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                    <text>e n in g H erald
77th Year, No 25$ Thursday, June 20, 1985— Sanford, Florida

Evening

Herald

—

(USPS

481-280)

— Price

25 Cents

4 U.S. Marines Slain In Submachine-Gun Attack
SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador IUPII
— Gunmen killed four U.S. Marines,
two American civilians and seven other
people In a submachine-gun attack on a
crowded cafe district, officials said.
Twelve people were wounded.
Justice Ministry officials Identified
Ihe off-duty Marines slain In the attack
Wednesday night as Tom Mandwohn.
Gregory Webber. Patrick Kwajaskl and
Hobble Joe Dickson. They apparently
were In civilian clothes.
T h e m in istry said U.S. citizen s
George Vlncy. a computer technician
for the Wang company, and Roberto
Albrldez also died In Ihe attack, which
appeared to have been a random
terrortst strike.
Th r m en's hometowns, ages and

military ranks were not released
Six other civilians — a Guatemalan, a
Chilean and four Salvadorans — were
killed In the attack, along with one
Salvadoran soldier, the ministry said.
In Washington. National Security
Adviser Robert McFartane said today
the attack may be seen "a s a time of
testing for the United States."
" I think action against this outrage Is
Justified." he said, but later explained
he did not envision U.S. military
Involvement. McFarlane said he In­
formed President Reagan during the
night of the guerrilla attack.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman In San
Salvador said six to 10 guerrillas In a
Datsun pickup truck pulled up beside
an outdoor restaurant In a residential

sector of San Salvador and opened fire
In discrim in ately with subm achine
guns, killing the four Marines and nine
other people.
Hr said all four Marines were security
guards for the embassy.
A Salvadoran military spokesman
said 12 other people were Injured In the
attack, all Salvadoran civilians. They
were taken to an emergency clinic.
A state of emergency was Immediate­
ly declared, the spokesman said, and
air force helicopters flew over the area
Hundreds of soldiers were dispatched
throughout the city to search for the
gunmen.
An embassy spokesman called the
group a unit of leftist rebels "dressed

up as members of the armed fo rces.'
"In our Judgmrnt It ts not clear
whether the guerrillas specifically In­
tended to kill Ihe Marines or If the
Marines Just happened to be In the
place the guerrillas decided to attack."
he said.
"A bou t 8 45 this evening (local timrl
a Datsun pickup tmek with anywhere
from six to 10 men In camouflage
uniforms pulled up beside a cafe In one
of San Salvadnr's nightclub districts,
and these terrorists opened fire with
a u to m a tic w ea p on s a c ro s s what
a m o u n te d to n e a rly a b lo c k of
w a ll-to -w a ll c a fe s ." sa id Donald
H a m ilt o n , a n o th e r e m b a s s y
spokesman. "Obviously when terrorists
open up with autom atic weapons

toward a crowd of several hundred
people, you're going to have this many
casualties."
A White nouse spokesman said today
dial “ we re awarr of the report." but
had no further comment.
The shooting of the Marines was the
first killing of U.S. military personnel In
El Salvador since May 25. 1983. when
ihe deputy commander of the U S
military group. Navy Ll. Cmdr. Albert
A Schaufelbergcr. was shot by left­
wing guerrillas
According to the U.S. Embassy.
Schaufelbergcr. 32. was sitting In his
car outside Ihe University of Central
America, waiting for a friend when .two
men shot him four times In the head

PMS Defense
Fails For
Woman Tried
For Assault

Seminole
Won't Hike
Tax Rate
employees.
And commissioners approved
S em in ole County C om m is­ Ihe hiring o f a properly acquisi­
tion coordinator, but not In
sioners voted unanimously early
County Attorney Nikki Clayton's
today to keep the county-wide
office. Earlier In the week, the
property tax rale at Its current
level o f 84 1H per 81.000 o f c o m m is s io n r e j e c t e d Ms.
Clayton's budget calling for the
assessed valuation
coordinator and n secretary, a
Even though a greater tax
nrw assistant attorney, federal
base would have allowed for a
la w b o o k s a n d b o o k c a s e s
IH-cent per 81000 reduction and
because o f frustration In the
sllll have brought In the same
time It Is taking for acquiring
amount o f revrnur us last year,
rlghts-of-way for road projects
commissioners In thrre days o f
budget work sessions with de­ like Red Hug Lake Hoad. Ms.
Clayton Insisted that her office
partment heads opted to udd
could not move to acquire the
staff and services requ irin g
rlghts-of-way until designs for
greater Income.
projects were submitted. Even
C o m m is s io n e r s F re d
after that, she said, surveys, title
Strretmnn and Hob Sturm said
searches and negotiations had to
the property lax rate should be
lx- done before her office could
reduced If county staff" finds
go to court to acquire the
more money from other sources.
properly through condemnation.
Hut C o m m i s s i o n e r s H i l l
In line with their desire to get
Klrchhoff. Sandra Glenn and
more roads paved, the commis­
Harhurn Christensen said they
sioners ugreed to boost Public
prefer to maintain the 84.IH
Works Director Larry Seller's
rule,
road budget from $1.3 million to
Mrs. Christensen has said she
$2 million. Sellers Is to tell the
would vote for a tax Increase for
commissioners
today the roads
road Improvements and none o f
hr recommends for paving with
her colleagues earlier disagreed,
ihe extra $700,000
but C ou n ty Budget Director
In uddltlon. Deputy County
Eleanor Anderson said toduy un
Administrator for Development
In c r e a s e Is not n e c e s s a r y
Woody Price was given the
Ix-catise there Is enough money
$450,000 budget he requested
Irom all sourres to fund ull road
for studies necessary to prepare
projects thus far approved.
On Wednesday, commission­ a new comprehensive land use
plan.
ers v o t e d to add 10 n e w
In his second appearance be­
employees to Sheriff John Polk's
department to bring to a total of fore the county commission.
19 new people to that depart­ Polk got approval from the board
ment. eight of them corrections lor two new school resource
officers. In the 1985 86 fiscal
See COUNTY, page 8A
year. Polk had asked for 31 new

By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff Writer

By Donna Estes
Herald Staff Writer

M *raM n « X * » T * m * r Vtwcwrt

92 Tons On Wheels
W ith the w ave of a finger, house m over
T o m m y Youngblood of Sanford, center,
directs the m oving of 92 tons of house Irom
Deltona to Sanford Wednesday n ig ht. Th e
70 m ile endeavor took about 6 '^ hours.
Youngblood's son, T a n d y Is d riv in g the

truck and daughter-ln law Debbie Is video
taping the huge m ove. T h e y moved the
house, from M aronda H om e Inc. model
center on Deltona B o u le va rd to a site on
B eardall Avenue, Sanford. T h e move w as
m ade to m ake room for new m odel homes.

Others Won't Chang* Travel Plant

Student Trip To Bypass Athens
By Rick Brunson
Herald Staff Writer

Six teachers and about 70
stu den ts from Sem inole are
Seminole County school of­ scheduled to leave Friday for a
fic ia ls c a n c e le d a stu d en t 25-day tour of Europe, which up
group's trip to Athens. Greece. until Wednesday. Included a
Wednesday because of alleged stop In Athens.
" W e had planned to go to
lax security at the city's airport,
from which TW A Flight 847 was Greece but because of the In­
ternational situation and the
hijacked
Other Seminole County travel­ safety of our students we de­
ers are going ahead, albeit cided to go to Madrid Instead."
apprehensively, with plans to go said Joanne Bohannon, registrar
to Greece and the Middle East, ut Lake Brantley High School
local travel agencies reported and one of the coordinators of
today. However. Ihe agencies the trip,
polled report there aren't too
In addition to Madrid, the
many people traveling to the students are scheduled to tour
five countries and visit most of
Middle East this summer.

Europe's major cities. Including
London. Paris and Florence.
The stop In Athens was cancrie d a fte r teachers p o lled
parents of the students and
asked them If they favored a trip
to Athens or not. in light of the
hijacking o f the TW A Right.
"The parents felt and we fell
we needed to take an alternate
route, particularly since the
president has urged us (the
American people) not to go
there. We need to honor our
g o v e rn m e n t's req u est." Ms.
Bohannon said.

See TRAVEL, page 8A

Sanford P&amp;Z To Review Plan For $12 Million Jail Addition
The alte plan for the 812
million addition lo the Seminole
County Jail ut Five Points Is
scheduled to be reviewed by the
Sanford Planning und Zoning
Commission tonight at 7 In City
Hall.
The addition, which Includes

renovations to the existing facili­
ty, will add about 121.000
square feet to the building, more
than tripling the size of the
com plex, a cco rd in g to Dale
NcdcrhofT. architect for Watson
and Co. which is designing the
project. T h e existing facility

contains about 62.000 square
fret.
Th r addition will house ubout
4HO more Inmates, bringing the
total to 716. as well as a food,
laundry and general services
center. NcdcrhofT said.
The Jail s present capacity Is

212. according to Nederhoff. a
figure disputed by Sem inole
County Sheri IT John Polk who
says It s 236. W hichever Is
correct, the Jail Is overcrowded.
About 263 inmates are presently
parked Into the Jail. Polk says
Nederhoff said the addition

will have a modular design with
five hexagonal "pod s" that will
house 96 Inmates each. Correc­
tions officers will be stationed In
Ihe center of each pod to guard
the Inmates.
The addition will be made of

See PfcZ, page 8A

GNP In Sharp Rebound

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Consumer prices,
held In check by decreased food costs for Ihe
third strulght month and a slower Increase
In energy products, rose only 0.2 percent In
May. the Labor Department said today.

business spending Is going up sharply.
If the assumptions do not prove correct
the "flash" will turn out lo be loo high, as
happened In the first quarter. The first
quarier "flash" was 2.1 percent.

The May figures mean that what had cost
$ lo o In 1967. now costs consum ers
$321 30.

With regard to consumer prices, the
bureau said the sharp turnaround In the
transportation component, as a result of
smaller Increases In gasoline prices and
declines In new and used car prices, was
largely responsible for the moderation In the
overall May Index.

The transportation, food and beverage,
and apparel and upkeep portions of (he
Index all registered declines In May. the
bureau said.
Meanwhile, government economists today
estimated the economy Is growing at a 3 1
percent rate, a shrro rebound for the groaa
national produc' fo n t only 0.3 percent
growth In the first quarier.
In projecting the "fla sh " GNP figure, the
Bureau o f Economic Analysis assumed that
sales are Increasing, that less merchandise
ts being tied up In Inventories, that trade
losses arc shrinking a little and that

Saa PMS. page 8A

TO D A Y

Consumer Prices Held In Check

The 0.2 percent Increase, reported by the
department's Bureau of Labor Statistics on
u seasonally adjusted basis followed 111rreases o f 0.5 percent and 0.4 percent In
March and April, respectively.

A Jury of six women Wednes
day apparently rejected a de­
fense based on premenstrual
stress and found a Deltona
woman guilty o f aggravated
battery and criminal mischief In
what may be a landmark case.
Margaret Pitt. 24. o f 641
Belltower Avc.. claimed she was
under Ihe Influence of pre­
m enstrual stress w hen she
rammed her car Into the car her
form er live In boyfriend was
driving Sept 28.
Circuit Judge S. Joseph Davis
Jr. scheduled sentencing for
9:3 0 a m. J u ly 11. at the
Seminole County courthouse.
Miss Pitt could recteve up to 5
years on each count. She Is at
liberty on $5,000 bond until
sentencing.
According to the attorneys on
the case, premenstrual stress
syndrome has never been used
ns u defense In trial In the United
Stales It has been sugested as a
defense before trial and as u
mitigating factor In sentencing,
according to an u appeal de­
cision. but not as an In trial
defense.
Miss Pitt's case pivoted on
whether the Jury believed she
Intended to harm her former
boyfriend. A Jury must believe u
defendant Intended to commit
aggravated assault before It can
find a defendant guilty of ag­
gravated assault, according to
slate Jury Instructions.
Leon Cheek III. Miss Pitt's
attorney, argued that his client
was under the Influence o f
premenstrual stresa at the time
of the Incident and did not
Intented to commit the crime.
He said she knew her former
boyfriend was In the car at the
time but when she bumped his
car with hers He said she was
not awarr there were two pas­
sengers In hta car and only
wanted him to pull over.
According to court records she
ruinmed It a second time, from
the side, and their a third time
after he stopped. About $3,000
damage was done to the car. No
Injuries were reported.
The Jury, asked lo have the
words "Intent" and "deliberate"
defin ed for th em about 10

"O n the other hand, the housing compo­
nent. reflecting a more rapid Increase in
shelter coats, advanced more than In recent
months." the bureau said "A ll othrr major
groups — medical care, entertainment and
other goods and services — rose the same In
May as in the preceding month "
The bureau said that for the first five
months of 1985 prices rose at a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of 3 9 percent, about
Hte same as for all of 1984.
The bureau said food and beverage prices
dropped 0.1 percent, apparel and upkeep
0.1 percent and transportation 0.2 percent.
Gasoline prices continued lo Increase, but
by only 0.5 percent In Mav as compared to

increases of 3.6 percent In March and 3.1
percent In April. New car prices dropped 0 2
percent and used cars declined 1.4 percent.
Grocery food prices dropped for the third
straight month, down 0.4 percent, led by
declines In meats, poultry. Ash. eggs, fruits
vegetables lieef prices dropped 2.6 percent
In May and were 5.9 percent lower than at
Ihe end of 1984
Housing prices rose 0.6 percent In May as
did medical care costs. Other Increases
came In entertainment. 0.3 percent, and
other goods and services. 0 4 percent.
The bureau said automobile finance
charges dropped for the sixth consecutive
month, down 1.4 percent, but automobile
Insurance rose 0.7 percent und was 9.4
percent above Us level a year ago.
In housing, maintenance and repair coats
declined 0 5 percent, while fuel and utilities
coals increased 0.2 percent. Fuel oil prices
declined 0.5 percent, after advancing 3.3
percent In April Charges for gas and
electricity rose 0 5 percent and 0.1 percent
resp ectively. T h e Index for husehold
furnishings and operations rose 0.1 percent,
the same as In each of the preceding
months.

Action Raoorts

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Case Of The Docile Doberman
Under the nose of a guard
dog. a thief cut the chalo
locking a fenced compound of
a Sanford gas station Monday
night, and alole a car con­
fiscated last week by Seminole
County sh eriff s agents.
But s h e r iff's C apl. J a y
Leman didn't blame the unexplfcably docile Doberman
pinscher.
"It had a hurt paw. He had a
bad night." Leman said.
Sheriffs agents seized the
1967 Chevrolet Camaro last
Tuesday after they arrested a
man and charged him with

driving without a license tag
and a suspended d river's
license. The car was taken lo
Buu h's Chevron. 1122 Celery
A v r . where the theft oc­
curred
Security has since been
stepped up at the station.
L e m a n s a id t h e m an
charged In the original case.
Tracy Steven Towers. 25. of
512 Satsuma Drive. Sanford,
was arrested again Wednes­
day charged with auto theft
Towers, released on $5,000
bond last week, was being
held today In lieu If $5,000
bond

a «i»«

�1A—Ivtoh tf Hwitd, StftNrd. FI.

ThurtAiy. Jun# J9, IWJ

NATION
INBRIEF
House OK s Production
Of Chemical Weapons
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House has finally handed
over lo President Kenyan the one major weapons system It
denied him In his first term by voting to end a 16-year ban
on chemical weapons and allow production In 1687.
Wednesday's stunning reversal o f three previous House
rejections capped a major administration push for renewed
production of modern binary weapons, which have two
chambers o f relatively harmless materials that become
lethal when mixed
Under the provision adopted 220-196, production could
begin after Sept. 30, 1987 If there Is no mutually verifiable
treaty with the Soviets on the weapons and, among other
things. If NATO allies agree to accept the weapons.
It also provides that the components would lie stared In
separate states In this country and transported separately
when moved.
With action on the chemical weapons provision, Ihe only
remaining major Issues for the House to resolve Irt the *292
billion defense authorization package are what changes
will be made In the contracting process and what spending
level will be act for “ Star Wars" anti-missile research.
Those Items were exper'ed to arise In today's debate.

Shuttle Goes Black Hole Hunting
Ualted Press International
With a “ Star Wars" laser lest botched by ground crews,
shuttle Discovery's astronauts today pressed on and
readied a satellite for launch to look for a giant black hole
In the heart o f the Milky Way.
If all goes well, the 2.190-pound Spartan satellite will be
retrieved Saturday afler spending about &lt;13 hours re­
cording X-rays from the core o f the Milky Way and from a
cluster of galaxies In the I’erseua constellation.
Once It la returned to Earth, scientists hope to learn more
about Ihe evolution of Ihe universe and whether black
holes, objects with such Intense gravity even light cannot
escape, are common In the cosmos.
The only glitch In an otherwise smooth flight came
Wednesday when the Shuttle crew was given Incorrect
Information lo properly orient the shuttle to rrflect a laser
beam fired from Hawaii hack lo Ihe ground station for
analysis. The test was rescheduled for Saturday.
The low -intensity blue laser beam was seen by
Discovery’s crew. Indicating the exercise was a partial
success, demonstrating the beam could locale and track a
spaceship speeding In mbit at 17,300 mph.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Norwegian Official Who Spied
F o r Russia, Iraq G a ts 20 Years
OSLO, N orw ay (U P 1) — A farmer deputy government
minister was sentenced today to a maximum 20 years In
prison for spying for the Soviet Union and Iraq In Norway's
most serious espionage case.
An Oslo district court found defendant Arne Treholt
guilty on virtually all 32 counts. Including giving Moscow
detailed pluns for the nuclear und conventlonal defense of
Norway ugalnst a possible Soviet Invasion Norway makes
up NATO's northern Hank.
Presiding Judge Astrl Rynnlng, head of a seven-member
panel, ordered Treholt to pay the government 1146.000 —
Including money Ihe Soviets and Iraqis paid him for
spying.
Treholt, 42, adinlttrd giving Moscow classified materlul
gleaned from his work at the United Nations from 1979 to
1982, but dented he was a spy.
He was serving as head of the Foreign Ministry press
section when he was arrested at Oslo airport Jan. 20, 1984,
admittedly heading for Vienna to meet u KGII friend. Police
said his briefcase was crammed with 66 classified
documents.

Car Bomb Kllla 50 In Tripoli
UEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — A booby-(tapi&gt;ed car exploded
among seafront strollers celebrating the end of the Moslem
fast of Ramadan In the city of Tripoli, killing about 50
people, army sources said today.
Ttie sources said 37 people were wounded In the blast
Wednesday night.
Other security officials who askrd not to be named said
at least BO people were killed In the car-bomb blast.
Twenty-nine bodies were recovered und 26 people were
unaccounted for and presumed dead.
Police said the car parked with 330 pounds of explosives
blew up In front of a candy store on the seafront In Tripoli,
a port 42 miles norlh of Beirut. It blew through a crowd,
shattered windows and hurled passing cars Into the
Mediterranean.
There was no Immediate claim o f responsibility.

Authorities Seek Bombing Clues
FHANKFUKT, West Germany (UPI) — Police and forensic
experts worked Into the night sifting through wreckage at
Frankfurt airport where a bomb demolished the Interna­
tional departure lounge, killing three |&gt;eople and Injuring
42.
“ We have started an Intensive Investigation. ri|xrtafly of
bomb materials by forensic experts. But we still know
nothing yet of the peoplr who did this or their m otives."
Frankfurt police chief Karl Heins Gem m rr said o f the
Wednesday aflrm oon blast.
Police said late Wednesday that three peuple. Including
two children, were killed and 42 were Injured by the
explosion of the bomb apparently left In a wastebasket.
Four of Ihe wounded were seriously hurt. Including one
child.

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To p 10 Defense Firm s Probed
WASHINGTON
A House
WASHINGTON (UPI)
(UPI) —
- A
House subsub­
_ _ .
.
c o m m it t e e c h a ir m a n , a r g u in g th at
mtscharglng taxpayers Is “ a way of life" In
ihe defense Industry, says the nation's 10
largest defense contractors face federal
criminal Investigations.
Rep. John Dlngell. D-Mich., Wednesday
released a list provided by Pentagon In­
spector General Joseph Shertck revealing
the general nature of criminal Inquiries Into
36 of 45 companies being probed by his
office and the Inspectors general of the
military services.
Besides General Dynamics Corp.. the
third largest contractor, which faces several
m u ch -pu b licized In vestigation s, those
named Included the nation's largest defense
contractor, the McDonnell Douglas Corp..
and the No 2 contractor. Rockwell Interna­
tional Corp.
Others being investigated, according to
the list. Include in order of size: the
Lockheed C o r p . fourth biggest defense
contractor In fiscal 1984. the Boeing Co.

C a n c e r Victim s
Fight Back; Sue
Tobacco Industry
B O S T O N (U P I) - C a n c e r
victims have filed three lawsuits
— seeking 417 million In dam ­
ages — against five lobacco
companies and an Industry lobgroup they hold responsl&gt;r cigarette smoke-related
illnesses and deaths.
The Tobacco Products Liabili­
ty Project charged Wednesday
that Ihe tobacco com panies
mislead the public by disputing
scientific links between cigarette
smoking and cancer.
R ic h a rd A. D a yn ard . cochairman o f the project, which Is
based at Northeastern University
School o f Law, said a court has
never found a toltacco company
liable for illnesses shown to be
caused by cigarette smoking
The three suits announced at a
Boston news conference arc in
addition to about two dozen
sim ilar actions pending na­
tionwide.
Harvard University professor
John Bullitt mild his lung cancer
was diagnosed lust summer ufter
u lifetim e smoking habit he
claims was spurred by adver­
tisements making the habit ap­
pear glamorous and even patri­
otic.
"l-ast July 4th ... I awakened
to find I could speuk only in u
hoarse, high-pitched squeaky
voice." Dulllll said with obvious
difficulty. "A s a professor o f
English literature at Harvard.
my voice Is rny livelihood."
Bullitt sought 93 million in
compensatory damage und 91
in III Ion for Ihe loss of com pa­
nionship o f his 13-year-old son.
Charlene Viola filed u separate
at lion seeking 910 million for
Ihe 1984 deuth of her husband.
Lawrence M. Viola, after five
decades o f smoking.
"M y husbund died an agoniz­
ing death o f lung cancer." Viola
said In a shaking voice. " I f my
union lodny prevents one ado­
lescent from falling prey to
Ismoktngl. then It will lx* worth
It."
A third suit, for more than 91
million, was filed on behalf of

that the
the types
types o
off violations
violations found
found *n the
that
General
r.&lt;-nrral Dynamics
Dvnamlcs rase
case are a way ot llle
throughout the defense industry.
"U n b elievably, when contractors are
challenged on such Issues, they act of­
fended. as though the behavior were
acceptable and the charges against them
Improper." he said
"T h e Pentagon simply must get lough
with Its partners in Industry so as to end
this blzatre behavior and stem the hemor­
rh age of taxpayers' money." Dlngell said.

I n c . . G e n e r a l E le c t r ic Co.
C o .. U n ite d
i ... Corp.. Raytheon Co., and
Technologies
Litton Industries Inc.
Shertck testified to the panel recently that
the seventh largest contractor. Howard
Hughes Medical Institute — the holding
company for Hughes Aircraft — was under
Investigation by hts office for alleged labor
mtscharglng. although the firm was not
named on the list, the aide said
The list says that as of May 1. the
investigations focus on allegations such as
cost and labor mtscharglng. false claims,
bribery and bid rigging.
According lo the list. General Dynamics Is
under Pentagon Investigation for alleged
coat mlscharglng. subcontractor kickbacks,
labor mlscharglng. product substitution,
security compromises, defective pricing,
cost duplication and false claims.
In a letter supporting congressional re­
forms lo members of his House Energy and
Com m erce subcommittee. Dlngell said.
The lisi of major contractors makes It clear

According to the list:
In hts letter, Dlngell railed at the Pentagon
for taking "no meaningful action against the
lop management" of General Dynamics.
He said the subcommittee has found
evidence of numerous "Illegal activities and
practices" at the St Louis company, which
faces eight federal Investigations and al­
ready has had more than *240 million In
alleged taxpayer mtscharges withheld by
the Pentagon.

Americans
Smoking Less

KICKING THE HABIT
Fewer Americans smoke
f

1965

U

1980

^

(

1965

If

1980

'I
90%
50%
40%
30%

»

20%
10%

WASHINGTON (UPI) For
ihe flrsl time In more than a
decade, the total number of
cigarettes sold In the United
Slates dropped In 1982 and
1983 despite a record advertis­
ing push by Ihe tobacco in­
dustry. a federal study shows.
In a report to Congress, the
Federal Trade Commission said
632 billion cigarettes were sold
In 1982. down 4 billion from the
year before. Indicating Ameri­
cans arc smoking Irss. It said
cigarette sides dropped again In
1983. to 584 billion.
T h e F T C s a id c ig a r e t t e
advertising expenditures rose
nearly 25 percent In 1982 to
$ 1,9 billion and an additional 36
percent m 1983 to a new record
high of 92.7 billion.

The commission said the sales
decreases followed an uninter­
rupted decline from 1973 to
1983 In per capita consumption
o f cigarettes, from 4.112 lo
3.447. which Is less than a half a
Current
Former
\ Never
pack a day per person.
smokers
smoked
sm okers
"Most consumers arc aware
that s m o k in g Is gen era lly
MCA ORAPMIC
(Sourc* U S Public Health Set vice)
dangerous." Ihe FTC said In la
T h e air has cleared a bit since 1965, the year after the U.S. study, which examined smoking
data Tor 1982 and 1983. "TRs
Surgeon G e ne ral called smoking a health hazard. A ccording
may have accounted for some &lt;4
to the latest available data, only 38 percent of m en and 30 the itrcitne in cigarette sales."

□

porcent ot w om en smoke, com pared w ith 52 percent of men
and 34 percent of women In 1965.

John and Jane Dor. over hts
disfigurement from mouth and
throat cancer. Daynard said Ihe
couple wished to withhold lls
Identity.
Dulllll and Viola also sought
triple dumuges under Ihe stale
Consumer Protection A d .
Theoretically, the plaintiffs
could be awarded us much us
9114 million since the three
suits contain some 29 counts,
rueh seeking separate damages
Bui attorneys emphasized that
the actual figure being sought
was 917 million.
The suits allege negligence for
failure lo warn consumers of
physical und psychological ad­

The Tobacco Institute, a trade
group that represents the In
dustry. had no comment on (he
diction and resulting diseases, FTC rrport but noted the 1983
and for producing unsafe pro­ decline corresponded with Con­
ducts. They also claim the com­ gress doubling lhr federal lax ot
panies Intent tonally or recklessly cigarettes that year.
m isrepresented data on the
Since Issuance of a 1964
dangers of cigarette smoking.
D a y n u rd s u g g e s t e d pro- report by ihe U.S. Surgeon
consumer changes In product General linking cigarette smok­
liability luw gives (be suits a ing lo a number of health
greater chance of success than problem s, ihe percentage of
previous rfiorts that failed to American adulis who smoke has
declined from about 43 percent
hold the companies liable.
Named In the suits arc: the lo about 34 percent.
Brown und Williamson Tobacco
1he tobacco Industry, which
Corp.; American Brands Inc.: was banned from advertising
R.J. Reynolds T o b a cco Co.; Cigarettes on television and radio
t-lg g rit Group. Inc.: P h illip In 1971. has turned more und
Morris Inc,; and ihe Tobacco more lo maguzlnrs and newspa­
Institute.
per spots.

Terrorists Say No To Hostage Visit; Crisis Drags On
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UI’ H — Shtllc Moslem
militiamen refused to allow a visit to 40
American hostages today as Algeria's am­
bassador pushed for a deal lo swap Ihe
hl|acked T W A pusaengrrs for some 760
Shillrs Imprisoned by Israel
In Jerusalem. Defense Minister Yitzhak
Rubin told the United States to "m ake up lls
m ind" whether II wants lo formally request
I lull Israel release the Shiites who are being
held near the Israeli port of Haifa.
President Reagan — citing the U.S. policy
against dealing with terrorists — has not
asked Israel lo release (he 766 Lebanese
Shiites rounded up during Us occupation of
southern Lebanon, although Red Cross
olficlals said (he United Stales asked them
In approach Israel as go-betweens. The Red
Cross refused
There was little apparent progress In the

WEATHER
A R IA

FORECAST: Partly

sunny and rather hot today with
s c a t t e r e d a ft e r n o o n t h u n ­
d e r s to r m s . H igh nr Id 9 0 s.
Southwest wind 10 mph. Rain
chance 40 percent. Tonight fair
except for 20 percent chance o f
evening thunderstorms. Low tn
the low to mid 70s. Light wind.
Friday mostly sunny and rather
hot. 30 percent chance of after­
noon thunderstorms. High In the
mid 90s.
NATIONAL REPORTS Storms
that prompted Hash flood w at­
ches In saturated southern T e x ­
as drifted off to sea early today,
while a weak cold front provided
some relief from a heal wave tn
Ih e W e s t . T h u n d e r s t o r m s
lingered In the Southeast and
along the coasts of Louisiana
and Texaa. Other showers and
thunderstorms were scattered
across the Rockies and the

stalemate.
Other diplomatic sources said the United
Stales was believed lo be seeking as part of
a "package deal" Ihe release of seven
Americans kldnap|&gt;cd In la-banon over the
past year. Four Frenchmen and a Briton
also are missing In Lebanon.
Ai Beirut airport. Shiite gunmen guarding
three TW A crew members aboard Ihe
hijac ked plane reportedly fired several shols
over Ihe head of a Lebanese journalist who
dressed up as an airport worker and slipped
utxrard Ihe plane In a hid lo get un Interview
No !n|urtes were reported.
With negotiations at an impasse, the
Shlllr Amal mil It la led by Lelranese Justice
Minister Nubth llerrt refused a U S Embassy
request to allow Western correspondents to
visit the 40 American hostages who were
taken oil a Trans World Airlines jet hijacked

n o rth e rn S ie r r a N e v a d a .
Early m orning tem peratures
dropped Into the 40s and 50s
from thr m iddle Mississippi
Vulley lo ihe Northeast. In
Marquette. Mich., the mercury
dipped lo 39 degrees at 4 a m. A
fla s h flo o d w a tc h c o v e re d
southern Texas. Forecasters said
Ihe watch was posted because
heavy rain this week had satu­
rated the soli and there was still
a chance o f renew ed storm
activity. At least three jteople
died Tuesday In traffic accidents
un rain -slick ro a d s In Ihe
Houston area. Mure than 5
Inches of rain soaked sections of
southern Texas Tuesday.
BOATING FORECAST! St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
m ile s — V a r i a b l e m o s t ly
southwest wind 10 knots or less
through tonight except easterly
onshore wind near 10 knots this
afternoon. W ind Friday east
around 10 knots Seas 1 to 3
feet. Widely scattered showers or

last Friday.
The Americans, removed from TW A
Flight 847 after the hijackers killed a U S.
Navy diver during one of three stops In
Beirut, were believed to lx* held In small
groups somwhere In west Beirut.
Some of ttrem — reportedly with JewIsh-soundlng names — were thought to be
prisoners of Hezbollah, a pro Iranian Shiite
group known to have u more radical stance
than Bcrrt's Amal movement
Am erican pilot John Testrakc. held
aboard Ihe Boeing 727 with two crew
members, told an ABC News film crew
Wednesday that "w e would all be dead
m en" In case of a dramatic attempt to
rescue the passengers.
Aides to Berrt said he would hold a fresh
round of meetings and lelrpfionc contacts
today with diplom ats Involved in the
negotiations

thunderstorms.

E X T E N D E D FO R EC AST:
Mostly fair Saturday through
Monday except lor a chance of
afternoon and evening thun­
derstorms. Lows in the 70s
except low 80s along extreme
southeast coast and keys.

AREA READ1NOS (S a.mjt
temperature; 81; overnight low;
74; W e d n e s d a y 's h ig h : 94;
barometric pressure: 30 05. rela­
tiv e h u m id ity : 82 p e rcen t;
winds, northwest at 5 mph; no
rain, sunrise: 6 28 a m., sunset
8 26 p.m.

HOSPITAL
NOTES
CaalrM FtarMs

ADMISSION!

aichwe l winami

EOaOa B A/uk her Oil and
D vnl Gmaat. OaOaa

FRIDAY TIDES: Daytoa
Beach: highs. 10:16 a.m.. 10-.:
p m ; lows. 3:58 a m., 3:44 p.m
Port C an averal: highs. 10-.(
am .. 10:28 p.m.; lows. 3:4
a m . 3:35 p.m.; B ayport: high
3-55 a m.. 2:28 p.m.; Iowa. 9:(
a m , 1008 p.m.

E v r n in g lle tu ld
lines ui m i
ThurK iey. Junv 30. IttS

Vol. n. No. 2SI

evM iuae o«&lt;ir am* s«* * • ? .
SAl«re«r hr TSa Santar* HAfAM.
let. MS N. Frtnch A*a_ I a*«atO.
fi*. m n.
lataad C l*u e « t n « * FiM t« Sa a MtO.

FtortO* urn

Hama D*M**r?; Waa*. t lltj MaaIH.
M .« j 1 Mantfct. SV« IS. * MaaIM
MM*( VAAf. til At. tr M*ii: WaaS
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(MSI US Mil.

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E v s n ln g H e r a ld . S a n fo rd . F t.

T h u r i d a y . J u n e 10. I H S - 3 A

Chronic Sex Offender Sentenced In Child Assault
A Longwood man convicted
three times this year for childscx crimes and currently serving
a life sentence for molesting a
9-year-old girl received addi­
tional prison lime Wednesday —
4^* y e a r s fo r fo n d lin g an
11-year-old girl.
Sentenced was John Sessums
Worllng. 52. of 318 Heather
Drive.
According to court records.
W o r lln g a s s a u lte d a ll th e
children — Including the latest
victim — in the same manner:
molesting them while they were
at his house playing on a swing
or with computer games. The
avsaults occurred during recent
years until his arrest In Sep­
tember.
Worllng has maintained that
he is not a bad person and
blames his troubles on hysterical
parents, coaxed children and the
news media

In the case for which he was
sentenced Wednesday. Worllng
was convicted of fondling the girl
while placing her on a swing. He
testified at his trial tn February
that he was ‘ protecting" her
with his hands from parts of the
swing each time he put her on It.

Action Reports
★ Fires
+ Courts
★ Police

RAM WITH KNIFE
Two Sanford men have been
charged with armed burglary
a fte r a S a n fo rd p o lic e m a n
chased them from a suspected
burglary site and reportedly
found a large butcher knife
under one o f them.
The pair was nabbed tn -the
woods of! Magnolia Avenue near
15th Street In Sanford. A police
officer reported chasing two men
from the Velma Mitchell A d­
ministrative Annex.
A knife was found hidden on
the ground under one o f the
suspects after they were cap-

lured. Both were charged with
armed burglary al about mid­
night Tuesday.
Henry Matthews White. 21. of
B Place, and Freddie Lee Davis.
22. of Holly Avenue, were being
held In lieu of SI 0.000 bond
each.

BOTTLE BATTER
An 18-year-old Sanford man
has been ch arged with a g ­
gravated battery after allegedlv
hltting another man In the head
with a beer bottle during an
argument.
Police reported making the

arrest In the 1300 block of Elliot
Avenue, where the men had
been fighting, at about 5:15 p.m.
Tuesday.
Eliaah Williams Jr., o f 1010
Olive Ave.. was being held In lieu
o f S8.000 bond.

suit for dam ages artsing out o f his allegedly

unconstitutional conduct In performing his na­
tional security functions."
—In a major victory for unions, ruled 6-3 that
pension fund trustees have a right to audit all
employer payroll records, even those of non­
union workers.
—Held 8-0. with Lewis Powell abstaining, that
citizens who criticize prospective federal office­
holders In letters are not absolutely Immune from
libel suits.
.
The high court reached Its decision on the
W ashington state obscenity law after poring over

a variety o f definitions o f lust. Including dic­
tionaries dating to the 1930s and form er
President Jim m y Carter's famous remark that he
had "looked on women with lust."
In arguing Its case before the Supreme Court.
Washington state also used the dictionary

Screw In Burger
Worth $25,000
PENSACOI.A (UPII - A man
who found a screw In a ham­
burger he bought at a fast food
restaurant four years ago was
awarded $25,000 In damages,
but the South Carolina firm that
lost the case has asked for a new
(rtal
An Escam bia County Jury
Tuesday deliberated a half-hour
and awarded James Busby of
Gulf Breeze $24,000 In damages
from Spartan Food Syatema Inc.
The Jury also awarded Busby s
wife $1,000 after she claimed
she was kept awake by her
husband s tossing and turning.
But attorney Robert Heath of
Pcnaacola. who represents the
Spartanburg. S.C.. firm at the
half-day trial, said he has al­
ready filed a motion for a new
trial and said the company Is
"looking" at a possible appeal.

"The (appeals) court failed to note, however,
that the dictionary still defines prurient as
lasciviousness and that lascivious is defined by
the same dictionary as: inclined to lechery: lewd,
lustful."' the state said.
They added that the appeals court's "reliance
on a dictionary' definition Is simply misplaced"
because such definitions are not legal. Judicially
defined terms.
However, those fighting the law. Including
distributors of sexually explicit material and civil
liberties groups, argued that dictionary defini­
tions were appropriate to define obscenity
because they reflected the common usage of
words.
Washington stute has been attempting to puss
an anti obscenity law since 1977 when voters
adopted a sweeping Initiative measure aimed at
w iping out "m oral nuisances."
In 1980. the 9th U S Cim ilt Court o f Appeals
In San Francisco ruled the Initiative unconstitu­
tional because It was vague and overbroad and
Infringed on the right to freedom of speech
The state legislature, responding to the appeals
court, enacted a second law In 1982. The law
allowed officials to Iran materials that were
deemed "prurient." which was defined as "that
which Incites lasciviousness or lust." Opponents
of (he law said the Supreme Court would only
allow banning of m aterials that prom oted
"morbid or depraved,interest In sex. nudity or
excretion."
Twelve days after It was passed. U.S. District
Judge Robert McNlchols refused to let officials
enforce It until It had been reviewed by the
federal courts. Th e judge eventually rejected the
ordinance as overly broad and the 0th U.S.
Circuit Court o f Appeals agreed for n second time
The ordinance could not pass constitutional
muster, the appeals court said, because It
outlawed materials that Incited lust. The word
had so many different meanings, the court said
alter consulting a variety of dictionaries, that It
was not an acceptable standard.
"Indeed, the word has acquired such accept­
able connotations that, prior to hla election In
1976. Carter confessed In a popular national
publication that he had looked on a lot of women
with lust la n d )... committed adultery In my heart
many tim es."’ the court said.
"W e do not think President Carter was
describing a shameful or morbid Interest: rather,
he was o b v io u s ly e x p re s s in g a h e a lth y ,
wholesome, human reaction common to millions
of well-adjusted persons tn our society."

HIDDEN OUN

A Seminole County sheriffs
PANCAKE HOUSE CASE
deputy who saw a suspicious
C a s s e lb e r r y p o lic e h a v e bulge In the rear pants pocket of
charged a 19-year-old Longwood a Longwood man searched him.
man with the January theft of found a handgun and charged
•200 from a Casselberry restau­ him with carrying a concealed
rant.
firearm.
The man allegedly stole keys
The suspect was spotted on
from the purse of the owner of Femwood Boulevard at Oxford
International House of Pancakes. Road. Fern Park, at about 8 50
700 E. stale Road 436. Vera p in Tuesday. Paul Sarbough
Duncan. 46. when she left her Jr.. 63. of 485 Seminole Drive,
purse on a cou n ter at the was being held In lieu of $5,000
restaurant, a police report said.
bond.
Keys from the purse were used
DUI ARRESTS
to open a safe from which Ms
The following persons have
Duncan said $200 was missing
been a rre s te d In S e m in o le
Police said the girlfriend o f a County on a charge of driving
suspect gave them a lead tn the under the Influence:
case on Friday. Arthur Robert —Fredrick Joe Vance. 22. of 108

‘Lust* Not Enough To Throw Out
Anti-Pornography Law, Court Says
WASHINGTON |UPI| — "L u s t" may not be the
right word to define obscenity, but It was no
reason to throw out Washington slates antipornography law. the Supreme Court has ruled.
The court, on a 6-2 vote with Justice Lewis
Powell not participating. Wednesday reversed an
appeals court ruling that said Washington state's
obscenity law was not specific enough in
outlining what kinds of books, magazines, movies
and other materials were obscene.
The court said only the portion of the luw that
dealt with "lu s t" should have been Invalidated.
"U n le s s there are countervailing con sid­
erations. the Washington law should have been
Invalidated only Insofar as the word lust' Is to be
understood as reaching protected materials.”
Justice Bryon White wrote.
However. In a dissent Justice William Brennan.
Joined by Justice Thurgnod Marshall, said the
W a sh in gto n law was " u n c o n s titu tio n a lly
overbroad and llu-rrfurr invalid on Its lace."
In other action, the court:
— Ruled that former Attorney General John
Mitchell cannot be sued for conducting Illegal
wiretaps while In office, even though Cabinetlevel officers are not Immune from similar
damage suits.
In a 4-3 decision that spilt the Justices two ways
on two Issues, the court said Mitchell does not
have to go to trial on charges he conducted
warrantless electronic surveillance In 1970
because the Illegality o f such wiretaps was not
established until a year later.
But the court said, also with a 4-3 majority In
which two Justices did not vole, that “ the
attorney general la not absolutely Immune trorn

Rlppcy. o f 1340 Boyer Drive,
was questioned by police, and
charged with grand theft and
petty theft. He was being held In
lieu of $5.000 bond.

NOTICE TO ALL
VETERANS

Who Have Honorably Served Their Country In Tim e of War or Peace
■N ttutt of tfts lack el burial (pa&lt;» a"d ir# dnia-H*
of Ilf# National CpmelOf, in Florid*
•&gt;«
8 '»»* t r t c i i in V U v i m Qa'dan ol Valor. Oaklaan
Mamorfal Fart At an Nonorabi, diKbargotT vtfd'an o*
lh« Un tad Malta Arm#d Forcoi you m*, b* qutiiliod
for Fi»# Su'itl Spaca Mc»#.a&lt; io u mu»t ,ag alar for
lb-* You mutl ba ab&lt;a la *non proof of Mono&lt;*bio
0'ic*a'B« t* * '» • '* a f«n lad nu&lt;r&gt;b*. 0f Valarant
•pacaa a - a a t 'r Cartifitaiaa for apacaa sill ba nauad
on a !&lt;»•! coma firat taxed baaa To attu'a 'n r -.a iio r
ma&gt;l tna coupon boioo to

O AKIAW N MEMORIAL PARK

PO Soi 171 laaa Mar, ri Mfaa
Plaaaa Sand M , Vslsran ol Sartlca Eligibility C a n itk a la

F in is

NAME
ADDRESS_____

Brsncft of Ss'vic*
Servici Sons) No

No inFimily
Taiapbona No

TO TA L INSURANCE
SERVICE
REMEMBER
YOUR INPEPENDENT AGENT
SERVES YOU FIRST

ffl«

HAITIANS CAWALTT
COSPAFT

KARNS

INSURANCE A O IN C Y me.
413 W. Flnt SI.

H». 322-5712

William H. "B ill" Wight C.P.C.U.
President

Saafsrd

Gerald W. Msysr
Account Representative

REG. PRICES
to *499

Busby, a former com puter
salesman who lived In Pensacola
Beach at the lime, said he had
taken hla family to a Hardee's
restaurant tn Gulf Breeze, south
of here, on Aug 26. 1981 to grab
a bite to eat.
Busby, who la now manager of
D ig it a l S y s te m s In c . o f
Pensacola, said he bit Into the
metal screw after taking a bite
from a Hardee s Big Deluxe
hamburger Busby filed suit,
claiming the object tore up hts
mouth.
Heath said the firm never
disputed that the screw was tn
th e h a m b u r g e r B u s b y
purchased. The attorney said the
company fell Busby was entitled
to be reimbursed for medical
expenses, pain and suffering,
but said the case came to court
because the company lelt the
claim o f $25,000 to $30,000 In
i too high.

Poplar Ave.. Sunlord. at 3:26
a m. Wednesday In front of his
home after he was seen driving
the wrong way on U S. Highway
17-92. Sanford. He was also
charged with careless driving
and fleeing and attempting to
elude police after not stopping
when first signaled by Sanford
police.
—Tyrone B Robinson. 29. of 73
W. Orange St.. Apopka, at 5:41
p.m. Tuesday after driving on
the wrong side o f Celery Avenue.
Sanford. He was arms led on
I lift Street In Sanford ufter a
police pursuit and was also
charged with careless driving
and attempting to flee and elude
police.
-Sandra N. Butler. 28. of 750
Lortnan Circle S.. Longwood. ut
2:25 a.m. Wednesday after her
cur reportedly sldeswlped a
pa rk ed v e h ic le on F lo rid a
Avenue. Longwood

C*oom tfw tuo that i ftgM *0'

fOu
T«m lor a *ms» room, o'
tsho tn« full or OuW*n » ( • tor • &gt;0'gor
•pit* Eacn iota-simps ' nips* • «•'»
comlortsbt* plush loom mstfois And
• ten n covt'Sd in • stsm-rssittsnl
Hsrcuton* Oistm tsbr-c Now tor a
pries mat S w»on &gt;•»» «»»••• Uw uu»l Ul
s rofluit' sots you can add an atua
bsd'OOm to yO«r 1'0'i't Coma in »n&lt;j
i h tnat# Dasuiifui swaps'-so'at

|i04 Acres of Bargains,
roduce &amp; Family Fun!

HWY. 17-92
B e t w e e n 0 « L A PI D O
And SAN FO RD

lor you'Sait

(5051 645-1 792

Y - sat. *

$3 FRIDAY S3

’VICARAGE SALES

30* W O O D e v t
Wltn No finance Crw/pe
Tike Mun,&amp;onrni to Pay
Witfi Sterchi f Parsona/i/ed Crsdrf'

iim

» ruses »*t

m u m s , n-

322-7953

�Evening Herald

DICK WEST

New 'Sexy' Woman Makes A Better Spy

(USPS Ml IN )
.'WXJN. FRENCH AVE . SANFOHD. FLA 32771
Arra Codr 305-322-2011 or 831 9993

Thursday, Juna 20, 1W5— 4A
f

W iyM D. Doyl*. Pvbilihsr
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Molvin Adhlns. Advtrllilng Otroctor

,

Home Delivery; Week. t l 10. Month $4 75: 3 Months.
$14 25 0 Months. $27 Of* Yrar. $51 00 By Mall Week.
$1 50; Month. $6 00 3 Months. $18 OO. 6 Months. $32 50 ,
Yrar, $6000

Castro's
New Ploy
F ld rl C a s t r o 's a ca d em ic c r e d e n tia ls In
finance are zero, but that d o esn 't stop Cuba's
boss from o ffe rin g a "s o lu tio n ” to Latin
A m erica's fo re ig n debt problem .
He proposes that W estern n ation s cancel
Latin A m e ric a n debts by se ttin g aside 10
percent o f th eir national d efen se spending
and g ivin g the savings to th e banks that
m ade the L a tin loans.
In essence. L a tin Am erican co u n tries could
welsh on th eir debts and W estern bankers
would still be paid off. T h e losers w ould be
the peoplr o f th e free world, w h o w ould have
10 percent less national security.
Thanks. F idel, but no thanks.
Cuba. In the sa m e leaky boat w ith the other
Latin A m e rica n debtors, lacks hard currency,
the kind o f m o n e y that people h a ve faith In.
the kind that Industrialized capitalist nations
produce. C u ba also suffers from th e current
low world p rice for Its raw m aterials, m ainly
sugar.
It also bus a ruble debt to the U.S.S.K..
which M oscow recently agreed to reschedule
ut easy rep a ym en t terms. T h is lets Castro
argue thut the com m unists treat debtors
better than do cupltullsts. Left unsaid Is that
In return M oscow has an u n sln k ab le aircraft
carrlet In this hem isphere — Cuba Itself.
Castro ca lls the Latin A m e ric a n debts
unjust because o f "unequul term s o f trade"
between d e ve lo p e d and non -developed na­
tions. He sa ys that If banks d o n 't agree to
cancel debts, d e b to r nations sh ou ld sim ply
refuse to p a y. E m otion a lly, m a n y Latin
leaders agree but th ey know that If they don't
pay. they w o n 't get an y more credit.
Havana's o w n $3 billion fo re ig n debt to
European ba n k ers w as recently renegotiated
and Castro p le d g e d to meet p a y m en ts, a vow
financiers dou b t becuuse of C u b a 's u n favor­
able trade tmlunce.
In the pust yeur. Cuba rec eive d a $600
m illion loan fro m Argentina. Itself so debtridden that W e s te rn bankers w arn ed It to
reach u n ew uccord with the International
Monetary Fun d by June 10 or risk huvtng Its
$4H billion debt declared "su bstu n du rd,"
m a k in g fu rth e r v re iili difficult.
On M ay 20. the A rg e n tin e C en tra l Hank
froze 9 8 0 0 m illio n fn dollar and o th e r foreign
cu rrency d e p o s its fo r 120 days to halt a run
on private nnd sta te banks.
T h e m ove fu rth e r eroded the fru glle fulth
A rg e n tin e fin a n c e ex p erts h a v e In their
banking s y s te m . A rgen tin e fin a n c e experts
recently visited W a sh in gton for talk s w ith the
IM F, which has accused Huenos A ires o f
fulling to reach Inflation-cu rbing m on etary
and fiscal lu rg e ls ugreed upon last year. T h e
Inflation rule has been 900 percen t In the past
yeur.
Peru's flnunce m in ister and Its c e n tra l bank
president begun tulks May 22 w ith th e IM F In
W ash in gton a im e d at heading o f f a dow n
grudlng o f Its n a tio n al debt rating. Peru Is In
urreurs on s e r v ic in g Its $13.5 m illio n debt,
h a vin g m ade o n ly token Interest p a y m e n ts to
uvold a d eclin e In cred it rating.
O verd u e In te re s t p a y m en ts to ta l $200
m illio n to b u n k s a n d $ 3 0 0 m illio n to
g overn m en ts a n d pu blic Institutions.
L on g p o litic a lly Isolated from o th e r Lutln
A m erican g o v e rn m e n ts . Castro seek s accep­
ta n c e b y t h e m . H e begu n b y b u c k in g
A r g e n t in e 's F u lk lu n d Is la n d s w a r w ith
England. N o w h e 's usng the r e g io n 's debt
problem to pose us u frien dly financing
ndvloer to the h em isp h ere's Latin nations.
T h e question Is: W h en Fidel tulks. w ill they
listen?

BERRYS WORLD

W ASHINGTON |UPI| Why. to cite a
question being asked a lot these days, do
American citizens let themselves get lured Into
spying for Russia?
For one answer, we need look no farther than
the July Issue of F o ru m magazine.
It tells us that money, sex. dope, booze “ and
anything else that can easily corrupt'' are
traditional ball In the espionage trade
You will have to look elsewhere for explana­
tions as to why money, dope and booze make
such powerful attractants. I myself have never
been tempted by such things
As for sex. I can only tell you what Forum
says.
"It Is used by all secret Intelligence services In
(he often dubious and sometimes deadly games
they play." Forum says.
For additional Information that might have
Indirect bearing on some of (he recent spy cases.
I refer you to the July Issue of Penthouse.
That venerable publication suggests that
being “ sexy" Is no longer a matter o f having
"b ig breasts and great legs."
"M en are dazzled by Intelligent women who

possess a good sense of humor and exude an air
of confidence." says Penthouse, which certainly
should know.
You probably can guess what I'm going to say
next. I'm going to say that espionage apparently
has moved half circle since Mata Hart's time.
The Dutch dancer, who was executed as a
Germany spy In World War I. was. from all
accounts, quite a looker But I doubt she could
have carried on an Intelligent conversation. At
least, not to the satisfaction of the French, who
arrested her.
Obviously, however. Mata Haii did manage to
"exude an air of confidence" while pretending
to be a Javanese temple dancer. This despite the
fact that her real name was Margaretha Gertrud
Zelle.
Her Javanese dancing fooled not only the
French but other Europeans as well. It Is.
however, pretty difficult to carry on an In­
telligent conversation about that. Especially one
that would meet French standards
Anyway. If I were a Soviet agent trying to
organize a spy ring. I know where I wouldn't
start

I wouldn't start with Victoria Principal. Linda
Evans. Lynda Carter. P»a Zadora. Morgan
Fairchild. Jacqueline Blsset or anyone else
named by Penthouse as "the 10 sexiest women
In the world."
I would, contrariwise, start by recruiting a
group of exceptionally smart women who are
easily amused. Then I would send them out to
dazzle potential spies.
Having never seen a list of the 10 brightest
women In the world. I'm naming no names. You
brainy damrs know who you are. however.
The toughest part. I would Imagine, w ould be
finding female geniuses "w h o possess a good
sense of hum or."

Women with big breasts and great legs are
comparatively easy to spot. But locating one
who Is quick-witted with rtslbles to match could
be tough duty, even for the KGB.
Spies. I understand, tend to be Inferior
comedians with repertoires composed of limp
punch lines. Show me a sharp-minded, if
homely, woman willing to laugh at their Jokes
and I'll show you the next Mata Hart.

WILLIAM RUSHER

SCIENCE WORLD

Woes
Of A
Traveler

Altitude
Factor For
Elderly

PARIS — A couple o f weeks In
Western Europe In June are still
among the pleasantest experiences
available to a world-weary Ameri­
can. They ran also be among Ihe
most Interesting, as I shall report In
due course. Meanwhile, however, I
want to share with you some of the
frustrations that ran afflict even the
most cautious traveler.
Arriving In Venice by nlr from
Milan. I discovered thut my main
suitcase had not accompanied me.
Fortiiriutely everything really valu­
able or Irreplaceable whs In the
large briefcase I still gripped In my
right hand’ but e v e ry Item of
clothing I bad brought with me to
Europe, save those uctually on my
track, was In Ihe missing bag.
Fortunutely. Alitalia's lost-andfound department In Venice Is
courteous and efficient, and pro­
mptly reported the loss, plus a
detailed description of the bag. Its
name tags, etc., to BugTrue.
H a g T r a c . 1 w a s t o l d , Is a
worldwide Interline computer In
Atlanta, to which all missing airline
luggage I" reported Every airport Is
also supposed to report all found
luggage promptly to HagTrac. and
the computer busily compares the
descriptions and matchrs them up
w h e re v e r possible (m a k in g In­
telligent allowances for minor varia­
tions).
Meanwhile, back In Venice, I
conservatively bought a three-day
supply of shirts, socks and un­
d erw ear (for which A litalia, of
course, must ultimately pay), and
r e s i g n e d m y s e l f to g e t t i n g
thoroughly tired of the sport Jacket
und slacks In which I had arrived.
T w o und a half days luter. with the
tuig still missing. I left far Stuttgurt
us scheduled, grimly clutching my
briefcase und a plastic shopping bag
containing my new belongings.
In Stuttgart further delay was
Impossible. At u friendly depart­
ment store I bought u dark blue
pill-stripe suit, two dark ties II
needed a Utile variety)), u bell that
fitted Ihe loops In the pants, a
raincoat and a pair o f black shoes.
Oh. yes. and a small suitcase,
appropriate to my nrw status as a
modest property owner.
As for the lost hag. so far BagTrac
hus turned up nothing. For all I
k n o w , th a t m u s t a r d - y e l l o w
Samsonite may already be an object
of fetish worship In some upland
Nigerian village. Or. perhaps my
best custom-tailored suit from Hong
Kong Is adorning a scarecrow In an
Indonesian rice paddy. If so. I hope
It scares Ihe crows.
Bui, I still say: Europe Is worth III

By United Press International
High altitudes seem to make heart
and lung diseases worse, prompting
many people over GO to move to
lower elevations.
Researchers at the University of
Colorado Interviewed 833 people in
high und low altitude towns In the
state and found that the elderiy
were unique In that they moved to
lower altitudes for reasons of poor
health. For four out of five. Ill health
meant heurt and lung diseases.

EDUCATION WORLD

Philosophy For Kids
By Patricia McCormack
UPI Education Editor
COLUMBIA. S C . lU I’l) - The
p ro fes so r this duy asked first
graders what It would be like to
know everything
"A w fu l." a Utile boy sutd.
" W h y ," the professor asked
"Becuuse there would l&gt;e nothing
to wonder about.” the boy said.
Th e exchange took place In a
"philosophy for kids" course at
ItrathwiMMl Hall Episcopal School In
Columbia. S.C. The professor. Hr.
J a m e s Ward of the University of
South Carolina College o f Educa­
tion. nnd an associate. Dr Robert
Mulvuney. a philosophy professor,
are am ong u grow in g band of
ex p erts leaching philosophy In
gradeschool
Philosophy for kids is supposed to
help the kids reason, a skill many
claim should be the fourth "R ."
Research shows It m ay be the
missing link In education und hold
Ihe key to why un awful lot of
Johnnies and Janies can't rend or
add. subtract and multiply better.
T h r curriculum wus pioneered by
M atth ew Llpm an. p rofessor at
Montclair State College In Upper
M o n tc la ir. N.J. T h e C olu m bia
school Is one of 4.000 nationwide
that has udoptrd l.lpmun's curricu­
lum.
T h e m ovem ent he sturted Is
circling the globe. Next month, for
example, an International confer­
ence on philosophy for kids will take
pluce In Copenhagen. Denmark.
Educutors attending will come from
17 nations.
Curriculum m aterials Include
novels written especially for the
course and designed to raise ques­
tions und encourage discussion
about life's Important topics —
e th ic s , m eta p h ysics, a esth lcs.
friendship. Justice, lave, truth.
Klo and Gus. the novel developed
for kids kindergarten to fifth grade,
tells about Klo w ho visits his
gruruiparenls' farm and becomes
friendly with Gus. who lives with
her family not far away. Gus. who

cannot see. helps Klo iH-come aware
of Ihe world as the blind experience
It.
Am ong Ihe contrasting concepts
thut Gus and Klo wonder about are
muke believe and reality, fear and
courage, saying und doing, und
truth and beauty.
As a result of the Intense Interest
shown by Klo and Gus In animals.
In space and time, and in many
other uspects of nature, the book
s e rv e s also as an Introduction to
s c ien ce.

Ih e

rela tio n sh ip

b etw een

language and the world
An evaluation of philosophy for
kids was conducted by researchers
at Educutlonul Testing Service In
Princeton. N.J. When reading and
mathemullcul gains werr compared
III terms of uverage standard scores,
exjiertmentul subjects made a 36
percent larger gain In mathematics
than did control students, and thr
gain In reading was 66 prrerni
larger.
Mulvaney says the subjects cov­
ered In philosophy raise down-toearth questions thut rvery human
bring raises some time In his life.
Included, he suld. are questions
about humun nature, moral respon­
sibility. right und wrong, and Indi­
vidual destiny.
"W e make every effort to have the
class operate us an open dialogue,
without too much dictation by thr
teacher." Ward says.
"A t times the level of operation Is
exciting, even startling."
A third grader recently uskrd:
"Y o u r thoughts 'are' thinking, so
how can you think about thoughts."
And u sixth grader Mild
" A hundred years ago black
people were slaves. Now white
people Just won't live In the same
place with black people. Maybe In
the next century they'll be friends "
Mulvaney said;
"E veryone who hears remarks
like those, und who receives them
with the same sense of awe and
hopefulness that we did. must
c o n c lu d e that p h ilo s o p h y for
children Is un tdru whose time hus
come "

Judith Regenstelner o f tile uni­
versity's Health Sciences Center
Mild th L proportion Is due to more
o ld er people m ovin g to lower
altitudes, while younger ones move
lo high altttltudes
Many of those Interviewed re(Mined that heart and lung problems
Improved once the move to lower
altitudes was made.

Spontaneous abortion deaths
A woman's risk of death after i
miscarriage Is greater In the secoti
three months of pregnancy than a
the first three, with older, black and
unmarried women having a higher
risk of dying than other women.
according lo federal researchers.
Between 1‘ *72 and 1980. the 122
deaths o f mothers after spontaneous
abortion reported lo the Centers for
Disease Control were due primarily
to infection, said Dr Stuart Berman
and his colleagues at the CDC.
The number of such deaths Is
small, and during that time the
number of these complications and
associated deuths has declined, they
suld
Before 1978. Intrauterine devices
contributed to the risk for death, but
since then no lUD-related deaths
have been reported, they said In the
Journal of the American Medical
Association

Test tube cattle
Veterinarians at Kansas State
University have begun producing
test lube cattle so that genetically
similar animals can be used for
research and to In crease the
number of high priced cattle that
can be sired by a prize bull.
Thr researchers treat cows with
fertility drugs so that they produce
eight to 14 eggs at a time. Instead of
)ust one. The super-fertile cows ore
then artificially Inseminated with
the sperm from a prize bull. The
union produces many embryos In­
stead of Just one.
The embryos are then sucked out
ol Hie cow and examined under a
microscope to determine which
ones are normal and likely to
survive. The upprovrd eggs ate then
Implanted Into other cows, where
they grow until birth.

JACK ANDERSON

Army Still Waiting For 'Urgent' Computer
By Jack Anderson
and Joseph Spear

"Roger, lower, the new crystal ashtray Is work•
Ing P E R F E C T L V/"

WASHINGTON - In Ihe appar­
ently endless chronicling of Pentagon waste. It's the $040 toilet
seats. $400 hammers and $600
ushtraya that get the headlines. Leas
sensational, but far more wasteful,
are Ihe unpubllelzed delays and cost
overruns on the Pentagon's bigticket Hems.
O ne o f these Is C A M IS . the
Continental Army Management In­
formation System, on which the
Pentagon has already spent enough
to buy more than 66.000 overpriced,
ashtrays with no discernible results.
After three years of development
1and rxjiendtturrs topping $40 mil­
lion. ihe fancy computer system is
sllll many months and millions of
dollars from even reaching the
drawing board
How important la CAM IS to na­
tional security? An internal memo
from the Army Forces Command

chief of staff put li this way:
"T h e need for CAMIS can be
simply stated. Without It. the Army
ca n n o t p erform the fu n ction s
needed to mobilize the (reserve)
fo r c e : r e d is trib u te p e rs o n n e l,
equipment and materiel by priority,
and prepare units for deployment
within the lime frame demanded by
national strategy."
But for all Its urgency, the CAMIS
project has bogged down In the very
first o f Its prelim inary stages:
figuring out what the computer
system should be able to do when
It's e v e n tu a lly built and p ro ­
grammed.
Our associate Donald Goldberg
obtained hundreds o f pages of
Internal Arm y documents detailing
Ihe project's problems. With the
help of Joe Bumlece. an analyst
with the Project on Military Pro­
cu rem en t. a private w atch d og
group, the story has been pieced
together.

As envisioned four years ago. Ihe
computer system was to cost about
$600 million from start to finish.
Surveying the appalling extrava­
gance to date, sources Involved In
the project now predict glumly that
the ultimate cost la sure to be well
over $1 billion.
In 1962. the Army chose Rehab
Group Inc., a Washington-based
c o m p a n y , to d o t h r b a s i c
"brainstorm ing" for CAMIS under a
S m all Business A dm inistration
"set-uslde." Hut the General Ac­
counting Oil Ice ruled that Rehab
was too big to qualify for the special
small business treatment, so Army
officials gave Rehab a sole-source
contract, arguing that It was the
only firm thal could do the Job.
Arm y attorneys questioned this
reasoning but were Ignored When
other officials Insisted that (hr
project be opened up for competitive
bidding as originally planned, the
brass created a separate computer

|

project — and gave Rehab a solesource contract.
By the spring of 1984. Col. Luther
Crum, then-director of the Army
Automation Management Office,
wrote a memo to the chief of the
Army Reserves charging that the
CAMIS project was out of control.
Detailed plana were "essentially
non-existent." he charged, and even
the amount of money already spent
was Impossible to figure out.
"A d e q u a te controls o v e r the
sole source m ollactor. Kebab, arc
lacking." Crum complained. "T h ey
are in control, rather than being
controlled."
• ru m ’ s recom m endation that
Rehab's contract not be renewed
was Ignored, and the company Is
now In the running for yet another
slice o f the CAMIS pie.
The Arm y's Inspector general is
reportedly Investigating Ihe fiasco
Rehab has declined to discuss the
matter.

I

™
L'
1
iL

c.
j

�SPORTS
Little Man Gets
Big Hit As Ball
Whips Kiwanis
Bjr Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
A little man got a big hit
Wednesday night.
B.J. Osborne, after bunting
through the ball on a safety
squeeze, slapped a single to
center field to drive In ihe
tie-breaking run and Ignite a
three-run outburst as Ball Motor
Line trimmed Kiwanis. 9 ^ . to
take a 1-0 lead In the Junior
Major League City Series at
Chase Park.
Ball Mojpr Line, the secondhalf champion, can wrap up ihe
series tonight al 6 with another
win. Kiw anis. ih e firs t-h a lf
champion, needs a win tonight
lo force a third, winner-lake all
game Friday.
Although Osborne resembles a
sapling among a forest of re­
dwoods on Ihe ballfleld. Ball
Motor Line manager Jim Lucas
said he wasn't surprised that his
4-fooi-5 Inch second baseman
came through with the clutch
hit.
"B J. Is a good hitler." said
Lucas. "H e’ll hi! anybody twice
his size. He’s been hitting the
ball real well lately."
K iw a n is p it c h e r S a m m y
Edwards found lhat out. Carlos
Smith drew a walk lo open the
Inning and was replaced by
speedy T roy Rollins. Rollins
s t o le se co n d but L e o n n rd
Williams fouled ofr a third-strike
bunl attempt lor Ihe tlrst out.
Rollins then swiped third us
Osborne took a called strike.
Lucas then flashed the safely
squeeze. "I Just wanted B.J. to
get the ball on the ground
because Troy Is fast enough to
score If he does." said Luras.
"T h a i was a big run. I figured If
we scored one more, Ronald Cox
could shut them down in Ihe lop
o f ihe seventh."
Osborne, however, missed on
hla bunl uttempl for strike two.
Edwards then eume In with a

m

NCAA
Ponders
Problems

Baseball
fastball and Osborne promptly
deposited It over the second
baseman's head for a single to
score Rollins for a 7-6 lead.
"1 was looking for a curveball
but he (E d w a rd s ) threw* a
fastball." said Osborne. " I Just
tried to make contact."
After his single. Osborne stole
second and moved to third on a
groundout by Kevin Nathan.
Edwards then ran Into control
problems as he walked John
Hendricks and Jlmbo Lucas to
load the bases.
Cox was next. The talented
first baseman-pitcher already
had a pair o f singles and a
double for the evening but with
the bags loaded, there was no
place to put him. Cox picked on
a 1-1 offering and lined It past
the shortstop Into left center for
a double and (wo runs batted In,
He had four for the nlghl.
Ball Motor Line took a 9-6 edge
Into Ihe seventh and with Cox
relieving starter Jlmbo Lucas. It
was like money In Ihe hank. Cox
struck out the heart of Kiwanis'
lineup —
Sammy Edwards.
L e o n a r d R ic h a r d s o n a n d
Bernard Mitchell — to nail down
UML’s firal-gamr victory.
Although Cox and his Bull
M o to r te a m m a te s fin is h e d
strong. Kiwanis and Edwards
dominated the game for four
Innings as they took a 4-1 lead
and Edwards kept the BML
hitters off balance.
Kiwanis snapped the scoreless
lie with a run In Ihe second.
Adrian Rouse singled and stole
second but was cut down trying
lo swipe third on a strong peg by
catcher Kevin Nathan Duck
U ray son restarted the outburst
with a walk, stole second and
went to third when the throw
sailed into center field. Blake

Sam
Cook
HERALD
SPORTS
EDITOR

Cagers Play In FACA Game;
Mull Prepares For Weekend
It's thr lust dance for Seminole County's graduated senior
haskrtball players tonight. Seminole High's Ken Gordon and
James Rouse. Luke Mary High's Darryl Merthle and Lake Howell
High's Efrem Brooks will play In (he District 7 (Seminole,
Orange. Volusia. Osrrolu and Lake counties) All-Slar game
Innight at Valencia Community College.
It's a predominately Five Star Confsrcnce-Mclro Conference
matchup DeLand's Stetson-bound Handy Anderson. Marques
Johnson and Terry Williams Join Seabreeze's Terry White along
wllh Lawrence Anderson from Mainland.
Seminole Community College roach Bill Payne will be among
the Interested spectators. Payne will have three future Raiders
on the floor In Brooks. Orlando Edgewatrr's Darius Gallagher
and Orlando Jones' James Morris, u 6-5 leaper who was Payne's
lusl signer.
The Five Slur-Mclro clash Ups off al 6 p.m.. prior lo the Florida
Athletic Coaches Association's North-South All-Star game at H
p m Tickets arc $3. Toney Mack. Florida's Mr. Basketball from
Brandon, headlines the South squad. Mack, a 6-5 scoring
machine, will plav at Georgia.
While Brooks has cast his lot wllh SCC. Merthle will head
north to Daytona Beach Community College. Rouse and Gordon
are still looking (or offers and may get their last showcase
tonight
Payne bird) dogged Merthle his rnllrr prep career as a Ram hut
Merthle sald'he wanted to get away Irom home, so he opted for
Daytona Beach a la Seminole's Willie Mitchell and Lake Mary's
Fred Miller.
Miller and Mtlchell played supersub roles for coach Ray
Ridenour lasl year us the Scots qualified for Ihe stale
tournament. Ridenour. Ihe Junior college coach of the year, may
have all three M's In the starting lineup next year...
When Bootsle Jackson and her Sun Bank Little Major
Leuguers won Ihe City Series Tuesday night. It marked the
second straight season an American League learn had laken the
crown.
Manager iawrencc Hawkins Adcock Roofing crew took the
title last year which Interrupted a string of four straight years by
National League teams. Poppa Jay's and Sylvester "S lick "
Franklin Jr. won the two previous years while Sid GrlfTtn's First
Federal team won In 1961. W.J. Ward's Railroaders won In
I960 An American League team. Isham Sheffield's Flagship
Bank, took the crown In 1979...
Or Undo Stadium holds Us biggest football weekend Friday
and Saturday. The Renegades host the Los Angeles Express In
iheir season finale Friday nlghl while the Qrst Florida-GeorgU
All-Star Game kicks oil Saturday Uotn kickoits are set for 6 p.m.
Curt Mull, who la headed to GeorgU on a football srholarhip.
will line up at center for the Florida grtdder* Mull was an
all state linemen for the Lake Brantley Patriots.
Apopka's Sammy Smith and Hialeah Miami Lakes' Michael
Tlmpson are two explosive pUyers lo watch for Florida.
It should be Interesting to see who draws better — the preps or
the 'Gades???
Don Reynolds. Lake Mary High School principal. Is looking for
a logo for ihe Seminole Athletic Conference (SAC). Send any
designs lo the Even ing HcruJd. 300 N. French Ave.. Sanford
32771

Hm

a

M M a ta by S p in * Wwb*M1

Kevin Nathan takes a big swing but misses against Kiwanis Wednesday night.
tollnwrd with a groundbull to
first base for the KOI ami a 1-0
lead.
Hall Motor LI nr bounced back
with a nin In the bottom o f the
Inning when Cox bopped an
Infield single, stole second and
moved to third on a throwing
error. He scored on Burnett
Washington's RHI groundnut.
Klwants took control again In
the third. S a m m y Edwards
walkrd and stole second. Rich­
ardson rolled an Kill single
through up the middle when the
second baseman and shortstop
ran together. Mitchell followed

with a single which sent Rich­
ardson to third and himself to
second on the throw. Rouse then
reached on an error by the
second lwiseman which scored
Innh runs for a 4-1 lead.
BML cut the defied to 5-2 In
the fourth. Hendricks walked,
moved to second on a wild pitch
and stole third. Lucas drew
another free pass and Cox
followed with a single to left
center for the run.
In the fifth, Mitchell used some
alert baaerunnlng to push the
Klwanln lead to 5-2. With one
out. the rangy first baseman

bustled a routine single lo center
Into a double. Rouse followed
with a groundball to the second
baseman. Mitchell never even
stutter-stepped around third
base as he romped all the way
home on a groundnut
" l knew they’d bring Cox In to
p ilch sooner or la te r." said
Mitchell. "W e needed lo get all
the runs we could."
F iv e , and la te r atx runs,
though, weren't goin g to be
enough. BML cranked up Us
attack tn the bottom o f the fifth

IK l LITTLE. Pago 7 A

NEW ORLEANS IUI’ 11 - In the
heart of the Crescent City. |ust a
diplom a's throw from scandalscarred Tulane University. I hr
lords of the NCAA have gal hr red
for a special convent Ion on the
precarious state o f collegiate
athletics.
N C AA President John Davis
opened the proceedings W ed­
nesday with much hark and
little bite, painting a grim
portrait of greed and cheating
eroding Inlercollrglale sports,
Today's session o f lhe fifth
s p e c ia l N C A A C o n v e n t io n
features a briefing by John
Ryan, head of Ihe Presidents
Commission, and a three-hour
general round table discussion.
Officials plan to hold a news
conference to discuss the Issues
of gam bling and drugs, two
areas where the NCAA up|M*ars
engulfed by u purple hate.
Davis said thr 12 legislative
proposals lo hr voted upon
Friday by the college and uni­
versity presidents are limited to
Integrity and economics.
The most controversial lin n Is
Proposal 3. which seeks to revise
the N C AA's enforcement pro­
cedure by establishing distinc­
tions betw een " m a jo r ” and
"secondary" violations and In­
stituting specific penalties.
tf the proposal, dubbed the
" d e a th penalty r e s o lu tio n ."
passes, u major violation would
be defined as one lhat provides
an extensive recruiting or com ­
petitive advantage. Minimum
penalties, beginning Sepl. I,
would Include a 2-year proba­
tionary period und elimination of
all expense-paid recruiting visits
lo ihe Institution for one year.
" A ll of us recognize for some
time now there's been concern
ubout Intercollegiate athletics."
said I)uvts
“ Th e Presidents Commission
has catted this meeting to try
und gel our house back In order.
The risk for cheaters simply
hasn't been high enough and
that simply can't go on."

Barnett, G irls Tackle J u n io r N a tio n a l
Frank Barnet I will gel a taste o f things to
come this weekend when he competes In
thr Junior Nallonul Track Meet al Elmhurst.
III.
Burnett, who stayed In Chicago lusl week
aher the International Prep Invitational, will
await the arrival of coaches Ken Hrauman
and Emory Blake, along with four Seminole
High girls team members, who left this
morning for Ihe Chicago suburb
The g irls m a k in g Ihe trip Include
freshmen Shownda Marlin and Dorchelle
Webster and gradualed seniors Glenda Bass
apd Katrina Walker.
Harnett, who will attend Arizona Universi­
ty on a track scholarship, will compete In
the 110 meler high hurdles which will »*• *r&lt;
at college height. The semifinals begin

Spolski
Powers
Astros
EUST1S — There was little
doubt that Andy Spolski was one
of the top power hitters In the
Altamonte Little Leagur Major
Nutlonal Dlvison But Spolski
only got to try out his home run
trot twice during the regular
season.
Spolski sm ashed his third
homer In the league playoff
game with the Dodgers and It
proved to be the winning shot
and the one lhat got the Astros
Into the District 14 Top Team
Tournament.
W ednesday n igh t. Spolski
equalled his regular season
output j o he rifled a pair of home
runs and drove in five runs to
lead Altamonte past Euatis. 5-4,
In Top Team play on Euitls'
home field
While Spolski was the hitting
hero. Chrts Plelcones did the Job
on the mound with excellent
control.
The Astros advance to the
loser's bracket finals against
Oviedo's Angels tonight at 7:30
at the O viedo Little League
complex. Spolski. who lots a
no-hitter (In a losing cause) and a
two-hlttrr thus far tn Top Team
play, will be on the mound for
Altamonte with Marvin "Bubba"
Fore the probable starter for
Oviedo. The winner advances to
the division finals against the
Altamonte American Tigers.

M*tar

Track/Field
Friday afternoon wllh the finals Saturday
afternoon The top two finishers In the finals
will go on lo run for Ihe U.S. Junior National
leant this summer In competition ogulnst
thr Canadian leant
laist week. Barnett Journeyed lo Elmhurst
for the International Prep Invitational where
he went up against arch rival Michael
Tlmpson of lllalcuh Miami Lakrs, For the
first tim e this year, Barnett defeated
Tlmpson as hr took first place wllh a time of
13.5
Tlmpson will not be at this week's meet us
he Is playing In thr Florida-Georgia Football

Greene, Heads-Up Running
Push Orioles Past Maitland

TOC T I A M T O U S N A M I N T
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All-Slar game Saturday In Orlando.
Muitln, the 4A State champion und aiule
record holder In the 880 run. will compete
In thr 800 melera this weekend. Her top
lim e for 880 yards was 2:09.9 al Ihe Golden
South Classic. The natlonul high school
record In Ihe 800 meters Is held by
Olympian Mary Decker SUney al close lo
2 00 llut.
The Seminole High girls mile relay team
which won Ihe slate title in record llm r. will
also compete In Ihe Junior Nationals. Thai
team Include* Bass on the flrsl leg, Martin
on the second. Wehster on Ihe third and
Walkrr anchoring The Lady Seiiilnoles'
mile relay learn has not been beaten this
seusoti und Martin has not hern bealrn. or
pushed. In the 880 run. — C brU F ilt e r

I aa

I
Altamonte broke on lop right
away with with three runs In the
top of the first. Rich Schou led
off wllh single. Mark Plelcones
walked and Spolski followed by
belling a John Lee offering over
the fence In left center for a
three-run homer and a 3-1 Alta­
monte lead.
A pah of fine defensive plays
enabled Altamonte lo get out of a
Jam In the bottom of the first.
Chrts W ym er’ s fine running
catch tn left field was one of the
gems while Jay Kane snared a
long fly ball lo center lo end the
Eustia threat.
Euslls scored once In the
bottom half o f the second but
Altamonte responded with two
runs in the top o f the third. Chrts
Plelcones drew a walk to leadoff
und Spolski followed with a

Ess SPOLSKI. Pags 7A

By Chris Flstcr
Herald Sporta W riter
DELAND - Th r Ovlrdo Or­
ioles made the most o f their four
h it s w ith som e h e a d s up
busrrunnlng and rode the strong
right arm of Alan Greene to a 3-1
victory over Maitland Wednes­
day night In District 14 Senior
Top Team Tournament baseball
at Howe Field.
Oviedo advances to thr Top
Team Division II finals where II
will have to win two games from
Euslls for Ihe title. The flrsl
game Is tonight at 7.30 at the
Oviedo Little League complex
with the second game. If neces­
sary. Friday nlghl also at Ovlrdo.
Greene and Maitland pllchrr
Perry Teague locked up In an
Intense duel with both throwing
no-hlt ball through three In­
nings The Orioles broke up
Teague's no-hltlrr und the shut­
out by scoring three times on
three hits In the top or the fourth
with two of the hits being bunt
singles.
A n In fie ld e r r o r e n a b le d
Greene lo reach safely to start
the rally and. with one out.
Poochle King dropped a drag
hunt down the first base line.
Not only did King beat out the
bunt but Greene alertly went
from find lo third on the play.
King stole second on the first
pitch to H D Pellartn to put
runners on second and third.
Oviedo manager David Austin
then put the squeeze on but
Pellartn missed the attempt.
Greene got a good enough Jump
off third though that the catcher
couldn't slap the tag on him and
the result was a steal of home

Baseball
undu 1-0 Ovlrdo lead
King look third oil the play
and. on thr very next pilch, the
squeeze was on again. Tills llm r
Pellarln did not iii Ihh as hr laid
down a perfect hunt which hr
beat out (or a Im m - till und King
scored for a 2-0 lead
"T h e rxecutkm on llie squeeze
was trem endous thr second
lim e." Austin said, "I guess ihry
weren't looking lor II."
Ron Fahy followed with u
sacrifice hunt to move Prlturln to
second und Bobby Wyatt then
stepped up and drilled u single to
left c e n te r to ch ase h om e
IVHurln for u 3 0 Ovlrdo cush­
ion.
Th e only olher hit o f the
ball game for Ovlrdo was King's
single In the top of the lllth. "W e
till (he ball well but right at
them.'* Austin said. "But we
made the most of what we had."
Maitland scored Its lone run In
the bottom of the sixth.
Bishop's slnglr. which Austin
said went through where the
•rrnnrt haaeman should have
been playing, was the only lilt off
Greene who struck out 10 and
walked three.
''l l c ’a averaged over 2 strike
outs per Inning all year long."
Austin said of Greene. "H e
didn't have hla good stuff lo
night, lie didn’t have lo bear
down that hard. "
Austin said hr will go with
Richard Cobb on the mound
tunlghl

•S X V y A S s s t

�I

4A—Evtninq H«rald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Juno 2ft, ltftJ

BASEBALL ROUNDUP
AM Cm CAM
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Detroit
Button
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nanwo 10 HI. Gato* ST NT
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• I nariioia !aaC*N

Whitson
Shuts Out
Baltimore
United Pros* International

The New York Yankees are
making Earl Weaver wish he
too. trww Hi at, rer ' . a
•l w pnm iw naw nkno
never left his vegetable garden.
341. I —0 Swktot till
tw a i
LaPant Canan (f) at,
k i l n n o w rllll.P x hn a.7l
lar.iA Pat Aaatlf*
5-*n i W-LeF*w 041: l-tw a It*)
After a 2 Vi year retirement.
Watt
HSt-le* tiamaca k m I in
Weaver returned aa manager o f
—
M TA 547 •
O lte g o
M N N -III
IV*
California
14 7k M
■ I 04da - I I I
_
T *4*1 the Baltimore Orioles last Friday
fhn*N
at at aa • 1 1•
WOM
CO in wain Co in
Vdw Camadi III ONw&gt; (A) ad
n 30 534 )W
Xante* City
Ik . IM
PI M P i - 411
and promptly guided his club to
17 77 ITS —
Son Diogo
_____.
LA)ia
r
m
i
—
a
L
A
IN
lo
w
•
raw"
od
P
’larA
W4(1
Oakland
71 13 m
l Y a t Ca ta ra. H w4 Fwa
U n 574 m
Houtton
•
i w c * ta n a - IN * t a H A
three successive victories over
•trwwa ItAI t-ldko (*l)
70 M 431 1
Seettte
" W I » S aw li). twraw 4*1 w «
Cuxlnnotl
n X ItA 4
lay tw tJLNaaa. P , I t l L d r , SC
70 35 43A I ’l
Minnesota
titigw M * - A * u IH I &gt; l-O rtw n
the Milwaukee Brewers.
Let Angol**
» M ■HA 4
ita
W
o
n
arS
tl
OIB1oa- | |l
An n * II).
d ll
H tr -r m a a p
Tene*
TA 31 404 10
Then the Yankees came to
Allan!#
77 it A3) t
man t o - t t n
• t . t ' i l i 1' i t i i III
Sl4iin4l)l R ew tti
k . i y d iw dd — filUVV
*S
Son FrenclKO
TA a 40A 11
town and promptly took some
la d C/aakrA IP ana Gad**
Toront© S, Ml latukaa I
Arm
na.
m
Dnwa
Fw
•
I
n
Co
V
010104 - I I I
Tom' lap! * **&lt; Sam* At- Tan*.
Naw York to, Baltimore 0
luster ofl W eaver s achievement
W W n .t4 .r t A .t .lt t
I n Tot
0 0 0 -1 1 1
Ill
L -B M (All h »a- Oatrot
Oatroil t, Botlort I
k m * Laapa - k t r a f t , h
ii.-. F r ,n t lira 1. C inttnn.ll ]
by sweeping a three-game series.
Swwnan
L
lank
III
an)
Lai.
a &gt;&gt;m a r i l l l . e i l t i a t i l l
C
lavaland
1.
Call
torn
la
0
M
Aw
m
Aaanmr
CO
It
Montreal a, PlttilMirgh )
t e w o d Carr* o-C w on INTI L
The Yankees weren't exactly
Kentae
City
1.
Mmneeote
l
l
i
n
n
c
n
«
to*.
T*
»
N o York I , Chicago 0
-S a a lir it * II li
inoaodi
T a .a k l, SaatlN 4
cordial either. In two of those
Hotrtlon 7. Atlanta )
B a n o a a a - IN I
Chicago (. Oakland 7, 11 Itwiinga
*■* ■
IM M S I - &gt; U l
victories they drubbed Ihe Or­
PMla»5elpAle I. SI LoviiO
R A IN E S G A U G E
01 0401 NT - I r] I
T h u n d e r * O am ai
Mawa
B HIOI - I 111
Lot Ang»k.t I. tan Ot*90 1
ioles 10-0. Including Wednesday
(U. awarto (l|.
Oakland (B f r t u i
111 at Chicago
■ lialtU lA I w a p n *
Haart
ftFna ip aro *W*r
LaaghH Itll afd ftnin* l m
I See » « r 7 4), 7 00 p m
night's triumph.
l i » . a Caw, Id), tartar rtl. tnwr m
TKvrw&gt;. r • O ant.t
la*1
"
*
1
4
1
Jaww
id
*4
'
d
■
Jawn
SA 0
Naw York INIakro 7 11 at Datrolt
ad Par ad I) p *»w rt iatl l - h a n r
Chicago (Fontenot I ] ) at Naw York
"I'm glad w e're leaving, play­
Itl)
l
H
rp
W
T
dD
M
B
*O
w
aaA
fcj
OS
At y q
(M o rrltA i ), 7 ,ll p m
|&gt;4I HI.-nawNc AavnaBIACrdlM
ft amende) I 4). I 35p m
4*gwaa I lUI Chug* t o IN) a w .
.
i
ing like we a re ." said Weaver,
•i/»
Bo.ion (0|ede A II at Toronto (Clone,
PltHSurgh (Rhoden 4 71 at Montreal
( I l l
1 M
*M|
1 4), 7 I t p m
whose club hits the road for nine
iSchaOeder 1 I I, 7 D tp m
P
u
ill
IM M 4 S - IM
Californio IRomankk 7*1) at Claret end
Mow. Ion IKnappar A l l at Atlanta
I
1 games. "People pay their money
G * «!»
P taa*
M M al - I I I
Ita CP o d awgman. On M I r a a N
....
—
O
I
WO
I
I
I
(Waddell
3
4l,7:35p
m
I Malt tar 1011.7 40pm
t] •
DqljCws
rwM. Canw m ad Tapi
DanaOw odhw n k a k
and have to see those games."
Sanaa Oh
04 01 I I I - I t l
Minna iota (Butcher 4AI at Kantat City
Philadelphia (Groat ta t at St Lautt
• 1
IffHf
IN
►ton* ad kata no* a tw in—
i n
Dad ill ad lagn lacuan
ILaibrand tA A l.l U p m
Ed Whitson. 2-6. pitched a
(C o . A 3), I J lp m
&gt;
sgp
*
f
r*$
•
:
*
H
ot
H
a
l| || l-A »e &gt; | tr H U )
Saattta (Young SB) at T a .a t (Mooton 3
as rn
San Frenclwo IGott 141 at San Diego
six-hitter
for his first shutout o f
Oar* VI » N*a*t A* 41. Bnoa F d o
(141.
I
In
*
1
1
4
1
n«ato"
4
1
11,1 11 p . m
IffPl
I H a rt I 4|,w10 I I p m
W. Cwf&lt;
m o a - 111
r* »* Coat
•van III n w City tokaa
the season and Ron Hassey hit a
F iM a r'tO e m a t
m m
a
w
e
*
Laago
«
*
w
i
»&lt;
,
let IdiQlil
M N I to -111
I
I
FfM a r’i Oantat
Clavaland At Oakland, night
pair of homers to spark the
►w a n . * n a d O w n l W O Caaoc
naw** Lanark (71 ad lanaadr
Atlanta at Cincinnati 1. twl nigh*
- » F « a n a m . " i n Sanaa a n inn
Seattle at Kam ai City, night
lawn Haw* IP) ad kaacd • - Awaa
DOadi*
Yankees'triumph.
Mcntraal at N*w York, night
a
o
d
i
M
1
i
t
n
I
d
law
o
w
t
.
o
,
n
tnrpaca
Tta a i At Mlnnekota. night
iHI L-nawmlitn «i-Ln
Inn
OIOSOT- I H
PlttUjurgh at Pniladatpnia night
Hassey led o ff the second and
d a a a l L la* O 1 i fF d i w * V
California at Chicago, night
V I 44
I . a i f • i i I I 11
c a n n r * w&gt; aa Fniaanr a I n a a p
W&gt;a* Aral 141 4d laamr ka*
Cnttago at St. Lout*, night
MeDm VI M l a n CM D tana M* I*
Balllmoro at Mllwaukoo. night
third Innings with home runs,
Sana
aataaa
a
Aaao
ad
actonaat
t*
N
m
in
O
r
ID,
m
fl*
1
1
1
ad
Houtton at Lok Angalat. night
Aaalliu* i i a b v i
Naw York at Dolrott. night
aam iir*
marking the first time In his
lid a w w ll1
I d . «-«oc*llt|. L-NkPIl II
an*van Laapo - h r . C* P
San PrenclKoaf SanOiago. night
l- ltl
ftotton at Toronto, night
career he had two In the same
game.
" I didn't know If the first one
was going to get out." Hassey
said. "Bui I knew I hit the
second one well. Heck, when you
don't hit m any, you don't ever
know for sure."
Giants 3. R eds 2
U nited Prees In tern a tion al
New York Jumped to a 2-0 lead
At San Francisco. Hob Hrrnly ripped a pair of homers
in the first Inning. Rickey Hen­
Now llial Andy Miiwkln»' record hut* been blemished,
and drove In four runs to power Duve LaPoint. 3-6. and
we will nee whether hl» Cinderella season continue* or
the Giants. Scott Garrelts notched his fifth save. Mario derson. who reached base safely
whether he lurtiH into n pumpkin.
14 of-16 limes In the series, and
Soto fell lo 8-6. Pete Rose did not |&gt;lny and still needs
Ken
Griffey opened the game
46
hits
lo
break
T
y
Cobh's
record
o
f
4
.191.
Hie
Dodgers
Jumped
on
him
for
three
hits
In
the
IliiwkliiN loM hid llrnl ijiiinr ol (he taentMiu Wednrnday
with walks. Henderson stole
seventh He was lifted without retiring a batter In the
Expos 4. Pirates 3
nielli idler ehalkhiK up 11 nlriilf(hl wins. Now the
At Montreal, plnch-hltter Jim Wolhford singled in second after his walk and both
Inning.
i|uemion I bin Han Ule^o rluhl li.mdrr. who before thin
Vance Law from third base In Hie bottom ol the eighth runners advanced u base on a
year hud never won more Ihuri eight gumrN. mum
Guerrero hit a 1-0 pilch Into (lit- righl fleld stands lor
lo send Pirates starter Jose DeLeon to his ninth loss in wild pilch by starter Dennis
iiiihwer Is — can helKiunee hack from thlAnelbark?
Ills I-till homer It was Ids 10th home run In his Iasi 15
Martinez. 5-4. Don Mattingly's
I I decisions. Rookie Tim Burke. 3-0. was the winner
The 25-year oltl Hawkins v e in * In think no.
games iirnd made a winner of .Jerry Heuss. 5-5
Uuhie Hriaiks hit a three run homer for Montreal and MLiifice fly scoicd Heiidcison.
"Now It'll over with and I tan settle down .md play
Mill Almon hornered for the Pirates Ttm Raines singled Dave Winfield's single sent Grtf
"I just got beat tonight," said Hawkins, i m not
liancbsll," said 1lawktns after Pedro Guerrero hi: a solo
fey lo third and Scott Bradley
and stole Ids 21st base.
really thut disappointed. I had a streak lluil l probably
homer to break u I-1 tie and highlight a four-run
followed with a single to score
A stro s 7, D r iv e s 3
will never Im- able lo etjunl In my life. It's Just been fun.
Dodger seventh Inning Unit sparked Los Angeles lo a
Al Atlanta. Crulg Reynolds and Jose Cruz homcred Griffey.
I had a good time while It lasted, hut I'll admit It was
5-1 vlclory over the Pudrrs
The Yankees scored four times
lo help Jim- Nlekro to his 197th career victory and lead
awesome." Elsewhere. New York shaded Chicago 1*0,
the Astros, Reynolds hit Ills third homer — all against tn the second. Hassey led oft
"During Hie streak, 1 fell like I was tvln g ttepnniled
San FnmclM-o heat Clnrlmuill 5-2. Monlreal edged
w i t h u h o m e r u n . M ik e
the Braves — off starter Steve Bedroslan. 3 6.
from the rest o f the leant lirt-ause thal's whal everyone
Pittsburgh 4-3. Houston pounded Atlanta 7-3 and
I’agllantlo singled und Bobby
wnntrd lo talk about."
P h illies 1, C ard s O
Philadelphia blanked St. Louts Id).
M cacham a n d H en d erson
At
St.
lands.
Jerry
Koosman,
2-1,
and
Don
Carman
The Padres must hope Hawkins, who Is on a pace to
combined on a five-hitter and G reg Gross drove In the followed with walks to load Ihe
In the Am erican League, li was: Toronto 5,
mulch Denny M eUiln’N 5 1-win season In HIGH, doesn't
gutne's lone run to boost the Phillies over Joaquin buses. Ken D ix o n re lie v e d
Milwaukee 1; New York 10. Ualtlniorc 0; Detroit 9.
tail Inlo u slump similar In one Atlanta's Hlrk Mahler
Andujar. 12-2. and the Cardinals. Th e loss snapped St. Martinez, and G riffey singled to
Moslem 3; Cleveland 2. California O; Kansas City 3.
experienced alter getting olf to a 7 0 sturt. Since (lien.
Louis' five-game winning streak. Koosman notched his score Pagllaru lo. M attingly's
Minnesota 2, Texas 5. Seattle 4; and Chicago R,
Hie Hravrs' right-hander has gone M-5.
second s a c r ific e fly scored
2 1Hih career victory.
Oakland 7 In 12 Innings
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Dodgers Hand Hawkins 1st Loss
N.L. Baseball

Minor Leaguers, Umps
Test In July For Drugs

51,778 See Gooden
Blank Chicago, 1-0
N K W YOKK IUP1I — Dwight Gooden, for all his
hht/lng speed, wants lo be u thinking man's
pitcher.
When he gets In a jam. as he did u couple of
lim es Wednesday nlghl In Hie New York Mels' 1-0
victory over the Chicago Cubs before 51,778 funs.
Gooden (Minders the situation. Then likely as not
lie'll go with the fast hull.
Gooden. 20. fuced his worst predicament In Hie
ninth Inning when hr allowed back-to-back
singles to pinch hitler Keith Moreland and Ryne
Sandberg with no outs.
The Mels' right bunder got Leon Durhum to fly
out lo renter and Itlrhle Hchner to pop out to
shortstop. He ended the guitir by striking nut
Thud tknley.
The strikeout wus Gooden's ninth and raised
Ills mujor league leading total to 125. He also
lowered
rtl hi* ERA to 1.66. another major league
best.
Aland the last Inning, Gooden. 10-3. knew wliat
he had to do.
"Y ou have to let go with everything you've got.
hul you have to think before you pilch I have to
rrudnd myself not 10 Overthrow," said Gooden.
The kry to the game according In Mels
manager Davev Johnson wus gelling Durham to
lly out In the ninth
"T h e liest pilch he threw ul) nlghl was agulnst
Durhum. He tried lo throw him up and In and got
him In hit thut |Mip fly ," said Johnson, who saw
Ids team win Its third sirulght from the Cubs.
Gooden, who ndded u slow curve to his
rc(M*rtolre (Ids season, hi* second In the majors.

NEW YORK HJPli Mujor
league baseball commissioner
Peter Ueberroth released W ed­
nesday the guidelines for the
mandatory drug tesilng program O c t o b e r f o r a l l e f f e c t e d
lor iNUM-hall personnel and an­ personnel.
nounced thut testing w ou ld
A total o f about 4.000 people
begin next month
would t&gt;e covered by Ihe m an­
Ueberroth, who announced Ids datory program. Ueberroth said
plan May 7. Informed baseball the testing would cost nearly
dub owners Tuesday thut all $400,000 this year and Is aimed
personnel, with the exception of at detecting users of cocaine,
mujor league players, would be n rn p h eta m ln c a . m a riju a n a ,
Irstrd In two groups. The first heroin and morphine. The tests
group* tested. In July, will be will be conducted with urine
minor league players and um ­ samples and shipped to two
pires while the second group, to laboratories that have not been
Im* tested In August, will Include Identified. Amphetamines would
m u jo r l e a g u e m a n a g e r s , not be considered Illegal If an
coaches, trainers and umpires, Individual has a legal prescrip­
plus olflce personnel In both the tion.
mujor and minor leagues.
U eberroth em phasized the
Tests — to t&gt;e administered at testing would he random and
major and minor league parks not everyone subject would nec­
and administrative offices — for essarily be tested.
thr first group will continue unlll
Thr program will he run by
thr end o f the minor league Dr. Anthony F. Daly Jr. and Dr,
season In September while the Kim Jasper, both of whom were
second group will Im- subject to aides lo Ueberroth al the 1984
lhr tests through November.
S u m m e r O ly m p ic G a m e s .
For 1986 and all subsequent Ueberroth wus the president o f
yean, tesilng will commence In the Los Angeles Olympic OrMarch and continue though ganlzIngCommltter.

Baseball

Howard Johnson
...RBI grounder

K eith H ernandex
...decisive ru n

has left Nutlonal League hitters wondering.
" In the back of your mind you think o f a
breaking hall and then It's hello to the fast bull,"
said llchner. who struck out twice going O-for-3.
The one bright spot for the Cubs, who have
scored Just three runs In their lust 45 Innings,
was Scott Sanderson.
Sanderson, who fell to 3-2, had missed his last
two starts because o f recurring buck spasm* He
pitched seven Innings, gave up five hits, walked
four and struck out five.
Chicago managed Just six hits off Gooden and
got only one runner. Sandberg In Hie fourth, to
third base.
Th r Mets scored their lone run In the fourth
Krilh Hernandez led off with u wulk and moved to
third on Gary Carter's double to right. With one
out. Clint Hurdle was walked Intentionally and
Hernandez scored when Howard Johnson's slow
grounder to shortstop Chris Spcler could not be
lurncd lor u double play.

27 Wet O nes Later, Duffer Is World's Worst
1‘ONTE V K O R A . Hu. tUIMl - Angelo
Spugnulo Iced up wills trepidation at Hie
lamed I7lh hole on Hir Tournament
IMuyrrs ('nurse — a 132 void, pur-9 lest
$u(rounded bv wnier — und irtvihodl*
rally drove 27 halls Inin the pund.
Finally. In exasperation. Spugnoln
pulled a hall around the goll cart path lo
the green und holed his 68th stroke.
Ills jierformance ranted Hie Fayette
('tty. I’a . duller Ihe title ol Hie Worst
Avid Gollrr lit America,
A lin seven grueling hours of play
Wednesday over the 6.857-yurd. |&gt;ur-72
■Muslde course. Spugnoln 31. curded a
•185 «)vrr-|*ur 257, the worst m w c ol u
lom*4&gt;mr chosen by a gull magazine fur
the contest.
Jack I hi llord, 48. ol Moline. Ill . looked
like Ihe winner alter hr shot a 68 overpar 104 on Hie imni nine mil wound up
In third place with a 208 total, S|&gt;agnolo
shot u 97 on the trout side
Joel Mossei. 43. of Aurora. Colo.,
t aided u 75-117 192. while Kelly lielund.
12. of Tyler. Trxus. shot a 89-90 lor the
day's luw score of 179,
All four duller* received small crystal
trophies. Inscribed: W orst-worst, 1st
worst. 2nd worst. 3rd worst
Spagnolo's accomplishments were not
unupprrelaird. A dozen hillowrr* wear

i

« *%«

Golf
lug "Angelo i* A rm y" T shirts cheered
him on
"T h e 17lh Is a formidable test." PGA
Commissioner Dean Reman observed,
"lip until this point, we have culled It
I’cte Dye's Folly (for Hie course's design
crl I Hunk we ll rename it Angelo's
Alley."
Although he lost five dozen golf balls,
S|kugholo managed to krep his sense of
humor.
"I used lo bowl, but my scores were so
t&gt;ad I took op golf." hr said. "N ow my
golf scores are higher than m y bowling
scores used to be The only advantage
w as I lost less balls bowling "
Ireland w ; the tone for the tourney on
Hie very first stroke of the day. smashing
a 13-fool tee shot that landed In the
second row of Ihe bleachers. Pullurd
toll owed with a 200-yard drive that
sliced to the right and went Into the
woods.
The four men were singled out by Golf
Digest as the worst avid golfer* In
America. They had to meet some rigid
qualification* for the tournament — a
handicap of at lea-.. 36. have ul least

rrusoiuiblr physical ability and play u
minimum ol 21 rounds a year,
"I haven't felt pressure like this, even
as a law yer." said Ireland
" I was doing pretty well until I got lo
(he 15th," sold Mosser. who had the low
score. 75. aflrr nine. "T h a t's when the
wheels begun to come olT "
Mosser carded a 25 on the 426yard
ISlh where he put seven halls In'o the

water.
The four golfers lost a total of 12 dozen
regular gull balls and one bag of 23
driving range balls.

KITE DEFENDS ATLANTA TITLE
A T L A N T A IUPI1 - Defending champi­
on Tom Kite says thr biggest dlf1rren?e
between playing In this week's Atlanta
Golf Classic and last week's U S. Open
will be attitude.
“ Last week, at Oakland Hills, thr
course was so tough, you played lo avoid
loo many bogeys." said Kite. "Herr, at
thr Atlanta Country Club, you have lo be
much more aggressive. You huve to gear
yourself for making birdies."
Kite offer* himself as a case in point. In
last year's Atlanta Classic, he was 19
under par with rounds of 69 67-66-67 to
win by five strokes. Sunday. 1-under was
good enough to win Ihe Open, where
Kite finished 13th

" I think you'll see low scores here
again Hits year," Kite said Wednesday on
(hr eve Of this $500,000 PGA Tour
event, "Probably not a 19 under like I
had last year, but It probably will take 14
or 15 to win.
"W e ll have to change mental geurs
this week, think about shooting 4 or 5
under every day. W e’ll have to be much
more aggressive "
Kile, winner of the Tournament o f
Champions and more than $171,000 so
tar (his year, says he Isn't playing as well
now as he was five or six weeks sgo.
"But. I’m starting to come around
uguln." he said. "1 like my chance*
liecause I like Ihe golf course. I'm putting
and chipping as well as last year, but i
need to start hitting m y Irons closer to
the pin. Lost year when I won here. I did
everything well."
While Kite Is defending champion and
one ot the favorites, the man attracting
the most attention during Wednirsday's
pro-am was slender Tzr-Chung Chen ot
Taiwan who led through most of last
week * Open before suffering s quadru­
ple bogey on the fifth hole in the final
round.

w ith a slnat* to score Henderson,

making ti 8-0
In the third. Hassey led off
with his second homer of the
game und third o f the season.
New York added two more rum
In the sixth on Winfield's eighth
homer. The blast drove In Mat­
tingly. who bud singled, to make
It 9-0
The Yankees added a mn In
the seventh on llrnderson's RBI
single.
Elsewhere, Toronto stopped
Milwaukee 5-1. Kansas City4
edged Minnesota 3-2. Detroit
pounded Boston 9-3. Cleveland
blankrd California 2-0. Texas
beat Seattle 5-4 and Chicago
downed Oakland 8-7 In 12 In­
nings.
Bine Jays S, B rew ers 1
At Milwaukee. George Bell hit
a two-run, triple to highlight a
three-run third Inning that led
the Blue Jays to victory. Jim
Clancy. 3-4. was the winner
while Bill Caudill notched his
loth save. Pete Vuckovtrh. 2-5,
took the loss.
R oyals 3. T w in s 21
At Kansas C ity. Mo., Hal
McRae belted a solo homer In the
eighth Inning lo spark Ihe
Royals Danny Jackson scat­
tered six hits to improve hla
record lo 5-4 while Pete Fllson
fell to 3 4.
T ig e rs B, Red Bos 3
At Detroit. Lou Whitaker and
Kirk Gibson each hit a homer
und drove In three runs lo pace
the Tigers. Walt Terrell raised
his record to 8-2 with an eighthitter Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd.
H-5. absorbed Ihe defeat.
Indiana 2, A n g e ls 0
At Cleveland. Bert Ulylevcn
tossed a three-hitter and George
Vukovlch laced a two-nut. tworun single In the sixth Inning to
lift the Indians. Blyleven Im­
proved to 6 6 with his ALleadlng fourth shutout. Jim
Slalon. 4-5. was the loser.

Rangers S Mariners 4
At Arlington. Texas. Wayne
Tollraon's sixth Inning sacrifice
fly scored Larry Parrish with the
go-ahead run and gave the
Rangers the trium ph. Chris
Welsh. 1-1, pitched 3 1-3 Inning*
In relief to earn his first AL
victory while Frank Wills slid to

2 - 1.

W h ile Box 8, A '# 7
Al Chicago. Rick Langford’s
wild pitch with one out in the
bottom o f th e 12th inning
enabled Ozzle Guillen to score al]
the way from second base and
gave the White Sox the victory.
Dave Kingman hit a pair of
three-run hom er* for the A's
while Carlton Fisk and Greg
Walker homcred for Chicago.

I

�Evtning Herald. Sanford. FI.

SPORTS
INBRIEF
Tucker, Taubensee Blasts Keep
Goldenrod Perfect In District 3
T h e G o ld en ro d E lk s
continued their unbeaten
string Tuesday night with
a 12-4 victory over Pine
Castle In District 3 Big
League baseball action.
T h e Elks, who Improved
to 17-0 for the season, go
fo r num ber 18 tonight
a g a in s t D o n a ve n tu re
L a k es at Azalea Park.
Kevin Llenard will be on
the mound for Goldenrod.
The Lake Howell con­
nection of Todd Hicks and
Damon Marie! te combined
to lim it Pine Castle to Just
th ree hits In the five*
ED T A U B E N 8 E E
Inning (tim e limit) game.
Hicks went the first two
frames and allowed three hits while Marlette threw no-hlt
trail the Iasi three frames.
Chits Davis led Ihr Goldenrod arsenal with two hits, one
a solo homer, and two KBls. Robert Tucker crunched a
three-run homer. Eddie Taubensee. who was the most
valuable ptayer at Lake Howell High this past year,
smacked a solo shot and Scott "Thurm an" Munson went 2
for 4 to raise his hatting average lo an even .500. Dave
Marlette was I for I for the Elks and scored three times.

Tagged Fish Bring $5 On Return
Thousands ol fish have been tagged In a
portion of the St. Johns River bv Florida
Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission
fishery biologists Each tagged fish that Is
caught between June. 1985, and July.
1987. Is worth S5 lo the fisherman who
caught It.
Striped bass black crapple (speckled
perch), largemouth bass, and sunshine bass
have been tagged throughout the river
system from L a k e Monroe n o rth to
Buckman Bridge.
Largemouth bass have generally been
laggrd In the Astor area, speckled perch In
the Welaka and Lake George areas, and
sunshine bass and sniped bass have been
lagged throughout the lower portion o f the
river from Lake Monroe north.
Striped bass lagged in Lake Monroe have
already been caught many miles north at
the Fuller Warren Bridge. Speckled perch
tagged at Lake George have been caught as
far away as Crescent Lake and the spillway
below Hodman Darn.
The tags are orange, yellow, or blue
plastic streamers attached to the sides of the
fish Some fish are double tagged lo lesl for
tag retention Fish wllh double tags do not
warrant double the $5 Incentive.
Everyone ts encouraged to report tagged
fish Persons w ho release tagged fish,
persons who catch fish that are undersized,
and com m ercial fishermen who calch
lagged game fish bid may not keep them
legally are encouraged to clip the lags and
report them too. Everyone who rrporls a
tagged fish Is eligible for ihe $5 cash

Massimino Says No To Nets' Job
VILLANOVA. Pa. (UPI| — Vlllanova basketball coach
Rollle Massimino said Thursday he has decided not to
accept an ofTer to become coach of the New Jersey Nets of
the NBA.
Massimino. whose Wildcats won the N C AA basketball
championship earlier this year, was considered the leading
candidate to replace Stan Albeck. who left the Nels lo
tiecome coach of the Chicago Bulls, but told his team this
m orning that he had decided to remain at Vlllanova.
" I felt at this time It was In the best Interest o f m y family.
Vlllanova University, our players and (longtim e trainer)
Jake Nevln to stay at Vlllanova University." Massimino
said. "It was something very tiring and trying but tins is
what 1fell I had lo do."
A school spokesman said Massimino. who was honored
ul a fund raising "ro a s t" in Philadelphia on Wednesday
night, made his decision lo turn down Ihe Nets' Job
between 3 a.m. and 5 a.m. Thursday.
' Obviously, he was very tired." spokesman Craig Miller
said.
New Jersey Nets president Bernle Mann offered the Job to
Massimino curlier this week and had expressed optimism
he would accept It. Th e Nets had even called a news
conference for this afternoon lo announce his hiring

Breland Knocks Out DeJesus
TOTOW A. N.J. (UPII — Mark Breland, displaying more
right-handed power than In his previous pro fights, scored
two second-round knockdowns Wednesday night and
slopped Dario Dejesus at 2:49 of the round.
Breland, the 1984 Olympic welterweight champion.
Improved to 5-0 with tw o knockouts as a pro. DeJesus fell
lo 14-9-3.
Breland made use o f his height advantage and look
control with his left Jab from Ihe outset. The 6foot-2 New
Yorker chased DeJesus In thr first round and opened a cut
under the Miami boxer's right eye. DeJesus threw few
punches and constantly circled the ring.
A left Jab followed by a straight right pul DeJesus down
near Ihe ropes midway through the second round. He got
up at Ihe count of six. but a Breland Hurry chased DeJesus
across the ring, and a right uppercut sat him down In
Breland's comer. DeJesus rose at right, but referee Larry
Huzzard would not let him continue.

Parker, Astros Sweep Red Sox
W INTER HAVEN — Bob Parker nipped three hits and
scored two runs as the Osceola Astros swept a doubleheader from the Winter Haven Rrd Sox Wednesday to
Increase thetr Central Division lead In the Florida State
League to seven games.
Parker singled and stole a base In the first game aa
Osceola pulled out a 4-3 extra-tnnlng win on Jim O Dell s
base hit. In gume two. live Astros broke loose for four runs
In the top o f the seventh for a 6-4 win.
Parker, who upped hts average lo .280. singled twice.
The Astros host Winter Hsven tonight at 7 :30.
In Southern League baseball Wednesday, the Orlando
Tw ins pulled out an 8-7 victory over Jacksonville at Tinker
T h e O-Twins host Jacksonville again tonight at 7:30.

Continued from 8A
two-run Itomrr to left.
"It was a towering shot over
the lett Held tencr." Altamonte
manager Duke Pic leones said.
“ It was some blast. Andy has
really come through for us with
Ihe chips down."
Eustia scored single runs In
Ihe third and fourth to pull
within 5-3 and the scored again
in the bottom of the sixth. The
IradofT man doubled, took third
on a groundout and scored on a
base hit. With one out. and the
t y i n g ru n on fir s t , C h r is

Plrlroncs struck out the next
batter and got the next one to hit
a grounder back to the mound
for the final out.
Altamonte had Just four hits In
the game with Spolski going 2
for 2 wllh five rtbblrs. The last
two limes he came to bat. bot
times with a runner on base.
S p o ls k i w a s In t e n t io n a lly
walked. S ch ou 's singled and
Chris Pie leones' doubled were
ihe only other hits for Ihe Astros.
"W e played a real good d e­
f e n s iv e g a m e . " m a n a g e r
Pie leones said. "Chrts pitched a
super game. They got eight hits
off him but he didn't walk a
single batter. Eustls got some
nice hits, they're a good hitting
rlub "
— Chris Fists r

W illiam s
H E R ALD FISHING'
HUNTING W RITER

Incentive.
Fishermen reporting lagged fish to one of
Ihe phone numbers listed on the tag will bo
asked lo provide their name, address, and
phone number. An Information sheet will be
mailed to the fisherman. The fisherman
must complete the Information sheet as
accurately as possible and return It along
with the tag prior to receiving ihe S5 cash
Incentive.
The tagging study Is being done s i that
biologists may belter understand move­
ments o f fish populations within the Si.
Johns River and thereby belter manage the
resou rce. K n ow in g w h ere and when
particular fish were caught will provide
inrormallon about transient and resident
fish p o p u la tio n , habitat preferences,
seasonal preferences and patterns, angler
pressure, and the distance fish travel.
A pplications for ihe C am p Hlnndlng
supervised youth hunt are now available
The hunts, scheduled In October, are for
youngsters 15 years of age and under Each

Dell Abemethy. Osteen Bridge Fish Camp
owner, says the rain and heat has curtailed
the fishing somewhat. "W c haven't had a
whole lot of fishermen out here." says Del
Hen Lindsey and hts wtfr arr still catching
tile bltirgills They got 50 or 60 the other
d ay."
Rod Chrlsttnscn. Deltona, had an 8-pound
-l1* -ounce bass,
Th e next Osteen Bridge lluddy Hass
Tournament will Sunday. July 7, Anglers
must enter before 6 p in Saturday. July ti
Dell pays for big buss, first, second, third
and fourth places along with trophies lor
each except (mirth and a case of beer for the
biggest mudfish

Watt Gets Job
Nobody Wants

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Spurs, Coliseum Close To Deal
HAN ANTONIO. Texas (UPII — The San Antonio Spurs
are "aw fully close" to signing a 10-year lease that would
move the NBA club from the city-owned Convention Center
Arena to the county-owned Joe and Harry Freeman
Coliseum.
John Steen Jf.. a director of the Freeman Coliseum
group, said Tuesday while a lease has not been signed, Ihe
Spurs sre close lo m oving to the new arena in time for (he
1986-87 season.
The Spurs have played Irt the downtown city-owned
arena for 12 years since m oving from Dallas In 1973.
" I want to slop short o f saying we have an agreement."
Steen told the San Antonio Light. "But there was a lot of
skepticism about this, and we fell like we should lei people
know that we have made lots of progress. W e do not have
an agreement. But we are awfully close."

Larry

youth must be accompanied by a supervisor
at least 18 vears o f age or older and must
attend a safety meeting prior to the hunt.
The hunt* will be in the designated
ponton of the containment area of the Camp
itamtlng Wildlife Management Area on Oct
5-6 and Oct 12-13. Each hunt will hr
lim ited to 40 hunters Applicants arc
required to have an underage management
area permit. All applications must be
returned by July t. 1985.
Hunters will tie selected by a random
drawing, to tie held at the Commission's
Lake City regional office, on July 5 at 10
a m. Successful candidates Will lie notified
tty mall.
For additional Information or an applica­
tion. contact the Game and Fresh VVAler
Ki«di Commission at 1-800-342-8105 or
Route 7. Box 440. Lake City.

SCOREBOARD

DOGS

...Spolski

Thursday, June 30. lf tS — 7A

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\...Little

Motor within one run.
Washington, who turned In a
strong game defensively at third
base, followed with the second
biggest hit of Ihe night as he
C o n t in u e d fr o m S A
drilled a single up the middle lo
for four runs to take a 6 5 lead. plate two more runs for a 6-5
Osborne started the outburst BML lead
Klwants wasn't dead yet. how­
with a one-out walk Nathan also
walked but Edwards reached ever. In the sixth. Blake reached
back and retired Hendricks on a on an error by the second
baseman, stole second and went
fly ball to left.
Lucas, th ou gh , cracked a to third on a wild throw. Shawn
two-out single up the middle to Roberts then brought the game
scored Osborne and pull BML to a 6 6 deadlock with a sacrifice
within 5-3. Cox followed wllh a fiy lo center field.
That set up the big Inning
double to left center lo chase
home Nathan and Inch Ball decided by Ihr little man

V A N C O U V E R . British C o l­
umbia (UPI) — lu taking the Job
nobody else wanted, Tom Watt
jWVrf.S
will tie landing tIn- (Misltlon he
always desired.
The Vancouver Canucks have
called a news conference today
at which they rrportrdly will
mime Watt, a former Vancouver
assistant and one time National
Hockey League coach o f the
year, os their new head coach.
T h e lo w ly C anucks, w h o
finished the year with the worst
record In thetr 15yrar NHL
history, have lwen looking (or a
coach since firing rookie Hill
l.afiirge 20 games Into the
1984-85 seuson. Former general
tmmuger Harry Neale finished
thr season as coach.
During thetr search for a new
coach and general m anager,
Canuck management was re­
buffed by Winnipeg GM John
Ferguson. Islander roach At
Arbour. Philadelphia vice presi­
dent Keith Allen. Buffalo QM
Scotty Howtiiun and Canadian
Olym pic coach Dave King —
CW-m I ioa DnamM
. mu l AMS Art among others.
;«.» iina t Caanat LaiaN a Onma
In r e c e n t days, h o w e v e r .
SIS
V a n cou ver newspapers have
predicted thr Imminent hiring of
I CAAIfAAA *rtrtM» ASIA! I AMI
I,AMMAN CNVAA CAWa A ISM TmB Watt. The rumors were bolstered
NiaawAaa Illljl A Oma Camaaana lust week when Wutt's agent, At
•a»ui Or lit IS A ASaS CrSM. E a g leson , told re p o rte rs In
CNIWM SIN A MS I aanca CNMSM
A]AAAI. IANaOHN |AA*WA1IS l IAS Toronto thut Canuck m anage­
I r ir s IrAMUS
ment was negotiating.
Wait, currently couch o f Ihr
I. Oam SAANN Dm
BSA I
University of Toronto Blues, left
AAAA* AaaIas Cs Oasm INAN l l-»A
work early Wednesday amt was
Lew M s . tu rn 4 Ian • - I I aaNw
INIS l I aIMs ESW U4aS 4 IAM unavailable for comm ent on
4 ana.I i S awaaaaa ll&gt; rtl ; ■- i f ,
whether he would be appearing
IW N S N s IA I S ’ an 4 Tint * a~a*
at today's news conference.
4m nw N1 NA I O s I M S O l»*l S i n
• If*. »AN* MAf.A'I IBJD II US*
Hut Gib Chapman, the univer­
• s lAAAAA Crt, 144u; l| ISlW
Iawaa Owa|A ISIS tl 4fis Qass* sity's athletic director, said Watt
CMMra * H 14 4s (ISA CNaas had given him no Indication hr
Main 'I 4w0v AN I.'AAMI sis n wus ready to leave Toronto
L(A»AV~« IanmCiAt n s
Cliupman added, however, lie
would lie willing lo release Watt
BO W LING
front hts multi-year contract at
any time because of hts “ years of
service to the university,"
Watt, who was fired from the
I 'N N 'A S M I •» Arts S S SB
Winnipeg Jets In 1983. one year
"&lt;••1mmI
t oraap iura Mirawv wj nut ultrr he won coach o f the year
pmrn I
i m»rm
•itII garaiJ mm i jMfM htmP. honors, h as publicly stated lie
would like to return to the NHL
Irarrat «m Ml (I ira t Vm a
mmm.
Ot OS U and Vancouver bus always lieen
___
one of hts top choices.
miigraa um

" W c need lo be more ag­
g r e s s i v e T h u r s d a y . " s a id
Klwanls manager Jesse Bell.
"T h e liest tram usually wins and
they were Ihe best tram tonight.
We ll play better Thursday."
Bell said hr was undecided on
whom he would pitch In the
second game, Lucas, neverthe­
less. said he had no decision.
" W e ’ll go with Ronald C ox." he
said about hts ace right-hander.
"H e should close tl out for us.“
Jlm bo Lucas pitched the first
six Innings to pick up Wednrs
d a y 's win The cu rveballin g
right-hander struck out four and

walked three. Edwards went the
distance and was the loser He
stiuck out eight hut walked
right, fixi.
"Sam m y did a real good Job."
said Lucas. "But he lias a
tendency lo show some wear
and trar In Ihe fifth or sixth
Inning. That’s when wc got lo
him ”
Cox finished Ihe night with a 4
lor 4 performance which In­
cluded four RBI. Washington
d ro v e In th ree ru n s. C o x ,
Hendricks and Rollins each stole
two bases. Richardson. Rouse
lilake and Roberts picked up one
RBlearh for Klwanls

Desigued and engineered ior a
smooth ride and long mileage
LUesaver XLM’ whitewall
DmPm
m

—

GENERAL
ADMISSION
a
y

(ADMIT TWO)

MAI MON WHLISAT 100
FA MON-SAT 745

Elegant Dining In our Chief Oscsola Ttrrscs Clubhouse
For Dinner Reservations Call. 699-4510
our m toob
A W M [0 HAiTLVC M10 0**M
to IASI TO 1/e JMtMSOurn
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A O K TIRE M A R J

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SAXIOHO •

4*' *

[

�I A — Evening Hor*W, Sanford, FI.

...County
Continued from p i f e 1A
officer**. four correction* guard*,
and four bailiffs Earlier In the
w rek he got approval for four
c orrection* officers (to bring the
total to right to beef up the fall
stuff), two clerk-typists, two
communication specialists and a
cook.
Polk wan also able to get raise*
for school crossing guards, up
Irorn t i per hour to 98. In
rrcommrndlng more money for
the crossing guards, hr said they
do not want to drive from one
end o f the county to the other for
an hour's work when the pay Is
no low. Guards work about two
hours per day, he said.
Streetman, pushing for ap­
proval o f the raises for the
c r o s s in g guards, s a id that
mothers who held no other Jobs
used to do the work, but now
most mother* urc working at
full-time Jobs outside the home.
The battle over whether the
courtly should hire u properly
acquisition coordinator ended
alter .Sellers and County Ad­
m inistrator Ken H ooper em ­
phasized that road construction
and road Improvement projects
are being held up because the
county has no one to push the
a c q u is itio n o f p ro p e rty for
rights-of-way.
W h ile the c o m m is s io n e rs
agreed to authorize ih r hiring of
t h e p r o p e r l y u c q u I s U lo n
coordin ator, the m ajority —
Kirch hoi I. Mrs, Glenn and Mrs.
Christensen — refused to in­
clude Ihe new employee In Ms
Clayton's domain. They decided
lo place thal person directly
under Hooper's control.
Ms. Clayton. In a second apprarnnee before ihe commission,
had a little better luck In gaining
new money for her department
I bun she had earlier I his week.
Hut she got no additional staff.

...Travel

Tfwrwiby, Juno M, i n i

Her request for a third assis­
tant county attorney was denied.
While she had asked for more
than 16.000 In federal law books
and book cases, the was granted
92.500. Her request for a desk
top c o p i e r at 9 3 .0 0 0 w a s
approved.

C ontinu ed from page 1A

As far as the property acquisi­
tion coordinator was concerned,
she told commissioners she In­
cluded that Item in her budget at
Hooper's request. While that Job
had been handled to a degiee by
the para-legal In her office, Roger
Volghl. she said thal now Volghl
will he Spending lime on updat­
ing the county cotie.
Meanwhile. Klrchhoff. In a
second session with Sellers,
demanded to see what road
projects were Included in Ihe
public works department budget
for Ihe new year and how much
had been approved for new
roads. A lengthy report was
given on various pro|erts.
Sellers said 91,3 million was
approved, the same amount as
last year. Kirch huff suggested
that sum be raised to 92 million
with Sellers lo recommend today
new projects to be built with the
money.
Klrchhofrs colleagues agreed
The commissioners also told
Sellers to consider which roads
might be put out for bid by road
paving companies. Sellers said
by using private Industry the
county would get less roads for
their money. But commissioners
said they want road projects
completed more rapidly than In
the past.
The surprise of the day came
during the afternoon session,
when Mrs. Glenn, after lunching
with Price, endorsed his pro­
p o s a l to h ir e n in e n e w
employees and retain a consult­
ing firm lo work solely on
preparing a new comprehensive
land use plan.

A R E A DEATHS
OBOROEC. REEVES

ELMA A. STUBBLEFIELD

Elina A. Stubblefield. 02. of
George C. Reeves, 102, o f 201
Sunset Drive. Casselberry, died 480 E. Church Avc. Longwood.
Tuesday at Florida Hospital- died Tuesday at South Seminole
Altamonte Springs. Horn Nov. C u m tn u n 11 y H o s p i t a l .
27. 1882 In Akron. Ohio, he Lottgwood. Horn April 4. 1803 In
moved to Casselberry from Ohio Cokesbury. S.C., she m oved to
*,tn 1056. He was u retired sale* UmgwiMMl from Hradcnton In
'.promotion executive and a t’ re- 1UH4. She was a retired teacher
' nhytrrtun. He was n tna*on, a and a member ot First United
.memt&gt;er nt Scottish Rite Bodies Methodist Church. Sarasota. She
wa&gt; a member ut Nation Retired
2 n d Bahia Shrtne Temple,
* lie is survived by ti stepson, Teacher* Association.
She is survived by u daughter.
fV irr OeWlllt. Casselberry; als. irr. Olive Hoomerslilre. Warren, Mr*. Marlon OH*. Altam onte
ipitto.
Springs; brother. Paul ti. Agnew.
« C arry Hand Ouardlan Chapel Orangeburg, S.C.i four grand­
daughters.
; t* In charge of arrangements.
G rn m k o w -G a ln ea F u n e ru l
ISABEL E. PEARSALL
Isabel E. Pearsall. 02. o f 421 Home Is In charge o f urrungr'.Scott A v e ,, Su n d ford, d ied mrnts.
EUOENEROUSE
Tursaday at Sanford Nursing
Mr. Eugene Rouse. 08. o f 335
and Convalescent Center. Horn
March 20. 1893 lit Nrw Jersey, Chlnuberry St., Oviedo, died
she m oved lo Sunford from T h u rsd a y at the L ife C are
i Ridgewood, N. J in 1000. She Center. Altamonte Springs. Horn
was u homemaker and a Protes­ April 1. 1017 In Oviedo, hr wus u
lifelong resident. Hr was a W W II
tant,
She Is su rvived b y three veteran and a Protestant.
He Is survived hy his wife,
grandchildren.
lirlsa o n Guardian Funeru l Delores; u stepson. Henry Jones.
Horne In charge of arra n ge­ Altamonte Springs; two step­
daughters. Shirley Allen and
ments.
RUBY "BROWNIE'* E. BROWN Rose Cantrell, both of Altamonte
Ruby "B row n ie" E. Drown. 87. Springs; 11 grandchildren und
of 2521 Narclsaus Avc.. Sanford, nine grrut-grundchtldrrn.
Wllsan-Elchelbergrr Mortuary
died Tuesday ut borne. Horn
July 15. 1807 In Ubly. Mich., Is In charge o f funeral arrange­
she m oved to Sanford from Port ments.
CARRIE B. SMALL
Huron, Mlrh. tn 1950. She warn a
Mrs. Carrie B. Small. 85. of
homemaker and a Proleatant.
10ID Avocado Avr,, Sanford,
She Is survived by a brother.
Milton T. Morgan, and a sister, dltd Monday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford. Born
Zulla Kelly, troth of Sanford.
UrUt.no G u aidlsn Fu n eral Sept. 0. 1800 In Ocala, she was u
Home In charge of arrunite- resident of Sanford for more
than GO years. She w aa a
menta.
homemaker und u member of
JABON ANOELO CUEVAS
Jason Angrlo Cuevas, 4. of Allen Chapel. A.M.E. Church.
Survivors Include two sisters.
280 Jungle Road N,. Oviedo,
died Monday ut Orlando Re­ Alice B. Small, Sanford, and
gional Medleul Center following Cora Lee Mickens. Ocala.
Wllson-Elchelberger Mortuary
u truffle accident. Hr wus born In
O rlu n d o and u m em b e r o f In charge of arrangements.
liurvesl Tim e Ministries.
He Is survlvrd by bis father.
Rotrert O., New Mexico; mother, Funeral Nolle**
Teresa, Geneva sister, Am ir,
Geneva, paternal grandparents, SHOWN, R U B Y " M O W H I l "
tunarol u i . K t l tor Hub*
Robert and Toni. A ltam onte *-G r t v t t ld oI r mm,
V . ol 1U1 Nartlitu* A .* .
Springs
lontora. wn• M
Tuottay. •Ill bo ol IS • m
B ald w in - Fairchild F u n eral Fnday ol Oaklawn Momoriol Fork with tho
So* Loo F King affiliating Friondi may
Home Is In churge of arrange­ coll
Horn 11 p m l u l l ) ot Oio luno*ol homo
ments.
Arrongomontt by i f Inon Funorol Homo, a

MARY S. GREEN
Mary S. Green. 70. Durango
Way. Altamonte Springs, died
Wednesday at Florida Hospi­
tal Orlando Horn Feb. 28. 1015
In Georgia, she moved to Alta­
m o n t e S p r in g s fr o m N e w
Smyrna Beach In 1055. She was
a retired nurse'salde.
She Is survived hy a brother,
W illie J. Starling. Altam onte
Springs, two slslrrs. Lillie May
Cowart. Valdosta, tia. and Ruby
Smith. Orlando

Funeral arrange men la are be­
ing h a n d le d by B a ld w in Fairchild Funeral Home.

Guardian rhapal
IU 0 IN IR O U tl
-Funo col torvlcot tor Cugono Row«o. td. of
M Chmaborry } l , O r — On -h o died Th ort
boy. *111 bo hold S p m Friday ol tho
W'lton CIchoRargor chopol. 1110 Find Aim ,
iontord *lfh Ifio Ro* O W W llliam i of
fHloling Visiting hour* oco I I p m today ol
fho chopol Burial will bo In Rotilawn
Comotor y foflaalng tho lunar ol Wilton
I 'Cholborgar Mortuary In chorgo

CARRIRR SMALL
-F y n o ro l torokat lor M rt Corrlo 8 (m oll.
S i ot 1*1* Avocado A v o . laniard. Who O x )
Monday, pill bo hold at I p m Saturday ol
Allan Chopol. A M 8 Church. IIS ] Olivo
A rt U nlord. » i m poilor Jrhn H Woodard
officiating V t u t a i g o r o » * p m Friday
ol lha chopol Burial In RtT'iatm Camotory
lo-lowing Mia funeral Wilton 8 Kholborgor
Mortuary M chorgo ol orrongomonh

H o w e nt hot A ll r tr a U o m T "

( t f a ilin a

f l b u i i t 'j
323-1204

• %

At for other travelers. Mary
Agrela. who books flights for
Sun Travel o f Sanford, said. "W e
have no one going over to the
Middle East right now. But we
have people who say they are
concerned about becoming hos­
tages while traveling elsewhere
(outside the U.S.)“
Marty Dillon. ofTIce manager of
Klassen Travel tn Sanford, said
Ihe agency has no trip* booked
to the Middle East until Ihe fall
and none o f those flights have
been canceled.
"Hut It wouldn't surprise me If
they are." she said, adding that
she has heard other travel
agents say some of their cus­
tomers have canceled Middle
East tours.
She said the agency has not
formed a policy about travel to
Athens but said. "If anyone is
reluctant w e aren't going to
encourage them tn go On the
other hand tf they want to go, we
can't slop th em ."
Ann Prtso*. who owns, along
with her husband, a chain ol
travel a g e n c ie s In Sem inole

County, said there have not been
any canceled flights to Athens or
the Middle East with their
company. Tours to the region
represent about 20 percent of
their business, she said.
Mrs Petso*. o f Greek extrac­
tion. said. " I think the media I*
blowing It out o f proportion."
Her d a u gh te r. M ell**a. left
Monday to honeymoon with her
new husband In Athens, she
said.
She said President Reagan's
warnings abou t the Athens
airport was more of a "boycott"
and thal could hurt America's
relations with other countries In
the region.
However. Mrs. Petsos said, on
some of her previous trips to the
Athens, she had noticed the
airport had "te rrib le " security.
Hut. she said. " I don't think I d
be afraid to go again. If It * your
time fro die) It's your time."
Elsewhere In Ihe country,
travel agents are anticipating the
cancellation o f some overseas
vacation plans In Ihe wake of the
TW A hijacking, hul they say
many U.S. tourists arc ignoring
the plight o f R igh t 847 with an
"It can't happen to me” attitude
Security aboard most aircraft

T h e P &amp; Z b o a r d Is a l s o
expected tonight to take up the
following projects:

...P&amp;Z
Continued from page 1A
pre-cast c o n c r e t e w h ic h
NcderhofT said Is cheaper to use
than regular concrete.
The cost o f the project could
range between 910.8 million and
912 m illion. Nederhoff said.
That's about 9)0.698 per bed.
he said, "and that's extremely
low" as far as Jails go.
Bids lor const ruction of the
project are already In and the
Seminole County Comm'sslcn Is
expected to pick n contractor lo
July, hr said.
The Jail addition ts being paid
for wl lh revenu es from the
onc-cent Increase In the sales tax
Seminole County voters
upproved In November.

• A request by Crestvlew
Developers to build s mobile
home sales business at 4165
Orlando Drive.
• A request by Ted and Selma
Williams to build a new and
used car dealership at 210 E.
25th SI.
• An addition (o Jim Lash
Blur Hook Cars at 4114 Orlando
Drive.
• An addition to Hamburger
Station. 2555 French Ave.

and at moat airports serving
Europe and the Middle East Is
tig h t, e s p e c ia lly fo r terrorconscious Israel and Its state
airline. El AL

But Hans Nle-Vrer o f Ameri­
can Express In Washington.
Nonetheless. San Francisco- D.C., said. "You have the old
based American Gulf Travel, attitude, 'll can't happen to me,'
which specializes In trips to the that keeps a lot o f them going."
Many other travel agents were
Holy Land, received numerous
calls from concerned patrons taking a wait and see attitude.
Salt Lake Ctty travel agent
Monday.
D o lo r e s B u ckley p re d icted .
” 1 have a couple of groups
"Business people will still go to
going to the Holy Land this
the area, but the leisure people
week." manager Sayed El Gabry
who want to go to Greece and
said. "They called me Friday
the eastern end o f the Mediter­
and Saturday and I tried to calm
ranean will likely postpone their
them down. Believe me. they
trips or reschedule lo some­
will call today to cancel.”
where else."
" I have a lre a d y tost two
Underscoring that view. Iowa
nights' sleep because of this." he Gov. Terry Branstad planned to
said. "It's a nightmare for the go ahead with a 35-member
travel Industry. Most of my trade mission to Israel. Egypt.
customers are older, retired peo­ Italy and West Germany.
ple who want to see the Holy
"T h e State Department has
Land. There la no way I can assured us It Is safe for me and
reassure them n ow ."
the other members o f the delega­
In Los Angeles. Sldon Travel tion to travel." Branstad said.
a n d T o u r is m , w h ic h a ls o " W e feel very confident that we
specializes tn the Middle East. will be safe."

...PMS
Continued from page IA
minutes before announcing their
verdict.
While the Jury found Miss Pltl
guilty of Intending to harm the
only person she said she knew
was in ihe vehicle — her former
boyfriend — they found her not
guilty of Identical charges In­
volving the passengers appar­
ently because they believed she
did not Intend to harm the
passengers.
The Jurors reportedly declined

Bob’s Antiques &amp;
* Used Fu rn itu re
AM C0BFMS9M - 9CMUMTM
M 1T0CK _________

• An addition to the Village
Inn restaurant. 2565 French
Ave.

You Won't Walk Away Empty
Handed. If You Don't Like
O u r Price We W ill Negotiate

• An a d d i t i o n to t h e
Slenstrom building. 2553-2565
Park Drive.

3 2 3 -2 1 5 0

— Rick Brunson

said the hijacking resulted tn 10
to 15 cancellations from people
planning to fly to Beirut.

M«y. 17 92 Bo,
Sanford, Flo.

Hr* M S 10 8
Sun. 10 8

to discuss their deliberations and
by Liw have the option not to
discuss their deliberations.
During the trial, the Jurors
heard a doctor testify on the
phenom ena of prem enstrual
stress syndrome, said to bring
on a capricious emotional stale
through hormonal changes prior
to the onset of menstratlon.
The cause Is not know, Us
documentation subjective, and
its treatment e x p e r im e n ta l,
according to testimony.
Miss Pltl is facin g similar
charges in Volusia County, ac­
cording to state prosecutor Kurt
Erlenbach.

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Or, you can have a Whtt-Wise contractor install one when

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So call o u r 24-hour toll free num ber for yo u r free
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Ask about o u r other CashBack incentives, to o From
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Call right n o w 1-800-821-7700.

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�PEOPLE
Extension Agent
Earns Promotion

•taraM Ste*M fey T m r n r Vincent

M arlise T o rra n c e O verby is greeted at the SHS 50th class
reunion b y Ja c k Kanner. S ixty four classmates and guests
attended the celebration.

Th e SHS 50th reunion com m ittee Included, from left: Dot
Powell, Billy V lhlen, Katherine V e rn a y M ille r and Helen
Ceresoll Constantine.

SHS 50th Reunion
...A n Evening To Be Remembered
The 1935 graduating class of Seminole
High School held Its 50th class reunion nt
the Sky port Restaurant on June H with
"much gaiety and reminiscing." accord­
ing to Margaret Ganas. "T h e committee
did a superb Job of gathering classmates
from New York. Virginia. Maryland.
North Carolina. South Carol rut. Georgia
and Florida. Sanford, laikr Mary. Winter
Park. O rlan do. Tam pa. Pl ant C ity.
Sarasota . New Sm yrn a Beach.
Jacksonville. New Port Hlrhey. Ponce
D rL ro n , D u n ed in , St
P e te rs b u rg ,
Hollywood. Holly Hill and Deltona." s h e

added.
Dot Powell. Katherine Vernay Miller.
Helen Cerrsoll Constantine. Billy Vlhlen
and Jack Kanner formed the committee
who spent many hours o f detective work
and telephoning on this labor of love,
resulting In the attendance of 61. tn
' hiding Honored Class Sponsor. Mrs.
Klt/alx-th Shoemaker Lynch. Mrs. Ganas
said.
Mrs Frank (Helen Vcrnayl Chase, the
other class s|xm»or, was unable to attend
due lu celebrating her golden wedding
anniversary In North Carolina. The entire

class o f 1985 was Invited to that wedding.
Mrs. Ganas said.
The cocktail hour began at 7 p in. with
dinner at 8 from a bountiful bullet.
Champagne was furnished by George
McRory of Ashton. MD. Vlhlen served as
M.C. and after the welcome and invoca­
tion everyone settled down to an evening
to be remembered with no speeches
regarding grandchildren.
Tim e flew as had the 50 ycurs and
I k - fore leaving many expressed the desire
of gelling together again tn five years.
Mrs. Ganas said.

Prisoner Desires To Benefit
Mankind While Serving Time
D E A R A D B T.t I urn a
54-year-old man who Is Just
beginning to serve u SO-yeur
prison sentence. There Is abso­
lutely no chance o f my being
released earlier, hence I ant
resigned to the fate of having to
die tn prison.
Why must 1 be compelled to go
on suffering the dc human twit ton
ottering yoursell as u numait
of prison confinement until I
guinea pig 1 have heard o f some
die? is Ihcrr any way 1 can
pr i s one r s v o l u n t e e r i n g for
volunteer to be a "guinea pig" to
non- l i f e- t hr eat eni ng e x p e r i­
advance medical science In Us
ments But to nty knowledge,
search for a cure for AIDS or
human sacrifices arc not ac­
cancer?
cepted
to further medical re­
Although 1 am not a homosex­
search.
ual. 1 do not hale my fellow
You see in to be an Intelligent,
human beings for being human.
Any assistance you can render w ell-intentioned person. Ask
In this matter would be greatly your prison chaplain how you
appreciated. Perhups by my can make a contribution to your
death 1 w ill be able to a c­ frllowman while In prison.
complish that which 1 failed so
DEAR ABBY: Recently
miserably to do in my 54 years
Disgusted" com plained that
o f Ufe. Thank you.
NO. 18631-008 she had discovered a peephole
on the wall of a I .dies' rest room
DE A R NO. 18831- 0061 at a gas station. You advised her
Sorry, there Is no way you can to write to the consumer rela
escape serving your sentence by tlons departm ent o f the oil

Dear
Abby

company that owns (or leases)
the gas station. Your advice was
sound but limited.
In Delaware, people are en­
titled by law lo privacy when
they are using the bathroom.
Anyone who Installs In any
private place, without the con­
sent of the person entitled to
privacy, a device for observing
events In the private place or
anyone who uses such a device
Is guilty of a misdemeanor,
which Is punishable by up to two
years In prison. I believe lh.1 a
Iter p hole Is a device and that u
rest room, public or privately
owned. Is a private place for
purposes of Delaware s law.
Other states may have similar
laws.
Anyone who Is victimized by a
creep using a peephole ought to
contact the police. U that does
not work, she might consider
contacting her attorney. I un
derstand that there have been
large verdict* awarded agalsnl
pe opl e who ha v e Invaded
wom en’s rights to privacy In rest
rooms and dressing rooms.

G A IN E SV ILLE Sem inole
County Extension Agent
Uarhara Hughes has been pro­
moted to Extension Agent II.
according to Dr Peter Warnock.
district extension director In
Central Florida.
As an extension agent. Ms.
Hughes Is a faculty member of
the University of Florida's In­
stitute o f Food and Agricultural
Sciences (IFAS).
Ms. Hughes, working in all
aspects o f home economics from
human nutrlllon to resource
management and human and
f a mi l y d e v e lo p m e n t, Is r e ­
cognized for her leadership In
adult hom e econ om ics p ro ­
gramming and 4-H youth devel­
opment work.
Ms. Hughes, who cam e to
Seminole County In September
1980. holds a bachelor's degree
from Texas Tech University and
a master's degree In home ccon o m l c i ed u c a tio n from
Oklahoma State University.
Saying that she enjoys her
work In Seminole County with

B arbara Hughes
adults, as wrll as youth, Ms
Hughes also says stir likes all
aspects of teaching. "I love to
leach." shr said
Ms Hughes makes her home
In Sanford,

Sharon Logan Graduates From UNC
A Sharon Logan was among
1.956 persons to receive degrees
from the University of North
Carolina at Greensboro during
the Institution's 93rd annual
r o m m r i u r m r nt In t h e

Grrrnslmro Coliseum
Miss Logan of Greensboro.
N.C.. an English and history
major, received a bachelor of
arls degree. She Is ihc daughter
ol Harvey Logan ol Dcltary.

CARPENTERS SHOP

■ ‘ /V

a

COFFEE HOUSE

PLACE: SANFORD

CIVIC CENTER
DATE. JU N E 2 2 ,- SATURDAY
TIME ••

8 00 PH

at fillin g stations. Is taking you
fo r a ride.

Holes In the walls o f such
places? Sure. Holes left by van­
dals who have ripped toilet
paper holders and soap fixtures
off thr walls. A peek Inlo any of
these would give a nice view of a
cinder block or the backside of
aluminum siding
In my view this Is one of the
most ridiculous letters you have
ever published. I drive up and
down the East Coast with some
frequency, and find attendants

much

too

busy

to

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glue

Ihcmsclves to some peephole. I
see public facilities wrecked by
vandals. I don't see peepholes.
Vandalism Is a subject much
t - ’ ler* addressed, and It Is not
confined lo filling stations.
Take to the road sometime.
Abby. and you'll find that tollcl
paper In public rest rooms Is u
rare occurrence. The vandals
have gone off with that, too,
I suspect you're being a bit
naive here. Abby But I love you
all the same

Vacation Favorites!

1/3 O F F
• S L A C K S • S H O R T S • S W IM S U IT S • S U N D R E S S E S

ON THE ROAD

CH AR LM M. OBERLY 111,
ATTORN* Y OENERAL
DEAR MR. OBERLY: Bravo
for Delaware. But how about
equal rights for men? Or aren't
men entitled to as much privacy
as women?
DEAR ABBY i I think "D is­
gusted." who finds "peepholes"

Ease into a

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�J»—Ivanlng Marald, laniard. FI-

B L O N O IE

Thursday, Jung 10. IMS

by Chic Young

WV COCTOQ S ( f N
V H If 1 W N 7 S T O P :
s a o r/ UP T O I
ON O C T T

by Art Sansom

T H E B O R N LOSER

Childproofing House
Can Help Save Lives

u

D

1C

DEAR DR G O T T - Yesterday activity, but I mention It to
I took my S-year-old son to the Illustrate the corollary: by Ig­
hospital to havr hla stomach noring non patiem ed sensations,
pumped He ate a whole bottle of you can block out an enormous library? Every time I go to do
my thyroid pills, which I had amount o f nervou s "s ta tic " research there, t start to sneeze. 1
stored In the top kitchen cabinet. produced by our complicated love to read books, and this
The little devil climbed right up nerve systems. Life becomes doesn't happen at the bookstore.
— | wouldn't have believed that simpler and more enjoyable. What can It be?
DEAR READER - Dust.
he could do It. Please warn your Naturally, any persistent hurt
may Indicate an abnormality
readers of this kind of danger.
Send your questions to Dr.
DEAR READER — Poisoning thid should be checked out.
DEAR DR- G O TT Is It Gott at P.O. Box 91428. Cleve­
and accidents are the No. 1
killers of children. Any family possible that I am allergic to the land. Ohio 44101.
with preschoolers must take
Anawar to Previous Pustlo
m eticu lou s c a r e to protect
7 flower holder
ACROSS
youngsters. Although medicine
6 River in Greece
cabinets are a prime source of
1 Aixn country
9 Airplane apace
trouble — and should be locked
S SuBP'tll
10
Perk.
— other areas in the house are
London
dangerous, too. Cleaning agents, 11 M u m
13 Carriage
12 Italian
s o l v e n t s — In f a c t , a n y
hydrocarbon compounds — can 14 TiO|«n horo
commune
be lethal. Chemicals of almost 15 Qroup o* livo
13 Cleavo
any sort, particularly lye, can 16 HouMtold
16 Low degree
ha v e t r a g i c r e s u l t s w h e n
animal
20 OtMtM
children who attrmpt to swallow 17 R f » J l » 4
Carrying fly
them.
19 Broka braed
21 Man (Spl
Go through your house like a 20 Pranar shawl
22 Young lady (Fr_
child — on your hands and
22 Fronch woman
□□□□
-9hH
knees. If you must — to Identify
abbr |
(abOrl
M w
1
s
s
sou rces o f po i s o n i n g . U se
23 Paroon'i
I
E LLLl
childproof latches on all cabi­ 25 German
manner
46 English
36 Full of (suit |
nets. Put t i ght l y stoppered
24
Outer (prof |
statesman
37 Old Thai monay
cleaning materials well out of 26 Court cry
47 Layer of eye
40 Afterward
27 Old time
reach Use childproof caps on all 30 Parttaos
48 Bold
41 Void!
26 Vitality
medicine, aspirin and vitamins 31 Birthmark
50 Actress
42 Nudge
Included. K eep parti cul arl y 32 Latvian
29 Quito
Gardner
43 River in the
(Kilsonous medicines In a locked 33 Arm (Fr|
35 laaa
52 Mao ___
Congo
box.
lung
44 Flippant
adulterated
34 Adam'a
DEAR DR. G O TT Why do
grandson
?
10
•
•
•
4
%
1
t
1
various parts o f my body hurt for
a very short time? I have heard 35 Kama
T i l
11
11
that this Is caused by nerve 36 Kind of income
endings. Will this continue, and 39 Hard tafind
11
14
what Is the treatment? I never 42 Bread ol dog
It
1?
heard of this until I saw my 45 Genua of palma It
doctor last month.
46 Voung dog
DEAR READER — Various 49 Partain
aches, pains and hurts are 51 lively
&gt;1
It
1*
If
12 21 14
normal for most healthy adults. 53 Musical movie
IO
If the transitory discomforts you
54 Gloss
feel have no predictable pattern,
11
you are probably better o ff 55 fortek)sa
ignoring them. There are webs $6 Of age (LaL.
&gt;4
abbr |
of nerve endings over virtually
every millimeter o f the body's
DOWN
surface. These rarly warning
1 Campus area
systems alert us to danger,
2 Of the planet
l i owrver . s o me t i me s they
Mari (comb,
misfire and produce (Kiln for no
form)
apparent reason
Sharp flavor
When you focus attention on
any area of the body, you can —
Chemical suffn
with enough practice — make
Vaquaro t rope
pain appear. 1 don’t endorse this
sc)teas k iN Is ut
Search

E

E EK

A

by Howls Schneider

M kLK

( NtUJ MAHCtTIMS

U X U .P A C K T D
T H E D R M W IM G B O A R D

W IN AT BRIDGE
By Jam ei Jacoby
t

*.&lt;mi «

m

M R. M E N A N D L IT T L E MISS

BUGS BUNNY
l l

W A N T M

h o

p it c h

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W ANT

I L L BE T w e

t o

S L O e rg rc p

ILL B£ V
c en t ERPifiLp.)

O H .n D .n O U

WONT

,

m B 8 lT-'

"W inning Defrnsr for the A d ­
vancing Bridge (’ layer" Is the
by Hargreaves A Seller a title of Frank Slewart's latest
contribution to bridge literature,
lie selected a title which should
offend no one. since all of us arc
certain that we are getting belter
at bridge.
Early In the book. Frank
demolishes (h r old ehrstm it
"second hand lo w ." Here Is the
deal.
West leads the lour of hearts to
Ills partner's king, which wins
llie trick. East continues with
lhe heart Jack ami thrn the
eight, which Soul h finally wins.
by Warner Brothers
Now comes a low diamond,
amt West must he alert to the
C &amp; m T b B P iE u P i s V Y
right play It Is absolutely rnsenC AW W O T PATCH .
li.d for him to put up the king.
Otherwise declarer will put In

the 10. which will be won by
E a s t ' s Jack. O n t he ne xt
diamond play. W est's king will
go under dum m y's are. and the
rest of dummy's diamonds from
the queen down will ull be
winners.
O f course In many instances
putting up the king would not
prevrnt declarer from eventually
running the suit After all. South
can Irt West hold the trick, If
that were to happen here. West
would Im m ediately take two
more heart tricks to set the
contract.
"Second hand lo w " is a fine
old adage, and II Is usually right,
lint If you 're one of Frank
S t e wa r t ' s a d v a n c i n g bri dge
players, keep your eyes open for
the exceptions.

NORTH
♦ WT J

A lO -l)

*41

♦ A q 101 4 J
♦ JJ

EAST

WEST
♦ K it

♦ 10 II 1

tQlOTtl
♦ KA
*7 * t

♦ KJI
♦ J *i
♦ J log*

SOUTH

♦ A J 41
♦ A ll
♦ 7J

♦ a Kgs

Vulnerable Neither
Dealer: South

Writ

North Kail

I’ats 16
I’au
I’au
JNT I’au
Pan
Opening lead V&lt;

South
*
1NT
I’au

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...
FR AN K AND ERNEST

by Bob T h a v t i

GHeauisfiff
&amp;

rn

G A R F IE L D

There's a strong possibility
that you'll make a career change
III the yeur ahead that could be a
complete departure Irom your
present line of work Your earn­
ing potential will Ire substan­
tially Increased
CANCER Uune 2 1-July 22| A
N J"
situation that has thus lar been
unprofitable can be reversed
today. However. It'll require all
T m a v s j 6 -1 0
the Ingenuity you can muster to
turn around Ma|or changes are
by Jim Davis .du-ad lor Cancers in the coming
year. Send lor your AstroGruph
predictions today. Mall SI to
Astro-Graph. Box IHU. Radio
Ci ty Station. New York. NY
lOOHJ He sure to state your
zodiac sign.
LEO Uuly 23 Aug 221 If you
have la Jeopardize a friendship
today to gratify your worldly
ambitions, think twice. Your
friends should come 9rxt,

X W/NN7 Y o u 70
Cu/Sf MV AM N ftflA»
&amp;UT NOT 'Tit- TH E
$

pEpU
A K f o ve p .
\

J

YOUR BIRTHDAY
JUNE 21. IBSS

VIRGO ( Aug 2.i-Sepl 221
Your domestic responsibilities
inav nnly get a lick and a
promise today. There's a strong
possibility your attention will be
rentcred elsewhere.
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct. 23| Your
Ireltngs could be needlessly
wounded today If you read tnlo
situations things that are not
Intended. Work at seeing Ihe
bright side.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nnv. 221
Your perceptions In llnanrlnl
und career matters will be more
astute today limn those of your
associates. Don't lei others think
for you.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee
211 Strive to keep your priorities
In proper sequence today. Do the
rMcnilata first und you'll still
have ample time for fun and
gumrs
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan.
I9| Don't hold yourself back
today from doing something nice
for another Just because Ihts
individual has nut always been
as kind to you as he or she could
have been.

(

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb III,
II a misunderstanding arises
In-i wen you and a close friend
today, la* the first to say you're
sorry. This will nip any [wissiblr
problems In Ihe bud
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20]
Don't Ire hrsltanl to experiment
with new methods nr procedures
inday ut work or In your career
Fresh approaches ran save you
time and trouble.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 10
Your competitive Instinct may
a trifle sluggish today and
ynu'rr not likely to put forth
vour Ix-si efforts until you're a
few (minis behind
TAURUS (April 20 May 20) A
di stasteful situation can b&lt;
altered to your satisfaction today
H you don't lake what occun
lying down. Correct whatevei
cun be corrected.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20| ll
vou'rc negotiating u mutter ol
importance lodav. It's tmpera
•IVC you approach Ihe sttuatior
realistic.illy. Focus on facts, not
probabilities.

�The 'A-Team's' Murdoch
Isn't Blushing At Success

Eytnin* Hrsld, SinMfd, FI.

ThurwJjy. Jurvt io, 1HS—IB

B j Dick Kleiner
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) - TV
networks are often ashamed of
ihetr hit shows. They love the
high ratings som e o f those
shows pull, but network execu­
tives almost blush when they
talk about them. Shows such as
"The Beverly Hillbillies" and
"Green Acres" In the past, and
more recently. "Starsky and
Hutch" and " T h e Dukes of
Hazzar d" em barrassed their
networks.
Currently, there; Is NBC’s "T h e
A T ra m ."
They hate us." says Dwight
Schultz, the brilliant actor who
plays the somewhat demented
Murdoch on the show. "T h e
whole Industry hates us."
He says that even before the
show went on the air. NBC’s
executives were apologizing for
it He remembers that at a press
conf e r e nce a nno unc i ng the
show, NBC’s Grant Tinker and
Brandon TartlkolT said the show
w asn’ t a qual i ty show, but
would get good ratings.
It s been called ’violent’ and
It’s been called garbage.*" says
Schultz. "It Is not chic to say
you watch It. I’ve met a lot of
Important people In the Industry
since we’ve been on. The only
person who told me he watches
the show was Nell Simon. He
admitted he watched It and liked
II Everybody else says they
have never seen It."
If that’s true, they are missing
something Maybe a lot of It Is
v i o l e n t and g a r b a g e , bill
Schultz's performance Is cer­
tainly one of the finest on TV. Hr
has made a gem out of Murdoch,
and it’s worth watching the
show Just to watch him.
But. then. Schultz Is a genuine
actor. He has trained long and
hard und has gone through a lot
of Iran years Id get where he Is.
" I was your typical impover­
ished actor In New York for a
long time," he says. "I slept on a
couch from 1975 to 1978 "
So hr Is relieved to lie pari of a
hit scries, even If It Isn't a
revered hit series. And he says
that all ol his old friends (mm
Broadway are happy for his
success — even those who origi­
nally thought he was prostltut-

THURSDAY
EVENING

6:00

14) [Dc k do new s
ntMiJCrtiiRSONS

0

(10) MACwrit / 1C unfit

new sm our

CD 111LAVE SHE A S H K .Fr

605

U FATHER KNOWS BEST

630
ll NSC NEWS
|CSS NEWS
J ABC NEWStJ
U (15) ALICE

K

(B I D HAPPY DAYS AGAIN

635
U QUEEN ACRES

700
O Cfi BALI Of THE CENTURY
, ] O PM MAGAZINE Atl.tal
Date* ah Station of Da*»» , a h**copt«w U fa (.&lt; INI Ciiand Canyon

(T ) O JEOPARDY

It (M| TOO aOSE FOR COBB
FORT

ffit 10) NATURE I ha D«atovary Ol
Animal Bahano" A loo* al aarl, «*•
io.it of naiuraaal* and loowgaU
including Chartat Otrwn lo imdw*
•land tha anmal mtnd (Ran 3 of S)
(R)p
(D |l) HARRY DAYS AGAIN

7:05
U

SANTORO AHO SON

7:30

O ® INTER! AINMINT TOMOHT
m larvOT wifi Mansi Hannar
(1 O WHEEL Of FORTUNE
(J O BW0 0OO NAME THAT
TUNE
1! (SSI BENSON
(D (D A L L R4 THE FAMILY

7:35

H BASE BAIL MouMon Aaltoa al
Atlanta B&gt;a&lt;«a

600
n 1*1 COSBY SHOW CM1 • &lt;M-

'If* not chic to toy you
watch It. IV * mat a lot
of Important paopl# In tha
Industry sinca w a ’va baan
on. Tha only parson who
told ma ha watchas tha
show was Nall Simon. He
odmlttad ha watchad it
and likad it. Evarybody
alsa says thay have
navar saan it.'

-Dwight Schultx
lug himself are pleased now that
he Is maki ng g ood . If not
spectacular, money.
It looks like pretty good money
to the kid from Baltimore who
used to get up at 3 a m to go
crabbing on the Wye River.
"You had to get out there
h efore the sun c a me up.'*
Schultz says. " I f you’re too late,
they drop off. those little bug­
gers My father und I would go
out together. But that was when
crabs were really btg They don't
cutnc as big now us they did
then.”

Comic Engagement
T a w n y Kilaen and T o m Hanks discuss their upcom ing m arriage, scheduled to lake place after he attends a w ild
bachelor party, in the 1984 film "B a tch e lo r P a r ty " scheduled lo a lr at 8 tonight on H B O

Schultz’s father was a letter
carrier and his mother a tele­
phone operator and both his
grandfathers were firemen. But
he was bom with the desire to
act.
"T h e living room was my
stage. I wore out a place on the
carpel. And I woul d mi mi c
e v e r y t h i n g I saw. B efore I
learned how lo read. I would
look through Ihe newspapers
and llnd pictures of horror m ov­
ies and I would badger my
parents to take rnr to see that
movie. Then I would come home
and model everything I saw In
clay and do ihr voices for all
those clav figures."
He went toTow son University.
In Towson, Md. and studied
theater. Then he was off to New
York and that couch that was
home for three years.
Now he's part o f a series that Is
a hit with every body except the
network brass

CALENDAR
TH U RSD AY. JUNE 20
National Action for Former
Military Wives, 6 30 p.m. For
Information on meeting place,
call 1128.2801

FRIDAY. JUNE 2 I
The Foster Gnmdpurrni Pro­
gram Is hosting Bingo games at
Flea World at 10:30 a.m. and I
p.m.For more Information, call.
Debbie Pettit 841 1792
Central Florida Klwanls Club
meeting ut 7:30 a.m. at the
436
H o l i d a y Inn S R
at Wymore Road In Altamontr
Springs.
SU ND AY. JUNE 23
The Betty Vaccaro World of
Dance and Performing Arts will
present Its third annual Summer
Recital on Sunday. The show

N» It divuerttd N an r»i couwn. a

tJS*7)_ Joann* WooOotnl. ton,

■hda an • m il a* Amwca Slari
Jo* Uanlagna and Kwtn Staabai-

(T t (M IE A M K Y ATEJun

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J l (M l RMOOA

4 00

1000
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4:30

11:00

IB ( I ) WHEEL OF FORTUM
i T O FWCE M ruOHT
( l i O a n o w i R)
II (M ) EIGHT WENOUOH
ffi I Yd) WTRd OOOKJNO HOW
d ) ID FAMR.V

11:30

O l 1CRABBLE
T ' O RYAN E HOPE
ffi i to) FLonioAsm i

of an obaaa pnaonm i
coapaa Norn in* holding ttM &lt;*•
•anti a drfbcuit pioOWm a «Ny
■Oman •ho H*l a trap lor a IN*1
and than mootl turn n artaaNd
morU

MORNING

AFTERNOON

o AHOTS LANDING VN i **rat* oafwnot pravant* author***

5 00

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from hndmg har. Gar, »hun»
naran t adatca and taaa t I Mr ong
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Gahraaton (Rig
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Rrvara tia m n a i modanli o( (*•maiura tatuaf growth m chddran
that ma, hand baan cau«ad try tha
additrvai lhal art lad to t»rm am
malt g

o

ilT (Ml RlOCPf N0CNT NEWS
ffi (10) IN SEARCH Of BACH A rw
port on young muaroana pari opal
ng at artrtt M u m m daatat
•orYahoo* rahaartart and bar
tormancaa during « * annual Bach
Aria tnttiluta hard at tha Slata Urtrtf wtr d Naw York at Sion, Brook

CD |() POLICE WOMAN

(1[ (Ml NEWS
11 AIL IN THE FAMILY

5 30
O D r s COUNTRY
11 BOB NEWHAM

o 4' MCOAY
J O J O Ntwa

1)1(M) BEWITCHED
ffi 110| THE HEART OF THE ORA
DON
C D ID m a n n u

600
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} Q MORNING STRETCH
0 10 EYIWTTNtSS DAYBREAK
(IT (3*10000 DAY)
SINEWS
OX*) AM BARKER

630
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NEWS
(D O ABC NEWS THIS MORMNQ
?| IMIPOREYI
11 FUNTBM

1020
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in r « | Warran B*att,. Paula Pran
ti*a An inrwhgalrv* raporiar al
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natmri of RoMrcal a r n u n l

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7.00
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7 o OOOO MORNING AMERICA
I t OS) FUNTST0NES
0 } |*0| FARM 0AV
(B III SURERf RENDS

10:30
(JS| BOO MEWHART

1100
® C | )O H ) O H E W S
(SSI BENNY MILl
I to) DAVE ALIEN AT LARGE
(D HOGAN'S HEROES

7:15
a&gt;(10)AM WEATHER

7:30

11:30
) (J ) TONUM Tf Hoat Jonnr, Car
n SchwRdad angar Laura Bum-

11 OS) TOM ANO JERRY
ffi IW) SESAME STREET (Rjg
CD (S) WSRECT0R GADGET

7 35

QTUI

3 ABC NEWS MOHHME

1205
11 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAI­
RIE

600
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1200

605
Q IORCA44 OF JCANME

630
at (&gt;S)MNK PANTHER
pOiMWTER ROGERS (R)
ID FAT ALBERT

S

6:35
■11 BEWITCHED

Christian Women's Club will he
hosting "Getting Away From It
A l l " at the M aitlan d C ivic
Center, Activities Include imistc
atul guest speakers Admission
$6 For more Inlonnaiton. call
862 8687

IrjRoyd Theatres

EQED&lt;M m,
BOND 007''

A btg city cop

MOVKLANOOd

I

® o MOVIE Th. h o w
H E « g (r W B o w *

(1*771

r LOVE CONNECT O n
( B id a e o n

936

1:30
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(1BB7J Oragon R » . * • «"

a I LOVE LUCY

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RELAXOR

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2:55
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3:30
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322*5227

ays Weh

SALE
STARTS
TODAY

100
o 4 GAYS of o u r liv es
r o ALL MY CHILDREN
f l (M l DICR VAN DYKE
|10) FI 01*0A HOME GROWN
|D MOVIE

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1:05
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S A N F O R D -2 9 9 4 O R L A
Z A Y R I P LA Z A AT AIRPORT BLVD

1:30
[I O AS THE w orld tu r n s
11 (MIOOMCRRTU
ffi HD MAOIC OF FAINTING
KEEPSAKES

Mony Mors llsm i

2:00
o 4 ANOTHER w o r l d

Drastically R t d u t t d ^ 1

J O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
H (M) ANOY GRIFFITH
ffi ( NR JOT OF PAPfTWO

Throughout th# Slo*8t/

l/U

2:30
|||(0 CAF1TCK.
IJ: (M l GREAT SPACt COASTER
ffi (101 M AO« OF DECORATIVE
PABfTMQ

3:00
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J OOUONGUOHT
(7 o 0ENERAL HOSPOAL
ill (Sll BUGS BUNNY ANO
ffi|lO)FLOf»*aT7LE
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3:05

IX BUG* BUNNV ANO FRIENOS

330

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ffi|1C|«SAME STR U T (R jg
IJ f u n t it o n e b
(BIDSURIRFRHMOS

4:30
31 OB) Hf-MAN AHU MASTERS
OF THE UNIVERSE

AOOAMSFAMR.Y

S

___

(D VOLTNON. 0E7INOER OF
THE UNIVERSE

SALE

In c lu d e s .
i m uni

c ted v

DRESS FABRICS,
DRAPERY
FABRICS,
TRIMS, NOTIONS,
NOTION
PATTERNS

We M u st M ake
Room F o r. . .

NEW
I

1005

SM ALL
— &amp;EEAUU

12:30

U HAZEL

a

f f i-lllt

JAY’S HAIRSTYIANG DEN

F R ID A Y . JUNE 28
Seminole on Stage, a non­
profit theatre group Is scheduled
lo p r e s e n t " A t h e a t r i c a l
Mopntage," which Is an evening
of one act plays at St. Marks
Presbyterian Church for more
Information, call Joe; Hawkins,
al 862 7273
SU N D AY. JUNE 30
The Maitland Art Center Is

11(SIRMAif' wvw

8.30

50

SECRET O
1ADMIRER k g i

4:00

905

S2

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n rr unu house on the

1:00
31(M( LEAVEIT10BEAVER
1:10

' HARRtSCN rest)

AVlEW ea A im o 11cvuntiT bof
™A KILL WITNESS

| ) 4 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
J O YOONO ANO THE RESTLIBS
O D O LOVING
____
I t (SSI SEVIRIY HILLBILLIES

u FUMTSTONES

J (SS| CHICO AND THE MAN
| (D HOGAN'S HEROES

Joining the city o f Maitland's
Centennial Celebration with an
exhibit of Andre Smith and the
Bok Fellows. Thi s exhibit Is free
of charge and will run (rom June
30(0 July 31.
TH U RSD AY. J U L Y 4
K92 KM. W C P X - T V 8. 7Eleven, and Champion TV A
Appliance Rentals are producing
Sky Blast ’85, a fireworks extrav­
aganza which Is going to be the
largest fireworks show tnCrniral
Florida on ihr Fourth of July.
Sky Blast ‘85 will lake place at
approximately 9 p.m. ut the
Altamonte’ Mall. Festivities will
begin at 7 p.m. with live cnlcrtalnment. A skydiving exhibition
by thr Purugutnm will precede
the fireworks.
TH U R S D A Y . J U L Y . I I
The Altamonte-Maltland

1HO

|R|
®

show will fealure 250 performers
from ages 3-50 The three uct
periormaner litlcd "Everyday Is
a Holiday" Is scheduled lo be
field at the Sem in ole Hi gh
School Gym.
M O ND AY. JUNE 24
Adult swim lessons. 7-8:30
p It) . Mondays and Wednesdays,
through July IO. Wrslmontc
Pool. 5&lt;X) Spring Oaks Blvd..
Altamonte Springs. Alt levels of
skills Cull Instructor Claudia
Harris. 862 0090.
The Seminole county 411 club
and the Seminole County Master
G ardeners are sponsoring a
youth workshop titled "M owing
foi M o n e y ." Th e wor kshop
explains the basic* of managing
a summer lawn business. Topics
to lie covered Include basic lawn
mower care, how lo set your
prices for mowing. Identifying
different types of graMCR.and
how lo care for them. How to
mow. edge and trim * yard
properly wlU be demonstrated.
Th«- seminar Is open to any
youth 8-18 years old and is free.
T o make reservations, for the
workshop or for more Informa­
tion rontact: Sheldu Wllkens.
4 11 agent., at 323-2500 Ext.

t h « S tO F8

eirly For/j

it in d u d a d l

�«R—E*»ni"a HtriM, iw rfiri. FI.

Thurid^r^un# M. 1w*

Graham Shoots Down
Teacher Certification
TALLAH ASSEE IUPI) Florida could be
without a teacher certification law thla fall
because of a veto by Gov. Bob Graham.
Graham haa proposed a special commission to
study the Issue — but barring a special session.
Florida could end up the only state In the union
lacking professional certification standards for Its
teachers.
Graham vetoed the teacher certification bill late
Tuesday night and proposed the commission
during a speech In Orlando Wednesday. He said
the panel would make Its report In time for the
nest legislative session — at which point the
legislature could take another look at certifica­
tion.
But the chairman of the House Education
committee said Wednesday that Graham's criti­
cisms of the bill are way off base — and added
ihnt the bill Graham killed was the best Ihc
governor can expect.
Unless the legislature meets early and over­
rules Graham, the veto means Florida's current
law will automatically be repealed on Oct. I
under Ihc state's sunset laws.
"I'm angry as the chairman bf the Education
committee and I'm angry for the teachers of this
state," said rep. Thomas Haaourl. D-Jacksouvllle.
“ |’m angry because he’s wasted at the stroke of a
l&gt;en a very good teacher certification bill that
should hage been approved "
When Graham vetoed Ihc bill (HB 1357). he
lauded legislators for tightening licensing stan­
dards for new teachers. But he said the bill lacked
a uniform statewide standard for evaluating
classroom performance and complained It did not
require subject area tests for recertification.
“ I'd rather have no law at all than what the
Erglslaturc asked." Graham said.
Ilazourl said thr bill would have given the
Department of Education the power to disapprove
local recertification standards — power he said
the department lacks at present.
He said the only subject area test currently
available for veteran teachers Is thr one used In
the troubled merit pay program — a test that In
s o me sch ool di st r i ct s de t e r mi ne d teachers-oMhc-ycar were Ineligible for merit money
and Indicated teaching supervisors were less
qualified than their novices
"Thla Is a classic case o f adding insult to
Injury," Ihuourl added. "Does anyone want to go
through thla misery to be teachers?"
An aide to Commissioner of Education Ralph
Turllnglbn said his boss opposed Graham's
decision to veto thr blit.

Mayors Oppose Reagan
On Budget, Tax Plan
municipal bonds and
A NC HO RAGE .
deductions for local
Alaska (11P1) - Th e
and slate taxes.
nation's mayors, volIn g’bvcrwhelmlngly to
Referring to the ad­
oppose key provisions mi ni st rat i on' s cl ai m
ol President Kengun’ s that tough economic
budget and tax plaits, cutback* and tax re­
set the stage for Intense forms are needed to
lobbying to sway Con­ bal ance the f ederal
gress from en actin g
budget. Mayor Joseph
i ne as ur es t he y say
Riley of Charleston.
could cripple urban S.C.. said. "M any cities
America.
operate on the rdgr.
The U .8. Conference We nee a continued rise
o f Mayors, closing a of the |M&gt;or. desperately
five-day m eeting a t­ poor |H-nplr. living In
tended by about 1HO our cld cs.... W e should
city leaders, came out
not be Ihc scapegoat."
In oppos i t i on W e d ­
C o n g r e s s wi l l be
nesday lo pnqtosals to
phase out federal reve­ more sympathetic to
ihc mayors' positions
nue sharing, disallow
than thr adm inistra­
l ocal and stal e l ax
tion, predicted Riley,
deductions on federul
who also Is vice presi­
Income tax returns and
dent of the conference.
r e m o v e l u x - e x e mp t
s t a i n s from many
Scranton. Pa., Mayor
municipal Ixinds.
Jumcs McNul ty said
The conference,
D e m o c ra tic m a y o r s
which Is the lobbying
would push the Demo­
arm of two-lhlrds of the
cratic House to baluncc
na t i o n' s el i tes ov e r
lls efTorts to rebuild the
3 0 ,0 0 0 p o p u l a t i o n ,
party's grassroots
stressed bipartisan unsystem with support
Ity an d w hat t he
for cities.
mayors said would be
Ihc severe Impact of
th r admi ni st rat i on' s
p rop osa ls on urban
ureas.
trait of flosid*
"W e arc no longer
D E P A R T M E N T OF
Demociuls reading lo
E N V IR O N M E N T A L
R E G U L A T IO N
Republicans, or R e ­
N O TIC E OF A P P L IC A T IO N
publicans leadin g to
Th* N p ttlm tn l (imouflcn
h e m o e r a t s We are
r*f*lpt ef on application tor
P
•
f m I I I &lt;* m T r u i i o
m a y o r s r eact i ng to
Manufacturing. Inc lo construct
some (eilerul pro|Nisuls • Bottom* D u ll Collodion
i l l l w i for protob lumbar pro
that will leave nuiny of
lotting operation, which it o
o u r c i t i e s In d i r e
tourcootolr pollution
strulls," said New Or­
IKIt proposed project will b*
leans Mayor and con­ tacolod ol li t ! I XSS Slroet In
Sonford. Somlnol* C ount,,
ference president
Florid*
Ernest Morlu).
TS Il opplitoiion I* bring pro
Tulsa, Okla„ Mayor cottod ond It ovollobl* tor
public
importi*n during normol
Terry Young suld the bwtlnot*
hour*. I 00 • m lo I W
Reagan tax plan would
p m Monday Through Friday
hurt elite* by culling ••top! logoi hoi Mo, t, *« j j i *
funding avenues across Moguir# Bout*void Suit* 11}.
Ortondt. F lor Ido llddl IT*/
the Isainl
Fortont rrlthlng lo common!
"W e have In essence on on, otpocl ol Silt odton or*
a double-whammy be- roguirod To tuSmll ttiotr com
mon!* in writing to th* oddrott
lug proposed." he said *b*&gt;* within th in , do,t *1
of the utlrmi)
uttrmpt to re­ publnotion ol mtt nolle*

Legal Notice

Legol Notice

legal Notice
N O T IC IO F A
FUSC 1C M IA B IN S
T O C O N IID fB
T M I A DOST ION OF
AN O BD IN AN C I
B Y T M t C IT Y
OF 1ANF0BD. FLOEIDA
Nolle* It hereby gluon lh*t *
Public Mooring will b* hold *t
Ih* Commlnion Boom In Ih*
CIT, Moll in IS* City ol Santord.
F lor Ido. *t I OB O'clock P M on
jg i, I, ITU. to contldor Ih*
adoption ol on ordinance bu Ih*
CIT, ot Sonlord. Florida, *t
to tow*
O B D IN A N C I NO fill
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D ,
F L O R ID A . TO AN N E X
W ITH IN TH E CORPORATE
A R E A OF T H E C IT Y OF
SANFORD. FLO BIOA. UPON
AOOPTIOH OF SAID OROI
NANCE. A PORTION OF TH AT
CERTAIN PR OPERTY LYING
BE TW E EN S R ** (WEST
F IR S T S T R E E T ) ANO
NARCISSUS ‘A V E N U E AND
WEST OF AND A B U TTIN G
TER W ILLIGER LANE) SAIO
PROPERTY BEIN G SITUAT
ED IN SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA. IN ACCORDANCE
WITH THE VO LU N TA R Y
A N N E X A TIO N PROVISIONS
OF SECTION D I M FLORIDA
STATUTES; PROVIDING FOR
SE V ER A B ILITY . CONFLICTS
A N O E F F E C T IV E D A T E
WHEREAS. Ihor* hot boon
(l!*d with ttw City Clark of Ito
CIT, ol Sanford. Florida. *
poll!Ion containing Ito namot of
Ih* property ownort In Ito or**
dotrrlbod horoln altar rtquoii
&lt;ng onnorallon to Ito corporal*
oroa of Ito City of Sanford.
Florid*, and requalling to bo
Includtd ftoroln; ond
W H E R E A S , fh* Properly
Approltor ofrSomlnof* County.
Florid*, haring certified that
Ihor* or* Ur* property ownort
In tto or** lo b* onrwiod. and
that told property ownort tor*
tlgnod tto Pttltlon lor Annora
lion, and
WHEREAS. II hot boon do
lormlnad Ito I Ito property do
*c r i b*if h o r o l n a l l o r I t
roetonebly compact and can
llguout la Ito corporate oreat of
Ito City df Sanford. F lor Ido. ond
It tot further boon determined
thol Ih* annoAOllon ol told
properly will not retull In Ito
croollon of on one lore, and
WHEREAS. Ito City Ol Son
lord. Florid*. It In a potIHon lo
prorld* municipal torvlcot lo
Ito property dotcrlbod horoln.
and IhoI tto City Com mlytlon el
Ito City of Sanford, Florid*
doomt II In tto bet I Intorotf ol
Ito C II, to accopl told petition
ond to onnoi told property
NOW TH E R E F O R E . BE IT
ENACTED BY THE PEOPLE
OF TH E C IT Y OF SANFORD.
FLORIDA
SECTION I: Thai Ito pro
porly dotcrlbod below tltueled
In Seminole County, Florida, b*
ond Ito tom* It hereby annoiod
lo ond mad* a part ol Ito City Of
Senlord. Florida, pur toon! to
Ito voluntary annotation pro
v lilo n t ol Socllon I I ! Off,
Florid# Stoluto*
Socllon M. Townthlp It South,
Rang* K Foil. Bogin on North
lino ol SI Gertrud* Avonuo II tr
them* Wool el Cat! Iito ef Holly
Avonuo, run Wotl Id chain*
North to chain* ■ e«t lt4 tool
North H I tool fool Ml tool
South to Beginning. Public R*
card* *1 tomlnol* County,
Florida
SECTION I: That upon toll
Ordinance becoming effectIv*.
Ito property owner* and any
rooMonl on Ih* property d*
ter feed horoln thol I to entitled
to *11 Ito right* ond privilege*
ond Immunlllot ot or* from

time to llm* grantod to roil
dtnlt and property ownort of
tto City of Sonlord. Florid*, and
ot turftor provided In Chapter
iFt. Florid* Slalutot. ond tholl
further to tubjeel to tto r*
tpontlbllltloi ol rotldonco or
ownerthIp ot may from tlm* to
llm* to doftrmlnod by Ito
governing authority of tto City
ot Santord. Florida, ond Ito
provltlont of told Chapter 1FI.
F lor Ido Slolulot
SECTION li It any Mellon or
portion ol * Mellon ol Ihli
ordinance prove* to to Involld,
unlawful, or unconttltutlanol. It
tholl not bo told to Involldato or
impair ito validity, tore* or
ottoct ef any other Mellon or
port ol fh!* ordinance
SECTION * Thol all erdl
noncot or perl* of ordlitoncat In
cantllcl horowlth. to and tto
Mm* or* hereby revoked
SECTION ) That thlt ordl
none# tholl botom* tltoctlv*
Immodlatoly upon lit pottage
ond adoption
A copy tholl to ovollobl* ot
Ito Ottlfv ot th* City Clock tor
til per ion* d*tiring to ocamlno
All pottlot In Intorotl and
cltlient tholl hove an opportum
ty to to hoard *1 M&gt;d hearing
By ardor of Ih* City Con
m illion ot tto City ol Son tor d
Florid*
A D V IC E TO T H E PUB LIC II

* per ton dec (dot to appeal *
dec lnon mod* with rotpect to
any matter contidorod at th*
above mooting or hooting, ho
may toad * verbatim record of
tto proceeding*. Including Ito
totlimony and evidence which
tocord It rvol provided by tto
City ot Santord IFSIdOllOSI
M N lo m m jr
City Clark
Publlth Juno II, M. V and July
A IMS

D IG f*

/TL

,T 'l

£A

fM M T «l
CALL TULL Fit I t
INkHMUl

Pubmh Juno » . I t u
DEO III

mo ve t a x •e x r m p t
s t a t ua for m u n y

prom

PUZZLES
CELEBRITY CIPHER

CwkfiCt** iiypfegionweetr.weOkiwi owHtuontkilemev* people p**ltntp*MM
lot* Mtiw wuwterwi umeow oral**, In U o iiM t i t o t f

byCOFME WtCNCn
"VIOB

IVPPYO

HTPI YO V J V I H :
H D YO ."

-

OYUYJAYH
Mf l K

RT M

QM

OSHFYM

TEOYTHM

QY

T

TFBFMHSKD.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION Yog don 1 know anything about A woman until you
moot tw*r mcourt
- Not m*n MActor

NOTICE OF A
PUBLIC H IA B IN O
TO CONSIDER

TH E ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE
BY T N I CITY
OF SANFOBD. FLORIDA.
Nolle* Ik hereby given that a
Public Hearing will to told at
tto CommlMton Room In Ito
City Moll In tto City of Sanford.
Florida, of &gt; M o'clock P M on
July I. 1*01 to contidtr tto
adoption of an ordinone* by tto
City Ot Santord. Florid*, ot
lot towt
ORDINANCE NO. m l
AN ORDINANCE OF TN E
C I T 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 TH E CORPORATE
A R E A O F T H E C I T Y OF
SANFORD, FLORIDA. UPON
ADOPTION OF SAIO ORDI
NANCE, A PORTION OF TH E
P R O P E R T Y L Y I N G BE
TW E E N C R f* A ANO THE
SEABOARD COASTLINE
RAILROAD R IG H T -O F -W A Y
AN D B E T W E E N UPSALA
ROAD AND JE W E TT ROAD.
SAID P R O P E R T Y BEING
S I T U A T E D IN S E M IN O LE
CO UNTY. FLORIDA. IN AC
COROANCE WITH TH E VOL
UNTAflY ANNEXATION
PR OVISIONS OF SE C TIO N
171 044, FLORIDA STATUTES)
P R O V I D I N G F OR
SE V ER A B ILITY . CONFLICTS
AND E F F E C TIV E OATE
WHEREAS, ttof* hot toon
Iliad with tto City Clerk of tto
City of Sanford. Florida, a
petition cantoning Ito name* ot
Ito property ownort In Ito or**
dotcrlbod horoln otter rogue*!
Ing annotation to tto corporate
area of tto City of Santord.
F lor Ido. and requeuing to to
included therein, and
W H E R E A S . Ih* Properly
Appro .tor of Sominoto County,
Florida, having certified that
ttoro or* tour property ownort
in tto ore* to to armored, end
that Mid property owner hot
iigned tto Potmen tor Armot*
lion, and
WHEREAS. II ho* been d*
ter mined thol tto property do
t c r l b o d h o r o l n o f t o r I*
reatonabiy compact ond con
llguout to tto corporal* oroet ol
tto City ol Santord. Florida, and
II hot turftor been determined
that th* annotation ol told
property will not rotull In Ito
croollon of on enclave, ond
WHEREAS, tto City Of Son
lord. Florida. It In * poution to
provide municipal torvlcot to
tto property deter Ibed herein,
and that tto City Commlulon ol
tto City ot Santord. Florida,
doemt II In Ito boil Intern! ot
the City to eccept Mid petition
ond lo onnoi Mid property
NOW. TH E R E FO R E. BE IT
E N A C T E O BY THE PEOPLE
OF TH E C I T Y OF SANFORD.
FLORIDA

Legal Notice
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT.
IN ANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
C A 't H O K - I t t l G A -tl

IN RE Tto Pot mono!
OASIS WORKSHOP.
INCOR POR AT E 0. A F torId*
Nonprofit Corporation
NOTICE OF CORPORATION
DISSOLUTION
Notice It hereby given Ihat
OASIS WORKSHOP. INCOR
PORATED. a Florid* nonprof11
corporation, ho* pot ittoned tto
ci rcui t court of Somlnol*
County. Florida, tor an order
ditMfrlng ito corporation All
portont having any claim*,
right*, tilt* or Intorotf or ob|e&lt;
lion lo told d'ttoiution *ro
hereby nohttod to Hto tamo with
tto Clerk ot tto Circuit Court In
tto above rotoroncod c o m and
MTV* o copy ot tom* on Frank
C Whlghom. Etqulre, Attorney
tor Potittonor. wtoM oddrott It
P O Bo. H B Santord. Florida.
J i m I no an or before July 4.

itu
Pleat* govern yourtoll ac
cording! y
ISEALI
OAVIO BERRIEN
Clerk of tto Circuit Court
B y; /!/ Choryl R Franklin
Deputy Clerk
Publlth Juno*. 10. IMS
DEG IS
T

n TH E CIRCUIT COURT ~
OF TH E E IG H TE EN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN ANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO M Iflk C A k k P
JU A N ITA BRINSON
Plolntllf.
vt
EASTER ROBINSON

Defendant

-S

T

Seminole

322-2611

831-9993

1:30 A M. - $.30 P.M.
MONDAY tltra FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

I*U

I S' Robert T Hauoo
/A' Mariano* Met***
r*. Gary D Roatar
/V Judith A Raaaar
Publlth May X k June k i l l * .

IMS

D E F 140

n tw

R id d t n i M a * # * «rf Activllto*
Oirvctor tor Sawtor AduH Apt.
C a m m v n ily . R a ip o n tlb l* .
croalfro individual to live on
promt*** and plan racr*
at tonal and tociai actlvtlW*
M u d an|#y paopw and bo
energetic Ideal lor racanl
retire*! Lovely a pt. maato
and ofhvr amanltW* provided
j j l SBag . Mon Frl.. ..Sontord

7 cantacutiy* Home 52C i ling
10 CPfttoCKtly* times 44C a ling
Contract Ratal AvaiUblt
3 Linas Minimum

D E A D LIN E S
N o o n T h e D ay Before P u b lication
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

a MABV KAY COSMETICS a
Skin car* and cater Itjir
C o n n i e ________ ____

ro m r

RggeCffAt Carts?
No credit/ bad credit?
Receive Motor Credit Cards

Fr n

Brochure IQS 41' 81S4

SEMI TRAI LER MECHANIC
Minimum I year* aapartonca
with good work record Mud
hove hand tool* V par hour
plu* **caii#nt benefit* In
eluding company paid health
meuranca Apply In pareon
Traatparl Brektrag* Inc
tla* I Franck Are
iStato Farmer* Market!

71 — Help Wanted

IS— Special Notices

Drlver/C*lt»ct*r E«p*rl*«c#
preferred but not rwc**Mry
ot rm _______________
I X C U T I Y I SECRETARY
nth or wtfhouf ahorlhand I
Ahi**t Temporary Servlet*

ni nm_______
Fadartl. Mato. B C iv il---------

available In your art* Call
lA ia la s U M for into 14 hr*

17— N u rstry t

Child Care
B a b y i l t t l n g In m y hem*
atoning* &amp; wookondt
Certified S E vp H I M i l
I will befeytit In my hem*, full or
pertim* Infant* A toddler*
Growvlow Village. I l l 1NU
Mature Woman w ill babytll
your child, any eg*. Mon F rl
fill 4 P M Coll Gina m i l Ik

Full and port tlm* petition* now
available M m i b* aver tl
yoar* aid to oparato raslau
ra n i equipment Apply In
par von pi R a i l . HX*
*
Hwy 414. Lanowaod FI
H A IB DR ESSER to lake aver

small cllantoto In DoIlona
Call poolST.______
work In convenience ttorat
Paid vacation* Group Inter
anc* aval labia Polygraph
raqulrad Apply In parton at
l into Champ Food Store, in*
French Av* . Santord
L A B O R E R S - Strong rallabW.
general laborer* naadad Im
mediately Different locallant
Phan* and Irantporlatlon a
m u d Never a la* Apply

RELIT SERVICES
440-2331
Landtcape Laborar mutl hav*
trantportatlen 4 good driving
record Sr* IXO

landtcapert no trparfanc#
Full llm* potlllont SI TS an
hour m i l J J ______________
Local Dov*taper need* coupta
tor ganoral ctoan up 4 (mail
repair* Full tlm* Tr»ntpor
tallon raqulrad Call OT m l
M I Ca Naad* O r a llim a h
Train**. Sand ratum# to M 1
Co . MfM Siaiv Road I lf .
Santord. Fla O TI1. _____
L F N a n d a r R.H tor J II

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
Nut tea I* herapy given that I
am engaged In butin*** at IM
S an d P in * C l r . . S a n fa rd .
Sam.neto County. Florid* OT3I
under Ih* HcKHeu* nam* af
R U T H S E N TE R P R IS E S , and
lhal I inland to regular said
name with the Ctorh af the
Circuit Court. Somine la County.
F tar US* in accordance with fh*
prevtoieni ef the Flctilipu*
Hem* Slalutot. T e w fl Section
MS m F tor Ida Statute* ISSf

Rulh * Entorprltet
/D Alice W Young
Publ ith June *. 14 m 17. IMS
D E G 1]

Slvdaalt/ Raliraat/Haetawlvat
Pari llm* or full Urn* B IG U .
long term automatic retkfu
* 1* W m i . or *4* *441
S W ITC H B O A R D O P E R A TO R
P a r i llm * . 1PM * P M .
Wad Sun light typing, tiling
M u d ba dipandabw Apply In
parton at Seminal* Fard.loc.,
IT U S Or i*fid* Dr . Soakard.

Tired af Jab Harding?
C a l l F u l u r * * they hav#
hundred* af |ob opening* tor
Ihot* who want lo work,
I to 4JOO

DE LI VE RY H E IFE R S - no #■
porwnc* nacatMry Full lima
Good darting pay *to 4JOO
g e n e r a l

o f f i c e

T RAI NEES
GrM l darling
Iob Several opening* G&lt;x*&gt;

p*r irttn*

F A C T O R Y ASSE MBLY and
PRODUCTION WORK Mod
thllt* open Good pay tcatot
Ito i)DC
IM M E D IA T E OPENINGS
Ganaral Conilructlon labor
Good pay tto a]**
TRUCK DRIVERS Long haul
Immediate! Good driving r#
cord Over IS *71 4300
L O C A L DRI VERS Straight
truck* Good pay Start right
away *to 4300
RECEPTIONIST, O FFICE
HSL FE RS, CLERKS. CRT
O P E R A T O R S - Immadlat*
opening* Good pay (catoe
Caiiaf* ajooNOWl
WELDERS Carllfiad Eacaltonl
pay h t i n

Call todk,

STE

4300

thill, full llm# good employ**
banllt* and almoiphara
E O E apply*!

PAINTERS 4 F A IN TER
H E L P E R S - Immadlat*
opening*, good darling pay
Call today 4f* *300

DaBary Manor
*0N Hwy If VT. DaBary

■t-4
.h
J—
|4tila

N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that Ito undartignod partem
datira to angag* in but,tot* at
par*tor* under ito ftetittou*
noma Of HaBa Entorpn*** af
M J NoadWt Trail. Longwood.
F lo rid * &gt;177*. in Somlnol*
C o unty. F lo rid a Nolle* I*
further given that Ih* un
dertlgnad parson* Inland to rag
ittor tuch licliltou* nam* with
•to Ctorh *4 Ito ClrcuH Court of
Sam mol* County. F tor .da
Datod Ihi* ll*s day of May.

Part Tlm # Certified Nurto*
A da* Coll tor appointment
ot «m

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 t i R M ..........................S 7 C g Hm
HOURS
3 cPBMCutlyg lima* SIC • llm

323-5176

All partial in Intorotl and
clluan* thall have an appertuni
ty to ba heard *1 Mid hearing
By order *1 th* City Cam
mutton at th* City of Santord.
Florida
A D V IC E TO TH E PUBLIC If
• par tan dec id** |* appeal a
daemon mad* with reaped to
any matter canaldtred *1 th*
above moating or hearing, to
may toad a verbatim retard of
•to proceeding*. Including tto
totlimany and avldancd. which
retard la not provided by tto
City Of Santord IPS 1*4 01*11
H N Tam m Jr
City Ctorh
Fub4«*fi Juno 11 Id If and July
A lt*l

ftm*f

Part
Full Hi m Earn
* r ma r a c o m m l t t i a n *
Supervisor podtton* avail­
able Ca ll Mr
Meara
I g**KJT QUA f «t. FLM

Orlando * Winter Park

Ctrl

I
— lr “ ♦ -

CLASSIFIED ADS

NOTICE OF SUIT
TO EASTER ROBINSON
m * E kit Monument Streol
Baltimore. Maryland I !XI1
33— Real Estate
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O TIFIE D that a complaint to
Courses
lorocloM mortgage hot been
tiled In Ito abov* ttylod Court
by th* Plolntllf. J U A N I T A
■A # ★
*
BRINSON, and you or* com
* Thinking of gaff lag • »
mondod to Mrve a copy of your
a Real Eilat* LIcawMf *
written f t l t n u . It any. on
W* altor Fra* TuHton
Tonya M Plouf. Plaintiff'* ot
and continue»* Training I
tornoy. whoM addrett It H I
Call Dick or Vlcbl tor dalall*:
South Lak* Avenue. Orlando.
H I lU f 11)104 Ey* l i t ISM
Florida. JJtOI. on or betore July
Kayosaf Florida . Inc.
II. IMS. and III* tto original
I* VMf* Erpartoncal
with tto Clark ol thlt Court,
either before tarvlc* on Plain
Ilf I'* attorney or Immediate),
55— Business
thereafter, ottorwlM, a default
Opportunities
may b* entered agelntt you lor
th* rallal demanded In Ih*
complaint
D E A L E R S W A N T E D ; New and
WITNESS my hand and tool
unique proven energy product
*1 th* Court of Sanford.
Company paid Wad program
Seminole County. Florida. Itilt
Low price. Largo protlll Not a
10th day ol June. Ito!
IranchlM Local attJttanca tor
(SEAL)
training Small Invattmonl tor
OAVI DBERRI EN
Inventory Sertou* call* only I
Call M r Yo*l JOS JSJ 7*10
SECTION li Thol tto pro 1 Clark ot tto Circuit Court
By AgnotE Sulek
I make ov*r *10.000 a month
party dotcrlbod below tlluotod
At Deputy Clerk
with my telephone You can.
In Sominoto County. Florida, be
Publlth Juno II, Id. If. ond
loo Port! Fulltime JJfOtOT.
ond tto Mm* It hortby onnoaod
July 4. IMS
or *4*1441
to and mod* a part ot Ito City ol
O
E
G
fO
Santord. Florida, purtuont to
Work Horn home S40 pr 100
tto voluntary annotation pro
InMrting enevelopo* For In
vl tl ont ol Socllon IF! 044,
FICTITIOUS NAME
lormatlen Mnd da m p to K S
Florid* Statutot
Nolle* I* haraby given that I
Enlerprltat. P O Boa H01 MZ
Par coll i
am engaged In buiinatt at US
Bloomltold, N J.,0f00j_____
Block II ond Wotl 'V of Street
W Lak# Mary Av*., Lak* Mary.
od|*c*nt on Eetl. M M Smith *
Seminal* County. F tor Ida under
41— Money to Lend
Subdlvltton. Piet Book I. Peg*
Ito flctttleut noma of KEOGH
M. of tto Public Record* ot
PINANCIAl GROUP, and that I
Vem met* County, F tor id*
Inland la register Mid name
Butin*** Capllal (to M* lo
Par tot It
With tto Clark of Ito Circuit
*1009 000 and ovkr P O Bea
block 4 I Loot beginning ot tto
Court, Sam mol* County. Florida
1411 WVHer Pk Fla WHO
Her Ih ■ ttl Corner thereof, run
In tccardonco with Ih* pro
thence Tetterly along North lino
vision* ol Ito Flctlllou* Nome
71— Help Wented
or Mid block to Ito Norttooil
Statute*. T* wfl: Section k*I 00
Corner, ftonco M utton, along
Florida Slaluto* IMF
tto Rett lino Itoroel Md toot,
/*/ Cofln R Kaagh
A C. M a ck o n lct 4 S e rvle t
thence Nwfhwettorly to * point
Publish Junta. IJ. M. If. Iktl
Imlalfatlan Salary based an
on Ito Wotl Imo ef told block III
O EG 14
tap a benefit* W M 0 1 ______
tool South of tto Norfhwett
A l o i s All thin* Eap A/or
Camor.thonc* run North along
F IC T ITIO U S N A M I
Ihad Good almotptora 4
tto Wotl lino to o point ot
NHIc* I* toraby given lhal w*
bonallt* EOE Apply el O*
beginning!. Block* 1, * ond port
or* engaged In butlnatt at M il
Rtry
Manor 60 N Hwy It *7
of Block I lying North Sooboord
H a r l w r l i A v * . Santord,
Coottlln* Railroad. *11 ol M M
Sam
I
no
I#
County,
Florida
71771
Smith * Subdlvltton according to
Employment
under tto lictlttou* name of
Ito plot ttorool at recorded In
C
R
Y
S
T
A
L
C
L
E
A
N
E
N
Plot Book I, Pag* U . of th*
TER PRISES and that wo In
Public Record! *1 Sominoto
I I I ] Franck Av*
land lo raglttor Mid name with
County. Florida; Lott JO. U . 14.
•to Clark ol tto Circuit Court,
Acrylic Applicator* naadad to
*1. 10. 04. 47. 40. 4* 10. SI. and
Somlnol* County, Florida In
apply protocflvk coaling on
Ito North to ot Lot 41, of M M
arc or danr* with ito provltlon*
cart, boat* and planet 15 to
Smllh’t Third Subdlvltton. *c
111 par hour W* train For
ol In* Flctlllou* Nam* Slaluto*.
cording to tto plat ttoro ot ot
wor k In Sanford area call
T own Section 1*10* Florida
recorded In Plot Book I, Peg# to
Tampa I I J 0 » 4 f 111
Slaluto* l*S&gt;
of th# P u blic R t c o r d i ol
/*/ Connt* A Lemon*
A L L T Y P E S JOBS
Seminole County, Florida; Thol
/*/ Claudia M Duncan
S TA R T W O RK NOW!
port et Ito NE to ot Socllon JJ.
Publlth June K . If A July A II.
Townthlp It South. Range 10
A
IftS
Eotl, lying North and Eatl ol
D EG lib
L A B O R / A - V fFORCE
O
Now U p m Io Rood and North ot
■Mi«n ~o.u^r Wtel
Seaboard Coottlln* Railroad,
IN O
^
FEE 1
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE
log*ihor with *11 Intorotl In
NOTICE IS HE REBY GIVEN
Raport ready tor work at * A M
plottod llroott. right* of way or
lhal by virtue ol lhal certain
« / W 1*1 St
Santord
Writ of Eaacullon Ittuad out of
321-1590
Parcal li
and unitor Ito Mol el ito County
AUT O SALES M ud b* tall
Black II and Black 10. North
Court at Vol ui i * County,
dart*-, have out going par
ol Railroad. M M . Smith * Sub
Florida, upon a final ludgtmont
tonality, b* amblltou*. and
dlvltton. Plat Book l. Pag* is. ol
randarad in Ito atoraMld court
hav*
a datira to make money
tto Public Record* of Seminal*
on tto III doy ol October. A D
Du* to our ••pontoon, we noed
County. Florida
itoi. in lhal certain caw tn
I parson* immediately tor
SBCTION li That upon Itilt
llltod. Florid* Bank at DaLknd.
uted car tale* Won H I 4031
Ordinance becoming affective,
#lc . Plolntllf - v s — lor*the
tto property owner* and any
Aran beauty Campaay
Carpenter. Defendant, which
ratldanl an the property da
Full or part llm* Call immodt
atoraMld Writ el E locution was
tcrlbod harem tholl be entitled
delivered to m* at Stor HI ol
ataly JJI W iQ o rm tg jI
to all Ito fight* and privilege*
Somlnol* County. Florid*, and I
AVON EARNINGSW OW III
and Immunlllat at art tram
novo lev tod upon the tallowing
OFINTIRRITORIISNOWIII
llm* to llm* grantod to rati
dotcrlbod property owned by
m msar ui-aaia
dent* and property ownort of
Lorolha Carpantor. Mid pro
Babytlltor Wanted Ratpontibw
tto City of Santord. Florida, at
parly twing lecetod In Seminal*
Wanagar lo keep J chlldran In
lurther provided In Chapter in .
County. Florida
mar*
my horn* 1 day* a weak Coll
Florida Statute*, and than
par ti cul arl y d t i c r l b t d **
PfTWt
lll'YOT
turftor bo tub|*cl to Ih* r*
fellow*
tponilblllttot ol rattdanc* Of
On* l ( f f B u l c k f door
CMTCRTU
owner thip at may from tlm* to
Automobile, id # a xa tjiE iiiie t
With awn tool* Call OT 3071
llm* be determined by th*
Being *tor ad al Sam, now Ford.
•nj iIfni
_____ _____
governing authority of tto City
Inc
Carpantor
and
Carpenter
Helper
ol Santord. Florida, and ito
and Ito under tignad at Shavitt
Mud lurnitn own hand Seat*
prevlttont el Mid Chapter III.
Ol Somlnol* Cowity. Florida,
Call JJJ toi l balwaan i
Florida Slalutot
will al II 00 A M on Ih* IIM day
PM VPM All day* weekend*
ol June A D 1*01. attar tor Mlo
S IC T IO N I: If any Mellon at
Cashier Nigh I pot11tan. tervic*
and MU to Ito Mgtotl bidder,
portion at * taction ef thlt
tlaltan 40 hr* Security OT
tar cath. tubitet to any and all
ordinance prove* to b* invalid,
a im in g lain* al Ih* Front
unlawful, or uncantiiiultonal. It
IW#»f| Door at Ito (top* of Ito
COOK
R d lt f
I* p * r l* n c *
thall not be told to Invalldat* or
Sominoto County CaurfheuM In
halpful Lakavtow Nursing
impair tto validity, tare* or
Santord. Florid*, the above da
Cantor. *1* R ind tl .______
affect Of any ether taction or
tenbad par tonal property
C R T O P E R A TO R
part ef thlt ordinance
Thai Mid Ml* It being mad*
Dale entry aapartonca ot good
to Mlitly ito tormt of Mid Writ
typing
Permanent pel! I tan
SECTION 4t That all ordl
nl E solution
with growth petonlial Never a
none** or parti ot ordinance* In
JohnE Polk. Sheriff
Fa*
contact herewith, b* and Ito
Sominoto County. F lor&lt;da
tom* are toreby revoked
TOP R M _____ 774-1341
To bt advert,Md May X . Jim* k,
IS. 10. with tto MW on Juno It.
DESK C L E R K S no riperlenc*
SBCTION 11 Thai thlt ordl
1*01
nccaiiery
Eiteltonl agger
none* thall become effective
DCF ISO
•unity to work with data ef
immodlatoly upon It*
and adaption
fha art computer tyttom
Fna n d ly. naal perienabto
A copy thall b* available at
N O T I C IO F IN T E N T IO N
Apply In parson Deltona Inn,
tto OttK* of Hi* City Clark tor
T O B IO ItT IB
4MI patten* dttirmg to tiamin*
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E

DEO-FT

T *'

71— Help Wanted

Haw Diana Shag agaolng July.
DRYWALL With or without
aapar l anc * I m m a d l a t *
opening* Good pay Call to
dav *31 4300

‘(S , In downtown Santord
Potihont available in Orlando
4 Santord tier** Miring A»* l
M g r . C re d it M g r . Sal**
partannal Rafail **p halpful.
but net nac Coll H » k SOT

Ncmr urtii CARiica
NEEOCO
Chwiuola. Oviedo are* Mutt b*
bondabi# hav* dapandabw
trantporlattan. have laWphona
and ba ratpontlbl* To work
between J 00 PM 4 « 00 PM
Far more Into, coll Tony,
m M il. between II 00 AM
and 4 00 PM

NURSE' S AIDBSi All thllt*
F. -per lanced or certified pr*
torrad Apply in parson *1
Lak aview Nursing Center, fit
E Ind St., Sanford
PHONE WO RK E RS M adly
fulttlm*. but will conildor port
tlm* 14 00 hr , plu* good
bonu»*t Mai* or l«m*l*
Good turnmar work for du
dent* Call m 1347

II yw waBi **M * ana*
lean ia4 vtat u mk* paanod atag
■net n»— * tW l yawh rm*| can
a m iw *t*n* uf 0*** Fmn It
4ik f p n K I IOOS4S4441

Triedman's
IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G

E x p e r ie n c e d

s a le s pe r s o n

J-KIEIYMAH'S JEWELERS, one of the futtsl
rowing rcuil chain* in the Soufhciu is seeking
nendly ami outgoing inJiviJuali wiih sales ability
Experience in retail sales preferred but not manda­
tory Friedman's olTers us employers an eicelleni
compensation package indluding Maim Medical
hospitalization, life insurance, paid sacauons, paid
holidays, sick leave, retirement program and olher
benefits Apply in Person

?

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
r~

Tried man’s
**n *

m

&lt;4

JIW ILE R B

Sanford Plaza
Apply In Person

Triedmanfe
IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G

E x pe r ie n c e d

b o o k k e e pe r

F R IE D M A N 'S JEWELERS the South's leaduq
and most aggressive retail iewcler has an opening foi
a bookkeeper Experience preferred bui not man
detory Individual must be friendly, outgoing anc
efficient. Friedman's offers its employees tn rt
tellent compensation package including M aioi
M edical hospitalization. We insurance, paid vacanon*, paid holidays, tick leave, retirement prugrtrr
and other benefits Apply tn Person
A N E Q U AL O P P O R T U N IT Y EMPLOYER

Sanford Plaza
Apply In Person

�KIT ‘N* CARLYLf : by Larry Wright
71— Help Wanted

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

SHIPPIK SUPCMISON
M a n u fa c tu re r *1 alum inum
window* and Hiding g a it
d o o 't la seeking « highly
a r g a n t t a d In d iv id u a l la
mporvloo eur snipping da
partmant M m t ba familiar
aim O O T regulate™ and
npariancad In tha Khedutmg
and malniananca 0* a beef ot
truck* Practical arparianca
in loading and protecting alu
minum w.ndowrt and sliding
giata door* or r*i*ted malari
alt It datirabl* Alta. rk
ipontibk tar maintaining an
orderly werahouM Mutt ba
tela to wort under aatrama
prattwra and rtta lt with all
lavalt at managamant Wa
ottar a iibaral compensation
and banafttt package It Intar
at*ad. and you maal thaia
rtqulromantt, land resume',
or call
H A R C A R A LU M IN U M
P R O D U C TS COM PANY
P O Drawer t
d. PI.

TRUSS ASSTMBURS
E ■per lance preferred, but will
train E&gt;t*&lt;knt benetit* with
c o m p e te n c e pay A p p ly
lo w e 'e T r u a t Plant, ito i
Aileron C lr., Sanlord Airport
Induttrlal Park

*3— Roortis for Rent
Rachater
Pnrata Door, Bath
Attar t. Ml atll__________
Chrlltlon Apt* a Hemet
TV. kitchen, laundry, maid, l VO
art u p O rl C ) 140* a lla t 10
f 0 n l t had Room tor rent See at
n i l Ca&gt;a Pi 1 btockt off Itm
St A Sanlord Ava
Lake M ary Area Kitchen prlyi
lejet tso a weak H I If?0

m sen
ROOM FOR Sent
Call: m laia

S ANFO R D Furnished roomt by
tha weak Reatonable ratat
Maid oarvica Call H I »S0f
) &gt; PM tIS Palmetto Are
S A N FO R D - Furnithed room
Haute 1 pool prlveieget Call
IH a ja ittta r S PM
lleoplng roam w ilt teperele
hath Include* ice bar US
*k . plu* giao tacurlty depotit
Call n &gt; m t . t r m t u i
T H E F L O R IO A MOTEL
SOOOak Avenue
H IS X u
__R!sekonet&gt;i*jiV#*kij^R*^

97— Aperlment*
Furnished / Rent
Furn Apt* tar Verier Cltliant
111 Palmetto Aye
J Cowan No Phone Calit
tugh 1 bdrm apartment M e . &gt;
children Complete privacy
t &lt;00 par weak plut UN ) tacurl
tr vtepotn Call 17) Jltt or

m t t a _____ __________

0n« Month Fim lint
on I bdrm turn aptt
Alto available ttudio
1 bdrm apartment*

SANFORD CRT. APTS.
373-1301
)| Woklva H irer E (ticlaney Canoe
ute Carpet, air Adult* no
pet* l i e ! H I **7g
end 1 bdrm . near town. Its
end MS par weak USO tacurl
B h ty, Call 13) *314 evenings
I Bdrm
adult*, no pat*, alt.
■ quiet residential. l i f t per
'"*1 month plu* depotlt Call
l m a o it

99— Apartm ints
Unfurnished / Rent
B AM BO O COVC APTS.
I M t Airport Rlvd
PHONE n i M N U l t d l
Efficiency tram I I U me
Oltcaunt ttr Senear Cttlltn*
a C O U N T R Y S t T Y IN G a
11 4 1 Bdrm Apartment*
LakaetawFamlly Pvelllde
i New Open Weekend*

ERSCOVC.......323-7900
eluee ] Bdrm Duplat Appli
a n c e t . t c r a a n e d p a tio ,
leundry *JOOmo H I H O ___

IIDGCW0O0 ARMS AFTS.
Limittd Tuna Ofitj
i* Ott First Month* Rant
1saoRidgewood Ava
Sanford. F la
CALL

la............... — Hiiaai

1 hdnw.. I S e n cD e fu r
SHO tacurlty deposit l
month Call H 2 0 IW
1 bdrm I bath. atr. wall to wall
carpet sua mo * dap. No
pats Leas# H I SOM

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent
La va ly One id r m Cottage
Private yard 1*0 par weak
plus SMC tacurlty Call H I
IM S or H lO iH

103-Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
1 Bdrm . duple*
ail
n la n c a i. nice a re a . 117)
month. ♦ «a&lt; Can H I 1117
Country largo two llory homo
tMO par month
C EN TU R Y 11
KISH R IA L E S T A T E
R E A L T O R ....... ...............H I-t a il
D E L T O N A 1 bdrm . I bam S O I
mo . plus tacurlty Call SJt
sail_________________________ •
H ID D E N LAKE 1 bdrm . 1
both, kid* a t . no pat* tees
par month Call I N QWT
a a a IN D ELTO N A a a a
a e H O M ES FO R R E N T e e
________e &gt; l l t l l M e » ________
lake Mary
1 Bdrm . 1 bath
H u g h t h o d t d lo t. q u ts t
naighborhood Goodichoolt
Wolloco Cra*t Realty
...................... m a i n
Lake M ary lo r A bdrm , I both,
new oppi lancet, (croon room,
lencad yard Available July I
SAS0 tec . SAM mo Reference*
H t am________________
Sanford watt ol 1/4. 1 bdrm I
bath, control olr/hsot. toncod
yard, dbl garage lake occatt
SSS0 a mo First, lost, tacurl
ty H I Ala*
______________
S A N F O R D 1 bdrm . 1 both
Villa Fireplaco. double cor
garago SS11 m o . M i l tec
Immadiato occupancy I
r ea lto r

LO N O W O O O 1 bdrm . 1 bath
Now
E itc w llv o
Momot
Eacluslvo area' 14V0 m o .
14VO tec

105— DupiexTriplex / Rent
I N I B Mel Nov tile 7 Bdrm
I
bom. sir. appliance*. S H I par
month plu* S ill tacurlty da
posit Coll H I M il

113— Storage Rentals
Mini N i r t h o u m
» « 4 u p .....................
W 04H

117— Commercial
Rentals
Rattaurpnt For Rant complete
ly equipped Far Information
colt H I 7T3S________________
Retail 4 Office Space MS up to
l.oso *q N aito ttorege avail
able H I taoi

121— Condominium
Rentals
Condo tor rent Now 1 bdrm 1V&gt;
bath, tlroploco. microwave
ttovo and dHhwathor SMO

C a lllM l«M
Sandalwood Condominium* 1
bdrm , 1 bath. S17S mo .
i m 77M _______ _ _ _ _ _

S IN G L E S T O R Y
L IV IN G
Ittu Term* to Ht
Tout Hoods!
FutnrshoO ot UnlMimshtd.
Corporis....... ......Prtvata Falla*
Lutb Landscaping Fat* Children
WAT ER BE OS ACCEFTEDt

..3211911

Call.

123— Wanted to Rent
Large Home needing repair I
Prater rural area Carpantary
specialist Appro* S400 par
mo H I AMO, o il I N

1 2 5 -For Lease

iy ffwy F rk Jiy
tufdsy from

J

Saar Down town 1 bdrm. I bath
c a r p e l , a p p lia n c e s
Downstairs apt Na pats SH I
a m* . 1X0 security 2221117.
or H I «*0t
____________
II*
Airport B ird I bdrm . t both
U ) l w a . i m n N __________

Sanford newly remodeled large
1 b d r m , new kitchen,
carpet, air. S X » + sac t i l B
S Park Ave Call *0*000 MBS
Spacious Apartment* Minute*
It urn Hwy 1*14 Lefcetront
pad Iannis, adult*, no pat*,
I laundry
and 1 bdrm
Alta
furnished
Starting
at SMI
a me
eftlctency trorn SIS week SIM
Call m 07a ta see___________
deposit No pots Coll H I AMI
S I P M AlSPelmotlO_________
I bdrm . &lt;ergo living
kitchen with appliance* SIM
a deposit H I MM
I bdrm.. SUO me SIM RtpooW
includes water 4 ‘v both
Loess Call H I M M __________
nice area U M
/I

JI

We M ve
B e A L TO R S . .

■RUM.

SHENANDOAH!
VILLAGE
APTS.

FROM *315
JlenUI Office
323-3920
^ u m O M iM O
U.

SARFOeO

BATEMAN REALTY

SAILPOINTE
AT
LAKE MONROE
*la*4 2KM00MS*

LAKEFR0NT
LUXURY ADULT
COMMUNITY
★ NOWLEASING★
CALL..........322 1051
127— Office Rentals
Offitai te ItRl
Mt N AAapAa. SonNrd
222*0*0
s n W. Lake Mary
Suita A. S IM month. Im
msdloNoccupancy M U R
Office tor rent It N M i tq H
a,aiiabie Rscsptignitt avail
a b le
Laka M a ry a re a
M an mmo
________
n o i q *1 ortico ipacs avail
able, tacand tlaar at ad
m iM ttr attve building San tore
Airport. 14 M par *q It In
rludst OR. hoot, iam tonal and
parking Call SanNrd Afrpert
Authority tor anail* H I m i

M l— Homes For Salt
A T T E N T IO N
H OM E B UTR R S I
Buy direct and save 11000
b d r m . 2 both, largo groat
roam and largo &gt;‘*mg room
Completely ram ado tod and
redecorated inudo and t
Can trolly located clots
school, mapping, ate Nice
yard and many other aolrao

SM tOO
C A LL F O R A P F T I
&gt;21 0000 or 111 t i n

Thursday. June 20, IH J — JB

321*0759 E v e 322-7443
BY OWNER 4 b d rm "1 both.
K -lin e d porch, many aetroi
021 ettumabie mtg M l .*00

H I till

717— Garage Sales
A L L Y SALE

USED CARS

RotregoroWr- Gold SIS D re u
or. hoodbc ird 2 night e'*nd*.
mirrors. 1100 or best offer
H I 1727______________________
* R EN T T O O W N «
Color T V l ktaroo*. naerwrt
dryer*, rtfrlgorofor, trootort
furniture, video record*'*
Special H tw e o k 'ir o n ltl 00
AIIornative TV 4 Appl R enisle
Xoyrs* Shopping Center

LAROE SELECTION
E V E R Y TH IN G MUST GO
Behind McCrary im
OawnNwn SanNrd

T H E B E S T IN T O W N
E l TER M S

_____

By Owner Lg 1 bdrm house
2704 Ridgewood Ave t i l 000
Dead investment 1/4 01*4

COUNTRY RIM REALTY

S P A R K L IN O

* * COLON T E L E V IS IO N * *

S A N FO R D
New 1 bdrm
l bath
garage energy saver

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

double

FOOL

hemal

Huge

matter

bdrm Fireplace! Central
haot/olrl 1 wo r k t h o p t i

u i too m to
to IRON
IN RIJU CSIIU

Attvme ns Oualitying ml low
it tvt.too
A FFO R O A R LE t
2 bdrm ml
•rg screened parch, fenced
ytrd FHA ar V A llnenclngt
SM 000 Call ut quick I
H ID D E N LAKE I I bdrm 1 bath
split plan ml o itra Irg lamily
roam Sparkling peal I Privacy
lent* gsrgoawt decor. AAafly
treat I Auvmablet

Haute tor tala by owner Need*
work Reasonably priced In
Sanlord Call H I 1044 ____
JUST R IG H T FO R Y O U
1 Bdrm . IVt both brick homo 10
toady and prlcad right at
144 *00 Recently redecorated
Large 1st Call tn sew

CALL BART
R EAL E S T A T E
R iA L T O R ______________111 1**0

C ^ iv ,
T j t i a

.

ftlMFf%M%lll I* Ml! l%f*I*r» aif I p

KISH REAL ESTATE
S E V E N i ' i ^ L lT d * D acre*
Coder Frame I bdrm/l** bom
2 story ham* b o o m earner t
fewer deck* t* help yaw an|ey
the peaettut country tatting
E ip a t t d beam c o lh s d ra l
celllnfl. B ric k tlra p la c a .
Stained g la tt w ln d a w t 4
tat.too oa
L IK E NEW Cende New bath.
New paint. New carpal. New
c a b in e t, l o p t . N e w tile
leyer ell thit 4 Owner will
a o i l o l In f i n a n c i n g
1
Bdrm/|i* bath
tlll.OOO 00
INVESTORS, this ana will moke
yea tame mone y! 0 rental
vnltt an ■*■/• I aero. Owner
will atkitf In financing
if t oes to
L O V E L Y frame ham# an tree
thawed lot 2 B drm /l both,
groat ream with ftreptec*
Screened paII* area Under
ground tpr In* let
M l.FM M

EXCELLENT condition. 2
bdrm/tv* both, lamily roam
with Hrapiato 11* l* Kraanad
parch. 1 catling fan* Kitchen
e q u i p p e d
O P E N SUNDAYS! I ta I PM

(305) 321-0041
021W 11th Slrwat
Santerd. FI 11771
1 bdrm

NEW HOME
Lovely ) Bdrm l bath with
great room, tlroploco. oat in
k lt c n o n . d i n i n g r o o m ,
beautiful wooded lot ST* 000

PtfOKI 3234443
Far quality rraftm am hip and
compatitiro price* let ut price
out your r
No puonlying New 1 Bdrm . &gt;
bath gtraga. ta S00 dnwn
l l ' * \ M ye a r m arlga g*
Mav* fgh l m Call I H M
aHaro PM _
_____
Na Oualitying New 1 bdrm &gt;
bath an 1 acres Hurt** ok
Owner financing prime arts
17*Mi 10*1217_______________
Sanford Nice I bedroom homo
with living roam, dining room
paneled lamily rwom laundry
roam workshop Call tar in
Mrmotlon H J IIM or U a *S1T
sakta* or ka*laHar__________
S A N FO R D 0 plus acre* F ant ad
A creel fenced No rooNlel tano
an Ueo stack B om B fockta
roam. *0u* 0 bdrm 2 hoik
ham* SttLSM

...MSI

■I it IOI1

STEm

H A N D Y M A N S P E C IA L ) 1
bdrm U* bath ham* with
lirepleco. L thapen porch,
remodeled kitchen Submil all
•ftartl t i t . too
P R E S TIG IO U S A R E A ! Ibdrm
! batti Sm w with Implete.
control olr/hoof. community
pnet dvb he tnr. A | » c « H .
Call tor mar* deteilil SUM S
F A M IL Y D E L IO M T t 1 bdrm 1
b o lh h o m o w i t h b r ic k
llro p lo c o . oat In kllcken.
central alr/host. broobtait
b a r. la rg o la m ily room.
U l.ftO
BEST B U Y O N M A R K E T ! 1
bdrm I bolh homo, eel m
kitchen, firbploco. ctn lral
olr/hsot. all now kitchen,
parch It* too
G R E A T B U S IN E S S OPPOR
T U N IT V I Oaad toceflenl Boor
4 W in* License IncluOed
Owner erttl (anelder term* ol
M \ dawn wtfh PM M of 10%
payable monthly, t i t .000
W ILL B U IL D TO S U IT! YOUR
LO T OR O U R S I EXCLUSIVR
A O E N T F O R W IN S O N O
DEV. C O U P ., A C E N TR A L
F L O R IO A L E A O I R I MORE
HOM E FO R LESS M O N E Y !
CALL T O D A Y I
O O E N E V A O S C E O LA RD s
I O N I O FOR M O i l L E l l
S Acre Country tract*
Well tread tn paved Rd
U N Down I* Vrs O IIIN t
From t i t . tOOl

L » ( « t N*«...&amp;...lh*d Mobil*
Horn* Diiki in this Aim .
Fam llNk
4 ........ . Adutf*
M M H w y 17 *1. . ............H I I2P*
PURCHASING
A M O B ILE HOME?
Free consulfatlon on hornet
park* land financing toning
Atk for Ron 201 H I 1700
R E P O : R EPO ! ) bdrm 1 bath
mebiw homat |t*» mo Soma
IS lu in a b a Coil A Oik for Mr
O rr &lt;04 211 1120
F R E E C R E O IT CHECK S T
P H O N E I E a ty qualifying
C o ll 4 oik lor Mr O r r .
004 111 2H0
WOWt I bdrm . 1 both, now
d o u b le w ld * . m o k o n lls
s h in g le d re o l, tlro p lo c o ,
111*00 Coll A ilk Nr Mr O rr
*04 111 111*
U S E D I Mobo* Horn** starling
at SHOD Coll 4 ask lor Mr
O rr *44 2111IN____________
1*42 Otamptan I4XM 2 bdrm .
! bom. family pork n i n e
Can 1111441__
t i l t S K Y L IN E
Cor r lag*
Cove 2 Bdrm . 2 bath, many
aetrst. m ini eve to apprecl
at* STOOD down and astum*
mortgag* Call JI7M1I

111— Appliances
/ Furniture
Appli#Atilt F*r til*" all in
•it«ll**t1 c•rtditnjn A M !y
fP ifltP P d ......................

YY11S0K MJUER FURNITURE
m

i l l R H I S T ...........2121022
* e CO UCH 4 CHAIR # e
B IS T OFFER
______
SJO ttlt
Dining Room table and chair*
S le c h a irs , A sking 1100
Call 221 TOM
Moving Ilka new toto. earth
fan* ch a ir, da*k, table*,
lamp*, color T V . doubw bad.
IM kao. Call H I 212*

MOVI NG! I Living Room 4
Dining Room Furniture Mult
Go I Call 122 7714 out_________
Rerendlftened Aurtlencer
tram 14* W AR R A N TY
B AR N ETTS
C A S IE L R E R R V

*24 SI I I .......................... U4S4S1

S PikCf 0 # Diriri Rmir Sot
dark tmlth. s i l l JH 7M4

4 Sot

719— Wanted to Buy
Baky Bad*. Slralfan. CNthat.
Ploypaa*. Etc
Psporkotk
Beak* 111 *1/1 111 *104

Head Crib* Playpen*. Baity

Ability Kannaie Dog boording
Country Atmotpher* Roaeon
* b l t R a ta *
111 1 H i
R O T T W E IL E R S
4 month* Na popart 1200 a*

tu rn itu r* . clo th in g Good
Price* Atw r 7^PM
H I 1741
Paying CASH Nr
Aluminum. Cant. Copper.
B ra n Load, Newspaper
G ia u . Gold. Silver
KoAomo Tool. I l l W lit
S 1 DO Sot * 1 121-1 too

111121*________________

Whlto A K C T o y Poodle k
month* ofd H o t oil shot*
StW Coll H I 111* of N r 4 PM
d u rin g w e a k , a n y tim e

O
•
•

•

D I M . O IF V T A U T O S A I T S
1501 T re n c h A v o .
325* 1855
11*1 Cadillac Driven dally
Call H I 0*11 attr* I PM weak
days. Anytime weekend*
1*40 AMC Spirit Runt beaut.full
E t c o lle n f transportation
Asking SU7S H U i d
1141 C have tie 4 dr hatchback
Auto, A M F M tWroa 11 m r»
warranty E acoINnl condition
122 1**7
7* Pinto 4 ipd Irani good
engine Body damaged Sail
tor part* SX» or boil otter
O T ISIS
71 Maiibu Station Wagon V t
p
window* b r a in iteorlng
auN air, crult* Need* tome
work, 1*00 HI m i

771— Good Things
to Eat

703— Livestock and
Poultry

LIVE HUE CtABS
________m *i»

BakWI For Sale
Peg* tm peat*, min berrree
Wiles Saw*. Hwy MW , H I *47*

773— Miscellaneous
M IN I B IK E
Good condition
Call 134 ISA*

711— Antiques /
Collectables

$140

REPOSSESSED
WA N T E D RT

Must sell 1 qiron*et style tree I
building* Brand new never
erected One Ik 40 X40 Will
N il N r balance owed Call
Adam 1 odd 137 &lt;044
Sub* equipmani ComplaN Ml
Of U S Diver * equipment
Like now
B C . ocfopu* ect
Coll 111 R IB
W E D D IN G GOWN
(I ,* Ik lar* K from i m
H I 4170

COLLECTOR

Top price* Pfid for baseball,
toqtbail card*, coin*, stamp*
and comic book* Cali R t
7710 anytime

713— Auctions
FOR E S T A T E
Com m ercial o r R esidential
Auction* A Appraisal* Coll
Poll l Auction 111 1 * »

lo t uo w orry about yout
c io d it problem*
W e c a n fmanc* # lm o »i
anyone
D o w n paym onl o t lo w as
S 3D 0 00
W o la k e trail***
Paymant* to At y ,» » buckyaf

t* Metlang * cyl pt AM F M
cattetto E v il* nice 1440
dwn JO mo* toper &lt;110*00

7 3 5 -Tru ck s /
Busts/Vans
1f«4 X L T Ford Pick Up Miid
Mpci, l i l t ovtf ptymcnVt

m 4i u

739— Motorcycles
and Bikes
BICYCLE

Schwinn. M*n t

Varsity, 10 speed Nee part* 4
many eatret 11II 1) I M00
H O N D A O O L D W IN O I I I *

Stereo. Jommor A steal at
iiwoi Cali i n *4lQ
STOPI
‘I I Sul irk I taM Adult owned and
maintained Great rruuj , very
clean H at many eatra* Need
money now must M i l l **7V nr
bed otter 331 lt*4 or H I *233

1*71 HO NO A

L &amp; E AUCTION

7 3 1 -C a rs

Friday Nights__ 7 PM

B id C fldlt?

No Clldlt?

500 Sinloid Att.

N t FINANCE

323-6593

ift friavt # U m lli i NuniNr •«

CX 1*4

Shaft

drive. w *N r cooled lull far
I n g . a n d t l d t s to ra g e
ekcollont condition IIDOO
Coll O T 111]or H I 1711

741 — Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

Htpe i ler #i L t « • • It## Dtwfil

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
n a v srrSwa.— m i -p w

715— Boats and
Accessories

★ DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION ★

14' Orlando Clipper * Horse
power Johnson motor and
frelWr All In perfect condl
twn Coll 1H 2*00 attar o PM
I* It. Open FliNoraiaa. i i tap.
AAarcury oalvanliad frailer,
end eitra* S3SOO Call after 4

Hwy N ........... e. .O i y H * i Niicli

• • * • # H«W r # * • • # f

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION
(very Wed Nile at 7, M PM

FOR 1ALR M’ RV Park Model
trailer Fine condition, tulty
furnished Heeli Air. screen
r o o m , p a t io l u r n l t u r o .
carpeted tlorage khed. all
Included M.000 hrm Frlncl
piekonly Call H I 4717
1*7* Haney f Mil contained,
elide In cemper A C. 1 way
relrigeraier. fleer furnace
netdmg tenk. like new D.dod

Call m D U

W here A n ybo d y *
* Can B u y or S till *

a

713 7Ml

717— Garage Sales
M O VIN G SALE 70S Brlarclitt
St , lat Sun. * 7 Appliance*.
dith linen*, d c

F er mere detail*
_______ I IH i l l l ) ! I
______
Da B a r, A uN A AAarlne U W l
Acre** the river. No ot Nil
l it Hwy 17 *1 DeBary taatakti

Highland* Garage te N Rained
out 1**1 Saturday This week.
71* Galloway Court Saturday
J u n o R .I M M Iln o o n

* * L IM O U S IN E * *
1*7* Cadillac lima Dork blue,
with partition 1)000 t it lit*

If you ar* look Inf far • tuc
cattful career in Real EtteN,
Sltntfram Rtelty It loot in*
lar yaw Call Lae Albright
today ol 212 20N Evening*

______________

743— Junk Cars
A N T JU N K C A R IA T R U C K l
taeught Frent t i l U4 A mart
CaW » - ) » &gt; * . . . . ............. ...22&gt;-0)l
TO P Dollar Paid for Junk 4
ItM d can.frucki 4 hoary
equipment 132 H R
WE P A T IO P O O U A R FOR
JU N K C A R E A N 0 TR U C K 1
C B t A U T O P A R T I 7*1 *1*1

CONSULT OUR

122 MO]

CALL A N Y T I M E

322-2420

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

IS4S P AR K A V E ______ SonNrd
N l Lk M ary Bhrd.........Lb Mary
11*04 d a w n , A o tu m a k lo 1
Bdrm . 2 bath Dbl garage
large fenced yard Coll 2*7
T7t»______________________ _

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

I bam

Haw root Low down payment
Owner financing 147.100
H I 4*07_____________ _______

WoN IQ Camps ay

Linford's Sites liidti

Fn

C R E D IT H ASSLES?

149— Commercial
Property / Sale

R EA LTO R
LONOW OOO

REALTY*REALTOR
W E L IS T A N D t E L L
M O R E H OM ES THAN
A N Y O N E IN NORTH
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY

323-5774

t h

STENSTROM

J Family Garage SaN clethei
baby INms. much mltc Plus 1
cor* Suburu, 4 Maverick
Mak* offer* 2101 Gaor(la
Are off W 21th St Thur*,

Zenith 11" color N N v lile n Orlg
Mel price over iaoo Balance
due S M 00 cosh or fok* over
payment* S21 month Still M
w a rr s n ly
NO M O N EY
DOWN Frt* homo trial, no
obligation Coll M l life day
or night

199— Pets A Supplies

BOND MONEY!!

w/Nnced &lt;* acre and largo I
bdrm

in m i

113— Television /
Radio / Stereo

Law Down. Low Interest Rttat
t i t too Crank Construction
Realty SMoaot______________
COOL

MuKl Fam ily Yard Sol* Ua
M o il D r .iM to O o w it* on
th* R lv o rl. OeBory S*l
/on* 22 Behind Power Hour*
pit 17*1 Follow Sign* 1
Saturday June 11 sT ^ aT h O
Sanor* B ird (In front of the
c lu b h o m o ) F u r n llu t * .
teanog* clothing and mitcol

2 m f s m n n jiK in jit

141 — Homes For Sale

ai&amp;Lif IRC
Rtatio
II V iiti i i n r r ik i

From I f U H l PM
Moving SaN Th ur F ri I AM
Bike* turnitur# old gllkk
work ledW* large m e lath
ion* lok» of good ituflt H I
Eokt Crystal Drlvo___________

111 MO*

tw w iffhst

Wall St.
121 I
D ISTR ESS SALE
in ret tori 12*00 negotiable )
Bdrm . I bath Country Club
area Call S74 74*0

HALL

SATURDAY O N L Y ....... A/21/IS

Deed wienere Part* 4 Service
for K p a t m . ........
12141*7.
MO O NEY A P P L IA N C E S __

Hag R E. I n t e r
.......m m i
DELTONA DI1TR ESI SALS
teener transferred &gt; bdrm I
bath ham* peddi* tans. 4
vertical blinds
Included
4 R I N0OF F ER! S4I.T00

731-C a r s

111— Appliances
/ Furniture

Lie Bool Ettatv Broker
1 Bdrm 1 Bath fireplace, new
kitchen, bam 4 root, fenced
bock w a s t i e . *00 now
tl* *00 Buyer pay* closing
14*4 Santerd Are

laOOHWY 17 11
IN L A N D RE A L T Y .IN C
R E A L T Y W O R L D .........H U M S
1 Bdrm . | bath, tented s a il par
month . salt tacurlty depot it
reference* required C a ll:
014 MM

Evening Harold. Sanford, FI.

M l— Homes For Sale

peR

DUPLEX Positive c « 0h flow
Owner will finance Sal MO
w ith tiu
O IN IV A
Lika new daukN
•ids ] bdrm . 2 batti iN b ilt S
acre*cleared fenced Storage
khed. pen/ stall SdS.M*
Terms
O TH E R H OM ES. LO TS .
AC R E A O E. IN V E S T M E N T
P R O P E R TY
CALL A N Y T IM E

REALTOR O T rail
LIS T W IT H USt

C O M M IR C IA L S P R C IA L IIT
L A K E AAARY R E A L T Y
RGB B A LL. JR ................ &gt;H IIM

151— Investment
Property / Salt
CASSELBERRY I aero, toned
PH I Ml 000 W AAoi'Ciawski
HI H*2
REALTOR

153— Acreage
Lots/Sdle

Additions A
Remodeling
REM00CUIK SOCIALIST
Th* Whole Ballot Wa.

B.L UNI CONST.
322 7029
F Inane mqAvOllabW

Appliance Repair
AH*m AppkiKi S*mci

i acre*, parti, t Narad wafer 4
alecIt k IIVH O By

14 hr la r v k a No ( H r * Charge

17yrt.paaokaai. 17**421

m oops

155— Condominiums
Co-Op / Sal*

Bookkeeping
N r you smell business*
I: 22470*1 -------------------------Jim

N E W S M Y R N A R IA C H

Dr at!realty reduced 2 bdrm I
barn Ocean Front fumithad
Condo 11004 down
Realty. R EALTO R *
Moot* 1112.____ OpQ*10qY*l
N EW 1 M Y R N A SEACH
Juki reduced Fontaolic ■**« P
Irani building
Upgraded
carpet, ceramic Ilk In bitch
an hall end bdrm t Calling
tank throughout many, many
•atraoi Own or It a Ikanoad
RoalNr
•aachafdo Realty. R EALTO R *
*0*022 1111.......
OpaalPoykl
_________________________a t I
bdrm , 2 bath All appnanett
w * * h * r/ d ry o r
F r it * R*
( u c t d l i l l . *00 R I A L T Y
IT O R E , Raaltaro *31 l « R

157— Mobile
Homes / Sale
A D U L T P AR K
L IF E T IM E R f N T t .... IM k llM
I n d u d * * w a t e r , g a rb o g o
pick up. y a rd m ain! Im
machaN occupancy

i miMo

Eleclrical

Law n Service

Plastering

Anything Elactrlcal SIm * 1*701
ElNm aNt....)* Mr. Service Colit
Tom 1* IN c Ir k t a r v f c o O T 171*
C O N TE M P O R A R Y E L E C T R IC

ACE LA W N S E R V IC E
MaiaNftanst taaMing Prunang
Ckantng Thatching Fortilumg
F i m I ir im a N t
H I I 'l l

O A L L Phases of Pttilorlog*
Repair. Sfvct*. HardCael.
ti mu Lafed Brfch H I 1**1

CompNNtNctrlcol Sorvlcot
TV 4 HMohen**
U l 1177

■EA T TH E HE A TI

D fc lE k c friC
21) MW
Haw 4 romcdoling, additions.
Ians, kacur'fy ughfs, llm ort
^•us on okC. korvlcas Qualify
larvica LK&lt;nswd 4 BondaO

Carpentry

E i p i r k a co d ....... — •■*--------------Very RtRokta ....... 22MFITKIO
All type* a* carpanfry 4 ' •
mortaring 27 y rt tap Call
Richard Greet H I F*71

Cleaning Service
a C O M P E T E N T C L E A N IN G .
a S E R V IC E*
Avaiiokta is day. laf (M y
Evas________ __________17*1*01
Carps* Ckeatag Lfviag.
4 M*N II* M
1*4* 4 Choar. I t a M I M

MAJDS-Te -0*4tr
N a*if Ta Oodriaast
Call MaiboSpatkl
Wrrtce Law Raleo

CAU NON! 139MOO
Bos c Cleaning laundry, win
rtanoks. HN sic
W ork-Law RaN* 2240*0*

Gill Oimtun Brat, j
CompUti Uwn Gift
NuiMlibli litl*
5234401

Fence
IN S TA L L I I L L . .4. R E P A IR
Cypress...... Chain LMh ,
Foac* &gt;211711
aaaooasaoasoaaa
Build*Bigger Businasal
U m The Herald ClatalHods
C A L L TOOAV
OT Ml I
••t aj t i i t j i i B g

Health# Beauty
A 0 R E A T 4 IF T I H a re H x
I All typos *1

Plumbing
i.

TO W ER I B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R LY Harriott t Beauty
II* E IH * I O T 17s)

Home Improvement

U w n M e w iR (.......... Law P ik e s
______224 7RM___________

minis howto t

tnimmcd

Iprfag Yard Clash ypo - O T I H l

Quality Lmr Cbm
Al A IN rd a b k Price* U l 0*7]

________ HI-*«2I________
THOM AS 4 TH O M A S
Hem*
rtp a v. sksaMg. lawn cars.
Call H I ISO!

Home Repair*
C A R P EN TER
Repairs sod
romod*img No |ok fo* small
Call 122 &lt;0*1__________________
Mamwnanc* of all typos
Carpanfry. pofnfIng. plumbing
endokctrie OTOOM

OUR R A T E * A R B LOW ER
IakovWw Nursing Coaler
(I* I tacawd M . taaSord
122 4 7*7

Painting
A Way T* ta rs i Rost Work
Boat Prices tar aolfpOForNB,
Minting. *. mar* Raf Vary
RoKoBta 2 I4 0 H IK 2*________

PliN Ml#

^ ★ yiiABTOi

SpOCNUtll
H y r t (s p
Fro* Est
Ronds*
Insured
W G T R U R Y ___
N ) MO)

****#••*#***•••

Landclearing
i NG

Lot/Landckaring
F ill dirt
Tspaoii Ponds O ram diichat
l i k Prsws/Ofwn Call If* P R
TH O R N E L A M O C L E A R IN O
f il l d ir t # c l a y *
* M A L( 4 H A U L IN G
O T JSH

a Fro* Ittlntotat • H I M M *

Sawing Machine*/
Vacuum Cleaners
owing Machine Repairs all
makes 24 yrs oiporknco In
11 Retired H I *71)

Sprlnklert/lrrigatlon
A B O U T T I M I IR R IG A TIO N
Now inttsuoHons
Fro* 1st
C apart Repairs *1Compkta
tpr ink lor ly stems
Timers
Pumps
EH
**11010

Masonry
B E A L C a w cro tta lM a n O u a b ir
Oporollon Pol NO Drlvowayt
Days H I 7)33 Era* 777 1771

Nursing Caro

Center t Baddkag 4
No J*4 Too Email
I I I Rvrta* Last*.

G I M l VA L A i i D C L E a I

Lawn Main fan*net
L a .d K aping Bush Hog Mowing
IS* K k l

UrrH*
Rowalr * RepNio * Remadol

Build • Bigger eusinsstl
U m Th* Her * N C NSOifkdt
CALL TO O A V
O TH 1 I
ai i i i m
i l l l l »
Hoot* Pofattn* 4 W o « Repair
Tou buy meter tell
kar To SAVE SSI
O T 1711

Tilt
A M T I L l Ceramic Ilk sales 4
m ste fleiio n Rath, Hear*,
remodeling repairs Lots ol
t lt o * . d o ilg h l, p a tte rn * ,
grout*, to llin g m a ttfla i* .
cleaner*, comonl. mastic,
Ihinsol Insfallallonk Show
room. JO7 | in n if lanford
John Parker. T lk Contractor
O T 314*. or 0** 4**1
Is all mean T i n Coromk. Vinyl
AkAestae. okc Instoriod 4 re
paired l i p , r t f . Ik Fro*
ottlmeket 21211*1

Tree Sarvlca

......

All T
U M Altar
And I
S M l...
ill****
■ C M O L t T R E E 1 E R Y IC E
Free Estlnsstasl Law P rk o tl
Lk la* ISoasp 4rkadkag,T*ol
114122* defer M N
"L a i R
JO H N A L L E N ! ULW M 4 T R I I
Dead free removal. I k 4 In*
Frsaesl H I U M

�tB -E v e n in g Herald. Sanford, FI.

Thvreday. June 70, IMS

b e i®i

w

Spectracide® 6000
Lawn and Garden
INSECT CONTROL

Liquid Fibered Black
ROOF COATING
Specially formulated for coating or
renewing old roofs

Kills ants, grubs, chinch bugs,
sod web worms and other
outdoor bugs 10 lb bag
No 53840

Plastic Fibered ROOF
CEMENT

n
l#1
D exd
Dexa-Klor
Indoor INSECT KILLER
Trigger sprayer included No 0148
m

Rebut

See store tor details

i f M f r . Rebtf*

Multi-purpose cement for patching and
laying new roofs

» ■

See store for details. m

Gallon
|l
S

5 gallons
M

O

Gallon

Hof 10.99

O

KENCO CHEMICAL

KENCO CHEMICAL

Rid-a-Bug$
FIRE ANT ,
KILLER
Makes 2.5 gallons
No 020 Gallon

Kills la w n Insects

Quart

TjfH fh. Rebel*
See store for details

Time-A-Matic® „
Oscillating
)&gt;;
SPRINKLER

Time-A-Matic* $
Pulsating
£
SPRINKLER
-

Waters up to 2,800
sq ft.. No 128

Full or part circle
Waters up to 88' in
diameter No 114

si

Bow RAKE

Oscillating SPRINKLER

No IFYB14

Waters up to 2.200 sq ft Model 59

LOW PRICE

Your Choice

Round Point
SHOVEL

_ __ _

EVERYPAY
.

Long handle
No IFPAR243

Garden HOE
No IFYG61/4

Shape-Up Your Yard With Savings Like These!
How's the lime to ■jjjfyff
fhi up four Iowa mower!

YARD AIRE

Electric BLOWER
416 lbs Easily held in one
hand Variable speed
No 60EB

rr«M *»ms n d » »« ImhW « t t mmt

fP Jk
///»

4 0 lb. bag.

Your Choice

--__J f ] I

BLADE
SHARPENER
No M S-52

BLADE

Reinforced
Gardtm
1/2"*50HOSE
RX121

balan cer
No b b a -202 c

Your Choke
Gas EDGER/TRIMMER
Heavy duty 2 hp motor Trench
width adapter adjusts to a
i
depth of 2". Depth control on .V
handle No GE-671
-W C

SUNCOAST

Vinyl bumper protects walls and furniture
14" No 5 1 8 ............................... f V ; 3 4 f

OPEN

0RAN6E CITY

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS

2323 S Volusia Ave 1029 E Altamonte Dr
Highway 17 and 92 (Highway 436)
Phona 775-7268
Phone 339-6311
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS

PRICES G O O D TH R U J U N E 22

♦ ►^

OPEN
SANFORO

700 French Avenue
Phone 323-4700

875 West Highway 436
Phone 862-7254

i

�</text>
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Brothers Charged With Keeping House Of III Fame
B y Susan Lodcn
H erald Staff W rite r
A 17 ycar old Casselberry man and his 50-year-old
brother are aeeused of operating a prostitution ring
out of the Seminole Referral Dating Service In the
Regency Square Plaza. Casselberry.
The pair were charged Thursday at 1008 p in. with
living off the earnings of prostitutes and keeping a
house of III fame after Seminole County undercover
agents completed an Investigation of the operation.
In November the agents began checking out
complaints bv people who alleged that the dating

service was a from for prostitution. The agents were
unsuccessful in several attempts to negotiate an
agreement for sex from any of the 10 women who
were allegedly working for the men.
A sheriffs report said the women were well versed
in Florida law related lo procurement, so Informants
were called In. who could proceed to negotiate with
the women Iwyond the limitations that restricted the
lawmens' ability tocomplete their investigation.
On two occasions In January the Informants
allegedly paid two of the women S I 50 per hour each
for their sendees. When the women were leaving the

motel rooms where they allegedly had sex with the
Informants they were approached by agents. The
women agreed to cooperate with the lawmen and
were not charged because, according to sheriffs
spokesman John Spolskl. the officers considered the
pending arrest of the men to be more critical. The
men allegedly received 50 percent of the money the
women earned.
After reviewing information provided by two of the
women and evidence obtained from recorded conver­
sations between the brothers, one of the women and

an informant, during which the suspects allegedly
accepted money from the woman and describe their
operation, saying it netted them between $5,000 to
$8,000 a week, the agents made the arrests.
William Maxle Grainger ol 2-11 Lake Griffin Circle.
Casselberry, and Alfred David Grainger of 1(&gt;00 33rd
St.. Orlando, arc being held In the Seminole County
Jail in lieu of $5,000 Itond each. They were arrested at
the dating service, located at 15-Regency Square
Plaza. Stale Road 430. Cassclbcrrv. Doth men are
scheduled to appear In court at 1:30 p in. today.

Challenger Streaks Into Orbit

Smooth Countdown
And A 'Great Ride'
By A l R o is ite r J r .
UPI Science E d ito r
CAP E C A N A V E R A L . Fla. (UPI)
— T h e s h u t t le C h a lle n g e r
streaked Into orbit today carrying
five men. three arthritic rats, two
communications satellites and a
pair of Jet backpacks designed lo
tu rn two spacew alkers into
human satellites.
With Vance Brand and Robert
■'H oof Gibson al the controls,
the ship blasted away from Earth
on schedule at 8 a.m. E S T after
one ol the smoothest countdowns
ever al the sprawling spaceport.
M ission specialists Robert
Stewart and Ronald McNair rode
on the flight deck behind the two
pilots and the fifth crewman.
Bruce McCandless. was seated on
the lower deck for the 0-inlnute
acceleration lo the 17.000 mph
orbital speed.
T h e ve te ra n rocket plane
soared Into a final orbit, about
IHO m llro h ig h . « 7 m in u te * after

launch on the push of twin
maneuvering engines.
"It was really a great ride."
said Brand after being told by
mission control In Houston that
all was ruling well.
"It looks like we're on the way
to a real gin&gt;d one." said launch
director Robert Sleek.
Th e mission. 1Olh for a shuttle.
Is a vital rehearsal for a satellite
rescue mission m April. Next

w e e k ' s u n p r e e e d c u t e &lt;1
But the final six days will be
spacewalks without lifelines also
devoted to rehearsing procedures
will demonstrate men can lly
for the next shuttle flight, set to
about to construct tin- space
s t a r t A p r i l 4. w l i r n f i v e
station President Reagan wants
astronauts will attempt to catch
built by the early I9‘X K
and fix a crippled S77 million.
The rocket plane is scheduled
310 mile-high sun-watching sat­
to return to the space center Feb
ellite called Solar Max.
I I . making the first shuttle
McCandless and Slew-art will
landing on the spaceport's new
try out new $10 million Jet
3-mlle-long runway.
backpacks during spacewalks
T h e e a r l y s t a g e s of
Tuesday and Thursday. They
Challenger’s planned 127 orbit
will lly up lo 300 feet away from
voyage made it look routine.
the shuttle without lifelines for
Preliminary orbit was achieved
the first time, becoming true
al 8:13 a m . and Brand said.
human satellites, orbiting Earth
" E v e r y t h in g 's going g o o d ."
at 17.500 mph.
Mission control In Houston said
One of those nitrogen Jet
all systems were n|&gt;crattng as
backpacks will be used to propel
planned on this fourth llight for
George Nelson 300 feet over to
Challenger.
the Solar Max satellite In April.
The ship, weighing 2.252 tons
He will latch onto the satellite
at liftoff, rode a now-famlllar
and then use the backpack's Jets
pillar of orange dame Into the
lo stabilize the satellite so the
partly cloudy sky and shed Its
shuttle's mechanical arm can
twin solid-propellant booster
place It into the payload bay.
r o r l i r l * 3 :i m l l t a a lm v r i | tlAtlantic 2 minutes later.
Not only will the two llight 10
C h a lle n g e r 's th re e m a in
spacewalkers try out the manned
engines shut down as planned 9
m an e uve rin g u nits, but M c­
minutes after blastoff. Then lin­
Candless will practice hooking up
ing orange external tank separat­
to a slowly rotating Instrument
ed as planned to fall hack Into the
package to simulate April's satel­
Indian Ocean.
lite linkup. He also will duplicate
a repair operation.
Th e prime objective of the
eight-day flight is to launch two
And on Sunday and Monday.
comm unications satellites for
Brand and Gibson will eject a 6
Western Union and the govern­
'•iToot plastic balloon and then
ment of Indonesia.
use It as a rendezvous target —

another rehearsal for April's sat­
ellite chase operation.
McNair, the second black to fly
on a shuttle, will concentrate on
a variety of experiments aboard
Challenger.
One Involves the observation of
six rats, three of which have been
Injected with a killed bacteria
solution that causes severe ar­
thritis. The experiment was de­
signed by Dan Weber, a sopho­
more at Cornell University, after
he noticed that swimming eased
the arthritis of Ills grandfather,
presumably because the body's
buoyancy in the water reduced
pressure on Joints.
W e b e r h y p o th e s iz e d that
weightlessness In orbit might
have the same effect.

Helicopter
C rash e s
W A S H IN G TO N (UPI) - A U S.
A rm y troop-carrying helicopter
with 10 people aboard crashed In
mountainous terrain In Honduras
because of bad weather Thu rs­
day. killing four people and
Injuring the other six. a Pentagon
spokesman said today. No further
details were available at press
time.

Protester
Arrested
For Theft

M tuld Photo by Jifq u r Brund

The space shuttle Challenger, as seen from the Sanford marina, rises out
of the fog and clouds at 8 a.m. today in what was described by astronaut
Vance Brand as "a really great ride." Pilots Brand and Robert "H oot"
Gibson are scheduled lo land Ihe shuttle on the 3 mile long Kennedy Space
Center runway Feb. 11. It will be the first Kennedy landing.

State Attorney Sued In
Case of Mistaken Identity

S|M)ttcd by sheriffs deputies at a
prulest In front of the Seminole
C ounty Courthouse, an Apopka
man was arrested on a charge of
grand Itiefl.
Scan C . Davis, 31. of 3202
Holiday Avc.. was arrested at about
I p in. Thursday after participating
In a protest regarding a divorce
decree issued by Circuit Court
Judge Dominick J . Salfi.
While Davis' arrest was uncon­
nected with the 12-pcrson protest. It
H«r«M PSoto bv J«cqv« Brund
was his visibility In the protest that
Divorce protester Sean C. Davis confers with a Sanford police
allowed deputies to recognize him.
officer about the conduct of fellow protesters Thursday. Following
one of tin- arresting officers said.
the demonstration, Davis was arrested on an unrelated charge.
Davis was a protest organizer for Ills
aunt. Laurel K. Islng. of the same
According to investigators, a man
address, who Is suing Salfi over a
was Irom the Photo Promotion
provision of a divorce decree order­ walked Into the T G &amp; Y store on U S.
Association. Th e man then allegedly
ing her to sell her house and give Highway 17-92 In Longwood al 9
look a promotional display of phoher ex-husband 125.000.
p in on Aug. 18. 1983. and said he
See P R O T E S T E R , page 2 A

B y Deane Jo rd a n
H erald Staff W rite r
You know you've done nothing
wrong, but an assistant state at­
torney says you robbed a store and
the store manager says you robbed
Ihe store.
Before the trial starts however,
your fingerprints prove you not only
did not rob a store, but that you've
never been arrested.
The state drops the case, and you
try lo forget It. But you can't. One
day before u statute of limitations
can lake effect, you file a civil suit
against the state.
Semlnole-Brevard Stale Attorney
Douglas Cheshire Is being sued lit
civil court by a woman who claims
one of his assistants falsely charged
her with robbery and refused to
verify that she was not the person
arrested for the crime.

The suit, which seeks unspecified
damages In excess of $5.(XX). also
names a Sanford business whose
representatives allegedly accused
the woman of robbery ami theft.
On Man'll 4. 1980, Cheshire, or
his assistants, decided not to pro­
secute Ihe case, according to the
complaint.
In the suit filed In Seminole
Circuit Court Ja n . 24, one day
Iw-fore (he most common statute of
limitations would take effect. Joan
Ann Johnson. 42. of G I43 Arundel
Drive. Orlando, claims she was
falsely charged with a Dec. 20.
1979. robbery of a Walgreen's store
in Sanford.
Ms. Johnson said in her complaint
lbat she received a notice in
January 1980 to appear in court
Jan 25. 1980. on Ihe charges of
robbery and theft. Al the hearing,

she staled that she told County
Judge Harold F. Johnson, she had
never been arrested or charged with
anything. The Judge, according to
the suit, told the assistant state
attomey. Patrick J . Dccse. to cheek
with the booking office regarding
her claim.
Mrs. Johnson states In the com­
plaint that the assistant state at­
torney refused to check the photo­
graphs and fingerprints of the
person arrested for the crime and
told her to go to Ills office and wait.
There, she asserts In the complaint,
he arranged a confrontation be­
tween her. Walgreen's store manag­
er Edward Hambrccht. and himself.
According to records on file in the
m is d e m e a n o r d iv is io n of the
Scmlnolc County Courthouse, a
Joan Ann Johnson. 37. of (5143
See M IS T A K E N , page 2 A

To Match Unique State Grant

TODAY

SCC Starts Fund Drive For High-Tech Equipment
B y Donna Eatea
H era ld S ta ff W rite r
A fund-raising drive to match a state grant for
"m u c h needed" technical equipm ent for
Seminole Com m unity College was kicked off at
a breakfast meeting at the college this morning.
Dede SchalTner. an alumnus of the school, and
Bill Schaffncr. a former chairman of the SCC
Board of Trustees, arc co-chalrlng the effort to
raise- $25,000 for Ihe SCC Foundation Develop­
mental Council to match stale funding. The
drive will be condut-ted throughout February
and the deadline for receiving contributions to
match the grant Is March I.
Th e drive was developed, said Dean of
Students Dr. Jam es Sawyer, because of newstate law setting up a state Academic Improve­

ment Trust Fund to grant comm unity colleges
$4 for new technical equipment for every $0
raised locally.
"It's a unique grant program, the only one of
Its type In the nation." Sawyer said. "It was set
w llli the hopes of fostering a closer relationship
between colleges and the com m unity."
Contributions are tax deductible.
"We hope not only the general community,
but also the business and professional com m u­
nity In the county will participate." Sawyer said.

effort." Sawyer said.
Every year the college Identifies unmet
equipment needs at the school. Sawyer said,
and this year It Is estimated that those needs
total $2 million.

and thousands ol Seminole County residents
have earned college credit toward a bac­
calaureate degree, have acquired occupational
skills and have participated In adult and
continuing education programs al the school.

"W e need this equipment to bring the school
Into the high technology area and must add
computers to the classroom and Institute
robotics Into the technological pro gra m s"
Sawyer said.

In the 1983 fall term. 3.947 SCC college credit
students and 1.540 occupational students listed
Seminole County as their place of residence.

Sawyer said SCC President Dr. Earl Weldon
views the real goal of the drive as laying the
foundation for future efforts.

Contributions for scholarships will also be
gratefully accepted even though funds for that
purpose cannot be used for matching the slate
grant. Sawyer said.

If ihe public believes the community college
has had a significant and positive Influence on
the community, they will support us In this

Seminole C om m unity College opened In
Sanford near Five Points In I960 with 733
students. Today the college serves 21.000 yearly

The number of In-state-resldcnts attending the
college comprise 90 percent of the total
enrollment.
!n -the |&gt;ast fiscal year the college brought $14
million to Central Florida through personnel
salaries and materials purchased from local
vendors. Since 19(56 the college has brought
more than $90 million to the community, not
including the $21 million invested in buildings.

Aclion Reports...........2A
Around The Clock.......4A
Classifieds............. 8,9A
Dear Abby................5A
Deaths.................... 3A
Dr. Lamb................ I0A
Editorial..................4A

Florida..................... 3A

Horoscope............... 10A
Hospilal.................. 2A
Nation.....................2A
People.....................5A
Sports................... 6,7A
Television..........Leisure
Weather.................. 2A
World......................3A
—

Sunday —

Sanford surgeon
unm asked for role of
ringm aster. PEOPLE,
page IB Sunday.

�JA— Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Friday, Feb. 1, in*

NATION
IN BRIEF
Police Suspect Link
In 5 Murders In 10 Days
N EW P O R T NEW S. Va. |UPI| - Five women
have been killed In the Tidewater area In the last
10 days and a pollee task force is working to
determine If the slayings are the work of the
same person.
The deaths have yet to be conclusively linked,
police say. hut all occurred within a 30-mile
area. Each victim was shot once in the head,
each about lunchtime. All the slayings occurred
near busy downtown streets, and there have
been no witnesses.
The body of the latest victim, described as
about 35 or 40 years old. was discovered in the
parking Ini of a downtown Newport News
church Thursday. Police said the unidentified
woman was wearing nothing but a wrist watch.
That ease was the first Involving a nude
victim and police said they arc not sure It Is
related to the other slayings. Sexual molestation
has not been ruled out In the latest case.

Judge: M an Can Starve
SYR AC U SE. N.Y. |UPI) — Doctors will obey a
court order and respect the wishes of a dying
H5-yrar-old patient who wants to starve to death
rather than live a life of pain.
State Supreme Court Justice Donald Miller
Thursday ordered the nursing home In which
the unidentified mail lives not to force feed him
and his doctors promised to obey. New York
State Health Department officials said they
would not appeal the ruling.
T h e rulin g was opposite of the recent
California Supreme Court decision In the case of
Elizabeth liouvia. a cerebral palsy victim, who
wanted to Ik * allowed to starve herself to death
al Riverside General Hospital.
The 20-vcar old woman, who Is confined to a
wheelchair, cheeked herself Into the hospital
last September saying she wanted to starve to
death rather than live In what she called a
“ use-less body."
The state's highest court rejected her petition
last month, saying the United Stales Constitu­
tion docs not give citizens Hie right to kill
themselves.

Klansman Condemned
MOBILE. Ala. (UPI) — An Alabama Judge.
Ignoring a Jury's recommendation for a life
sentence, condemned to death a Ku Klux
Klansman for the killing of a young black man.
Mobile County Circuit Judge Braxton Klllrct!
Thursday sentenced Klansman Henry Francis
Hays to die In the electric chair on April 30 for
the killing of Michael Donald. 10. who was
beaten with a tree limb, strangled and slashed
ucross (he throat before his body was hanged
from a tree.
A predominantly white Jury convicted Hays,
20, of eapltftl'mbrder on Dec. 10; 19R3. Ihcn
recommended that lie spend life In prison
wllhout parole.
Defense attorney M.A. “ Bubba" Marsal ref­
used to comment on Klttrell's sentence, which
carries an automatic appeal.

Ex-Firefigher: N o Appeal
IOW A C IT Y . Iowa |UP1) - Former Iowa City
firelighter Linda Eaton, who lost her sex
discrimination suit against the city, says she
cannot afford in appeal the verdict.
A Jo h n so n C o u n ty District C ourt Jury
Thursday rejected Ms. Eaton's $040,(XX) suit, in
which she alleged her ro-workers harassed her
after she won a civil rights suit letting her
breast-feed her Infant son while on duty.
The Jury, after three days of deliberations,
agreed with defense arguments that a certain
amount of horseplay and rough behavior Is
common In a firehouse.

AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy today with a 40
percent chance of afternoon showers. High near 70 to
mid 70s. Southeasterly wind 10 to 15 mph. Tonight
cloudy with showers likely and a few thunderstorms.
Low low to mid 50s. Southerly wind 10 mph. Rain
chance 00 percent. Saturday mostly cloudy and turning
colder. A 40 percent chance of showers. High In the 60s.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
out 50 miles — East to southeast wind around 15 knots
becom ing southerly by tonight and shifting to
northwesterly 15 to 20 knots Saturday. Seas 3 to 5 feet
Increasing Saturday. Partly cloudy with scattered
showers with a few thunderstorms mainly north part.
AREA READINGS (B i.m .|: temperature: 58;
overnight low: 40: Thursday's high: 73; barometric
pressure: 30.07: relative humidity: 07 percent: winds:
rust at 5 mph; rain: none: sunrise: 7:12 a.in., sunset
0:06 p.m.
THURSDAY TIDES: Daytona Beach: highs. 0:40
a.m.. 0:53 p.m.: lows. 3:02 a.m., 3:37 p.ni.j Port
Canaveral: highs, 0:32 a.m.. 0:45 p.m.: lows. 2:53 a.m..
3:28 p.m.: Bayport: highs, 2:16 a.in., 3:16 p.m.: lows.
0:06 a.m.. 9 :1 1 p.m.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Sanlord

Emory 0 Avrall
William* Elkflfcurg
JoihH Simon*
Tr**uM Jackion. Longwood
DISCHARGES
Sanlord

'JonalhanW AlnuouoS

E vrn in K Ifciuld

C«*ggory 0. Alhworth
C harl«»W B rtnllty
3*ltyB Colbtrt
Tyrant J Montgomery
Vilty »*nh Sanamkont
William H Porltr, D tlh r*
M u h tllt J Harknaaa. Gtrwv*
Carolyn Klnr.alrd, O tn tv t
P ttr k it l Sulhar land tnd baby I
Sanlord

««»** «•»•»■&gt;

Friday. February J, I W 4 -V o l . 74, No 144
Publithed Doily and Sunday, eicept Saturday by The Seirierd
Herthl. lot. M l N. Frenth A vt., Sanlord. Fla. H i l l .

Second Clett Postage Fold et Santord. Flood* H ill

t

Improvements Show Up Throughout The Job Market
W A S H IN G TO N (UPI) - Th e nation's
unemployment rale dropped for the fifth
consecutive month to 8 percent In
January, with Improvements In nearly
all segments of the Job market, the Labor
Department reported today.
The continued decline from the re­
cession lilglt of 10.7 percent gives
President Reagan a healthy boost as he
starts his re-election campaign, with the
overall civilian rate closing in on the 7.4
percent Jobless rate prevailing when
Reagan was Inaugurated three years ago.
T h e o ve r-lh e -m o n th drop In the
seasonally adjusted rale was 0.2 of a
pcrrcnl point from December's 8.2

percent level. Joblessness now has
declined for five straight months, and
has not Increased since December 1982.
Administration economists have pre­
dicted a generally stable situation for the
remainder of 1984. proJecUng in Ihc
fiscal 1985 budget sent to Congress
Wednesday that Joblessness will average
7.8 percent this year
An alternative unemployment rate
that includes 1.7 million members of the
military ns a part of the work force,
declined from 8.1 percent to 7.9 percent
In January.
Labor Statistics Commissioner Janet
Norwood. In testimony prepared for a

congressional Joint Economic Com m it­
tee hearing, said the employment situa­
tion In January, "conllnucd to move
upward, and the unemployment rate
continued Its steady decline.*' A compar'Ison with the post 1973-75 recession
period highlights the vigor of the current
recovery, she said.
“ Overall Jobles3t.css In Ihc current
recovery has. In fact, declined at twice
the rate of 1975-76." Mrs. Norwood said,
“ with all major worker groups showing
greater Improvement in the earlier
period."
She also noted that factory hours.

Use Of Deadly EDB Suspended
W A S H I N G T O N (U P I) Th e
Environmental Protection Agency
today suspended use of the powerful
canecr-eauslng pesticide EDB for
dlslnfertlng stored grain and grain
milling machinery.
Moving to restrict contamination
of the nation's food supply by the
c h e m ic a l, E P A A d m in is tra to r
W illia m R uckleshaus said the
emergency action — coupled with
the EPA's previous suspension of
EDB as a soil fumigant — will
eliminate about 97 pcrrcnl of the
e hem leal's agricultural use.
On the question of EDB conlamination In fruit. Rucklelshaus
warned that Just four days ago. the
EPA received information showing
E D B " le v e ls h ig h e r th an we
expected In some Imported rltn is."

“ In Just a few weeks 1 will
announce my decision as lo how wc
will address that use (in cllrusl." the
EPA chief said.
Most of the remaining 3 percent of
E D B use is as a "q u a ra n tin e
fumigant on fresh citrus and other
tropical fruits," the agency said In a
statement.
The E P A ’s emergency suspension
of EDB use on stored grain and
grain m illing machinery — the
strongest action the agency can
take under law — immediately halts
all sides and uses of Ihc substance
for those purposes.
"Th e levels EPA Is now rcrommending are designed to drive down
the average dietary burden of EDB
to near zero over a three-year
period." the agency said. "T h e

primary concern about the dietary
risks of EDB Is for chronic elTeels of
long term exposure, such as cancer,
and not for an Immediate or short­
term toxic effect."
— In raw gra in Intended for
hum an consum ption — wheat,
corn, oats — the level should not
exceed 900 parts per billion.
— For "Interm ediate products
such as flour, various mixes for
preparing baked goods, soft cereals
and other products that require
cooking before eating." the re­
commended level Is 150 parts per
billion.
— For "ready-to-eat products such
as cold cereals, snack foods, bread
and all baked goods, the residue
levels should not exceed 30 parts
per billion."

...Mistaken identify Leads
Continued from page 1A
Arundel Drive. Orlando, was ar­
rested Dec. 20. 1979 at 6:30 p.m. in
Ihc parking lot of Zayre's on U.S.
H ig h w a y 17-92. Sa n fo rd , und
charged with petit theft, no valid
driver's license and careless driving.
A woman calling herself Joan Ann
Johnson was urrested In 1979 about
three minutes after the store man­
ager of Walgreens told Sanford
police officer Paul Lltlle (hat the
woman tried to lake three bottles of
liquor.
Th e same Ms. Johnson was to
appear In court Jan. 4 of 1980 but
according to records, did not. She
did ap|x-ar Jan. 25 and the Judge
entered a plea of not guilty. Her
attorney, Richard L. 'W ilson of
O rlan d o , a p p e a re d for h e r F eb. 4
and a trial dale of Feb. 18 was set.
According to Wilson., while the
woman arrested Dec. 20 1979 said
she was Ms. Johnson, she was In
fact another woman in her early
2 0 s. a p p ro x im a te ly 15 ye a rs
younger than Ms. Johnson who was
37 al the time. He said when the
fingerprints of Ms. Johnson were

compared to the ones taken of the
person arrested Dec. 20. It proved
his client was not the person who
committed the crime.
He said the ear of the woman
arrested was traced to a well-known
criminal In Altamonte Springs who
Is currently serving time for solic­
itin g m in o rs for p ro s titu tio n .
Through the car registration, the
woman was located. Wilson said he
knows who she Is.
Th e state attorney's office —
without a reason entered — decided
not to prosecute the case on March
10 of 1980, Decsc no longer works
for the stale attorney's office in
Seminole County.
W .J. Patterson, executive director
of the State Attorney's office In
Titusville, said (hut the paperwork
on the civil suit has been sent to the
Florida Division of Risk Manage­
ment.
Ms. Johnson states In the suit that
during the confrontation she was
held against her will wllhout proba­
ble cause and was unable to freely
move about or return lo her home
or place of employment. She said

To

Suit

she was Identified, while In the
presence of her sister and a friend.
In a manner similar to a line-up. She
said she had lo remove her jacket
and turn around for the attorney
and the store representative.
The complaint slates that the
store re p re s e n ta tiv e said Ms.
Johnson was a thief and a robber
and that she had stolen several
articles from the store. She states In
the complaint that the assistant
slate attorney said she was a thief
and .was g u ilty , could not be
innocent, and that she should get an
attorney.
Her suit further claims she was
restrained against her will, was
arrested without legal cause, had
her civil rights violated, received
"grievous bodily barm ", d a m a g e (o
her reputation and has suffered
from the "malicious and unwar­
ranted criminal charges."
She slated that the state attorney
acted beyond his authority with
mailer, moral turpitude, wanton­
ness. willfulness or reckless Indif­
ference to her rights and asks that
the Issue be settled by Jury trial.

...Protester Arrested On Theft Charge
C o n tinued from page 1A
lographle equipment valued aT$7H9
and walkrd out.
An arrest warrant was Issued for
the man but a question of jurisdic­
tion arose regarding where the man
lived, which was believed lo Ik - In
Orlando. Th e paperwork, however.

was relumed to Seminole County
by Orange County in late October.
Th e man was not urrested then
because the investigators did not
know where he lived, an arresting
officer said.
Davis was arrested after deputies
were alerted to ids whereabouts

from news reports on the protest.
Davis is chairman of the A t­
torneys' Legal Research Group,
suite 401. 3202 Holiday Ave..
Apopka.
Davis was released from the
Seminole County Jail on $5,000
bond.
—Deane Jordan

w h ic h u s u a lly d e clin e s h a rp ly In
J a n u a ry , were up 0.4 hours after
seasonal adjustment.
The dala from (he Bureau of Labor
Statistics showed the number of jobless
persons d ropped lo 9 .0 2 6 ,0 0 0 in
January, a decline of 169.000 over the
month. It Is now 2.9 million below the
recession high.
•
Total employment continued lo rise to
103.2 million, but at a slowei pace In
January than the previous two months/
as adult men saw a significant increase/
but the women's category remained
unchanged.

Senate Approves
Anti-Crime Bill
W ASHINGTON' (UIMI - The Scnalc approved 91-1
a package of bills to aid In the war against crime and
today turned to related measures much more"
difficult to pass.
The crime package passed Thursday aflcr a
week's debatr narrows the Insanity defense, abol­
ishes parole for federal crimes and allows Judges to
deny bail for dangerous defendants.
Broad support for the package was possible by
sorting out controversial provisions for later consid­
eration. The Senate today planned to take up a
measure that would limit the time In wbteh
criminals could appeal stale verdicts to federal
courts.
Also up for consideration will Ik * attempts lo
reinstate the death penally for federal crimes and to
relax the exclusionary rule to permit use of evidence
obtained Illegally by authorities In some cases.
House passage of Ihc hill Is uncertain because of
opposition to Its sentencing and hail provisions,
despiie ilie pressure to pass such popular legislation
Irian election year.
Senate leaders had expected swift action on the
package after culling the controversial Items. But
debate bogged down over an amendment that would
ban federal workers from taping of conversations
without permission. Th e Senate rejected the
amendment, 51-41.
The addition grew out of secret taplngs by U.S.
Information Agency chief Charles Wick of telephone
calls with officials. Including former President
Jim m y Carter und White House chief of state James
Baker.
Republicans charged the amendment was alined
at embarrassing Wtek and his close friend. President
Reagan, and warned it was drafted so hastily it
would damage Intelligence-gathering und criminal
Investigations.
A chief sponsor. Sen. Howard Mclzcnbaum.
D-Ohlo. said national security was not threatened.

Amtrak Stockholders
To Meet In Sanford
The Amtrak corporation will hold Its annual stock­
holders' meeting In Sanford tentatively scheduled for
March 22. according to Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce President Jack Horner.
Horner said various corporate officers of Amtrak.
ineludlnj; Its president. W . Graham Clay tor. are
scheduled lo nllend the all-day meeting set lo begin
around 10:30 a.m.
Homer said Amtrak officers will fly In or train In from
around the country to attend the annual meeting at the
Sanford chamber offices. Some of the offirers and
stockholders will visit the local Auto-Train facility and
view one of the trains when It arrives.
Horner said more than 70 Amtrak officials arc
expected lo be on hand for the meeting, which will
Include a luncheon al the chamber. He said the meeting
Is open to any Amtrak stockholders.

Robbery Victim Tries To Run Dow n Thief, M isses

WEATHER

Cantral F lw id j Ragtanal HstpiUI
ThgrldJr
ADMISSIONS

Unemployment Down Again

Heme Delivery: Week. SI Ms Month. M .H i t Months. ua.M j
Veer, 141 00 By Mail: Week Sl.lSi Month, SS.lSi 0 Months, SM DO;
Yeer, SSt.OO. Phene IMS) IM 1*11.
_________________________

T h e victim of a strongurm robbery in Sanford
apparently look violent exception to being ripped off and
tried to run down the thief with his ear.
Christopher Rizzo. 61. o!2610 Hartwell Ave.. Sanlord,
told police he was on his way lo a hardware store about
10:25 a.in. Wednesday when he stopped at the
Intersection of First Street and Jasmine Drive lu usk
directions lo Alrjairt Boulevard.
According to a (Miller report. Hie man Rizzo asked said
lie was going (hat way and got In Rizzo's 1978 Ford.
Alter Ihc pair hud lraveled only a short distance. Rizzo's
passenger turned oif the ear and look $ 4 1 from Rizzo.
After (he robber got out of the car. Rizzo storied the
ear and aimed for the fast-walking bandit, the report
said. Just before Rizzo caught up with the man. vho
was by then running back and forth trying lo dodge the
oncoming vehicle. Ihc robber Jumped out of the way and
Rizzo struck a palm tree, doing $1,500 damage to his
ear.
Th e robber got away.
"If I could have caught him. I would have killed him ."
Rizzo said.
Rizzo was nol the only vlcllm of slrongann armed
robbers In Sanford recently.
Between 11 p.m. and midnight Thursday. Kelly Ann
Medlin. 24. of 152 Brayton Road. Winter Park, was
walking In the 200 block of U.S. Highway 17-92 when a
man grabbed her. ripped her dress, and stoic her purse.
Ms. Medlin said she told the robber there was no money
lit the purse. She told pollee she removed a shoe and
threw it at ihc robber then chased him south on 17-92
hut lost him.
Also, a Sanford man told police two men struck him
from behind when he was In his back yard and look his
wallet.
Guslr.f R. Ornbcrg. 73. of 219 Holly Ave.. (old police
he was In his back yard Tuesday al 9:35 p.m. when two
men rubbed him.

STOCKS
Thoto quoitlloni provldod by
monitori ot ttW Hotlonol Auocltlton
ot Soourltlot Doolort try roprt
tontoltro Intordnlor prlctt u ot
opproolmototy noon lodoy. tutor
dootor moruti chongo throughout
(ft* doy Prlctt do pot tnctudo rotoll
morkup/morhdown,
SM Aik
Atlantic Bank..........................M MU
Bar nail Bank........ ................M U Ml*

F lor Id4 Power

A Light................................at 40u
Fla. Pragma.......................JOS M*.
Froodom Saving*.................MW 17
MCA......................................... 4141U
Hugh** Supply....................M U M S
MorrHon't............ .............. 141* M S
NCR Ccrp--------------------- ------IM S 117
Ptoaaay................... ............M U M S
Scotty'*......— ..... .......
til* t»S
Soultwaat Bank................ ......n u u
Sun Banka............................ M S M S

County on a charge o! driving under the Influence:
— Carol Ann McLeed. 38. of 790 Pasadena Ave.,
Longwood. at 12:22 a.m. Thursday after she was seen
driving at a slow speed as her ear was weaving on and
off Stale Road 436 ut Lake Howell Lane. Casselberry.
-D a v id Edward Hall. 41. of 407 S. Alderwood St..
Casselberry, at 2:54 a.m. Thursday when Ills ear was
seen speeding south on U.S. Highway 17-92. Fern Park.

Action Reports
★

Fires
* Courts

it Police

TAXIFOUND
Ornbcrg said there was $5 In the wallet
Identification cards,

plus

APARTMENT FIRE
A second fire In a month has damaged a Fern Park
apartment complex, leaving three people homeless.
A New Year's Day fire at the same complex but al a
different building forced 26 from (heir homes.
No one was hurt in the latest blaze.
According lo Seminole County fire Investigator Ray
Pippin, a fire began at about 1 p.m. Thursday In an
18-unlt building at the St. John's Village complex on
Oxford Road.
Th e fire, fought by 12 firelighters, started In the
heating portion of an air conditioning-heating unit In the
apartment. Pippin said. Th e exact cause of the fire has
nol been determined.
The three people living In the apartment escaped the
fire — w hlch did $25,000 worth of damage. Pippin said.

DUI ARRESTS
Th e following persons have been arrested In Seminole

A taxi reported stolen from Public Ta x i and To u r
Service, Orlando, was found on the east exit ramp of
Interstate 4 at State Road 434, Longwood. Monday. The
ear had been reported missing In Orange County
Sunday, a sheriffs report said.

FIRE CALLS
The Sanford
following calls:

Fire Department

responded to the

Thursday
— 12:55 p.m.. 20th Street und Marshall Avenue, lire. A
brush fire was confined and extinguished.
— 2:57 p.m.. between W ylly Avenue and Mattie Street,
fire. Brush fire on county property. County notified. City
firemen extinguished names when county fire truck
could nut reach site.
— 5:26 p.m., 2201 Bel Air Blvd.. rescue. A 64-year-old
man with medical problems had been drinking for an
extended period of time. Emergency medical techni­
cians monitored his vital signs and an ambulance
transported him to Central Florida Regional Hospital.
— 6:06 p.m.. 309 Hidden Hollow Court, fire. False alarm.
A ear overheated.

2 Arrested On Counterfeiting-Related Charges
Seminole County sheriffs deptules Joined Winter Park and Orange
County Investigators to arrest two
people on counterfeiting-related
charges.
Th e officers, armed with an O r­
ange County search warrant, raided
A d W atch. In c., an answering
service at 1950 Lee Road. Winter
Park.
T h e raid came after a two-month
Investigation during which officers
gathered evidence Indicating the
business was a storehouse of
hundreds of sheets of blank bank
paper, counterfeit drivers licenses.

birth certificates, military papers,
car titles and checks. Winter Park
Det. Gary Collins said that some of
the phony Items had been tied to at
least four Seminole County coun­
terfeiting cases.
C o llin s , w ho headed the In ­
vestigation. said that photo copying
equipment, printing Inatuments.
stolen property and a 1979 Lincoln
Continental, allegedly driven by a
female suspect when she passed a
counterfeit check, were seized by
the lawmen.
R obert E . C a rra n o . 4 1, was
charged with grand theft, forgery

and m a n u fa c tu rin g counterfeit
drivers licenses. He Is being held in
the Orange County Jail In lieu of
$100,000 bond. Dawn E. Jackson.
18. who was charged with three
counts of forgery, posted $100,000
bond and was released from the
Orange County Jail. Collins said.
Both were arrested at Ad Watch late
Thursday.
Th e Investigation Is continuing
and lawmen may make additional
arrests related to the passing of the
bogus items. Collins said.

—By Susan Loden

�FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
INS: Hunger Strikers
Feeding Publicity Contest
MIAMI (Uf’I) — Some 130 illegal aliens at a
federal detention renter who refuse to eat have
been separated from the general population and
cannot leave except to be escorted to the
bathroom or use the telephone, officials say.
The refuge .. at Kromc Avenue Detention
Center, refused to eat Thursday for the 10th
consecutive day. They are at the Immigration
and Naturalization Sendee detention center
awaiting resolution of their Immigration eases.
INS spokesman George Waldroup said the
participant? were feeding erroneous information
to the press and INS was not going to succumb
lo the "publicity contest" they were trying to
create.
Th e aliens — mostly Indians. Haitians.
Bangladeshis and Latins — are protesting slow
processing of their political asylum claims.

Police Shooting Accidental
OR LAND O (U l’l) — A circuit court Judge says
law enforcement agencies may want to tighten
safety procedures, but ruled the fatal shooting of
a construction worker during a drug search at
his apartment was unintentional.
Judge Dorothy Russell on Wednesday said
Bruce Evans. 26. was killed accidentally Jan. 11
when his apartment door swung open and
triggered a 12-guagc shotgun on which the
safety device had been disengaged. She said
there were no grounds for criminal charges
against |&gt;ollec officer Raymond Hughes, who
was holding the shotgun
Orlando Mayor Bill Frederick said he would
order Police Chief William Koleszar to review
police procedures on executing search warrants
and safely procedures and a report woidd be
submilled lo the city commission within two
weeks.
Hughes. 33. still laces a department In­
vestigation. The 10-year veteran was suspended
without pay following the shooting, hut was
reinstated Thursday "In a non-combat, nonhazardous duty capacity." Koleszar said.

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O UR T FOR
S EM INO LE CO UN TY, FLO R ID A
C IV IL ACTIO N
CASE NO. S3 Itt7 C A dt-E
B A R N E TT BANK OF SOUTH
FLO R ID A. N A,.
Plaintiff,
vs.
P E R M A B IL T HOMES. IN C . KEN
t W ALT'S AIR CO N D ITIO N IN G A
H E A T IN G . INC . C H A R L E S R.
R A IN A L D I. G E O R G E T T E M
R A IN A L O I. and C E 'B R O O K S
M O R TG AG E COM PANY. INC .
Defendants
NO TICE OF SALE
N O TIC E IS G IV EN Itiel purtuanl
to a final |udgm#nl dalad January
17. 1t*4. In C att No S3 1H7 CA 0t E
•* to* Curcmv CHrrt •* to# i«l**ti
feenth Judicial Circuit In and for
Samlnolt County. Florida. In which
Barnatl Bank ol South Florida. N A ,
a National banking corporation. It
plaintiff and Parma Blit Homes. Inc
a Florida corporation, and Kan A
W all'l Air Conditioning A Haallng.
Inc., a Florida corporation, arc
datandanti. I will tall lo the htghatt
and bait bidder for cash in the lobby
at tha watt front door of Iha Seminole
County Courlhoute In Sanlord.
Seminole County. Florida, al 11 00
a m. on the 11th day of February.
IW4. the following deterlbed pro
party tet forth In Ihe order of final
ludgment
Lof II, R E P LA T OF W YNDH AM
WOOD. PHASE O NE, according to
the plat thereof at recorded In Plal
Book 22, Paget 7S and 77, of Iha
Public Record* ol Seminole County,
Florida
D A T E D thlt 10th day ol January,
IN I

iSEALI
Arthur H Beckwith, Jr.
Clerk ol Circuit Court
By Jean Brlllent
Deputy Clerk
Publlih January 17 A February 1.
MBA
DEP-111
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O UR T.
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 EM INO LE CO UN TY. FLO R ID A
CASE NO. U -lltA C A -W
DIVISION P
H E R ITA G E F E D E R A L SAVINGS
AND LOAN A S S O C IA TIO N
Plaintiff,
A L L E N L JACKSON and JE A N N IE
$. JACKSON. Individually and at Ihe
toia surviving directors and trustees
of Alecon Builders. In c . a Florida
dissolved corporation. R O N A LD
R O U TL E D G E . individually and as
the sole surviving director ol Marlin
Hall. Inc., a Florida dissolved cor
poratlon. D O R A L A N D S C A P IN G
COM PANY. U N IT E D S TA TE S OF
A M E R IC A . PALM ER E L E C TR IC
C O M P A N Y , and S E M I N O L E
C A R P E T SPECIALISTS. INC .

Defendants

N O TIC E OF M O R TO A G E
FO R ECLO SUR E SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
purtu a n l to a Sum m ary Final
Judgment of Foreclosure daled
January f. IM A and entered In Civil
Action No. U U S * CA0S. Division P.
in and tor Seminole County. Florida,
wharain H E R IT A G E F E D E R A L
SAVINGS AND LO AN ASSOCIA
TIO N Is the plelntlH. and A L L E N L.
J A C K S O N and J E A N N I E S
JACKSON. Individually and as Ihe
sola surviving directors and Irutteet
of Alecon Builders. Inc., a Florida
dissolved corporation. R O N A LD
R O U TL E D G E . individually and at
the sola surviving director of Martin
Hall. Inc., a Florida dissolved cor
poratlon. D O R A L A N D S C A P IN G
C O M PAN Y. U N IT E D S TA TE S OF
A M E R IC A . P A LM E R E L E C TR IC
C O M P A N Y , and S E M IN O L E
C A R P E T SPECIALISTS. INC . are
the defendants. I will tall to ihe
highest and best bidder for cath at
Ihe front door of the Courthouse In
Sanford. Florida, between the legal
houri of sale {estimated lime of tala
11:00 a .m .) on tha Ith day ol
February. IM A the following da
scribed property, to wit:
Lof It , Weklva Cove Phase One.
according to the Plat thereof as
recorded in Plal Book 23. Paget M
through M ol tha Public Record* of
Seminole Courly.Florida
D A T E D this Nth day ef January.
IMA
(S E A L )
A R TH U R H. B EC K W ITH , JR
Clerk. Circuit Court
Publish January 17 l February 1.
IMS.

DEP 111

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
OF TH E E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT, IN AND FOR
S EM INO LE C O U N TY . FLO R ID A
CASE N U M B ER : S4S04I CA W E
FIN A N A C E A M ER IC A
C R E D IT
CORPORATION,
t Delawara Corporation,
authorized to do business
Inth* SMI# ol Florid*
Plaintiff,
vv
TH IN K IE BLACK. JR and H AZEL
B
BLACK.
hli
w ilt;
and
M O N TG O M ER Y
WARD
AND
COM PANY. INC
D«l»nd*nt*
, ~ N O TIC E OF ACTIO N
t o * h a z b C b . u . a c ic &gt; t 1 J
Currtnf Addrttl Unknown
Lait known addren
701 Laka Mobil# Drive
Allamont#Spring*, Florida
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D Mai an
action lo foreclot* on a mortgage on
to# following proparly located In
Samlnole County, Florida;
Lot 11. and toe NE &lt;1 ol Lot 21.
Block B. R E P L A T OF LAK E
M O B ILE SHORES. According to the
Plat toereol at recorded In Plat Book
I. Paga SS. Public Record* of
Seminole County, Florida
ha* been filed again*! you and you
ara required to larva a copy of your
written detente*, If any. lo It on
W A R R EN H P E TE R S E N . Esqulrs,
Plaintiff'* attorney, whole address if
417 E Waihington Street. Suite It,
Orlando. Florida 17401. on or before
the 7th day ol March. IMe and III*
Ihe original with to* Clerk ol toll
Court either before service on Plain
tlff-» tlfomay or Immedialaly Mart
altar, ototrwlt* a default will be
entered agelntl you tor to# relief
demanded In the Complaint or pell
(ton.
D A TE D February I, I Me
(S E A L)
Arthur H Beckwith. Jr,
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
Eleanor F. Buratto
Deputy Clerk
Publifh: February], 10.17,14. IMF.
D E O el

N O TIC E OF P U B LIC N C A R IN O
T H E BOARD OF C O U N TY COM
M I S S IO N E R S O F S E M I N O L E
C O U N TY will hold a public hearing
In Room 100 of to* Samlnolt County
Courthouse. Sanlord. Florida, on
Fab. I*. IM4 *1 7 00 P M . or at toon
thereafter ** possible. to consider a
S P E C IF IC L A N D USE A M E N D
M E N T lo Ihe Samlnolt County
Comprehensive Plan and REZON
IN G ol to* described property
A N O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D I N A N C E ‘ 7 7 -1 1 W H I C H
AM EN DS TH E D E T A IL E D LA N D
USE E L E M E N T OF TH E
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y CO M
PREM ENSIVE P LAN FROM LOW
O E N S IT Y R E S I D E N T I A L A N D
P R E S E R V A T IO N T O P L A N N E D
U N IT D E V E L O P M E N T IP U D I FOR
T H E P UR PO SE O F R EZ O N IN G
F R O M A I A G R IC U L T U R E T O
P LA N N E D U N IT D E V E L O P M E N T
(P U D ), the following described
property*
The SW L* of to# NW to and the
NW 14 el too SW Vk, containing M
acres more or lest, tocolod In Soclion
IS I I S JO E , S em ino le C o u n ty ,
Florida. (T H E SE corner of to*
Intersection of Dike Rood and Dodd
Road, north ol Boor Gully Lake.)
(01 ST. ol)
A P P L IC A T IO N H AS B E E N
S U B M ITTE D BY O L IN A M E R IC A N
HOMES
Additional Information moy bo
obtained by confecting to# Land
Management Manager al 123 4110.
Eat. 140
Parsons unabl* lo otlond the
hearing who wish to common! on to*
proposed action* moy submit written
iielement* to the Land Management
Division prior to too tchodulod public
hearing. Persons appearing at to#
hearings may submil written state
merits or bo hoard orally.
Persons ore advised tool. If they
dec id* to appeal any decision mode
ol those mattings, they will naod •
record ol to* proceedings, and. tor
such purpose, they may need to
ensure that a verbatim record of too
proceedings Is mode, which record
includes the testimony and ovidonco
upon which toe appeal Istobo based.
Board of County Commissioner*
Seminole County, Florida
B y: Sandra Gtonn, Chairman
Attest: Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Publish F e b ru a ry ! IM4
DEQ7

White: U.S. Covered Up
Slaying Of Archbishop
W A S H IN G TO N |UIM) - A lop House
Democrat wants the administration to
spell out all it knows about accusations
liia t S a lv a d o ra n rig h tis t R o b e rto
d 'A u b u l s s o n o r d e r e d th e 1 9R 0
assassination of popular Archbiship Os­
car Arnolfo Romero.
Robert W hite, who was the a m ­
bassador to El Salvador when Romero
was shot, said Thursday the administra­
tion has covered up evidence that
d'Aubulsson. running for president in El
Salvador, ordered Romero's death.
Rep. Bill Alexander. D-Ark.. ihe No.
4-ranklng Democrat In the House, who
with two other members met with White
for a briefing on his charges, said the
charges raise “ serious questions about
our government's knowledge of official
or semi-official terrorism In El Salvador."
Romero, gunned down March 24.
1980, as he said a funeral mass, was
known in El Salvador as (he "poor man's
bishop" who brushed off death threats to
"speak for Ihose who cannot speak."
White, who was replaced soon after
Reagan assumed office In 1981, charged
that d'Aubulsson set up a lottery to
select tl.e architect of Romero's slaying
and the winner ended up being an army
friend of d'Aubulsson's, Lt. Francisco
Amaya Rosa. He said a disgruntled loser
who wanted the assignment himself
subsequently described the death plot to

U.S. officials.
The aclifal triggerman was lalrr killed
himself when d'Aubulsson decided he
was untrustworthy. White said.
D'Aubulsson denied W hile's charges
while cam paigning in El Salvador
Thursday.
“ He's a liar and worth no more than a
cockroach." d'Aubulsson said.
"I call upon the administration lo
make a full disclosure of the facts in Its
possession" on ihe matter “ and about
the terrorist activities alleged to be
supervised from our own territory."
Alexander said.
Alexander noted that Kcagan recently
vetoed a measure that would have
required the administration to certify lo
Congress twice a year Dial El Salvador
was improving human rights conditions
if Ihe country was to keep receiving U.S.
military aid.
Alexander said Congress may try to
"reinstate a reliable certification pro­
cedure to govern potential aid to El
Salvador." and said the time has come
for a congressional probe of the violence
"and the support. Indirect or otherwise,
which our aid provides for it."
White was to have lest Hied Thursday
to a subcommittee of the Foreign Affairs
panel. The session was rescheduled lor
Monday morning for reasons unrelated
lo White's Icsllmony.

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legal Notice
C IT Y O F
LA K E M AR Y. FLO R ID A
A D V E R TIS E M E N T FOR BIDS
PUBLIC N O TIC E It hereby given
Ihal to* City ol Laki Mary. Florida,
will rtc tlv t staled Bids lor toe
construction of Water System Im
provemenls In compliance with Ihe
Contract Documents prepared by Ihe
City of Leke Mary
Sealed Bids will be received until
4 30 P M „ local lima on February IS.
IVt4. al to* Laka Mary City Hall. IM
North Country Club Road Bids will
be publicly opened and r#ad aloud al
tha City Commission mealing, 7 30
p m , February It, 1*44
The protact consists al appro. I
mataly 1,221 I F. of w tltr mains
wim sarvtca. lines and related op
pur tenante*
There will be a Pre Bid Conference
at 1 00 P M , Local Tima on Ftbru
ary 10.1S44
Bidding document* consist ol a
protect manual containing bidding
and contract raqulramanls and Ordl
nance Num ber 1*7 (Te ch n ica l
Specifications) and drawings
Bidding documents may be ob
talned al Lake Mary City Hall. IM
North Country Club Road. Laka
Mary. Florid* 1270S, upon paymtnl
ol S10 00 per sal The payment will
not be refunded
Bidding documents may b* auam
ined al tha lot lowing local tons:
I. City ol Laka Mary
City Hall
Lake Mary. Florid* 277SS
Dodge Plan Room
Sulla XU
*11Wymora Road
Winter Park. Florida 1271*
Centra! F lo rid * Builders
Enchang*
120 Irma Avenue
Orlando. Florida 12003
Bid Security In to* amount of five
(5) percent shall accompany »*ch
Bid In Compliance with tot Inslruc
lions lo Bidders
The Owner reserves to# right to
reject any or all Bids and fo waive
any Informality or technicality In
any BidlnthoInltreslolthaOwnar
By: KathyS. Rico
City Manager
City at Laka Mary.
Florida
Publish: February I t s . 1*04
D E O 4}
N O TIC E OF P U B LIC H IA R IN O
T H E BOARD O F C O U N TY COM
M IS S IO N E R S O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY will held * public htsrlrp
in Room 200 of to* Saminot* County
Courthouse, Sonford. Florid*.
Feb. 14, IM4 at 7:00 P M , or at soon
there aliar as possible, to censidtr a
S P E C IF IC LA N D USE A M E N D
M E N T to tho Samlnolt Counly
Comprehensive Plan and REZON
IN G o l Ihe described property
A N O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D I N A N C E 7 7 -2 S W H I C H
AM EN DS TH E D E T A IL E D LAND
USE E L E M E N T OF TH E
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y COM
P R E H EN S IV E P LAN FROM LOW
I N T E N S I T Y U R B A N T O COM
M E R C IA L FOR T H E PURPOSE OF
R E Z O N IN G FR O M A
A G R IC U L T U R E TO C l R E T A IL
C O M M E R CIA L, to* following
scribed property.
Lot S, le u too South » l . l t«
Smith's 3rd Subdivision. Plat Book 1,
Pagols, to Socfton IH S 1 0 . Samlnolt
County. Florida. Appro* Imataly two
acres. (At Ihe SE corner of SR 4* and
Elder Rood) (O IS T. IS).
A P P L IC A T IO N H AS B E E N
S U B M IT T E D BY C H A R LE S
HARDW ICK
Additional Information may ba
obtained by contacting th* Land
Monagamant Manager *1 m a n ),
Eat. M0.
Person* unabls to altsnd tha
hearing who wish to common! on too
proposed actions may submit written
slatomants to to* Land Managemani
Division prior to to* scheduled public
hearing. Persons appearing at I
haarlngs may submit written stale
ments or be heard orally Parson* ore advised that. If It
dec&gt;d* tp appeal any daemon mod*
at toes* meetings, they will need a
record of too proceedings, and. tor
such purpose, they may naod to
ensure that a verbatim record of to*
proceedings It mad*, which record
Include* too testimony and evidence
upon which to* appeal it to bo bated.
Board ol County Commissioners
SamInotoCounty, Florida
By ‘ Sandra Glenn. Chairmen
A Mesl: Arthur H. Bockwlfh. Jr.
Publish February ! i m .

DEQ 4

Ml * 7 0 ^

j ■**

11 I f * # * # 10C It II i % J

500-53 59
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N O TIC E O F PUBLIC H EAR ING
TH E BOARD OF C O U N TY COM
M I S S IO N E R S O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY will hold * public tie r log
In Room 200 ol tot Seminole County
Courthouse. Sanford, Florida, on
Fab 14. IM4 at 7 00 P M . or as soon
thereafter *s possible, to consider a
S P E C IF IC LA N D USE A M E N D
M E N T to Ihe Samlnolt County
Comprehensive Plan and REZON
ING of to* descr ibed property.
AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D I N A N C E 7 7-sJ J W H I C H
AM ENDS TH E D E T A IL E D LAND
USE E L E M E N T OF TH E
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y COM
PREMENSIVE PLAN FROM LOW
D E N S I T Y R E S I D E N
TlA L/P R E S E R V A TIO N TO M ED I
UM O E N S ITY R E S ID E N TIA L fO R
T H E PURPOSE O F R EZO N IN G
FROM A I A G R IC U LTU R E TO R 1
ONE AN D TW O F A M ILY DW ELL
INC D IS TR IC T, the following de
scribed properly
The Wes! '* ol the NW '&lt; of the SW
Ik ol Section 24 21$ ME. Seminole
County. Florida Twenty acres more
or less (At the SE corner of Red Bug
Lake Road and Dodd Road I (O IS T
III.
A P P L IC A T IO N HAS B E E N
S U B M ITTE D BY SID V IH LE N , JR
Additional Information may be
obtained by contacting th* Land
Management Manager al 33) 4130
Eat. ISO.
Persons unsbl* to stlsnd to*
hearing who wish to comment on th*
proposed actions may submil written
statement* to th* Land Management
Division prior to the scheduled public
hearing. Parsons appearing *1 to*
haarlngs may submit written stale
menls or be heard orally
Persons are advised that. If they
decide to appeal any decision mad*
al toes* mealing*, they will need a
record of to* proceeding*, and. for
such purpose, they may need to
tnsure that a verbatim record of tha
proceeding* i&gt; made, which record
Includes th* testimony end evidence
upon which th* appeal 1sto ba based.
Board of County Commlsitontri
Sem.noleCounty, Florida
B y : Sandra Glann. Chairman
Attest Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Publish February ! I He
DEQ 1
NO TIC E OF PUBLIC H EAR IN G
T H E BOARD OF C O U N TY COM
M I S S IO N E R S O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY will hold * public hearing
In Room 200 ol to* Samlnqt# County
Courthoul*. Sanlord. Florid*, on
Fab 14, 1*44 at 7 00 P M , or as soon
thereafter at possible, to consider a
S P E C IF IC LA N D USE A M E N D
M E N T fo Ih* Samlnolt County
Comprehensive Plan and REZON
I NG of Ih* described property.
AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D I N A N C E 77 21 W H I C H
AM ENDS TH E D E T A IL E D LAND
USE E L E M E N T OF TH E
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y COM
P R E H EN S IV E PLAN FROM GEN
E R A L R UR AL T O LOW D E N S ITY
R E S ID E N T IA L FOR TH E
PURPOSE O F R EZONING FROM
A - l A G R I C U L T U R E T O R IA A
S IN G L E F A M I L Y D W E L L IN G
D IS TR IC T, to* tot&gt;owlng described
Th* South Vs of tho SW I* of Soc.
J ] 11$H E , lest approalmotoly 11
acres of th* southeast comer which
It design*led at flood prone Appro*
Imately 71 acrot. (A l th* NE corner
of Dean and McCulloch Roads.)
(D IS T .s i).
A P P L IC A T IO N H AS B E E N
S U B M ITTE D B Y C E N T E X HOMES
O F FLO R ID A.
Additional Information may ba
obtained by contacting to* Land
Management Manager at 1314330,
E H . ISO.
P -r ia n t unabl* lo attend Ih*
hearing who with to common) on to*
proposed actions moy submit written
slatomants to to* Land Managomonf
Division prior to th* tchodulod public
hearing. Parsons appearing *1 to*
haarlngs moy submit written stale
monitor b* hoard orally.
Persons or* advised toot. II they
decide to appeal any decision mad*
Of toes* ipootingt. they will need •
record of to* proceedings, and. tor
such purpose, they may need lo
ensure toot a verbatim record of to*
proceedings It mad*, which record
Includes to* testimony and ovidonco
upon which to* appeal It to b* based.
Board of County Commissioners
Seminole County, Florid*
B y Sand's Glenn Chairman
Altos!: Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Publish February J. 1*44.

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Miss Nellie V. Maurer.
76, of 603 Truesdell Avc.,
Altamonte Springs, died
Thursday at her home.
Born Oct. 15. 1907. In
Philadelphia, she moved to
Altamonte Springs from
there In 1976. She was a
verse editor and a member
of St. M ary M agdalen
Catholic Church.
Survivors include two
sisters. Anna Oswald. Miss
Pauline Maurer. ImiiIi of
A lta m o n te S p r in g s ;
bro the r. J o h n M aurer.
Philadelphia.
B a I d w I n •F a I r c h I f d
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Springs. Is tn charge of
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month ago from Savannah
to work. He was a member
of F ir s t P re s b y te ria n
Church. Sanford.
He Is survived by his
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Friday. Feb. 1, 1FI4-3A

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

,

323-9975

SANFORD PLAZA

SAVE

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IT’S BACK
THE NINTH ANNUAL
SANF0RD-SEMIN0LE JAYCEE

RESTAURANT
SAMPLER

This Year The Sampler Has MORE RESTAURANTS, MORE COUPONS and
MORE VALUE Than Ever. OVER $275oc IN FREE MEALS At Nearly 30 Local
Restaurants! And Now With This ONE TIME OFFER, You'll SAVE EVEN
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And Enjoy Buy One Get One FREE Meals At These Fine Restaurants Sup­
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SORRENTO'S
SO BIK'S
B ISQ U IT S
JERSEY M A ID
SE A SO N 'S
RIB R A N CH
H U N G R Y HOW IE'S
BOWL A M E R IC A
CHURCH'S
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DA N SEI'S CRAB HOUSE
LEE S G A R D E N
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CARLI'S
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MR. C'S
G ASLIG H T SUPPER CLUB
C A S A M IA
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WAFFLE HOUSE
HARDEE'S
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Altogether The 1984 Sampler Has 65 Coupons All Good For Buy
One * Get One FREE Meals At The Above 29 Restaurants. The
Sampler Is Valid Until Sept. 1, 1984. When Regular Sales Begin
The JAYCEES Will Be Offering This $27500 VALUE For Only $19.95
•BUT - If You Act NOW You Pay Just $15.00. Why Not Dine Out
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JA V S l

�E v e n in g H e ra ld

If you would like to know to be more
informed and articulate on the Influences
and power struggles behind the interna­
tional news and have a chance to express
your opinions on various subjects, "Great
Decisions" Is for you.

IUSPS ttl IM)
300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771*
Area Code 305-322-2611or 831-9993
Friday, February 3, 1984— 4A

The nationwide program Is offered In
conjunction w ith the Foreign Policy
Association, a non-profit educational orga­
nization In existence for 50 years under
the sponsorship of the Cassleberry Rotary
Club and Seminole Com m unity College.

Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thoma* Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $1.25; 6 Months. $24.00;
Year, $45,00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.
B y Ja n e C a sse lb e rry

Education
Or Just Fads?
W h e n poorly educated students m ove out Into
professions, they Inevitably low er professional
sta n d a rd s. E v e n w orse, th ey becom e p o o rly
qualified teachers and inculcate Incom petence in a
whole new generation. Second-rate education has
a w a y of perpetuating itself in a vicious cycle.
C la rk Kerr, form er president of the U n ive rs ity of
California, brought these thoughts to m in d in his
recent address to the Association of A m e rica n
C olleges. He described the slate of general
education in o u r nation's universities as "a s
absolute disaster."
D r. K e rr places m u c h b la m e on c a m p u s
presidents. 8 0 percent of w h o m spend their tim e
raising funds and Increasing e nrollm ents w ithout
m u c h thought to im p ro vin g c u rricu la .
It used to he that every college graduate could be
counted on to have certain basic knowledge. He or
she had to pass th ro u g h a core c u rric u lu m that
included the great books an d ideas of western
civilization . Not a n y m ore. D u rin g the 1960s,
requirem ents were watered dow n, enrollm ents
were increased and students were given the choice
of m ore and m ore electives. T o d a y , the em phasis
Is on technological and professional tra in in g.
U n iv e rs itie s a rc b e c o m in g trade schools for
science-based Ind u stry and the professions.
T h is Is not altogether bad. It has made students
m ore responsible and m ore realistic. Indeed, it is
difficult to criticize this latest shift in higher
education precisely because the hu m anities a ren 't
w hat they used to be. W hile history, literature and
philosophy once held sw ay, college catalogs offer
C o n t e m p o r a r y P e r f o r m in g A r t s p r o g r a m s ,
W o m e n 's Studies and pop sociology courses.
S peaking at the same conference as C la rk Kerr.
D r. C harles M uscatine, a professor of E n g lish at
the U n ive rsity of California at Berkeley, blam ed
the decline of liberal arts education on the
Increasing specialization of unive rsity disciplines.
T h e idea of a classical general education has given
w a y to esoteric fads and Job-related skills.
Part of the responsibility for this decline m ust go
to professors w h o devote themselves to research,
neglecting th eir role as teacher, and to a d ­
m in is tra to rs w h o en cou ra ge this neglect by
p r o m o tin g professors on the basis of th e ir
p u b lish in g records rather than their teaching
abilities.
O u r educational Institutions need invigorating.
A cadem ic standards should be im proved, core
cu rric u la renew ed, and the liberal arts restored to
their form er place as a cro w n Jewel of education.
More than a n y other form of go ve rn m en t, a
d e m o cracy requires its citize n ry to be equipped for
Intelligent decisions. A n d there Is no better w a y of
le arn in g about m a n and society than th ro u g h the
liberal arts. G ib b o n 's Decline and Full of the
Hom an Em pire show s w hat can happen to a
society that loses Its cultural m oorings.

Shut The Loophole
W e hope som eone high u p in the Reagan
a d m in istra tio n glanced at a page one article of The
W all Street Jo u rn a l recently. T h e re , he w o u ld
have seen a detailed description of an astonishing
lo o p h o le In th is c o u n try 's co un te r-esp io n ag e
defenses.
F o r obvious reasons, Soviet citizens are p ro ­
hibited from visitin g m ilita ry installations and
defense plants In this c o u n try . Incredibly, no such
g e n e ra l p ro h ib itio n a pplies to c itize n s fro m
Eastern Eu rop e an countries. One guess, then, as
to w h o m the K G B uses to c a rry out espionaage
activities in areas of the U n ited States that are
closed to Soviet nationals.
T h e F B I and the C IA have cracked tw o m ajor
espionage cases in v o lv in g Polish Intelligence
agents since 1981. Iq both cases, Polish agents
w ith relatively easy access to the U .S . defense
in d u s try obtained ream s of h ig h ly classified

Information.
So w h y urc Eastern European nationals left to
roa m so freely? T h e rationale is political. A m e ri­
can interests w ould be served by e n co uraging a
m ore independent Eastern Eu rop e . T o that end.
m a n y of the restrictions applied to the Soviets are
w aived for Eastern Europeans.
B u t w here Is the connection between m a k in g
things cuslcr for Soviet intelligence and p ro m o tin g
an Eastern E u ro p e less rig id ly controlled b y
M o sco w ? T h i s n onsense sh o u ld be sto p p ed
Im m ediately.

BERRY'S WORLD

THE MOST SERIOUS
PROBLEM FACING, OS
IS OUR PECAYlHGt
iN f R A S T W

R E ...

Th e first program at the Casselberry
.Senior Citizen Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive, got underway at 2 p.m. Wednesday
with 15 attending. Moderator James L.
Whitmore, retired aviation consultant, who

Whitmore, a Rotarian who has lived in
more than 60 countries and has had
experience with people of many back­
grounds. will be a great asset In aiding In
understanding of world problems, accord­
ing to Duane Bailey, coordinator of the
scries.

has served all over the world with the
Federal Aviation Authority, will lead a
grneral discussion of the overall program.
Registration Is still open and the only
cost Is for materials. If someone can't
afford the $6 fee for the books, two will be
available to read at the senior center,
according to manager Valerie Barber.
Th e goal of the program Is to develop
understanding of vita) Issues facing the
U.S. and to give individuals a chance to
express their views to the nation's foreign
policy makers.
Materials arc available on these subjects:
USSR under Andropov; Central America.
Mexico and the U.S.; U.S. Security and
World Peace: South Africa. International
Debt Crisis; and International Drug Traffic.

Sessions will also be held In other
locations, dales and times. Th e y Include
Mondays. 7:30 p.m.. Westminster Pre­
s b y te ria n C h u r c h . Red B u g Road.
C a s s e lb e r r y ; M o n d a y s , 7 :3 0 p .m .,
Seminole County Library. Seminole Plaza;
Tuesdays at 7 p.m.. at Seminole C om m u­
nity College: and Thursdays at 7:30 p.m.
at the C o m m u n ity United Methodist
Church. Highway 17-92. Casselberry.

JEFFREY HART

D O N GRAFF

What
Next
Argentina?

Human
Mind's
History
Author-educator Joseph Campbell Is
embarked upon a majestic, nay, stag­
gering enterprise of the first importance.
It is nothing less than a history of the
human mind In terms of Its guiding
myths, from the silent cultures of
prehistory through the present.
The first of his four volumes has now
appeared, "T h e Way of the Narnmal
Powers" (Harper and Row), and It
concerns the myths of the ancient
hunting cultures. With Its maps and
photographs, the volume Is Itself a
stunning work of art — about stunning
works of art by people we can never
know otherwise.
Campbell’s second volume, he told me
over lunch recently. Is virtually com­
plete. "Th e Way of the Seeded Earth"
will deal with the ancient planting
cultures.
"F a r more violent than the hunters."
Campbell tells me. "hum an sacrifice."
The work on Volume Tw o Is complete.
The third and fourth volumes. "Th e
Way of the Celestial Lights" and "Th e
Way of Man," will move from the sky
myths of the cities of the ancient
cosmos to post-Rcuaissance man and
his computers.
Clearly, this is a project of heroic
Importance, a sununa of Campbell's
career as a student of man's myths. It Is
also one of the great works of our time,
an Intellectual and artistic effort on the
scale of Pound's Cantos, or. even.
Dante's "Divine Com edy."
Talking with me In that New York
restaurant. Joseph Campbell at 79
looked no more than 50. a thin and
handsome man In a tweed sport Jacket
and slightly non-businessman blue
shirt.
It quickly became clear that the roots
of his Interest In myth lie track In the
1920s. In the modern movement In the
arts.
I remarked that, all of a sudden, not
long after the turn of the century, the
now great names began to make myth
c e n t ra l to t h e ir w o r k : P ic a s so ,
Stravinsky. Joyce. Eliot. Pound. Yeats
and the rest.
Campbell ugrred. " I got a fellowship,
and went to Parts In 1927. I discovered
Joyce. Later 1 studied Sanskrit In
Munich. I discovered Ju n g and Mann."
"You found that they had a lot In
com m on."
"Yes. They are all fascinated with the
great patterns or archetypes that char­
acterize the human spirit and find
expression In m yth, art and religion."
We both speculated aloud about why
a preoccupation with P A T T E R N ap­
peared so suddenly early in the 20th
century, though It had roots further
track In the 19th.
Over wine and good pasta, we agreed
on u theory. Art became Interested In
these profound patterns because the
multiplicity of modern life was slipping
out or emotional and intellectual con­
trol. Things were moving so fast. Indeed
accelerating, and becoming so complex
and contradictory, that the sensitive
mind naturally sought some deeper
pattern to unify them.
Thus. In Eliot’s "Waste Land" or
Joyce’s "Ulysses.” the baffling details of
the surface — which suggest our dally
experience of the formless — find a
reconciling pattern below the surface
through an appeal to ancient forms.

*,J$

&lt;■ .•

.-

.

WILLIAM RUSHER

Warning To The GOP
NEW YORK (NEA| - As any obser­
vant reader of this column knows. I
have not gone along with those con­
servative leaders, such as Richard
Vlgucrle and I toward Phillips, who have
become profoundly disenchanted with
Ronald Reagan and would, if the
opporlunity presented Itself, repudiate
Ills administration altogether. On the
contrary. I think Ronald Reagan has
been an absolutely superb president —
the only authentic representative the
conservative movement has had In the
White House In modern times — and I
believe that any conservative who Isn't
on balance pleased with his administra­
tion probably can never be pleased at
all. What's more, 1 think the vast
majority of conservatives, and probably
a majority of the entire American
electorate, agree with me.
Hut for that very reason I think the
time ts appropriate to issue this public
warning to the so-called "pragmatists"
who are taking over the management of
this year's Republican campaign: Get
over the breezy notion that serious
conservatives have "nowhere else to
go" this year, and that accordingly you
can afford to spend your time wooing
this or that liberal clique to round out
your vole total on Election Day. Nothing
could be further from tile truth.
in the first place. If there was ever any
validity to the theory that the GOP could
win nationally hy pursuing marginal
liberal voters — and jn-rsonally 1 never
believed It for a moment — It certainly
Isn't true in 1984, The liberals may be
down and out. but they know an enemy
when they see one. and they will fight
Ronald Reagan's Republican Party with
every ounce of strength they possess.
In the second place, the notion of
winning by picking up stray liberal
voles betokens a fatal misunderstanding
of the nature and deepest concerns of
the American people. This Is not a
liberal nation and hasn't been for almost
20 years. Th e really Important movable
bloc of voters — "movable" In the sense,
that It can and will vote for either of the
two m ajor parlies, depending on
circumstances — Is the lower and lower
middle class blue-collar and "ethnic”
while voters who were dependably
Democratic until Kennedy's election in
I960.

In 1964 that bloc, though profoundly
alienated from the Democratic Party's
strenuous liberalism, stuck with Texas'
Lyndon Johnson. In 1968 It split
between Nixon and George Wallace, and
defeated Hubert Humphrey. In 1972 It
Joined the rest of America In re-electing
Nixon over the leftist McGovern. In
1976 It returned to the Democratic
Party at the soft beckoning of Georgia's
J im m y Carter — and retired a Re­
publican president who'd had no better
sense than to pick Nelson Rockefeller as
Ills vice president. In 1980 It conferred
Its enthusiastic approval — and the
presidency — on Ronald Reagan.
In 1984. the Republican Parly had
better lake blessedly good care to keep
this bloc of voters, or most of it. In Its
pocket, or It could Ik - In for u bleak
s u rp ris e . M o re o ve r, some of the
shrewdest political observers on the
scene today are growing seriously con­
cerned over the danger of defeat.
Take Paul Wcyrlch. by far the ablest
nuts-and-bolts political operator active
today In the conservative movement.
Weyrich Is close to such New Right
spokesmen as Vlgucrle and Phillips, but
has firmly refused to Join in their
intemperate denunciations of Ronald
Reagan. Yet Weyrich Is warning, both
publicly and privately, that the Re­
publican Party cannot, on Its record to
date, count on the sort of enthuslasllc
blue-eollar support that, udded to the
OOP's natural base, put Reagan over
the top In 1980.
Blue-collar voters are vulnerable to an
economic downturn, and even those
who weathered the recent recession will
Ik - sensitive to the slightest hint of
{Kisslble future trouble on that front.
They can also Ik - Influenced by Demo­
cratic charges that this administration
has tended to favor large corporations
and big banks with soft overseas loans.
In addition, Weyrich warns, millions of
Americans motivated chiefly by the
"social issues" — abortion, school
prayer, etc. — may not feel nearly as
fervent about registering and voting In
1984 as they did four years ago.
Ronald Reagan Is aware of these
problems — but what about his manag­
ers and advisers? They had better start
learning: fust.

Is Argentina overdoing It?
The news out of Buenos Aires for the
last several months has been con­
sistently good for the democratically
Inclined. Almost too good.
In October's presidential election, the
Argentines did not repeat their dismal
history of the past half century. In
which the pendulum of power has
swung monotonously between military
dictatorship and the institutionalized
demagoguery of Pcronlsm.
Instead, to almost everyone's surprise
except possibly his own. Raid Alfonstn.
a center-leftist of the European social
democratic type. won.
Not only that, the generals and the
Peronlstas accepted the decision of the
clectorale and allowed him to take
power, which he has been wielding
energetically to deal with Argentina's
problems.
T o say these problems arc legion Is a
considerable understatem ent. Just
about everything that can go wrong In a
country — short of total collapse — has
gone wrong In Argentina.
Alfonsln has attracted the most atten­
tion with his moves to bring to Justice
military leaders. Including past Junta
presidents. Implicated in the torture and
murder of thousands of Argentines
during seven years of government
terror.
Economic Initiatives, however, could
prove to be of much greater Import In
the long run.
■
Alfnnsln's administration has set Itself
some formidable tasks:
— Bringing under control an Inflation
that, at a rale last year of more than 400
percent. has been the world's highest.
— Beginning to trim a budget deficit
that, relative to the size of the national
economy. Is worse news than Am eri­
cans arc gelling accustomed to hearing
from Washington.
— Raising taxes and limiting wage
Increases.
— Self mismanaged, money-losing
state enterprises.
The agenda would Ik - ambitious for an
Incoming government with solid public
support In a stable democracy. For the
fragile Argentine political consensus. It
looks almost foolhardy.
Alfonsln's policy makers may be
correct, however, in seeing Argentina's
problems as so num erous and so
pressing that there Is no option but to
counterattack immediately on all fronls.
But there are dangers. A lot of oxes
arc going to have to be gored.
Alfonsln Is probably right in taking on
the officers immediately. Discredited by
the Falklands defeat and the shambles
of their latest attempt at government,
they may never be In a less advan­
tageous position in dealing with civilian
authority.
Th e danger may be In pursuing
Justice too far. and loo deeply Into the
ranks, provoking a coup of desperation.
O r an alliance of convenience with the
Peronlsts. who will be the most dis­
turbed by the economic housecleaning.
We must hope not. The Impact of the
Argentine effort at national regeneration
Is not limited to Argentina. It Is being
watched closely — In some places
fearfully - throughout Latin America,
e s p e c i a l l y In t h e I m m e d i a t e
neighborhood.

JA C K A N D E R SO N

Egypt Uses American Cash For Weapons
W A S H IN G T O N Th e financially
strapped Egyptian government has
come up with an Ingenious plan to meet
overdue paym ents on the military
hardware It has been buying from the
United Slates: Use $103 million in U.S.
aid funds.
With one hand. Egypt would take
economic aid from Uncle Sam and. with
the other, pay some of the money back
to Uncle Sam for military aid. And the
Reagan administration Is apparently
e ncouraging this flagrantly Illegal
scheme.
Ever since the 1978 Camp David
accords, the United States has been
pumping more Hum $1 billion a year In
economic aid Into Egypt — a sort of
baksheesh that ex-President Carter was
willing to give Egypt for signing the
peace treaty with Israel.
But the billions In aid have been
soaked up like so many teacups of water
poured on the desert sand, with little
visible result except for the enrichment
o f a few c o n t r a c t o r s . E g y p t ia n
middlemen and corrupt officials. Bart of

th e p r o b le m h a s b e e n s lo p p y
supervision by the U.S. Agency for
International Development.
Th e Egyptian government Is deeply in
debt: the international Monetary' Fund
has balked at any new loans, or even a
restructuring of the debt unless Ihe
Egyptians take strict belt-lightening
measures. But President Hosnl Mubarak
doesn't dare Introduce an austerity
program — or make public the enormity
of the economic problem — until after
the elections scheduled for May.
One obligation the Egyptian govern­
ment has been unable to meet Is the
regular Installment payment on its
form idable U -S . weapons. Sale of
sophisticated hardware to Egypt was
also part of the Camp David deal, but
Ihe Egyptians were supposed to pay for
the stuff. Both the November and
December payments were missed.
T o Egypt. It makes perfect sense to
pay for U.S. guns with U.S. butter. But
It happens to be Illegal. Money that
Congress appropriates for economic

assistance to a foreign country Is not
allowed to be used to buy weapons.
So the administration has proposed
giving Egypt a $103 m illion cash
transfer of "deobllgated" AID funds It
has told Congress that Egypt needs the
moncy for unspecified reasons.
B u t a State D e p a rtm e n t cable,
stamped "Confidential." makes clear
that the money would be used to meet
Egypt’s Foreign Military Sales pay­
ments. My associate Lucelle Lagnado
obtained a copy of the cable. It describes
meetings early last month In Cairo
between Peter McPherson. AID ad­
ministrator. and Moustafa El Said.
Egyptian minister of economy and
foreign trade.
McPherson "asked If the $103 million
would be sufficient to enable the G O E
(Government of Egypt) to meet Its FMS
(Foreign Military Sales) debt servicing
obligations through the elections." the
cable reported, adding; "E l Said re­
sponded affirmatively...."
McPherson told the Egyptian minister
the administration was having a hard

time persuading Congress to approve
the $103 million transfer. Th is is true;
H o u se a n d S e n a te le ad e rs have
expressed concern over the proposal
McPherson suggested to El Said that
perhaps the best way to get approval for
the cash trunsfer was to level with
Congress about Egypt's shaky financial
situation and Its Intention to seek IMF
help after the May elections.
Ironically, one Important reason for
the IMF's reluctance to ball Egypt out Is
the government's refusal — for obvious
political reasons — to raise Ihe price of
bread. Millions of AID dollars have been
spent to build bakeries that will help
solve the bread problem. As l have
reported In past columns, much of this
AID money has been wasted.
Footnote: AID Deputy Administrator
Brad Langmald Insisted that the Egyp­
tians would not use Ihe foreign aid
money to meet their FMS obligations,
but he and other officials admitted the
funds were "fungible." Th is means they
are interchangeable with other funds.

�PEOPLE

Evening Herald. Sanlord. FI.

Friday, Feb. 3, M 4 -J A

Gardening

It's Too Early To Know Effects Of Freeze Damage
Editor\ Note. Alfred brsscsen has
b e e n e m p l o y e d as U r b a n
Hortleultrlst by Seminole County
Agricultural Extension Sendee and
will write The Herald's weekly
Gardening column. A resident of
Winter Springs, he was In the
landscaping and Irrigation con­
tracting business for I I years, lie
has a US degree from the University
of Minnesota and &lt;i Master of
Science degree from Iowa State
University. Bcsscsen was formerly
associated with the Cooperative
Extension Sendee at Iowa Stair
University and Ohio State Universi­
ty.
Go easy on your pruning. It's u
l i n k early to know how much
damage the freeze has caused lo
landscape plants. A lillle "green" Is
showing up on backyard rllrus and
some landscape plants. Unless you

Alfred
Bessesen
U rban
H o rtle u ltrls t
3 2 3 -2 3 0 0
E x t. 181

were planning to do some drastic
pruning, better wait a month or so.
For citrus, wall until late May or
June to prune. Freeze damaged
branches may sprout only lo dry up
later. Then, you will need to prune
again — double work — best to wait.
Shade trees, such as Sycamore.
Sweet Gum and the oaks should be
planted as soon as (xisstblc to gel a
good root system started before the
hoi weather arrives. Trees grown In

coniainers obtained from your fa­
vorite garden center or nurseryman
arc your best bet. He sure you water
them thoroughly lo eliminate any
air pockets, ami continue lo water
al least once a week for the first
year.
Lawn grasses are slow to gel
moving this year due lo the con­
tinued cool weather. Norm ally,
lawns ran be fertilized early In
February, but you may want to wait
until the end of the month. We still
could suffer frost or a freeze and any
new growth would be damaged
While you're waiting, break opt
your trusty lawn mower to be side
It's In tip top shape Clean It up.
especially underneath Also, fresh
oil change for the engine, perhaps
new bells, and a sharp blade. If you
don't feel m echanical, have a
mower shop spruce it up for volt.

Miss Burrows,
Elliott Wells
Repeat Vows
Towanna Hechcllc Hurrows and Elliott Avery Wells
were married Jan. 14. al 4 p.m.. at Shiloh Missionary
Haplisl Church. Sanford. The Rev. Harry D. Rucker
performed the candlelight and double ring ceremony.
The bride Is the granddaughter of Mrs. Inez Mayo.
1218 W. 13th St., Sanford. The bridegroom Is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Thcobie Wells. 108 Hcihunc Circle.
Sanford.
Given in marriage by her uncle, Ronald Nathan. A
formal late and silk gown featuring a Victorian collar
and pul fed sheer sleeves with wide cuffs trimmed In
lace. Her silk chiffon skirt gracefully swept into a
lace-trimmed chapel train and a lace and pearl trimmed
cap secured her Herd veil of illusion. She carried a
formal cascade of pink and white carnations in­
terspersed with baby's breath.
Towanna Thom pklns attended the bride as matron of
honor. She wore a floor-length cranberry taffeta gown
and carried a bouquet of pink and cranberry carnations.
She wore a spray of baby’s breath In her hair.
bridesmaids were Tonya Hurrows. sister of the bride.
M utrluku

Fo rt.

J u n io r

D ix o n .

A rd c n n u r

G o td rro .

Lateisha Carter and Ayana Nathan. Their gowns and
flowers were Identical to the honor attendant's.
Calvin Thom pklns screed the bridegroom as best
man. Groomsmen were Stephan Hcnrcy and Lorenzo
Dixon -Jr. Ushers were William Davison and Maurice
Terrell.
Flower girls were Latellla Dixon and Lushondu
Arnold. Ring bearer was Hartholomew Dixon.

UluliU/' Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Avery Wells
A reception followed In the social hall of the church.
Ethel Nightengale assisted in directing the wedding and
reception.
After a wedding trip the newlyweds are making their
home In Sanford where the bride attends Seminole
Com m unity College and the bridegroom is employed by
Cobla Boat Works M arva H sw k in s

Phot* hr Join Modiion

Hearts On Parade For Scholarship Fete
Hearts on Parade is the theme of the Seminole County Branch American
Association of University Women's Second Annual Scholarship Brunch and
Fashion Show Saturday, Feb. 4, at 1030 a.m. at Quality Inn North, Longwood.
Checking out the heart-shaped favors are, June Gordon, seated left,
president, and Carol Ancona, show chairman, and standing, Patricia Byrd,
left, and Joyce Splatt of the decorating commltte. The $10 cost covers
brunch, door prizes and a scholarship contribution. Reservations are
necessary by calling 323-6417 or 831-0066.

FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given ttvut w* *r*
engaged In butlnttl *1 *50 Vlhlen
R0., ienlord. Seminole County.
Florid* under It* fktltlou* n*m» ol
C R A FTS M A N CO N S TR U C TIO N ,
end lt*l w* Intend lo regiiler u ld
n*m* with the Clerk ol It* Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florid* In
*ccord*nc* with the provliioni ol It*
Fktitlou* N*m* Slelute*. to Wit:
Section US Of Florid* Sletut** IH7.
I\l Brian O'Boyle
ry/Colvin D*y
Publish January JO. V A February J.
10. I « r
DEP 100
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice I* hereby given the! I am
engaged In butlneu at 1030 Hun
tington Court. Longwood. Seminole
County, Florid* under the flctltkou*
name of ECC. and that I Intend to
regliter Mid name with the Clerk ol
the Circuit Court. Seminole County.
Florida in accordance with It* pre­
valent ol the Fictitious Name Slat
utet. to Wit: Section MS 0» Florid*
Statute* 1TS7.
. /*/Joteph L. Abram*
Pubilth February 3.10.17.1*. IN*.

LEOAL NOTICE
The annual meeting ol the *tock
holdert ol It* Flag*blp Rank o*
Seminole. Sanlord, Flood*, a bank
Ing corporation, will be held *t the
Sanlord Olllc* Board Room on
Wednetday. February 31, IN*. *1
t *Sa m , lor it* followingpurpo***:
(1) Election ol Director*
i l l To lr*n**ct tuch other bu*ln*t»
•t may properly com* betort ft*
meeting
DermIt H Cour ton
President
Publish February 3.10. IN* DEQ1I
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice I* hereby given that I *m
engaged In butlneu *1 ISM W. lllh
S I . Sanford. FL 33711. Seminal*
County. Florid* under It* lidittou*
name el CONTEM PORARY IM
PRESSIONS. and that I intend to
register utd name with It* Clark ol
ft* Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Florid* In accordance with It* pro
vision* ol the Fktitlou* Name Slat
utet. to Wit: Section N J Of Florida
Statute* 1057.
m Ferret* Willard
t\l Deborah Willard
Publish January 37 &amp; February 3,13.
17. IN*
DEP 133

D E A R A B D Y : My
boyfriend. Roger (not Ills
real name). Is In big trou­
ble w ith m y p a re n ts
Dear
because they caught him
In m y room at 2 a m. My
father told Roger that he
was not lo come back until
they |my parents) (old him
lie could.
I totally understand their rjtsons for this, liut I am
afraid lo even bring up the lijcet lx-cause m y father
iitiglu blow up. Roger wouli like to eomc over and
apologize to m y parents and sk for a second rhanee.
hut I'm afraid to even mention is name.
I love Roger and want to lx hie to see him again. Inn
how ran 1arrange tt?
A F R A ID T O
B R IN G I T UP
D E A R A F R A ID : Allow fi a cooling-off period of
about two weeks. Don't sul or moon around or act
deprived or mistreated. T h i tell your parents that
Roger wants to come over aid apologize to them In
lM.-rson and ask for a second etkiicc to bc accepted.
Most parents would accet a sincere apology and
agree lo a second chance. Aid tf yours do. Roger had
Ix-itcr respect your parents' fries, or Ills real name will
lx- "M ud.”

Abby

" V\

Legal Notice

In or call and we ll Ik - happy to
provide you atopy.
Your Christmas polnsettla should
be going dormant now. Allow the
plant to dry out and go into the
dormant state. Water It occasionally
— Just enough to prevent It from
drying compete])’. When the danger
of frost has passed, remove it from
i he pot and plant ii In your llcwer or
shrub border. Choose a location
protected from artificial light for a
b e a u tifu l b urst of c o lo r next
Christmas.
Gardening Is more popular now
than ever before. And, we usually
refer to tt as backyard gardening.
That's not always (air lo those who
live In mobile homes, apartments
and condominiums — where there's
little or no backyard lo Ik* had Just
because you don’t have a big yard
with lots of room, doesn't mean yon

can't garden.
hi lari, you can enjoy gardeningworking with a strawberry barrel or
a half-dozen tomato plants as m uch
as nn_v backyard garden. How ulmiil
m ini-gardening? Grow ing plants
and vegetables m containers. De­
pending on the kind of plants or
vegetables you plan to grow, there's
practically no llmil lo the kinds of
containers you can use — |xils anti
pans, milk Jugs, hollow concrete
blocks, baskets, barrels — even
plastic bags. Just be sure the
container you choose will hold soil
and let excess water drain mil
Soil ran come from a garden or
you can obtain a prepared soil mix
ironi your local garden center. If you
want to grow plants, hut are
eniuipcd lor space, give m lnlgardetilnga try. Happy Gardening!

Boyfriehd In Bedroom
Gets Biot From Parents

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

Hand tools need hdp. loo. Sharper
blades of shovels and oilier garden
tools with a metal file or grinder
then spray a rusl protector on tin
metal parts.
With the tremendous leaf dro
due lo the freeze, why not start
compost heap? All plant debris sue
as leaves, grass clippings and vcgi
table waste contain nutrients th
can Ik - returned to the soil lo bene
living plants. O ur sandy soils a
short on organic material and
ding compost will aid In moistii *
retention, air movement throu i
the soil (roots need lo breathe, to .
and holding nutrients in the r&lt; t
zone. If you don't have a oempot
heap and want to start one. a I t
sheet entitled. "Making and Usi g
Compost.'' is available from I e
County Extension Office al bc
A gricultural Ccnier In Sanford. Srp

Legal Notice
F IC T ITIO U S NAME
Notice It hereby given that I am
engaged In butinetl el 770 E Alta
mont* Drive. Allemonte Springs.'
Fie. 31701, Seminole County. Florida
under It* IlctitlOut name ol IN
TE C H , end that I intend to register
said name with It* Clerk of the
Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Florida in accordance with it* pro
visions of the Fictitious Name Slat
utet. to w n Sac lion US W Florida
Statutes 1*57.
B O W IES BROS . INC.
By: CliveLubner, President
Publish January 30. 37 A February 3.

N O TIC E OF
A P U B L IC H E A R IN O
OF PRO POSEOCHANGES
A N D A M EM O M EN TS
IN C E R TA IN DISTR ICTS
AND BOUNDARIES OF
TH E ZO NIN G O R D IN AN C E,
AND A M EN D IN G TH E
F U T U R E LA N D U S E C L E M E N T
OF TH E C O M PR EHENSIVE
PLAN O F TH E
C IT Y OF SANFORD. FLORIDA.
Notice it hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held al the
Commission Room In It* City Hall In
the City ol Sanlord. Florida, at Z OO
o’clock P M on February 13. IN*, to
consider changes end amendments
to It* Zoning Ordinance, end amen
ding the Future Land Use Element ol
the Comprehensive Plan ol the City
ol Sanlord. Florida, as follows
A portion ol that certain property
lying Northeasterly ol end abutting
Airport Boulevard and between
Lake,iew Middle School end Zayre't
Plaia Is proposed lo be reioned Horn
MR 3 (Multiple Family Residential
'Dwelling! District to GC 1 (General
Commercial! District. Said property
being more particularly described as
lot lows
From the SE corner of Section 3,
Township 30 South. Range 30 East,
Sanlord. Florida, run North 0*0* 01"
West, along the East Hr* ol Section 1.
e distance ol 1*S feel, thence run
North I**S1 JO" West, parallel with
the South line ol said Section 1, a
distance ol *J710 Ieel tor a Point of
Beginning, thence continue North
•*•11*30“. West. 100 leel 1o the
Northeasterly Right of Way line ol
A irpo rt Boulevard, thence run
N o r t h w e s t e r l y a l o n g s a id
Right olV.'ay hr* and a curve con
cave Southwesterly having * radius
ol I.!IS*3 teet a central ang* ol
7*la'15'' a chord bearing ol North
43*30’34" West, an arc dislanca ol
IS* 13 taet. thence run N orth
43**3 07-' East. I3S teet thence run
South S3***’** ' East. *7 II teet.
thence run South »**S I'» ’ East. 170
teet thence run South 0*0t'a0” West.
Its teet to the Point ol Beginning
Containing 103* acres Public R*
cords ol Seminole County. Florida
All partiat In interest and cillient
shall have an opportunity to be heard
al said hearing
By order of It* City Commission ol
the City ol Sanlord. Florida
H N T im m . Jr
City Clerk
Publish January 1* and February 3.
IN*
DEP M
H EA TS A FELYA N O
C O N V E N IE N T L Y

Nuturl fuDIt ) IfftuRr
soot u*

10. IN*

» itC tk 'C i

DEP**

FOR Tfft BEST
TV SER VICE
C A L I MILLERS
PH 1J3 63S3
/•
0•?»
Sal &gt;frvr ri

D E A R A B B Y : Alter rcadig alxxit "Te x Lansburg."
the terrier you knew lu Sioif City. Iowa, who would cal
"only kosher food. 1had lo w rr.
My oldest daughter is m iflrd to an orthodox Jew , so
not only docs she keep kosj-r. she buys special food for
the Passover holiday.
The first year she was tarried, we all went to her
house for Passover, and 1 jiw her feeding her goldfish
Passover matzo meal liisicJ of .he usual fish food! I told
her the fish would surrl)dle. She said theirs was a
Jewish home and the ( Idflsh would have lo cat
whatever they uIc.
Well, the fish loved Ihc : utzo meal!I'm sure it knows
when Passover Is near bee: sc tt becomes very frisky.
You may think this Is fun V. but It's u true story.
M A R G A R ET FREEM AN,
S A N D IE G O
D E A R M A R G A R E T : T l nks for a wonderful fish tale.

WALL

Ml UMttiNC &amp;.
nf A 1ING INC

I0U1 X X.nlu. d i . .

(Eve ry teen-ager nliniild know ilie truth about ilruga.‘

sex and how to Ire happy. For Alihv's htmklct. send -12

and a long, stamped Id7 eentsl. sell addressed envelope
lo: Ahhv. Teen booklet. I'.O. box 3ti92d. Hollywood.
Calif. yOOJH.I

NOTICE
Seminole District Boy Scouts
Chicken Bar-BQ
Has Been Cancelled.
Refunds May Be Picked Up
At The Chamber Of Commerce
Feb. 4 From Noon To 5.

D E A R A B B Y : You we nit■vrong to tell that 21-year-old
mother to leave her 3-yei i old daughter at home or she

•LIGHT
SUfPER CLUB
&amp;
•TAURANT
(Form e rly M r. P 'i)

Everpody'sFavorite!
:riday and
Iturday ONLY
om 5:30 • 10
PA LOBSTER With Our
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7 0Z. SRLOIN STEAK

r*

DRINK j*
AND
BEFA
NOV, IS THAI ANY W

TO LIVE?

IF T O U R B A T I N G H A B I T S
A R B C A U S IN O Y O U T O
G A IN W B IG H T C O M B T O
T H B P R O F E S S IO N A L S . . .
Who C m Help You With Oatty Behsvior Modification
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NEED HELP. . . C A U TOOAY

E V E R Y T ff R 8 D A Y E V E N IN G
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B A R D IIN K S 2 F O R 1
L U N C H E O N ^ D IN N E R S P E C IA L S
D A IL Y

— 3‘D4ice Floors —
YOUR DINING i
DATING PLEASURE

119 S . N

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Nil! KAMI) WITH INT QTHi H DISCDUN1 LLHjPON

F R E E . . . 1st WEEK

PUIS 50% OFF LAB 4 PHYSICAL
Good through February IBM

lunch 11-2 Mon.-Frl.
luh 9:30-T Tuee.-Set.
AND BAR U IV IC I

Al A I Hi MIWON
H E A T PUM P
C A L L 322 4S4J

could kiss tier boyfriend goodbye. | tie mother said ihe
child fussed and spoiled her evening when she look lief
on dates with her boyfriend
If her boyfriend ran be upset by a 3-year-old. then she
should kiss hint gtxxlliye now. What would he do tf they
married? Slap the i tills! around lor hissing'?
I speak from experience. I was a 2 1-year-old widow!
with a baby. When I met Ihe man I eventually married. I*
luok the child everywhere we went Thai way I had a ’
"father" for m y baby as well as a boyfriend.
Many a widow and divorcee will marry a great guy,
who isn't any kind of a father — thus child abuse, and I n .
the end. no marriage. I say. lake your child with you on,
dates. You will sure weed out the hums fast.
H A P P IL Y M A R R IE D
FO R 34 Y E A R S
IN T E X A S
D E A R H A P P IL Y M A R R IE D : I agree that a single
woman with children to raise should not marry a man'
who doesn't love children. Hot I wouldn't recommend,
taking a child along on I lie first dale, or there might not.
lx- a second.
,

dt

gnolia, Sanford
Uesl Hite Cirirt

Cell

iS tn w ra
WhemWwgN Cones* I* More Then Jue* A Owe
m a m a
MONDAY
SANSORO
I R2t*1441 I
th ru
FRIDAY

�SPORTS
iA -E v tn in g Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Feb. 1, If 84

Hillery Dominates Gordon,
Girls Move Closer To Title
B y C h ris F ls te r
H erald Sports W rite r
D K I.A M ) — Going into Thursday
night's crucial conference clash
wllli DeLand's Lady Bulldogs. San­
ford's Lady Semlnolcs weren't wor­
ried alioul DeLand's impressive
home record or its being ranked
seventh In Hu state 4A poll. The
Lady Tribe Just wanted to go in and
do whatever they had to io pull out
a victory.
And they did Just iliat.
Behind Dlcldrc lllllcry's dominant
play Inside, and some clutch free
throw shooting down the stretch.
Seminole came away with a 56-52
victory over the Lady Bulldogs Is
Five Slar Conference basketball
action at DeLand High School.
Seminole pretty much clinched
tile Five S la r Conference title
Thursday as it Improved to 20-4
overall and l-l-l In I h r conference.
DeLand now stands at 18-5 overall
and •12-3 In the conference. The
laidy Semlnolcs lied for the Five
S la r Conference cham pion two
years ago with Mainland bill have
n e v e r w o n an o u trig h t title .
Seminole's remaining conference
gam es are a ga in st F iv e S ta r
doormats Apopka and Spruce Creek
and upset-minded Lake Brantley.
Illllery |x&gt;urcd in a game-high 2-1
|Hilnls and jHiunded llie ixiards for a
season-high 25 rebounds. The se­
nior center clearly outplayed her
DeLand counterpart. 6-1 Junior
liridgcltc Gordon. Gordon scored 10
|K&gt;lnls. but lilt Jusl 7 of 28 shots
from the llonr and ripped down 15
rebounds. Nikki Williams added 13
points for the Lady Bulldogs and
Robyn Swartz tossed In 10.
"I made up my mind before the
game Iliat I wasn't going lo lei her
(G ord on ) Intim idate m e ." said
Hillery. who for some reason was
not ranked among Hie top 16
'Seniors In the slate by a recent
Orlando Sentinel poll, "i wanted lo
prove myself against her and prove
dial I could play defense."
l l l l l c r y 's 25 re b o u n d s is a

Prep Basketball
s in g le -g a m e , s e a s o n -h ig h for
Seminole County, breaking Lake
Howell's Christy Scott's single-game
high of 23. Hillery had Just one
rebound less than the entire DeLand
team. Seminole outrebounded the
L id y Bulldogs. 53-26.
H illery was Joined In double
fig u re s T h u r s d a y b y G e n c n c
Stallworth who turned In a clutch
performance with 11 points and
eight rebounds. Maxine Campbell
added nine j h i I i i I s . including 7 of 9
from the free th ro w line and
Catherine Anderson helped out
underneath with 14 rebounds.
Seminole started to crash the
boards as soon as the game started
as the Tribe outrelxiunded DeLand.
17 8. In the first quarter. However.
Seminole lilt Just 4 of 23 shots from
the floor and missed numerous
layups on offensive rebounds, and
the score wound up tied. 8-8. at the
end of one quarter.
The Ladv Semlnolcs started con­
verting the offensive Ixiards In (he
second quarter and went up hv as
much as six points. DeLand came
hack to cut it to three though.
24-21. at the half. Illllery scored 12
|xilnls In the first half wlille Gordon
was held to seven.
Neither team could find the
shixitlng touch In the third quarter,
bill Kaysha Roberts kept the
Bulldogs In from most of the quarter
with six |xilnls. A short Jumper by
Roberts gave DeLand a 32-30 lead
with 50 seconds remaining and.
after a Seminole missed shot, the
lately Bulldogs went for the last shot
of the quarter and a four-point lead.
However. Seminole's Andcll Smith
came up with a steal with six
seconds left and raced down court
for a layup ul the buzzer to make It
32-32 going Into the fourth.
DeLand scored the first four
points of the final period and held

on to the lead for the llrsl five and u
half minutes ol the quarter. The
Lady Bulldogs took a five-point lead.
47-42. as Gordon hit a pair of free
throws with 3 :3 1 remaining.
Campbell then hll one of two free
throws to cut the lead to four. 47-43.
and Hillery then scored six stralghl
points to give the Lady Semlnolcs a
19-47 lead with 1:45 remaining.
However. Hillery was whistled for
lcr fourth foul with 1:30 remaining
ind Gordon hll one of two free
Osses to cut the Tribe's lead to one.
-9-48. Campbell came back with
: 17 remaining to convert both ends
|f a onc-and-one and give Seminole
151-48 lead.
After a missed shot by Gordon,
iem lnolc came down w ith Its
tircc-polnt lead still Intael and tried
t&gt; run some lime off the clock,
(im pbell was fouled, (hough, with
5 seconds remaining and missed
te front end of a one-and-one.
Hllcry though came up with her
msl crucial rebound of the game
ad banked In the follow up for a
5-48 Seminole lead.
Campbell then hit two free throws
vwh 18 seconds left and Mona
Bnton In one of two with six
seotuls left lo sew up l he vlrtnrv for
Smtnnlc and send DeLand couch
Cfford Cox Into one of his infamous
tutrums.
We didn't exrcute that well, but
w&lt; played hard enough to w in."
Scnlnole coach Ron Merthlc said.
" Ills Is the first time we've ever
wc» here (DeLand) since I've been
al Seminole. There was u lol of
enktion In (Ills game, hut we
rcahed down and came up with the
vlckry."
Smlnolc Is buck In action Mondayas li hosts Spruce Creek. The
Lad Semlnolcs host Orlando Evans
In
non-conference battle Wednesuy.
SESNOLE 1141 - And*r*on ). Benton 1.
Compill f, H iller, )4. Pringle ). Smith I.
Stall or th II Total* ) 1 14)714
DEkND (11) - K. Corr 0. P Corr 0. Davit I.
Gordo It. Robert* t. Swarti 10. W lllUm t 1)
To U ltiH O 1117
4

HaHtlm* — S*mlnol* 74 DeLand 71 Foul* —
Seminole Ik. DeLand 70 Fouled Out - K Corr.
Robert* Tethnic*!* — none

Lake Howell..........................44
Lake Brantley....................... 50
In other girls action Thursday.
Ta m m y Johnson connected for 22
ixilnts. Janenc Brown added 13 and
Mary’ Johnson tossed In 12 as Lik e
Howell's Lady Sliver Hawks out­
lasted the scrappy Lady Patriots of
Lake Brantley. 64-50. In F'vc Star
Conference play at Lake Brantley
High.
Lake Howell Improved to 17-8
overall and 10-5 In the conference
while the Lady Patriots fell to 6-13
overall and 4-11 in the conference.
The Lady Hawks are tiaek In action
Monday at Apopka while the Lady
Patriots travel lo DeLand Monday.
The Lady Hawks built an eightjxilnt lead. 36-28. at the half, but
Lake Brantley fought back lo within
five jxilnts In the second half. Not
long after that th o u g h . Lake
Brantley's Michelle Brown picked
up her fourth foul, and the Lady
Hawks went on to build a 10-point
lead. Lik e Brantley never got closer
than six points the rest of the way.
Christy Scott contiucd lo work
well underneath as she pulled down
14 rebounds. T a m m y Johnson
added nine rebounds and Mary
Johnson and Brown pulled down
eight apiece. Mary Johnson also
handed out eight assists and
Ta m m y Johnson dished out four.
Linda Nunez led the way for Lake
Brantley with a game-high 26 points
and Mic ielle Brown udded 11.
Lake Dranllcy was without two
players M onday while another
played Injured. Kim Lubcnow has
been out for the past three games
with an injury and Klin Wain, the
Patriots second-leading rebounder,
was in a car accident before the
game and didn't make It lo Ihc
gumc. Sherry "Ice" Asplcn. who
was on crutches all day due lo an
ankle Injury, played only sparingly
Thursday night.

Photo by Rotor Oil mot *

Dieidre Hillery tosses In a short jump shot during Seminole's
victory over DeLand Thursday night. Hillery scored 24 points and
grabbed 25 rebounds while outplaying Bridgette Gordon (No. 44),
considered to be the lop player in the state by some basketball
experts.
LAKE H O W ELL (441 - Barm* 0 Brown I).
D&gt;*trich 4 Gillie* I. M Johnton I), T John ion 7?
M i N*&gt;14 Miranda0, S to ut Total* 71 14 77*4
LAKE B R A N TL E Y 1101 - A*pl*n 7 Bro*n II.
Gordon 0 Longhoutc-r 4 May 0 Meikle 7 Njne,
76 TwadcJeltO WilhamtO Total* 70 10 70 10
Halllime — Lakt Howell 3* Lak* Brand*, 70
Foul*
Lak* Mowed 21. Lake Brand*, II Fouled
out — none Technical* — non*

Lake Mary JV boys..................84
Lyman................................. 56
d irts Jackson led four Lake Mary
players In double figures with 16
points, including 7 of 7 from the free
throw line, as the J V Rams upended
See J A C K S O N . P A G E 7A .

Pari-Mutuel Players Try To Out-Handicap Each Other
winners of the win pool. (176 sutracled
If you don't understand pari-mutuel
wagering — don’t till bad — very few people from $ 1.000.00 leaves $824.00.; Now.
,
suppose you placed a $2 wage (the
do.
When you coinr out herr to- the Sun- m inim um bet here) on the seven dg and
ford-Orlando Kennel Club to tx-l on the the seven dog won the race. If you wre the
greyhounds you are not playing against the only person lo wugcr on Ihc seven log to
housed Wliai you are doing Is competing win then you would get the entire SS4.00.
G lenn Laney
with everyone else- out here. You are trying If two people bol $2 each on the sevo dog.
Sanford O rla n d o
lo nut-handicap your fellow greyhound race then It would pay $-112.00 to win. Ithree
K e nnel C lub
people bet on It then it woult pay
fan.
$27-l.666666on Into Infinity.
Th e track doesn't care who wins or how
might throw your ticket away Blinking It
Hut because we do not pay off In oderents
much they win. Il mailers not to us. We act
was no good. But If no one had the 7-6
strictly us a money-handling agency for the out here "breakage" would be Involv’d. I'll
combination then we would pay everyone
gel back to that later.
slate — our cut comes off the top.
There has lo lx- a winner every race. If a
Remember — I said there had tobc a who had a 7 1 . 7-2. 7-3. 7-4. 7-5. 7-8.' 16.
2-6. 3-6. 4-6. 5 6 and 8-6. Tills would make
"pool" has no exact winners ilicn we must
winner In every pool. If no one gc» the
your 7-5 a good ticket. But If you tossed It on
pay out consolation payolfs to the people exact w in n e r of a pool we paj out
ihc floor It automatically becomes an "outs"
consolations.
who come the closest.
ticket. I'll cover outs tickets later too.
This happens the most In the perfect and
Okay, what do I mean by "pool".
The same holds (m e for the trlfccta. If
trlfccta pools. The perfeeta wager Is zhen
Every dollar Ilia! Is bet out here on every
w a v e r i t i a l w e h a v e g ix «* I n i n a {M il o r ptxil----- v u u instilgupsuihc top two greyhound In a .nobody had a 7 6-1 then we would .pay.
race In order. The trlfccta Is picking th lop everyone who hud a 7-6-2. 7-6-3. 7-6-4. 7-6-5
for that wager. In other words, every dollar
and 7-6-8. If you have any question at all
dial Is tx-l on a dog to win gcx’s into the win
three In order.
So let's say a rare runs 7-6-1. Arulcl's about whether yur ticket Is a good one lake
|xx)l. every dollar that Is bet on u trtfcctu out
say that no 7-6 perfectas were sold We It lo any m u lu rl clerk and they will check It
here gix-s into a trlfcrla p o o l . and so on.
would then pay a consolation to cvcronc for you.
So. lei's say that In race number eight
What arc "outs" and "breaks?" In our
who had a perfeeta ticket with the sevo on
$ I .(XX) Is wagered on all eight dogs to win.
lop or the six on the bottom. Th is ts A iy It mythical race above where only three
First we take out 10 |&gt;cr cent for ourselves
Is so Important not to throw a w a y our tickets were sold on the seven dog to win the
and then we lake out 7.6 jx-r cent for the
ticket until the final results a r e postd. If actual payoff would be $274.60. Wc pay to
slate.
you had a 7-5 pcrfrcla or an 8-6 pcrfcr.A'ou the nearest low dime figure.
That leaves $824.00 to pay back lo the

Win Place
and Show

So. If you mulllplv 274.60 times three you
gel $823.80. We had $824.(X&gt; lo pay oul so Ihe $.20 Is breakage and II goes lo the
Stale.
That doesn't sound like much. Bill when
you get say $20,000 or more In a trlfccta
pool (which Is noi uncommon out here on
the weekend) and 300 plus ju-ople hll It for
say $60.99 and you only pay out 860.90 —
llien your breakage (or that one races alone
Is $27.00.
Figure that we m il 117 races oul here
every week, and all of a sudden II comes
Into big money. By the end of the year It
runs about one-half of one jx r cent of the
total handle. That's right around a quarter
of a million dollars for this one track alone.
The state picks up another half a per cent
or so on the "outs". You have exactly one
year from the time you purchase your ticket
io rash it. If you do not cash It within that
year the money automatically g&lt;x-s buck lo
Ihe state.
The majority of "outs" tickets come from
people throwing away winners. Once that
ticket hits the floor It legally belongs lo the
state. T o bend over and ptek up a ticket o(T
the llcxir is called "siixtplng" and Is against
the law.
Not all p&lt;x)ls have the same amount taken
oul of them. For Instance, more is taken oul

Seminoes Entertain Erratic
DeLand Patriots Host Hawks
Sanford's Fighting Seminole look
for their 16th victory tonlgh at 8
when the DeLand Bulldogs }vade
for a Five Star Conference hsketball game.
DeLand has had Its ups andlown
this year. Seminole nlppet the
Bulldogs In a close game at DLand
earlier this year, something rtt too
many teams have done. Coachlohn
Zeull's team blasted Mainland y 21
points a couple of weeks ago I the
conference upset of the year.
The Tribe. 15-6. Is prclty tuch
out of the conference race wllhi 9-4
record. Spruce Creek is 12-1 *hlle
Mainland is right behind at 1-2.
Coach Chris Marlette said the tain
aim of his ‘Noles Is to get tunq up
for the district tournament vilch
will begin Feb. 21 at Lake fery
High School.
Seminole turned in one of Itslcst
performances Tuesday whe) it
m urdered Lake H o w ell. 8643.
Marlette used his whole bene) In
that one and is hoping for anoier
stellar efTort tonight.

Lake Brantley's Austin Hodges looks for an
opening as DeLand's Greg Gilmore, left, and Matt
F air converge.

Elsewhere. Lym an takes on Lke
Mary at Milwee Middle School. Lke
Brantley hosts Lake Howell nd
Oviedo travels to Leesburg.

Prep B a sk e tb a ll

Lonen u , *&lt;Jo
Hodge*. Lk Branll*,
Reynold*. Lk M a r,

17 17
II 11
17 71

of the trlfccta |xw&gt;l (20 per cent) than Is
taken out of any other |xx&gt;l. Nineteen per
cent ts taken out of Ihe pick six. The extra
|XTccntagcs are used for purses and for
Improvements around the track.
W hy. even a certain amount Is taken out
lo help the horse tracks around the slate,
they are In such financial trouble. The
money which we and the State take out Is
divided up us well. The slate must pay Its
employees il has at the various tracks and
frontons as well as Its staffs in Miami and
Tallahassee. The vast majority of what Is
left over after operating expenses Is poured
Into the Florida school system. Every
county shares equally In the revenue,
whether they have a pari-mutuel plant
within their boundary or not.
In fael. there are several small counties In
the stale, especially In northern Florida.
-win4*4.- entire sellout budget-is comprised of---------race track funds.
As for the tracks' cut. Three per cent of
Ihc total handle must be paid lo the dogmen
In purses. While we get some relief from the
trlfccta pool — that Isa big chunk.
Another big chunk Is the payrull. We have
over 500 full and pari time workers. We are
a big industry.

7th V arsity — Alumni Baseball Game
Saturday at 1 p.m.
at Sanford Memorial Stadium
No Charge For A dm ission
Probable Starting Lineups

51
47
44

Position
1st Base

"DeLand will be tough." he said.
" Y o u saw w h at happened to
Mainland.

County B oys C afe Leaders
kNM |
• b
i»s
Schwab. Ovtedo....................................... 13 245 M 4
Brooki. Lk Howell................................. I t U l * IS S
Mllchtll. Samlnote..................................I I 174 U l
Mi.lor. Lk M a r, ...........
17 )44 M4
Bonn. I k M a r,
17 231 IJO
Marthl*. L i M a r ,.................... _........17
I I I 11.4
Trombo. Lk. Brand*,........................... JO a t
III
Pilot. Lymon........................................... IS IM 107
DV-gl**. Lyman..........................
10 10k 104
Naal. L y m a n ..........................................I ) 1)1 10 I
Cohan, Ovtedo........................................ .17 14)
ft
Ro o m . Somlnolo— ............ ....... ....... ,11 n
II
Hod®**. L t lr o n lt e y ....................
X if )» .)
Rouhlo, Ovtedo...............................
1) Ilk I f
Cordon. Somlnolo.........................
31 117f.k
Franklin. Somlnolo
................
If t i l I )
Robovndmf

Dunn Lk M a r,
Mill**. Lk M a r,
Reynold*. Lk M a r,
Wooldridge. Lk Howell
Cohen. Ovtedo
Philpol. Lyman

g Mm Ita (Kl
17 59 *7 M
17 *417 •1
41 79 79
17 70 77 74
74
l»
14 71
12 71 104 6V
17 ) ) 41 69
IS )7 SS t7

2nd U^sc
3rd Base
Shortstop
Left field

A ttu tt
• ill.
Frjnklm S«mlnolt
Milter. Lk M a r,
Anderton. Lk Howell
Brook*. Lk Howell
M*rthi«. Lk M a r,
Garriqu**. Lk Brand*,
Flora*. Lk M a r,
Rogft*. Scminolt
Norton. Oyirdo

17 74
71
14 64
..............17 71
II »i
u
52
17 42

See L A N E Y , Page 7A.

Center field

4«9
71
44
44
42
42
) 4
7*
2•
it

Right Held

V arsity

*

Brian Sheffield

t

Kevin Smith

Rodney Turn e r
Bobby Robinson

To n y Cox

•

Brian Rogers

Catcher

Sieve Dennis

Pitcher

Chad Braden

Ned Raines

Glenn Robinson
%
,

David Rape
1
1
James Hersey
William W ynn

A lo a n l

Levi Raines
T im Raines

Brett Von Herbulls

*

JcfT Anderson
Randy Brown

, V a r sity r e s e r v e s : Ronnie C llp pa rd , David
• *n. avg
Trombo. Lk Brand*,
47 7 7
II
Grot*clot*. Lk B randt,
11 4* 27
Hodgat. Lk Brand*,
11 47 2 4
Frtnkltn. Semino'e
............If
44 24
Cohtn. Oviedo ...
..............17
25 2 1
Route Seminole
19 21 20
Brook*. Lk Ho»*ll
.................U
))
20
Merthi*. Lk M a r,
17 27 1 9
Mitchell. Seminote
19 24 1 9
Milter. Lk M a r, ............ ............... 17 ) i
ii

S rob. avg.
Milcholl. Somlnolo...................
II
M f 10f
Schwab. 0 »io d o ......................
II
IJO
•)
Roichlo. Ovlodo.......................................U » l
70
G lk h rlit. Somlnolo................. — --------.31 117 14
Philpol. Lyman .............................. _ . . . ! ) ft
l.l
Crayton. Lk M ary.................................17 f7
1.7
WooldrldBO. Lake Howoll...................... I I 101 47
Brook*. Lk. Howoll........ ........... .......— 1» I I k j
Pilot. Lyman ...................... - .................I ) M
5)
Marthl* Lk Mary
....
II M
41 Lyman. Lako Mary and Ovlodo update* on avallakl*

Hanson. Ricky Kidd. Glenn
Thomas. To m Wilks.
/-

Landreas. Larry

Alumni reserves: Kenny Brown. Dean Smith.
Robert Smith. T e rr)’ Smith. To n y M ann..Donny
Williams. Darren Whitehead, Tra cy Walker. Billy
Griffith. Sam Raines. David Wiggins (question­
able).
•
Manager

_
Bobby Lundqulsl

v

—
Wes Rlnker

�Clowning Stops For Starling,
Battles Don Curry For Title
A T L A N T IC C IT Y . N .J. |UPI| - Marlon 1
Starling has hung up his big. red rubber
hose and oversize sneakers Th e clown
days are over.
Starling faces World Boxing Associa­
tion welterweight champion Don Curry
Saturday In a scheduled 15-round title
fight at Bally's Park Place Casino. The
fight will be nationally televised bv ABC
starting at 5:24 p .m .E S T .
Starling and C urry have met before
with C urry scoring a 12-round split
decision on Oct. 23. 19H2. The loss was
the Starling's only as a pro In 31 fights.
Since then, he has reeled off five straight
victories, four of them by knockout in
five rounds or less.
"I think It showed me that this is a
business, not entertainment and not a
show." said the 25-year-old resident of
Hartford. C onn, who did a lot of
showboating in their first fight. " I ’m
much more business like.
•"In the first fight, people saw about
one-third of Marlon Starling. I'll stay
more active Ibis time, concentrate for
three minutes every rourtd. I'll never
clown. Th is flghi is*the key to my life.
I.’ve always wanted to fight for the
championship of the world all my life.
Th is is the only man that squeaked out a
decision on m y record."
Sugar Ray Leonard waits for the
C urry had to drop over two pounds In
winner of Saturday's fight between
the steam room the day of that light,
Don Curry and Marlon Sparling for
which two Judges scored 116-112 for
another title opportunity.
Curry while the other had it for Stalling
117-113.
the ninth or 10th round. I started lateral
In his next light, the unbeaten 117-0.
movement and he had lots of problems
13 knockouts) C urry won the vacant title with that.
with a 15-round decision over J u n Sok
"I'm anxious to fight him again. I was
Hwang. Ilfs flrsl title defense was a weak the first time. The big thing was 1
one-round demolition of Roger Stafford had to finish. I don't know exactly how
last September.
good he Is. I certainly was not 100 per
"He (Starling) was kind of awkward." cent that day."
said the 22-year-old C urry, who Is from
S a tu rd a y 's w in n e r co u ld see a
Fort Worth. Texas. "He was hard to gel
megabuck payday against Sugar Ray
at because he had a pretty good defense.
Leonard, the former world welterweight
He tried to make me fight his fight. By
champion-

Pro Boxing

...Laney
Continued from 6 A .
Another big chunk is the payroll. We
have over 500 full and parl time
workers. We are a big industry.
And power bills? Suffice it to say
815.000 a month doesn't even come
close. What little Is left over after all the
bills are paid goes to the owners and
operators.
L E T T E R S — Hooray — the first letter.
An Irate customer (what else) wants to
know why we didn't pay off on the fourth
•log In the trlfeeta the other day when we
had a dead heat for first His reasoning

was that the first two dogs ran first, the
next dog ran second and his dog. the
fourth dog. ran third. Wrong. The stale
has very clear rules which we must
follow when making payoffs. In this ease
it states that we shall have one quinlella
payofl with the two dogs that finished in
a dead heat, in I his case the 1-5. We had
to p a y w in a n d p la c e on b o th
greyhounds, plus we had to pay two
perfectas — 1-5 and 5-1. In the trlfeeta
rules it clearly states that two trlfeeta
shall be paid off the 1-5-7 and the 5-1-7
(the seven dog ran third). The eight dog
that finished fourth did Just that — lie
ran fourth — by stale law he did not hit
the board.
NEXT
gripes.

W EEK:

Some often heard

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

SCORECARD
NBA
NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOC.
E llttra Conference
Atlantic Dorman
W L Pci GB
34 • ICO —
Boston
Phil4d*iphi4
» tl Ml It*
New York
It tl 5*1 I 'l
13 11 111 1)
New Jersey
Washington
10 14 tiS It's
Central Division
IS 20 554 —
Milwaukee
14 10 545
Detroit
Atlanta
15 11 543 to
ti 14 311 7to
Chicago
Cleveland
1] 30 301 tl
'Indiana
1) 30 xn tl
Western Conference
Midwest Division
W L Pci GB
Utah
2* it 444 —
IS 11 54) 4to
Dallas
Houston
20 14 4)5 *to
10 14 435 (to
San Antonio
If 21 an to
Denver
17 17 384 tito
Kansas City
Pi-lhc Division
Los Angeles
11 11 417 —
27 10 574 Ito
Portlend
11 20 115 ato
Seethe
Golden Slot#
It 24 447 ito
Phoenii
» 25 444 I's
San D ego
II 30 33) Uto
TSnOAtyt I twin
Detroit Ilf, Washington tlf
Houston in. DiUet W
Utohit*. Phoenii*!
Golden Stale 1IZ. San Antonio KT
F rid a y 's Sam el
(All Timet 1ST)
Indiana at Boston. I X p m
Kansas City »t New Jersey, 7 15pm
Atlanta at Phlladeiphn. 7 ))p m
San Diegoll Detroit, 7 ISp m
Chicago at Cleveland. I 05p m
Denver at Dailat. 115pm
Ulah at Lin Angeles. to 10p m.
Milwaukee at Portland. 10 lip m
San Antonio at Saattie, it pm
Saturdai‘1 Garnet
Indiana at Washington. night
Philadelphia at Atlanta, night
San Diego at Cleveland, night
New Jertey at Chicago, night
New York at HouVon night
Denver at Kansas City, night
Milwaukee vl Utah at Lat Vegat.
night
Phoenu at Golden Slate, night

NHL
NATiu n a l m n iU t Ltn u u t
W ain Canlaranca
Patrick Dtvtitaw
w L T Pis GF GA
NY Rangers
jo IB 5 45 214 101
NY Islanders
31 30 I 44 2)0 IH
Philadelphia
27 IS 1 4) no '|i
Washington
21 21 4 40 its i*a
Pittsburgh
It 25 S 27 157 B f
New Jersey
10 27 5 25 141 HI
Adams Division
Buffalo
3) 14 4 72 21) 176
34 IS ] 71 n i tao
Boston
Quebec
21 II 4 4] led 114
Montvtil
IS 24 4 54 203 1*4
Hertford
15 28 1 31 17] Ito
Campbell Contorence
Nairn Division
W L T PH GF GA
Minnesota
27 21 4 58 241 2)4
n 27 5 4* 200 217
St Louit
it 27 a a If* 304
Chicago
17 2* 4 40 ifl 724
Oetroit
Toronto
11 30 4 31 1*7 ISI
Smyttio Di niton
Edmonton
31 f 5 11 3d 205
Calgary
70 1* 11 51 11* 201
Winnipeg
tl 34 1 4 no 252
1* I* 5 44 205 III
Vancouver
II 27 10 0 230 247
Los Ange'et

Legal Notice
[Tap tovr in each divisian duality lor
Stanley Cup ptayefft)
Thursdays Keiultt
Boiton S. Buffalo 1
Montreal 1. Philadelphia 1
Wishington 1. New Jertey 0
St LoutJlN Y Islanders!
Calgary I. N Y Range-si
Lot Ange'et a, Vancouver 1
F r l l i y ‘ 1 G a n tt
(AH Timet (S T)
Minnetote at Buffalo, r IS p m
Montreal at Wathington. 715 p m
Chicago at Winnipeg, t 05pm
Calgary at Edmonton.» is p m
Saturday's Garnet
Philadelphia etBot ton
Saw Jertey at Quebec
f oronto at Detroit
Pittsburgh at N Y itiendert
N Y Rangers at Vancouver, night
Hartford at St louit. night

MISL
MAJOR INDOOR SOCCER LEAGUE
Eastern Divitian
w i Pci GB
citvtland
17 4 HO
Pittsburgh
12 1 41* 4
Baltimore
14 It 544 s
New York
12 11 500 ito
Memphn
* 14 XI tto
Buffalo
1 U III Uto
Western Devisee*
Kansas City
IS 7 411 —
14 10 513 3
St Louts
11 12 &lt;7| ato
Wichita
f 1) 40* 4
Lot Angolas
Phoenii
1 1) Ml ito
Tacoma
1 17 3*2 1 &gt;
Thursday's Garnet
No Garnet Scheduled
F rid a y 's Gam ai
I All Timet ESTI
Tecoma at Pittsburgh. I 65p m
Cleveland at Memphit. I IS pm
Kernel City at St Loun. 1 15 p m
Saturday's Garnet
New York at Baltimore, night
Wichita at Phoenii. night

NASL
NORTH AMERICAN SOCCER LEAGUE
W L Pci GB
Golden Bay
11 t 447 Chicago
II 7 450 New York
10 7 ill l'»
Sen Dingo
I I ttt |iy
Tutu '
I 11 NO S
Vancouver
7 It Mt S
Tampa Bay
1 14 MO 7
Thursday s latult
Chicago I. Vancouver 1
F tid a y ’ t Garnet
[AH Timet ESTI
Tampa Bay at Tutu. I » p m
New York at Golden Bey. It p m
Saturd Garnet
No Garnet Scheduled

HOOPS
Thursday's Callega Basketball Remits
By United Pratt Internatienal
East
Amhertt M. Wetltrn Com SI 51
Bridgeport 71. Qumnipiec 47
Central Conn St Ilk. New Haven 17
ChtyneytO, E Stroudsburg 14
Cleveland Si 17, Xavier 74
Elmira 40, Houghton S5
Hawthorne 17. Lyndon St It
Lincoln |7. Phita Pharmacy 44
Massachusetts 75. Pann St M

p

SPO RTS
IN BRIEF
Flagship Bank’s Big 4th
Period Rips McLain-Pierce
Flagship Bank went on a 19-9 fourth quarter
blitz cn route to a 62-44 victory over McLainPierce in Sanford Recreation Intermediate
League basketball action Thursday night at the
Salvation Arm y gymnasium.
Albert Armstrong led Flagship Bank will) a
game-high 19 points and was joined In double
figures by Darryl Lee with 15 and Horace Knlghl
with 14. Darrell Grayson led McLain-Pierce with
16 points while Curtis Rudolph and Craig Dixon
added 10 points apiece.

Sims: Nothing To Lose

;

D E T R O IT IUPII - Billy Sims claimed he had
nolhlng lo lose by signing a contract with the
Detroit Lions after be already bad agreed lo one
with the Houslon Gamblers, says ihe general
manager of the U.S. Football League team.
Gene Burrough made bis remarks Thursday
during testimony on the running back's suit
against bis former agent Dr. Jerry Argovllz and
Ihe Gamblers.
Sims claims Argovllz. a parl-owncr of the
Gamblers, used fraud and misrepresentation to
gel him In sign a $3.5 million contract with the
team on J u ly I. Sims says be signed wllh
Deiroil for 84.5 million In December after
learning details of a previous Lions offer.
Defense attorney Steve Susman was expected
lo call one more wilness today In the ease before
final urifumcnls begun in front of U.S. District
Court Judge Robert E. DcMasclo.
Burrough. who also helped Argovllz represent
Sims, said he met wllh ihe former Oklahoma
slar one day after hr signed with the Lions.
"I told Billy. 'You really got yourself in a
mess,"' Burrough leslified. "T h is is going lo
land you in court ... and your whole life is going
to be lx- exposed."

Campbell Wants Out
SAN A N TO N IO . Texas |UPI| - Disgruntled
running back Earl Campbell, who has said he
wants to be traded from the Houston Oilers, is
meeting with officials of ihe U.S. Football
League's San Antonio Gunslingers.
Campbell, who has two years icmalning on
his contrail, attended a Gunslingers workout
Thursday and met wllh Gunslingers general
manager Roger Gill and leant official Bud Haun.
according to Clinton Manges, the team's princi­
ple owner.
"If he warns lo sign wllh us. we ll sign him ."
Manges was quoted by radio stalion W OAI.
Manges said he would meet personally today
wllh Campbell, who spent Thursday night in
San Antonio, in hopes of negotiating a contract.
During the 1983 season. Campbell staled
publicly that he wanted to be iraded from the
Oilers, bul seemed io soften his |xisiilon near
the end of the year.

k

Sub's Driving Layup
Upends Tulsa, 66-64
U n ite d Press In tern a tio n a l
W ith 17 seconds left and Wichita Slate
owning a golden op|&gt;nrtunity to upset
the Golden Hurricane. Ihe Shockers
shocked Tulsa.
Instead of using one of I heir big guns
in break a 64-64 tie. Wichita State got a
driving layup from Junior Karl Papke
wllh 10 seconds lo go and Ix’at Ihe
lOih-rankcd Golden Hurricane 66-64 in
Wiehlla. Kan., Thursday night.
Ii was Papke's only basket In the
second half. He finished with six [mints.
X avie r McDaniel, who scored 21
points, and Aubrey Sherrod, with 17. are
Wiehlla Slate's two most dependable
-rlutrb-pt-rfonnrrs— but-lx»ll5-w ert*-v«vcrcd and Papke had an open lane lo Ihe
hixip.
Tulsa reserve Vince Williams missed a
20-foot Jumper wllh three seconds left to

...Jackson
Continued from 6 A .
L y m a n 's J V G r e y h o u n d s . 8 6 -5 6 .
Thursday night at Miiwec Middle School.
Jackson was Joined in double figures
by Byron Washington will) 15 |xiints.
Alan Reid with 13 and Tro y Stutts will)
10. Washlnglon also pulled down nine
rebounds and Stulls ripped down seven.
Lake Mary Improved to 13-5 overall
and 11-4 in (be conference with its third
siralgih victory. The Rams will try to
make it four In a row Tuesday at
Daytona Ik-aelt Mainland. The top two
Junior varsity teams In the conference
will meet in a playoff game for the
district title at Ihe end of Ihe regular
season.
Th e Rams tKilled lo a 50-25 lead by
halflime, then flooded Ihe floor with
reserves in the second half. Lyman was
playing with mostly freshman since
most of Ihe Junior varsity players moved
up to varsity.
L A K E M A S T (••) - Amct I. Drawdy 4. Garner I
Jackson It. Napoli a. Newby 1. Pritchard a. Raid 11.
Shepherd a. Stutts 10. Washington IS, Young &gt; Totals 1]
jo jo

at

LY M A N |SS| — Dtcktr 3. Denning |7, Dougherty J,
McBride 1. Moulon I. Simpson ]. J. Stewart II, M.
Stewart 7, Thomas J. Totals: 1114 Jt Si.
Hallllme — lake Mary jo. Lyman 1) Fouls — Like
Mary I I , Lyman la Fouled out - none. Technicals —
none

Lake Mary JV g irls............................. 34
Lym an.....................................................25
In girls Junior varslly action. Lake
Mary's Lady Rams improved lo 12-0 for
the year but had to struggle to do It.
outlasting Lym an's JV Lady
Greyhounds. 34-25. in the Thursday's
first game al Mllwcc Middle School.

College Basketball
prevent the game trom
overtime.

going

into

"W e wanted to dum p il Into Aubrey or
X avier." said Shockers coach Gene
Smithson. "Karl showed bis experience
oil that drive. He look ii all Ihe way to
the hole."
In other games Involving ranked
teams. No. 5 Houston routed Texas AAM
87-65. sixth-ranked Nevada-Las Vegas
slop[K‘d New Mexico Stale 89-81, No. 7
Illinois got past Iowa 54-52 in Iwo
overtimes, eighth-rated Tcxas-EI Paso
whipped Utah 79-61. and No. 15 Wake
Forest held off Georgia Tech 78-74 in
overtime.

Lyman uxik advantage of Lake Mary's
slow slarl on offense lo build a l l - 3 lead
after one quarter. Lake Mary kept the
defensive pressure on while ihe offense
struggled and cut Lym an's lead to one.
13-12. at halftime.
The Lady Rams conlinued lo play well
on defense in the second half and started
to get back on truck offensively. Lake
Mary outscorcd Lym an. 10-4. In ihe
third quarter to take a seven-point lead.
22-17. Into the fourth. Lake Mary
outseored Lyman. 12-8, In the fourth
quarter to wrap up the victory.
1-ake Mary has already eliiiccd al least
a tie for the conference J V title and will
play the team with the next best record
in a playoff for the district title.
Cynthia Patterson led the way for Lake
Mary Thursday with a game-high 13
points and Karen DcShctler tossed In
nine.
L A N E M AR Y 134) - Dal».al 4. DeShetler t. Patterson
II Wad* I Totals: 111014 34
LYMAN |1S| - Blenktwic* A. Garvin 1. Millar 0.
R ichard ton 4. Roberts 1 Totals: 1 7 I I 15
Halttlma - Lyman I], Laka Mary 11 Fouls — Lyman
IV Laka Mary IB. Foutad out — non* Technicals —

Lake HoweU JV girls isifttMHatMiaaaoaioi 52
L ik e B ra n tle y ........................................ 37
Lake Howell's J V Lady Silver Hawks
gave coach Kimberly Codrey a victory In
Ihe Iasi game of her coaching career,
52-37. over Lake Brantley's J V Lady
Patriots al Lake Brantley High.
Th e J V Lady Hawks finished Ihe
season wllh a 9-6 record.
Erin Hankins tossed In u game-high 13
points to lead the Lady Hawks while
Putty Rae and Keller Johnson added 11
points apiece. Jolce Jo h n so n , who
st ored 14 points In the flrsl half against
Seminole. Is still out with an injured
ankle.

Merchant Mar we tl, N Y Mart hm*40
Southern Conn 41. Sacred Heart 57
Spring Garden n. Miter,ccr d,| 71
St MichaettTt Keenest 41
Susquehanna IS3 WilSes 7t
Tampie7J,Si BonarentureM
Union 44. Hamilton 47
W. Virginia al. Rutgert 55
W New England 54 R Williams S!
Savin
Alabama Birminghm 44 Jacksonville 45
Alderton B-oeddul 17. Bluefeldtl
BaMirmlnelt.No KantwckySl
Balmont Abbey}], Eton Call 40
Catawba 77, Pteitter 79
Charleston )1. Fairmont 14
Charleston |W Vi 171. Fairmont 44
Gardner wtbb 44. Barber Scotia tl
Georgia Sotthem at. Cantenary 44
Lamar 41 McNeeta St 54
LMngstonekl, N C Central 47
Middle Tennessee 77. Tennessee St 71
Maryville 41, Roanoke 51
Norfolk 51 104. Copp.n St tl
SW Louitiana 41. New Orleans U
Shepherd 17. Salem la
V* Commonwealth45, So Florida41
VanderbilJ 57. Mississippi St 54
W Carolina74. E TenneneeSt 45
Waka Forett 71 Georgia Tech 74 lot)
Midwest
AshiandTt.St Joseph I Ind 177
Bethel t(B. Concordia TT
Bradley 54. Southern 11lino 1 55
Bias CliH tl. Wtstmar 15
Cant Method.it 41. Wm Jewell laid)
Cleveland SI 17, Xavier 7a
Culver Stockton It, Mo VaKry 71
Dakota Wttleyn at. Black Him 47|ot|
Dayton II. Detroit 74loti
Eureka 74. Maryville at
Georg* Williams!*, Indiana Tach 54
GrtenvtUa 13 Princtpia 17
tllinolt 54, lowl 51 Hot)
lnd.onat7,Minnetota54
Kantat Newman M MePterion IS
Michigan SI 77, Michigan 47
M.d America Nacarene 41 Baker 45
Mount Marcy 70, Or and View 44
Ohio St 15. Wisconsin U
Purdue Calumet 71. St FranotlS
Quincy 47. Roc Shunt 411Jot I
SI Xarter 51. St French 51
Taylor 51. Siena Haights 41
Wich.ta S. Tulsa 44
Wn ParktideU.Ind FortWaynell
Seuthwed
Ark St 70. Evangel IMolSt
BlthopColl al Trinity 57
Brighem Young Ii. New Meiico 7]
Houston 17. T t ilt ARM IS
Tach 75. No TitaiMlotl
NE Louitiana 74. Tetat Arlington 71
Nevada LatVegatM NewMeilrnSl It
0u4cn.il (Ark IM, Cent Arkansas 54
Pan American Id. Hardm Simmons 14
St Edwards IS. Mary Hardin Baylor 11
Tan St 74, Howard Payne 71
TtiatColl lll.LeTourneault
Utah SI 7t. Santa Barbara 71
Watt
Air Force 55. San Diego St 4}
Cal Irvine IDO. Long Beach St 14
Idaho St IS . B o l i t State I I
anti Clara 54 GoniagaSS
SanJoteSt 50, Fullerton St at
Washington IT. USC 47
UCLA 73, Wathington St 5t
Wyoming 73 Hawaii Al

legal Notice
CITY OF LAKE MARY. FLORIDA
NOTICEOF PUBLIC HEARINO
TO WHOM IT AAAY CONCE R N :
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IVEN by
the City Com m illion at the City ol
Lake M a ry, Florida, that laid
Commission w ill hold a Public
Hearing al 7 30 P M . on AAarch I,
1*84. to
A) Consider a request trom Glenn
H Marlin that the City ol Laka
Mary. Florida, vacate and annul the
lol lowing deter Ibed plat
Lots 150. IN TE R S T A T E INDUS
TR IA L PARK, according to the Plat
thereof as recorded in Plat Book It,
Pages 71 and 7t ol the Public
R ecords ol Sem inole County.
Florida: more commonly described
as North ol Andarson Lana contain
Ing 44 plut/minut acres
The Public Hearing will be held at
the City Hall. City ol Lake AAary.
Florida, on the 1st day of AAarch,
ttta. or as soon tharaelttr as possl
bla. at which time Interested parties
lor and against the request slated
above will be heard Said hearing
may be continued trom lima to time
until final action It laktn by the City
Commission
TH IS NO TICE shall be posted In
three (1) Public Places within the
City ot Lake AAary. Florida, at the
City Hall, and published In Ihe
Evening Htrald. a newspaper ol
general circulation In the City ol
Laka Mary. Florida. In two weakly
Issues at least lillaen days prior to
the data ol the Public hearing and
owners ol the real property which It
allacted hereby shall be malted by
the City Clark a copy ol this nolle* at
ttwlr address may appear on tha
latest ad valortm tea records
A taped record Ol this mooting It
mad* by lha City lor its convenient*
This record may not constitute an
adequate record lor th* purposes ol
appeal from a decision made by the
City Commission wllh retpecl lo Ihe
lo rego ing m atter A ny parson
wishing lo tntur* that an adequate
record ol th* proceedings Is main
talned lor appallal* purposes Is
advised to make th* nactssary ar
rangam anlt at his or her own
•apans*
C IT Y OF
LAK E AAARY. FLO R ID A
/t/ Conn I* AA*|or
City Clark
Publish Fabruary J. 10. IM4
D E Q If
N O TIC E O F
A PUBLIC H EAR IN O
OF P R O P O IE D C H A N O E I
AN D A M EN D M EN T!
IN C ER TA IN D IS TR IC T!
AND BOUNDARIES OF
TH E ZONING O RDINANCE
Nolle* It hartby given that a
Public Hearing will b* held *1 th*
Commission Room In th* City Hall in
th* City ol Sanlord. Florida, at 7 00
o'clock P.M. on February II, IW4. lo
consider changes and amendments
lo Ihe Zoning Ordlnanca ol Ih* City ol
Sanlord. Florida, at follows:
A portion ol that certain properly
lying between lath Street eatended
Westerly and Mth Strati and b*
tween AAapla Avenue and Laurel
Avenue Is proposed to be rtlonad
trom R C I (Rastrlctad Commercial)
District to GC 1 (General Commer
clal) District. Said proparty balng
mor* particularly described at
lot lows:
Lott II through It. Amended Plal
ol Orange Hatghlt, Plal Book a, Pag*
14; Lol* II* through 104 (lass
Right ol Way lor Slat* Road), San
lord Haights. Plat Book 1. Pag* 03:
lots J l through al, and al. 1st
Addition to Ptnahurtl. Plal Book S.
Pag* 7f; Section 30. Township If
South. Rang* 30 East. North 104 leet
ol West 313 lael ol South to ol
Southwest U ol Northeast la (last
Eaat ISO lael of North 133 teat) and
(tost East 140 toe! ol South IJJ feel
and Street); Weal 17f 25 leet ol Easl
311 tool of South tat leal of Northwest
to; all Public Records ol Seminol*
County, Florid*
All partial In Intorttl and cllltant
shall have an opportunity to fa* heard
•I M id hearing
By order ol th* City Commission ot
Ihe City of Sanlord. Florida
H N Tam m . Jr,
City Clark
Publish January 3a and Fabruary J.
1*84
1 OEPBI

Ctf Y OF LAK E MARY. FLO R ID A
N O TIC E O F P U B LIC H E A R IN G
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCERN
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N by
th* Planning and Zoning Board ol Ih*
City ot Lake Mary, F lorlda. that said
Board will hold a Public Hearing at
I OOP M . on February IB, l*B4, to
A) Consider a request lor change
ot toning trom R 1AAA Single Faml
ly Residential to A 1 Agriculture, as
said class,Heat ons are described in
the Zoning Ordinances ol the City ot
Lake Mary, Florida, and amending
the land us* element ol the City's
Comprehensive Plan trom Low D*
nslty Residential to Rural Density,
on th* following described property
lying within the municipal limits ot
Lake Mary, Florida, and more fully
described as follows: to wit:
Blocks E and F, Lake AAary Woods
Subdivision, as recorded In Plat Book
16. Page 40. Including lands shown In
right ol ways lor Lake Mary Woods,
Less th* North 135 leet thereof more
commonly described as Notth ot
State Road 417 and West of 17*1
contilnlng appro* Imatety t 1j acres
The Public Hearing will be held at
the City Hall, City ot Lake Mary.
Florida, on the 21th day of February.
I*14, at I 00 P M . or at soon
thereafter as possible, at which time
interested parties lor and against the
request lor change ol jonlng will be
heard Said hearing may be con
llnued trom time to tlmt until a
recommendation it made by the
Planning and Zoning Board ot the
City ol Lake M ary, Florida A
workshop session on this request will
be heard at I 00 P M on February
14.1*84
THIS N O TIC E shall be posted In
three (3) Public Places within the
City of Lake Mary. Florida, at the
City Hall within said City, and
publ shed In the Evening Herald, a
newspaper ot general circulation In
the City ol Lake Mary In addition,
notice shall be posted In Ihe area to
be considered at least lllteen (15)
days prior lo the date ol th* Public
Hearing
A taped record ol this meeting is
made by the City tor Its convenience
This record may not constitute an
adequate record lor Ihe purposes ot
appeal trom a decision made by the
City Commission with respect to th*
foregoing m atter Any person
wishing lo ensure that an adequate
record ol the proceedings Is main
tamed lor appellate purposes Is
advised to make the necessary ar
rangements at his or her own
ripens*
D A TED January 27. I*B4
C ITY OF
LAKE M AR Y. FLORIDA
iSi Carol Edwards
Deputy City Clerk
Publish February 3,1*14
DEQ 12
N O TIC E UN DER
FIC TITIO U S NAM E LAW
Nolle* Is hereby given that the
below named persons desire to
engage In business under the
fictitious name ol V ID E O R EN TA L
III. located *1 5140 Huntington Street
N E. In the City ol SI Petersburg.
Florida, and Intend to register th*
said nama with th* Clark ot th*
Circuit Court of Seminole County,
Florida
JOHN F. KO LEN D A
REGIONAL E N T E R T A IN M E N T
D E V E L O P M E N T. INC.
Publish February 3,10.17.34.1*14
OEQ 41_________________________
NOTICE OF PUBLIC H EAR IN G
TH E BOARD OF CO U N TY COM
M IS S IO N E R S O F S E M IN O L E
CO UNTY will hold a public hearing
In Room 100 ol ttv* Seminole County
Courthouse, Santord. Florida, on
Feb 14. 1*14 al 7 00 P M . or as toon
thereafter as possible, lo consider a
S P E C IFIC LA N D USE A M E N O
M EN T to Ih* S*mlnol* County
Comprehensive Plan and REZON
INGol Ih* described properly
AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D IN A N C E 7 7 1 5 W H IC H
AMENDS TH E D E T A IL E O LAND
USE E L E M E N T OF TH E
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y COM
PREHENSIVE PLAN FROM GEN
E R A L R U R A L / P R E S E R V A TIO N
TO M EO IUM D E N S ITY R ESIDEN
T I A l FOR TH E PURPOSE OF
REZONING FROM R 3 M U L TIP L E
S AM ILY D W E LLIN G O IS TR IC T TO
RM 1 M O B ILE HOME PAR K OIS
............
LO T B. O RLANDO INDUSTRIAL
PARK. AS R ECO R DED IN P LAT
BOOK 10. PAGE 100. P UB LIC RE
CORDS OF SEM INOLE C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A ; LE S S TH E N O R TH
1 7t . 3 1 F E E T T H E R E O F ;
TO G E TH E R W ITH TH A T PORTION
OF SAN FO R D A V E N U E . A
V A C A T E D 70 00 F E E T W ID E
VA C ATED R IG H T OF W AY. LY IN G
A D J A C E N T T H E R E T O
TO G E TH E R W ITH LO T 13 SAID
O R LAN D O IN D U S TR IA L P AR K.
L E S S T H E F O L L O W IN G O E
SCRIBEO PARCEL
BEGIN A T A P O IN T ON TH E
EAST RIG H T OF WAY LIN E OF
S EM IhCLE AVE N U E LY IN G IIS
F E E T S O U T H OF T H E
N O R TH W E S T C O R N ER OF
A F O R E M E N T I O N E D L O T 13;
T H E N C E E A S T 501 F E E T ;
T H E N C E S O U T H 701 F E E T ;
T H E N C E W E S T 111 F E E T ;
TH E N C E S O U TH II I I F E E T ;
TH EN C E W EST 115 F E E T TO TH E
A F O R E S A ID E A S T R IG H T OF
W AY OF S A N FO R D A V E N U E ;
TH E N C E N O R TH ALO NG SAID
RIG H T OF WAY 727 F E E T TO TH E
POINT OF B EG IN N IN G OF THIS
’ LE S S "P A R C E L
B EG IN A T T H E SO U TH W ES T
CORNER OF LO T I. O R LAN DO
I N D U S T R I A L P A R K . AS RE
COROED IN P LA T BOOK 10. PAGE
100. O F TH E P UB LIC RECORDS OF
SEMINOLE C O U N TY . FLO R ID A ;
TH E N C E E A S T ALO N G TH E
SOUTH LINE O F SAIO LO T I A
D I S T A N C E O F 414.17 F E E T ;
TH EN C E SOUTH 700 PLUS/MINUS
F E E T; TH EN C E W EST III
P L U S / M IN U S F E E T T O T H E
E A S TE R L Y M OST CO RNER OF
SAID LO T 13; TH E N C E N 45*S4’IJ'’
W ALONG TH E EAST L IN E OF
SAID LO T 13 A DISTANCE OF 431.31
F E E T ; T H E N C E N OWl'OB” E
ALONG SAID EAST LIN E O F LO T
13 A DISTANCE OF 400 F E E T TO
TH E POINT O F B EG IN N IN G O f
T H IS ’ ’ T O G E T H E R W I T H ”
PARCEL.
A P P L IC A T IO N H AS B E E N
S U B M ITTE D BY P ALM V A L L E Y
M OBILE HOME PARK.
Additional Information may bar
obtained by contacting Ih* Land
Management Manager at 313 4130.
Eat. Itt
Parsons unable to alttnd Ih*
hearing who with to comment on th*
proposed actions may submit written
statements to th* Land Management
Division prior to tho scheduled public
hearing Parsons appearing al tha
hearings may submil w rllltn stale
rnenli or b* heard orally.
Persons ar* advised that. If they
decide to appeal any decision mad*
al theta meetings, they will need a
record ol tho proceedings, and. for
such purpose, they may need to
ensure that a verbatim rtcord ol th*
proceedings Is mad*, which record
Includes th* testimony and avldtnca
upon which the appeal It tab* bated
Board ot County Commissioners
Seminol* County, Florida
B y: Sandra Glenn. Chairman
Attest. Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
I Publish February 3 .1IB4
DEQ J

Friday. Feb. 3, 19B4-7A

Legal Notice
NO TIC E
Notice* Il hereby given that on
January 14, 1*14. FLA. Ltd tiled with
the F e d e ra l C o m m u n ic a tio n s
Commmlssion In Washington. D C
an application lor a construction
permit lor a new AM broadcast
station al Lake Mary, Florida Th*
proposed station will seek authority
to operate on a frequency ot 14*0
k H i. with a power ot 10 kilowatt
daytime. 5 0 kilowatts nighttime, end
Its transmitting antenna will be
dire ctio n a l, em ploying several
towers. Ihe tallest ot which will be
433 4t leet above ground level Th*
location ol Ih# antenna is proposed lo
be al 21* 4*' 4*'' N Latitude It* 10'
7*" W Longitude
The studio ot Ihe proposed station
will be located at a site In Lake
Mary. Florida and Its transmitter
wilt be located in Sanlord. Seminole
County, at the Intersection ol Oregon
Street and Ohio Avenue
FLA. Ltd Is a limited partnership
In which Q Tech Associates is the
General Partner with a JOS interest
In Ihe limited partnership First
Columbia C o . Inc Is the limited
Partner wllh a 70S Interest In the
limited partnership
A copy ol Ihe application and
related materials are available for
public inspection during normal
business hours Monday through
Friday, at the Lake Mary City Hall.
1SB N Country Club Road. Lake
Mary, Ftor!da37744
Publish February 7.3.». 10.1**4
D E Q IB

N O TIC E O F PUBLIC H EA R IN G
TH E BOARD OF C O U N TY COM
M IS S IO N E R S O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY will hold a public hearing
In Room 700 ol the Seminole County
Courthouse. Santord. Florida, on
Feb 14. I9B4 at 7 00 P M . or as soon
thereafter as possible, to consider a
S P E C IF IC LA N D USE A M E N D
M E N T to the Seminole County
Comprehensive Plan and REZON
ING ot the described property
AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D I N A N C E 77 7 ! W H I C H
AM ENDS TH E D E T A IL E D LAND
USE E L E M E N T OF THE
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y COM
P R EH EN S IVE PLAN FROM LOW
D E N S ITY R E S ID E N TIA L TO LOW
IN T E N S IT Y COMME RCI AL FOR
T H E PURPOSE OF R EZ O N IN G
F R O M M I A S IN G L E F A M IL Y
D W E LLIN G D IS TR IC T TO OP OF
FIC E D IS TR IC T the tallowing de
Scribed property
Beginning at the NW corner ol Ihe
Rrplat ot Tract 47. Block A. Sanlando
S p r i n g s . P B 7, P g
4. r u n
S 8*’ 44 50"E along the N line ol said
Tract 47. o distance ol 3011 It;
thence run S 0*32 07'VY 784 55 It to
point 350 It N ol S line ol Tract 47
thence run N B»- 4*'5B "W parallel
with the S line ol Tract 47, a distance
ol 151 14 II; thence run N 0*32 01 E
67 00 II, thence fun NWly along a
curve concave SWIy having a radius
ol IS II. and arc distance ot 34 17 It,
thence run N 0*3101 E 25 tt. thence
run S B**!4'Sa W 178 a It to the W tine
ot T ra d 47, thence run N 0*12 07"E
150 tt to the POB Sub)ed lo the
following described easement a 25
tt strip ol land lying on each side ol
the following described centerline
Begin 15011 North ot Ih* NW corner
ol Replat ol T r a d 47, Block A.
Sanlando Springs. PB 7, Pg 4, run E
105 80 tt lo the point ol curvature ol
a curve having a 50 loot radius to th*
right; thence run SEly on an arc
76 54 tt to Ih* point ol lengency ol
curve, thence run S and parallel to
th* East line of said Replal ol T ra d
47. Block A, 4)3 * II more or lass to
South line of said T ra d 47. Block A.
more or less lo South line ol said
Tract 47. Block A. containing 1538a
acres MOL
A P P L IC A T IO N HAS B E E N
S U B M ITTE D BY C E R T IF IE D FI
NANCIAL SERVICES
Additional Information may be
obtained by contacting Ihe Land
Management Manager al 32) 4330,
E it 140
Persons unable to attend Ihe
hearing who wish to comment on the
proposed actions may submit written
statements lo the Land Management
Division prior lo th* scheduled public
hearing Persons appearing at Ihe
hearings may submit written slat*
menlt or be heard orally
Persons are advised that. It they
decide to appeal any decision made
al thesa meetings, they will need a
record ol the proceedings, and. for
Such purpose, they may need lo
ensure that a verbatim rtcord ol the
proceedings it made, which record
includes the testimony and evidence
upon which the appeal It to be bated
Board ot County Commissioners
Seminole County. Florida
By Sandra Glenn. Chairman
Attest Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
Publish February J. 1*84
DEQ I

�BA— Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Friday, Feb. 3, 1984

55— Business
Opportunities

Legal Notice
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY
BOARD OF
C O U N TY COMMISSIONERS
N O TIC E OF PUBLIC H EA R IN G
MARCH *. m i
7:00 P M
The Board ol County Commission
ert ol Seminole County, Florida, will
Hold a public hearing to consider the
following
I RALPH T B IL L IN G S L E Y BA(I1 31 S3)
A I
Agriculture Zone - Appeal against
the Board of Adiuttment in denying
a Special Exception to park a mobile
home on Lot JO. Woodland Eitolet. in
Section 34J i l t , located East ol
Lockwood Road on Red Ember
Road ID IST tl
J
M E TR O P O LITA N
ALCOHOLISM
CO UNCIL
OF
C E N TR A L
FLO R ID A
B A (tt 31 831 SIE - A 1 Agriculture
Zone — Appeal against the Board Ot
Adiuitmenl In denying a Special
Exception to permit rehabilitation,
counseling and domiciliary uses ol
Lots I, 2. ). and 4 Block B. Lake
Harney Acrettes. PB II, Pg 14. In
Section 14 20 33. less W ty ot Lot I
and S tt ft of W ty ol Lot 1. Block B.
Lake Harney Acrettes PB II. Pg 34.
located on the Northwest corner ol
Lake Harney Road and Lake Harney
Heights Road IDIST S)
3 S TE V E N R. B E C H T E L BA| 1J 1* 831 ISJV
M I Industrial
Zone — Appeal against the Board ol
Adjustment In approving the follow
mg Variances lor J W HICKM AN:
lt| Side Yard Setback Variance from
10 It to 5 It; Front Yard Setback
Variance Irom SO It to JS ft.
Driveway Width Variance Irom 24 I!
to 20 It, and Waiver ol the S tt
landscaping requirement on the side
yard and rear yard and reduction ol
parking spaces trpm I0x?0 It to lOrll
it: on Lot 24, Seminole Industrial
Park. Block B Section 2. PB 14 Pg
79. In Section 19 21 30. located on the
South side ol Candace Drive. West ol
Highway 17*2 IDIST 4)
4 B R A N TLE Y POINT. LTD . BA! 12 19 8)1 144V
R 1A Res den
Hal Zone - Appeal against the Board
ol Adjustment In denying a Rear
Yard Variance Irom 30 It to 14 It tor
screened porch on Lot 14, Brantley
Point. PB J4 Pg 71. In Section
S 21 2* located South ol West Lake
Brantley Road on Blackmon Court
IDIST 31
J B R A N TLE Y POINT, LTD . BA( 12 1*831 I4SV - R 1A Residen
Hal Zone — Appeal against the Board
ot Adjustment In denying a Rear
Yard Variance Irom 30 It to 20 tl lor
screened porch on Lot 15. Brantley
Point, PB 34, Pg 71, In Section
i i i J S . luiaied Scrum ot nest Laae
Brantley Road on Blackmon Court
IDIST 3)
t
M A R TH A
PULTZ
BA| 12 1*83) S4E - A I Agriculture
Zone — Appeal against the Board ot
Ad|uslmen1 In denying a Special
Exception lor the establishment ol a
Veterinarian Clinic on the W 234 It ol
E 14 *S chs ol S 373 TO It ol NE '• ot
Section 3u21 30 Hess road) Further
described as located on the North
side ol S R 424 330 tt East ot
Tutkawilla Road IDIST I)
This public hearing will be held in
Room 200 ol the Seminole County
Courthouse. Santord. Florida, on
March 4. 1*84, at 7 00 P M . or 4S
soon mere alter as possible
Written comments tiled with the
Land Management Manager will be
considered Persons appearing at the
public hearing will be heard
Hearings may be continued Irom
lime lo lime as lound necessary
Further details available by calling
373 43)0, Ext is*
Persons art advised that, II they
decide to eppeal eny decision made
at this hearing they will need a
record ol the proceedings, and. lor
such purpose, they may need to
Insure that a verbatim record ot the
proceedings Is mad* which record
Includes the testimony and evidence
upon which the appeal Is lo be based
per Section 214 OIOS. Florida Stat
utes
BOARD O F
C O U N I Y COMM ISSIONE RS
SEM INOLE COUNTY
FLO R ID A
BY S A N D R A G lE N N
CHAIRM AN
A TTE S T
A R TH U R H BECKW ITH, )R
Publish February 3 1*84
D E O )*

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611

Orlando • Winter Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:30 A.M. i5 :3 0 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

RATES
1
3
7
10

time ....................... 64C
consecutive times . 58C
consecutive times . 49C
consecutive times . 44C
S2.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

a line
* line
■ line
a line

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

E D U C A TIO N A L PRODUCT CO
Home type operation, |2*,000
Terms Orlando I 425 1*84
W A N TE D DEALER S
For Cedardale Salelite Systems,
part time or full lime J sales per
week generated SI 000 Income
weekly S2.000 refundable deposit
required Salelite sales Increase
200% Contact Tim Wright %
Cedardale Satetlte Systems, Inc
401 F r i e n d s h i p C e n t e r ,
Greensboro. NC 2741*
*1* 854 1752

WANTED
BOYS AND GIRLS

Ma n u f a c t u r i n g Secr e
tary .'Engineering Document*
tlon Clerk, requires good typing,
communication, and general ot
lice skills; and willingness to
learn Excellent opportunity.
Apply lo person or send resume
and saftry history to. Callbron
Corp 600 Lake Emma Rd Lake
Mary. Fla 32744

Alter School and weekends
Earntxlra money
Call TO N Y 323 26It
________Between 6 A 7 PM________
WIN AN AVON CARD
S TA R T SELLIN G TO D A Y !)
_______ 331 3551 or i n 063*_______
Work trom home on new telephone
program Earn up to la 00 an
hour, 211 168?__________________

NEED

You don't have tobea
D E T E C T IV E to Find a Good Buy I
Just read our Classified Pages

Accounting Clerk 131 permanent
position CRT experience 7 full
lime. I part time Never a Fee
TEM P/PERM J74JI48

Lost aOSS S Santord Ave area
Black miniature poodle, Female
answer* to name of Delilah
Ph 377 H09

Legal Notice

27— Nursery &amp;
Child Care
B AB Y S ITTIN G my home Hidden
Lake area Fenced yard. 7 S
years and alter school kids Call
331 3093 Have relerences _____
Babysitting my home
LotsofTLC For any age
Call 37) 7701 Have Relerences
Care tor your child in my home
Excellent referencei u . , i i ...,
33) 83S*_______________________
Will keep children in my home
days &amp; nights Fenced yard sea
rates Local Ret 177 8013

NOTICE OF
A PUBLIC H EARING
OF PROPOSEOCHANGES
A N D A M EN D M E N TS
IN C E R TA IN DISTRICTS
31— Private
AND BOUNDARIES OF
Instructions
TH E ZONING O R DINANCE.
a n o a m e n d in g t iie '
Enioy tenant Piano and organ In
F U TU R E LAN DU SE E LE M E N T
your home Limited opening!
OF TH E COM PREHENSIVE
now available, by professional.
P LA N O F THE
DonJame* Phon*47j ?4fl/______
C IT Y OF SANFORD. FLORIDA
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Heating will be held at the
33— Real Estate
Commission Room in the City Hall In
Courses
the City ot Santord Florida, at 7 00
0 clock P M on February I) 1*84 lo
BALL School at Real Estate
consider changes and amendments
LOCAL R E B A TE S 37)4111
lo the Zoning Ordinance, and amen
M A S TE R C H A R G E O R VISA
ding the Future Land Use E lament ol
the Comprehensive Plan ol the City
01 Sanlord, Florida, as lollows
A portion ol that certain property
lying South ol Lake Mary Boulevard
NOTICE OF PUBLIC H EAR IN G
and West ot U S Highway 17*2 (SR
THE BOARD OF C O U N TY COM
IS 400) Is proposed lo be retorted M IS S IO N E R S O F S E M IN O L E
from MR I (M Jtlpie Family Resi
C O U N TY will hold a public haartng
denlial Dwelling: O ulrlcl to GC 7 In Room 200 ol the Seminole County
(General Commercial) and MR 2 ■Courthouse, Sanlord Florida qp
Feb 14. 1*94 at 7 00 P M or as soon
(Multiple Family Residential Dwell
mgl District Said property being thereafter as possible, to consider a
more particularly described as S P E C IF IC LAND USE A M EN O
ME N T lo the Seminole County
follows
Comprehensive Plan and RE20N
LE G A L d e s c r i p t i o n
FR O M MR I (M U L T IP L E
ING ol Ihe described property
FA M ILY R E S ID E N TIA L DW ELL
AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D I N A N C E 77 JS W H I C H
ING) D ISTR IC T TO GC 1 IG EN E R
AMENDS THE O E T A IL E D LAND
AL C O M M ER CIALI D IS TR IC T
U S E E L E M E N T OF T H E
Part ol Lots 2 and 4. LA K E
M I N N I E E S T A T E S . S tm ln o le S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y C O M
County, Florida, according to the PREMENSIVE PLAN FROM LOW
R E S I D E N
plat thereof as recorded In Plat Book D E N S I T Y
4 Page *7 Public Records Seminote TIAL P R E S E R V A TIO N TO COM
County, more particularly described M ERCIAL FOR THE PURP05E OF
as lollows
R E Z O N I N G FR O M A I
Commence at the Southwest cor
A G R IC U LTU R E TO C I R E TA IL
ner ot Lol 4, L A K E M IN N IE
COM M ERCIAL the following de
E S T A T E S thence S l» * l ) )0 l
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINO
scribed properly
(Brarm gs based on Florida De
The Seminole County Board ot
That portion ot the NW * ol
p a r lm e n l ol T r a n s p o r t a t io n Section II Township 71 South, Range
Commissioners will Isold a public
Right ol Way Map tor State Roads IS 2* East lying North ot Ihe North Ime
hearing to consider a request to
and 600). along the North right of
amend the Master Land Usa Plan ot
ot Bel Air Hills Unit One according to
way line ol Lake Minnie Orive lor the Plat thereof as recorded in Plat
the H EA TH R O W P LA N N E D UN IT
7S7 44 feet to the Point ot Beginning
DEVELO PM ENT
Book 72 Pages 7 and I ol the Public
A 1341 S acre trad ol land located on
theme continue S ***1) 30'E along Records ol Seminole County. Florida
the North side ot Lake Mary Blvd .
the said North right ot way line tor and lying North ol the North line of
1*2 48 leet lo the point ot curvature ol Bel Air Hills Unit Three according to
west ot I 4. east ot Markham Woods
a curve concave Northwesterly
Road and south ot the Tavares
the plal thereat as recorded in Plal
thence Northeasterly along ihe South Book 34. Pages 37 and 38 ol said
branch ol the A C L Railroad All In
line ot Lot J. along Ihe arc ot said Public Records, less lb* NW ’« ot the
Sections 35 and 34. Township If,
curve, having a radius ot (•&gt; it leet, NW '• ol the NW '&lt; ot said Section
range 2* and Sections I. I, II. and 13
through a central angle ot S7*l» 57
ot Township 30. Range 30. Seminole
II and less the East 700 It thereof
tor 14* 88 te*t lo the East line ol Lot ]
County, Florida
TO G E TH E R W ITH That portion ol
The hearing will be held In Room
and the point of compound curvature the SW 'x ol Section 7. Township 21
ol a curve concave Westerly; thence South Range 7* East, lying South ol
200. Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanlord. Florida, on February 28
Northeasterly along the East line ol Old State Road 454 less Ihe SW
ol
Lot 2 along the arc ol said curve
1*14 al 7 00 P M . Or as soon
the SW 'v ol Ihe SW ol said Section
having a radius ot 7814 7* leet. 7 and less the East 700 It thereof
thereafter as possible Written
through a central angle ot 07*40 0)
comments may be tiled with the
and less beginning al a point 114) S
for 378 41 feet to the point of tl S 0*07 14“ W and 387 4 tt S
Land Management Division and
tangency, thence N 28*4* 30” E
those appearing will be heard
l**57’44 E ol the W '* corner
along the East line ot Lot 7 lor 3S7 JS monument ot said Section 7, sa d
Persons are advised that. It they
decide lo appeal any decision mad*
teel to the Northeast corner ot Lol 2
point being on the Southerly R W
thence S 75*84 S* W along the Nor Ih line ol Old State Road No 4)4, thence
al these meetings, they will need *
lm* ol Lot 7 lor 1*0 48 leet to the run S 10*16 W 20 It more or less lo
record ol the proceedings, end. tor
Northeast corner ot Lot 4 thence the waters edge thence run Easterly
Such purpose, they may need lo
5 14*38 It W along Ihe North line ol 74 S tl more or less along the waters
ensure trial a verbatim record ol the
Lot 4 lor I I I 03 leet to a line bearing edge, thence N 11*28 S I ' E 20 It
proceedings Is mede, which record
N 21*71 44 E Irom the Point ol more or less to said Southerly R W
Includes Ih* testimony and evidence
line, thence run Northwesterly along
Beginning, thence S 28*28 44 W lor
upon which the appeel is to be based
781 21 teet to the Point ol Beginning
said R W line 75 tt to the point ot
Board ot County
Containing 4 4* Acres (including beginning ALL LESS. Rights ot
Commissioners
Way tor Present Slate Road 434,
lake bottom 1. more or less
Seminole County, Florida
DOT
Water Sloreg* Area and
ANO
By Sandra Glenn.
FR O M MR I (M U L T IP L E
Balmy Beach Drive eecordlng to
Chelrman
F A M IL Y R E S ID E N TIA L DW ELL
deed recorded In Otticiel Records
Attest Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
I N G ) D I S T R I C T T O M R 7 Book 66* Pages 444 and 48* ol said
Publish February J. 1*84
Public Records.
(M
U
L
T
IP
L
E
F
A
M
IL
Y
R
ES
ID
E
N
D EO 38
T I A l D W E LLIN G ) DISTR ICT
ALSO LESS All that part ot Ih*
Pari ol Lots S, 7. 8 * through 12 SW '&lt; ol said Section 7 and the NW '*
N O TIC E OF
and the vacated part ol Lake Mlnme
O' said Section 18 lying Southerly ol
A PUB LIC H EA R IN G
State Road 43* Lying Easterly ot
Drive LAKE M IN N IE ES TA TE S
OF PRO PO SEO CHANGES
Seminole County. Florida, according
Balm y Beach D rive and lying
A N D A M E N D M E N TS
Westerly ol a line beginning al a
to Ihe plal thereof as recorded In Plat
IN C E R TA IN DISTR ICTS
point on the North line ol said Bel Air
Book a. Page *3. Public Records
ANO BOUNDAR IES OF
Seminole County more particularly
Hills Unit On* said poml being S
TH E ZO N IN G O R D IN A N C E
described at lollows
89*41*21” E 7735 85 tt Irom the SE
Notice IS hereby given lhal e
corner ol Section 12. Township 21
Begin al Ih* Southwest corner ol
Public Hearing will be held et the
South Range 78 East, thane* run N
Lot 4, LAKE M IN N IE E S TA TE S ,
Commission Room in the City Hall in
0*34 II E 205 35 ft to Ih* Southerly
thence N 8 »* 1 )‘)0 " W , (Bearings
the City ol Santord, Florida at 7 00
based on Florida Department ol
R W line ol said State Road 434
0 clock P M on February 13. 1*14. to
A P P L IC A T IO N HAS B E E N
Transportation Right otW ay Map
consider changes and amendments
lor Stale Roads tS and 6001. lor 44S 81
S U B M IT T E D BY S K IR B Y
•o the Zoning Ordinance ot the City ot
leet. them* N 28*28 44 E tor 854 64 M O NCH IEF TR U S TE E
Sanlord, Florida as lollows
leet lo the North line ol Lot 10.
Additional Information may be
A portion ot that certain property
thence N 73*83' I7” W along Ihe North
obtained by contacting Ihe Land
lying Northeasterly Ot and abutting
Management Manager al 323 4JU
tine Ot Lot to lor 109 43 leet to Ihe
Airport Boulevard 1C R 4351 and
Northwest corner thereof thence
Est ISO
between Airport Boulevard (C R
Persons unablt to attend Ihe
N 70*2I'2T W along the North line ol
42S) and U S Highway 17*7 IS H
hearing who wish to comment on the
Lol 12 tor 1*9 41 let! lo the Northwest
IS 4001 If proposed lo be reroned
proposed actions may submit written
corner thereof thence S 40*5* IS W
Irom MR 7 (Multiple Family RtsJ
statement lo the Land Management
lor 1959 9S test to the Southwest
denlial Dwelling) District to GC 7
Division prior to the scheduled public
c o r n e r o l L o t I I , th e n c e
(General Commercial) Districl Said
hearing Persons appearing al the
S 89*1) 30 E along the South line ot
properly being more particularly
hearings may ssibmit written state
Loll It, 9, 7 and S tor 1172 73 leet to
described as lollows
the Southeast corner ol Lot S, thence
Section 2, Township 24 South.
men Is or fa* heard orally
Persons art advised that. It they
N3S*S4 » E lor 71901 feel to the
Range 30 East South 245 tret ol
decide to appeal any decision made
Point ol Beginning
Southeast on* quarter lying Easterly
at theta meetings they will need a
Containing 25 70 Gross Acres (In
01 C R 425. Public Records ol
record ol the proceedings and tor
eluding lake bottom), moreor less
Seminole County, Florida
such purpose, they may need to
All parlies in Interest and cilKtns
All parlies in inleresl and cBurns
ensure that * verbatim record ot Ihe
shall have an opportunity to be heard
shall have an opportunity lo be heard
proceedings Is made, whtch record
et seid hearing
at sa d hearing
includes the testimony and evidence
By order ol Ih* CHy Commission ol
By order ol the City Commission ol
upon which the appeal it lob* bated
Ih* City ol Sanlord Florida
theCity ol Sanlord Florida
Board ol County Commissioners
H N Tamm, Jr
H N Tamm. Jr
Cily Clerk
Seminole County. Florida
City Clerk
By Sandra Glenn. Chairman
Publtkh January 34 and February ].
Publish January 74 and February ],
19*4
Attest Arthur H Beckwith, Jr.
1*84
DEP87
Publish February 3 I9A4
OEQJ
JJEP79

Legal Notice

This Page Beams With
Real Opportunities For
All who Read It._________
TR A C TO R /TR A ILE R DRIVERS
Florida based trucking company
Okahumpka, Fta near Leesburg
Need O T R drivers tor our 48
state team operation Mileage
pay, daily e.pense and benefits
Most have 3 years cross country
experience. 25 ol age D O T
requirements with good driving
record 0* away trom home 3
weeks at a time Call Personnel
Dept Lester Coggins Trucking
__________ 904 376 8*00___________

IM M E D IA TE L Y W A N TE D
SS00 S7 000 'mo P lu l Need SO
Overweight people lo lose weight
and share in company profits
____________ 8)1 *441_____________

Car* For Senior Cdittns
74 hour loying professional care In
Private home on beautiful estate
tor sick or wheelchair patients
Also hourly care on dally basis
A ll with gourm et meals &amp;
ncellentcare 441 4147_____

LOST Bro*n Engllih Bulldog Vic
Httoticu! and Grandview, Tu ti
jJ a y J / S Regard 172 6407_______
Pomeranian malt dog, bfo*n Ran
away Saf night from Ceder Ave
and lit street Call owner*
17? 0390___

Federal. State A Civil Service Jobs
available Call 1 (AlV) 54* 1304
For Inter 74 hr*________________

Advertising person, print layout,
and paste up experience Degree
needed, permanent position
Never* Fee
TEM P/PE HM 774 1148__
Assemblers and
Warehouse workers needed tor
Altamonte Area Call Ablest
Temporary Services No Fee
____________ 231 3)40
Bookkeeper Grocery company
ha* immediate opening lor a lull
charge bookkeeper M v U it V
knowledgeable. In payroll re
turns, and accrual entries tor
general ledger Computer tip*
rience preferred Send resume to
P O Bo. 3500 Sanlord Fla
staling qualifications, and sala
ry requireme n t s ___________
B OO KK EEP ER S E C R E TA R Y
Part Time, E .p Relerences
___________ 171 4*28______________
C A B IN E T IN S TA LLE R . Expert
enced only Seminole Cabinet Co
37) 0720

M l— Homes For Sale

E H / l

S TE N S TR O M
REALTY • REALTORS
Sanford s Sales le a d e r
WE LIST A N D S E L L
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEM IN IO LE C O U N TY

H O U S EK EEP ER Full time tor a
new 240 unit complei in Sanlord
E.perience helpful Call lor *p
pointment 3314270______ _ _ _

HIGH SCHOOL OIPLOMA7
___
CALL 7*3 1146_________
Need Motorcycle Mechanic. Must
have own tools All Japanese
bikes Apply In person Davit
Cycle Service. 1810 S French
323 4572________________________
Now accepting applications lor
Short order cooks, dishwashers,
and waitresses Apply between t
A 3 P M Cindy's Country Kllch
en 1800 French Ave______ __
Part time attendant Alert. In
telllgenl Individual needed to
look after amusement center In
S antord P la ta n ig h ts and
weekends Must be mature, neat
In appearance and bondable
Phone tor appointment 371 4W3
Part Time Cook E.perience net
essary Apply Mayfair Country
Club Country Club Drive
Pitta Cook Part time, prefer
e.perienced retiree Goudio's
Fish Fry Call 311 4**4_________

PIZZA DELIVERY
Part and lull time Fle.lble hours
and days Wages PLUS lips
PLUS commissions averages sa
to SI per hour
Must he II • Have own car with
Insurance
Apply al Domino s Pitta. 1*10
French Ave . Santord___________
Plastic Materials Coordinator;
requires controlling and ml.lng
plastic materials for injection
molding operation, mass docu
mentation, listing and good
working altitude Stock and In
ventory e.perience helpful
Apply. Callbron Corp 400 Lake
Emma R d , Lake Mary, Fla
27744 _______ _______________

PROCESS MAIL AT HOME I 178 00
R E D U C E D ) BORM 7 Bath home,
in popular Ptnecrest on a large
corner lot. across Irom a Park)
Newly painted outside, new root
and carport Lots ot eitrasl
144*00
JUST L IS TE D 3 B d rm , 1 bath
home in Woodmer* Park! Super
Starter hornet Owner motivated!
137.800

per hundred! No e.perience
Part or lull time Start Immedl
a te ly D e ta ils send self
addressed stamped envelope to
C . R I 300 P O 45 Stuart Fla
334*5______________________ _
Secretary Wanted lor Engineering
Dept Typing tiling, general ol
tic* duties Contact Kpthy Lange
323 7780 ' ‘ '

AGES 13-11

73— Employment
Wanted
24 Hr Babysitting Service In my
home I will provide transport*
tlon 321 0805

Sanlord Female to share turn. 2
Bdrm with lemalt child OK
5200 mo 175 dep 477 0437

93— Rooms (or Rent
SANFORD Furnished rooms by Ih*
week Reasonable rates Maid
service catering to working peu
pie 323 4507 331 Magnolia Ave
SANFORD. Reas weekly A Mon
thty rates Util. Inc eft 500 Oak
Adultl I 841 7863

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
DE LUX 2 Bdrm, 2 bath, I level.
W ’W /C .C ’M/A
__________ Ph 323 75*8___________
Furn. Apts, lor Senior Cllltens
311 Palmetto Ave.
__J_Cowan No Phone Calls
Furnished I bdrm apt singles only,
no kids or pets all utilities
Included 8375 a mo SI7S dam
age 333 077* alter 5 thru the
Lovely 3 Bdrm with bath screened
porch Complete privacy S*0
week plus 1200 security deposit
Also 1 Bdrm apt new carpeting,
private entrance 175. week plus
S200 security deposit
Call 373 226* or 323 1403

JU ST L IS TE D 1 Bdrm.. I both
homo in B l-A ir, with calh
editings, and L R . DR , FR .
Coulnd tie oilra bdrm., coiling
tan Lovely yard in quiel artal
All (his (or 137 *50
P SAN FORD I 44 44 0
2' i Acre Countr* home site*.
Oak. pin* seme cleared B payed
19% dewn. (Oyrs.at 17%.
• G E N E V A OSCEOLA RD.P
S Acre Country tracts
Welt treed on paved Rd
20 *. Down 10 V rv al 19%.

Bond Money Available
S U P E R O U P E R O U P LE X ES I
H U R R Y ! JU ST ONE L E F T I
Don’t m ill this I*re bdrm 3 bath
unit with all tlie t i lr a i l Earth
tanedecerl Convenient location!
Eicolltnl financing FHA/VAt
Yours tor just *44.*00
Call Rtd or Linda Morgan,
R/AiMctaltt.
At 322 7470or 3)3 511*1

C A L L A N Y T IM E
lias S. Park

322-2420

Lake Mary 3 Bdrm .3 8 range
r e f r i g e r a t o r , d is h w a s h e r
garage, lenced SaSO plus deposit
____________ 345 IS7*____________

BAM BOOCOVe APTS
300 E Airport Blvd Ph 333 4420
Efficiency, trom 1235 Mo ) %
discount tor Senior Cltliens

Peaceful and secluded This large
bdrm country cottage feature:
an eat in kitchen, and living
room fireplace
Call 323 4507 before I PM

Large I Bdrm . upstairs. 18th and
Park. S375 Plus security.
3234474 Adullionty,

Wanted settled couple only Clean
small 1 bdrm house. *250 mo
STOP sec dep 373 5172__________

L U X U R Y A P A R TM E N TS
Family A Adults secl.on Poolside.
2 Bdrms. Master Cove Apts
323 7*00
Open on weekends

1*94 Maybe your last chance to but
a house l have several available
rent with option lo buy Call lot
1111*04 71* 3047 OwnenBroker
) Bdrm . appt kids. pets, fence
1400 Fee Ph 33* 7200
___Sav On Rental Inc. Realtor

Mariner's Village on Lake Ada. I
bdrm Irom 1715. 2 bdrm trom
13*0 Located 17*2 lust south ol
Airport Blvd in Sanford. All
Adults 12) 1420________________
NEW 1 A 3 Bedrooms Adjacent lo
Lake Monroe Health Club.
Racquelbail and More!
Santord Landing S R 4*331 4320

S'* rms , appl. air. porch, kids
1350 Fee Ph 339 7300
Sav On Rtnlal Inc. Realtor

105— DuplexTriplex/ Rent

RIDGEW OOD A RMS APTS
3510 Ridgewood Av* Ph 32) 4420
1.3 A 3 Bdrms Irom 1300
Santord Lovely 3 Bdrm . plus den,
lenced. new carpel, appliances.
C H 'A 1450amon 3*5 8113
* Sanlord Court Apt. •
Studios. 1bdrm , A t bdrm . turn
2 bdrm . apis Senior Cltlien O il
count Fle.lble leases
____________ 17) 3301____________
t Bdrm . clean, quiet, walk lo
downtown No pets |7S Wk 1200
deposit Call between S 7 P M
323 4507 331 Magnolia Aye

Sanlord 2 Bdrm . air, all appli
anett. water Included. 3420 A
Lake Ave U 5 0 .123 *155________

I Bdrm. W ’W carpet. C/H/A. no
pets Call between 8 A M to a
P M 172 » » ___________________

119— Pasture tor Rent

S rooms Full kit., kids, no lease
1370 Mo Fee Ph 33* 7200
Sav On Rental Inc. Rtallor

W A N TE D TO R E N T between 20
and eo acres ol pasture land
W/option 321 7405

Lake Mary 2 Bdrm , air. kids, no
leas* S3IS Mo Fee Ph 339 7200
lav On Rtnlal Inc. Rialtor

3’irm s appl.air, S250Mo
Fee Ph 33* 7300
Sav On Ran ti l Inc. Realtor

Outstanding Opportunity For

EXPERIENCED CASHIERS,
GAS ATTENDANTS AND
FAST FOOD PREPARATION
O

CENTERS

n e « J '£ o /&gt;

5 L O C A T IO N S IN ttEM
M lh
IN O LE CO U N T Y

• Auto / Truck Refueling
• Full Line Convenience Stores
• Fast Food Kitchens
Frjed Chicken-Subs-Donuts

•
•
•
•
•

Top Salaries
Free Life &amp; Hospitalization
2 Paid Vacations Each Year
Profit Sharing Plan
Other Benefits
M AKE APPLICATION IN PERSON
AT 202 N. Laurel Ave., San&lt;ord
Monday Thru Friday 0:30 AM •9:30 PM
NO PHONE CALLS, PLEASE

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

LOTS OF CHARM 1 Bdrm 7 bath
3 story older home, in mint
tondilionl Split plan lamily Rm
DR . Coiy FP L. dan. (could be
aih Br equipped tat In kitchen
and lots morel 174.800

NEW 7 Bdrm . 3 bath townhous* in
lovely Hidden Lake with earth
Ion* decor, tal in kitchen. CHA,
WWC. Celh.. ceiling and great
rm. double garage and lets mere.
Yours lor 154.199

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

JUST L IS TE D J Bdrm . I bath
home in Sansra with lots ol
e.tras. equipped kitchen with
brtaklasl bar, lovtly family
room Cent HA WWC. sc. patio,
and fenced yard, Only 171.000.

IM M A C U LA TE J Bdrm . 1 bath
patio homo in Sonora with CHA.
WWC. lully equipped eat in
kitchen, coiy lirtpMco. 4 paddle
Ians, privacy walled yard, and
|0in Homeowners Assoc Only
*75.000

* * a IN D E LTO N A * * a
a a HOM ES FOR R E N T a a
a a 176 1638 a a________

CONSULT OUR

SUPER 3 Bdrm . 2 bath home in
Grovtview with many lu.ury
Natures! Split plan, Cent. HA
WWC. dbl garage, paddle Ians,
dream kitchen, lully equipped
with microwave too Just S5t.*o0

BRAND NEW ! J B drm . 3 bath
home on a treed double let In
quiet neighborhood. CHA. WWC.
patio, grtal rm , ta l In kitchen
and more. Choott your own
colors NOW BOND M O N EY
A V A ILA B LE ! Jvit 345.0941

DE BAR Y. 3 bdrm, air, kids,
petio k 133)
Sav On RenUls Inc, Realtor

Nicety decorated I Bdrm , quiet,
walk to downtown No pets. 180
week 1700deposit 373 4507
331 Magnolia Avt.

NOW HIRING!

91— Apartments/
House to Share

A TTR A C T IV E 3 B drm . 3 bath
New home in Midway, with a
sunken. LR. Ig OR, paddle Ians,
Cent HA. beautilul carpet and
much more SS4.500

W E K IV A R IV E R FR O N TI 3 bdrm .
I bath home on J8 secluded
wooded acrtsl New, CHA, WWC.
newly painted, new root, coiy
FPI. ceiling Ians your own dock
and so much morel Horses wet
comet tlJC.500

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

TENNEC0 OIL COMPANY
Is now accepting applications lor
P .T cashiers with potential tor
Associate Manager
E.perience is a plus Apply in
person 1800 French Ave
Equal Opportunity Employer.

Girl Friday E.perience required
Typing and general oltlce pro
cedurei 321 1300
________ _

Bankruptcy 12)0 and Chapter I)
S4I0 Free conference Attorney
M Price For Appt 477 2*97_____

23— Lost &amp; Found

COOKS
Breakfast and Dinner Cook needed
E.perience necessary Apply In
person Mon F rIS IJN o o n
__________ Deltona Inn___________

323-517$
2704 French Av*.

II you collect payments Irom a tlrst
or second mortgage on property
you sold, we w ill „ jy x the
mortgage you are now holding
788 2S*»

71— Help Wanted

Dog Obedience T raw Ing
Beginners class starts Feb 4lh 10
AM Ability Kennels Osteen
_______ 303 )23 2220___________
New Office no* opening
VORWERK
1120 W IsISt
____
STAR T WORK TODAY
Ray Clack will be at the Lake
Front Holiday Inn. Sat 1 4 P M ,
Feb 4th tor stall ot Gemt'ooe
Ent Mull be neat and tree to
travel all ol U S 3 wk All
eipenses paid training 3300 plus
commissions No phone calls

Clerk Typist, with accurate typing
and general office skills Call
Ablest Temporary Service* No
Fee 171 2*40

Employment

63— Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold

25— Special Notices

Color comes to Sanlord Discover
your colors by a certified analyst
plus a Free Facial Sal Feb 4.
S40 per person
Call 14* 8480 (or appt
___
MAST E RCAR D ’VISA
Now you can gel Mastercard’Visa
Regardless ol credit history
Guaranteed! Very last and Sim
pie Call Credllline at 1800 323
1434 Alio open evenings

Cleaning Woman, e.perienced lor
oltlce and residence, own trans
porta lion Monday thru Friday,
Good Pay, future potential
Bon (table 323 1823________ _____

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

71— Help Wanted

Full or Part time Management
Trainees Water Purllication
Systems ot Central Florida
____________ 1*181)3_____________

12— Legal Services

21— Personals

71— Help Wanted

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service
TAX R ETU R N P R EP AR ATIO N

Home Improvement
Addiliant, Custom kitchens. Siding
A Trim , Cutlers. Exterior Paint
ing A Roofing. Ph 18) li lt .

In your home, by appointment

m mi

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
Additions 4 Rtmodtlmg
New Custom Homes, by Bill Stripp
Licensed. Insured and Bonded

________ 695-741$ ______

Addition t Fireplace Specialist
"We will save you money”
_________
33* 3774

★ COGAB SKYLIGHTS*
An Allordabl* Addition
To any Home Call today
For A Free Estimate

321 0342

Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating
9 0 IL H E A T E R #
C LEA N IN G A N D S E R V IC IN G
Call Ralph 321*713
29% Discount On All Repairs
Far Window Air Condilwntri
On* Day Servtct. Ph 177 1631,

Electrical
Quality Electrical Servlet
Fans, timer*, security lilts. add&gt;
Hons, new service*. Insured
Master Electrician James Paul
11) 7SS9

General Services
R V and Mobil* Home, clean A
wax. roof coaling, all repair* tic.
F A L Maintenance
373 0461 or 331 1701

RAINBOW PAINTING EXT./INT.
Driveway saallng, cement work
Daniel Dekmar, 321 026*
________ Senior Dltcounl

Health &amp; Beauty

COMPLETE CONSTRUCTION
No job to small Minor A major
repaln Licensed A bonded
____________ 371H3I_____________
Give Your Home A Face Lilt!
Home remodeling and repair,
licensed and Insured
T. J Enlerprlsas, 1)1 347*
P AIN TIN G R EM O O E LIN G
TR E E TR IM M IN G
22) 1457

Home Repairs
Austin's Maintenance
Plumbing, carpentry, electrical.
painting, remodeling 321 3414
Carpentry alterations, gutter work,
pointing, siding, porches, polios,
etc Ask for Arl Hubble
____________ 322 1787.____________
Maintenance ol all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
Aelectrlc 32)4038

Wallpaper and interior Painting
Minor Repair* 7) y ri Experience
Reasonable 373 7207 All S

Janitorial Services
Chrlillan Janitorial Samlet
W* do complete doors, carpel*,
and general cleaning 8)4 0)17.

Landclearing
Construction, trath wood hauled
Off end raked Free estimate*
________ 323 2417 34* 5713_________
LA N D C LE A R IN G , F IL L D IR T.
BUSHOGING C LA Y A SHALE
_____________121)411____________
Spring claanlng early, senior clll
lent 10% discount, pick up al
door Vaterans «i*o io% dit
count 377 7417 Jet S7J3

Lawn Service

REN T

C O M P L E TE LAWN SERVICE
P R O P ER TY M A N A G E M E N T

BUY
With •
W A N T AD
Dial 323 2411

K IN O A S O N S LA W N S E R V IC E
Early Fall Clean Up. SS9 Special
For Any Aver a y Verd. 1452914.
L A M Lawh Care Service
Mow. edge, trim and haul Contact
Lee or Mark 111 11*7 or 321 *161

__________m -n ii_________
JOHN'S LAWN CARE
Landscaping A Mainl Dependable
Senior Dltcounl. 321026*

Photography
Denni* Keeler Photography.
W adding t -P o r lr a i It -C o m m t r I '
cal/lnd Wedding Special you

_^m^h^i*2*tlye^l2M)7)^^r

Plastering/Dry Wall

•

Randyt Quality Lawn Servlet
Com plete lewn maintenance.
landscaping, clean up* i l l 0716

A L L P h a s e * of P la s te r in g
Plastering repair, tlucco, hardcole. Emulated brick 331 S9fJ

Taylor Brother* Lewn and Garden
Service Residential and Com
mere ill work. Hauling, garden
prepare Hon and all lawn sarvlc#
Free E H All *715

Roofing

Masonry
B EA L Concrete I man quality
operadon Pallo*, driveway*
Day* 1)1 73)1 Eves 127 1121
S W IF T C O N C R E T E
Foo lart,
driveway*, pads, floors, pool*.
Chafl Slone Free E t l/ 122 7103

Moving &amp; Hauling
Moving t Call Rent a Alan with
Van Llcensa. and insured. Best
price* in (own tl* 0*44

Interior Decorating

TO W ER ’S B E A U TY SALON
F O R M E R L Y Harriott'* Beauty
Nook SITE 1*1 St 322 5741

SELL

Lawn Service

Nursing Care
OUR R A TE S A R E LOWER
Lakeview Hurling Center
919 E Second $1., Sanlord
____________ 322 6707

Painting
C EN TR A L FLO R ID A
Heme Improvement
Palnllng, Carpentry.
Small Repair*.
) ) Year* Experience. 32)2*41
Cunningham and Wife painting.
Inferior and exterior. Quality
brush and roll work. H I *410.
e * F R E E E S T IM A T E * *
Rhode* Palnllng All Type*
IS Y rt E .p j* H r. Phon&gt; 32) 4931

Paving
Asphalt, driveway*, parking lots,
etc. Very reasonable.
Guaranteed Free estimate*
Central Fla Concrete 31) I 111,
H U O C O N C R E TE AND
P A V E M E N T M AR KING S INC.
Specielite in driveway*, pallo*.
sidewalks, curb* and gutters,
re ta in in g w a lls , Licensed ,
bonded. 331 &gt;010 Free Estimate*

11ROOFING1!
Hll I ’m A rt Hubble
I do beautiful work. I do new root*,
root leak*. I replace or repair,
valley*, root* vent*, etc. I will
lave you money I 322 1712

Screen 4 Glasswork
* O A H E N TE R P R IS E S *
R e p la c e A r e p a ir t c r e a n t .
liber glass A aluminum.
• (MS) &gt;7144)1 •

Sewing
Custom Elegance. Fancies In.
Fabric by Mia. Dressmaking.
alteration, etc By appl » ) 408*
Experienced Seamstress will do
alterations A custom tawing ol
any kind. No |ob loo big or loo
small. Rea* rale* 322 *W*

Sprinklers/ Irrigation
Irrigation control repair* Home
and commercial Guaranteed I
year, monthly service rale
121 2417 149 171)

Tree Service
AA FIR EW O O D
Spill Slacked Seasoned
Reas Trees down. 24 h r * H i *57)
FIR EW O O D
Eipert Tree Service
Call Eves and Saturday m 2145
level Credit on Good Wood I
JACKSON T R E E SERVICE
M Yrs. Experience 78A9II)
We* Dunn Tree Surgery. Trim
ming. Topping, Removal.
904 775 201. Call Collect

Upholstery
LO R EN E 'S U P H O LS TER Y
Free Pick Up B Delivery
HOM E BOAT A U T O n i-IT M
• O P E N IN G S A LE *
Q uality upholstering. ) ) % oil
labrlc thru February m S7S)

�OUR BOARDING HOUSE ‘

141-Homes For Sale

141— Homes For Sale

BUY S E LL HIRE R EN T
Winter Bring} "W HITE' Snow
ClAUlhed Brinqi G R E E N ’ Coih

t

m i.__________

CALL BART
373 7491

M A G N IF IC E N T. H U G E 1 STORY.
4 Bdrm., home on large corner
lot, w/lnground pool, detatched
garage, M much more I l i t , 700.
ALM OST NEW. 1 Bdrm., 1 bath
home w/garage, C/H/A. paddle
la m , kit.equip!! 100 Ventura
Drive, SSI.too.

C A L L US T O D A Y

323-5774
1M4 HWY 17 93

e Saturday and Sunday e
Feb 4th and Sth to to S PM.
102 Marta Rd. Oebary.
Eeecutive hideway. large 2 bdrm .
w ith lo rm a l d in in g room ,
lireplace. treed double lot.
enclosed garage, lovely panell
Ing. huge kitchen with cherry
cabinets CORRY R E A L TY .
448 4719 441 S4S2 441 4471
SACRIFICE Appro. 814.500 down
Assume mtg at low Int. rate
Balance a p p ro . S 3 S . 000 3
B d rm .. large L R /D R area,
kitchen dinette. 2 lull baths. |ust
painted Inside and out. like new
CB. CH. eitra Ige yard Prime
location In Sanford Approi 1700
sq It under root Total price
S S I.to o This oiler limited time
only Owner 322 5207 321 00S2

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTM EN TS

SHENANDOAH
VILLAGE

O K I SATURDAY
• Adult A Fomily
Sections
• W/D Connections
• Coble TV, Pool
• Short Term leases
Availoble

Bedroeai Duplei Apt &gt; jE

L lro« ‘ 34&lt; r
• IS N IIK S R U C O M t
•(XTMtlC root

•ruTCiouko
• CLUB HOUM

I, 2, J Bi. Apis-. 2 II. TX

323-2920

Ft*. ‘290

4220 S. ORLANDO DRIVE
SANfORO

ISOS W. 25th SL

1 1 M IM

WITH
n u n THIS
i n u COUPON
tu u n

eMasfe§Cov€
c

*L B

COLOR TE L E V IS IO N
Z E N IT H ’’ Console Color Television
In welnut cabinet Original price
over 5700. balance due 5195 or
payments (19 a month
NO M O N EY DOWN With war
ranty Free Home Trial • no
obligation 842 539« ___________
Good Used Televisions 825 And Up
M ILLE R S

_^JJI*Orl6ndoD^2303S2

141-Homes For Sale

a

A PA R T M E N T S

3 2 3 -7 9 0 0
T T

R EA LTO R 323AMI

INLAND

B

d/jlfft

By Owner. 3 Br . I ' l Bath, split
Bdrm plan CHA.S45 900
1004 Scott Ave Call 323 7539

REALTY, I I S
IN F T O

m u . LQ

SANFORO R E A L TY
R EALTO R
323 5324
Alt Hrs 372 4954. 223 4345

REALTY WORLD.

2 BDRM , I B ATH C U TE HOME
with lots ot room to eipand
Completely fenced, large family
room, could be used as 3rd
bdrm .536 140

3 Bdrm . l ' j bath, fenced yard
Almost new Owner will deal
5*3.500 Low C TM
« Petiel Really 4713*14.

3 BDRM , 2 BATH HOME W ITH
Pool |ust In time tor summer
VA/FH A appraised at SS7.S00.
Lake Mary school district Ask
Ing price 157.500

149— Commercial
Property / Sale
Newly remodeled Service Station
to Convenience Store Ideal loca
tion West 1st St Sanford Days
321 *752 N.Q htW JTflt

4 BORM . 2 B ATH m Country gives
you privacy yet good location
Access to Wekiva River Above
groundpool.andfenced 119.800

153— Lots-Acreage/Sale

F H A A S S U M A B L E B eautilul
Home near Bayhead Racquet
Club E itra large fenced lot.
truit trees, family room, with
brick llrtplce. huge workshop
(7Si16). Unique trundle bath,
paddl* tans throughout 1*4.900
1 BDRM., 1 B ATH HOME located
on scenic route Large shade
trees 4 It wooden fenced
endOMd rear yard Close to
School and Park 119 900

SANFORD For lease 11.000 sq. It.
warehouM with 1500 sq It ol
attic* space and loading dock
SANFORD Retail space available
for rent.

I
^ —

Buying or Selling call SHARON L
SULLIVAN Peatty Get a second
opinion Member MLS Reason
able rates 830 0524 or 788 1984
alt hrs

W E HAVE B U Y E R S !I
WE N E E D LISTIN G S!!

A M R / t-

323 3145
Alftr Hours 321 M il

m o rtio rm tool

M .

H O N D A

Lsngwood Lake Myrtle Hills Rd
noooeo ioi. mi tt a i j s tt sauuo
down
balance to Suit Owner
323 1695_______________________
OSCEOLA RO 5 Acres Mobiles
OK High and dry. perk tested
Assumable mortgage
Wallaca Cress Realty Inc.
Realtor 331 5897________
10 Acres In Cypress Isles In Osteen
Priced to Mil Writ* Tom P O
Boi 304Osteen Ela 37744

155— Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale

Family Section ol Carriage Cove
For sal* by owner 1979. 17.52
58900 373 1303._________________
G R E G O R Y M O B ILE H O M ESINC
AREAS LA R G E S T EXCLU S IVE
S KYLIN E D E A LE R
F E A TU R IN G
Palm Beach Villa
Greenleat
Palm Springs
Palm Manor
Siesta Key
V A E H A Financing 305 373 5200
Larga sgl In adult park 2 bdr. 3
bath, den large screened porch
and utility room Low rent In
eludes sewer water, rubbish and
mowing 511900 1 904 228 3790
New Homes starting at 58995 Easy
credit and low down Uncle Roys.
Leesburg US 481 908 717 0324
Small 2 Bdrm Unmobile.
On fenced lot. 111.000
149 5458

159— Real Estate
Wanted

&gt;1 BDRM HOUSE
ORDUPLEXI
525 844),

163-Waterlront
Property/Sale
NEW SMYRNA BEACH S \ Down
No doting costs 3 7 plot den
Oreantronl Brokers Invited
rtrachs.de Realty Realtor
104 437 171?___________

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

157— Mobile
Homes/Sale

A P P LIA N C E S , REPOSSESSED,
reconditioned, freight damaged
F rom 599 Up Guaranteed
Nearly New 217 E 1st St 373 7450
Cash tor good used furniture
Larry's New A Used Furniture
Mart 315 Sanlord Ave 322 4132
For Sal* Relrlg a vac ado green.
Moipoml E i Cond 1125 O th
washer, while, l i e cond MS
495 1457alter 5P M

BOB M. BALL JR. PA.

Dog Obedience Training
Beginners class starts Feb 4th 10
AM Ability Kennels Osteen
__________ 305 323 2220___________
German Shepard puppies lor sale
AKC registered. 8 months old
Black, bl/tan. |I50 apiece Call
between 8 A M A e P M 322 5757

201— Horses

EXPERIENCED HOOF TRIMMING
Call Alter 5 P M.

521-485)

211— Antiques/
Collectables

Rummage Sale Friday 9 5 Safur
day 91 Feb 3rd and 4th First
Christian Church 1407 S Sanford
A ve___________________________
T H E SALE
134 Evansdale Rd Lake Mary
Saturday Feb 4lh tv to 1 PM
Car radio, twin bed Van M at.
lots ol new and used 1st lime
Sal* tor allltems No prior sales
Yard Sale F urn . Avon bottles,
misc Frl and Sat 9 A M to 5
P M 310 W 15th St___________ ^

219— Wanted to Buy

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

9

Furniture and repair, stripping and
refinishing, staining, antiques a
speciality. 551 0892

213— Auctions

AC R E A O E. FARMS. GROVES
I have Mrlovs buyers SHARON L
SULLIVAN R E A L T Y 830 0524 or
788 1984 alt hrs________________

SANFORD SANDALWOOD
1A 7 Bdrm available
Realtor Call 70S 477 8876

DOUBLE WIDE on a Corner Lot
1/2. CHA Family room, fenced,
shed Assume mortgage
CIOM to 17 92 541.750

F IL L O IR T A TOP SOIL
Y E LLO W SANO
Clark A H lrl 273 7580. 773 7873

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

Garage Sale Sat only; Tables,
desks, rockers, dresser, an
tiques. clothes, household, mlr
rors 7130 Amelia Ave off ot 20th
Street, Sanlord_________________
OARAGC SALE Sat only. 9 to 5
Infant A toddler clothes. |unior A
ladies clothes, misc houMhoid
Items, portable dishwasher, tow
bar. tools 2425 S Myrtle Ave..
Sanlord No early bird* pirate1

Yard Sale Boies ot 10c. 254. 50c
etc misc clothing, boys and
girls, sites 2 16 also, some mens
and ladies Baby crib 510
w'mait. wattle iron S3 00 weight
bench 15 9 5. Feb 4th
2004 Hartwell Av*

193— Lawn &amp; Garden

G E N E V A S T JOHNS
Riverfront 2 homes. Cent H/A.
fenced lacutti. boat dock, much
more SMS.900

O EBAR Y 1 Bdrm . 2 Bath Mobile
Home Located In part on SI
Johns River Slmming pool,
tennis courts, shuttleboard also
Included Is bost slip All this tor
137 100

*1 0 0 Off! Security Deposit

WE

183-Television/
Radio / Stereo

Newly licensed A eiper. lull time
real estate salesmen needed

H I T ,T O O .

a

MiSMd that the Job? Perk up
You’ll find good hunting In the
Classllieds____________________

OWNER SAYS
R EO U CEO
This could be the opportunity you
have been waiting tor This 3
Bdrm , 2 bath home has a
G R E A T room lor family tun
Located on a beautiful lot on a
quiet cut de sac Was US 000 now
only SSf 000 Don t wait to see
this

tiAiioa

W ILS O N M AIER FU R N ITU R E
111 215E FIR S T ST
_____________373 5477____________

321-0041

OAK S TU D D E D LOT
Neat 3 I ' l Like new Carpeted, and
interior paint, ipllt plan, large
.umiihed kitchen, eitra cabi
net} Cent H 'A Lot 100.150
Set,900

fItfttftCf

4.83 ACRE C O U N TR Y E S TA TE ! 1
Bdrm, 1 itery home In Markham
Wsodi Areal Priced te Mil and
many eitra il Bring your horMi.

r

KISH REAL ESTATE

STEMPER AGENCY INC.

T E L L US W H AT Y O U W ANTI WE
HAVE 180'S OF HOMES FOR
S A LE TH R U M U L T IP L E
LISTINGS.

«

Queen Site Sole Sleeper A met
chlng rocker (Blue A Cream
Velvet) 1150 Ph 331 4904________

II Paying Your T a «e i li making
you lad Soil the Place with a
ClatilliedAd

R EA L E S TA TE
R EA LTO R

CY

321-0759 Eve 32j'7643

REALTOR

D R IF TW O O D V IL L A G E
ON LA K E M A R Y BLVD

HALL
me

Ken more parti, service,
used washers 123 0897
M O O NEY APPLIANCES*

2S23FRENCHAVE

323 3200

For Sale by Owner. 3 Bdrm l bath
fenced yard, good location.
541.900 Alter t 321 3498

IS

231-Cars

.217— Garage Sales

Lie Real Estate Broker
2440 San lord A ve

e

FOR A LL YOUR
R EA L E S TA TE N EED S

For Sale by owner 1 Bdrm . 1 •&gt;
bath. Cent heat and air. land
leaped. In ground pool with large
patio m soo 322 4039 Eves

H im

181-Appliances
/ Furniture

BATEM AN REALTY

D e b a r, Deltona
Lilting Sale}
Appraliali Full Service Realty
oC O R R Y R E A L T Y 848 8789 0
E X TR A large I Dory Colonial on I
acre ol Oak tree} All the omenl
tiei plui gueit apt Beit locale
SM0.000 WM. MALICZOW SKI

REALTOR

Friday. Feb. J. 1W4-9A

Evening Herald. Sanlord. FI.

with Major Hoople '

141— Homes For Sale

Auction Sale
Friday Nile 7 P M
Couches, chairs.
TV's,
trailer
hitches, a lot ol houMhoid items
Plus e truck load ol new Items

CASH DO OR P R IZ E S
[Jells's Auction
515* W. Hoy. 44
_____________5511458____________
FOR E S T A T E Commercial or
Residential Auctions A Appeals
als Call Dell’s Auction 525 5420

215-Boats/Accessories
BASIC SPECK SPECIAL!!
14 I I . C o u r ln e y w/25 H .P
Evenrude. m il speed prop. 55
Mlnnkot* trolling motor Many
EXTRAS. Rocket Trailer

8)188___________________ 122 4555
Fiberglass Bass Baal. F u lly
•quipped.1977 55 HP Evenrude
Completely rebuilt. 1985 Calve
nlied drive on trailer
Call 121 8001 anytime

Baby Beds. Strollers. Carseats.
P la y p tn s . E tc . Paperback
8. I l l 8577 - 111 9588

GOLD OIGOERS. TWO

•

Now buying scrap gold and silver
and precious gems Also Estates
and antiques We make house
calls Call 871 1754 or come to
booth 74 Sanlord Flea World
Paying CASH lor Aluminum. Cans.
Copper. Brass. Lead Newspa
per. Glass. Gold. Silver
Kokomo Tool. 911W 1st
8 5 00 Sat 9 1 575 HOP
WE BUY A N TIQ U E S
F U R N ITU R E A A P P LIA N C E S
571 71aO

223— Miscellaneous
A C 54 000 B TU . heal A cool 5150
M In electric range 175
__________Call 575 1167___________
For Salt Wedding gown site 7
Original price SS00. asking 1300
372 7129 alter 4 30______________
Rutfeutpm*
111. 4&gt;A 4i8
____________ 834 1025___________
Used Wot k Shoes 53 99 Pr
AR M Y. NAVY SURPLUS
310 Sanlord Ave___________ 377 5791
You Can Slay At Home and Go lo
Town with Evening Herald Want
Ads Place your Low cos!
Classified Ad between 8 00 5 30
372 3811

231-Cars
Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
NoCredilCheck Easy Terms
NATIO N AL A U T O SALES
1120 S Sanlord Ave
331 4075
C H R Y S L E R C O R D O B A ’ 78 7
Door. A/C. P/S. AM FM . auto.
13.495 5 Point Auto Sales. 477 oil
Hwy 17 92 Callb*lore4 373 1449
Oebary Auto A Marine Sales
across the river lop ol hill 174
Hwy 17 92 Oebary 448 8548
DODGE OMNI ’79. 4 Door A/C
AM/FM. P/S. 4 speed 17.495 5
Point Auto Sales. 427 olt 17 92
Call before 4. m 1*49

D O D O f V O LA R E '77. 7 Door
auto Pi'S. AM F M cassette
It 195 5 Point Auto Sales. 477 off
17 92 Call before 6 373 U 9 9 ____

WANTED GOOD USED CARS
« Cell Jack Martin 373 ?900«
WE F IN A N C E I!
77 Toyota
OK Corral Used Cars 323 tflt
1971 Ford F ISO 4«4 Pick up Short
bed Needs body work Runs real
strong 11350 Cash
Hurry! Hurry I Hurry I
1)4 4401 or 339 9108
1910 Toyota Corolla 5 speed,
manual AM FM AC Good con
dition U30C Firm Call 323 6442
‘75 Chevy Monle Carlo PS PB air
conditioning AT. new pamt Call
377 1239 alter 4 p m ____________

’ 77

F o rd F t o o p ic k u p 3 0 2
Hydromatlc. P/S. P B AM FM 1
track, rust proof and a topper
82 400 323 4S35
__________
71 Marda GLC 4 door hatch back,
must Mil 5MOO or best otter
321 6000 between • and 6 ask tor

B«b. Attff 6.321 0738.__________
'79 PONTIAC SUNBIRO. SSOOOO
down takes over payments at
8)77 71 or t3 SOOcash 327 1233
'10 Volkswagon Rabbit, fuel ln|e&lt;
lion. air. radio, excellent condi
tlon 83.500 firm Ask tor Bill or
Barb, day or night 323 537*
13 Toyota 4W/D Pickup w/camper
AC. AM/FM. stereo w/tap* deck
Tinted windows 322 7474

235— Trucks/
Buses/ Vans
1*74 Ford F 750 Ranger. X LT,
camper special AC PB PS.
dual gas tanks, good cond 52500
OBO Alt 6 30 PM 371 5*14____
1977 CM C 5-15. V 8. auto
topper. good condition 83.250
____________ 373 4535_____________
1912 G M C S 15 P ick u p with
fiberglass camper top. 4 cyl.
auto, air P B P/S. AM/FM.
Sharps? 800 22) *445or 111 5144

239— Motorcycles/Bikes
For salt. Puch Moped very good
cond Reasonable Call alter 4
P M. jjV UI44Kawasaka ’80 KZ 554 k trk tr
header 5300 and fake over
payments Mark 377 0943

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

WANTED TRAVEL TRAILERS.
« Call Jack Martin 333 2900*
1980Chev Van’Camper P 5 . P B ,
77 000Miles E «cetl*n! Condition
___________ 345 5858
__ ______
31 C LEA N USED R V S
R .V .1 A L E !
HWY 44
NEW SMYRNA
____________ I 415 8171

243-Junk Cars
BUY JU N K C A R S A TR U C K S
F rom H0 to 150or more
Call 373 U U 37J 4317
TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk L Lived
cart, t r u e 4 heavy equipment
_
w 5 * * ) _________
WE P AY TO P D O LLA R FOR
JU N K CARS AND TRUCKS
CBS A U TO PARTS *14505

©BMW*

Prestige imports

First Time Offered Prices

$0095

Month

This Weekend Only
Because Of Exceptional
Low Prices We Cannot
Repeat This Offer.

Month

All Cars Come With 30 Day 50 / 50 Warranty. Payments Starting As Low As 599.95 Month (36 Months,
18.9 A.P.R., 25% Down, S3598.20 Total) Depending On Down Payment, Term, With Approved Credit

$

2995 ‘3995 ‘4995 ‘5995

7 9 Renault, A/C Stereo, Nice Car
7 7 Monte Carlo Landau, With All The Toys
7 7 Chevrolet Nova Concourse, Don’t
M iss This Deal.
7 8 Chevrolet Malibu, 2 Dr., Auto A/C
7 9 V.W. Rabbit, 4 Dr., Standard Trans., A/C

7 6 Dodge Custom Van, Nice
7 8 Chevrolet Camaro, Auto. A/C, Sporty
7 8 Ford Thunderbird, Jado Green, Super
Sharp
’80 Pontiac Sunbird, Sharp
7 9 Mercury Capri, Auto., A/C, Sharp

7 7 Cadillac Sodan Daville, Loaded,
Luxurious
7 8 V.W. Convertible, Great Shape!!
’80 Dodge Omni, 4 Dr., 1 Owner

’83 Chevrolet Chevette
’S i Jttp CJ7 W/Soft Tup
’82 Honda Civic Wagon, Uko Now
’B2 Toyota SR5
’S3 Toyota Corolla

7 9 Chevrolet Ekandno, Auto., A/C, Super
Track

FLORIDA
2913 ORLANDO DRIVE■RT. l7-92-O R LA N D O :83l-l660 SANFORD: 323-6)00
OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 9-8 • SATURDAY. 9-5 • SUNDAY. 12-5

t

�*****

IOA-Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Feb. 3, 1t»4

by Chic Young
^ W E L L , I C A N 'T
S L E E P ... L E T 'S _
S TA R T ONE

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

by Mort Walker

...BUT I'M ALMOST
CERTAIN YOU'RE
NOT SUPPOSE?
TO POUR
RUM CAKE

ACROSS

44 Entertainment
Answer, to Previous Puttie
group (ebbr)
T A s K
1 Jest
47 Kind oi bread 57 M A
0 O t
E
E E
5 Resign
48 Overwhelmed
O C S
E r T E
9 Greek letter
51 Old Testament
s K C C T
s R
12 Persuade
book
R ( V
s
13 Soviet Union 55 Bring into
Q lIU A R R i l
libbr)
play
14 Auto workers' 56 Copperfield s
union (abbr)
wife
15 Vast period ol 58 March
time
59 Article
16 Being (let)
60 Grating
17 Compass
61 Paradise
point
62 Make lace
18 Sewing
63 Perceive
implement
1 0 ____ Solo
41 Ctntir
64 Renovate
20 In case not
1 1 1s indebted to 43 Tit
22 Actor Wallach
DOW N
19 Additions to 45 Marsh plant
23 Greek eight
houses
46 Smtlli
24 Corsets
1 Campus area 21 Research
48 Cur
28 Coffin stand
2 Animal waste
room
32 Deer
chemical
49 Safety agency
24 Grisly
3 Composer
33 Compass
(abbr |
25 Jot
point
.
Stravinsky
26 Relai
50 Red root
34 Enst
Caged
27 Feudal
vegetable
35 It is (contr)
Questions
peasant
36 Fled
Navy ship
52 Conceal
39 Time period
prefn (ebbr) 29 Metric foot
53 Squeezed out
(ebbr)
Point tt stake 30 Great Like
54 City on the
31 Split
River in
40 Arithmetic, for
Truckee
Short
37 At this time
England
57 Teer
42 Truck
38 Negatives
Norse letter
1

2

3

4

5

12

6

7

8

9

13

14

16

17

10

11

i
15
18

T H E B O RN L O SE R

19

by Art Sansom

22
24

25

27

28

33

35
41
44
49

29

30

31

34
36

40

48

21

23

26

32

A R C H IE

20

37

42

38

39
43

45

47

50

SI

52

55

56

59

60

61

82

63

64

57

53

54

58

by Bob Montana

HOROSCOPE
What The Day Will Bring ...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
FEBRUARY 4. 1984

E E K &amp; M EEK

by Howie Schneider

WOWJ ARE-...QOJT TELL ME,.
I'LL GET IT..HOWJ ARE..

M R . M E N A N D L IT T L E M IS S
Cl *8*8"eyMiw » •( to**1*
D.»»«»a*n,to a*«

■ ■ ■■

VOU !

HOW ARE VOU?
VttAL HAVE TO FCRSIVE
ME... I'M TERRIBLE WITH

by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers

I

l^ A R E Y O U

THE WORLD'S
.STRONGEST MAN P

BUGS BUNNY

by Stolfel &amp; Heimdahl

"D O 3ASS5NOR S X b X X J J l'STAP£NY
5A5T ENOJSH 'TD SAT
FASTEST
POOP in a l l a i e x i CO.

An old friend from the
past w h o p r e v i o u s l y
played an Important role
In your career will enter
your life again this coming
year. You'll both pick up
where vou left ofT.
AQUARIUS (Ja n . 20Fcb. 19) Although you
may be Inclined to do
things the hard way today,
chances arc you'll •till do
them properly — but why
make things so difficult?
Major changes are In store
for Aquarians In the com­
ing year. Send for your
year-ahead pred ictio n s
today. Mall $1 to AstroGraph. Box 489. Radio
City Station. N.Y. 10019.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) Anyone who comes to
you for advice today will
put great stock In what
you have to say. so don't
offer youKopinions lightly.
Think before v'o’ft speak.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) If you hope lo enhance
your image with contem­
poraries today, you must
let your word be your
bond. Fortunately, this
will be your Inclination.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) The types of compa­
nions you're apt to find
most enjoyable today will
be old friends with whom
you can frankly discuss
your true feelings.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) Your ambitious urges
will be easily stimulated
today. Furthermore, you'll
be able to spot advan­
tageous situations and
know how to utilize them.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) You tend to shine In
situations today where
you may be called upon to

bring order out of chaos.
Use your skills If they arc
required.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22)
Be tenacious In your en­
deavors today, because
you have a remarkable
amount of reserve upon
which to draw. Play to win
and you will.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) Carefully screen pro­
posals offered you today.
There's a chance they may
contain advantageous el­
ements suited for you but
not for others.

Implanting Lenses
Considered Low Risk
DEAR DR. LAM B - I’ve
been told I need to have
my cataracts removed. I'm
only 57. so my eyesight Is
very Important to me. The
doctor has recommended
Implants, but I'm a little
frightened because I've
heard Implants may not
work or may cause other
complications. I'd like to
know how safe Implanted
lenses arc and If there Is
any reason I shouldn't
have an Implant.
DEAR READER - You
arc a little young for Im ­
plants. according to the
Food and D r u g A d ­
m in istra tio n . T h e y re­
commend that lenses be
reserved for people older
than 60. However, some
ophthalmologists disagree
and believe there Is no
arbitrary age at which an
Implant can be used.
E a c h case m u s t be
Judged on an Individual
basis. If you have other
eye diseases, a cataract
operation may not really
help. In other cases. It can
almost be a miracle.
Al this point tn research,
the risk Involved in im ­
plants Is low. More than 70
percent of cataract opera­
tions In the United States
today Include implanting a
lens.
A n o t h e r o p t i o n Is
ext ended- wear contact
lenses. Many of these can
be used for long periods,
making It much easier for
the patient. As this tech­
nique develops further. It's
not Inconceivable lhal
contact lenses may be
worn for months at a time.
T o give you a more
complete understanding of
cataracts. I'm sending you
The Health Letter 13-6.
Your Cataracts Arc Coin­
ing.
DEAR DR. LAM B - I
Just returned from a trip lo
Florida and have a very
nice tan. My friend and I
decided lo spill the cost of

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Whether you're with a
young group or an older
one you'll be the catalyst
today w h ic h can help
spark a good time for all.
SAOITTARIU8 (N ov.
2 3 - D e c . 2 1 ) Pe r sonal
benefits may come your
way today without your
h a v in g to expend too
m u ch effort. How ever,
don't use this as an excuse
to coast.

CAP RI CORN (Dec.
22-Jan. 19) Beware of a
tendency to misread the
Intentions of others. Before
making a Judgment, watt
until all the facts arc In.

How safe arc these tan­
ning booths? I'm a little
skeptical about artificial
sun.
D EA R READER - From
a practical point of view,
consider tanning booths as
c o n tin u a l exposur e to
s u n l i g h t . C h r o n i c or
excess sunrays can be
d a m a gin g to skin and
cause premature aging of
skin.
There arc two types of
ultraviolet light that cause
tanning. U V - A are the
longer ultraviolet rays and
U V -B are the shorter ones.
The UV -B rays are largely
responsible for sunburns
and that is why it's some­
times called the "sunburn
r a y . " Many tanning
booths are said to use
UV -A. It's probably true
that you are less likely to
have skin damage with
UV - A . but there Is no
guarantee It won't cause
s k i n

d a m

a g e .

Ask yourself If you want
c h ro n ic sun exposure.
How damaging h might be
depends a lot on your
specific skin type. If you
have a reasonably dark
complexion or tan easily, a
moderate amount may not
be harm ful. Otherwise,
chronic exposure to ultra­
violet radiation will speed
up the aging process of
your skin.

Send your questions to
Dr. Lamb. P.O. Box 1551,
Radio Q ty Station. New
York. N.Y. 10019.

WIN AT BRIDGE
his partner's ju m p to three

NORTH
4A

V K7 5

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.
23) Be on your toes today,
whether you arc buying or
sel l ing, because you
should be able to rack up a
p rofit. H o w e ve r, d o n 't
expect a killing.

a tanning booth lo keep
our tans for the rest of the
winter until the spring and
sun return.

♦ Q 10 6 4 3
41543

WEST
EAST
4 Q9 7 1 J
41085
VJ10I 43
VQOi
♦•••
8J987
41008
4QJ2
SOUTH
4KJ63
VA3

♦ AK5 !
4 A K7
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer. South

West

Norik Eatl

South

I'au
Pan

!♦
58
68

4 NT
5 NT
Pass

Pan

P ut

14
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: VJ

By Oswald Jacoby
and Jamea Jacoby
Waldcmar von Zcdtwltz
Is 87 years young. Bad
eyesight keeps him from
p l a y i n g In b r i d g e
tournaments but It has not
dulled his keen Interest In
the game.
He knows all the tricks
of the trade, as may be
seen from this defense he
put up some 45 years ago.
South thought of seven
but settled for six. since

diamonds showed a good
hand but was nut forcing.
He won the heart tn hts
own hand, cashed his ace
of diamonds and got the
bad news about trumps.
He had to find some way
to avoid a club loser or.
falling that, to end play
East In clubs. He led a
spade to dum m y's ace and
a club toward Ills hand.
Waldy knew that his Q -J
of clubs might catch him
In an end play, so he
contributed hlsjack.
Declarer played swiftly
to a five-card ending In
which dum m y held Q-10-6
of diamonds and 8-5 of
clubs. W aldy. who had
followed suit, held J-9 -8 of
d i a m o n d s a n d Q - 2 of
clubs. South held K-5 of
diamonds. Jack of spades
and K-7 of clubs. Now
South led Ills spade Jack
and ruffed with dum m y's
queen of trumps.
Waldy underruffed with
the eight of trumps, the
only play to defeat the
slam. A club was played
from dum m y, and Waldy
played his queen. South
won with hts king and led
Ills last club.
West was In with the 10
and. what ever he led,
Waldy was sure to collect
a trump trick.

by Jim Davis

■
»&gt;*V8i|l#

�S T A T E OF F L O R ID A
D E P A R T M E N T OF S T A T E
Dlvltlon of Archlvat, Hlttory and
Racordt Man«o*m»nt
O S-R M 417 (Rav. 8-761

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                    <text>E v e n in g H e r a ld
77lh V , . , . No 33, t n u r w y . « o * 23. m 5 - S . " &lt; « d . F lo r . C

1

E

««' * " &gt;

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&lt; ^ PS

*

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-

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»

C' " ' 5

Russo Wants Travel Expenses For Defenders

J . R . R u a io

B y D eane J o rd a n
H e ra ld S t a ff W r ite r
T h e p u b lic d e fe n d e r o f
Sem inole and Brevard counties
w ill urge h is fe llo w p u b lic
defenders In Tallahassee today
to support proposed legislation
ih a t w ou ld force counties to
p ick up the trave l expense tab
of p u b lic defenders
Jam es Russo, scheduled to
speak befo re the b oa rd o f
d ire cto r o f the Florida PublicDefenders' Association, said h r
w ill discuss a recent ru lin g by
i h r 5 th D is tric t C ourt o f A p ­

peals s ta tin g th a t Sem inole
C ounty does not have to pay
•9 5 5 In tra ve l expenses his
o ffic e in c u rr e d d u r in g the
preparation o f a Casselberry
m u rde r suspect s defense.
The ru lin g m ay affect the
fu n d in g o f p u b lic defenders'
offices th ro ug h ou t Florida and
Is the first such ru lin g regard*
lo g p u b lic d e fe n d e r tra v e l
expenses. Some counties In
Florida pay such bills, some do
not.
The h ig h c o u rt said the
co u n ty does noi have to re im ­

School
Buses
'Safe'
B y R ic h a rd T r u e t t
H e ra ld S t a f f W r it e r
" I f the buses were unsafe, they
w o u ld n 't be on the ro a d .'' said
Sem inole C ou nty schools' tra n s­
p o rta tio n s u p e rv is o r R ich a rd
Wells.
W ells was responding to a
television sta tio n 's report that
several Sem inole C o u n ty school
bus d rive rs co m plained buses
were unsafe
T he charges w ere p robably
made by d rive rs w ho d id not
receive one o f the 19 new buses
the co u n ty delivered th is year,
he said.
W ells said each bus receives
I wo 2 3 -llc m checks each day by
d rive rs and. as re q u lrrd by state
law . com plete m echanical e xa m ­
in a tio n s once a m o n th . These

the r o u n tle s w ill I k - fo r r r d to
p ro vid e th e legal defense fo r
poor d e fe n d a n ts

The $955 b ill was Incurred
by a p u b lic d e fe n d e r and
tra n sla to r w ho w rn t to Puerto
Rico w h ile p reparing (he case
• &gt;f Jose Padilla 36 of 109
Balboa C ou rt. Sanford Padilla
subsequently pleaded g u ilty to
m urde r and was sentenced to
life
The h ig h co urt ru lin g w ill
not have any Im m ediate legal
Im pact statew ide, according to
one state spokesman, and w ill

C ro o m s

T o

o n ly affect countles in the 5ih
D i s t r i c t w h ic h In c lu d e
S e m in o le . O ra n g e . V o lu s ia .
B r e v a r d . L a k e . O s c e o la .
Flagler. P utnam . Si. Johns.
M arlon . S um ter. C itru s and
H ernando couni les
M e m b e rs o l th e F lo r id a
P ublic Defenders' Association
are concerned a tx iu l the ru lin g
and support a b ill lo change
i he law fn rrln g co un ties pay
such expense’s, according to
the o rg a n is a tio n 's president.
Michael Allen
See RUSSO, page BA

P r o v id e

R e m e d ia l E d u c a tio n

H*f«w r *»*0 St IWSsrS Trwtl

Chief m echanic Al R iv e ra Inspects a bus a fte r repairs made
by another mechanic at the Seminole County bus garage,
Tlm ocuan W ay, Longwood. Each school bus Is Inspected
once a m onth by m echanics.

In v o lv e B 4 p o in ts o f In s p s c iio n .

■ b in s a r o u n d t h e c lo c k r e p a ir in g

b y d r iv in g a n u n s a fe v e h ic le .'*

In a d d itio n , the h ig h w a y patrol
Inspects the buses once a year,
h r said.
T h e tr a n s p o r ta tio n d e p a rt­
m e n t has u • 5 m illio n d o lla r a
year budget and 3 00 em ployees
lo m a in ta in 2 15 buses.
T w o weeks ago the co u n ty
loo k possession o f 19 new buses
ul a cost o f $ 2 0 ,5 0 0 each W ells
said the the new buses are diesel
m odels and were assigned to the
d rive rs w ith the longest routes
because diesel buses get better
m ileage, about a bo ut 8-9 m iles
per gallon.
T r a n s p o r ta tio n d e p a rtm e n t
m a in te n a n c e c re w s w o rk In

(he buses.
If a p ro ble m does develop w ith
a bus. It is the d rive rs d u ty to
report It. W ells said. "T h e re are
no unsafe buses on the road to
m y kn o w le d g e ." he said.
WCPX T V C hannel 6 re|Kirted
M o n d a y s e v e ru l d riv e rs had
c o in p lu ln rd about unsafe buses
W ednesday at Sem inole H igh
School. Five bus drivers w ith 75
years c u m u la tiv e d riv in g e x p e ri­
ence. w ho refused to be Id en ­
tifie d . sa id W ednesday th e ir
buses are safe and alw ays have
been. One d riv e r s a id ."A d riv e r
Is not going lo jeopardize h is life,
or the stu d e n ts' for that m a tte r.

A nother d riv e r said that the
d riv e rs w ho com p la ine d are from
the south end o f the co u n ty "and
Ih e v 'rr crazy. These buses are In
decent repair he m ild ."
The average school bus In
Sem inole C o u n ty n ic k s up about
10.000 m iles per year. W ells
mild Some o f them are more
than 10 years old. If a d riv e r
com plains about It tirin g In need
o f rrp u lr. he said, a jtir r h u n lr
checks It. fixes II and then a
c h ie f m e c h a n ic in sp e cts the
work.
" I f the buses were unsafe, they
w o u ld n 't be on (he roa d." W ells
said

Bus Driver's Actions Probed
B y S u san L o d e n
H e ra ld S t a f f W r it e r
A Sem inole C o u n ty achool bus
d riv e r Is under in ve stig a tio n by
school bourd
tra n s p o rta tio n
n lllctala u fle r allegedly p u n ish in g
e le m e n ta ry sc h o o l rid e rs by
p a rkin g and o rd e rin g them to
c lo s e l i u i w i n d o w s In
9 0 - d e g r c e - p lu s h e a l fo r 15
m in u te s W ednesday. The bus
d riv e r today denied the allega­
tio n
Parents o f Keel It E lem entary
School ch ild re n rid in g bus *1 0 9
have utleged to deputies and to
R ic h a rd W e lls, head o f the
c o u n ty 's school tra n sp o rta tio n
department, tbal th e d riv e r
parked the bus along side stale
Road 419 In W ln lr r Springs, al
about 3 05 p m
Eight-year-old K u su m L yn n , ol
224 Oak Road. W iu ie i Springs.

burse Russo s office because
the ira v e l expenses were part
o f the cost o f ope ra ting the
office. The co urt said state
a tto rn e y s ' offices budget for
tra v e l expenses and the p u b lic
defenders' offices should do so
too.
Russo, however, said th a t
u n lik e state a tto rn e y offices,
i he p u b lic defenders do not
budget for travel expenses, and
the futlure of counties to p ick
u p s u c h co sts c o u ld force
p u b lic defenders to d ro p co stly
cases. If that happens, h r said.

lo ld her father. David W. L y n n .
3 7 . t h a t th e d r iv e r . D ia n e
McGough. o f Geneva, ordered
ih e c h ild re n lu r o ll u p th e
w indow s o f the bus. a s h e riff's
report said.
A cco rd in g to Ihe report Mrs.
M cG ough said "Y o u a ll are
going lo fr y ." und ih r bus was
allegedly parked w ith the w in ­
dow s closed lo r 15 m inutes.
L y n n said h is daughter a rrive d
home from school 22 m in u te s
late Wednesday. She was soak­
ing wet and her lace was red
I rum the heat, * These are five,
six. seven, eight-year o ld k id s ."
he said, "n o t a bunch o f ro w d y
teenagers "
L y n n q u e s tio n e d a b o u t a
d o z rn o f the c h ild re n before
ie|K&gt;rtlng ihe Incident, he said,
and said he got the same sto ry
Irnm a ll The c h ild re n he said.

were recklessly ru d a n g rrrd If
not ubused by ihe d riv e r's aci iu ii and II o lftn .ils don 't m i on
w hal he considers lo be a serious
violation o f a u th o rlly he w ill
have charges filed o r w ill file suit
against Mrs Mi G ough
W ells said aboul three parents
have com plained lo h im about
Ihe action o f Mrs McGough. who
lias been a d riv e r lor aboul tw o
vears
Mrs McGough 41 confirm ed
she did slop the bus and after a
10 m in u te w ait w ith th r w in ­
dows s till open she said, the
c h il d r e n b e g a n y e ll i n g a t
.m other passing school bus. She
ordered Ihe w ind ow s dosed and
they rem ained closed, except for
th re e w in d o w s ih e c h ild re n
c o u ld n 't sh ut, fur ih n -r lo five
m in u lcs. she said
Bee D R IV E R , page BA

B y R ic h a rd T r u e t t
H e ra ld S ta ff W r it e r
The Seminole C o u n ty School
Board voted 3-1 W ednesday to
m ake the Croom s H ig h School
fa c ility an a lterna tive education
center for the c o u n ty 's troubled
v o u lh .
Croom s. w hich Is In need of
•4 8 5 .3 2 2 in repairs. Is slated to
open in the 1986 87 school year
(Misslbly under Its o rig in a l name
— C room s Academ y.
A bout 75 people. In c lu d in g
several prom inent bla ck leaders,
(am m ed Into the school board’s
M ay 16 w ork session to urge
S uperintendent Robert Hughes
lo m a k e C ro o m s a m id d le
school. At Wednesday n ig h t's
m eeting, no one protestetl the
decision
Croom s Is th ird on the school
h o a rd 's 44-Item p rio rity lis t of
c o n s tru c tio n projects.
Hughes suld that even though
th e achool Is In n e e d o f re p a ir ,
some program s could get started
la-lore co nstructio n begins.
A lth ou g h no c u rric u lu m has
lieen established vet for Crooms.
a com m ittee has been set up to
design one. M arlon G ta n n ln l.

assistant superintendent fo r in ­
s tru c tio n a l services, said th a t
ih r state has guidelines and
procedures for ih ls special type
ol school w h ic h w ill be used In
setting up the c u rric u lu m .
A w orkshop session Is sched­
uled be held u l 1 p m. on J u n e
12 to discuss c u rric u lu m fo r the
school w h ic h w ill house students
In grades 6-12.
B e n n y A r n o ld , a s s is t a n t
superlntedent for tran sp o rta tio n
and fa c ilitie s , said before re­
novation can begin, an a rch itect
m ust draw up plans and then
bids have lo be solicited A rn o ld
.i Imi suld there is no m oney In
I he budget rig h t now and It
would p robably lie Septem ber
la-fore the fin a n cin g and c o n ­
st ru c tio n design process begins.
The school board decision on
ihe a lte rn a tiv e school o p tio n
gives stu de nts throughout Ihe
co u n ty w ho are having tro u b le
a d ju s tin g to regular schools, k id s
w ith a c a d e m ic p ro b le m s , a
chance for sm aller liu s s rs . more
In d iv id u a l co un seling , and u
different c u rric u lu m . In c lu d in g
m uch vocational (raining
H u g h e s s a id t h r te rm " a

Sanford To Host Parade

M e m o ria l Day O bservances Set
S a nford veterans o rg a n iz a tio n s w ill honor
servicem en w ho have -given th e ir lives In Ihe
n a tio n 's wars w ith M em orial Day cerem onies al
11 a m on the tra d itio n a l dale o f May 30.
A M em orial Day observance w ill be h rld
M onday al A ll F aith s C em etery In C ussclberry
w ith local and area veterans groups p a rtic ip a tin g
T he gates w ill be closed p ro m p tly al 10 a m . and
the event Is open lo the p ublic.
In Sanford a parade w ill move from the First
Federal of Sem inole C o u n ty b u ild in g east o n F irst
S tre rt to Park Avenue and n o rth lo S anford's
V eterans M em orial Park on the lakefront for the
p a lrlo llc program
The event w ill be sponsored by the Disabled
A m e rican Veterans S em inole C hapter 30. the B.
D uke W oody C h a p te r o f the Fleet Reserve
Association, the A m vets. the Veterans o f Foreign
W ars, and A m erican Legion Post 53.
The com m anders — F rank M Stabile. DAV.
Ray Pounds. FRA. Jam es M elton. Am vets: Carlos
Raines. VFW . und K e rm lt Roberts. A m e rican
L e g io n — w ill place a w re ath at the base of the flag
pole.
Sem inole C ounty SherlfT J o h n ta lk w ill d eliver
th r M em orial Day message and Alec B la ir. IO th
D is tric t C haplain fo r the Disabled A m erican
Veterans, w ill be m aster o f ceremonies.
S a n fo rd M ayor B e lly e S m ith w ill give a
w elcom e on the b ehalf o f the c ity
T h r Invocation and benediction w ill be given by
.Navy C haplain W illia m J . Boyer, pastor o f Grace

TO DAY
Action R e p o rts .....3A
Bridge ....................7B
C a le n d a r................. 3A
C la ssifie d s...........4,SB
C om ics.....................2B
C ro ssw ord .............. 2B
Dear A b b y .............. 3B
D r G o t!................... 2B

Moslems Attack Palestinian Camps
kille d, but the report could not he
independently confirm ed
At least 126 people have been
k ille d and 840 others w ounded since
ih r b a ilie for Ihe cam ps began, but
hospital and police sources said the
m ils were not co m p le ti­
on Ihe C h ristia n eastern side o f the
ca pita l, rescue w orkers searched for
m ore v ic tim s of a car bom b that
e x p lo d e d W ednesday and h u rle d
fire b a lls dow n a c ro w d e d street,
k illin g at least 36 people, leaving 23
m issin g and w ou n d in g some 200
oi hers.
i
Red Cross o fficials said Ihe n ig h t­
long search had fulled to locale the
m issin g There were no Im m ediate
«(aim s o f resp on sibility fo r the s tu c k .
* One o f those w ounded died d u rin g
the n ig h t, th u s ra isin g the confirm ed

United M ethodist C hurch. Irv in g Leary. DAV. w ill
lead Ihe pledge o f allegiance to t h r flag Bud
T obin o f the 4 0 A 8 w ill read a m em orial poem.
The m usic w ill be provided by the Seminole
H igh S c h o o l B and u n d e r th e d ir e c tio n o f
Bandm aster Dob McGuire. Soloists w ill be J u lie
K ellner and D AV A u x ilia ry C om m ander Patty
T rip p J im K e lln e r w ill play Tups
T h r F lorida A rm y National G uard Co II I2 4 lh
In fa ntry w ill p rovide an honor guard und DAV
Chapter 30 w ill provide the color guard
In C asselberry. Keynote speaker w ill Ik - Richard
D Adanczyk. program developm ent manager of
G r o u n d C o b u l S y s te m s . M a r t in - M a r ie t t a
Aerospace. O rlando. Casselberry M ayor Charles
If Glascock w ill Ik - master of cerem onies Mark
P a nter. v ic e p re sid e n t o f B a ld w ln -F u lrc h lld
Funeral Hom es, w ill welcome the p a rticip a tin g
veterans groups and guests.
S e c H o lid a y , page BA

Deaths...................8A

C a r B o m b D e a t h T o ll 3 6

BEIRUT. Lebanon |UPII — Shiite
M o sle m A m u l m ilit ia s p u n c h e d
th ro u g h tw o P a le s tin ia n refugee
cam ps today, ro u n d in g up hundreds
of men as wom en and ch ild re n fled
the onslaught, p o lle r and witnesses
said.
O th rr Am ul u n its , tracked by a
barrage o f ligh t a rtille ry und m ortar
fire from S hiite u n its ol the Lebanese
a rm y , la u n c h e d a d u w n a tta c k
ugulnsi a th ird Palestinian refugee
cam p s till h o ld in g out despite re­
peated assaults since Sunday n lg hl.
m ilitia sources said
• Palestinian sources said u n its o f
A m a l, L e b a n o n s m o st p o w e rfu l
m ilitia , entered Ih r Ghaza hospital In
the Sabra ca m p and arrested 70
w o u n d e d P a le s tin ia n s
Som e
Palestinian sources said the 70 were

school of a lte rn a tiv e e du catio n"
has not lieen d efined yel but II Is
bv no means a negative term "
H ughes said th e school w ill
house d is in te re s te d s tu d e n ts
w ho are having l rouble a d ju s t­
in g lo regulat h ig h schools, 'll
w ill not I k* a d ru g c e n te r." he
suld
Karen C olem an, a spokesman
lo r the school Im urd. said Ihe
IsM rd w ill begin a d v e rtis in g for a
princip al before i lasses In-gln In
1986
F o r m e r p r I n c I p u I E I,.
Blacksheare and caretaker of ihe
lu c lllly w hich serves as a slle lo r
in service teacher tra in in g and
houses the S antord G ym nastics
A sso ciatio n, said th a t If the
M iio o l hoard w a u le d h im lo sluy
. h i lie w ou ld How ever, he said.
" I d o n 't w ant lo im p ly in any
way I want to I k - p rin c ip a l."
('room s Academ y ojiened In
1926 and was an till black school
w ith grades 4-12 u n til I9 6 0
when a w h ile teacher from New
Vu(k laugh! (here In 1970 a
federal court ordered (.'rooms to
Integrate and house Jusl n in th
grade students w h ic h It did u n til
1983 when Ihe n iu lh grade was
moved lo Sem inole H igh SchiN&gt;l

death list to 36. We have n o th in g on
i In- m is s in g ." a R rd ('to s s o fficia l
said
Funeral ceremonies were sched­
uled today at a c h u rrh o n ly tw o
blocks away from the street in the
te rm in g east Beirut neighborhood of
Sin El Fit. where the 440 pound
iMimb concealed In a car exploded
Wednesday.
P ro -S y ria n P a le stin ia n gun ne rs,
entrenched In the Moslem D ru zr-h eld
m o u n ta in s east o f B e iru t, responded
lu Ih r A m u l.a d v a n c r w ith a fresh
ro u n d o f m issile and lon g-ran ge
a rtille r y In a bid lo relieve the
pressure on th e ir beslegrd comrades.
Police and Moslem ow ned radio
sta tion s reported at least tw o salvos
o f 36 S oviet-m ade G rad m issiles
i rashed In to the perim e ter o f the

B o u rj'U a ru jn e h t am p O ther rockets
le ll lu several nearby re s id e n tia l
neighbor hoods.
The ca m p was the o nly one c o n ti­
nuing to resist Am al. w h ic h has
blam ed the fig h tin g on w hat It says
are the Palestinians' plans lo reassert
th e ir c o n tro l over southern Lebanon
fo llo w in g the com pletion o f the Israeli
w ith d ra w a l.
A m a l fig h te rs storm ed In to the
sm aller Sabra and Shattla cam ps —
where hundreds o f Palestinians were
massacred by C h rls tU n m tlltU m e n In
1982 — late Wednesday a fte r 72
Itours o f fierce fig h tin g
H a rd lin e Palestinian leader Abu
Mousa. in a statem ent reported by
the p ro-S yrian newspaper A l ShMrq
today, said h ig m en shelled the A m a l

Bee MOSLEMS, page 8A

E d ito r ia l.......
Horoscope
H o s p ita l.......
N ation
People
Sports
Television
Weather

2A

3A

Cabbage Patch Custody Fight
JEFFER SO N VILLE. Ind. |U P I| - Ii was the
M istody case o f Ihe Cabbage p atch kid. and
Ih r c o u rtro o m was packed w ith fascinated
th ird graders
Sm all c la im s co uri al a so uth ern Indiana
c o u rth o u s e was the s u s p r n s r fu l scene
lu r s d a y o f the custody b uttle o v rr Ihe doll
A th ird grade class lo u rin g ihe courthouse
derided to stay lo r Ihe action.
'll w as Interesting, but a little- w e ird ."
C lark C o u n ty Judge Steve Fleece Fleece said
as he review ed the docum ents filed In Ihe
case. In c lu d in g Ihe d o ll'• "a d o p tIo n papers."
H arold Ezell o f Jeffersonville successfully
argued th a t he was ihe rig h tfu l ow ner of
Margo D olo re s." having In he rite d II when
his m o th e r died Ills s is irr In law. Marie
Ezell o f C la rksville , had argued Ihe doll was
hers because she had given It lo her late
m oth er-in -la w and now had possession of It.
H arold Ezell w eni to c o u rt w hen hls
g ta n d d a u g h le r said she w anted Ihe doll
The d o ll was re lu m e d after Fleece's ru lin g

�1 A -E v « n !0 9 H erald. S anlord, FI.

T hursd ay, M a y 13, IMS

5 . Florida Ablaze

NATION

‘There's No Rest For The Weary Or The Wicked’
F O R T M Y E R S (U P I I F ire lig h te rs m astered a huge
h la /r that destroyed thousands
o f urres In the Everglades, b ut
d ry lig h tn in g sparked dozens o f
new fires th ro u g h o u t southern
Florida.
Weary fire fig h te rs from Lake­
land lo M iam i p o sird lig h tn in g
watches W ednesday night as
bolls o f e le c tric ity touched o ff
tires In ihe d ry brush Muchneeded rain, however, did not
accom pany Ihe lig h tn in g
When ll h its, there's enough
fieat and energy to ligh t d ry fuels
like leaves." forest ranger Al
Sim m ons said
" I t can even

IN BRIEF
Officials Urge Delay
In TMI Restart Vote
WASHINGTON (UPI) - T h r N uclear H rg u la to ry C om ­
m ission. m oving tow ard a final vote next week on the
restart of Three Mile Island's undam aged reactor, has ru n
In to strong opp osition from Pennsylvania s governor and
senators.
Before an em o tion al audience o f people w ho live near the
p la n t. Gov. D ick T h o rn b u rg h and Sens. A rlen Specter and
Jo h n Heinz urged the panel W ednesday to delay Its
scheduled vote so m ore hearings can be held on safety
Issues.
The three officials, jo ln rd by tw o o the r Pennsylvania
congressmen, to ld the com m ission too m any unanswered
questions rem ain about the competence and In te grity o f
plant operator General Public U tilitie s Corp. to proceed
w ith the restart vole May 29
OPU pleaded g u ilty last year to c rim in a l charges for
fa lsifyin g d o cu m e n t* concerning w ater leak rate* from
Three Mile Island reactor cooling system s It Is the o n ly
u tility ever convicted of violating federal nuclear safety
lawa.
The unresolved Issues, they said, exacerbated the fears o f
Pennsylvanians s till traum atized by the March 1979
accident at TM I * U nit No 2 reactor. The NHC shut dow n
the undamaged U nit No. I Im m ediately after the a e d d rn t
and It ha* not operated since.

ig n it e a tre e ll || h i t s II

-forester Hank Graham
He said d ia l o f 31 new fires, al
least 16 were started by lig h t­
n in g The rest were believed
man-made.
"T h e re 's no rest lo r the weary
•&gt;r the w icked." S im m o ns said
More than 100 w ild fire s have
scorched about 170.000 acres In
F lorida destroying about 200
h o m e s a n d k i l l i n g iw -o
lire lighters since last week
T h e la rg e s t o f s o u th w e s t
F lo r id a 's r e » r n t f ir e s , a
» 400-acre blaze along A lligator

A lle y, was "p retty dam n close lo
•mt " fo re s te r H ank G ra h a m
*ald.
W e've p re tty m uch been able
ti&gt; i o n fa ln it
he M id ‘We'%e
got (lire | lines pushed th ro u g h ,
lo r the most pan and once we
com plete that H it lie u b ab y­
s ittin g jo b "
The Everglades fire began w ith
a lig h tn in g strike. G raham said
A second strike 6 m iles to the
n o rth caused a m in o r blaze
Tuesday

W e're g e ttin g some Isolated
storm s, b ut u n fo rtu n a te ly they
co n ta in m ore lig h tn in g th an
rain. 'h e said.
G ra h a m s a id
h o w e v e r, a
650-ai re fire th a t threatened
residences In Fort M yers earlier
In the week was not siarted by
lig h tn in g "W h e th e r It was kids
lust p la y in g — o r arson — It was
d e fin ite ly m an-caused." he said
The blaze burned th rough the
com m ercial d is tric t of Ihe c ity
Monday, fo rcin g evacuation of a
p s y c h ia t r ic h o s p ita l a n d a
church. F ire figh te rs hailed ft as
n m oved to w ard th r heavily
|M iptildtrd D unbar section o f Fort
M vrrs

C ontroversial W est Lake Passes First H urdle
C e n te x H o m e s ’ p ro p o s e d
K X M iom r West Lake develop­
ment ha* passed Its first hurdle
when Ihe 44-acre site was rezoned from K - 1A single fa m ily
residential to R -l single fa m ily
residential over co m p la ints o f
some area residents
The residents w ill get another
shot later w hen the site plan
comes up fo r review A lim e for
llu- review has not been set Hut
lo make sure th ey don 't miss Ihe
hearings before Ihe Land P lan­
nin g Agency and th r city c o m ­
m is s io n r e s id e n ts lin e d u p
Monday n ig ht lo pm their names
and addresses on a list to be
n o tifie d b y C ity C le rk G e rl
Xamhrt

Many Bridges Inadequate
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A governm ent s tu d y says nearly
h a lf o f the n a tio n 's 574.045 bridges are s tru c tu ra lly
deficient or fu n c tio n a lly obsolete — b u t not unnafe —
d rs p ltr b illio n s o f dollars being spent In fix them .
The T ransportation Departm ent to ld Congress W ednes­
day Its annual stu d y found that at the end o f last year
200.175 bridges were Inadequate. B ut the report by the
d epartm ent's Federal H ighway A d m in is tra tio n stressed
there was no reason to believe the bridges were unsafe.
A stru ctu ra lly deficient bridge Is one th a t can no longer
accommodate vehicle w eight for w h ic h II was o rig in a lly
designed ll Is restricted lo handling lig h t w eight vehicles
o n ly, Is closed o r requires Im m ediate re h a b ilita tio n to
rem ain open to tra ffic
A fu nctio na lly obsolete bridge Is one not designed to
handle current vehicle sizes and w eig hts and often hinders
the efficient flow o f tra ffic
Many of the Inadequate bridges are at least 40 years old.

O p p o n e n ts a re r o n r e r n e d
hom es In the developm ent w ill
use septic la n k * w h ic h could
(M illm r the lake. T he y also object
in Ihe a d d itio n a l tr a ffic Ihe
d e v e lo p m e n t w i l l b r in g lo
l.ongwnod H ills Hoad
T he zoning change, w hich
died May 13 In a 2-2 vole (Perry
F au lkne r was absent), was track
on the agenda M onday at the'
re q u e s t o f M a y o r H a rv e y
S m e rtls o n a n d u n a n im o u s ly
approved w ith Ihe s tip u la tio n ll
la-rom e effective w hen Ihe plai Is
tiled in the co u n ty records and
show ing ll w ill co n ta in no more
th an 100 lots.
T he rezonlng w ill give the
developer more fle x ib ility In lot

ThotO q v o ltlio n i p r o n d o d b r m o m b o n o l
tt » K r lto n ll A fo o t lo 'to n o t S tC IITlIH t O n S m
o ro ( * K H » n a W « In to r d o o m p r lt o % Of o l
m id m o rn in g i o d o r
In lo r d o t i n m o il o ff
t bongo H iro vg ho vl I ho d o r P r 1Co f do noI
m t ludo ro lo il rnorh u p m o ild o n n

Teachers M ay Face Drug Testing

F tor Ida Porror

RIVEKIIEAD . N Y. (UIM| - School o ffic ia ls ' concern over
d ru g use Is a fa m ilia r topic, but one lam g Island schrxil
d is tric t I* pushing to have teachers — not students —
tested for drug l|se
Stale Supreme C ourt Justice Thom as Stark reserved
decision Wednesday on the move by Hie PatchogueMedford Sr Loot D lslr let to require the tents of 22 teachers.
S tark continued a tem porary re s tra in in g order against
the tests u n til he m akes Ills ru lin g
Teachers say 11 Is the first tim e any school d is tric t In the
nation has dem anded such tests
School o fficia l* concede there bus been no pruhlem d w ith
d ru g use among teachers, hut th r propsed testing Is
Intended a* a deterrent

M

At*

I'e
u 't

IS
l/ '»

m,

American Pioneer SAL
Harnett Bent

sizes In order lo eonlorm lo the
new- arbor ordinance and p rrserve (h r m a xim u m n um be r ol
large trees The u rlxtr ordinance
was given fin al approval M on­
day
In o th e r action
• The com m ission approved
an o rd in a n ce designed lo co n tro l
s k a te b o a r d s by p r o h ib it in g
"u n ro o fe d surfaces prepared lor
s|Mirts " The ordinance w ill also
req u ire a b u ild in g |&gt; rrm ll for
concrete basketball and te nn is
co urts, b ul not for p u llin g u p a
|Mtlt- and basketball hoop next lo
a paved drivew ay
• A site plan lo r V illa g e

ATCHLEY

STOCKS

Atlantic B*x»

A Ltgftf ..................... .....

MCA

N C R Corp

&gt;4
tu n B a x ,,

SERVICE

).S
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OH
OS
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JO S Jf
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MS
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^TENDER LOVING
CARE
8 3 1-3 10 1.
IONOwooo

S q u a re P r o fe s s io n a l O ffic e
Center on West Magnolia. West
Palmetto and N orth East Lake
streets In Ihe Longw txtd H ls to rl
• al D is tric t was u na nim ou sly
a p p ro v e d
T h e d e v e lo p e r Is
A rch drvcon . Inc.
• T w o loan agreements w ith
Fieedom (Link, w hich call for
the c ity lo puv H S percent
interest and a S3 (XX) legal fee.
w err approved They Include a
9100.000 note lo pay for sewage
tri-a im e ni im provem ents and a
$400,000 note for im provem ents
to the w ater system
—J a n e C a s s e lb e rry

Bob’s Antiques &amp;
Used Furniture
c o f m voa u
M STOCK

u t n

You W o n 't W a lk Away E m p ty
H anded If You D on't L ike
O ur P rice We W ill N egotiate.

323-2150
M » r . I7 f j So.
Sanford. Flo.

Mr*, MS 10 I
Sun. lO t

WE’LL PAY YOU UP TO *4 0 0
TO TAP THE SUN FOR
HOT WATER.

G o s p e l Sin g To Benefit H ospital
Burger King Is s|ion so rlng ,i
gospel slug tonight lit 7 :3 0 Ul the
Sanford C ivic ('enter to la-ucllt
the RARE O rlando C h ild re n 's
I lo s p lta l and Perinatal O u t e r
The Four Fold Day Spring.
Messengers, and S outhern Cross
q u a rte ts and S hirley D lnnard.
J u d y and T rln a Itoger*. Patti
O s b o r n . C a lv in S t r ic k la n d ,

’W e ’re g ettin g so m e iio lo to d sto rm s, but u n fo rtu n o te ly
th e y contain m o re lightning th a n rain .*

G loria H orton and K m tu a n u rl
I,lis te r w ill Ire p o o lin g th e ir
taleni lo r a h arm onious n ig h t of
e n te rta in m e n t.
A dm ission Is free, but donalio n s w ill I m- accepted w ith all
proceed* going lo th r hospital
K f lr r s h u ir n t* w ill I k- available
ilu rln g the event

HOSPITAL NOTES
Cw rtrtl M m Ida R**l*Mal
A D M IttlO N t
l l u J Jama*. tan lord
Ann* M P oonor, Dtllona
N t m U t f i u .P a llg i K
Hanley Valintkl. Dalian*
Gull* G Guanlha,. Lata Malan
D I I C H A S O It
Ih if S y C IS**«na». l*nlo&gt;d

U utter 1 F Ragln, longwooil
MatettaS frym a h Chtwfl
R ally S H r an ond baby boy AMamontf
Spring*
H o u M C rgi and baby hoy DttSna

•ISTMI

Martin and Li*a J Jama*, a baby girl
laniard
Mark and Anna Paondar. a baby boy,
Uaitona

WEATHER
NATIONAL

REPORT:

F ire figh te rs pum|&gt;ed w ater from
base m e nts and u t ilit y crew s
w orked to restore r lr c lr lc lt v to
day because o f S outhern storm s
th a t ripped down |M&gt;wer lines,
flooded stre e t* and dam aged
hurtles w ith ruin, high w in d * and
tornadoes. L ig h tn in g W rd n r*
day sparked dozens o f fire * In
th e d r y b ru s h o f s o u th e r n
F lorida
A R EA FO RECA ST! T od ay
p a rtly cloudy. Chance of m a in ly
ufte rn oo n th u n d e rsto rm s High
In low er 90s. W ind so uth 10
m p h H aiti chance 40 percent
T o n ig h t p u n ly cloudy w ith a 20
p e r c e n t c h a n c e o f e v e n in g
th un de rstorm s. Low aro un d 70.
L ig h t southwest w ind. Friday
v a ria b le c lo u d in e s s . C h a n ce
m a in ly a fte rn o o n ih u n d e ra to rn is . H ig h a ro u n d 90.
W in d southw est 10 m p h Rain
chance 4 0 percent.

BOATING FO RECAST! St.
A u gu stin e lo J u p ite r In le t o ut 50
m i l e s — W i n d s o u t h to
southw est 10 to IS kn o ts today
th en southw est lo west around
10 kn o ts to n ig h t and F rid ay. Sea
2 to 4 feet today then 3 feet or
lesa. Scattered showers and a
ftw th u n d e rsto rm s m a in ly n o rth
part.
EXTEN D ED

FO R ECA BTt

C h a n c e o f th u n d e rs to rm s
statew ide Saturday, ce n tra l and

south S unday, then m ostly lair
Monday. Low s In Ihe 60s n o rth
and 70s south Highs upper HOn
lo lower 90*.
A R EA R EA D IN O S |S a m .) :
tem perature: 76; overnight low
69; W e d n e s d a y 's h ig h : 94:
tta rom elrlc pressure: 30.05; rela ­
tiv e h u m id it y
90 percent;
winds: southw est at 6 m ph. ruin:
75 Inch: sunrise 8:31 a .in.,
sunset H: 13 p.m
F R ID A Y T ID E S : D a y to n a
Beach: highs. 1 1 55 a m .. 12 17
p in .: lows. 5 4 1 a m . 5 29 p m .
P o rt C a n a v e ra l: highs. 11:47
a lit., 12 0 9 p in ; lows. 5:32
a in . 5.20 p.m .; B a y p o rt: highs.
5 33 a m .. 3 :5 1 p r o : lows. 10 30
a m.. 11 3‘ * p m

E v r n litj&gt; l l c m k l
I U I P I M l IM )
T h u r s d a y . M a y 11. IM S
V o l 77. N o 114
P vtlu S a d Dally **d lu n d a , t i c a f t
la ls r d a , By Th* laniard Harald.
Inc MS N. F ta x ih A v t . la n ia rd
FI* 11771.
Wcaad C la n * * »!«• « Bald al lasta/d.
Mar id* m i l
Hama Oatlaary WaaS. t i l l , Manlh.
14 M i | M a x is , 114 U i 4 M anlh,
U F .M i r tar u t M By M all W ,4k
t i l l ; M anlh 14 M i I M a n lh ,
I I I M l 4 M a n lh , D I M . Vaar.
M4 M
im i) m m u .

I

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Evtnir &gt;9 HtraM, S iw M # El.

Tlmrfd&gt;y&lt; May 23, H ifr—SA

Bike-Riding Gunman Nabbed Second Time Around
- S e m in o le C o u n ty s h e r iff's
d e p u tie s w h o In ve stig a te d a
d o m e s tic d is t u r b a n c e s u p ­
posedly in v o lv in g an armed sus­
pect left the hom e after fin d in g
no weapon. But they returned
m in u te s la te r after receiving a
second c o m p la in t and arrested a
suspect, a shertfTs report said
The In c id e n t occurred late
Wednesday n ig h t al 501 M arker
Si . A lta m o n te Springs Deputies
co nfron te d the suspect for a
second
tim e after he left th a t
home and was ru lin g a bicycle
on M a rke r Street, the report
said.
They searched the man and
reported fin d in g a ,25-callber
pistol In h is rear pants pocket
along w ith tw o .rounds o f a m ­
m u n itio n . the report said.
Because h r Is on probation for
b u r g l a r y th e s u s p e c t w a s
charged w ith possession of a
firearm by a lelon In addition to
c a rry in g a concealed firearm , the
report said.
T e rry Lee Barnes. 36. o f 501
M a rke r S t,, w as arrested at
I I 48 p .m . lie was being held In
I ley of SH.OOO bond.

Action Reports
★

Fires
* Courts
★ Police

prom pted the in ve stiga tion , the
report said.
K u rt Alan M ara. 18. o f 613
A lh a m b r a A v e .. A lta m o n te
Springs, was charged at the
srhool at noon M onday. He has
been released on * 5 0 0 bond and
Is scheduled to uppeur In court
May 29. He was the o n ly person
charged In the case.

EA R H O LD ER
S e m in o le C o u n ty s h e r iff's
deputies spotted a m an. w ho had
been a rre ste d p re v io u s ly for
possession o f m a riju a n a , w ith
w hat they b cllvcd was a m a ri­
jua na cigarette re stin g on the top
o f his tig h t car and charged the
suspect w ith possession o f less
t han 20 gram s o f p o t.
Deputies co n fro n te d the m an
al the Eastern service station,
state Road 436 at Lake Howell
Road. A lta m o n te S p rin g s , at
PO T A T SCHOOL
One o f tw o Lake Brantley H igh about 10 45 p m . Tuesday.
They d ete rm ine d ihe handSchool stu d e n ts questioned In
connection w ith fo ur m a riju a n a rolled cigarette contained m a ri­
cigarettes fo un d In a box In a ju a n a and arrested Lee Eddie
locker at the A lta m on te S prings W illiam s. 21. o f 800 C itru s Tree
school has been charged w ith Lane. A lta m o n te Springs. He has
possession o f less th an 20 gram s l&gt;cen released on * 5 0 0 bond and
Is scheduled to appear In court
of pot.
The suspect reportedly was Ju ne 5.
CAM PED IN H O U SES
searched d u rin g the q uestioning
In separate In cid e n ts law m en
and the box and cigarette th a t
had been fo un d d u rin g an earlier a rre s te d tw o m e n a lle g e d ly
c a m p in g o u t In u n o c c u p ie d
locker search, but left there,
were allegedly found again In h is homes, one In Sanford al a
possession, a Sem inole C ou nty house under co n s tru c tio n and
the other In a vacant home In
s h e rlfr s report said
The suspect was spotted w ith- Ixm gwood.
In the Sanford case, Raym ond
tw o o th e r yo u th s passing w hat
appeared to be a m a riju a n a O'Neal C arry. 18, o f 57 W illia m
cigarette at the school and th a t C lark C ourt. S anford, was ar

Seminole Set To Tackle '86 Budget
The Sem inole C ounty C o m ­
m ission Is scheduled to begin u
w eek-long review o f budget re ­
quests fo r fisca l 1985-86 on
June 13 at the C ounty Services
B u ild ing .
In th e m e a n tim e , C o u n ty
A d m in is tra to r Ken Hooper said
h e. D e p u ty C o u n ty A d rn ln ls ira to rs W oody Price and
R ichard George. Budget D ire cto r

Eleanor Anderson and C om puter
S e r v ic e s D i r e c t o r M o n t y r
Beamer are lo o k in g over budget
p ro p o s a ls fr o m d e p a r tm e n t
heads.
He Mild no figures are
available on the to ta l of
requests or th e revenues
co u n ty can a n tic ip a te In Ihe
fiscal year.

yet
the
the
new

CALENDAR
C lub. 7 a m ., A irp o rt R estaurant.
TH U RSD A Y . MAY 2 3
Sanford.
I n t e r n a t io n a l T r a in in g in
O p tim is t C lu b o f S o u th
C o m m u n ic a t io n G r e a te r
Sem inole. 7 :3 0 a.m .. H oliday
S e m in o le C lu b ( p r e v io u s ly
Toast m istress), 7:30 p.m .. A lta ­ Inn. W y m o rr Road. A ltam onte
m onte C hapel Education B u ild ­ Springs
ing on State Road 436, second
C entral F lo rid a Blood Bank
and fo u rth T hursdays.
F lo r id a I lo s p lt u l- A llu m o n t e
Sanford Jaycees. 7:30 p.m . Branch. 601 E. A lta m on te Ave.,
J a y c e e b u i l d i n g . 5 th a n d
9 a .m . to 5 p.m .
French. S anford
Gentle Exercise for seniors.
C entral F lorida U ullte rs G u ild .
10 30 a in .. C asselberry Senior
6 30 p m , F irs t B apllst C hu rch ,
C enler. 200 N Lake T rip le t
519 S. P a rk A ve .. S a n fo rd .
Drive. Casselberry
Potluck d in n e r and In sta lla tio n
W rk lv a AA (no sm oking). 8
o f officers.
p .m . W e k lv a P r e s b y t e r ia n
Sanford AA. 1201 W First St . C h u rc h . SR 4 3 4 . at W eklva
5:30, closed discussion, and 8 S prings Road. Closed
p.m .. open, speaker
Longwood A A . 8 p.m .. R olling
Oviedo A A . 8 p m ., closed.
H ills M oravian C hu rch . SR 434.
First U nited M ethodist C hurch.
Longwood A lanon. same tim e
Overeaters Anonym ous, open. and place,
7.30 p.m . C o m m u n ity U nited
Tanglewood A A . 8 p.m .. St.
M e th o d is t C h u rc h , lllg h w a y
R ic h a rd 's E p is c o p a l C h u rc h .
17-92. Casselberry.
Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same
F R ID A Y , M A Y 24
tim e and place.
C entral F lorida K lw anls C lub.
Sanford A A Step. 8 p.m .. 1201
7 :3 0 a .m . , F lo r id a F e d e ra l
W. First St.. Sanford.
Savings and Loan. State Road
SATURDAY. M AT 2 S
436 at 434, A lta m on te Springs.
Sanford W om ens' AA. 1201
S e m in o le S u n ris e K lw a n ls W. First S i.. 2 p in , closed

CHAMCO HEARING INSTRUMENTS
ANNOUNCES THE PUBLIC OPENING
OF THEIR FIELD RESEARCH CLINIC
THE NEW LIBERTY II. THE WORLQ‘8 FIRST DUAL
SPEAKER ALL-IN-THE-EAR HEAMNQ INSTRUMENT WILL
BE OFFERED FOR PUBLIC PURCHASE THROUGH THE
FIELD RESEARCH CLINIC ON A LIMITED BASIS. THIS
WILL ENABLE CHAMCO TO DIRECTLY MONITOR THE
BENEFITS OF THESE INSTRUMENTS.

rested at a home at 1730 W. 4th
S t . He w a s c h a r g e d w i t h
possession o f a c o n tro lle d sub­
stance after police rep o rte d ly
fo un d a m a riju a n a cigarette In a
bun dle of b lankets and clothes
the suspect said were his. a
police report said He was later
freed on $500 bond
In Long wood police said they
fo u n d a m an w ho had been
sleeping, w ith o u t perm ission. In
a hom e at 702 Orange Ave.. at
a bo ut 11 p.m. The m an re­
p o rte d ly had a bun dle o f clothes
and b la nke ts In a bedroom o f Ihe
hom e.
T hom as Howard Sewell. 42. of
117 E xter St.. Longw ood. has
been charged w ith b u rg la ry to
an unoccupied d w e llin g and was
ite ln g held In lieu o f *5 ,0 0 0
bond.

__________ _
T A G G E D FO R A R R E S T
A 20-year-old Sanford m an has
been charged w ith posetwion o f
stolen p ro p e rty a fte r S anford
police rep o rte d ly found a stolen
car bea rin g a license tag Issued
to the suspect.
The suspect was arrested at
6 :3 6 p .m . T u e s d a y a n d re ­
p orted ly to ld police he had found
the 1972 Vega that had been
reported to the Sem inole C ou nty
S h e riffs D epartm ent as stolen
T he suspect claim ed to have
a ttached h is tag to the car,
gassed It up and parked It where
It w a s fo un d behind his hom e at
1317 E lm Ave.. Sanford.

^
„
Paul T h o m a s S te w a rt w as
being held In lieu o f *5 .0 0 0

bond.

C H A SED A CAUGHT
A suspect w ho was confronted
by an occupant o f the home he
was reportedly try in g to break
into was ca ug ht by bystanders
and a rrrs te d by Sanford police.
Police said the m an cut a
scieen and broke a w indow o f a
home al 2616 M ohawk Ave..
Sanford, before the chase began
at about m id n ig h t Tuesday.
He was ca ug ht w ith in tw o
m inutes and police charged h im
w ith a tte m p te d b u r g la r y , a
police report said

★ C R E M A TIO N E X P L A IN E D ★

W O ULDN 'T L E A V E
A m an. allegedly p a rt o f a
g ro up creating a pool side d is­
tu rb an ce at N o rtli Lake A p a rt­
m ents. 242 Sharon D rive. A lta ­
m o n te S p rin gs, was charged
w ith tresp assin g, d e fy in g an
o rd e r to leave and assault on a
police ofTIcer.
A lta m on te S prings police were
called lo the a pa rtm e nt com plex
b y the m anager w ho com plained
th a t a group of m en. some of
w ho m d id n 't even live at N orth
Lake, were being row dy at the
pool, a police report said
T he su spe ct c h a rg e d re ­
p o rte d ly said he w ou ld have to
be th ro w n over the fence to be
forced to leave, the report said
W hile being booked on Ihe
trespassing related charges the
m a n r e p o r te d ly to o k a
th re a te n in g stance a ga in st a
(Ktllce officer and the ass.mll
charge was added.
B a rry W illia m M oo rr. 26. of
538 Orange Drive *2 . A ltam onte
S prings, was booked und re­
leased on *5 0 0 bond

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OF NORTH AMERICA
ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS MOST OFTEN ASKED
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P .0 . Box 1457, S anford, F I. 32771

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LIBERTY U

Re*. 444*

SOFA, WITH HAITIAN
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CONTACT

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THE ENTIRE COMPANY IS ACTIVE IN THE RESEARCH
CLINIC RESEARCH S DEVELOPMENT. MANUFACTUR­
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IF YOU HAVE A HEARING LOSS. AND WISH TO PUR­
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rx__
_ . 40.
|A address
.4.1
D o tn■ln lq.u.1l ru_i
P ic ric
u n kn o w n , was being held In lieu
o f *5 .0 0 0 bond.
DUI A R R E S T
The fo llo w in g person has been
arrested In Sem inole C ounty on
a charge o f d riv in g under the
Influence:
—M artin Joseph Burgess. 26. o f
112 B u rg e s s B l v d . W in te r
Springs, was a rrrs te d at 2:20
a.m. Wednesday a lte r the tires o f
h is vehicle "s q u e a le d " as he
lu rn e d from U.S H igh w a y 17-92
o n to state Road 434, W in te r
Springs He w as also charged
w ith d riv in g w ith a suspended
license.

MIRRORS, HEAOOOAROO, CHINA DICKS.
DININQ TABLE TOPS. END AND COCKTAIL
TABLES, DINETTE CHAIR*. MAPLE ANO
PINEWOOO ROCKERS. C H U T
BASES, SUNK BEOS. ETC.

M

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IU SPS 411 ]M )

300 N. FRENCH AVF... SANFORD. F LA . 32771
Area C o d r 3 0 5 -3 22 -2 6 1 1 or 831-9993
T hu rsd a y, M ay 23, 1W 5-4A
W jy n * D. Doyls. P u b lu her
Thom as G iordano, M anaging E d ito r
M s lv ln A d kin s, A dvertising D ire c to r

Home Delivery Week. $1 10 Month. $4 7.1 3 Months
• I t 2.Y «i Month* S27 Of) Yeitr. **»l Oft lly Mall Meek
%I VI Month. *ti (to 3 Month* $18 00. ft Months &gt;32 10
Year, to o on

T h e E a st-W est
H o s tility

L in g e r s

N o th in g m o re s ta r k ly r c f lr r t a th e d iv is io n o f
E u ro p e a n d o f th e la rg e r b ip o la r w o r ld th a n
th e c o n tr a s tin g w a y s In w h ic h E ast a n d W est
m a rk e d th e 4 0 th a n n iv e rs a ry o f th e e n d o f th e
w u r th e y fo u g h t to g e th e r a g a in s t N a z i ty r a n ­
n y . V -E D a y c e re m o n ie s In W e s te rn E u ro p e
a n d In th e c o m m u n is t East m ig h t a lm o s t
h a v e been c o m m e m o r a tin g w h o lly d iffe re n t
h is to r ic e v e n ts . T h e o n ly s im ila r itie s seem ed
to be In th e h a rs h to n e w ith w h ic h (he tw o
s id e s b la m e d e a c h o th e r fo r th e ir m u tu a l
fa ilu r e to re c o n c ile th e ir d iffe re n ce s.
In th e W e s t, th e re w as a s u b d u e d a t­
m o s p h e re . a t le a st p a r tly as a c o n s e q u e n t r o f
th e fa c t th a t W e s t G e rm a n y — th e largest
g e o g ra p h ic a l r e m n a n t o f th e h a te d N azi s ta ir
o f 4 0 y e u rs a g o — Is n o w a d e m o c ra tic a lly of
th e sa m e n a tio n s th a t fo u g h t u n d defeated
th a t r a r lle r G e rm a n y . T h e c o n tro v e rs y o ve r
P re s id e n t R e a g a n 's v is it to th e H ltb u r g
c e m e te ry s h o w e d , a m o n g o th e r th in g s , th a t
th e c o m p le x itie s o f m a n a g in g s u c h a w k w a rd
s itu a tio n s o fte n e lu d e m e re m o rta ls . A n d th e
v is ib le a n d v o c u l p ro te s ts , n o t o n ly to H ltb u rg
b u t to m u c h th e p re s id e n t sa id In S tra s lto u rg
a n d M a d rid a n d L I s I k u i — a b o u t S ta r W ars,
a b o u t N ic a ra g u a a n d a b o u t th e n u c le a r
c o n fr o n ta tio n In E u ro p e — w ere r e m in d e rs
th a t th e free s o c ie tie s o f th e W est a re b o th
u n i t e d . In t h e i r a d h e r e n c e to c o m m o n
c iv iliz e d p rin c ip le s , a n d fra c tio u s , in th e ir
d is a g r e e m e n t o v e r w a y s a n d m e a n s to
p re s e rv e th e m .
A c ro s s to d a y 's g r r a t d iv id e , th e a ir In
M o s c o w w as m a r tia l, as If th e S o v ie ts w ere
c e le b r a tin g a v ic to r y o v e r a foe th a t, a lth o u g h
te m p o r a r ily v a n q u is h e d , h a s re -e m e rg e d in
th e m e n a c in g fo r m o f W e s te rn im p e r ia lis m
le d b y th e U n ite d S ta le s . M lk h u ll G o rb a c h e v
d is to r te d h is to r y In th e u s u a l S o v lr t w a y b y
v ir t u a lly a c c u s in g W e s tr r n g o v e rn m e n ts o f
th e 1930s o f s u p p o r tin g N u zl G e rm a n y , w h ile
conveniently o m it t in g th e fa c t th a t It w a s t h r
S o v ie t U n io n th a t s lg n r d w ith H itle r . In 1939.
th e c y n ic a l M o lo to v -H lb b e n tro p P a d b y w h ic h
th e tw o d ic ta to r s h ip s c a rv e d u p P o la n d a n d
trig g e re d W o r ld W a r II G o rb a c h e v gave
v ir t u a lly a ll th e c r e d it fo r d e fe a tin g G e rm a n y
to h is o w n c o u n tr y , re fe rre d to th e H o lo c a u s t
o n ly a llu s iv e ly u n d n e v e r m e n tio n e d th a t
m o s t o f Its v ic tim s w ere J e w s. F ro m th e
le a d e r o f a n a tio n th a t c o n tin u e s to p e rs e c u te
Its o w n J e w is h c itiz e n s , th a t's n o m o re
s u r p r is in g th a n It Is e x c u s a b le .
S o m e m o n th s u go th e re w as th e h o p e , n o
d o u b t a n a iv e o n e . th a t a ll th e n a tio n s c a u g h t
u p In th e K u ro|&gt; cun w a r c o u ld s o m e h o w fin d a
s u ita b le w a y to c o m m e m o ra te jo in t ly th e e n d
o l th e b lo o d ie s t a n d m o s t c r u e l c o n flic t In
m o d e rn h is to ry . T h o s e hn|&gt;c» w e re d a s h e d b y
th e v e ry d iv is io n s o f w h ic h H c u g a n a n d
G o rb a c h e v sp o ke , a n d b y th e ir In s is te n c e o n
u s in g th ose d iv is io n s — In th is a n n iv e r s a r y
y e a r a lre a d y so w e ig h te d w ith a n g u is h e d
m e m o rie s o f th a t s lx -y e u r n ig h tm a r e — to
re s u rre c t th e In fla m m a to r y r h e to r ic o f th e
( o ld W a r.
T h e re w e re , to be s u re , m essages o f h o p e
fo r th e fu tu re In th e w o rd s o f th e tw o le a d e rs ,
as In th e P r e s id e n t's d e s ire th a t s o m e d a y
E u ro p e a n s fr o m M osco w to L is b o n m ig h t
m o v e a b o u t fre e ly , u n d In G o rb a c h e v 's w is h
lo r a re v iv a l o f d e te n te . O ne a ls o m ig h t n o te
o p tim is t ic a lly th a t , b e llic o s e o r c o n c ilia to r y ,
a ll o f It w a s o n ly r h e to r ic th a t w ill be fo rg o tte n
its th ese a n n iv e r s a r ie s th e m s e lv e s become
p u rl o f th e p a s t. H u t re c e n t e v e n ts h u v ln g
lit t le to d o w ith r e m e m b e r in g V-E D u y o r th e
I In tn c u u s t o r th e h e ro ic s tr u g g le u g u ln s t
fa s c is m o ffe r lit t le c a u s e fo r c o m fo r t. S a d ly ,
e v e n th e re m e m b r a n c e o f th e o n e tim e
A m e ric a a n d R u s s ia lo u g h t to g e th e r to b u r y a
t r u ly e v il e m p ire c o u ld n o t s till th e v o ic e s o f
E a st-W e st h o s tility , n o t e ve n fo r u d a y .

BERRYS WORLD

BUSINESS WORLD

N e w J a p a n e s e C h a lle n g e In F ib e r O p tic s
B v H ld e to s h l S a k a i
N E W YO R K IU P II F u jits u L td ., th e
J a p a n e s e c o m p u te r a n d c o m m u n ic a tio n s
e q u ip m e n t com pany, has intro du ced a new
generation o f o ptical fib e r w h ich It Is c o u n tin g
on to give It a two- to three-year lead In the
c o m p e titio n w ith A T A T . R ockw ell In te rn atio na l
and o th e r dom estic co m m u n ic a tio n s system
suppliers
The s la le -o f-th r art technology. F ujitsu 8 1 0 ,"
can tra n s m it 810 m egabits, or 810 m illio n
pieces, o f in fo rm a tio n per second on a single
p a ir o f o ptica l filters, b a lr th ln strands of glass,
i h rm ig h w h ich laser beams ru n .
T h e speed Is tw ice as fast as that of the most
advanced o ptica l fitter system s now In operation
in the U nited Stutes. A n a n t Das. vice president
lo r F u jits u Am erica. In c .'s te leco m m un icatio ns
d iv is io n , said In an In te rview .
Such e x is tin g system s, w ith the transm ission
s|tced o f 405 m egabits per second, are offered
o nly by F u jits u and NEC C orp.. also o f Japan.
Doth com panies have gone a ll out for greater
sales o f hig h speed o p tica l fib e r In the U nited
Stales, w here co m p e titio n in c o m m u n ica tio n s
services has Intensified since the breakup o f the
A T A T system III 1984.

In du stry sources expect about * 8 b illio n to be
spent d u rin g the next five years for o p tica l fiber
projects by 20 o r so co m m un icatio ns services
companies, w h ich are Investing h eavily In faster
and larger-capacity co m m un icatio ns lines
A T A T 's Bell Laboratories announced In Feb­
ru a ry It has succeeded In 4 OOO-megabltper-serond lightw ave transm ission
But in p ro du ction technology. A T A T has |u*t
In iro du ced a 417 mega bit-per-seennd system .
Fujitsu Am erica, based in San -Jose. C alif.,
earned nearly ID percent of F u jits u 's w orldw ide
sales of $5 4 b illio n d u rin g Its \e .ir ended In
March 1984. the m ost reernt &gt;r.»r for w hich
figures were published
A model using the F ujitsu 810 technology is
now in the fin a l test phase in Japan. Das said,
w ith a U S . field tria l In an actual custom er
enviro n m e nt expected “ som etim e between J u ly
and S eptem ber." S hipm ent Is scheduled to
Ix-gin d u rin g the lirs t q u a rte r o f 1986
W ith Fujitsu-designed new laser d lc M le s and
v m lc o n d u c to r ch ip s, the system ra n handle
12.096 channels o f voice, data and video
transm ission — a capacity ro u g h ly tw ice that of
the 405-megabit per-second systems
Newspaper r r ix ir ts from T okyo said NEC has

succeeded In sw itc h in g lig h t signals at 1.000
m egabits per second,
“ We have already reached that point. We are
w o rk in g on a 1.600-megabit m odel w ith the
ra p a c ity o f 24.192 c h a n n e ls." Das said. S h ip ­
m ent o f the m odel Is scheduled for 1987
In 1981 F u jitsu lost to A T A T 's W estern
E lectric a m u ltlm llllo n -d o lla r contract to lay
o ptica l fib er cable between New York and
W ashington. The com pany, w h ic h said It had
o u tb id W estern Electric, blam ed the defeat on
p o litic a l pressure from W ashington.
The norlheast co rrid o r episode already Is a
th in g o f the past The m arket has changed so
d ra m a tic a lly that people In th r In d u stry m ay
have some d iffic u lty recollecting It.** an in d u s try
source said.
In fiber optics. &gt; r th in k we now are ahead of
A m erican com jwinles at least tw o to three
years." Das said
W r have th r biggest cu stom er base In th is
c o u n try rig h t now for high-speed o ptical fib e r."
he said F u jits u s biggest custom er Is MCI.
A T A T 's riv a l In long-distance telephone service.
As F u jits u supplies to about 9 0 percent ol
o ptical fllx -r users. Das said, "w e are co n fid e n t”
o f m a in t a in in g th e to p p o s itio n In th e
m arketplace

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

VIEWPOINT

G re y
Pow er
G r o w in g

M e d ic a l
S chool
M ile s t o n e

The U S Senate vote In e a rly May
in favor of restoring re d u ctio n s In
cost ol liv in g a d ju stin rn ls for Social
Security recipients Ix x lr* III fo r the
overall d elicti control p ro gram . The
Senate d e a rly Is afraid o f so-called
grey |Hiwer at the jx ills In ihe 1986
congressional elections
To tie sure, the senators w ho
voted to restore the funds m ay huve
read I he politics of the s ltu u tlo n
correctly. The over-65 group In the
nation's im putation Is gro w in g In
sl/e and Is |M illtlcally conscious and
active U nlike young voters, older
citizens tu rn out on election day.
They are keen on protecting th eir
Interests. No one can blame them
(or tills
Nevertheless, It's very
d llllc u ll to reduce th r deficit when
so m any c o n s tllu rn c lrs are so w ell
o tga nl/e d and active.
Those w ho d ta lle d the President's
drfh It reduction program m ay huve
u nderestim ated the imwer of special
interest p olitics. Many of Ihe new
brred o f p o litic a l activists, such as
David ShN'km an. d irector o f (he
Office o f M unugrm cnl and Budget,
th in k o f jM illtlcs III Ideological te rm *
Today, one fin ds both lllie ra l and
conservative Ideologies However,
|x&gt;lllles In the U nited Stutes conIln u r to lie o f the Interest group
tyjM- People gather together und use
th e ir Influence according to th e ir
econom ic Interests, w lirth e r they
are farm ers, businessm en, w elfare
rrp lrle n ts . or w h u lrv e r And suei esslul p o lllic u l strategies huve to tie
b uilt around u co alition of Interests

A n y w e a k e n in g In t h r a d m lt ils t r u llo u 's d e fic it r e d u c tio n
program encourage* th r foes o f u
strong nutlo nu l defense to try to
scorr |N ilnls w ith Ihe jio u b llc by
slashing the defense budget fu rth e r.
F n rtu n u trly , the S r n u lr leader­
ship regrou|ied In tim e to squeeze
out a v ic to ry lo r Ihe President's
prn|M&gt;*ul In a m id nig ht vote May 10.
It It Is pieserved from assaults by
the House ol Representatives, th r
plan w o u ld reduce fr d r r u l spending
by m ore th a n $50 b illio n next year
In order to u r h lr v r that, however,
ihe President and his lieu ten an ts
m ust argue hard and long w ith
House m em bers. In order to w in
back a m easure of th r b ip artisa n
support he enjoyed w hen he pushed
th ro ug h Ids lu n d m u rk lu x cut In
1981 T h a t w ill lie e xtre m ely dlflim it , due to the heightened sense
of p o litic a l partisanship In th r low er
I mmI v .

B y B ill L o h m sn n
A T L A N T A IUPII - W ith o nly 20
g ra d u a te s , c o m m e n c e m e n t
exercises at the Morehouse School
o f Medicine were sim ple and In ­
tim ate.
But the low -key graduation cere­
m o n y F riday at Morehouse — the
fir s t m in o r ity - o r ie n te d m e d ic a l
school founded In the 20th ce ntu ry
represented a m om entous oc­
casion in ihe h is to ry o f m in o rity
m edical care.

EDUCATION WORLD

G r a n d S c a le H o o k y
B y P a t r ic ia M cC orm ack
UPI E d u c a tio n E d ito r
NEW YORK IUPII - As Mark
T w ain told It. Ilu c k Finn and Ills pal
Tom Sawyer played hooky som e­
tim es on nice days when th r s p irit
to fis h o r w a tu lrr c o u ld n 't be
oven ome.
K id s c u rr y in g on In Ihe tr a d itio n
ol s u ch u rg e s to s k ip school o fte n do
so. no m u tte r w h a t the w e a th e r

These occasional episode* ol tru a n ­
cy are som ewhat tolerated by Ihe
education establishm ent as a sort of
academ ic e q u iv a le n t to g ro w in g
|tuln*
The same cannot lie said o f the
c u r r e n t e p id e m ic o l tr u a n c y ,
especially at Inner c ity schools
From 2(1 to 3 0 percent ol high
s c I i i m i I student
|Mtpoluiion can I m u h s fiii on a Munduv or F riday in
some u rb a n ureas. Ur Ik -tty W
N yungonl *u y * In a re jx irt. “ T ru u n
cy and Ihe A bsent-m inded Stu
d r i l l . " p u b lis h e d III " S c h o o l
S afely.” Ihe jo u rn a l of the N ational
School Safely O u te r
The O u t e r Is a p artnership o f the
U S . U epurtm eni ot Justice. U S .
D epartm ent o f Education and Pepp rrd ln c U n iv e rs ity In Saccamento.
C alif
N yungonl. chief attendance officer
ol Ihe D is tric t o f C olum bia P ublic
Schools and usslstanl pm frssor at
H oward U n iv e rs ity lit W ashington.
D C . *u y * " I f 20 to 30 p e tre n l Is the
average absentee rate (on M ondays
and Fridays), then there ure m an y
schools w ith y r l higher rates."
She rem ind s also that tru a n cy Is
such a severe problem that for th r
Iasi live y ru rs It has m ilk e d e ith e r
llrs l or am ong the lop concerns ol
the N ational Association o f Second­
a ry School PrincIjM ls.
A nother fix on the tru a n c y p ro ­
blem was provided by u U nive rsity
of M ich iga n In s titu te lor Social
Research s u rv e y o f m ore th a n
16.000 h ig h school seniors n a ­
tionw ide.

N yungonl reported
"O l those res|Mindlng. 13.4 jx-rcent said th a t w ith in a four-week
period they "s k ip p e d , cut o r were
otherw ise tr u a n t" from classes at
least one day for reasons other than
Illness; m ore th a n 7 percent a d ­
m itted they were tru a n t tw o days o f
s c h o o l; 3 .9 p e rc e n t sa id th e y
skipped three to to ur days o f school:
I t) p e r c e n t o f th o s e s u r v e y e d s a id

they cut six to U&gt; days ol school;
am i less than I |&gt;ercetil said they
stayed away from school 11 days or
m ore.”
So w hy a re n 't the n a tio n 's tru a n t
o lllc e t* doing a h e lle r )ub ol c h o k in g
o il I he a pp aren tly enorm ous c o l­
lective In fra c tio n ol C om pu lsory
S&lt; liool Attendance Law s In elfect In
a ll states and the D istrict of C o l­
umbia','
Nvangoui says Ihose who enforce
Hu law are llin llr d In m anpow er
and receive little* support fo r Ih e lr
m ission.
The e xpe rt said e x te rn a l and
school related causes ure ut the root
ol the tru a n c y problem E xte rn a l
ones Include fa m ilia l obligations.
|M-cr group pressure. Iln an clu l and
i i onouitc problem s.
S c h o o l-re la te d causes In c lu d e
|HMir academ ic and-or social skills;
Irrelevant c u rric u lu m and or poor
In s tr u c tio n m e th o d s ; In fle x ib le
sc h rd u le s ; In s e n s itiv e , u n r u r ln g
teacher*. Ilstlessness or disinterest
lit

s c Iiim iI

Just as a lever out ul co ntrol m ay
signal worse h e a lth tro u b le s to
&lt;tunc, c h ro n ic tru u n ry often Is a
s ig n a l th e w o r s t 's a h e a d
As
N yungonl described It;
It Is e stim ated th a t 1.5 m illio n
young people o f school age w ill drop
out of school before they receive
high school d ip lom as A high p ro ­
p ortion ol Ihese have e x h ib ite d
Iru a n l lirh a v lo r p rio r lo dro pp ing
out.'*

(lrra d e ago
" T h is Is the crescendo o f all those
years o f p la n n in g and deve lo p ­
m e n t." said D r. L ouis S u lliv a n ,
president o f the school, w ho has
directed Its g ro w th since Its Infancy.
" T h e m is s io n o f o u r school Is
Im p o rta n t b e c a u s e th e r e continues
to b e . e v e n tn lO H S . n s e rio u s
shortage o f b la c k and m in o rity
physician s In Ihe c o u n try The need
Is so g re a t."
loilest figures show about 3 per­
cent o f all d octo rs In the U nited
States are black and o n ly 500 to 700
black students are enrolled In m e d i­
cal schools across the nation. C ritic s
say those figures are the root cause
of In ad eq u ate m e d ic a l care for
blacks n ationw ide, p a rtic u la rly In
jKior In ne r-city and ru ra l areas
Morehouse Is not Ihe total answer,
but proponents say II Is a giant step
In the rig h t d ire c tio n
"M orehouse Is d real good th in g lo
happen at th is tim e , when the
m a jo rity of In s titu tio n s huve not
been able to s u p p ly the blaek
physician m anpow er for one reason
or a n o th e r." said L Leon D eni. 30.
of A lbany. Ga.. p rrs ld rn l of the
h is to r ic M o re h o u s e g ra d u a tin g
class.
" I t 's also a good th in g because
w ith all th r cu tba cks In federal
m on ey fo r s tu d e n t) In general
you're going lo fin d fewer and fewer
m in o rity s tu d e n t* w ho can afford lo
go Into m e d ic in e ." Dent said.
T h e r e w e r e o n l y tw o p r e ­
d o m in a n tly black m edical schools
In th e n a tio n — H o w a rd a n d
Sleharry. both founded In the 19th
ce n tu ry — when Morehouse took a
gamble, opened ft* doors on the
cam pus of Morehouse College In
southw est A tla n ta In 1978 and
began a ctively re c ru itin g blacks and
o the r m in o ritie s to s tu d y m edicine.

JACK ANDERSON

Stockman Sabotaging Cut Ideas
r r
rf*

(7 » v

"I HATE IT that tdsslm ' is t*c o m ln ' C H IC r

m

I

W A S H IN G T O N — P r e s id e n t
R e a g a n 's f is c a l g u r u . D a v id
S to c k m a n , was re p rim a n d e d in
1981 lor d e rid in g in private the
Reaganomics he was defending In
p ublic. But a p |u rc u i|y that scolding
iia s m e r e ly m a d e h im m o r e
cautious
W h ttr House so u re r* fa m ilia r w ith
S tockm an 's backdoor ro u tin e s say
tic c o n tin u e s to u nd ercut p re si­
dential iK illc tr* he doesn't like . He
lias In s tig u trd attacks, they cla im ,
on the Grace C om m ission, w h ich
th r p tra ld rn t adm ires
By leak and e rltlq u r. S tockm an
allegedly has Inspired e d ito ria l and
c o n g re s s io n a l c r it ic is m o f t h r
co m m issio n 's fin d in g s on waste In
governm ent. A p pa ren tly the fin d ­
ings were an em barrassm ent to
S to c k m a n , w ho is sup|H&gt;srd to
uncover m isspending In the le d rru l
bureaucracy.
Y rl J . I V ir i Grace, w ho heads Ihe
c o m itils s lu ii. jx iln lr d out b illio n *
b r in g w a s te d r ig h t u n d e r

i

Stoc k m a n 's nose
S locktuun reacted by try in g to
discredit Grace’ s w o tk He c o u ld n 't
do th is openly, since Ihe Grace
C om m ission has P rrs ld rn l Reagan s
s ta u n c h b a c k in g . So S to c k m a n
began a w h is p e r in g c a m p a ig n
against the com m ission.
T h r president p ut Stockm an on
the s|&gt;ot t h r other day by usklng
h in t to meet w ith the Grace C o m ­
m ission. Reagan led o il by h a ilin g
Peter G ra e r's "energetic but h ea lthy
tro u b lc m a k ln g " and prulsing th r
com m ission lor Us rx p o s u rr ol "u
s p e n d th rift. lrrrs|&gt; o nslblr b ure a u ­
c ra c y ."
The president also declared his
sop|Mirt for C itizens Against Waste,
u b ip a rtis a n , g ru s s -ro o l* g ro u p
w hich l* s triv in g to persuade C on­
gress to e lim in a te th r w astr th r
c o m m is s io n has u n co vered . H r
called C o-C huinncn Peter Grace und
Jack Anderson "a n unusual but
high octane tra in tw hol focus on the
abuse of taxpayer dollars and hold

u p |x i!n trd o tllc la ls a ccountable."
One u llte lul w ho m they Intend to
h o l d a c c o u n t a b l e Is D a v i d
Stockm an.
A l t e r Ih e p r e s id e n t s p o k e .
Stockm an c o u ld h a rd ly co n tra d ic t
h im So instead, ihe budget d ire cto r
gave a lip-service speech su pp orting
Ihe stop waste reform s that h r has
been sabotaging behind Ihe p re si­
d en t's buck
Then he so le m n ly ra ile d for u
lo b b y in g c a m p a ig n to persuade
Congress to pass the six m ost
controversial rrto rm s W hite House
sources suggest that S to c k m a n s
secret strategy is lo antagonize
Congress, u n tie the opposition and
d rlr a l the rrlo rm s he's supposed to
support.
Sen W llllu m Roth. R D el., w ho Is
spearheading th r Senate battle to
reduce governm ent waste, to ld us
he's uwure S tockm an Is secretly
try in g to block the reform s. The
senator's c o u n lrr-s tra lrg y ts to push
the least co ntrove rsia l reform s and

l

a

••

gel as m uch waste e lim in a ted as
feasible T hen h r w ill consider
S tockm an's six s tu m b lin g blocks.
Footnote; The General A c c o u n t­
ing Office has com pleted a review of
the Grace C o m m is s io n s fin d in g s
and has endorsed m ost o f them .
M eanwhile, the com m ission's lead­
ing c ritic , co lu m n is t George W ill,
w ho ts close to Stockm an, has ru n
a fo u l o f c o s t - c u lle r E rn e s t
Fitzgerald.
Fltzerald. the celebrated w histle
blow er, disputed argum ents raised
by W ill and H a rv a rd professor
Steven Kclm an.
" T h e y 'v e been c a u g h t In an
a b s o lu t e f a b r i c a t i o n . " s a id
Fitzgerald.
We r o u ld n 't reach Stockm an for
his com m ents. B ut h is defenders
say S to c k m a n fe e ls th e G race
C o m m issio n Is p ro p o s in g m a jo r
p olicy changes that Congress w ill
never approve. He believes the
solutions are n ot as sim ple and
painless as the com m ission Im plies.

t

�SPORTS

Low Ceiling Can't Cramp SGA Climb
B y C h ris F it t e r
H e ra ld S p o rts W r it e r
The va u lt Is located in an outside corridor. If a
gym nast va u lts too high, she m ig h t h it the low
co rrid o r roof
The uneven parallel bars were put up In one o f
lh r classroom s. Because of the low celling, high
d ism ounts are impossible
The m ain b u ild in g . Ihc cafeteria, is where the
young gym nasts w o rk out on the balance beam
and floor exercise The cafeteria is too sm all for a
com plete floor exercise area.
There arc gym nasts strew n a ll over the old
Grooms H igh School cam pus. T ha t is where the
Sanford G ym na stics Association ISGAI has te m ­
p o ra rily set up shop — and the O lym p ic hopefuls
are very happy to have that fa c ility .
To look at the faces of the young athletes,
though, to see the d e te rm in a tio n and concentra­
tio n. the eagerness to learn, it's like they aren't
even bothered by the cram ped q ua rte rs
There's n in r-y ra r-o ld J u lie C lark pra cticin g
back handsprings and track flip s and show ing the
a b ility to be a fu tu re cham pion. Over In another
area, the younger g irls are w o rk in g on the basics
Six-year-old Test W ellm an Is le a rn in g how to do a
cartw heel.
C onsidering th e ir dedication to lea rn ing g y m ­
nastics and the success that SGA com petitors
have had In recent years, the m akeshift gymnasilcs fa c ility set up at C room s H igh m ay not
seem that trad.
B ut. w hen the gym nasts co n tin u e to Im prove
and m ove u p In class (SGA athletes arc Class 4
and 3 now), is w hen they w ill n erd that height In
the vault and the bars and that e xtra room on the
floor exercise that Is not available at Crooms.
"W e've got g irls w ho have the a b ility to learn
Ix - tlrr routines. " said SGA head coach Eugene
Petty. "B u t e ve ryth in g Is lim ite d by the fa c ility
(Crooms). The ceiling s are too low fo r the va ult
and bars and the fa c ility Is not b ig enough fo r a
com plete floor fo r the floor exercise, And we ca n 't
put In a sp rin g floor w hich Is essential fo r the
g irls ' (ra in in g ,"
A perm anent I ra in in g fa c ility Is w hat the
gym nasts need. The SGA is m a k in g Its drive for
that b u ild in g and has called on world-class
gym nast and. c u rre n tly , m ovie star K u rt Thom as
for help
Despite an e xtre m ely busy schedule. Thom as
w ill take the tim e to put on a show w hich w ill
lir n c llt the Sanford G ym nastics Association The
K u rt Thom as Benefit w ill be held Tuesday. June
4. a l Sea W orld, the site o f Thom as' d ally
G ym nu stlcs A m erica Show.
"T h e g irls are very excited about It. " Petty said
"J u s t the Idea o f p e rfo rm in g fo r u w orld-class
gym nast is e xcitin g . We were very fortunate to
get h im (Thom as) He took It w ith open arm s. He
tuts a lot of h u m a n ita ria n q u a litie s ."

The SCiA's goal Is $85.(XX) for Its new b u ild in g
A site has already been donated by the Sunrise
Ktwants C lub and t h r c ity o f Sanford

Eight-year-old gymnast Abbie McClintock gets an assist from M ario Causey.
The SGA s till has a n um be r ol tickets available
for In d iv id u a ls and for sponsors Gold Sponsors
( * I.OOO) and S tiver Sponsors ttSOO) w ill receive

jirrm a n e n t recognition In the new b u ild in g
There are ulso In d iv id u a l tic k e ts available (or
tIO O ra c h .

B aseball
stole th ird and scored when
o ilie r b ro th e r B o bb y C o flrld
singled.
A lte r B o b b y s to le second.
Itr iu v in stepped up and clouted
a ia n run hom er over Ihc fence
in led center.
Brinson p itche d sh u to u t ball
ih ro u g h three In n in g s and Ih r
K n ig h ts scored once In ih r
Ix itb im of the th ird lo r a 5 0 lead
Bobby C o flrld reached on an
e rro r, si ole b oth second and
th ird and scored on an overi ll row
T h r Elks took advantage of
lo u r KOC errors lo score four
lim es in the top ol ih r fourth
W llh one out. W ill it- McCloud
singled, siole second, w ent to
t h ir d o n a n o v e rth ro w a nd
scored on another o verthro w on
I he same play. A lm ost a replay
of M cCloud's a n tics h.qi|M-nrd on
ih c next batter. Tv Koke singled,
w ent to second on an erranl
p li k o ll a llr m p t. itx ik th ird on a
passed ball and scored on an
error.
Hubert M ille r follow ed w llh a

T h e n , th e y w ill be able lo h o ld th e ir heads up
h ig h , Instead o f tr y in g to a vo id h it t in g th e m on
th e c e llin g

Ball Holds Lead...Barely

Taylor's Clutch Hit
Lifts KOC Past Elks
B y C h r is F is te r
H e ra ld S p o rts W r it e r
■Tie K n lg h ls ol C olu m b us tell
out o f c o n te n tio n early tor Ih r
ltr*u h a lf title KOC finished w ith
a 4 t&gt; record and in lilih place In
th e s ix -tra m S u n lo rd J u n io r
League.
T he K n igh ts have tu rn e d li
a ro u n d in Ih c se con d h a lf,
th ough At the m id w ay jx iln l In
ih c second half, the K n igh ts
s ta iitl at 4-1. one game tx-hlnd
league-leading Ball Motor Line
154I|.
Ih c reason K n igh ts o f C o l­
u m b u s has stayed In co nte ntio n
Is li Is g e ttin g c o n trib u tio n s from
everyone on the team .
W e d n e s d a y n ig h t . D w ig h t
B rinson pitched a lour Itllle r and
pinch h itte r K ick T aylo r slugged
a tw o run trip le In ihc hot lo in ol
the s ix th tim in g lh a l lifte d KOC
lo a 7-5 v ic to ry over Elks at
Chase Park.
B rinson set the E lks dow n In
o rd e r In the lop of the first and
(lie K n lg h ls came back w ith four
ru n s In the b o tto m o f t h r in n in g
Bay W illia m s led o ff d ir fram e
w ith a double and he scored
w h e n Won "P e a n u t” C o flr ld
reached on un e rror. "P e a n u t"

S ix o f th e S a n fo rd g y m n a s ts iw ll h tw o
alternates) w ill be perform ing at the K u rt Thomas
Benefit as a p re lim in a ry to T hom as' G ym nastics
Am erican Show
Those gym nasts, w ho have excelled in com ­
p etitio n for the SGA. Include K lm a th a Kelly.
S hari S lrgrtst. C hcrte VanCamp, Karen G rainger
and Je nn ifer Cox. The tw o alternates w ho may
also perform are T ra cy Kalccl and G lenda C arter
C a rte r, w ho w as one of th e to p o v e ra ll
com petitors In past m rets. In ju re d her foot In
practice earlier tin s week b ut m ay do a ro u tin e on
the liars for the show according to Petty
" K u r t (Thom usl is going to Involve the g irls in
the show and p ut th em through s m a ll ro u tin e s to
show the audience th e techniques th e y le a rn ." he
said. The g irls w ill use three d iffe re n t appara­
tuses. the bars, floor exercise and b e a m ."
Once ih r SGA reaches Its goal. P etty Is hoping
contruetton on the b u ild in g can begin rig h t away
"W e 're hoping to have It by A u g u s t." he said
Class 4 c o m p e titio n begins In Septem ber
followed by Class 3 and. sta rtin g In 1985. Sanford
gym nasts are m o v in g to Class 2.
"We do w ell In Class 4 a n yw ay because th a t's
the more basic class." Petty said "B u t the
b u ild in g w ill have an Im m ediate Im pa ct on Class
3 and 2. W e've been successful In the past
because o f lhe g irls ' d ete rm ina tion . But w e’ ll Ineven more c o m p e titiv e tl we get the n r w fa c ility ."
Since It was founded In 1977. the Sanford
G ym nastics A ssociation has grow n s ig n ific a n tly
It now has o ver 125 girls, and txiys. learning
gym nastics.
" A lot of people d o n 't know It. b u t we have 10
boys w o rk in g o u t." SGA President Jeannette
Stiffey said. " T h e y range ltt age fro m 6 to 13
"W e have g irls s ta rtin g out as yo u n g as four,
five and s ix ." added Stiffey. O nce w r gel a
perm anent b u ild in g , we’d like to s ta rt a T u m b l­
in g T o la ’ p ro g ra m . W e’d lik e to o ile r the
c o m m u n ity m ore p ro g ra m s."
Petty said the younger' a g y m n a s t starts. Ihc
lie tte r chance he or she has at b ecom ing a
cham pion.
"W e like to get them as early as possible ." he
said "W e teach th e m fle x ib ility , c o o rd in a tio n and
balance. G y m n a s tic s Is very th e ra p e u tic . U tra in s
I he lo ln l trod y. K id s who do w r ll a l g ym n astics
len d to do w e ll a l o th e r things, to o ."
A new b u ild in g , w ith the p ro pe r tra in in g
Incllltles. w ill enable Sanford g y m n a sts to coil
cent rate on m o v in g up In clnss o f c o m p e titio n and
m aybe develop In d ia future w o rld -class a th lr tr .

M*r«M

ST M

PW y

T y K o k e re c e iv e s th e th ro w too la te as R on ’ ’ P e a n u l'' C o fie ld
s te a ls t h ir d base
w alk, stole second, w ent Hi th ird
on an o verthro w and Von Erie
S m all d im unloaded a tw o -run .
inside-1hr-park hom er to p u ll th r
Elks w ith in 5 4
W ith M cCloud on In relief, Ih r
Elks held the K n lg h ls scoreless
in ih r fo u rth and fifth fram es
and came bar k lo lie the score at
5-5 In th e top o f the s iv ili
M cCloud drew a w alk to lead off.

si ole se co n d a n d th ir d and
scored the tv lu g ru n on a passed
lu ll
The K n lg h ls came b a rk to
break Ihc tie In the Ix itlm n o f the
sixth A n to n Held drew a w alk to
lead o il and. w ith one out. M ltrh
W rig h t a lso w a lk e d T a y lo r,
pinch h ittin g lor Angel G a lo n /a .
then d rille d a tw o -run trip le o il
McCloud

Ball Motor L in e b u ilt op a solid
lead a lter five In nin gs hot alm ost
w a id ie d Its one-game lead in the
league washed aw ay as K lw auls
came hark stron g In Ih r seventh
.Inning
B nl H n n a lil ( ’ ox had ju s t
enough lelt In h im lo slave oil
the Klw anls ra lly and Ball Motor
Line came out w llh lls lead s till
Intact as n polled out a 11-10
victory
K iwants opened the game w llh
live runs in the lop ol the llrs i
inning w ith a iw n ru n double by
Bernard M itch e ll and H ill triple
hy Duck G rayson leading the
way
M eanw hile, K lw a n ls s ta rte r
Sammy Edw ards held Ball Motor
scoreless for the first tw o frames
and Klw anls n x ik a ti O lead Into
the bottom &lt;&gt;■the third.
Edwards, one o f Ih r lop con­
trol p llc h rrs III Ih c leagor. sud­
denly went w ild in ih c tx id o in ol
Ihc th ird ns lie walked seven
K ille rs and uncorked lour w ild
plli lies lh a l enabled Ball lo score
Hirer runs,
Cox sealed dow n a lle r the
second In nin g m shut Klw anls
ooi in ih r third, fourth and m ill
Ball Molor L in e Ih ru made lls
move w llh c lg h i ru n s in ih c
Ix iiio in of Ihc filth
J lm b o Lucas drew a walk to
s ta ll oil Ihc In n in g stole second,

B aseball *
I
and scored on f o x ’s double
T ro y Hollins th en drew a w alk
a n d l l u r n c l l W a s h in g t o n
billow ed w llh a tu p le lh a l drove
hom e K ith Cox and H o llin s lo tie
I he score at 0-0.
L e o n a rd W illia m s fo llo w e d
w llh a w alk and stole second lo
put ru n ne rs mt s e to u d and th ird
E dw ards re a d ie d buck to s irlk c
m il the next h itle r s b u t he
c m ild u ’ l get out ol t h r In n in g as
K e vin Nathan sm acked a tw o
ru n trip le lor an H ti Bull Motor
L ille lead
N athan scored on a w ild p ilc h
to make ll 9-0 J o h n H endricks
th en drew a w alk, stole second
and Ih lrd and scored on a single
hy Lucas In m ake li 10 0. Cox
i lo-n d rille d a dou ble in pui
ru n n e ls on second and ih lr d and
Lucas scored w in d tu rn e d b in In
be the w in n in g ru n w hen h r
stole home
Cox rellre d K lw a n ls In order In
Ih c top ol the s ix th and Edw ards
got out ol the but tom ol the
in n in g w llh rasi as Hall lix ik lls
I I -6 lead lltlo llii- seventh
Leonard K le hu rd soti drew a
w alk In lead o il I h r seventh,
stole second, but was c u t down
try in g to steal Ih lrd ,

PartyfTime
Lakers Trounce Nuggets, 153-109

Celtics Steal Past Sixers, 102-100

INGLEW OOD. Calif. IUI'11 - There was no
cham pagne. T he party, a fte ru ll. is Just b e g in n ­
ing
"F o r the last live years, w e’ve won the
conference title , so there's no big ira so rt to
c e le b ra te ." Jam es W o rth y said W rd n rs d a y
n ig ht a lte r Ihc Los Angeles L a ke r* trounced Ihr
Denver Nuggets 153-109 lo a d v a n rr to ihe NBA
rlu im p lo n s h lp series and a rem atch w llh Ihr
Boston C eltics.
O ther tra m s w ou ld dance In to the nig ht. The
Lakers, w ho lost lo the C ritic s In sevrn games a
year ago. concentrated Instead uu a sh u ttle lo
Boston — w h ich e lim in a te d 1’ h iljd r lp h ia earlier
In Ih r n ig h t — fo r M onday’s series opener.
"A c tu a lly , a ll w r wanted lo d o was get lo the
ch am pio nsh ip regardless o f w ho we had to
p la y ." said an unco nvincin g-so un ding Magic
Johnson. w ho had 19 assists lo become Ihc
NBA’s a ll-tim e leader In Ih r p la yoff*
"S ince It’s the Celtics. It ’s going to be a lltlle
e xtra In c c n tlv r because o f w hat happened last
y e a r."
K a rrrm A bdul-Jabbar. however, dow nplayed
Ihe riv a lry . “ Last year Is o v e r." said t h r Laker

BOSTON lU P Il — H c iu rn to Philadelphia or
r« tu rn to d ie NBA cham pio nsh ip series — for Ih c
Boston C eltics that was no choice al all
"W e had a in e rtin g before the gam e." said
Dennis Johnson "a n d we decided wc d id n 't
want lo go back In P h llly ."
Tlu- result W ednesday n ig h t was a 102-100
('c ld c s ' v ic to ry over the 76er*. e lim in a tin g th e ir
riva ls 4 I from the Eastern Conference finals
The d rle n d in g cham pions w ill now play the
Los Angeles Lakers In a rem a tch o f last year's
final series, w h ich Ih r C eltics won In seven
games The Lakers clinched t h r lr fourth con­
secutive W estern Conference t l i l r Wednesday
n ig ht w ith a 153-109 v ic to ry o ver Ih r Denver
Nuggets, w ho also fell 4-1.
Game 1 o l d ir NBA fin a ls w ill be played
Monday al Boston Garden
The C cldcs are seeking to become the first
cham pions since th e ir 1908-69 counterparts to
successfully defend I heir crow n.
Johnson scored 23 points, in c lu d in g a pair of
crucial free th ro w s and an I 8 -fooler In the fin al
I I I to lead the C ritic s ’ a tta c k In Game 5.
l-a rry B ird preserved sabc C eltics' w in by

center. " I t's hern o ver lo r a long l i m e
" W e 'll show u p T here's n o th ln g e ls e to s a y ,"
Johnson needed 7 assists to break JerryW est's record o l 970 He set ihc m a rk In a
second quarter ru n o l 16 straig ht Los Angeles
p o in t* th a t decided Ihe outcom e o l th r game
and series
In becom ing the firs t tra m to record four
consecutive W estern Conference crow ns. Ihe
Lakers defeated th r Nuggets In live games —
ra p tu rin g the Iasi three after an 22 |x&gt;lnt loss
last week tfi.it ended a 23-gam r home w in n in g
s trru k
" W r Just didn't have It offensively." said
D enver coach Duug Moc "A g a in s t th em , you
just can't win that w a y."
W o rthy had 23 [x jim s and B yron Scott and
Mike McGee 21 each lor Urn Angeles Johnson
added 17 points
W ayne Cooper had 23 and L afa yrtn - Lever 22
lor I lie Nuggets.
The Lakers broke a 34-34 deadlock w llh th r
tng burst as Johnson orchestrated a sm oking
last break d ia l Mrx- c o u ld slow o nly hy c a llin g
tim e o u t.

stealing the ball fro m Andrew Toney w ith fo u r
second* re m a in in g before Ihc 76ers guard i m ild
a tte m p t a g u m r-iv ln g shot.
For the 7ffers. d ir regrets are m any
"la x ik ln g back, you can see d ia l the game was
rig h t th rre tf wc had gone out and gotten It."
said Maurice Cheeks, who paced P h iladelphia
w llh 26 points
"W e had th r o p p o rtu n itie s and d id n 't take
advantage o f th e m ." agreed Hobby Jones. "W e
had a lot of m istake s and they pul da- pressure
on a ll a ro u n d ."
T he 76ers lost the llrs i three gam es o f the
conference fin a ls before ta king G am e 4 In
Philadelphia No tra m In M IA history lias rv e r
recovered from u 3-0 deficit in posl-season play.
T he 76ers Ju m p ed o u t to a 10-2 tra d
Wednesday n ig h t, hut t h r Celtics drew w ith in
30-28 at the end o f d ie first q ua rte r. Johnson
sparked a 9-2 surge m id w a y th ro u g h the second
q u u M rr lo h rlp Boston to a 56 51 tra d at the
h a lf
Boston led by at least 6 points th ro u g h m ost ol
the ih lr d period h ut P hliudeljdiiu d o se d to
w ith in 81-77 on Cheeks' Jumper

�*A

Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI

A M im ciH
(«!!

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Reuss M aintains Hex O ver Expos
U n ite d Prea* Intern a tion a l
lie M n n irr.il K ij k m itr r to J e rry K ru m w hirl the
I li mm i . i l t .ire In K n n.iltl R rn ^ in e.isy In lieu I
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sine helped I ■n il I le m e in lH 't I lie Insl lim e ll
h .ippem 'ii w hen I w.is pile him ; said Reims
I ns Angeles m .im i^e i In m im l.nsnrd.i Heines ih.it
uni i.ik in r; l».illlit|4 prm lire lim y liuve hel|H'd Ihe
■li.dyi is m in Inr n iilv tile In m lh tim e in I I unities
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; replnee s h n rls in p S lin w n n D iin n lm i. p ln e h till In i
&lt; w h in in g p lle lie r D e n n is K ekerslev fi ;i. In Ihe se ve n ih
m n in K m ill s in u s lie d Ihe llrs i p m h lim n s in rle i Im n
Itiu w n ln u . 4 JI. In in th e leh Held seals

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At Si lauds lln h hnrsi h lu lled a solo hnniei and
; p iii hi d li I J tim in g s In rellel In help ihe I a nim a ls
| t m itplele a three uuidt sweep nt A tla n ta I’ m s e lls
; lim iie i n il Insr'i Rh k M ulder. H it m ihe till li lii o ken :i J
; in ll was Ids llrs i Hlnee Sepl S, IRHJ a ltd ih e e iu h lh
nl Ills i .u n i Moh H orner e n iltlid ie rl In su ntu a hoi hm
Im the Itriives as h r s h i n 'd lin e r singles
( .In n t s ti, P h lllle a 1
, Ai P hiladelphia M anny Ir llln lu rrie d H ire r dunhle

N .L . Baseball
p ln vs n v r r Ihe llrs i lo u r ltd d n « s th e n added the
Uaitie w m n in u K ill to h elp Sun F ra n r ls r n sn a p a
H ire r nam e lo sm n s tre a k Have la il'n ird tn n k a d v a n t.in r
nl ih e d n n h le p la ys a m t led RI I’ lilllle s stra n d e d over
th e llr s i six m m n u s io im p ro v t m 2 5
A t I ’llls h m u h A la n A s h h v lilt a uarm ty ln tj sai r l l l r r
lh in th e n in th in rd d U a n ti a iw n -n in rln n h le w ith tw o
m il In Ihe JO lli to l ll i H ouston m v le to ry
A s h b y 's
d o u b le In the let I Held w a ll M in e d p ln e h h llle r K ilos
( a h e ll and I 'h ll G a rn e r C a h ill s in g le d w ll li one m il
a n d liu ik seeonrl cm a h alk hv lo s in g re lie ve r AI
lln lla m l 1 7 G a rn e r w as w a lke d iid e tiiln n u lly w ll li iw o
m il

M a rin e r* 4 , Yankee* t
Ai Seattle, left-hander Matt
Young threw a three h itle r and
Dave Henderson doubled home
tu n ru n s lo s ji.irk the M ariners
Young 3-5. allow ed o nly one till
a lir r the llrs i in n in g , an op
I tost i e held single In the Im irtli
in Ken G rllle y Young s tru c k nut
a c a r e e r h ig h 10
D e n n is
Rasmussen fell to 2 2

P a d re * 5. M e t* 4
A i New Y ork. C m K e n n e d y w h o lie d Hie sem e in
the s ix th lim in g w ith a th re e ru n h o m e r d e live re d a
n m s c o rin g single in th e R&gt;Hi lim in g i n give the S ail
Ih e g n im v le io rv M a rk I Im rm n m l p in lie d the m o th
m n in g i n even hm ret m il at 1 2 w ln h H u h G nssngr
In n led ilt i H u ll lo r Ills I I Hi save

P E IIR : L O tilC . R EA SO N IN G IS M IS S IN G
C H IC A G O i n i ’ l l — M a jo r league hasehall p layer
re p re s e n ta tiv e * e o iiK ld e r th e p o s s lb lllly n l a s trik e
lo d a y at a m e e tin g In C tdcugd lo c llw u n s th e sta tu s o l
H m o n th o ld c o n tra c t iir g o U a ttiin * w ith c lu b o w n e r*.
I h r e x e c u tiv e h o a rd o f the M ajor l.c aguc Masc-liall
P la ye rs A a a o cld tlo tt m a y dec ide to ask tts tif&gt;() m a jo r
league m e m h e rs in v o le cm a s tr lk r a u th o r l/a tlo n lot Its
n e g o tia tin g te a m o r to even s p e c ify a strike- d e a d lin e
T h r |ilu y r r s struc k lo r 5 0 d a ys In lilH I w ip in g out
7 I 4 gam es
We have Iw-eu d o w n th is ju illi h r lo re ." sa id Don
l ehr, a c tin g cxe e u H vc d ire c to r o l Hie P la yers Asscs la
Hun " H 'h e p la ye rs) are re sig n e d lo Hie la d th a t these
n e g o lla iln n s are n o d l lf r r r n t Iro m past nrgollaU cm s
I here is no lo g ic , n o re a s o n in g
I (.'sides a strike- u iilh o rU tillc in v o ir , the- pla ye r
re p re s c n la llv e s w ill a lso d is c u s s ha se h a ll co m m la a lo n »r Peic-r U e lre rro lh 's c o n tro v e rs ia l m a n d a to ry d ru g
lest m g p ro g ra m and Hie o w n e rs m u st re c e n l jito jm s a l
in th e lo n g s ta lle d t ir g o t l. it Ions The m o st c c m tro v rrs l.il
aspect ol the pro|»osal are s a la ry cu p s lo r Ih e tr a m s

YORK

| Ill'll

N'u

lhat

. m i so u r is c m n in g dow n on h u rry
Holm es w llli a ll lliu i advice lor Ills ow n
| good m ay I k - h e 'll hold wt ill Im some nl
m ine also
lie w lm truly know s has no need lo
' shm il
I h a t’s m y message lo him
W hy Is h r going around hollc-tlng
aluiut Rim kv M arciano s ti co ld w hen h r
d u rs u 'l tc a llv know’ w hat lie s ta lk in g
id Mint?
i We’ re luc ky we've got lic-e s|M-et I i
III .il makes la lk cheap W hether he
leiill/c-s ll cm nut Holmes is g u llly ol a
i heap shoi w hen he culls M a rclu iiu ’s
Itl'tl tec cird a |ihnuv He-claims M aicl.ino
, h m g ht Ills h ru ih c is u n d e r d lfle r c iil

nam es in e x h lh ltlo n I m uiI s a m i ih a t llu is .
c x h lh lllc iH s m m an- liic liid c d In Ills
n iiir d

W rong w rung, w rung h a n v You'd
m ake a luusy icjhu let
Unimex contends M aicl.ino lou gh l Ills

J e r r y Reuss p o s te d h is 20lh w in in 25 d e c is io n s
d q a in s t M o n lr e .il W e d n e s d a y

hrcilhcrs. jilu ra l In those e x lilh lllo n
iMiuts su|ijM&gt;seill\ im ludcd in his rcc ord
ItlM'ky s Iw o h io lh e is houts and Peti t
I mah arc liv in g I h- did ligh t l.ouls. hut hi
MKVKR lou gln I’c n t w ho was m uch loo
w m ng and ru n s a xjMirtmg gtMids shnj) lit
M ansfield Mass now So w hen Holm es
ta lk s a lm u i M a rrt.in o lig h tin g h is
h ru lh e rs jtlu ru l. th a t's one o bviou s
U miI mmi rig h t there
M a rc la n u boxed h r o iln t l.o u ls hi
I'cirtlaud. Manic m an c x lilh liiiin Im
• tia rlty
llo h ltc s s .i\s check tin it-ru rd honk
I &gt;K let s do ill.II
Nowhere in Man luim s record ts then
am cvidc'inc ol a ligh t he had lit Malm
V ii m alls all nl his early ones were- in

Get Smart

Providence hi|&gt; V alenti, w ho has |tto
iiio le d lig h ts in Nc w England lor 5tl
w ars says Man l.m o's record ol -PJ
vii lories as listed m Ih e R ing Record
Ikin k is ahsnlutciv a ilH ii'iilli’ u iltl llt.il uol
a single one ol those lig liis was an
i x lu h iiiiiii
i Hi no Holm es is deli tid in g I muse II
against rim u g h other suits alrc *l\ 1la
taw vers are g e tiu tg a ll Ills iiiiitie v W ell a
giM.il c h u n k, anvwav
r«-ddv lln - iilir r llu - a b le m .itih m u k r i
tor lo p Rank Im
leels the saitie wav I
do u lm ul H olm es attack m i llu- va lid ity
nl M arciano s re. m il and In- s ■crtam lv a
m ail w ho should know
It s a t ic ''
In says n l tln lm e s
issertinn

B lu e J a y * IO . W h ile Boa O
At T o ro n to Have S tlrb amt
tw o relievers com bined on a
tom h llle r and George Hell drove
in three runs, helping Hie Mine
la vs sweep I heir ih rre -g a m c
series S lid ). 4 3 w orked seven
iim in g s and scattered three hits
am i a w alk K id i Dotson, 2 2.
look Ihe loss
B rew er* 6 . Indian* 5
At C leveland. Ted S im m ons
tw o run single capped a fo u r-ru n
tilth lim in g and relievers lln h
Gibson and R nlltr Fingers coni
hlm-d on a one h llle r over the
him ! 5 1 3 innings in lead ihe
Brewers G llison 5 I hurled 3
I 3 in n in g s s in k in g out tw o and
w a lkin g tw o. in get the victo ry
H o y * 1* 6 , Ranger* 3
At A rlin g to n . J o rg e O rta 's
three ru n hom er In the eig hth
lim in g oil reliever Dave Slew-art
(lowered the Royals K a nsa sC*t(y
lell hi liln d hy one ru n In the
seventh when Hret Salierhagen.
4 3 h a lk rd in a run. but the
Royals q u ic k ly recovered in ihe
eighth oil losing pitcher D ickie
Moles. 2 5
Red Sox 4 . T w i n * 3
Ai M inneapolis. Tony Arm as
h n m e r e d a n d W a d e H og gs
singled home tw o run s lo lilt the
Red Sox Roger Clemens, 5 4,
allow ed four h its over seven
M illings, w alked three and s lrn r k
out one He retired 10 ol 17
trailers he fuerd between the
second and seventh Innings Hob
Stanley notched Ills s ix th save

YAR D BARNS BY SPAR

O ile r s N e e d W is e r P la y T o n ig h t To G a in S p lit
I'lltl.A D K I.I'IIIA i t l l ’l) - Ih e E dm onton Oilers
hchiAc th ey m ust either (day sm arter or g n lio m e
jsinai tin g
I lie Oilers, trealen 4 1 Tuesday III a tenacious
d isp la y ol lo rc c lic i k in g hy the I ’lilla d c lp h l.i
I lycra, d o n 't w aul In In- n a ilin g hy tw o alter
Ih u r x tla y 's c o u lc s l. Game 2 In Ihe N H L *
I m si ol-seven S tanley C up series
We have In p la i sm arter and gu home w ith a
s p ill." K d tn o n io n defenseman K e vin Lowe said
p rim lo pruellee Wednesday "T h e y owned Ihe
llrs i game They lis ik th r iHsly as we expected
I lie) slapped us a ro u n d ."
th e Flyer s o u l shut the O ilers 4 I 2ti
I'ln la tle lp lila scored on o n r nl seven (lower
jrla y *. E d m on ton w a s / n o lo r three
The tille rs have m il debated the F iv e r* In nine
uni lie * since Nov 13. HW2. The F ly e r* are 221*1
In i la ir last 24 g am e* ill ihe S pectrum .
O ilrrs ' center W ayne G re U ky said h i* team ts
i ml in tim id a te d p la y in g In the S p ectru m
Ih a t'* not ll at u lt." lie said " T h e F ly e r* pl.iv
good d iscip lin e d hockey. T he y d o n 't give you loo
m a n y chance*
I hey deserve a lot ol e rrd ll They w orked very
h a u l and shut dow n o u r o lle iis r."
O ftrU ky. shadowed ih ru u g h o u l Ihe game by
Run S u ite r, was unable lo get one shot on n ri
I d id n 't p la y w ell, but I II bounce back

Un ite d Pre** In te r n a tio n a l
Scon McGregor escaped his
m y s te rio u s d o ld ru m s |ust in
nme lo h e w lld rr the Oakland
Vs
M rG rrg o r w ho had lost ms
last four decisions and missed
h i* last start w ith arm problems,
tired a th re e -h itle r and Lee Lacy
c o n trib u te d a double and an RUt
single Wednesday night to lead
th r H a lllm o rr Orioles to a J-0
triu m p h over Hie A's
I c u in r In lo the game just
w a n tin g to gel jrasi the fifth
m ning McGregor said I g u rs *
th a t s w h a t h a p p e n s w h e n
von vt pitched ihe way I have
Hits \ t at Once I got th ro u g h Unorder lo r Hie first tim e and saw
tin- way I was p itc h in g I started
to relax
McGregor entered the game
w ith a 14 record H r had also
given u p 43 hits In 30 2 in n in g s
Against the A 's he was In total
co n tro l in n o tch in g the 2 0 th
shutout n l h is career He s tru c k
nut seven and w alked o nly three
Don S utton. 3-5. look the loss
T h is Is the first tim e all year
I've (ell com fortable out th e re ."
McGregor said
I hale to th in k
about It but w ith m y m o tio n ,
there Is just so m any m echanical
th ing s that can go w rong
The O rioles opened tli» scoring
111 Ihe fo u rth on « single by Fred
l.y n n . a w ild p itc h by S u tto n and
an RBI single hv l^ trry Sheets
H a lllm o rr th en scored tw ice In
the fifth for a 3-0 lead Rich
D u lle r a n d R ic k D e m p s e y
singled to Irud oil
T ig e r * 3 . Angel* 2
At A naheim , rig h t-h a n d e r Dan
I ’etrv pitched a four b itte r Inr Ills
e ig h t Ii v ic t o r y
le a d in g lh&lt;T lgcrs
lie w alked none and
s tru c k out fo ur in th ro w in g tils
llr s i c o m p le te gam e o l th e
season M ike W ill fell lo 2-5

Astro* S. Pirate* 3

Holmes Misses Punch With Swipe At Marciano
NKW

M c G re g o r
B e w ild e rs
A 's , 3-0

Thurvdjy, May D, IMS

N H L Playoffs
T hursday. ' G re t/k y said
W cT c up against lluw all Wt- m ust ta k i Hie u m n ie n iu tii away Irom
die F lyers,"
II Ihe O iler* lose T hursday, they la e r the
prospect ol having to beat the Fivers three
si m ig h t 111 E d m o iiin n to reguln the lead tie lo rr
re lu m in g lo I'h tla d c lp h ln If a s ix th or M-venlh
game Is necessary
E dm onton defenseman Handy Gregg said In *
team never got going Tuesday
"T h e lee was soli am i the puek was b o u n c in g ."
he said " It caused us to (day at a slower iriiijM i It
was no worse lo r us th an lor the F lyer*, but we
have to get the tem po going and jn it pressure on
tlie lit '
T h r Oilers, know n as Ihe fastest tra m In the
N ational llo rk e v League, found the F ly e r* can
also skate well
They came on us very last
O ilers' lot w a u l
M ark N a |)lrr said We knew It waxn t going u&gt; I k ra *v against a team o l Hits cal Ib n
T he ir defense was strung am i th e ir lo iw a rd *
were alw ays lo n illlg b ack.- Napier s lid
They
played exceed In g h w ell d r fe naive h

74« "HoUm . 4 -tUadut
111 H U S/nlord
&lt;&gt;] M U Of Undo

I (ID ) H ) 0*7* Trmpj
i i*o«) *11 ti«r

Sttvuute S&amp;ecU
6 X 8 BARN ETT
SA LE &gt;359.00
RIG. $429.00
Include* Pressure
Treated Floors

7VT\
ALL WOOD BUILDINGS

8 X 10 ESTATE STANDARD
SALE &gt;459.00

B U ILT ON YOUR LO T

____________ E t 6 .SS 39.00 ____________

NOW MONEY DOWN IOO\
FINANCING AVAILABLE

8 X 12 ATLANTA
SALE &gt;699.00

Sife Prices Good Thru i - f - i i

EEC. $ 799.00

wu

V ISIT OUR FACTORY S A L E S LOT AT
200 S. M Y R T LE A V E.
SANFO RD

323-5557
i
'* - i

�Evening Herald Sanford FI

SCOREBOARD
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II you ilu ln t tjci th a t qaeta hum last v r a r now
l» t h r tim e to begin th in k in g about what t hnn-ei
von w ou ld llk r th is h u n tin g season
On Ju ne I tiu n te n ra n begin fillin g out and
m a ilin g in th eir e ho le rs for the llrs i ntne-dav
q uo ta iu in l and a p p lic a tio n s lor special h un ts
o lfered in the s ta ir The quota h un t a pp lications
i an f&gt;e picked up at the courthouse or at
designated agents
T o q u a lify (or s e n d in g In a quota h u n t
a p p lic a tio n or a special h u n l. one needs to
purchase a w ild life m anagem ent area perm it
H u n te rs t&gt;5 years old and over onlv need to send
in th r num tier from th e ir average license The
over-age license ra n lie squired form the court
house it needed
This year, the h u n te r has a In-iter chance to
m r K r the choice th a t he prefers Thts Is true
because tlie G am e a nd F resh W a te r F ish
t o m m lsslu n revised its selection m ethod H eforr.
a h u n te r received six choices at the nine-day
quota h um Now the h u n te r Is lim lle d to a choice
to fo u r T his w ill help e lim in a te a h u n te r that
m ig h t gel his tilth or s ix th choice la-fore another
h u tiie r m ight receive h is firs t or second choice
Next vear • w ould like to sec the com m ission
have the local m eetings as it had In the past T ilts
w.iv local sportsm en could voice th e ir o pinio ns
i oncerm ng the next h u n tin g season
The com m ission s.n-s that it did not have these
m ce iin g s iln s vear lie ia u s e of la rk o l puhlte
interest I attended the last one it had in Sanford
and there was a i ruw d th r r r . almost sta nd ing
riH ini o nly
T h is vear l*&gt;« season w ill lie alm ut lo u r weeks
m Iru g ih lollowed by one weekend ol black

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Thursday, May 1). I ftS —7A

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L a rry
W illia m s
H E R A L D F IS H lN O f
H U N T IN G W R IT E R
(Miwder h u n tin g Regular h u n tin g season w ill last
as long as in p rrv lo iis years, h ut Is set back a
week later th an norm al
It those afternoon thundenU ortns don t starl on
a regular basis we m ight not have any wood# to
h un t in l l fm ik that we need to th an k all the
firefig hte rs and a m o u r rise th a t helped to gel
those d readful flam es under c o n tro l
I’a tll A fie m e lh v the lie tte r hall ol the o w n e r­
ship at the Osteen llridg e Fish C am p, siiul th ey're
i aiehtng bream and s h e llrra c k c rs in shallow
water rig h t ofl I he old bridge
F ishing is p rrttv slow .' said Patti "W e
lia v rn 'l seen lis t m uch a c tiv ity Ii s lie rn sti hot
In il we d id have lour (touts go out T lm rsd n v
m ornin g tor txiss fishing
I'a itl and Dell rem ind everyone lh a i th r fish
«amp w ill he open M em orial Day (Monday) but
w ill close Tuesday through F rid a y Ii Will reopen
Salurdav
I'h r next llu d d v llass F ish in g T o u rn a m n it w ill
I m- Sunday. Ju ne J All anglers should register by
O J O p m on Saturday. Ju ne I

Railroaders Triple Pleasure In Win O ver Rinker
The Railroader# trip le d th e ir
pleasure Wednesday — lite ra lly
Included in th e ir n in e -h it o f­
fensive atta ck w e rr six three
baggers, tw o each by T ro y M ike.
J i m m y C a ra w a y a n d A le x
Hayes. Those triple# and Ih r
c o m b in e d p itc h in g o f S c o tt
Scsiak and C alvin D onaldson
enabled the Railroaders to come
aw ay w tih a H-3 v ic to ry over
R in ke r M aterials in L ittle Na
Ilo na ) League action at Fort
M ellon Park
M ike trip le d In the llrs i and
scored on a w ild p itch for a 1-0
lead W hile Sestak shut R inker
dow n In the top of tlie second.
C araw ay frlp lc d and scored on
R ichard W ashington's single lor
a 2 0 lead
R in k e r got one run In the lop
of the th ird lin t tin- R ailroaders

Roundup
answered w ith three in I h eir
hall W ith tw o outs. Caraway
doubled. T errance Jones w alked
and W a shington walked to load
the bases Hayes then stepped
up and slugged his llrs i trip le to
drive In a ll three run s lor a 5-1
lead
R inker had |usi tw o hits in the
game. J,U . H c im c tt's single am i
M ilan G rayso n's R ill triple I m h I i
in ihc tilth
B U T C H 'S N IP S ATLAN TIC
llrc tt Hansen ripped an R lil
single to tie ih r game and th en
went a ro u n d to score on u w ild
pitch for i h r w in n in g ru n in the
i&gt;ottom ot the s ix th In n in g as
M u lc h 's C h e v r o n o u tla s te d

A tla n tic Bank. | h |7 In l . l l il r
N a tio n a l L e a g u e a r lM in at
W estaldr Field
Harvey ('lin g e r had three ol
eight hits lor D u tch 's Chevron
and he also drove In seven runs
In the first, ('lin g e r slupjM-d a
tw o ru n dou ble
He added a
tw o -run homer in the second
and a three-run double In Ih r
IIItIi B rrtl Hansen had iw o hits
a n d fo u r K ills in c lu d in g a
th re e -ru n hornet h i the first
frame.
For A tla n tic H ank. A nthony
D uva ll was 4 lor 5. J o h n ril
H rrw iiig to n c lub be d a three-run
hom er and K e ith M y rr added
tw o slng lrs
MEDCO DRUBS R O T A R Y
A 14-run second In n in g paved
ih r way as M e d io Pharm acy
iqiended R o la ry. 22 12, In San-

lo rd J u n io r League sotthall
M rd co rap(&gt;rd out 15 tills m
the seeond Inning atom Inelud
m g tw o each l&gt;\ A nn Prrrv
Renee Ware and K lin H a rris For
I he game M rdco had 2 li Inis,
th re e each by P e rry
W are.
C ha rltv W atkins Tnshn W ynn
and Louise Hleks
R otary, w hich S io re il n ln r ol
lis ru n s m the second lim in g
had IO tills in ifie game iw o
each by Kriea D ixon
M .irrfr
Tooke. Tina Jones and Roxle
W ilson
LIASM TO

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�• A - E v a n ln g H erald, S anford, F I.

T h u n d e r, M a y 1), i t l i

...Russo

ai the Sem inole C ounty C ourthouse, said the c o u n ty also
Incurs o the r e x p rn s rs from the
Public Defender sO lflcc.
She said the county can also
pay fo r typ ed depositions, transp ortatlo n costs for out-of-state
w it n e s s e s , c o p y in g c o s ts ,
p sych ia tric exam in a tion costs,
and costs of a court-appointed
special Investigator
A fte r Judge McGregor ordered
S em inole C o u n ty to pay the
travel expenses the co un ty ap|M-aled berause tlu -rr Is no s ta t­
ute o rd e rin g the co u n ty to pay
the b ill nor was It allowed by
statute to pay the b ill, a rro rd in g
to dep uty co u n ty a tto rn ey Hob
M cM illan He said the c o u n ty
also w as a h s rn i d u rin g th e
d ecision-m aking process about
w ho should pav the b ill The
bearing In w h ic h the c o u n ty was
ordered to pav the b ill was
unrecorded, accordin g to the
apjieal papers

C o n tin u e d fr o m page I A
A lie n said dome o( F lo rid a 's 67
co u n tie s have Marred to pay
tn iv e l expenses, other** have not
Its been p atch w ork across
F lo r id a ." h r said
A second
expense related case In vo lvin g
d e p o s itio n costs In c u rre d by
p u h llr defenders is being cons id e re d b y a r o u r t In F l.
Lauderdale.
A llen said a b ill that w ould
* bangr- the Florida sta tu tes Is In
p id le la l c o m m itte e s In e a rb
house ol ibe legislature and has
at*ouI a 30-50 chance o f becom ­
ing* law litis session
In the r ase that brought about
&lt;b«' ru lin g . Padilla, Irom Puerto
Mien was arrested March 10.
1984. in connection w ith the
shooting death the previous day
ol Carole Lynne Keith. 30. o l
lutkt Clem Drive lam gw ood. He
pleaded g u ilty tri first-degree
m u rde r Or t 10 and was sen
it need by C irc u it J u d g e C.
Vernon M u r .Jr to life w ith no
t bant e ol parole lor 25 years
lit- was defended by the Public
D efender's Office
In preparing P a dilla's defense.
Don West, an assistant public
defender who lias since left the
agenc y, traveled to Puerto M co
w ith M a rk K rv e x , a fo rm e r
assistant public- defender w ho
served as a tran slato r fo r West
I hey went to Padilla's home
l*et ause lie was p reviously conv it ic-cl ol m anslaughter for k ill­
ing Ills wife but siih se c|u rn lly
released
West and Heyes stayed In the
( a rlhltean Island sis days West
su bm itted a b ill o f 9955.21 of
w h ic h 9 1 2 0 was fo r R eyes'
tra n sla tin g services
C i r c u i t J u d g e R o b e r t D.
M e fire g o r granted the P u blic
D e fe n d e r's re q u e st th a t the
remedy pay the b ill berause
Russo said bis o ilie r bad no
I i i i i d h d e s ig n a te d fo r tr a v e l
expenses
Act circling in stale s ln lu trs . a
iim u tv Is required to pro vid e a
p u b lic d c le n d e r w ith o il i e r
s p a c e , u t i l i t i e s , te le p h o n e
s rrv irc s and eustodlal services
Al Its o p lln ii. a e o u iity cal)
appropriate or e o n trlb tlle pay to
i lie salary til one assistant p u b lic
defender whose o nly job Is to
d rlc n d In dlg en ls The r o u n iy Is
.ilso required in provide, ecpilp
and stall a courthouse. Liens
against tlrle n d a n ls far legal costs
Incurred by a piddle dcle nd er
an- payable in the c o u n ty , aci a id in g to statutes.
Mtinu McGregor. D ire c to r of
tin ('m u tu a l D ivision, records.

A R

E A

M c M illa n sa id the c o u n ty
(ought the case because of p rln
* iple and the "precedent value'
ol Me &lt;ire g o r's ru lin g
It was an expense that should
have been paid by the p u b lic
defender, be said
We bad to draw the line
som ew here." be said M cM illan
said II M cG regor's ru lin g bad
stood, the co u n ty could have
Incurred a lot ol p u h llr defender
travel expenses In Ibe future.
M cM illan said h r did not th in k
the fu n d in g s itu a tio n w o u ld
reach th a t stage nor. If It did.
that the co un ty have to provide
such legal assistance
Don N orth, press secretary for
Florida A ttorn ey General J im

ren tal.
If the case had gone to tria l.
A cat said the c o u n ty w o u ld also
h eve had to Incur the expense of
P o n g a witness from P u erio Rico
lo Sanford.
In the decision, the Justices
said the question was w hether
tra ve l expense K an a ppropriate
lo s t to Ire paid liv ihe co u n ty or
!«■ included as part ot ope ra tion ­
al expenses ol a p u b lic defend­
er x o fftre
lh&lt;- high court noted that
P adilla was In d ic te d by a
I9H4.
grand Jury and pleaded g u ilty to S m ith s o lfire in (Jet
avoid the death p en ality Assis­ issued ihe opinion th .ii public
t a n t S t a t e A t t o r n e y D o n defenders' offices sh ou ld pay for
Marblestone agreed not to seek so* h expenses .is do state a t­
d ie death p e n a lly If Padilla torneys offices Ih e v also said
pleaded g u ilty to first degree sta tu tes prohibit c o u n tie s from
m urder H r is now in the Union g iv in g state a im rn e v s offices
h in ds
C orrectional In s titu te . Ralford
th e court said R ussos m ain
Ms Keith was kille d ai about
a rg u m e n t was t li.it his o the r did
I 20 p in d u rin g an argum ent
w ith Padilla She was having a not h a * e th e lunds
Even ll we assume that th is
d iffic u lt lim e keeping Padilla
aw ay Irom her p rio r to ilu- allegation was sustained as fact
lo ih&lt;- satisfaction ol (McGregor!
xhootlng
ai the u nrep ortcil hearing this
Witnesses said Padilla llr r tl
la i t alo ne ca n n o t alio** th r
several shots in to her as she sat
* in u lt i o u rl to slult the lin .iiu lal
in the front seal ol her car while
o b lig a tio n ol one n u ll of governit was parked ai her employer.
m i ni Ithe state 1 to another tlh r
Vaughn Inc . a nursery at button
i o u tllv l." the (uslu es w rote
R o a d a n d S u n s e t D r iv e .
I here was no allegation that
Casselberry
She d lrd w hen a bullet ripped the state Itself was h lllr d lo r this
through her lu n g s and ruptured expense and i m ild noi pav T his
a m ajor blood vessel Padilla was c o u rt takes Judicial t i u i i i r that
Ihe stale, ai least at th is point m
arrested in an O rlan do bar a lir r
tim e is solvent Therefore, th r
.m anonym ous tip lo C rlm e lln r
In preparing Padilla s defense. d e c is io n o f tin lo w e r c o u rt
West traveled to Puerto Rico, l Mi Gregor's) Is re* ersi-il

S m ith , said the high c o u rt's
opinion Is o n ly b in d in g In the
5 ih D istrict, lie said the issue
would have lo lx- addressed by
ibe Florida Suprem e Court be
lore It w ou ld have statewide
im pact. H r said It would be
reasonable lo assume, however,
d ia l the increased expenses of
some p ublic defenders olflees
budgets w ould eventually have
v ir n r (Inanerial Influence on the
stale in higher costs

trxrk at least tw o depositions
stayed In a Rarnnda hotel at a
&lt;ox! ol $80 a d ay and drove a
re n te d llu le k S k v b a w k 433
m ile s lie paid $ 2 7 0 -lb lor car

C o n tin u e d fro m page 1A
\lte r th a t tim e Mrs McGough
told the c h ild re n she was going
:n rejrort th e ir row dy b ehavior to
the p rtn rlp a l a nti then she drove
•in to com plete her rounds, she
■viltl M rs McGough said she did
not tr || the ch ild re n. You all are
cuing to fr y ,"
\ ’q m a tte r ho** long the bus
« .is parked w ith ih r w indow s
.h u i W ells said such a ction is

...Moslems
C o n tin u e d fro m page I A
•i i-.ii ions in Heirnt
Those [A m a ll people w ho are
viip |x m rd to fig ht Israel w ith us
Irom the same trench, have now
em barked on -a rry in g out th is
c rim e and th u s h elpin g and
serving Z ionist schemes
Abu
Mousa said
We cannot rem ain silent We
w ill defend our people against
those covering their teal fares
w ith p a trio tic vails
Am al v iu r r r x said ihe* u r n
in lu ll c o n tro l ol th r Sabra an*
S im u la c a m p s P a le s tin ia n
sources conceded losing parts ol
Sabra. b u t said Shallla was s till
contested
Ai Sabra and Shallla. Am al
rounded up men and y o u th *

Kay. past state soloist
H ig h lig h ts ol the program w ill lx- la v in g ol a
w re ath on the s y m b o lic T o m b ol the U nkn ow n
S oldier and th r lig h tin g o l the Flume ol Freedom

...Holiday
C o n tin u e d fro m page 1A
VFW Post 5405 of W inter S p rin gs w ill lx- the
host post. O ther groups ta k in g part w ill h r
In c lu d r VFW D istrict 18 H onor G uard. VFW
A u x ilia ry 5405, Casselberry VFW Post 10050 and
A u x ilia ry . VFW' Post 10139 and A u x ilia ry
Am erican Legion Post IH3. A lta m on te Splngx.
A m erican Legion Posts 2-12 a n ti 331 ol Orlando.
Ibe A ir Force Sergeants A ssociation, and the
O livet C o in m u n d e ry No 4 of th e K n ig h ts Tem pter
of the York Rites Tem ple, O rlando
The Royal H lu r Patriot brass U u ln in ol Lake
b r u n tlr y H ig h School w ill p la y tin de r Ihe
d irection o f J e rry Richardson Echo Taps w ill lxplayed by b rIa n b l. ii/ and Sharon Sw alina
The Rev. J o h n b ra ly , pastor of the W estm inster
P rrs h y trrla n C h u rch . Casselberry, w ill give the
Invocation and benediction. T he chief m arshal
w ill be C h ie f Muster Sgl. (U.S.A F.-Rel.) Robert
l.4iihum A m o ng the honored guests w ilt lie
Robert D ysert. past slate ch a p la in , and Ills wife.

Also Monday, the V ie tna m W ar M em orial
located at the Orange C ou nty C onvention and
C iv ic Center w ill he the site ol a special service
Ix-gin nin g at 2 p in It w ill feature m usical
presentations by the W in te r Park H igh Sc hool
C horal Ensemble. M arine Major A rnold Fields and
L in d a b ry n n l J o rd a n
Ih e service is s|Minsoreil tn the V ietnam
Veterans uf C en tral F lorida and w ill m ark the
th ird such M em orial Day se rv ln in l«* held at the
m on um en t c o n ta in in g the engraved nam es ol IbM
servicem en w ho died Or are m issing in action
Iro m ih r county

NMtTUMD CAWUtT
COWSAST

KARNS
IN S U R A N C E A G E N C Y
413 W. First St.

Ph. 322-5762

W illiam H. ••B ill" Wight C.P.C.U.
President

I'honr a ttending .ire asked lo lin n g a Mower to
place .it ihr- m e m o ria l as a personal expression ol
rem em brance T im e w ill lx- made a vailable lor
anyone w ishing lo share th ru thoughts on Ihis
special occasion For m ore in fo rm a tio n ca ll Mike
C iillv c iilt at IR4-fitlUH.
—Ju ne C a s s e lb e rry

im c .

Sanford

□ •ra id W. Mayar
Account R apratantallv#

S E M IN O L E
POOL S U PPLY
SPECIAL

son b orn Dec. 28. 1904 In
Chicago, he m oved lo A ltam onte
Springs from N orth Carolina. H r
was a retired teacher and a
m em ber o f C h ris t E p isco p a l
Church. I.ongwood
S u ivlvo rs Include tw o sons.
W illiam G J r., lla v lo c k . N.C..
Roger. G a ine sville, five d a u g h ­
ters. V irg in ia G odw in. A n c h o r­
a g e . A la s k a . N a n c y b a k e r .
Ja ckso n lvllc, Nela C h ru th ls . L it ­
tle Rock. Ja nice S to ll. Pem broke
Pine*. Sandra llu d lr y . Tam pa,
sister. M rs M anet I a liy rd C h it
tu rn . A lta m o n te S p rin g s . 17
g r a n d c h lld r e n lr n ; s ix g r e a t­
g ra nd childre n.
U a ld w in - F a ir c h ild F u n e ru l
Home. Forest C ity . I* tn charge
o f arrangem ents.
V IC K I L T N N K U C H A N
M is* V ic k i L y n n Kuchun, 21.
o f 2545 Park A vc.. Sanford, died
Tuesday at her hom e after a long
Illness b o m J u ly 31, 1903 In

THURSDAYFRIDAYSATURDAY SPECIAL!
FREE DELIVERY!
4 -DRAWER

Many o f them were marched
through Moslem neighborhoods
ol west H c tru t before being
herded Into tru c k s and Jeeps and
i.iken to a m akeshift ja il — an
itn lin ls h r d 4 0 flo o r h ig h -ris e
b u ild in g near the b eiru t Green
Line that also serves as an Am al
m ilitia base

TO TAL INSURANCE
SERVICE
REMEMBER
YOUR INDEPENDENT AGENT
SERVES YOU FIRST

At c o rd in g to r o u tin e p r o ­
cedure the i.is c w ill Ire re
scheduled b rlnrc Mi G regor lor
reconsideration and fu rth e r uc
non

D E A T H S

LA U RA E .O U Y AN
M is Laura E G uyun. H3, ol
2 10(1 H o w e ll b ra n c h R oad.
M aitland, died Tuesday at A tn rr
l i a n a H e a lth C ure C e n te r.
W inter Park born Dec 29. 1899
in L o n d o n , s lt r m o v e d to
M aitland Irom Orlando In 1983.
She was a hom em aker and a
Presbyterian She was a m em ber
of Ih r Scottish Klatt. New York
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e h e r
husband. Alex; a soil. Robert,
L a rc h m iin t. N Y ; a b ro th e r,
( ir o rg r Strode, E ngland; tw n
sisters, O livia and Lucy. Ix ith of
England, six grandchildren
Ila ld w ln - F a lr e h lld E u n e ru l
Home. G oldenrod. Is In charge of
arrangem ents
W IL L IA M Q .1 H L A N D
Mr W llllu m 0 . Ih lu n d . 80. or
148 R onnie D rive. A lta m o n te
S p rin gs, died F rid a y In New
llc rn . N,C. w hen he suffered a
heart a tta ck w h ile visit lu g h is

5 -DRAWER

HDRM. CHEST

UDRM. CHEST

• 4 8

• 5 8

KA

L ivo nia . Mich , she m oved In
Sanford from there tw o m onths
ago She was a cashier lor Pantry
Pride
She Is survived by h r r parents.
Mr a .id Mrs R olx-rl Kuchun.
l.lv o n la , a b ro th e r. E ric It .
L ivonia, m a tr n i.il grand parents.
Mr and Mrs Ralph Sutherland.
Sanford, paternal grundpaients.
Mr and M rs Peter Kuchun.
Redlord. Mich
G ru m k o w F u n e ra l H om e.
S u n lu rd . is in ehurge nt a r­
rangem ent*
JOHN A . L a C E N T R A
J o h n A ndrew l.a C e n lru . 3
m on ths. 1155 San b ias Cove.
C asselberry, die d M onduy at
S h u n d * T e a c h in g H o s p ita l.
G ainesville Horn Feb
I I In
W in te r Park, lie was a Catholic.
S u rv iv o r* Include h is parents.
Jo h n and K a th y. Casselberry;
grandparents. Paul and Hetty
LaCcntra. Oviedo, and Nell and
V iv ia n S tu m lle v
W est Palm
bead.
I la ld w ln - F a lr e h lld F u n e ra l
Home. Goldenrod. Is In ehargr ol
arrangem ent*
T H E L M A W. ROUSE
Mrs Thelm a W. Rouse. 60. of
2 10 L u k e v irw A v r., Sanford,
died Tuesday at C en tral Florida
Regional Hospital. S u n lo id Iko n
A p ril 17. 1919 in H un ting to n.
W .Va.. she m oved lo Sunhm i
Irom DeLund 40 years ago. She
was a telephone operator w ith
Southern bell
S urvivors Include a daughter,
P a t r ic ia V a n L a n d ln g h a m .
O lym pia. Wash ; one grandson,
one great-grandson; tw o sisters.
Im og en r Irving, S a iilo rtl, and
Mary Wooten. H u n tin g to n
G r.unkow Funeral Home Is in
charge of arrangem ents

KucH«rt 2i wr*od*«d Tufiday w illtw ^ ld il
1pm Fr &gt;d#y in tty* OrimhChM Fpntt *1 Hem*
cfYAp*( «ifti
Mtv Dr Tommy i J*cwbi
officiating Fnondi m#r cill *f th# fun*r«l
hom* today f t pm Bunn Mill b* in
Fv«rgr**rx
Grarriko* f yf**t4l
Morn* in r harg*
ROUSE TH E IM A W
M # m w ilt «*r vie at tor fhQlm# A

KUCMAN. VICK I IY N N
— Fun .r.1 H i i k f l lot

M ill

L,nn

Flower * F or A II Ck i -iisTon^”

(InlliiHi

UM l

V

333-1204

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fUNCIAL NOMvCiHCTtRY
11mmti • M SI

F R E E

1100 S. French A v*„ Sanford, FL

3227053

HOURS Moo. - Sat 0 AM - 5 30 PM

J

$ | 99

R eg. 9 2 .2 9 • 2 ‘/a G al.
M ay 2 4 th &amp; 2 5 lh O N L Y ...

J K
2 V, g «i .
D e p o sit N o t In c lu d e d

SAVE *100
*1 0 0 .0 0 O F F On All
Above Ground Pools.
M ust Present This Ad. Offer
Good Only May 23rd &amp; 2 4 th

E s t im a te

SEMINOLE
SEW
322*9411

The Com plete Pool Sforr
A B O VE G IN G R O U N D POOLS &amp; PARTS
2 IB S. Fiench Av«.. Sanford
17 92 C 3rd Siren

(O M N I • If tj A
L AM C MAMT l l VO

Vhbran ()i ■&gt;* C•*+««

„

_

3 2 2 -3 0 2 2

2020 McC r a c k e n r o a d , sa n fo r d , f l a . 321-5330

IffCIAL

fWrtd* fresd—

1 A*d D.ws

S P A R E R IB S

. * 1 .6 9
m 1*1

taiu

W HO LE F R Y E R S

AQC

umi

• t n 111 rtw ciuu

court i t

t

U t.O A.

m u

P O R K R IB S

CHUCK S H A K

5 L * BOX

$6 .4 5

CHUCK ROAST
u

9

9

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SAVE - M EM ORIAL DAY SPECIALS! • SAVE
5 Lb. Box-20-4 Oz.

rv H H d
F in n

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5 Lb. Box

T T J S S ?

$3 . 7 5

5 L b . B o x -1 0 -8 Oz. M*LS S r,C0 4 3 . 9 5

5 L b. B o x 2 0 - 4 O z. ' S i #t. n m , 7 . 4 5

5 L b . B o x * l( M ) O z.

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IS S i

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2SS
won

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5 lb. B o x *2 (M Oz. C M u a o a u ir ? r n i» * 4 a 9 5

5 L b. B o x

row mors

*9 .9 5

5 Lb. Box

3 Lb. B o x

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44A At
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I M g j y h Ran
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LIQUID
C H L O R IN E

1 DAY
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SERVICE

cat At

V IU I

Rout*

a4 Mho d9*nJ Tuotdty *(M too hold in in*
Gf*mko« Fun*r*l Mom* chp*i *1 IQ mm
Saturday
Father Lvroy 0 Sop*' Jr
officiating In li*v ol Mowtn donetiortt m*f
tm m*&lt;|* lo your f*vor&lt;t* charity Gramho*
Fun*r*f Horn* »ncharti*

Funeral Notices

*

...Driver

im p r o p e r a s
d is c ip lin a r y
measure and the tu atie r Is being
investigated. H r *uid school bus
d r iv e r s h a v e h e r n w a rn e d
specifically against such action.
Wc d o n 't emtdone It- Wc
don 't recom m end It They have
been told not to do ll. 'h e said.
A lter the incident is evaluated
Wells sld school officials w ill
decide what if an* action w ill be
i.iken Sem inole C ounty s h e rllfs
spokesman Jo h n Spolskl said at
Hits point the Incident is being
deali w ith by school otltelals and
m charge* ha* e been Hied

I *

PO RK CHOPS ’ 5 . 9 5
xwr M
j

51
WCCiACIM 1040*

3
m
1z

BEEF
SPARE RIBS ib . * 9 *

CATTLEMASTER’S
YOUR GRILL-OUT
HEADQUARTERS

�PEOPLE
Evam ng H arald. Santord FI

C h ristin e F o w le r B ride
O f R obert W. Lipscom b

SISTER
Shares

( h r h iiiu ' J F n iilc r .m&lt;t Hubert
U Lipscom b w en in a m c d A p ril
27 at I p in at A ll S o uls
i athn lii C hu rch Sanlont
l lic bruit* is t]u- daughter ot
Mrs C onnie Fowler JOB McVay
Drive S anlont Flic bridegroom
is i|t* son o! Mr am t M rs
1 tio in a s s
laps* o tn b
1B44
\iu hur I )riv *• S m ilon l

On b e h a lf o f S IS T E R In c ,
P resident
Elizabeth
W e le b o b . p r e s e n ts a S500
ch eck to C .J " K i t " C a rs o n ,
p u b lic r e la tio n s d ire c to r o f
the C h r is tia n S h a rin g C e n te r,
S a n fo rd , to be a p p lie d to th e
c e n te r's b u ild in g fu n d
•(•••Id eSo*o S r

Thursday. May 13. 1HJ— IB

t h &lt;■ K r v
I. \ I e I) a n t* n
|M'thirim*tt llu* tra iliiio n a l double
ring e rre in o rn assisierl t&gt;\ the
H r\ K avnuunl Govern ol New
Sm yrna H eath, eoiisiu ol the
bride

V »H v«*

G iven in m arria ge b \ tie r
tiro itie r F re d rru k 1. Fowler Itu*
bride * hose lot tier vows a gown
ol * a n d lr lig h i o rg an za w ith
Aleiieon a pplique late and seed
jtcutis I tie lilte d tMKill i ol sheer
I nullsli net Ic a tu ii *! a iia ln rn l
M .lls llltlr w ith &gt; lu ll IlllW lllg
skin le tin in a u u u in a sweeping
* bap* I tra in A Camelnt tlead
piece lie lit hei w a ll/ length veil
ot appll&lt;|iied Al*'il&lt; on la* e
Pal M F o w lri slsl*'i ol 111*'
brute a lle iid e d as m aid ol tiu u o r
Mu ware a lea length down *il
m a m e e lu llo tl at * r ille d w llb
satin n titm n
A stuni * b illo n
jacket in a deeper sli.nle ol
m a u v e e tib a iii «■*! ill* a ltlr*'
Hr Ide s in ,i Ills v v c ii K .itb v
W illiam s Lestev H iggins L lg g rll
i a ib v F o w le r Iv t'V t u iiiile
FtiW'let L e tltn u s atul I hetesa
I ow let Keelte 1 In ll gowns w en
stm llai lo ltie tiu llo i a llt in la llt s
S* o il 1 laps* o in b b io lt ir i **|
ib* 1*11*0111 served as lies! m an
I sliers w eie Dave t lam
Ion
H a ys D r
H on K sie s
F oin
Fowler and Mik* Mabel
A reception was Ill-Ill at III*

L e is u re
Ms. Lakeview 1985 And Her Court
L a k e v le w N u r s in g C e n te r, S a n fo rd , c ro w n e d
a queen on M o th e r 's D a y w h e n th e re s id e n ts
p a r t ic ip a t e d in p la n n e d a c t i v i t i e s th a t
e x te n d e d d u r in g th e fo llo w in g w e e k , Na
tio n a l N u rs in g H o m e W eek M s L a k e v le w

HtnM Photo hr T#mmy Vincent

1985 a n d h e r c o u r t in c lu d e
E tta C r u m m e tt,
fr o m le ft, and E m m a H a r r is , tie fo r fir s t
r u n n e r u p ; a nd M s L a k e v le w 1984. L o r in e
C a n a d a , c r o w n in g M s
L a k e v le w
1985,
G la d y s B ro g le y

Author Reviews Books Based
On Psychic Research For ESO
Dr David K .tones, u M o ri.ilr
prolessor ol r u liu r a l a niliru jK ito
gy at the U n lv e rs iiv ol fe n tra t
Florida, w as I he Uuesl speakel ai
I lie Mav n ire tlrig ol Hie Kpsilun
Siunia O rnU ron chapter nl the
Sanlortl W o m an 's c lu ti In-Id ai
the home nl K s le llr Davis w llh
coliuslesses K attier Penn and
V irgin ia llu m r v
In irn d u e rd In Mabel Piety,
prnur.un ch a irm a n Dt Jones
review ed tw o o l I tie several
books lie has w ritte n based on
psychic research
Sanapia
C om anche M ed icin e Woman"
am i "Visions o f T i m e '
"Sanapia — C om anche M id i
cine W o m an " is itic result nl his
vra ra as a Held researcher w ith
the Am erican In d ia n In sU tutr
and as a rescan her and consul
la id lor Ihc H.KAV Indian tlospl
la l System The consistent a b ili­
ty o f m edicine w om an Sanapia
to anticipate fu tu re events amt
e nvision [Mst ones convinced
.Jones that p hysic a b ility was
rcul and not m agic nr make
Ix -lirv r Harly to i t i r i r acipialn
la n c e , S a na p ia asked Jones
w hat tie was tio ln u to prepare lor
tils u ncle's visit the follow ing
week Jones knew n o th in g about
such a visit but. sure enough, his
uncle made a surprise visit Just
as Sanapia had said he would
Sanapia sim p ly "kn e w " things
Episodes such as th is were so
com m on that Jones came io
accept ihem as n orm a l
In “ Visions o f T im e " Jones
relates his e x p e rim e n t* In using
psychics lo o b ta in Inform ation
about artifacts not available to
a r c h e o l o g i s t s and an*
th ro p o lo g lsts. T h e y ra n dale
a rtifa cts and d e te rm in e how and
under what r tr r u m s ia n r r s peo­

Didn't Gel
Your Paper?

ple lived, but th ru - ts no real w.n
in d e te rm in e w h a t p rim itiv e
I***opic were tliltik lo u &lt;*r fre lltig
lim e s Im pe d i l i u i p s y c h ic s
w o u ld lx- able in sense some
i hough Is and lee lings
F lic bonk d e l.Ills bow the
e xpet lllie Ills w ere sel up. who
purl Ii l|).ilrd III tllc ill. hnvv llll-v
were carried m il and w h ,il lluir s u tls were
A l l x i t |to/«- a m e d iu m Im m
&lt; assad ag a. w a s o i h * *d the
p s y c h ic s w ho helpe d Jo ne s
Ito /c was quilt* s u n esslul m
s e e in g
e v r tits a n d n o tin g
h u m a n fe e lin g s
c o n n e c te d
w ith the .u til,i* is In the cun
tro lle d p re liin ln .it&gt; e x |x *rtiiirn ts
Doze d e ition slra te d HO% act u n i
* v w lit* h is considered high
Jones discovered in tils rescar* Ii I I i .i 1 ill*- g ill of c la irv o y ­
ance Is acquired til several ways
Som e |H-op|e arc tx irn w ith II.
some study lu gam Ih c s k ill and
some seem suddenly to develop
a I.iic n i a b ility In taler years
( tn ld re n txirn w ith clairvoyance
have a (little n il lim e . Jones said
Ii they w arn |m*o |*Ic ot danger,
they are freq ue n tly accused of
m a k in g accidents happen. They
are seldom believed, u rr I bought
pecu lia r ' and g ra d u a lly learn
io k re p silent about th e ir g ilt
Jones indicated ib is is a Meld
w ith u n lim llrd (x iv s ib illllrs and
one h r intends to pursue
The regular business m eeting
was conducted by ch a irm a n Hat
Foster.
M em tier* prcseni were Vida
S m ith . C harlotte S m ith . Melba
C txiper. E dvlhe George. Tem pa
I ’.irks, Kay Hall. Hazel Cash. Hat
Foster, Mattel Hiety. D oris lia r
rlrn a n . Louise Mayes. K a tr Nasti.

1. ti * i l l * - S l o n e
F l o r c o* &lt;
M oo t lo r io n
11•*11 n M a u h u rt
Hsiber Henn. V irgin ia H urticv
.m il K siclle Davis — K a te N a th

J A Y ’S
c o U f 0 **

o**v*

t tic Leisure l ion H m giitm at
Sem inole C n m tm itfltv College
announces that die b illo w in g
• lasses w ill begin I lie* w r r k id
tu lle 3 “ T hese classes arc
si lt supported hv student tees as
in* esj&gt;eriNc to tin- taxpayer
a* i iirc itn u to F.i» f
llr n k i
( iN irdln.itur ol tin- Program Reg
siia tin n s are Ix-ing accepted in
ill* Mi u is tia i s( )ttn *• at S&lt; (
W AKDUcmK IM A G f IM H A l' I
!, V e ilin g c la s s l — S lild e ills
s/uuifd /lave /x-,-i» cofur .u ia fit/rd
l» Itite |*tu iillg th is * lass Vou w ill
I* .n il to assemble a baluiu ed
w.udrobc to in a lc h vm ir In d ivid
u.d b b s iv le p his ib* im |x&gt;riaui *
&lt;&gt;t accessories and bow in shop
*o*l dj* ss * lin e * ilv bv a point
s* stem Fhe m in s*- w ill eonsisi
ol lu n Itlle e boot sessions ,iu*l

H A IR S TY LIN G

M rs . R o b e rt W . L ip s c o m b

T im e

C la s s e s

emuttmerU w tlt be lim it* *1 to six
I' O l , O H . S I V 1, K A N D
\\
A
M D
N
O
It
K
\\ ( tMKSIM tl’ AVf )M K\ biltmux.n

* la s s t — 1 tiic * th re e h u m
sessions w hich * liver personal
i nlni a iia h s is m akeup selection
.m il appll* alln n I* * In ilip ic s anil
how to assemble a h a la n rrd
w a t d r u b * t o h i .i t * h v u it r
lllc s tv I*
( lass * n io llm i nt Is
lim ite d
to s ix so ib .it each
student mav l« u n t il as m ill'll
pi Is o ila l a lie n llin t as (Hisslble
&lt; &lt;&gt; I. t l M A N D S T V I. K
WORKSHOP ii v io lin * i lass)
l u i i Ituee Im m sessions w h it'll
IVtil i i iv e i personal M ilul ,111,11V
sis
u id k e t i|i si b , lio n a n d
ip p tli a lu m i* &lt; tiiiiip ie s ( lass
* m n llln * tit ts bunt* tl to six so
III.il * a, ll student III.l\ lie Ulven

as nmv It petsonal a lte n llo n as
] Misslble
U U I l , T I N U / It I t i I N N K H S
IH H O C G H ADVANCEJ) le v in
mu class)
I In InUnwtiiU pal
ic tu s w ill be i.m u h t fa lb e d u il
W indow la*u f . i b l t i S u tllK inn el
S ue. G r a n d m o th e r s F lo w e r
G arden. plus in a ity m ote The
p atte rn s mav b* used in m ake
p illow sham s w all h an ging s and
lu ll s l/e q u ills
G OLF II (Sutuidav u m in m u
* lass) — Kaeli session w ill be
designed lor llie d iv e lu p m c u l til
Unit s most co m m on shots such
as short g a to r Ip u tlin u . i tup
p lu g **liurt appro,i* b and x im l
sliois): the m id ilb trim s, and the
lon g name (Irons and woods)
S im le n is should b rin g the I &lt;&gt;
and '* trim s lo the lits i class
meet mu

DEN

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C en ter M all, Sanford

323-5227

Your
Long
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ruppieS all-time favorites
M ( . t l 's

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is n iiifn

MEMORIAL DAY
SPECIALS!
Summer
Slacks

%

DVKEU

Jimo c. in s».

25%

I k i r t i n t w lx t

H a th Puppies' Shoes Q ua lity W ith
Steel Shank Support And N in o
Crepe Soles. In Supple
Sm ooth Lealher of
B reathin' Blushed
P ic k in ' Leather.

32 2-3524

OFF

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C a ll C ircu la tio n Dspt.

322-2611

th e brute Is a project ail
itu n ls ira io t l*n A A I O tln ttd o
I III 1*10*1111 Is p ln jc c l niaiiau* l
I o l D S -I 111 v * s lu t e ll 1 f o i l
s li in tins, III*

M ia u iM iii* S p lin e s In n and
Mai ip li I ( lilt*
fo llo w mu a w c d d ltiu erulse to
ib* lla lia iiia s l l u - uew lvw 'rds are
i oak mu III* It boon- in O rlando

Available In Pewter A Mound Dog

SHOE STORE

E v e n in g H e r a ld

i m f. t i n t ir
DOWNTOWN lANTOtO

» • »

w&gt;u«v
»a* •»

r « ♦

'-9

%« * * #

•

�• #

7 B -Eve n in g Herald. Senlord.

B L O N D IE

Thurtdey, May 23, I W

by Chic Young

THE BORN LOSER

by Arl Ssnsom

by Bob Montana

ARCHIE
S W ( THE BUKO PATE
VOU A NO B E T T y MAP fo a
WE CAST NIGHT* •
TH AT I TURNEP

TOW

•y'Y E f"

by Howla Schneider

EEK &amp; MEEK_______________
I M tAJ T H tS E DAYS A R tk lT
IM T E .R E .S T tD (U W A R W U G
AVID SETTUIOG D O k J U

T H E V JUST W M J T TO
P i MV A R O U U D

IT'S POSlTiW ELV
&amp; O -D E &amp; R P O II0 G .

!

V" “ \ C "

Life-Saving Health Care
Isn't Always Welcome
Do a ll people w hose hearts th e s u b je c t In s u b tle w ays,
have stopped beating la ie r w el­ expecting the patient to elabo­
come the news that th e ir lives rate and express a preference.
w ere saved by re s u s c ita tio n ? U n til we doctors can be educated
A p p a re n tly not. accordin g to a to accept death as an option that
s tu d y conducted In a Boston Is preferable to a life o f depen­
dence and d is a b ility . I am afraid
hospital.
One lh lrd o f p a tie n ts reported th a t p a tie n ts m u st la k e the
that th ey regretted being k rp l in itia tiv e lo inform us o f ih r lr
a liv e by c a rd io p u lm o n a ry re­ own ve ry personal beliefs
U nd ersta nd ab ly, patients m ay
su scitatio n |CPRI. T h is Inform slio n Is notable, to say the least: It
fobs the very fo un da tio n o f the
67 South American
ACROSS
acute, heroic m edical care that
monksy
physicians are ira ln e d to ad­
DOWN
1 Pity on words
m in iste r.
4 Long poem
1 Msis psrsnt
A fte r having undergone CPR
9 OfDosit
2 HlWSnSn
and been lite ra lly b ro ug ht hack 12 New Zeilend
mttrumsntt
from death, these s u rv iv o rs In­
fithmg lid s
I 'M
form of element
sisted d ia l If th e ir o p in io n s had 13 Kitchen
Romen duty
implement
been solicited before the event,
So
fir
th ey never would have given 14 Yssr (Sp |
56. Romsn
p e rm is s io n for e x tra o rd in a ry 15 Stroks
fswsst
life-support measures to be used. 16 Ancient port of
Alto.
(toms
As p a in fu l as th is know ledge
Cali forms
m ay be to us doctors, we are 17 Burmese
10 Sloth
11 Slog
forced lo conclude th a t a hefty 18 Property
19 M llS v rl of
p ro p o rtio n o f die III people we 20 Koreen city
22 Eleventh month
typo
save w ould prefer lo die.
21 Ivory
Isbbr |
Most physicians Involved In
24 School orgtm is 23 Iddy
the s tu d y assumed — a p p aren tly
24 Annoy
t on |abbr )
In c o rre ctly — th a t the v ic tim s 25 Breed of dog
25 Wslk
26 Ons
w anted to live. A lth o u g h the 20 M itel globs
dm -tors’ rffo rls m ay have l&gt;rrn 30 Political group 27 Annoying
msscl
w ell-in te ntio ne d, ih r l r In stin cts 34 Annuity Isbbr)
29 Msdam (cont)
seem lo have hern a l odds w ith 35 Ags*
31 South Ssst
the w ishes o f c h ro n ic a lly III 30 Tots
foist
|M-rsons w ho w ould have chosen 37 Italian grsstmg
1
a i|u tc k and re la tive ly |&gt; ra rrfu ! 39 Bsby i goodbys
death. E vid en tly. I h r m edical
{comp wd )
profession m ay not he doing 41 Bibytonisn
dsity
everyone a favor by assum ing
42 M it* Kstt of
d ia l everyone wards to su rvive.
ths comics
I am aware d ia l a h a n d fu l of
d o c t o r s w h o r e g u I a r I y 43 Wife of
Cuchulam
p a rticip a te in CPU have Jokingly
vowed to have die w ords "D o 44 Bring into plsy
Not K rs u s c liu tc " la llo o e d across 45 Sly follow
”
M
th e ir chesls The average citizen 47 Msisurs of
Isngth
m ay not find d lls so lu tion a m u s­
IT
49 Thst it (Lot . 2
in g or practical, hut you m ust
w d t)
a d m it ii Is a clear and direct
52 Pslsts port
message. And th at, a ccordin g to 56 A itron sutl’ "oil
the Boston researchers. Is w hat
right" (comp,
Is most needed
wd)
4*
to
•1 1
A m a jo rity o l p hysician s are 57 Join*
re lu c lu n t lo ask d a ily . In-fore die 61 Alshouts
II
fa c t. If p a lle n ls w a n t to he 62 M tdim s Isbb r)
resuscitated Many doctors p re ­ 63 Dsncsr
•1
fer to ignore die Issue altogether
Jssnmsirs
%%
by b elieving dia l o nly th e y kn o w 64 Also
w hat Is I m s i for die te rm in a lly 65 Egyptisn dsity
ill Some tdiysleluns approach 66 Tims m ssturst

by Hargreaves A Sellers

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
jL &gt; f - r r v &gt; H T
O i LAA Tip 1AKT M E
O E K K ^O ^LY . pOOTOfi
peo ple

&lt;n

by Warner Brothers

BUGS BUNNY
(5 W E C E LO ST.

'-fl-iE S A D n Ew S is

&amp; O Q O N g tV S ? U i^ T S
- fi* E S A P N E W S * 1

Send y o u r questions to D r
G olf a f I ' O Box 91428. Cleve­
land. Ohio 44101
Answsr to PrsviOul PnMls

A H c A
A 0 U D
A 1 R 1
T
1 1 1
s O S n
o 0 0 R
L 1 B E
n N A
E E R
O
A Q U 1
R u H N
T A S K
32
33
30
40
46
48
49
50

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T A N
E D E

T
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S
M
V
R
N
A
R
E
D

51 Soussrss out
53 Antisr sourcs
54 Vsnsty ol moth
55 Biblicsl nsms
SB Busy msact
59 Actrsss Msiksl
60 Thncs Iprsf |

Pots
Nsvy
Boors
Wskss up
Esrsd soil
505. Romsn
Postic foot
Roundfd roof

10

11

It

11

14

11

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!

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it

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i *’
1§i
114
11 r
| «| IS I! to, hi * iiw

WIN AT BRIDGE
By J a m e s J a c o b y

TVE GOOD NEWS

hesitate to broach the subject!
because th e ir view s of death!
m ay d iffer s u b s ta n tia lly from |
th e ir p hysician s' opinions.

t3

S£ FJU N P ,

•lust In catw* some o f you ore
not up on yo ur n o -tru m p c o n ­
vent tons. tw o (In tis asked for a
m a|or Pour d u b s then asked lo r
aces and the lou r n o -tru m p
r&lt;-r&gt;|Hinsr sltowed litres*. In d ia l
fashion N orth .Sm ith bulged In to
a reasonable slain
Declarer won tin* c lu b k in g In
d u m m y and played th e A-K of
hearts W est's show ing out on
thr* s e c o n d r o u n d th r e w a
w re n c h In to w hat o th e rw is e
w ou ld have tie rn sm oo thly r u n ­
n in g m a ch in e ry The queen of
spades was covered liv the king
and ace. Next came the A O of
i In tis , a n d a d ia m o n d w as
th ro w n from d um m y Declarer
How p la yed too q u ic k ly
He
played ace ol d ia m o n ds and
rutted one Now lie pluvt-it Jack ol
spades and tried to m il a spade.
East came In w ith the heart |uck

a n d p la y e d a n o th e r h e a r t.
E ve n tu a lly South had to lose tw o
more tric k s .

m n

It Is true Ural It East had
fo llo w ed to th e th ird spade,
declarer w o u ld have succeeded
He w ou ld have been able to ru ff
a th ird d ia m o n d and now score
his hean t o for the tw e lfth tric k .
The tic tle r approach Is lo play
Jack and a spade before ru llln g a
d ia m o n d . N ow East c u n n o l
prevail by c o m in g In w ith the
heart Jack si nee declarer w ill
have enough entries lo set up
the lit I tk spade. When East d is ­
cards on tiie th ird spade. S outh
w ill r u f f In h a n d , tr u m p a
diam ond and lead the fo u rth
spade, Once again. East Is help
less It he ru ffs and plays a heart,
d u m m y Is good It he (alls to ruff,
declarer m akes the 10 o f hearis
in tils hand and has the slam

EAST
♦ K 10

W EST

SH U
V4
♦ y Js

YJ V52
« K»«I

A 8 S2
SOI T il

* j to w « i

♦ AI
V 1067 1

♦Ay7
♦ A J 104

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

W'rel

North

Kail

Paw
I'aw
Paw
Paw

:4
14
19

Paw
Paw
Paw

Opening lead A.)

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...
by Bob Thaves

FRANK AND ERNEST

FRANK a ERNIE S
KWIKI - FIX GARAGE

WB

frW A N c fp

F /e o N T

e n p

T W

, Re

a p

-

A M P W Q X T ° F o u Fi
r - /

OVPPHFAP.
s -u
THAi^tV
t »** a-

by Jim Davis

GARFIELD
PO VOU KNOW WHAT I LIKE
ABOUT VOOR PLACE, IR M A ?
v VOU RE OPEN 21 MOORft

YO UR B IR T H D A Y
M a y 2 4 , 19BB
T h is c o m in g year you w ill
have a num lK-r ol o p p o rtu n itie s
to so ce rsstu llv use yo u r salrs
a b ilitie s and pro m o tion al s k ills
Buyers w ill tic Interested In w hat
vnu'11 1m* selling
G E M IN I (May 2 1-Jun e 20)
T oday obstacles arc lik e ly lo be
fig m e n ts o f y o u r im a g in a tio n
Once you sw ing Into a ction ,
y o u 'll know' how lo c irc u m v e n t
these lalse Im pressions. Know
w here to took for rom ance and
y o u ’ll fin d It. The Astro-G raph
M atch m ake r set In s ta n tly re ­
veals w h ich signs are ro m a n ­
tic a lly best lo r you. M all S2 lo
A stro -G ra p h . Box 4 89 . Hadlo
C ity S ta tio n . New Y o rk . NY

turn

C A N C E R (June 21 J u ly 22| II
vou boast about yo ur m a te ria l
w o rth today. It w ill not Im p rrs s
anyone hut yourself. O thers w ill
tie m ore s tirre d by your h u m ility
m

Ilian by y o u r bucks.
LEO (J u ly 23-Aug 221 Friends
w ho have dealings w ith you
outside o f y o u r home w ill fin d
you pleasant and refreshing to ­
day H owever. II fa m ily m em bers
are (silled the verdict could be
different.
V IR G O (Aug 23-Sept. 22) A
second e ffo rt m ay tie required to
achieve a m a jo r goal today
Don’t ca ll It q u its if your first try
falls short.
L IB R A (Sept 23-Ocl. 23) Your
Judgment In most m atters w ill
tie e xtre m ely keen today. The
one exception, however, could
lie In y o u r lln a n c la l affairs, so
move c a u tio u s ly .
SCORPIO (Oi l 24-Nov. 22) A
situation lh u t has stym ied yo u r
a m b itio u s a lm s w ill ta k r a tu rn
lot the b etter today. V ictory Is In
the offing.
S A G IT T A R IU S INov. 2 3 Dec
21) T o d a y 's c o n d itio n s a re
unique In th a t you can reap
gams from Joint ventures b ut
o n ly If y o u r choice o f a partner ts
wise.
CA PRICO RN |Dec 22-Jan. 191

People not d ire c tly Involved In
y o u r llna nclal a lla irs m ust lak e p t o u t o f th e a c t to d a y .
Interference from them could bo
a lia b ility
A Q U A R IU S (Jau 20 Feb 191
Be careful today not to become
loo closely associated w ith those
whose a iln s are not In com plete
h arm o ny w ith yours. S tic k w ith
proven allies
P IS C E S IFeti 20 M arch 20)
Y our Inner urges w ill compel
you lo tie In d u s trio u s today and
they should tie heeded However,
spend tim e on a w o rth w h ile
hobby rath er th a n a routine
chore.
A R IE S |M arch 2 1 A p ril 19)
Even ll th ing s are a b it tig h t for
you fin a n cia lly today, y o u 'd tie
wise not to try to borrow from
Irlends W ork y o u r affairs out
yourselt.
TA U RU S (A p ril 20 May 20&gt;
Y o u are in u fa r s tr o n g e r
bargaining post I tori today than
y o u m ay realize D o n 't ytcld to
term s that do nut serve yo u r best
interests.

ANNIE

TUMBLEWEEDS
A GREAT rowWOVH \ /w A R tW W BY

U Wi MR E
a a
a e ir a M a iB ^ i
A GREATAURIPWCEi

tfU W T

TM YPL

,V W B « J o &lt; r^ llS l

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FOUTK?OE.
t h a iu s o
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ASPfrm .
to try
0 \tW r TD ( if T TD MY rtVlCJ
f t &amp; K - I flAPOQ I c w r $ H !

V -W m B U N P ? *
you pereniFP M£ I MOW t w t
TPRHOfllflS
£W H THOUGH
prcfer yom
youwe wcwoer VICTIMS
TDTRUY
H em ese?
HfLPLfS5y BUT
174 HF8t*Q ic o a p w t !

I osude.

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$

04

B nJS U l
.- .

by Leonard Starr

by T. K. Ryan

r*
-

�I &gt; *

Evening Herald Santerd. H

'Contract For Life' Helps Save Lives
DEAR A B B Y : The response to
the co lum n you wrote Iasi year
to prom ote S tud en ts A gainst
D riv in g D ru n k was e ffe ctive
beyond o u r w ildest dreams.
Since SADD became a national
program, hundreds of thousands
o f C ontracts for Life have been
signed. T h e d e a th rate has
dropped over 2.000 in th r age
bracket 16-21 In d rin k in g and
d riv in g accidents It is the o n ly
age bracket th a t has shown a
d e c re a s e In d e a th s due to
d rin k in g and d riv in g
You w ou ld be doing a g rra i
public service If you would once
again alert the piddle that the
C ontract for Life (or high school
students and the new C ontract
for Life fo r college students Is
now available.
The deadliest tim e of the year
Is upon us. d u rin g prom tim e
and senior weeks across the
co u n try.
Abby, w ill you help u s to save

Dear
Abby
young lives by repeating the
enclosed Item from vo ur col­
um n
ROBERT AN A STAS .
E X E C U T IV E D IR EC TO R
D EA R M R. A N A S T A S ; W ith
pleasure:
D E A R R E A D E R S : A life saving effort has Just come to m y
a tte n tio n that I th in k deserves
p u b licizin g
It s called the "C o n tra c t for
L ife " — an agreement signed by
parents and teen-ager
In an
effort to reduce the n um be r of
deaths in v o lv in g d ru n k drivers.
S A D D ( S t u d e n t s A g a in s t

D riv in g D ru nk) was launched
tw o year ago in Marlboro. Mass.,
b y Robert Anastas, a teacher
Irom W avland H igh School In
VYayland. Mass . after tw o o f his
students were kille d In a car
crash.
The part o f the contract to be
signed by the teen-ager states
" I agree to call you for advice
a n d /o r tra n s p o rta tio n at any
hour, from any place. If 1 am
ever In a s itu a tio n where 1 have
had too m uch to d rin k , or a
frien d or date w ho Is d riv in g me
has had too m uch to d rin k "
The part signed by the parents
states
" I agree to come and gel you
at a n y h o u r, any place, no
questions asked und no a rg u ­
m ent at that tim e, or I w ill pay
lo r a ta x i to b rin g you home
safely. I expect we w ould discuss
th is Issue at a later tim e
“ I agree to seek safe, sober
tra n s p o rta tio n home if I am ever

m a s itu a tio n

w h e re I h a ve

had

to o m u c h t o d r i n k o r a f r i e n d
w h o Is d r i v i n g m e h a s h a d to o
m u c h to d r in k ’
A lt h o u g h th e S A D D

p ro g ra m

h a s a lre a d y re a c h e d a m illio n
t e e n -a g e r s i n t h e U n t i e d S l a t e s
a n d C a n a d a . I w o u l d lik e to s e e It
hi

e v e r y h i g h s c h o o l.
F o r th e fre e S A D D

k it . p le a s e

send
a lo n g ,
s t a m p e d , s e ll
a d d re s s e d e n v e lo p e lo
S A D I)
i ’, 0

Rov

01752.

H tH l

M a tllx ir o

M ass

_ _

D EA R
A B B Y :
E x h a u s te d .
tin

I I n - Is t o r
H i t c a r o ld

u o m . m w h o s a v s In t 4 4 - v r a i o l d
h u s b a n d w a n ts
v at Ic .is i t h r e e
m i u s . i d a y . a n d •m i l d s p e n d t h e
« h o lt w e e k e n d m In d
I h a v e tw o t lim e s

to

sav

II

i o n it b r a g g i n g s h .u t ii o n \ o t i
to r l o i d m u it m e t w o m e n lik e m e
w h o s e h u s b a n d s ■a n t (x -rlo rm
O i.it w e ll It y o u it c o m p l a i n i n g
si m l m e v o u r p h o t o i m m l t e t
W A I T I N G IN S E A T T L E

Search Is On For
Outstanding Dad
June 16 is F ather s Day
We at 77u H erald are
s i.ire h m g fo t th e a n n u a l
O utstanding Dad
in the
lo m m u m ty but w need the
help ol readers to lim l this
-I* ci.il man
th e

O u ts ta n d in g

■U lm ers u p
to m

le t t e r s

w ill
ol

Dad

and

h e s e le c te d
m m u n a tlo ti

I'o m a k e s u r e v o u r la v o r t l e
ib id g e ts th e p r o p e r r e e n g n l
lin n
tn llo w
th e
s lim n o u s
F irs t
lu ll

nam e

.h id in g
vour
;ln

lu ll

e tty

s i m p l e In
w rite v o u r
a d d re s s

and

t e le p h o n e
to p

ot

s ta le ,
iiio u

th e

I m- i

page

m
and
at
lit

ib

emitting- J cn t B csscsen.
M oore. A lta m o n te S p r in g s 1 •
F a s h io n R evue; M ike L y o n . G e n e v a ; B e t s y A c k e r .
C a s s e lb e rry
D a ry l W a ld ro p .
Sanford - Recreation C ategory.
Receiving Red A w ards from L a k e M a r y : L e ig h M l n t r r .
S e m in o le C o u n ty at S e n io r Oviedo: and F ranclne H uggins.
Events were David N unnery. A lta m on te Springs
Best llrs t year poster Ja ycl
C h u lu o ta ■ S a fr th C a te g o ry:
S ta s l Ilo ju n o w s k l. S a n fo rd - Bcsscsen. Geneva
Horse
M a r ik a H a r r is o n .
Breads Category: Jeanne
Everett. C huluota
Talent, anti Longwood.
E n to m o lo g y
B ria n H e n ry .
A n n H a rd m a n , K lin L ln g c n Longwood
feller, Longwood Talent.
Marl n r Science: Car r le
For more In fo rm a tio n on the
Sem inole C ounty 4-H Program W aldrop, Lake Mary
R e c re a tio n : M ic h e lle R a ry .
com act S h rld a K W llkens. 4-H
A ltam onte Springs and A lliso n
A g e n t.a l 323-2500. E xi 1HO
C nm m ack. Oviedo.
R o c k e t r y ; E d d ie W a ld ro p .
Sem inole C ounty 4-H held lls
A n nu a l -I II Day .it the Seminole Lake M ary.
B re ad s F ra n c ln e H u g g in s .
C ounty A g rtc u llu n il Center
The annual event gives 4-H‘crs A ltam onte Springs
Home Environment Marjory
lit o p p o rtu n ity to e x h ib it th eir
l- ir g r . A lta m on te S prings
w o rk s as p a rt o l t h r l r 4-H
M ost E d u c a tio n a l E x h ib it
projects d u rin g the past year
Melissa H enry. LongwiHxl.
W in n in g top awards in th rlr
T h is year open e x h ib it
e .ita g o rlrs were

moAnioim mol not paeHyied is*
CA| k l . t l MA&lt;fy IliIM M * II"
COufthnuMi plfi An AUOf lm«nl ot

(VtM M Q

kintlct |R|

10 00
600
o (iu | i o (£ a ncw s
it iw i j m u r s o n s
®
110) MACNCll / LlMAfR
NfWSHOUR
d j in La v i r n c t s k ir l i t
• 05
U BCVERLY H H X B H .UU
630
4} n k nkw s
U JO C H N C M
&lt;7 &gt;o **c N tw s y
d t(M | Auca
O ) m o o o o m a rs

1

700
f&gt; i ll s a i l o r TH i c tx T u s y
T i O f U MAQAZlNI Tom S*
■ack a tu x m a o l a ( w u i C.ty hoMdiaoaMv « IM I
QT) O JfOPAROY
I t (M l TOO CIOSC r o t COM
r o a r w m i s m « out
m#
t m Hk k j d-aog-s* o w S u n
ID (10) NATURt A Nm «tud, ol ——
kuga outooppngt ol roc*
m AAica ■ Sofongaii plain (D| m
CE (*l H A m DAYS AGAIN
7.05
I I SANTORO ANO SON
730
O 4' INTIRTAINM tNT TONKJHT
tntArwOO Wts Uoitdttn (la&gt;1a&lt; B*r
N ) MoJtysgod IM O d liP tl ot
J O W N (U o r t o r t u n *
T i O
1 100 000 NAME THAT
TUNC
I f (M IM N 3 0 N
(B HI A U M THE FAMILY
7:35
12 A U M Th e T a m il y
800
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mto CMTI h * * *i PAfUian ol
to# Toor (N|
CD O MAGNUM n Magnum n" " ■ J t 't i "Ron *•« OMnlonl 0 A
Inond Corol loo" v « i t&gt;«r&gt;g
INooionod b| tomoono *r» I proMCulmg iRj
(7l O 6 A T T U o r THE NETWORK
STARS from tin p i, M*«&lt;o no'*
m l coMb-'o* teal too#
p i w B» perKvetmg «
tool mcMdo room&amp;o* (wytkog
And tug ol «a&gt; Among toot*
NtomSuMd to A W
*ri Janmlor
0 N M Luc* A/noi jaca Cm m o i
*nd TontOontA CJ
I t ( M )DALLAS
to (W ) WHO AMERICA An co m .
notion Ot WdM* tawnd m poptAotod
ataoi n L O n g door raccoon'
" W I And Boot |R|g
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160 AIRPORT BLVD
322 7542

WHERE THOUSANDS CHEEK

SUMMER BOWLING LEAGUES
IT’S MOT TOO LATE! YOU STILL CAM
HAVE A SOMMER OF FOM, WITH
_
OLD S MEW FRIEMDS, OM A SOMMER
BOWLIMG LEAG0E. CALL 322-7542 TODAY
MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND
SPECIAL!
FRIDAY, SATURDAY. SUNDAY &amp;
MONDAY 9 A.M.-6 P.M.

5O0 A GAME MAKES
THIS A BOWLING
WEEKEND TO
REMEMBER

[

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BARBS
Phil Pastoret
G e n e ra lly
speaking,
there's nothing much more
enduring thsn something
that * disposable
Those who Insist on pour­
ing &gt;ou a drink arc aulle
often s i the point where
they ran t roordlsate with
the glass.

One of ibe best ways to go
oo a sodium-free diet Is to
buy a set of resuuranl
ulu hske rs

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w ere g iv e n to t r ai t s A im
H ardittau. LongwiMMl
H o b b le s
I.. m i.i 11.i i &lt;1til .t it
Foods

n e . u It

a d d re s s
and
n u m b e r o l tin

4-H'ers A ttend Senior District Events
F o u rte e n S e m in o le C o u n ty
S ' nlor 4 -H 'crs participated In
talent and d em onstration com(M illio n at Senior D istrict Events
held In Tavares Senior 4-H cr's
(rum O range. Osceola. Lake,
Brevard. Volusia, and Seminole
c o u n tie s w ere v y in g fo r the
o p p o rtu n ity lo u tlc n d Florida
4-H Congress at ih c U n ive rsity of
Florida ih ts su m m e r
Representing Srm lnolc
C ou nty and 4-H D istrict VI w ill
be: Jam ie B ojanow skl. Sanford ■
Mechanical A Electronic Sell nee
C a te g o ry: F ra n c ln e H u g g in s.
A lta m on te S p rin gs • C lothing
Calcgory: K rls ll M eriwether A
Lori H ill. Sanford » Consum er
E d u ca tio n C ateg ory: Deborah
Sargent. T iffa n y Wallace. San­
ford • Horse C ategory: fb irlu ira
Abn Bucclno, Longwood H o r s e
P u b lic S p e a k in g C a t e g o r y :
W esley N u n n e ry . C h u lu o tu •
H o rtic u ltu re Category
TllW nv

Thursday May I ) . 1?*J—IB

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T h o fi^ iy , May a , i m

Sailor Son Charged In Father's Espionage Ring
tils lather, addressed to Jaw s,
w h ic h provided d eta ils on the
m assive q ua nt It lex o f secret
d ocum ents and papers the son
ts tie r used of gat Iter log.
T h e affidavit said Navy In\e x iig a to rs found a box bulging
wi t h 15 |M)tinds o f classified
pa|n-rs and photographs next to
the younger W alker s bunk on
(ti e Ni r n l t / . th e 9 8 ,0 0 0 -to n
fla g sh ip o f the IJ.S. nuclearI in W i n d fleet.
T he younger W a lk e r’s letters
spoke o f the "s o u v e n irs " he had
been gathering, w tilc h the aftid a v lt said were classified doc­
u m e n ts a b o u t th e fla tto p 's
operations.
T ile son's letters com plained
itia l he bad collected so m any
dor om enta ih a l he w as going to
have lo slarl w eeding nut the
excess. One letter n o trd w ith
iro n y that he had been named
.o llo r o f the m o n th for tils
|ie rfo rm a n re aboard the ship,
a ltho ug h he hated Navy life.
Navy and FBI o fficia ls said
they were try in g lo determ ine
how seriously ll.S se cu rity had
b ee n c o m p ro m is e d because
they s u s p e c t e d the elder W alker
had hern spying lo r at least 15
years.
Navy In v e s tig a to rs a b o a rd the

\ im t t z put the lo u n g e r W alker
in the b rig earlier Wednesday.
The elder W alker ts being
held w ith o u t bond In B altim ore
He retired from the Navy tn
I9 7 fi as a chief w arran t officer
w ith a top-xrerct s e c u rity clea r­
ance.
W a lker's assignm ent fo r most
ol his Navy career was com ­
m u n ica tio n s and sensitive m ili­
ta ry codes.
A fte r his retirem en t. W alker
o p e ra te d tw o N o r fo lk . V a ..
private detective agencies th a t
specialized In "d e b u g g in g s ."
An K ill affidavit Monday sold
the sensitive papers, found by
KHI agents In a hag o f trash
W a l k r r left In a s u b u rb a n
M aryla n d wood appeared to
have come from the N lm lt/ and
contained In fo rm atio n about the
deploym ent and m ovem ent of
Soviet m erchant and w arships
In the M editerranean Sea.
K rro n n a ls a n e c p la n e s and
e qu ip m en t aboard the N ln ilU
le g u la rly m o n ito r Soviet licet
m ovem ents.
A March 0 letter from M ichael
W alker said:
'Enclosed Is a copy o l m y
latest e valuation Not tmd. Is II?
I hal Is Just a little proof on m y
|H T fo rm a n rr as a sailor.

Teen M ay Face Death Penalty In Arson
ENGLEW OOD. N .J.
lU P II — P ro s e c u to rs
m a y seek (he d ea th
p e n u liy against a
teenager charged w ith
Im r u i n g d o w n h i s
p re g n a n t g ir lf r ie n d 's
house because she
w a u l e d ari a b o rtio n .
I h r g irl and six o lh r r
p e o p l e d i e d In t h e
iila /e .
W aller Lee Craig. IH.
w a s c h i l l ged w i t h
h o m ic id e and a g ­
g ra va te d arson W e d ­
n e s d a y a nd o r d e r e d
h e ld In th e B e rg e n
C n u n I v J a il o n
$250.(XX) bull.

get m u
Within 20
m in u te s to a hall h o u r,
they started b rin g in g
Ihc bodies out of the
h o u se ." lie said.

C raig a lle g e d ly set
Ills g irlfrie n d 's house
on lire e a rly Wednes­
day, using gasoline or
snme o th e r substance
that spread the (lames
l o o ij u I r k I y f o r
firefighters — stationed
lust ii him k aw a y — to
slop,
M elvin J o h n s o n , a
next-door neighbor,
s a id " I got u p anti I
saw flum es c o m in g out
Ihc front door. W hen I
first w alked o u t. a ll I
saw was I h r w h o le
house In names.
"I don't th in k they
t ra lly had a chance to

Bergen C o u n iy Pro­
secutor L a rry M cClure
said C raig was arrested
la te r In the day id le r
a u t h o r i t i e s "re c e iv e d
in f o r m a tio n he w as
seen in |M)*Hcs*lon ol
the substance (used lo
spread the fire) it few
Jays b e fo re ." McClure
said. " H r was seen In
th e v i c i n i t y o f t h e
house b y someone they
both k n e w ."

Sanford Man Fined $150
For Hitting Pregnant Wife

Legal Notice
A F F ID A V IT U N O IS
F IC T IT IO U t N A M E S TATUTE
STATE OF F L O R IO A
C O U N T V OF OMANGC
Tho u n N * t l « n M .
H O I.

A 32-year-old H anford m an ch arge d w ith
spouse abuse after th ro w in g a p illo w at his
p r e g n a n t w ile a n d s l u g g i n g her several tim e s has
pleaded g u ilty to b a tt r r y .
C hristop h er H, Ferguson, of H IS Valencia C ourt
N . entered the plea Wednesday before Sem inole
C ou nty Judge H um id Johnson. Johnson fined
Ferguson $150 and ordered h im to pay court
costs and $15 lo the s ta ir ’s victim com pensation
trust fund.
According lo co u rt records. Ferguson h it his
w ife In the face, cheat and stomach
Ills wife. Beve Ferguson, met w ith a Sanford
jxille e officer fo llo w in g the attack. She to ld h im o f
her In jurie s and said she was eight m ouths
pregnant.
Fire departm ent rescue w orkers were called to
the Stop Center on C elery Avcuc, where she hud
met w llh the officer at about 1:33 p in Muy 8.
She was transported to C entral F lorida Kcglonul
H ospital. Sanford, fo r fu rth e r e x a m in a tio n , u
police reporl said.
Police then went to the eouple's hom e and
arrested Ferguson
tn o the r court a ctio n :
—Colozell W ings W ild er. 53. of 101 S p rin g St..
A lta m o n te Springs, u rrrs te d Feb. 2 on stute Hoad
430. Casselberry, a lte r u m otorist alerted a
trooper lo a possible d ru n k driver. H r was fined
$250. ordered to co m p le te 50 hours o f c o m m u n i­
ty service, serve u year o f probation and hud hts
d r lv r r 'u lice use suspended fo r B m onths.
—D eane J o rd a n

«n

I th is in s tru m e n t I t being
• i n u l f d to r I N purpose o l
c o m p ly in g w ith Section *44 04
r lor Ido S u m ' l l
} II It f* o inten tio n of 1*0
u n d e rs ig n e d to engage In a
b u t .n o n o n lo rp n to under IS#
fic titio u s n om o o t Longw oed
Compel to r Services. located ot
M l l o t i H orn b e am D r lv * In t* o
C ity o l L e n g w oo d , S em inole
C ounty. F lo rid a
1 A tta c h e d h o rtto ond m a d * o
p o rl h e re o f I t t* o now tpopor
P ro ol o l P u b lic a tio n o t ro q u iro d
b y M id S tatute
t
TSoto In lo ro tto d In M id
b u l l n c t t o n t o r p r lio . ond I So
t i l o n l o t ttio Inte re st o t to e s . It
» t fo llo w s
H A M I OF O W N E R
How or d Eoslate in
A n o olto F d a ltle in
I N T t U I IT
SOX
SOX
IIQ M A T U S E
t H o w a rd E d e ltte in
i \ t A n n e tte E d o ltlo in
A O O S t l t O F OW NER
M l E M ornboom D r
lo n g wood. F t J i m
ta m o
Sworn to ond tu b t e n bod bo
lo ro m o o t le m in o te County,

r lo rido. is it i n * doy •« May.
IMS
■I U t i b t r t A lo n d r y
Motor y P u b lic
M y C o m m is s io n E a p ir t t
A u g u s t». l H t
A t r o lo rro d to In P a rag ra p h 1
«bov«. P ro o f o l P ubllcD lton ol
l * ! i In te n tio n to ro g itte r It Uted
h e re w ith p u rtu D n l lo l* o pro
visions o f Section MS Ot F lo rid *
Statutes
A T T A C H P R O O F OF
P U B L IC A T IO N
P ublish M o y IJ. )0 A Ju«te t . II .
IMS
O EF i n

Only One Local Lawyer
Seeks County Attorney Job
A n ew a s s i s t a til
S e m in ole C o m ity a t ­
to rn e y, replacing G uy
M l t i l e r w h o la re*
s ig n in g , w ill be a p ­
pointed before the end
of J u n e . C ounty A t ­
to rn e y N tkkl C la yto n
says.
Sm ile trU applications
have been received for
the |lost, hut according
to Ms. C layton o nly one
Is from a local a ttorney.
W illia m L e fllrr, a Sanfo rd la w y e r, has
a p p lie d for I h r Job.
0 1 It e r s w h o h a v e
applied now w ork fur

I h r O ra n g e C o u n ty
S tale A tto rn e y 's and
P ublic D efender's o f­
fic e s and som e are
Irom law yers Just out
ol law school
She said she and her
c h i e f d e p u t y . Bob
M cM illan, are review ­
in g lh e a p p lic a tio n s
and expect to narrow
ih c list to 10 lo 12 and
co n d u ct p ersonal In ­
te rvie w * w ith them .
The sulury range for
the office is $23,(XX) lo
$ 3 0 . (M X ) a y e a r, d e ­
trending ott experience.
Ms C layton said.

F IC T IT IO U t N A M E
N atlcs I t horoby glvan t * * l I
« m *ng o g ad In b u t ir w t t at » 0
l o n t t o m * F ln a D r lv a .
lo n g w ood
la m in a te C ouniy.
F ter Ido J i m undor l* a lie l i t to u t
n a m a ol A R T I S T I C
A W A K E N IN G S
and th o l w *
inla n d lo r t g i t t e r M id nama
w it* l* o C la rk a l the C lrcw ll
C ourt, lo m m o te County. F lo rid a
In *&lt; cor done t w it * Iho p ro
visions a t &gt;** FtotiH oua N a m *
S tatute*. TowHI ta c tio n M S O t
F lo r id * I I * M o t IfS f
! * ) 0 J o n * Fater
P ublish M a y t . ». la. JJ. IMS
OEF *

Doonesbury
'PO XXJ. ALK£.
J A &amp; iU w i
VHAKANP
I to hxp. ’
•
1

IB X W T b e
IM C f THAI
(U S TV N ,*M
w iH o m v ,
HfUTMTHAS

legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U ! N A M E
N jtic o I t hereby g ive n m o t I
om tn g o go d In b u t ln o tt o l I MO
W o tid o lo A v * , W in te r P a rk ,
le m in o te C ounty. P lor Ido undor
m o fic titio u s nom o o t ROSE
BUDS A N D R IC HE S , ond t * o t I
inten d to ro g itte r M id nom o
w it * lit# C lorh o t th * C irc u it
C ou rt, lo rn tn o te C o u n ty , F lo r id *
In o c c o rd o n to w ith t* o p ro
v itlo n * o l t *0 F tc tltto u t N a m *
Statutes. To w it W e t Ion MS Ot
F lo rid a Statutes 14&gt;7
7 4 /Jam as R P h illip s
P u b lis h M a y 21. JO A Juna t . u .
IMS
O E F 111

N O TIC E U N O E R
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E LAW
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that tha undor signed, dollring lo
tngog* In butlnott undor Iho
llctitiout items at FO XM O O R .
at Alternants Mall. *tl Alla
monte Avtnua. In tha City Of
Altamonte Springs. Florida. In
lands lo rogitter m* M id nomo
wim Iho Cterk of m* Circuit
C o u rt ot Ssmlnote C o u n ty,
F lor Ido
Doted *1 Now York. N Y . mis
St* day ol M oy. IMS
FOXM OOR S P E C IA L TY
S TO R E S CORP
•Y

lO U F lIH

IA W A O IH I

V IC E P R E S ID E N T
Publish May It, JJ. JO A Juna A
IMS

O E F It
N O TIC E
Th* Si Johns Hlvor Water
Monagomanl District hat r t
ealvad an application tor Con
tumptlvo Water Uta from
SEMINOLE COUNTY
S C H O O L B O A R D . 1111
M E L L O N V IL L E A V E . SAN
FO R D . F L J i m , application
r j llfOlaSANM . on 4/J1/U This
application It ter th* modltlc*
lion ol Iho a sltlln g perm it
I 11/OtatU Th* applicant pro
potot to withdraw 0*4 M O D ot
G R O U N D W A T E R FR O M AN
UN KNO W N A Q U IF E R V IA I
EXIS TI NG WELL ANO I
P R O P O SE D W E L L FO R A
R E C R E A T I O N A R E A ANO
C O O LIN G AN O AIR CO NDI
T IO N IN G to torvt IS a ertt In
laminate County located In S*&lt;
lion M . Township JO Soulh,
Rang* ro Eosl
Th* Governing Board at tha
District will take action to grant
or dtny th* application!!) no
sooner than 10 days Iram th*
dote ol mis nolle* IfteuMyoub*
interttlad In any ol Iho listed
appl leal Ions, you should contact
IS* SI Johns Rlvar Water Man
agomonl District at P O Bos
Isis. Palate*. Florida nor*
ItJt. or In parson at its attic# an
Sl at * H i g h w a y I 0« Wa t t .
Patetea. Florida. FOa/JJtUJI
W r i t t e n o b | * c llo n t* th*
appiKalian may b* mad* but
should bo received no later than
14 day s tra m tha da l* at
publication Written ob|*clian&gt;
should Identity th* ab|*cter by
nama and address and tuily
describe Its* ablactten to tha
application Filing a written
obiocbon duos not tnt.it* you to
a Chapter Its. Florida Status**.
Administrative Mooring Only
&gt;N«* portent whoso substantial
inter at ts at* attected by th*
application and who til* a poll
lion mooting tie# requirements
ot Section M S M l, F A C , may
obtain an Administrative Hoar
Ing All limoly IIted written
obioctwns will b* presented to
th* Board ter Its consider alien
In l i t d e lib e ra tio n an th*
application prior to Iha Board
lacing action an rh* application
Dennis# T Kemp, Director
Division ot Roc or dt
SI Jatvss River Water
Management District
Publish May IJ. IMS
DEF tn

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
OF T H E II T K
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT .
IN A N D F O t
S E M IN O L E COUNTY.
F L O R ID A
CASE NO t t - * 4 * l C A M P
IN R E
T h * M a tr la g # o l
S A N D R A M IL L E R
SHEPHERD
P e titio n e r. Wito.
and
R O B E R T D E A N SH EP H E R D .
R e tponden t / M usband
N O T IC E O F AC TIO N
TO R O B E R T D E A N
SHEPHERD
Address U nknow n
YOU AR E
H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D Ih a l a P s llllo n tor
D is s o lu tio n o f M a rria g e h a t
boon tile d o g o m tt you. end m o t
you * r « ra g u ira d to serve a copy
ot yo ur Response o r P leading fa
m e P a tm a n upon m e P o ll
•■oner's a tto rn e y M A R V IN L
SEAM AN
JR
M A R V IN L
B E A M A N , JR
P A , tM U
w r m ore Rood, o t W inter P ark
F lo rid a J i i t t M t l . ond f it* m *
o rig in a l Response or P leading In
th * o ff tea ot m * Clerk o f m *
C irc u it C o u rt, on o r before the
l« t* day o f J u n *. A D IMS II
you ta il to do to . a O o ta u it
Judgm ent w ill b * token against
you to r th a r e lie f dem anded In
m * P e titio n
D eted et S a nlord Seminote
C ounty. F lo rid a th is 1th day ol
M a y. IMS A 0
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C L E R K OF THE C IR C U IT
COURT
By Joan B rm e n t
Publish May 4 14. IJ.». IMS
DEF II
IN THE C IR C U IT COURT
OF TH E C IO H T IE N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E COUNTY.
F L O R ID A
G E N E R A L J U R IS D IC T IO N
O IV IS IO N
CASE NO U I4J4 C A M 0
C IT IZ E N S F E D E R A L
SAVINGS A N D L O A N
A S SO C IATIO N o t t .
P la in tiff.
Vt
R A N D Y S C O T T L IG G E T T .
el a l .
D d e n d a n tt
N O TIC E OF ACTION
C O N S TR U C TIV E SERVICE
PROPERTY
I F lo rid a Bar H * U n t i l
TO R A N O Y SCOTT LIG G E TT
a tin g le m en
Residence U nknow n
and a ny u nknow n p o rly w ho It
or m a y bo interested in me
t ib lo c t m a ile r o t this action
w h o M nam es and residences
a lte r d ilig e n t search and Inqut
ry are u nknow n to P la in tiff and
w h ic h s a id u n k n o w n p a rtie s
m a y c la im a t hairs, d iv lta e t.
g ra n te e ), a s s ig n e e s , lie n o rs ,
c r e d ito r s , tr u s te e s o r o th e r
c la im a n ts by. th ro u gh , under or
a g e m tt th * M id D * to n d * n t( t) .
R A N D Y SCOTT L IG G E T T , a
tin g le m an, o r e l-S a r al them ,
who e ra not know n to be dead or
a live
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D Ih a l an
action to fo r te lo ta a m ortgage
on Iho fo llo w in g p rop e rty In
Seminote C ounty. F lor Ido. lo
w it
l o t I I . in B lo c k H o t R E P LA T
O f P A R T O F T O W N S IT E
N O R TH C H U L U O T A . according
lo m * p la t th e re o f, a t recorded
In P ie t Book I I . pag e * 4a and t l
o l I h t P u b lic R a c a r d t o t
Somwsote C ou n ty. F te n * *
h o* been lite r) a gainst you Ond
you a r t re q u ire d to serve e copy
o l your w r itte n d e te n t** i l any.
lo II on ROGER A P R E Z IO ll
E i q u i r t . P la in t if f s a tto rn e y
w *o w address Is Low O ffices
a t S t u iln a n d C e n tn e r, t t l
B r lc k a t l A v e n u e . S u ite &lt;00
M ia m i, F lo rid a U t i l , on or
o o fa rt J u n * 14. IMS. ond fito iho
a n g in a l w llh th * C te rt o t th is
C ourt a llh a r b e fo re service upon
P la in tiff s a tto rn e y o r Im m edl
a te iy ih e re e tlo r. o lh e rw lto a
d e fa u lt w ill be entered a g e ln tl
you to r Iho r e lie f dem anded In
Iho C o m p la in t
W ITN E S S m y h and and the
te a l o l th is C o u rt on this 4th day
o t M a y , IMS
HEAD
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
A IC le r k o l th # C o u rt
By J e a n B rllte n l
D eputy C lerk
P u b lish M ay », 14. I I » , IMS
O EF SO
I N T H I C IR C U IT COURT
OF TH E N IN T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT .
IN A N D FOR
S f M IN O L B C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
P R O B A TE D IV IS IO N
F IL E NO IS IS t CP
In Re G u a rd ia n s h ip at
JE F F R E Y S BUSKE.
a m ino r
F O R M A L N O TICB
BY P U B L IC A T IO N
TO M r M a rty B u s t*
H esidenc* U nknow n
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D Ih a l
P e lI I ion lo r A p p o in tm e n t o t
G u a rd ia n and P e titio n to r Ap
p r o ta l o t S o tltem ont at Personal
In ju r y C la im h ave boon tile d In
m is C ou rt and you a r * ro q u iro d
lo t i l * your w ritte n d e te n t** to
Iho P e tlH o n t w im the C terk a l
m i* C o u rt and to te r v * * copy
m a rs o l no la te r thors Juno 1.
IM S an P e titio n e r * a lte r nor
whoso nans* and address It
LOUIS C B o u cha rd Esquire I t
Weal W a sh in g to n S treet. Or
lands F lo rid a JJ«OI II you ta ll
to da to lo d g e m en t m a y be
entered In duo course upon the
P e lllia n t
W ITN ESS m y hand and the
te a l a t m is C o u rt on th * erh day
o tM e y , IMS
(S E A L I
O A V ID N B E R R IE N
A * C terk o( m * C ou rt
By B a tty M Capps.
D eputy C terk
F i r t l p u b lic a tio n o r posting on
M a y km. IMS
P ublish AAay t 14 IJ. JO. IMS
D E F SI

BY GARRY TRUDEAU
NOTUNTIL A ll OUR ftW tW f
HCAt.OR ATUAST HCitXNO
C O N FM W S M a! JfTK THtti
W tU W lM l OtStARW, U
_ . l i f t AlPO, M
^

•

legol Notice

Spying Was A Family Affair
W A S H IN G T O N (UIM| A
v o tin g x.illor on ih r n iir lr .tr
u r i r a f i r u r r n r N im llz w ho
slowed b ulgin g tn ix rx ol "xouv r n lr ” claxxlfied | m |» t s near his
liu n k lx n r r u v r l o l tirin g ih r
xhipt&gt;oard m n lr in h is faihrr'%
r la tin r a lr spy rin g lo r Ih r Sovlrk t
M lrh a rl Lance W a lk rr. 22,
wax ch arge d W e d ne sda y In
Ita lilin o r r w ith a id in g ih r c»plo na gr operation a llrg rd ly run
hy .John A n th o n v W a lk rr. 47. a
r e tir e d N avy o f l l r r r t ur ned
private d r lr c llv r
Assistant U S A l l o r n r y
M ic h a e l S c h a l / o w
said I h r
v o u n g rr W a lk rr w ill h r rrlu r n r d w ith in days (rorn the
N lrn ltz. now In H aifa, Israel, to
stand tria l w llh Ills f a t h e r , who
w a x c h a r g e d M o n d a y In
lin ltlm o r r wi t h passing x r r r r l
dot iiim n is to Soviet agents
C on viction on th e (barges
&lt;m ild rnran lift* In prison
Sourccx lo ld U n ite d Press
In te rn atio na l tin elder W alker's
lo rrn c r wife and d aughter tipped
o il Ih r K ill to the spy activitie s
tin t would not p r o v i d e d e t a il s .
A cco m pa nying the charges
Wednesday was an K ill affidavit
tlia l quoted e xten sively from
the younger W a lker s letters to

0

/« at i W I aAOBM-a- 1

ln m B l

UhATPO

m, I'M

71—Help W intad

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando •Winter Park
831-9993

322-2611

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

XUPRIV- Pftesoa
NO ATT FOEALL

HERPES
New in fo rm a tio n on ra m lis te n
c e n tra l Call MO MOT

23— Lost A Found
Lost H o m o s * ca t Seal p oin t
C o lla r ond lag found v ic in ity
o f Ran tout Lena. S W corner
a t M o y to tr C ountry C lub Cat
rw t found House p e l R ew ord
C o ll I J ! Ota?

23—Special Notices
• M A R Y K A Y C O S M C T IC t *
Shin c a r* and coter lle ir
c o n n i * . . „ . ......................m r t m

MOVING SALE
S a tu r d a y o n ly f
fOI k o t t A y$

}

S u m m er d ay C am p F o r 4 I I y r
o ld *
E a c h w to k in c lu d e *.
S w im m in g , b o w lin g , ska ting
m o v te *. kportk. o rtk 1 c ro ftk
o n d c o m p u te r s k ills
C a ll
H J S a lt to r in fo rm a tio n

A BUSINC1S IN YO U R HOME I
Need h o m e m a k e r) o v e r IS in
S em inal* co u n ty to w ork w im
toy parsonnal H o u le o l L ly o d
N o In v e s tm e n t, t a r n t i t .
bonus, t r ip H a w a ii C all H a ta l
c a tte d a t 4 B A K M IM _________
A C C O U N TIN G C LE R K S
E ip e rte n c * In accounts payable
r e c e iv a b le * , o r p a y r o ll.
C o m p u te r a a p a r ia n c * p ra
leveed P e rm a n e n t positions
N ever a te e 1

UMP M M ..........774- 13W
A c ry lic A p p lic a to rs needed to
a pp ly p ro te c tiv e coating on
c a r t, boats and p la n a * t ) to
111 par hour Wa tr a in F o r
w ork In Sanford area c a ll
T a m p * I I I 0 0* MS)
AC T I I now h ir in g fu ll A p a rt
lim e p ositions D ire c t solos
iv p e rto A c e h elp fu l, how ever,
w * have an t i c t l t o n t tra ine e
p ro g ra m
F a r c o n fln d a n tla l
In te rv ie w , c a ll JW 4 1 4 ) _____
A ID E S A ll s h ifts E rp A or
c s rtltte d Good a tm o tp h o r* A
b o n o tltt EOE A p p ly a t Do
B a ry M a n o r, 40 N M w y I I W
A ir C o n d itio n in g M e c h a n ic *
S ervice A In tte ile ilo n S alary
b o ia d on o s p o rlo n c o . plu s
bonotlts
________ 10) m 41*2
_

E X P E R IE N C E D PR U S E R
C O U N TE R PERS044
Eacaitent salary A condttans
M l J**d
E v p e r io n c e d p r e f e r r e d In
se a lco o lin g A asphalt re p a ir
w o rk 3 0 1 * 7 4 ______________
H A IR S T Y L IS T W A N T E D E»
p o rlo n cod m c h e m k a l w ork
to r C o re tra * A Rotevors C all
m O JJ. o r J » 4117__________
L A B O R E R S S tra n g ra lte b te .
gen e ra l la b o re rs needed Im
m e d ia te ly D iffe re n t lo ca tio n *
Phono ond tra n s p o rta tio n a
m u lt N eve r * tea A pply

REUT SERVICES
$4432331
L e g a l S o c ro te ry /R o c e p H o n ls t
needed E s p e rte n c * re qu ire d
Local G o n o ral P ra c tic e L aw
F ir m Phone JJJ 4111
L ocal R ooting
Com pany haa
o p e n in g s fo r som e o v p a rl
encod ro ote rs. * 1*0 la b o re r*
w llh n o ts p e r to n r * nocosaary
M u st b * a t 1***1 I I y r i aid
and h ave own tra n s p o rta tio n
lo m o p Ta a pp ly c a ll. 271
4417 te r a p p o in tm e n t

M A I N / C U S T O D I A N Parson
wonted Good pay. oscaltent
bonotlts. must hare a occur
chauffeur's Ikons# with a
good driving record Rater
ences chocked Call tor oppl
al m J44J Mon Frl 4 SPM
M a in lo n a n c # P erson d oslrod
F a m l ll o r lt a l l o n a ir c o n d l
lls n ln g A r e f r ig e r a t io n
e q u ip m e n t
D ls h a rw a s h o rs
w a n te d
A p p ly In p a r son
D ays In n . 1/4 A St R d a4
M A N A O E R T R A IN E E
SI 1C wk D ays only I A lte rn a te
S aturdays
N a tT C om pany
W ll ll r a ln l

Employment
323-5176
J i l l French A re
M E C H A N IC T R A IN E E
D on’t m iss Iho o p p o rtu n ity h a r t!
Best e m p lo y e r In to w n wants
to tr a in fa r a ll phases of
m e cha n ics A a n o fits l

Employment

A L L T Y P E S JOBS
STAR T W O R K NOWI

323-5176

X
LABOR / A - V fO R C E

31 — Private
Instructions
G u ita r Lasaont A ll A g tt. and
A ll L e v e ls R oosonobl* " P r o ”
b a c k g ro u n d ! H i *44a

33—Real Estate
Courses

W 'M

M IN '

Chilly W ork D olly P ay
I NO F E E I
R eport re ad y to r w o rk o t 4 A M
407 W l i t St
Sanlord

321 159$
A p p lic a tio n s now being ar copied
te r fu ll tim e cashier A p p ly M
person al U ttto Food Town
Stores. 110 L o k * M a ry B tvd
E O E _______________________

Appomtm«nl Setter Needed
C o lla te M M

T h in k in g e l p v tltn g a
Real E t i t l e L ice n se r
We e tto r F ra * Tetttew
and cawttawaut TraiaMwgl
C all D tck a r V ic k i ta r d e ta il)
411 I4 « I.. m r n e . l v * . t r i l l :
o t M a r t a * . In *.

SJ— Business
Opportunities
Own Y a u r Own Jean
S portsw ear, Lad le s' B outique
or C h ild re n 's Store N atio n a l
b ra n d * IIS .M 0 Includes 111
t u r n , tra in in g , 14,171 Invan
to ry Accessories ond m ore
C all N ow ! M r Tote 104174
MSS

$1 —Money lo Lend
B u s in e s s C a p ita l *10 000 lo
11.000.000 and e ver P O B o .
I4 U W in te r Pk F la JITVO

Legal Notice
IN T N I C IR C U IT COURT
OF THE 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
CASE NO U ISM CA *4 G
IN RE
THE M A R R IA G E O f
TH OM AS L E E H A B E H IN
P e titio n e r H usband.
ond
M A R Y A L E N E H A B E R IN
R esp o n de n t/W it*
N O TIC E OF A C TIO N
TO M A R Y A L E N E H A B E R IN
Route I P O Boa IJ*
D e tro it Lakes. M N M M I
YOU ARE
H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D th o l * P e titio n lo r
M o d ific a tio n b a t b oon tile d
•g a in s t you ond you a r * r#
q u iro d to to r y# * copy o l your
w ritte n d« ton s o t II ony. to II an
N A N C Y F A L L E Y . ESQUIRE
P a tilie n o f Husband s a tto rn e y .
Whoso o d d ro ts is F R E E M A N
E A TO N . F O U N T A IN A A L L E Y .
Post O ttte * Boa I k A lta m on te
Springs. F lo rid a . J IM S 0070 on
or balcw# Juno II. IMS. o nd tito
•ho o rig in a l w im th * C terk o l
•h is C ou rt #1 lite r balnea service
on H u s b a n d s attar noy o r im
m e d ia te ly Htoveelter 0 lit e r w ito
* d e fa u lt w ill be entered o g o m tl
you lo r tha r a il* * dem anded in
m * P otm en
W ITN E S S m y hand end the
seel ot m i* C o u rt on m i* a day ot
M a y IMS
(S E A L )
O A V ID N B E R R IE N
C terk a t in * C irc u it C ourt
By J t/ C h a r y lR F ra n k lin
As D eputy C terk
P u b lish M ay V. 14 I L 10. IMS
D E F *4

Shopping For A
New Or Used
Yaw caa a l w ap* Find (A#
beet deals la I A * f t e n in g
H e ra ld ’a C faasfffad a a ctta n
Road F rid a y a E e e n ln g Ite ra te
Jar th e beat • • le c tio n s

M R N o rs k I r e a r k t i r u v
S a n lo rd . Ilw rk d a
M I-M I I

a s *, p

PM

27—Nursery *
Child Cere

Evening Herald

» l •

7 1 -H e lp Wanted

D a n C u r tis
To # ‘ Y a n ke e
C h ic k e n .” n ot o n * h a ir do you
have to toko m y bet W inner
to k o * a n P a u la _____________

* 3 * 5 5 . WAT A ft tftu .r0
AWKAIJH

7 consecutive times 52C a line
10 cottiecutiTi times 46C a line
Contract Rates Available
3 Lines Minimum

21—Personals

m letter in tm
Cap P ressor Needed- A p p ly lit
person. O v H our Cteaners.
c o rn e r o tm d A Q *A.S*w 4erd

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 time .................. 67c j line
HOURS 3 consecutive times 61C i line

$:30 A.M. • 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

BE A B IO W H E E L IN YOUR
F A M IL Y ! S E LL A V O N !

a u to r C indy

A S S E M B IC R I
A T T E N T IO N m an so JS h r tor
m o d e rn m a n u fa c tu rin g p la n t
W l b * . strong, re lia b le awn
tra n s p o rta tio n E q u al Oppor
lim lty E m p lo y a r P e rm an e n t
p o sitio n s N ever * foot

n x p r t w _____ 77I-U 4I
A u to P a rts C ounterporsan Fast
prm vW g argom aatten f v p a n
•need o n ly A p p ly In person
Sam s P M A u to m o tiv e l
p a r ts s e r v ic e 100 S P a r
Como ro Avo O rlando
A U TO PARTS
C ounter p o tllio n f M a r t t t l w ith
e vp b u t w ill tr a in w illin g
le a rn e ri C areer*

Employment
323-5176
t i l l F re n ch A v *

★ BOY or GIRL ★
W anted to r b lcycto
ro u t* In dow ntow n o ra *
Fo r m a r* In fo rm a tio n c a ll
* Tony
111 J4I1 .
C a p * C a n a v e ra l F ir m needs
people w ho w a n t to bo Ih o ir
own boas W ill tr a in t i r o p o rt
tim e , S*M lu ll lim a M I U07
C o r p a n lo r t and la b o rs
F la t
-ce d e d
See Steve * • F lo *
W o rld botwoon I IP M C om *
w ith t e o t a a n d f id Y to w a rk
C ounter P erson needed M u ll be
neat A m a tu re W ill tra m
Sewing a p lu s ! A p p ly C ar
n a g * Cloaners, a ja Shopping
C enter,

COUNTER GAL
T R A IN ! L ik e p e o p le t F u n ip o tl
Rent vide o *!

Employment
323-5176
I I I ! F re n ch A v *
D e liv e r y D r ly e r / K lt c h e o
Neteor Good p ay P o rt and
to ll tlm * C arte s Ita lia n Re*
taucant. IPM S F re n c h A r *
S anlord m 7AM
D e liv e ry C ollecto r SO h r M u *l
have v a lid F la d r iv e r * Heo n **
and good d riv in g re c o rd C all
J IJ 7AA1

DIKfCTOR l
AUI. DIRECTOR
to r a C h ild D ay C a r* Center
P ro to r S y r * o ap o rto n c* m
c h ild ro ta te d Hold M u si have
leadership
and
o rg a n lia
tto n a l s k ills S alary based on
• ■portonco A p p ly M l E I t m
S t . baker* M a y la th
E a rn I t X
C ia a liils s s .
S u p e rv is o r p o s itio n s a v a il
abto U J 00* or m o re y e a rly
C a ll M r M o o r*. I ta b a l l M M

Eli Mi
I I I
PHONE EOOM
MAN AO I R wall established
Ca heads aggressive manager
in la n ia r d O ttk e
D ra w ,
com m luton. plus bonus Far
appf t n a t t t nut t t

j j t l F re n ch A v *
M edical OH i t * general c ter leal
a n d m e d ic a l te r m in o lo g y
h e lp fu l A fte rn o o n ) evenings
ond S a tu rd ays Pteoso* sub
m il a resum e In own w r itin g to
P O B o* 1071 S anford
AV O N I A R H IN O S WOW I I I
O P E N T E R R IT O R IE S N O W III

n t m is r n iM t t
H ig h tim e /W e a k and

M echanic

Bawl Am erica

Pultllm a

tn

7VU

Per ta n F a r R a il* ! D u ty ar
F a t lllm a - C h r is tia n Y o u th
R anch to r ahusad A tro u b le d
c h ild re n j o t 10*4

PHARMACIST
H osp ita l E x p e rie n c e p re fe r* d In
IV A d d itiv e and U n it Dos*
system s A p p ly W a it VotuSla
M e m o ria l H oepltal. TQt West
P ly m o u th A v * O tL a n d , Fla
EOE
___________

No as
p e r la n e * needed 44 00 per
h ou r, piue bonus a et l ia r
REPS N E E D E D
tor business a ccounts F u ll tlm *
440 000 to 400 000 P a rt tlm *
411.000 to llt.OOO N o 4*11
mg Repeat bus to * * ) Set your
awn h o u r* T ra in in g provid e d
C a ll I 411 * M 4*70. M on F r l I
A M Io S P M C S T
R a tid e a t M a na g e r Fee Senior
A d v il C o m m u n ity In d iv id u a l
needed w ith auger p erso n a lity
a c tiv itie s c o o rd in a tio n s k ills
strong sons* a l re s p o n s ib ility
Id e a l l o r r e c e n t r e t i r e *
A p a rtm e n t A m oots provided
R e tu rn * to Porsonnol, MO W
A ir p o r t B lv d . Suite 111. San
fo rd . Fla JJ77I_________
Tire d *1 Job H u n tin g 7
C a ll F u tu r e s
th e y h a v e
hundreds o t |ob openings tor
Ih o * * w h o w a n t la w o rk
47* (100
D E L IV E R Y H E L P E R S - no *■
parlance n o c o s ia ry F u ll tlm *
Good s to rtin g p a r *7* aJM
O E N E R A L
O F F I C E
T R A IN E E S
G re e t s ta rtin g
Iob S a vo r*! Openings Good
pay 47* 4J00
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 ORK M a il
sh ifts opan Good pay sca t**
17* (RO
I M M E D I A T E O P E N IN O S G eneral C on stru ctio n labor
Good pay 47* aJOO
TRUCK D R IV E R S Long haul
Im m e d ia te ! Good d r iv in g r *
co rd O ve r IS 47* aJM
L O C A L D R IV E R S
S tr a ig h t
tru c k s Good pay S ta rt r ig h t
away a t l U 00
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 L E R K S . C RT
OPERATO RS
Im m e d ia te
apanm gs Goad p ay scales
C all tte a m N OW I
W E L D E R A C e rtifie d E sceitont
pay sc a to ) C ell today Ste

PAINTERS A PAINTER
H E L P R R I- Immediate
openings, good starting pay
Call today t n a m
D R V W A LL W ith ar without
asparlanc*
immediate
openings Good pay C all to
day OteajM

�KtT *N' CARLYLE * by Larry W righl
7 1 - H c lp W anted

99—A p a rtm e n ts
U n fu rn ish e d / R ent

• per son *o c o r* ta r )
C h ild r e n In m y h o rn *
Mon F r l M u ll have tra n tg o r
to lta n and re fe re n c e , C oll
m M l f a t t a r 1PM

• C O U N T R Y IE T T IN O e
ko rg a | | | Bdrm A p a rtm e n t*
A d irlt Lokav taw F a m ily P eetsid*
A v a ila b le Naw Oean W aakand,

UASTIRS COVE___ 321-7900

RIDGEWOOD ARMS APIS
Li mited Tint Only

I I I -179
P S N Pool
A c u to c o r * tr im
tm p lfa i e ip e r lance too ro llo t
(to ttin g l i t o r I I T. A pply
n o t* V o iu tio M e m o ria l H o tp l
to l J01 Wool P ly m o u th A r t
P o la n d PI__________________
S *t», H r 'p W onted We nood
good h a rd w o rk in g pooplo tar
e rte rm in e tin g b u o rw s t M a ia
IJOOO to ( Ito o p o r m o E ip o r l
m e * p r * t » r r * d b u t w illin g to
tro ln w ith ( p lo t background
Cor allo w a n ce . h ig h # ,! com
m liu o n p o id vo co 'ta n . p tu i
b o n u to i. « tc
C o ll t t t H N
T o d o y o n d o ik ta r C indy

Seerttaq Clerk Typrst
Wanted ta r fro n t o tttco M u tt b *
#b&gt;# to typ o o t lo o t! 45 W PM
C oll U l m i ta r on Appoint

Pfoitroti n *«dod lull A port
tlm# Motur# A eiper lenced
•lift ttollon Food Cor lo t
Motion Restaurant ioo* S
Prone It Ay# . Sonford M l 7151
W AREHOUSE
A T T I N T I O k l mon Shipping
Roc loving *b&gt;« to lift SO !M
own tronipertollon 54 on hr
P#rmon*nt potifiont Never a
taol

' * o ff F lr» t M o nth , Rant
15M R csgewond A v *
Santord. Ft#

Spec mu* Apartment* minute*
from Hwy rasa lalefront
pool term.* adult* no pat*
laundry Starting at SMS a mo
Cell U 5 0741 to tea
1 and 1 bdrm Alio turmihad
atticlancy from V I waak S150
dapenit No pat* Call M l 4S0f
S 7 PM 4l&gt; Paimatto
t Bdrm larg* living room naw
appliance, A In good condi
Hon l i f t mo taatasi
__
t m S PECIAL
I A 1 bdrm from AJ10 Lah*
Ada Fle.ibie lease IIS 14*0

DtHwiA

3 b^rm

103— Houses
U n fu rn is h e d / Rent

• • 174 1414 • •
S a n ta rd 1 b d rm . 1410 m o n th .
C h ild r e n A p a t* O K
C a ll
t t t 7i U , a fte r S_____________

2 Bdrm house J 325 mo

Firrn Apts ta r Santar C ltn a n i
J10 F#lm #ITo Av#
i Cowan N o Phon# C o ll*

1 or l b d rm n a w ly ram odalad
• 111 L a u r a l A y a n u e
1410
m d n th p lu t (a c u rlty R * f* r
*nc» a re q u ire d M l HOP______
]

b d rm . i b a th on b e a u tifu l
L ak# M a ry
In L a k * M a ry
H S a tte n d a n ce io n # ISOO
m o . p lu i ISOQ ia c m l l t l

SANFORD CT. APTS.
373-lKK
N a o rly n#w 1 b d r m /1 b olls.
* o ih « r d r y t r . t a l l P #r
m onth. 1,1 A da p o t «t C oll
l o t t a t ] o n y llm o __ _ _ _ _ _
N lcoty tu rn
I b d rm o p l boy
n ndow t. Ir b K r p orch , o il
u lllliw t pd . 1 b l i t to tow n no
p a t, n s OWt i#o u » m essage
Santar#
1 b d rm
A d u lt*, no
p e lt A lt. g u l# t r» ,id # n ti* l
U J In to A up M l M l * _______
I B drm e ffic ie n c y p e rfe c t lo r I
p e r io n
t# t wk
p l u i SIOO
ta c u rity d tp o a it C a li U 5 W *
a room A p l In to w n I c h ild A
pel OK U U m o WOO ita p o ,' I
M l 0011

• 9 Owner Asset
) b 0 tm
1
both. 1300 tq f t , F ie room .
t&lt; r*p i*c» Fence Stucco n e e
ro o t L o » 40t A3DQ1Q3_______
Duple a For Vale Two 1 bdrnn
u tfffl i H i t M g a ra g e newt)9
renovated 153)00 B » U f l
G » n t t a N e v ie
10 r o o m i
3
b e th i \ m mrw t re pie ce 2 ce r

0e*ege d im m in g pool ortlb
d0 X 41 # n tio iu r e

t$ e c re i

A S S U M f NO O U A L IF Y IN O I )
8 d rm M i both, lo rg e fenced
g e rd t I I 000 dow n t S I t Mo

R A M B LC W O O O 3 STORY w ith
■sparkling pool! Huge »ton*
ftrepfeco* Cottkodm l C e iU n ft1
A ll tile e a t r i i f Assum e no
Q u o l l t f i n q t A lm o s t n t w l
H IM

323-5774
3004 HWY 13 t l

T

tt ___ m

KISH REAL ESTATE

471 Wt. 71th S tia a t
Santar4 FI &gt;1711

R EA LTO R
L a r g . a b d rm
1 baft-, b ric k
hem e in H ig h la n d P a rk S1SB
vq tt w ith d b l* cer g ara g e
plus l a l j l paths, la rg e lo t w /
nice to n c-xa pin g A tta in a b le
7
m o rtg a g * w ith p o tu b ia
o w n e r fin a n c in g
I l i a S00
U l al7a

T iH A

Ul T0U NUO
10 IRON
IN ItU (Stitt

U l 1M I

N EW S M Y R N A BEAC H
11
b d r m
a p t *
I u r n /
p r l y p o o l ■b o a r d w a l k ta
beech F ro m w oo wk 141*144

Mini Win houses
u o A U e ......... ................ i n f t f * * »

Will Street C o ............. 321 5005

SAVE

U U

Rani New and I afar I
Tbit Limitad tpackal
E nergy IH ic ta e t.
I B d rm I l a i d A p a rlm a n f,

ONLY
1119
WH
v I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . »v^T
o w.
I b d rm . I b o th olko iv lk a k M
W / Oecarotta# W a ll C tv a rta g i.
at tta ra g a . W asbey/ D ryer
Moeh «p. and C o rp a ri
W ,ta r b a d , Accaptad

1211911
OrtaMe tei free 34M4I1

117—Commercial
Rentals
H elen A O ffice Spec* MO up to
1 OOO vg I t a ito tta ra g a a va il
able 117 4am

111—Condominium
Rentals
1 B d rm &gt; b a th new app lian ce *
w ith e r and d ry e r included ,
poof sale p e r m onth I ' M ta
c u rlty d e p o t'* Can U i SIM or
777 Y777

123—Wanted to Rent

BAMBOO COVE A R TS
M* (

A irp a rt B ird
n i a a it. n i o t a t
(m e ta a c y N am IM S m e

phone

I tar Seeker CN

Need H au te e r a pt I or 1 b d ri
I b ath In Sen to r * area
a ccept s m e ll dog and c*&gt;
M eat have by * i t *5 C e ll
171 711) any tu n a

STEN STRO M

REALTY-REALTOR

5TEM P ER

JAlLMlNTE
AT LAKE M0AROE
1 and 2 BEDROOMS

FRO M *3 1 5
R e n t a l O ffice
3 2 3 *2 9 2 0
'42201.1

IN

D ELTO N A

a B D R M C O U N T R Y HOM E IN
O S T E E N w d h 7 s le e p in g
ca bin * S7S 000
SANEORO 1 b d rm
I balh
Fenced y a rd F la roam E tc

iand l i t ooo

C A L L A N Y T IM E
R E A L T O R 777 4**&lt;

S W IM T E N N IS
N ta l 1 B d rm 1 B a th horn# w ith
• a iia d s e c u rity
N ice ra rd
la r p a ti a ir p e d d t* le n t 7
g a ra g a t. club tvo u ** o v e rtire d
pool and te n n it c o u rt*

S A K fO R D

219— W ented to Buy

MS SM
W IL L B U IL D TO S U IT I YOUR
LOT OR OURSI E X C L U S IV E
A G E N T FO R W IN IO N O
OEV
CORF
A CENTRAL
F IO N IO A L E A O E R l M c.tr t
H O M E FOR LESS M O N E T I
C A LL TO OAYI

O OENE VA OSCEOLA RO O
IO N E O FOR MOBILE St
SAcre Cavalry tra c t,
Wat* traad #a paved Rd
M \ Dawn IB V rs e l D M
F r im H I &gt;0*1

PrtCdt Attg# 2PM

C e c h e t ie lt
W h it* A g re y
Young lust s ta rtin g to lay AM
b ir d ! m u lt go
U l 4111 or
111 77*0________

M l 447 4447
3M0 C G#4*#%

904 27) J27|
O ra n g * C ity

JUST OFF I 4
AT ORANGE C ITY E X IT t t t

W &lt;»nd lm #g#
n#e&lt;h cokfwm#
|# w # lfy 123 9421________

221 — Good Things
to Eet

203 — L iv e s to c k end
P o u ltry

U P ic k S tra w b e rrie s
SOc lb
S a ilo r ending June ! Open f
a m C a ll m Sfaf

B ib le * F a r Sal*
P tgt. tm g a a tt. m m h w rre t
W ile * Sale* H w y saw &gt;71*474

L a * * M o n ro * near I 4 1 acre
w *0 Ir a * * canal • b a rn b ric k
a jx t.m 1 t.4'K ! • ' 000 &gt;77 07$a
S A N FO R D le e r * . H o t*
*41 000
W M o tic to v n k i
R E A LTO R
.171 7*07

FOR E S I A I I
C o m m e r c ia l o r R a n d a M ia l
A uction* A A p p rp tfta ift Call
Qgft * i u d i o n 31) *430

500 Sanfofit Rn
181—A p p lia n ce s
/ F u rn itu re

it,h si

tit m i

F d r I# !#
4 11 Ml
candition 4 Fully
g u# r #nt##0
))&gt; 8)94
E * r ly A m # f i€On 'Ov# W4&lt;
o/&gt;d to la *71
C#M W } 4 *i
p l'tt# 4 P M
F'ch' t o i# Slave d#|k iH l/fti vet
t p n n g t 4ind m i t t f f i t e i
ttb fc H l i f t £1 £ a " 13 i 1777

IS F 1 Bonita T rI H u ll llb a r g la tt
w
IS H P E v ln rw d *
R unt
grea t Coma* w tra ito r taso

F r# # f# r
U p r ig h t
19 c u f f
E rcoIIoo F (ondifson *3)0 or
t«#»* oFftr »«9 )944
Onto forgo # « riy I m t m i n %o1*

Good condifHum I*) Call 33)
•&gt; / * r H''M#jflpf I PM
R 8 C in 4 itw u 4 A y t i t i t u t i
fro m *M
AKK ANT Y .
•A K N E T T I
c a s iil b ik k y
M M 3 U ...............................K it- *4)3
• K f NT TO OWN •
C olo r T V t . t i t f i o f
w R vt#M
d ry a r* . rv frtg a fM o r. f r p t f g r i
fu rm fu rg . e id a o ra c o rd a r*
Spot i# I l» f waak * ro o f *5 00
A tfa r n jflv a TV A Appl la n t« l«
l a y r a t Iho-pping Candor
133 W94

Town
sjsoo

&lt;•?* M agm un XE GT
T Top
B u c k e t, &gt;11 A ir
o c e lla n l
co n d itio n *7 ISO C all U l 4IS7
1*7* CTtaveff* a ir naw b r a k e ,
good tir e , A tkm g SI47S C a ll
* a * * l l 7 m o rn in g , or a lt e r
SPM
1 *1 1 C h e v o r l e t C a p r i c e
E »t el lent condition ' ) D
OCm i
SatOO Phon#
la ) a l l *
or
11? 07)1

79 Mc*rt&lt;J* P rtlu d a
A y to
any Sunroof
Cour le t y N e liiC
•0 Dodge Om ni
AulomalLC
C euvtaty Pontiac

B la c k
im s
11 1 M il
4 d r Sedan
) 199)

in m i

*0 Grand Pr a
N o m-onay Oowin
im s
C o u rt* ,y Penliac
12) 3131
•0 M u ,ta n g
oaiWif
C o u rf# 8y Fanllac
l

12*95
us m i

I I D a ltu n I I * T.nled w in d o w ,
a ir W ell m a in ta in e d * 1 * 0 0 or

best otter XU«B»*B*F
I ) M a id a *7*
R educed
SS7S0
C a o ila iy M I H ..............IM -1 S U

' l l M a tw r Itg k ft 09- SgHHng
e t la t * L ik a naw cond
m l *4 *00 l i t S4*S

I I 000

ta Ponliac F la ro
S p o rt* C oup*
Reduced
S teel
C e u rte ty Fati B X .............&gt; 0 1 1 ) 1
ta Pontiac S unbtrd
No m o ne y down
See*)
C ourtesy Pantiac
SIS l i l t

m ax

IS tt I'b a r g la tt c lo ta d bow •&lt;
M arc $0 m a g ic t i l t Owned by
Merc m echanic 17 ISO U l
cX M a t'e ra
__

F oe S ale GE r e tiig o ia t o i
• n good (o nditiO fi
12&gt; 4*41

lf7 S L ln c a ln C anfm ental
Cavaa Good e o n d llto n
or b e d o tte r L7) a a li

• 1 C adillac F le etw o o d
R educed
*•*? )
C e w tte iy Fenllac
.......U S U I )

t id in g m o w tr * Saar ft K o to
T llia r. powar M / f t V * * H P
B o th a t c a l l a n t c o n d itio n

215— B oets end
A cce ssories

i * ’ » Lm calnTow n C ar Loaded
V a lo u r In ta rig r
E tc a H c a n t
C on d ition S) ISO U l 41)7

H#r%af&gt;! P la n ! Sat# co rn# ' ot
f avt 23rd SI 4 P a im a tto 1101
E 2 !r d St » S aturday J lth
bag in n in g a t | A M

Woodan diftp la y 13*. w if t r f a l l
rack. *J0 clo th in g ra ck *11
321 94)1
_____

323-6593

IBM

I t B vick V *
F u lly equ ip
R educed
SSASO
(e u rta s y FtaltlaC............. I 1 U U I

ia la llit a TV ly iie r m
C om p iata A ll you n«#d &gt;00N
F in a n c in g No monay down
*1 144 00 UniuOf ftal I X ' '

Friday Nights... 7 PM

....... m

l * f l VW Bug E i t e 'ia n t cond.
fla n Sun root new In fe rio r
and b r a t h ik in g SUS0 C a ll
111 S a ilor 171*4)1

223—Miscellaneous

H at Tab
C om piata. 7 tt ta a t* a
*1900 349 *791

L &amp; E AUCTION

ISBS F re a c h h e *

?1 F o rd Slat.on W agon A p t M l
J I M G a o rg ia A ve
G a o g la
A r m i a p tm o rft

• a oo ’..9* 9 1 m i oo

213— A u c tio n s
143—W a te rfro n t
P ro p e rty / Sele

m SHI

P a yin g CASH for
A iw m m w m C m t Cop
B r o « lo o d H #w vr#p#f
G l« u Gold l i l k t r
K o ko m o Too! 9!l)% I t !

P tk in g e t* m a la ? t , w a e k t old
good n a tu ra d
A tk m g HOC
Beaut.tu l B .s q u it colored Call
S111D41 a lte r * P M lo r m or#
inform a tio n

2 3 5 -T ru c k s /
Buses / V a ns

231— Cers
Bed Credit?
No CreditT
WE FINANCE
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1120 S. Sanlord 121*075

u i ms

* DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION *

217—G e re g e Seles

H w y 92
a a a • •

B IO YAR D S A L E ! h4»e« d *
fitlo r f dr a war F ra nch P ro
van draft*#'* K a n m o rv d *h
wafthar quoan ftir# oak t«ad
w ilh 2 h u ilt in dr a w ar ft and
a H a th « d a n d l a h l a t
p lu i

much n w ti 1101 * U m tl

Av# Bohind P oppa J#y l F rl
4 Sat anty__________ ________
t v# rythirsg m u lt g o l Sfov#
d » ik h d rm *#1 ftp r in g i m a t
tr# * *# * . la b ia l, ia m p t ca r
ft ia r to
c o r n ic tf t
p ic t u r a t
m iic
T aka S a n fo r d Aua
N o rth fo No ta li'a *0 1101
P aiom a F rid a y and' Saturday
10 3PM Can ) IJ 177/

Day tana M a c h
Natela a i • * • •

1*71 GMC 1/1 Ion Van Three
speed, needs m o to r BtSO C all

243—Junk C ars
A N T JU N K CARS A T R U C K !

Bought From II* ISO A m or.

P U B LIC AUTO AUCTION
E ver y Wad H lf a a l l'M F M

C all l l l l W ....................... M l 4)11
TOF D o lla r P a id lo r J u n k A
Used c a n , tr u c k , A h eavy
equipm ent J i t Seeo

* W h e re A n y b o d y *
* C an B u y o r S e lll *

W E P A Y TOP D O L L A R FO R
SUNK C A R S A H O T R U C K S
CBS A U TO FARTS it ia s a s

Fa# m«f# details

245—M is c e lla n e o u s

I 9f4 IS* t i l t
O eB ery A u la B M a rin * Seta,
A c r e ,, I ha H e a r, tap *1 h ill
114 H w y 17 f t OeBery *44 4544
l 1 '■ .. - ..... m ! , i ** 1 i j i u t
by ow ner C all 111 11*t any
fim #

O iim and King F r t a fo rm tt y la
D ia m o n d i | appro# 40 p f l ,
H u b ia t appro* 30 pfft
I4K
y a How goid ISOO of b a il u ffv r
W ill (o n iid a r !ra&lt;1# C a ll 111
0434 any lim a

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...

By O w ner 1117 l g tt d w e llin g 10
X I » It lo t W e t! A irp o rt
B lvd . S a n lo rd Toned GC )
Su&lt; labia lo r p ro ia tv u jn a i o llic a
conversion
P r in c ip le , only
1710100_____
C O M M E R C IA L S P E C IA LIS T
LA K E M A R Y R E A L T Y
BOB B A L L . J B ................. M U M
S A N FO R D 41 X 200 te n te d K&gt;l
W e liR ta p tic Good Ter m i
W allace C r e tt R e a lty . I m
R E A LT O R
U l 0177

151 — In v e s tm tn t

F r * o E ( t i m i t a , A C onsulting
lie
Bondad
In su re d
W * Spec i i l l i e in Q u a lity 1
S te p * B y itd e r,_________ la * M W

B . E. L IN * CONST.
F .n a n c ln g A v a ila b le

Air Conditioning
4 Heating

17000 dw n $747 m o &gt; a c re , I S
It
p avad rd
fr o n ta g e
h o rn e t.ta I no m o b , le t 1 171 toap

155—Condominiums
Co-Op / Sole
Two B d r m .] B A TH N E W AP
P L IA N C E S
W ASH D RYER
IN C L U D E D , pool
screened
parch SM 000 WHI ta n t id t f
&gt;eot* o p'-o n C oll U l US* or

____________
Mobile-

Homes / Sale
For Sat*
Bast O tte r M o b il*
H orn * 1*71 S kylin e M a l i 1
b d rm l&gt;* b o th W ritte n p r *
poaol m u tt b * ra o o v o d by I
PM
F r id a y , f i t I I by
F lo r id a P o w o r a n d L if lh '
Com pany &lt; o O P W e t ton
P u rcha sin g D ept
P O Bo.
07* 100 M .ow n F l U &gt; «

W e lle r , H eating 4 A ir
C on d ition ing Service
W ork an w indow u n it* A R V t

UIWW

Appliance Repair
Ulil i n t J L &amp; b iiiiftfa G m r i
I f h r S e rvice Na I s irs Charge

IF tr H* UBM4S. S74BU)

Carpentry

IN S T A L L s i l l
b
b ip a ir
C ypre s,
C hain L in * .. .Weed
F to c * M l 1711

H andy M an
t a p H andym an. N * t R aiiabta
F ra * E H m a tt any |ab B art
R ata* H IE I1 I C a llA n y tlm *

U t | t s t N » R . . . l. . . lh e 4 M o b il*

322-2420

H o m t D ealer in Ih ts A m
F o rn dto * ..... ...R . ...
A dult*
M U H w y &gt;1-01.............
U S IIU

0|4 Slotto Kay
C all

TOW ER’S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H a r r i e t , * Beauty
Nook I I * E 1*1 SI M l 1741

H o m e Im p ro v e m e n t
C aU tar-t B u ild in g B R ao w d altn g
Ns M B Tan S m a ll
&gt;11 B u r l* * I a n * . S antard
m a m
P lum b in g. P a in tin g E le c tric
C arp e n try Don t So* itT A t* Bal
U y f ) E&gt;p
B A L U l 0*41
Sam i B e tira d C o n i. *c ta r w a n t,
s m a ll re m od e lin g lo b * Rea
lik N U N M e i

H o m e R e p a ir s
CARPENTER
R e p a irs and
rem od a iin g No |ob too s m a ll
Can sis * M )
M am tananca of a il ty p e *
C a rp e n try p a in tin g , p lu m b in g
end e le c tric M l * * M

l a b B Q u i t . SM U l IMP
M A ID S T i -O tW t
C Nanllw ea* t t n a if Ta Ol
C all H it h e lp e r*!

cau.lowi m

C A LLA N Y TIM E

H e a lth f t B e a u t y

*11 ty p d * •&gt; c a rp e n try A ra
m o d e lin g 17 y y * ta p C all
R ic h a rd G r o t* U l 5F71

C a rp e l C N ia m g liv in g ,
learn B H all l l * * B .

an

BEAT THE M EAT!
Gb II C l i n i t i i n B io s

(
j

\|h j&lt; m

iu b l&lt;

tiln

1214401

TH OM AS B T H O M A S H a m *
re p a b . &lt;H a a In g . la w * c a r*
C all U l ue»

Cleaning Service

Plumbing

L a w n S e r v ic e

^ C o m p l t t i L iw n C u t

*B 7 o m 7 t G IF T I Have Hav
K itc h e n R im e d , tad I AN ty p a , * f
C arp a w try
Rea ta na h ie Fricae
E ip e r lane a d .......... Beta* ewe &gt;t
V a ry B aN dhta........... W S -W IF K I*

S p a c id iiim g mi a tfk ia s B
W ara ha w ta *
L ic a n ta d . E l l
Raa«onaM a
F ia a ta C all
I 1 L C leaning Service

1 b d rm . 1 b a th
S p ilt
U&lt; kata Sun T h u rt

Fence

322 7025

Lots/Sale

157

Additions A
Remodeling

The W hwa Ban Of Waa

ft#4(h»*d# R M ffy . . i l A L T O I I I
904 43/ 1)13
O b a n lA a y t!

ii’ m

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

REMODELING SPECIALIST

&gt;11 M U

IM S P A R K A Y E S antard
W I L k M a r y B tv d L k M a ry

N eed C rib s . P is y p t^ t. B oby
t u r n it u f*
c lo t h in g
G ood

SALES

WE FINANCE

149— C o m m e rc ia l
P ro p e rty / Sale

tt reu * r# taohmg tec a tu t
i a * * M (oraar m Raal E tta**.
StawtNaa Raalty t t laahiag
tor you Colt Loo AlBright
todor o l » l ) 47# Srawing*

t

Man fh r y F m

R E A L E S TA TE
R E A LT O R
&gt;17 M*«
IM * * C hav. A . . 0(]#n H o u t*
on Sun S b d rm
l * t bath
U it I l l y r m
a w a r*s h o p ,
la n c e d b a c k y a r d . C e n t
heat 01' fu lly carpeted M e ,
help lln a rtce &gt;7) t*S&gt;

NEW S M Y R N A BEAC H
ACLF K#t»ram#fk» Mom#
I ■ (• ib n i Ifttom#

SPACIOUS I hdrm 1 hath ham*
ham* w ith te a tre l air heat
padata tan*, tat* *4 ttaraga.
m u d * B a a lltd # e t l l i t l a t

Baby
B ad, S tre lta rt C lathat
P la y p i n t . E tc
F a p a rh a c k
i t U l 4177 &gt;11*544

A b ility K erm an
F O B * , it s . US U N
Otte e n F l* I l f *4

CALL BART

P r o p e r t y / S a le

SWEET DREAMS I bdrm 1
bath ham* w ith u ta a a a d goal
a t * * , central al r/ haal ,
lirantoc*. fane ad yard S ai.tM

• TO )

&lt;*« w

Sa IM)

M il LIST ANO S E L L
M OR E HOM 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

A D O R A B L E 1 M i n | v . Bath
h a m * w it h ta a k a n l iv i n g
re a m
(a d a r tciw t m ta v ta r
O ra a t tar r a U ra a t * r naw
c a u e ta tl ta* ta *

LAKEFRO NT
LU X U R Y ADULT
C O M M U N IT Y

NOW LEASING
CALL 322-1051

S m a ll* L ik a M onty, S ting* L t h t
A B * * ' It you w on t to *a * a
y a rd t i i * com # tee m e ' E ld a r
S p rin g s M o b il* Mom# P a r*
H w y a ]f naat ta C a rria g e
Cove Sat A Sun l l t a l

Adult Motile Homt P«rk

A p p lm c # !

IN V E S T M E N T
1 u n itt in S
S a n lo rd O n ly SS7 000 Lg
down o r r * tin o n c * Owner
• i l l a t s it i

Sintotd's Silts U *d « i

O O LL HOUSE &gt; bOrnt I b ath
hom e w ith c e n tra l * ir Pw*l
u til i f f ih# d new cer pet, c lot#

125— F o r L o o m

I SH EN A N D O AH
VILLAGE
APTS.

COLOR T E L E V IS IO N
C A IS " CO'S' co n s o l*
television O rig in a l p ric e ove»
sack! balance d u * tla a Cash
or taka o v e r p a y m e n t* ot SIS
m onth NO M O N E Y DOWN
SMI In w a rra n ty F ra * home
t r ia l no
o b lig a tio n C a ll
ta ) SJSadav or n ig h t__________

P re tty P u p g ta t Fa r Sal*
cockapoo S llS

2/TH STREET FURNITURE

153— A cre a g e
UU

S in g r i
i l l O d h im D r iv e
A ssorted ite m * cto*h*» d i*
he* ale « ) P M F n A 5i&lt;
Sat a x ) A M to i PM L o 't ol
c lo t h in g
so m a c h ild r e n *
m o m , a d u llt
H o u s e h o ld
't a m t
ISa* P a lm e tto Av#
Son lo r d ___________________ '

17H471

k tA ito a i

N E W LIS T IN G
) b d rm
&gt;
b e th t Oeh flo e r i, tc re e n e d
POOL i n i
O f M n h o u ii
L e v e lf corner lo t w ith lerg o
aek tre e * U 9 900

2 R V Spoets Audible

Rentals

S e n fo r d
F H A e t t w m e b l#
mertgege
Owner will held
2nd L arg e 2 b d rm
2 bath
w tfh fire p la c e fa m ily ream &amp;
double g a ra g e tM too

L IS T W IT H USI

( 305)321 0041

R e s o rt/V a c a tio n

Venford N ic e 2 bddr'bom home
w ith liv in g room . d»nmg room
p en*fed fa m ily 1 room leyndPr
room w orksh o p C ell to r w»
torm elAon 12 ) 1)01 or 114 4137
)4 ) 900 or bt t l o ffe r

O T H E R H O M E S . LOTS,
A C R E A G E IN V E S T M E N T
PROPERTY

CONDO
N owly rode c e r* ted
end re N rb ith e d
3 b d rm
2
l l t r y W on't U t l * t M l . SM.

COUNTRY VILLAGE

M00CIS ON DISPLAY

1 ftd rm
3 b eth e tm
g re e t ro om . H reptece e * t in
k it c h e n , d in in g ro o m
b e n u tltu i wooded lot l?» FOG

ID Y L L W IL D I th»» tp«&lt;M&gt;us
hom e tft v a t i n l o«d reedy to*
Y our l i m l l f l l 4 b d r m , 3
b a th t. f o m i lf ro o m . U r g i
gom e ream Owner w ill o t i i t f
• n fin en cm g 191 900

Du p i »■
1 b d rm . c a rp o rt,
p r i v a t e p a t le . fa n . la w n
te r v ica. SMS m e . &gt;7* 144)

111

&gt;» t i n

ivEMPy viMSfit*e&gt;vtt&gt; is i' - r i n i i »

OPE N SUNDAYS I P M t# 1 P M

P a rk A v * M o b il* P e rk

R E B r a h tr

1 LOTS
aoch

Delterv* N ice 1 b d rm Q uiet
near (h o p p in g . A l l ! m o p lu t
tec B_ lease. S_7*MI_I. e v e t_ _

NIC* 17.40 I b d rm
4 m l to
tow n O id tr couple no p * !t, no
c tllld ra n R * l# r* n c * k r#Q ulf*d.
w ater lu r m ttw d l i t A le*t.
SXJQ m o 111 11*.

COUNTRY WIDE REALTY

PH O N t 323 8463

C O O L S P A R K L IN G P O O L
w/ten&lt;e&lt;i ’ i e cre end U rg e ]
b d rm
h om e 1 H iiqe m e ite r
b d rm
F l r i p l i c c l C e n tr o l
h e e f /e ir t 1 w o r b itio p it
Assume no q u o lity m o « / low
dow n ! 114 000

1 5 7 -M o b ile
Homes / Sale

LO N G W O O D 1 b d rm
I bath
Naw ro o t Low dow n paym ent
O w n e r fin a n c in g
Sat too
»&gt; a**f
________ _

f o r qunltty creflm em h ip end
co m pe titE vt p r i c t i let u t p r'c e
e y t yd or now horn#

A V A IL A B L E
7 b d rm 1 bath
c a rp e t applienc a t vc leaned
petto, la u n d ry SM0 W1 H U

K a n c ra tt
a i r c o n d . tu p a r
clea n A n ic e ly tu rn tith in g A
g o lt a t beck door
ra nt by
w a a k o r k a i l ISOS d w n ,
1140 Sa m o A d u lt* no p e tt
W
N I I l l l t l U ______

An Signal A r * Go I 1 b d rm 1
b a th t dan low equity walk
■ng d is ta n c e to school c e n tra l
a n h aa l IS h o c Call N ow '
J7J 1**4

NEW HOME

105— D u p le *- '
T rip le x / Rent

1 0 7 -M o b ile
H om es / Rent

141— H om es F o r Sale

L

113—Storage Rentals
99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE

DISCOUNT
m&gt;
AUTO

M a vin g S i I*
F u rn itu re c u r ia m , p lu t o d d , A
e n d * 111 t i l l _____________

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

t - w u e * «K

tttg

] b d rm
1 b a th C en tra l a ir
W asher D ry a r. fenced ya rd
vc r**n # &lt;j porch, to n n i, vats
n i i i M _____________________
« B D R M 1 B A T H saSO per m o
la fS d e p o t ! No re frig e ra to r
T a k Ing a p p lic a tio n *
STEM PE R A G E N C Y
)71 aeai

LUSH GARDEN SETTING
S A d r m ........
Fu rm vh od A p t(
I A drm
f n o rg y llt t c t a n t
S IN G LE STO RY
B U IL T IN BOOKCASES
A B U N D A N T STORAOE

0 « * f t . TOO «q ft
) bdrws
ca n tra l heat A ir. piu fth carp#*
Fo r Qu*Cfe Solo 139 M0 104
L o r v V Awe M ove I n Today *__

PI Tit It 11% AiRfNTOi II frt

S A N FO R D . R #ak
w ttk ly 4
M o n th ly r # t* ( U til Inc #11
SCO0 * k
A d u llt I *41 7**)

97— A p a rtm e n ts
F u rn is h e d / Rent

iB * iu ttfiil N# tv H o m t

M o v * r t f h f in! U t . 'lid

1 b d rm 1 b a th a va ila b le Ju n*
IS S40U par m onth 1700 ta cu
n f y d e p o t it C a ll U l 7740
a tta r 4 P M w e e k d a .t

Th# Ftartda H efei Fum isTwd
ro o m i A # ttic l# n c l# i TOO Oak
Av# U l 4 XU

F o rd F a ir Iona *4 4 d r 4 c y t
a ir fthockft magft m a n y naw
_ p a r t ) 322 4104 7 to f P M

OpwA Heertd. Sunday I |

w ith u s o deposit Cell U l SMI

Room F o r R ent Loko M a ry
or #0 SM a i . k llc h o n pel ul
1 U l S*14 111 |7 K

SAN FO R D F u rn ith o d r o o m , b y
th# w *#k Reasonable ratak
M a d to rv lc # C a ll U ) 4107
W P M 4 I I P o lm «M o Ay#

321-0759 Eve 322-7643

1 bedroom t bath a p p lie n c**
SJSO m o n th p lu ( ( a c u r lty
T1J 7417

J b d rm 1 * * bath, fa m ily room
S haded y a rd
c o n v e n ie n t
lo c a tio n No p a rt t o o m o t
k * t dap W e e k d a r, l i 4 ft
OCHS E . e ,
117 104f or 117
07S7
__ ________________

d oo m s p riv a te f n t n n c *
C e l l ___ ______
m M ii

Ltc Raal E tla t* B r**« r
1*40 Santard A v *

l R dining

w*#k. Include, utilities A monl
lorylco Coll U l 0*47 or I I )
MM__________________ ■
C'oon room wllh kitchenette
Privet# both Its wvtk in
cludoi utllMiot HOO kocurity
ul U l 4»4f or n i t u i

Room In p r lv . bom # to r r *
Ip o n ilb t* par to n
Down lo o n
o r# * K itc h e n P r ly SfJ wk
m clud » ( «tl u l l l l l m H I 4(04

E tc a r c is * t i l
h o u t a h o td
ita m t. and to t* ol m itc a iia
naou* U S E F lo yd A v * L aka
M ar y Sat A Sun • ta a
_

183—T e le v is io n /
R adio / Stereo

BATEMAN REALTY

• T M fclfcK . ftcr porch t t t
pluft 1)00 Me No p#’ % A v a il
now 179) m o
1*4 RedC I If f
VH U j 1040

• • H O M ES FOR R E N T * •

too

S ta c k th l* W it h e r / D r y a r .
French P ro v in c ia l d ln .n g te&gt;
■eschar t d a te
m 71*7 or
17) m i ______________________
Used Wavherv P e r tt A Service
to r Kew m oret
I I ) ta t?
MOON I T A P P L IA NCES

141—Homes For Sale

10t — Houses
F u rn is h e d / Rent

004

Roam

231 —Cers

111711 E H IS T

471 W L a k * M e ry B outavard.
S u lla 4. S100 m o n th
Im
m o d ia t# occupancy U 7 'TO*

HAS 000 U1\Tfl

Room mot# to (hor* lorg* victo
non hom* in downtown or#o
ISO mo Include, util U l

C o m ta rto b l*

4110_________________

10 to J
On* bedroom on* bath U S U
par waak Cell U l Jatt after

Thursday' May i l . ItES—SB

217— G e ra ge Sales

R

a a * IN D E L TO N A a a •

w t u p o n 431 S 4 » g /4 » to io

1400 t g ft SAM p e r m o p l u t '4 .
4 ceding le n t B ric k A Coder
In te r io r w e ll*
Bob M
B a ll J r . P A . R e a lto r
715

Saturday from

*1—A p a rtm e n ts /
House to Share

Otrltllon Apt* A Heme,
TV, kitchen. loundry. mold. ISO

‘ A r « L and h &amp; Tuna
APE
CH hkVETEb "

w in te r S p rin g *
P ro to *,to n a l
O ffice Spec*
ISO EH vq ft,
r# ** o n *b i# ra n t
Phon#
U T OTlt or MS 4010_________

• to 1 »

w# hov# Job# too nood pooptal
Cor##r F in d # r,, |nc 1*01
South Fr*«ch U l 111]

9 3 -R o o m s fo r Rent

*0*0

ly fh r w F rid a y

P flll fu r n lih g o , jj m in u te ,
w ork tor I I I IT ) O ft#

O *o n

&gt; 1114 4 1

m ta i*

Pfo hov# Job* we need poop 1*1
C a re e r F l n d o n . In c
1*0*
Sou th F r e n c h U I H l |

Working l*m*l« ta rtt Mm# to
(tor# tportm#nl Conv#ni#nl
location pool Nlc#t U l I l k
____________
ott#r 4

A v a ila b le June t i l m

C A LL

TIMF t i t * _____ 771-1141

Y A RD M AN To cut wood! on
average r**id#ntiol lot one# 0
month No rot mg or #dging

181— A p p lia n c e s
/ F u r n itu r e

Double Office for rent.

P S Y C H IA T R IC TCCM

Part tlm* Must be n p t r w t t d
for crl»l» unit In Samlngi#
County M l 41!1

Evtttmg Herald. Jintord, FI.

127—O ffic e R en ta ls

L a n d c le a r in g
B E N E V A LA N DC L E A R IN G
lo t-L a n d c le e rin g
F ill d ir t
Tepeefl
Pond*
D ra m di te n e t
S it* P ra pa ra tm n C a ll Sat w ig
T H O R N E L A N O C L E A R IN O
F IL L D IR T • C L A Y 6
S H A LE H A U L IN G
U l MU

121BOt

L a w n M aintenance
L a r d w a p in g Bush Hag M ow ing
la * soes
LAWNS H O N E D 8 T IIH M E D
Spring Y a rd C taan u p . MS I M I
M e to n ry
B E A L C a n c rtta 1 M an Q u a lity
O p e ra tion
P atios D riv e w a y ,
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ALTIR ATK M S....M b «
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1be open M em orial Day, M ay 27
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7V4" Fire-tooth
No 2 5 6 3 0 /F 4 0 7 1 4

Indv 500 Racing
TOOL BOX

Deluxe
V
ROUTER TABLE

19" x 7 '/i“ x 7 " box w ith black
lift-out tray No 89224

A ll steel w ith adjustable (enco
and m iter guide No 23466

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6-Piece
ROUTER BIT SET
No 22992

Drill BIT SET

SCREWDRIVER SET

HOLE SA W SET

13-piece W ith case
No 1 0 2 4 5 /1 155D

6-piece No 50048

5-Piece No 18398

Cutoff/Rip Sa w Blade

J ig s a w BLADE SET

Torx SCREWDRIVER SET

10 piece No 30039

5-Piece No 50547

7V4". 2 0 tooth carbido blade
No 2 7 1 7 0 /M 4 4 7 1 4

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m\6 n 9 f fat Picnic:!
Portable GAS
GRILL
185 sq in Single burner
rated 11.000 Btu No L505

GAS GRILL

G A S GRILL

225 sq in 2 0.000
Btu single burner 2 0
lb cylinder included
No 9031.

2 25 sq in. 24.000
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No 9 0 4 1 /9 0 5 4

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CARPET

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15 watt. 1 / 2 acre
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No BE-15M

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25 w a tt 3 / 4 acre
lure range
No 6425

4 0 w att 1 acre
lure range
No 6440

OPEN

ORANGE CITY

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS

2323 S Volusia Ave 1029 E Altamonte Dr
H igh w ay 17 and 92
(H igh w ay 436)
Phone 775-7268
Phone 339 831!

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
875 W est H igh w ay 436
Phone 862-7254

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SANFORO
700 French Avenue
Phone 323-4700

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�</text>
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                    <text>Man Fired For Jury Duty
Wins $7,500 From Employer
A former Lake Mary man waa
awarded $7,500 In damages after he
was fired from his Job al a savings and
loan association following his refusal
to Ignore u call to Jury duty In
Sanfonl.
While Carl W. Neldhart. 31, now of
Titusville, was awarded $7,500 In the
case against Pioneer Federal Savings
and lawn Association, o f Clearwater.
Circuit Judge Thom as Pendlck ruled

PMS Defense
To Be Judged
In Landmark
Assault Case

Neldhart could not collect $2.4 million
In punitive damages he sought from
the association, a apokesmasn for the
Judge said today
N e l d h a r t '* a t t o r n e y . D e n n is
Fountan of Altamonte Springs, could
not be reached for comment.
T h e verdlcl was handed down
Monday at the end o f a one-day trial.
According to reports. Neldhart. then

8«r JURY, page 0A

For Odometer Rollbacks

S a n fo rd M a n
G e ts 4 2 -Y e a r
P ris o n
By Rick Brunson
Herald S t a ff W r ite r
A 29-year-old Sanford man was
sentenced lo 42 years In prison.
slap|&gt;ed with a $7,000 fine Tuesday
mid ordered lo stay out of the cur
business alter tiring convicted on 27
counts of rolling tiark the odometers on
curs
Hunter Delphln Glenn, of 420 Oak
A vc . also received 26 years probation
mul was ordered by Orange County
rlrru lt Judge Ted Coleman lo pay
restitution to the car buyers us soon as
.i proper amount ts determined Hill
Llpham. Investigator with the Orange
County Consumer Fruud Division,
which filed Ihe charges, said today the
amount could lie about $1,000 per car
or $28,000
Glenn plans to appeal the sentence,
hts attorney reportrdly told reporters.
Llpham said the sentence waa the
stillest yet given to s parson eonvtetrtl
o f tampering with odometers snd wilt
send a signal lo other car deulers who
may try lire same practice
" I dare say It's the maximum sen­
tence that's ever been handed down In
such a case ... probably In Ihe United
Stales." he said.
Glenn was convicted ol Ihe charges In
April and rould have received up lo 147
yeurs In Jail In addition to 27 counts of
supplying lalse odometer statements.
Glenn was convlctrd of one count of
scheming lo defraud u ear buyer. Each

T erm
charge Is a felony and Is punishable by
up lo five years In prison and u $5,000
fine.
Glenn was arrested al his Sanford
hom e Nov 20 after a two-month
investigation which showed he bought
28 vehicles In south Florida, turned
bark the mileage readings and falsified
Ihe mileage rerords. then sold (hem
lb rough Florida Auto Auction In Or­
ange County, according to Llpham. The
cars were sold between March and
June o f 1983. Llphuni said.
During Ihe trial. Glenn reportedly
testified lhal he was selling up to 40
cars a week and was "to o busy" to
check the miles on all the vehicles.
Llphum said Hr also testified, accord­
ing lo Llpham. lhal other workers
signed his signature on some of the
mllcugc records.
Although he received 42 yeurs. Glenn
will prolwbly only serve three, because
ol the nature of the charge. Llphant
said. At that time he will be eligible for
parole snd will probably get It. he aald.
irrrauar "he'll be a model prisoner."
' It's the same story. Prisons are
overloaded und they (prison ofDelalsI
lend to let the white collar criminals go
sooner than they do the violent crimi­
nals." Llpham said.
llul the severity ol the sentence may
spark a national trend lo gel loiigher
w it h d e a le r s w h o ta m p e r w ith
odom rlers. Llpham suld. Odometer
See PRISON, page 6A

?o u n iy B u d g e t H e a r in g s C o n t in u e

Fire Protection Tax To Rise
In Unicorporated Seminole
Property taxes for lire protection In
Sem in ole County’ s unincorporated
area* are going up.
County commissioners In their sec­
ond day of workshops on Ihe proponed
budget of the public safety department
tor the 1985-80 fiscal year voted
unanimously to raise the tux rale for
lire protection In the unincorporated
area from $1.81 per $1,000 assessed
valuation to $2. a JO-cent Increase
The property tax Increase would fund
only the (Ire department's hose budget
— ihe same budget as last year, hut
with Increased salaries und Increased
&gt;&lt;&gt;mn lor Irtuge benefits such as Insur­
ant i- and state retirement.
Meanwhile during the afternoon

session service agencies made their
pilches for county subsidies lo four
com m issioners C om m ission er Hill
Klrchholf was representing Ihe county
al a meeting of Ihe Tri-County Trartstl
Authority.
Approved by at least three of the four
commissioners were:
• Federation o f Senior Citizens.
9 3 5 .0 0 0 The fed e ra tio n received
$30,000 last year
• Retired Senior Volunteer Program
(KSVPl. $25,000. $5,000 more than the
agency received from the county last
year.
• Community Coordinated Child
Core of Central Florida (4C|. Controls-

See BUDGET, page BA

COM A n d Gone
W orkers dismantle apparatus for coal oil

mix experlm anta, known as the C O M
Protect, at Florida Powar and L ig h ts plant
olf U.S. Highway 17W between Sanford and
DeBary. The equipment wes sat up by the
Bechtel Corporation over tour years ago In
an experiment to see If pulverized coel
mixed with oil could m ake a desirable fuel.
Although the experiment was a success In
that the mixture worked, the process didn't
prove economical, said F P It L Engineering
Supervisor Bruce Stephenson. “ It's sim ply a
matter ot econom ics/' ha said today. The
power company owns part of a plant In
Georgia that pumps 500,000 volts of alactrld*
ty to the company's othar facilities, ha
explained, and power could be obtained
cheaper that way. He declined to say how
much the coal oil m ix experiment cost the
lirm .

*w»a

pm i

kT Ti

e

H w « u P S * * by Tymmy V l M M t

Champs Cheer

J a m e s Jackson, star of the title gam e In the F lo rid a L ittle Ma|or City
series Tuesday night, holds up his te am 's trophy while team m ates show
off their Individual trophies. Jackson, the winning pitcher, also got three
hits, Including a grand slam for the victo rio u s Sun Bank team . The team
defeated F irst F e d e ra l 21-7. F ro m left, Ja so n Sutton, bat g irl Lakoscla
Ken non and Je ffre y Ingram . G am e details, page 7A.

H ija c k e r s A llo w

I n t e r v ie w

Pilot: Rescue Too Risky
H EIH U T. L eb an on |UPI) - An surrounded by many, many guards."
"extrem ely tired but sm iling" TW A came the captain's reply.
T h e Interview w ith Testrake. a
pilot John Testruke said today he
leared he and his fellow American Richmond. Mo., resident and vrtrrun
hostages would "all be dead men" if TW A pilot who recently began flying
anyone tried to rescue them because International flights, lasted less than 10
minutes tieforr gunmen In the cockpit
they are constantly under guard
Testrake was Interviewed by three waved tire correspondents away.
"Captain Testruke. do you have any
AHC News correspodents who stood
below hts Ikielng 727 — the first time Idea what's hap|iened to the |iassengers
the Shltte Moslem hijackers of TW A on the aircraft?" Glass asked.
"N o. We've been told that they've
Flight 847 allowed Journalists to speuk
lo uny o f ihe 40 Americana who began tieen taken lo a -vile place, that they are
comfortable and being well taken care
a sixth day of captivity today.
o f." Testrake said.
AH C t e le v is io n c o r r e s p o n d e n t
"D o you have any messages for your
Churles Glass, a former Helm! bureau
chief now baaed In London. Beirut* fam ily?"
" I'd like for my wife and my family
hosed AHC radio correspondent Julie
Flint and Derwln Johnson, an ABC and all of my friends hac k In Missouri
to know that Ihe Lord has taken very
producer In Helrut. were summoned
good cure of us so far and he has seat)
unexpectedly to Interview Testrake.
A IK ' spokesman Tom Goodman said In us through some very trying limes and
we will see us through to Ihe end."
New York.
Flint gave this account o f the scene:
Goodman said the three were ac­
"W e re standing a few feet away from
companied by an unidentified corre­
spondent for Agence France Press, the the plane. One of the hijackers Is
leaning out of Ihe cockpit window,
French news agency.
"T h ere's talk at home o( a rescue pointing a pistol at us. and we don't
cjulte know what he's saying Another
operation. Whal do you think about
that?" Glasa. standing below the nose hijacker — a short, fat boy with a scarf
tied around hts head — la atandlng al
o f the cockpit, asked Testrake.
carrying
" I think we would all be dead men if the back of Ihe plane
Sec HIJACK, page BA
they did because we're continually

By Deane Jordan
H erald S ta ff W rite r
A six-woman Jury In Sanford will
probably reach a decision today In
what may be a landmark case Involving
premenstrual stress as a defense In a
criminal trial
Doth defense and prosecuting at­
torneys agree lhal It may tie the first
time In the United States that pre­
menstrual stress syndrome, or PMS.
has been used as a defense
On trial ts Margaret Pitt. 24. of 6 4 1
Helltuwer Ave.. Deltona. She Is charged
with three counts of aggravated assault
with a car and one count of criminal
mischief The charges stent from a
Sept. 28 Incident In Altamonte Springs
In which she allegedly rammed her
former llve-ln boyfriends car several
times while he was driving south on
state Road 434 In Ihe vlrlnlty of Little
Wcklva Drive.
Ms Pitt's attorney. Leon Cheek III. of
Casselberry, said In court Ills client
may be guilty of criminal mischief hut
not of the three aggravated assaults
because of PMS. I'ltt maintains she was
experiencing PMS when the incident
occurred.
She faces up lo 5 years In prison If
convicted
Testifying for the defense as un
expert witness was Dr. Jeffrey Korerr. of
685 Palms Springs Drive. Altamonte
Springs. He has hern treating Ms Pitt
this year lor PMS and testified that
because of PMS she has mood swings,
experiences tension. Irritability and
rage.
Korcn testified, under cross examina­
tion by Assistant Stale Attorney Kurt
Erlenbach. that most of what hr
described os symptoms of PMS are
bused upon what woman tell him — he
runs a PMS clinic — und that he has
treated Ms. Pttts only alter Ihe alleged
Incident He suld other woman have
reported more extreme behavior than
she.
lie te s tifie d that o fte n w om an
experiencing PMS do oul of character
things, such as bear their children, are
aware they are doing It. but have no
Idea aa to why.
He said the most common treatment
ts diet control, exercise and B-vltlmlns.
Then the stress cycle Is plotted. It
usually occurs Just prior to the onset of
Ministration.
According to court records. Ms Pitts
Is accused of driving her car Into the
car of James Apuzzo. 23. of 616
Andrew St.. Altumonte Springs Al the
time Ihrrr were two pussengrrs In Ihe
vehicle.
Witnesses claim Ms. Pills rammed
her car Into I hr rear of Apuzzo's car.
then pulled along side and slammed
Into the driver's sld** twice. No one was
Injured, bul about $3,000 In durnage
done lo Ihe car.
Cheek said that thr stale bus not
proven Ms. Pitts Intruded to hurt the
pussengrrs ol the car. Just rum thr cur.
There must he specific Intent lo find
someone guilty of aggravated assault,
he said
Apuzzo testified that Just prior to the
Incident he and Ms. Pills had two short
talks In which he (old her he was going
to a popular night spot and she wus not
welcome.
Cheek said that If Ms. Pills was angrv
specifically at Apuzzo she would have
aimed her cur al him when he got out
after one ot the rurmnlngs Instead she
drove her car Into hts. run knowing
there were other people In the vehicle,
one of them wheelchair bound
Ms Pitts also faces similar charges In
Volusia County.

TODAY
SA
..........SB
Bridge
.......... 3A
Calendar
Classlllads...................... 4.7B
Com ics.................... ..........2B
Crossword............... ..........SB
Dear Abtoy..........................IB
Deaths.....................
Dr. G ot!...................

Florida................ ......... 6A
Horoscope........... ..............SB
Hospital...............
Nation.................
Paopla.................
Sports................
Television
...............3B
W eather.............
W orld..................

Jack The Crimper' Jailed
WATFORD. England (UPI)
— A man who haa been
stalking the alreeta ot W at­
ford. grabbing women and
rubbing shampoo in their tutlr
ta dually behind bars.
Keith Everttt. nicknamed
' Jack the Crimper" by the
Urttlah press after a style of
crimping done by hairdress­
ers. ts to be sentenced In
Crown Court after pleading

guilty Monday to two charges
of assault and two charges of
c r im in a l d a m a g e to hts
victim's coats.
Prosecutors said Everttt. a
29-year old security guard,
had attacked women over a
six-month period, rubbing
shampoo and soap liquid Into
their hair for sexual pleasure
and leaving them hysterical

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Mengele Died Unrepentant

NATION

Son Said Nazi Doctor Considered Victim s W orthless
By U nited P ress Internation al
Nazi war criminal Josef Mengele was
unrepentant and scornful o f those who
sought lo judge his actions as the con*
cenlratlon camp doctor charged with the
deaths of 400.000 people, most of them
Jews, Mengele's son says In a magazine
article.

IN BRIEF
Discovery Readied For
'Star Wars' Target Practice
CAPE CANAVERAL (UP1| - The International crew of
the smooth-nailing Discovery launched » third com­
munications satellite today and planned to turn the shuttle
into a target fora "Star W ars" laser experiment.
With satellites owned by Mexico and the Arab League
safely deployed and operating normally, the shuttle (Iters
made It three for three with the launch o f a radio relay
station owned by the American Telephone A Telegraph Co.
The 1,438 pound Telstar satellite. Insured for $105
million, was gently kicked from Its cradle In Discovery's
cargo bay on lime at 7:20 a m. as the shuttle neared the
equator over the Atlantic Ocean.
The "Star Wars" experiment, using a low-power laser In
Maul, Hawaii and a mirror assembly aboard Discovery, was
scheduled for the afternoon. The experiment Is designed to
demonstrate high-prectalon tracking.
By studying how atmospheric turbulence affects the
laser light during Its round trip into space and back,
scientists hope to verify techniques that one day could be
applied to an exotic laser weapon system.
One such application currently being considered involves
huge orbiting mirrors that would atm blasts from powerful
ground based lasers at enem y mtssllrs In flight.

Rolf Mengele. 41. told the weekly Bunfr
///usfrtcrfe In Munich. West Germany that
Mengele cleaned stables In Bavaria after
W orld War II before fleeing to Latin
America. The art tele was released Tuesday.
Until hls death he regarded hls victims as
worthless people, the Nazi war criminal's
son said.
"But for him there were no Judges, only
those who wanted revenge." Rolf Mengele
said. "Besides, he could never understand
w hy anybody could think he should fee)
guilty for wanting to get rid of what he
railed unworthy lives."
Tw o weeks ago In Brazil, remains were

exhumed from a grave of a 1979 drowning
victim that police said they were virtually
certain was Mengele. Forensic experts In
Sao Paulo are now trying to Identify the
rrmalns positively.
Rolf Mengele. a lawyer from Freiburg.
West Germany, broke hls silence last week
lo say he believed the skeleton found In the
grave was that o f hls father.
Mengele Is blamed for sending 400,000
concentration camp Inmates, most o f them
Jews, to their deaths and for performing
Inhumane experiments on twins In an effort
to create the master race envisioned by the
Nazla.
Rolf Mengele told the magazine, in which
he gave hundreds o f documents, that the
family always knew where hls father was
hiding and sent him money.
He said the Odessa organization, the main
underground group supporting Nazi exiles,
never helped the former Auschwitz con­
centration camp doctor.

Rolf Mengele attributed hts father s suc­
cess in eluding authorities to a lifestyle so
modest that he never would be suspected of
b ein g the " A n g e l o f D e a th " at the
Auschwitz concentration camp In Poland.
He told Bunte In a 20-page article titled
"How My Father Escaped" that after World
War II. Mengele spent four years cleaning
the stables of a Bavarian farmer who
w ondered w hy hls m ysterious helper
washed hls hands so much.
Mengele later went to Latin America,
where ihe family sent him the $100 to $170
a month he needed to live In hiding. Bunte
said.
The son first met hls lather on a Swiss
skiing vacation In 1956 and later corre­
sponded with Ihe fugitive. Bunte said.
Family members visited Mengele. During
a llnal meeting In Brazil In 1977, Rolf
Mengele said hr found hts father a shattered
man who pondered suicide and suffered
from depression, but also unrepentant.
Bunte reported

Man Acquitted
2nd Time Around
In Attack On Girl
By Deane Jordan
Herald S ta ff W riter

Accused Spy Cooperating

f

WASHINGTON |UPI| — The sailor son of a retired Navy
warrant officer accused of masterminding a coast-to-coast
spy ring has begun to cooperate with authorities trying to
unruvei the 20-year opera! ton, sources say.
Federal law enforcement sources who asked not lo be
Idenllfed said Tuesday that Michael Walker. 22. who was
arrested May 22 aboard the aircraft carrier Nlmltz with 15
pounds of classified material next lo Ills bunk, has begun
lo talk.
Michael Walker, like thr other three suspects, faces a life
sentence If convicted and Is the second man to assist In the
Investigation. Ills uncle Arthur Wulker. a retired Navy
lieutenant commundcr. Is also speaking with authorities
about the spy ring called by some officials the largest In 30
years.
In federal courts a continent apart. Arthur Walker and
Jerry Whitworth pleaded Innocent Tuesday to charges of
spying for the Soviet Union. Their lawyers promised to put
on combative defenses

M#f aid Ptwtf lif Tommy Vincsnf

Peaceful Coexistence
An unidentified shoeless fisherman shares
hls fishing spot on La ke Monroe with an
alligator, both apparen tly oblivious to the
other. Despite seven m ore alligators cru ls

W O RLD
IN BRIEF

H o u se V o te s Limits O n M X M issile ;
‘Star W a rs', C hem ical W e a p o n s N e x t

Gold Dealer Murdered,
Live And In Living Color
OSAKA, Japan fUPM — Two men shouting "you die”
forced Ihelr way Into the apartment o f a gold dealer
suspected of bilking customers out of millions of dollars
and slublied him lodeath with a bayonet, police said.
Television cameramen watting outside the victim's
apartmenl building filmed the assault Tuesday. The
Ittolagr was later broadcast nationwide.
The suspects, thrlr clothes splattered with blood, were
arrested by police outside the upurtment of Kazuo Nagano.
32. the i hair man of Toyota Shojl Co.
The pair told authorities they were members of an
ultra-conservative group called "Selahlnkul." or Honest
Men's Club, but pillce declined to comment on u motive for
the slaying
Toyota Shojl and Its alltllutes allegedly bilked
million from customers, many of whom said they
ton ed to sign contracts to purchase gold liars but
received them. The company refused to cancel
contracts, they said.

$800
were
never
their

Wrongly Killed Americans Found
GUADALAJARA, Mexico (Ul’ ll - Police have uncovered
what they bellrve lo lx- the remains of two Americans
killed by Mexican narcotics smugglers who mistook them
for U S narcotics agents
A Judicial poller spokesman said that what authorities
liellrve lo be the IkmIIcs of John Walkrr. 35. of Mlnnraiiolls,
and Allierto Hadrlnt. 33, of Fort Worth. Texas, were
unearthed Tuesday from a well In the San Isidro Maratrper
Park north of (iuadulajara. 300 miles northwest of Mexico
City.
Both men were lust seen Jan. 30 at La laingostu, a
Gundula|ura restaurant that Is u known hangout for
members of Mexico's drug underworld
Although thr liodles were not yet found, drug kingpins
Rafael Caro Uohitero and Ernesto Fonseca were arraigned
last wrek on charges of killing the two men after they
stumbled Intou private purty at loi Langosia
Caro Uulntero also Is charged wtlh murdering U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration agent Enrique Camarena
Salazar, who was kidnapped Feb. 7 In Guadalajara
Cumarrna's laitterrd laxly was found In u shallow grave
less than a month later

Drink At ABC For Good Cause
The March of Dimes and ABC
Liquors. Ine. have scheduled u
charily hour 4-6 p in iixlay In all
A B C lo u n g e s t h r o u g h o u t
Florida All proceeds will Ix’ nefll
the Match of Dimes
Beginning at 4 p m .. ABC
lounge cash registers will lx*
locked and all drink sales will be
donated to the March of Dimes.
Il Is alsu hoped that must
patrons w ill contribute more

than the regular drink price.
ABC Liquors. Inc. has been
sponsoring m on th ly charity
cocktail hours for more than 16
yrars. usually corresponding
with national churlly campaign*
Prevluus beneficiaries Include
United Cerebal Palsy, Easter
Seals. Harry Anna Crippled
C h i l d r e n 's H o s p i t a l , and
Muscular Dystrophy Associa­
tion.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Control Mond* SoslOM i H otstlll

Tusiiiy

Borvuo l WIlMn. Doltono
K oyorD toonton. O o n o o Co*

ADMIMIONt

la M
Count* J Kaon

Worry A

H r ib o r lL Lofton

jodOOv*.

VhorylL, JxkMii Doltono

m tC H A S O II

M e*
h e m i t Jmi
V iilE

Monies 0

la iu W fi

Ing the w aters nearby, the fisherm an spent
much ol Tuesday m orning on the sandbar,
seem ingly unconcerned about possibly win
ding up as gator bait.

••rn«t ond I

WASHINGTON |UPI| - The House. having
rflccilvcly rendered Ihe MX mlasllr a has-breii
lh i itc. lakes u look today at the question of
renewed chemical weapons product Inn and
spending for President Reagan's proposed “ Star
W ars" drlrnsc.
Oil a 233181 vote Tuesday night. Ihe House
tlghlrnrd the screws on a MX deployment cap.
adopting a statutory limit ol 40 missiles with no
production guaranteed In tlsc.il 1988
The Senate, In Its own work on the defense bill
last month, passed a resolution saying deploy*
menl should lx- held at 50 with production nr 12
missiles during Ihe yrur.
Just nn hour alter the House vote. Reagait told
a nallonally televised news conference. "A ll these
debates on the MX. I think they're a lot of wasted
rhetoric and wr ought lo get on with It."
He also answered charges the missile was
vulnerable try saying. "One thing right now we do
have, our research bus shown ... wr ('an vastly
harden a silo to the rxtenl that wr think It would
lake a very direct hit to do uway with, to
eliminate those missiles."
Opponents ol renewed chemical weapons
production said they o xjx ei to win today an
amendment lo strip the $292 billion defense
authorization package ol $124 million earmarked

lor work on new binary chemical munitions
It Is Ihe only major weapons system the
administration has been unable lo get (rum
Congress. The House has turned Reagan down on
Ihts thrrr years In a row.
Also expected were attempts lo change the $2.5
billion amount sei aside lor anil rntssilr rescan h
work under Reagan s Strategic Defense Initiative
or "Star W ars" program
The MX Issue Is largely over. What was once a
swirling controversy, that would use a day of
Impassioned rhetoric and cllll-hanglng vines in
resolve, look up Just 90 mtnuirs of desultory
discussion Tuesday.
I here was Just a handful of members on Ihe
lloor unlit the hei He final minutes when barkers
of the 40- and 50-cap positions Jockeyed for an
edge.
In earlier voles. Congress approved the produclion of 42 deployable MX missiles and another 20
for testing and spares
Rep. Nick Mavroulea. D-Maas.. said the key lu
hls amendment la the ban on deployment beyond
40 missiles. Hr said he will light lor that in the
conference committee thal will resolve differences
In Ihe House and Senate positions

B ik e A u ctio n
S la te d Ju n e 29

WEATHER
A R E A F O R E C A S T ! Today
mostly sunny and rather hot
today with scallrrrd afternoon
thunderstorms. High mid 90s
Southwest wind 10 mph. Rain
chance 30 percent. Tonight fair
except for 20 percent chance of
evening thunderstorms. Low In
the low er 70s. Light wind.
Th u rsd a y con tin u ed m ostly
sunny and rather hot. A 30
percent chance of ufternoon
thunderstorms. High In tbe mid
90s
NATIONAL REPORT) Storms
spewing more than 5 Inches of
ruin threatened lo push (lash
flixxls across sodden southern
Texas today, while another day
o f 100-degree heat was expected
to sear the West. Thunderstorms
c lin g in g to southern T exa s
poured more than 3 Inches of
ruin on Houston by early today.
San Jacinto County was snaked
by more than 5 Inches of rain
Tuesday and LaGrangc endured
storms thal dumped 41* Inches
In two hours. Some streets were
Hooded in Houston, and the
National Weather Service puated
fla a h flo o d w a t c h e s fr o m
south central Texas (o thr lower
K lo G ran d e V a lle y . F lood s
spawned by heavy rain earlier
this week covered Ihe Meramec
Slate Park near Sullivan, Mo.,
a n d a u t h o r i t i e s s a id th e
Meramec River was still rtaing.
Sixty-five people Tuesday Hcd
from flooded campgrounds, and
authorities rescued a car thal

A Sanford man convicted of
sexual battery lo a 14-year-old
girl and granted a retrial has
been found not guilty o f the
same charge.
Acquitted Tuesday was David
Alonzo Anderson. 33. of 5 Ruby
St.. Sanford. He was accused of
molesting a girl several times
betw een March and August
1984. and was sentenced April 4
lo 5 '* years In prison.
Anderson maintained hls inmxence throughout the first and
second trial and called the girl a
pathological liar.
He was granted a new trial last
Month because Seminole Circuit
Judge Dominick J. Salfl. who
heard both cases, said he did nol
think Ihe first verdict was sup­
ported by the evidence.
Defense attorney Vincent W.
Howard Jr. said where Ihe Jury
deliberated and Its composition
probably contributed lo the
not-gullly verdict.
Howard said the llrsl Jury
begun deliberations Just after
being mustered out of Ihe court­
house because of a bomb scare
While ihry were deliberating at
Sanford City Hall they could
hear Intermittent fire alarms In
the building. The second Jury
bad a qulcl room to consider Its
verdict and ulso contained a
medical doctor which may have
helped juora In their understan­
ding of medical testimony, he
said.
Howard said Ihe new trial was
granted because Salfl was con­
cerned about Ihe girl's credibili­
ty. Both she and Anderson
passed lie deteelor tests. An
analysis of the lest results using
different criteria Indicated the
girl was nol lying Anderson's
s r e o n d a n a l y s i s w a s Inronslustve. Both the girl and
Anderson agreed before the first
trial lo allow (hr results o f Ihe
polygraph teals lo lx- admitted
Into evidence.
Anderson was charged Aug.
13 allrr the girl and her mother
reported "forced" sex acts to a
F l o r i d a H e a lt h a n d R e*
habllltatlvr Services counselor.
An examination of the girl at
C e n t r a l F lo r id a R e g io n a l
Hospital. Sanford, supported the
girl's allegations, a report said.

was swept oil a bridge spanning
the Meramec. "T h e water was
quite high und over the bridge."
a Sullivan County Sheriffs De­
p a rtm en t sp ok esm a n sa id .
"Barricades were up. but appar­
ently people went aroufd the
barricade and they got swept
down the river." In the West
Tuesday, a reading of 101 de­
grees In Reno. Nev.. broke Ihe
record for June and marked the
earliest 100-degree reading ever.
A temperature of 106 In Fallon.
Nev., also broke a record for Ihe
month.

BOATINO FORECAST: SI.
Augustine (o Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — South to southwest
wind 10 to 15 knots decreasing
to 10 knots or leas tonight and
Th u rsd ay. Sea 2 lo 4 feet
decreasing to I to 3 feet tonight.
W idely scattered showers or

thunderstorms.

EXTENDED FORECAST)
Chance of afternoon and evening
thunderstorms Friday throgh
Sunday, especially north Friday.
Otherwise m ostly fair. Highs
near 90 to mid 90s Lows In the
70a except low 80s In the Keys.

AREA READ1NOS (0 a.mj:
temperature; 80; overnight low:
73: W e d n e s d a y 's high: 95:
barometric pressure; 3008; relaliv e h u m id ity : 87 percent:
winds: southwest ui 8 mph: rain;
none: sunrise: 6 28 u.m.. sunset
8:25 p.m.

W E D N E S D A Y TIDES)
D a y to u Baach: highs, 9:34
a.tn.. 9.57 p.m.; laws. 3;20 a m .
3:02 p.m.: Fort Canaveral:
highs. 9:26 a.m.. 9 29 p.m.:
lows. 3:11 a.m.. 2 5 3 p.m.;
Bayport: highs, 3:20 a.m.. 1:50
p m .lows. 8:21 a.m.. 9 53 p.m.

WINDOW &amp; DOOR
GUARDS

B ic y c le s w ill be on th e
Seminole County Sheriff's De­
partment auction block on Sat­
urday. June 29,
The 39 lost or stolen bicycles
up for sale have been recovered
by sheriffs deputies, but not
claimed by ihelr owners, so will
be sold to i be highest bidder.
The sale Is set for 10 a m. at
the sh-rtfTs department, build­
ing 310, Sanford Airport. San­
ford Cash only will be accepted
and all sales are final.
T h e bikes can be view ed
before ihe sale through the fence
of the compound behind the
shertfTs office where they are
stored. shertfTs s|K&gt;krsman John
Spolskl said.

E v e n in g llc n ik l
lutev t«i im &lt;
Wrdrwidoy, June It. IN I
Vol. T7. No W
FvStohod Ditty tn* W*4*y. •■cot
SotvrSoy Sr Ttw iontord Htrtld.

Isc. MS N. Frtnth Art., to*lord.
Fi* m n.

THE BEST PROTECTION
AGAINST INTRUDERS!!!

W c sn S C l* it Pottos* S *M at iont-ord.

fsm «* urn

FREE
ESTIM ATES
iooi a. ink tr.
IANI0S0 HA.

323-2600

Mom* Dtllvtry Wm *. It.lit Month.
M ill J Month*. HI M, t Month*,
lit M, Vtor, Ul M By Mod Wooh
II M) Month. M.Mi ] Month*.
HIM. t Month*. Ml Hi T**r.
MS M
Phono (Mil Ul 1*11.

�t .4

Asbestos Cleanup Obstructed?
WASHINGTON (UP1) — Administration official*
nave denied charges by Rep. James Florlo.
D-N.J.. that they secretly planned to stop
enforcement of laws to protect school workers
from asbestos related health threats.
Morio last week released an Internal Environ­
mental Protection Agency memo that he said
showed EPA and White House officials agreed not
to pursue regulations to protect school mainte­
nance workers who help remove cancer-causing
asbestos from walls and ceilings In thousands of
schools across the country.
However. EPA officials said they recall no such
agreement and that they were proceeding with
the regulations.
Florlo said the EPA memo — released by his
ofTlce — directly contradicted public statements
made by agency officials before Congress and the
federal courts that the agency would consider
Issuing rules to protect school workers

Florlo said the EPA told the Service Employees
Internationa) Union on Nov. 30. 1984. It would
consider regulations concerning asbestos materi­
als found In school buildings.
Despite the assurance, the union, which
represents school workers, sued EPA in federal
court to force the agency to act.
Florlo also said EPA ofllclals told a House
Energy and Commerce subcommittee In April It
was still considering such rules and would
announce Its decision In May.
However. In the document released by Florlo.
EPA ofllclals refer to an agreement between
former EPA Deputy Administrator Alvin Aim and
David Gibbons, an official In the White House's
Office of Management and Budget. not to pursue
the asbestos rule.
Florlo said the memo showed the Reagan
administration was seeking to maneuver the EPA
out of Its responsibility to enforce the law.

Evening Herald. Sanford, F I.

Wedneiday, June 1*. IM S—1A

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If you &lt;«• NaNan. you’ll tort uti

CALENDAR
W EDNESDAY. JUNE 19
C O P E S u p p o rt G r o u p o f
S e m in o le A rea . 7:3 0 p m .
Sem inole Com m unity Mental
Health Center. Cranes Roost
Office Park. Suite 377, Pelican
Hulldlng. Altam onte Springs
First and third Wednesdays for
families and caregivers o f long­
term mentally disabled. Free of
charge.
TH U RSD AY. JUNE 20
South Seminole Senior Citi­
zens covered dish luncheon.
1 2 :3 0 p . m ., C a s s e l b e r r y
W o m a n 's C lu b . O v c r b r o o k
D rive. C asselb erry. Musclal
program by Earl Henge and Hill
Kowalski, retired professional
m usicians. Th ose a tten d in g
should bring their own table
service.
National Action for Former
Military Wives. 6:30 p m, For
Information on meeting place,
call 628.2801.
F R ID A Y. JUNE 2 I
The Foster Grandparent Pro­
gram Is hosting Hlngo games at
Flea World at 10:30 a.m. and 1
p.m.For more Information, call.
Debbie Pettit 841-1792
Central Florida Klwanls Club
meeting at 7:30 a.m, at the
H o l i d a y In n S , H . 4 3 6
at Wymore Road In Altamonte
Springs.
SUNDAY. JUNE 23
The Hetty Vaccaro World of
Dance and Performing Arts will
present Its third annual Summer
Recital on Sunday The show
show will feature 250 performers
from ages 3-50. The three act
performance tilled "Everyday Is
a Holiday” Is scheduled to be
held at the S em in ole High
School Gym.

T h u rs d a y , F rid a y ,
Big Savings

R eg . p r ic e d S a n ta C r u r 1

s p o r ts w e a r

Junior coordinates and separates In the hottest
summer styles,

and S a tu rd a y

Big Savin g s

Wyndham*

m isses coordinates

Savings ofl all regularly priced W yndham’ misses
coordinate groups.

Take An Extra

R e d t ic k e t e d J u n io r a n d M is s y s la c k s

Red ticketed long sleeve blouses

All previously marked down slacks for Jrs. and
M isses. Many one-ol-a-kind styles. Not every style
In every color.

All previously marked down long sleeved blouses
lor misses. Assorted styles and colors.

Take An Extra

Take An Extra

Take An Extra

Red ticketed shoes
All previously marked down shoes lor men, women
and children, Many, many styles to choose Irom
Broken sixes.

Take An Extra

R e d tic k e te d s u it s a n d s p o r t s c o a t s
All previously marked down men's suits ahd sportsc o a ts . C h o o s e Horn W oodm ere* . C o b u rn
Square' , and Vittorio Rex*

T ake An Extra

MONDAY. JUNE 24
Adult swim lessons, 7-8-30
p.m.. Mondays and Wednesdays,
through July 10. Westmonte
Pool. 500 Spring Oaks Blvd..
Altamonte Springs. All levels of
skills. Call Instructor Claudia
Harris. 8620090.
The Seminole counly 4-H club
and the Seminole County Master
G ardeners arc sponsoring a
youth workshop titled "Mowing
for M o n e y ." The w orkshop
explains the basics of managing
a summer lawn business. Topics
to be covered Include basic lawn
mower care, how lo set your
prices for mowing. Identifying
different types of grasses.and
how to care for them. How lo
mow. edge and trim a yard
properly will be demonslraled.
The seminar Is open to any
youth 8-18 years old and Is free.
To make reservations, for the
workshop or for more inlormntlon contact: She Ida Wtlkens.
4 It agent., at 323 2500 Ext.
180.

Bob's Antiques &amp;
Used F i r i i t i r f

Red ticketed Ju n io r and M is s e s
Cotton Sw eaters
All previously marked down cotton sweaters In Jr.
and M isses sires. A fashion staple in assorted
colors.

Sensatio nal

A ll re g . p r ic e d s w im w e a r in M is s e s ,
J rs . a n d W o m e n ’ s s iz e s
Includes 1905 styles and 1906 Preview styles. Come
in and checkout the selection.

Take An Extra

Red ticketed w om en's belts
All precviously marked down belts &lt;or women Many
styles, many one ol a kind.

Red ticketed d re ss e s

Red ticketed s p o rt o r d r e s s shirts

All previously marked down d resses, for Jrs.,
M isses, P e tltes and W om en's sixes. Many one o f
a kind summ er styles.

All prevlooualy marked down sport and dretts shirts
fo r men. Large selec tio n to c h o o s e from.

Take An Extra

Red ticketed coordin ates
All previously marked down Junior. Misses, Polite
and Large sire coordinates.

Big Savin g s

All reg priced rompers lor Juniors Great selection
of our most popular styles and colors.

Take An Extra

All previously marked down boys' girls' and Infants'
apparel and shoes.

Mr* MS 10#
Sw*. 104

I DAY
S E R V IC E &gt;
FREE
Enti•
'M

Red ticketed suits
All previously marked down women's suits
Summer styles in Florida Fresh colors.

Red ticketed women’s jewelry and
handbags
All previously marked down women's accessories,
bags, billfolds, jewelry, scarves and more.

,

3224411

T u lip s kitchen coordinate group
All reg. price Tulips pattern kltchon utensils,
accessories and towels.

Take An Extra

S H fiM C

J
Red ticketed w om en’s sportswear

WHATEVER THE
TEMPERATURE

Wsalhartron Cantral
Ak Condi lionsrIHast Pump
Won't Lai Yao Down
mmm m ■ ■ PLUMBING t
HEATING INC

H ALL

All previously marked down sports apparel for men
and women, Exercise bikes and more

Sen satio n al

3 2 3 - 2 1SO

ItMIKOU

Red ticketed athletic apparel and
equipm ent

Red ticketed children’s sportswear

Junior Rom pers

You Won't Walk Away Empty
Handed. If You Don * Like
Our Price We Will Negotiate.
Huy. 17 *1 So,
Suntoc*. ru.

Take An Extra

All previously marked down lo p s and bottoms lor
Jrs , M isses. P eliles and women.

Red ticketed luggage

Red ticketed lam ps

All previously marked down luggage. Garment bags,
lotes, 2-sulters, pullmana amd more. Some broken
sets.

All previously marked down lamps. Varied selection
permits pairs on many styles

Store Hours
Mon.-Sal. 9:30-9
Sunday 12-6
Sanford Plaza

.i

�Evening Herald
(USPS 411 290)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322 2 0 1 1 or 831-9093
Wednesday, June 19, 1985—4A
Wayne 0. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director
Home Delivery; Wrek. 91.10, Month, 94.75; 5 Months.
914 25; 0 Months. 927 00 Year. 951 00 By Mall Week.
I 91.50: Month, 90 OO :t Months. 918 m . 0 Months. 952 50.
Year. 900OO

Will Arafat D o
A s Hussein
There In a rustle ol m ovem ent on the West
H ank d ip lo m a tic front. K in g H ussein of
.Jordan, looking beleaguered but a bit more
confident than usual, told W ashington that
Yasser Arafat told him he would accept
Israel's right to exist In exchange for a return
of Arub lands. T h a t would tie a historic step
for the Palestine Liberation Organization,
w hich continue* to swear In Its charter that
Israel doesn’t have the right to exist.
Bui despite H ussein's claim , Arafat has not
publicly recited the m agic words. "I will
accept U .N . resolutions 242 and 338." Until
he does. H ussein's diplom atic effort will be
w histling In the wind.
T h e noise com ing from the Middle East Is
the roar o f Israeli bulldozers clearing the land
for settlem ents on Arab land, the rattle o f
m achine gu n s In (he Palestinian cam ps In
la-banon and the cacophony of voices speak­
ing for the dispersed und divided PLO .
In com parison to the m illim eters of pro­
gress registered by diplom ats since the C a m p
David Treaty, tanks have ground up miles o f
terrain and terrorists have turned up acres of
earth for graves. Israel Is finally leaving
Lebanon, b tlcrrd and h u n illlatrd , three years
after m urching In with Ihr secret aim of
destroying the VIX). And, Arafat, who lost a
base for his organization and saw it dispersed
from T u n isia to Syria, where an anti-Arafat
pro-Syrian faction Is harbored, has landed In
A m m an seeking the talks he scorned three
years ago.
A s long as Israel und the Palestinians lull to
s|&gt;euk directly to each other, to recognize
each other's right to exist and to negotiate a
settlem ent, the sounds com in g from the
Mldeust w ill continue to be the walling of
widows and the scream o f um hulence sirens.
The aim o f U.S. diplom acy m ust lie to keep
talks going, to get the parties to npeuk directly
to eacn oilier.
Recognition. In all Its forms, Is the key to a
diplom atic solution; recognition that both
Israel and a Palestinian entity have a right to
rxlst, m o n it io n (hat killing dim inishes both
peoples and endangers their futures, and
recognition thut lim e Is ru nn in g out for a
trade of land for security.

P e n ta g a o n I I ?
T h e G en era l Services Adm inistration Is
thinking n lxm l building another Pentagon,
almost us lurge as the present one.
It’s a had Idea. It would mean m illions of
dollurs added to the defense budget. But
that's not the worst of It. T h e result would lie
to enshrine In concrete an overgrown defense
b u rea u cra cy thut m ust be cleared away
before the country gels the kind of military
establishm ent It needs for the kind of money
It can afford.
T h e Defense Department long ago outgrew
the Pentagon. Even the w orld's largest nfllcr
building, with 3.7 m illion square feet of
spucr. was not big enough. It Is overflowing
with 22,000 m ilitary und civilia n personnel.
T h o u sa n d s of other Defense Departm ent
workers are housed In 5.5 m illion square feet
of leusrd o ilier space In the W ashington. D.C.,
area. T h e leases are costing a bundle.
In an effort to save m oney. G S A Is looking
Into bu ild in g 3 m illion squ u rr feet of others
on the 700 ucres of lund surrounding the
Pentagon. T h e acreage now Includes lawns
und terraces, purking lots, the Nuvy annex
and other buildings.
G S A has tried for years to move govern­
ment agencies from expensive leased space
Into cheaper government-owned facilities. But
the Defense Department needs more Hum
relocation. It nerds a h o u srclra n ln g to rid
11self of unnecessary com m ands and bureaus
and their stuffs.
Rather than having the G S A build new
q u a rte rs for m ore m ilita ry u nd civ ilia n
workers, the bloated Defense Department
hradquurters should look Into wuys to reduce
stuff, so that more of It could fit Into thr
Pentagon. W e don't need a Pentagon II.

BERRY'S WORLD

’ Loo k here Hornsby, I sym pathise with your
yearning to return to sim pler values, but...”

DONALD LAMBRO

How Federal Tax Dollars Are Puffed Away
W ASHINGTON For 18 years, Harold
Pillsbury has been walking into the "Sm oking
Room " at the Federal Trade Commission, where
he proceeds to light up 20 cigarettes at a time.
By the end of the day, he's gone through five
different brands at lOOcIgarettesaplece.
No. Ilarnld Pillsbury Is not a chain-smoker. He
gave up smoking In 1967. But the Federal Trade
Commission pays him and five full-time assis­
tants to run a smoking machine that measures
the tar. nicotine and carbon-monoxide content
In American cigarettes.
The FTC's Cigarette Program It tucked away
In a small section o f a downtown Washington
office building and Is the only product-testing
lab the regulatory agency runs. The smoking lab
remains quietly entrenched In the FTC budget
— unquestioned by the agency or by Congress.
Ironically, the lab's biggest fans are the
tobacco companies, which use the govern­
ment-approved official numbers to promote
their low-yield cigarette brands.
Nearly two decades ago. In 1967. the FTC

decided to encourage advertising of the relative
levels of tar and nicotine In domestic brands of
cigarettes by measuring their tar and nicotine
contents. In '1971. cigarette manufacturers
voluntarily agreed to disclose these contents In
their advertisements.
FTC officials defend their testing as the only
way to ensure objective, accurate results.
But many medical researchers have begun to
question the presumed health benefits to
smokers who switch to "low -yield" cigarettes
Because "machines do not smoke cigarettes as
people do." concluded a 1983 study published
In the New England Journal o f Medicine. "FTC
cigarette-testing data do not predict nicotine
Intake by cigarette smokers "
Many smokers simply compensate for the
lower nicotine by altering their sm oking
behavior, the Journal reported. They may
change the number of cigarettes smoked, the
method of puffing and the depth of Inhalation to
maintain a desired level of nicotine Intake.
So why do the FTC machines keep puffing
along?

"T h e FTC numbers help the cigarette in­
dustry In promoting low-yleld brands." Dr.
Berton Freedman, an epidemiologist for the
American Lung Association, told my associate.
Tom Miller.
Surprisingly, although cigarette companies
are the biggest beneficiaries o f FTC testing, the
Idea o f charging them user fees to finance this
nearly »200.000-a-year program has never been
seriously explored.
A more relevant question also ts never asked;
Do the year-to-year levels o f tar and nicotine
change enough to warrant full-time government
testing?
My review of the last two FTC reports reveals
that virtually all tar- and nicotine-content
figures for leading brands fell within an
insignificant range of differences from one year
to the next. Thus, there Is another strong case
for eliminating this program.
Meanwhile, this obscure federal program has
become more hablt-formlng than the product It
tests, sending more tax dollars up In smoke.

SC IEN C E WORLD

AN TH O N Y H A RRIG A N

Genetic
Tricks For
Vaccines

Reform
Reagan
Tax Plan
What's the bottom line on the
Reagan Administration's tax pro[tonal*? Congress and the public
iietter get a straight answer to that
q u estion before th ey buy the
package.
On Its editorial page, ihe con­
servative Washington Times says
that "the benefits ot the Reagan
reform are endless." Elsewhere In
thr same editorial, however, It saus
that the new minimum corporate
lax "w ill hurt mainstay Industries
and genrrale a probable new round
of blue-collar Joblessness." It adds
I lull knowing that General Motors
and General Electric pay the same
lax rate Isn't going to comfort the
assembly-line worker who loses his
job.
T h e n c o n s id e r w h a t T h e
Washington Times reports In Its
news columns, nainrly that "Presi­
dent Rragan's proposed overhaul of
the tax code would raise corporate
luxes a whopping 23 percent by J E F F R E Y H A R T
1990." That's n far cry from the 9
percent hike Mr. Reagan referred to
111 Ills speech In which he unveiled
the tax plan. It seems that Secretary
The light In Ihe U.S. Senate over
of the Treasury James Baker said
the confirmation of William Brad
May 29 that the change in lax
ford Reynolds as associate attorney
burdens outlined by the President
general has exposed the reality
would not occur until sometime In
liehlnd pleasant phrases like af­
the next century. Well, well
firmative action, and It bus shown
On Trading that corporate taxes
dearly Ihe new meaning of civil
would rise 23 percent by 1990, one
rights. At stake Is whether white
may well wonder whether Monmules are entitled to the equal
dale's policies have been adopted.
protection of the luws under (he
That's ilie sort of design that Walter
Constitution, and whether the Civil
Mondalc favored. The Reagan ad­
Rights Act of 1964 means what It
ministration. however, came Into
says when II bans discrimination on
olflce on the- basis ol an understan­
thr basis of race und sex.
ding that It recognized the central
Currently usststant attorney gen­
role ol business In creullng Jobs und
eral for civil rights, Mr. Reynolds
prim|M-rlly. Now ulnng comes und an
(relieves lo ihe late Hubert Hum­
administration lux plan (hat prophrey's definition of civil rights.
|M&gt;ses repeal of the Investment tux
I hut Is to say, no discrimination.
credit, umong other things, which Is
jut loti .Speaking on the Iloot of the
needed lo modernize U S Industry
Senate In UMM. Senator Humphrey
und mukr It more competitive.
passionately dented that anything
The public should uudersiund
m the tunguuge of the Ctvtl Rights
that u com|&gt;uny won't Invest In
Act could conceivably lead In racial
costly new machinery tf thr tux
favoritism.
laws provide only disincentives.
Hut public policies based on
Other countries ultow very rapid
"consciousness ol race" have grad­
drprrclutlon writr-olls. That's why
ually come to prevail In large areas
industrial equipment In a numlM-r of
of American life. In a way that
nations Is more modern than what
contradicts all of American tradl
Is found In American factories.
lion, stule and municipal govern­
Without modem equipment. U.S.
ments have placed themselves In
plants are on thr road lo failure und
Ihe position of allocating privileges
shutdown When the tux Uiw allows
on the basis of race and sex. Under
lor rapid depreciation of tndusttral
tills novel system, a (tenant s rights
equipm ent, it's sim ply making
derive not from his or her Individual
(Mtsslhlr the competitiveness that
citizenship hut from membership In
Amrrtcun Industry must display In
an otllctally privileged group.
order lo survive.
Mr, Reynolds’ opposition to all of
The objections already raised In­
ihls Is supported by the courts. The
dicate that substantial reforms air
needed In the so-called tax reform
Supreme Court lias held that re­
verse discrimination Is legal only If
package.

By O ln o Del Gaerclo

UPI Science W riter

Racial Favoritism
II Is used to place Ihr victims o t
specific acts in p o s it io n s they would
have occupied had It not been for
demonstrable discrimination. Lower
courts huve m int ugatnst allocating
jobs on the basts of race.
Mr. Reynolds, accordingly, has
placed the Department of Justice In
opposition to more than 40 state
and local governments that are
allocating Jobs on thr basis o f race
or sex. Mr. Reynolds' position,
which Is that o f thr president. Is
that this represents dlscrmlnatton
and Is therefore unconstitutional
and Illegal
The Democratic Party has been
gravely Infected by the group en­
titlement bacillus, and has gone so
far as to establish u "fa irn ess
commission" lo ensure that groups,
as groups are proportionally repre­
sented In the deliberations of the
party We are to be treated to a
spectacle In which blacks. Hlspuntes. Indians. Esquimaux, women
and persons o f "all sexual prefer­
ences" are numerically represented.
This bizarre development rests on
the premise that a woman, say.
cannot represent the political Inter­
est o( a black.
Reynolds, w ith the president
bucking him, has challenged this
entire set of assumptions. Th e
Senate fight over his confirmation
will show us dramatically Just who
Is In favor of civil rights for all
Americans and who Is playing the
game ofrurlal entitlements.

CAMBRIDGE. Mass (UPI| A
m a jo r d r a w b a c k to g e n e t i c
engineering techniques Is that they
take so long, but researchers have
developed a new method that has
quickly yleled Information lhat may
help fight leprosy and tuberculosis.
If successful, the technique may
also be useful for fighting a large
variety of Infectious diseases
The process uses Ihe ‘-ody’ s
Immune system to pinpoint key
proteins In bacteria, which might
otherwise require years to Isolate.
The proteins are those that trigger
the human Immune system to fight
the disease.
Once scientists Identify these
proteins, far more potent vaccines
can be produced.
The simplest way lo do this ts to
make a soup o f the Important
proteins — leprosy and tuberculosis
bacteria each have six — and Inject
It into people In danger of being
Infected by the disease
The vaccine, as with any vaccine,
alerts the Immune system lo the
Invader so that It can respond
Immediately. Without the vaccine
the Immune system may require
valuable time to Identify the In­
vader. giving thr microorganism a
barter to multiply Inside the body
and so gain a strong foothold
Current vaccines either contain
Infectious agents that have been
killed or live microorganisms sim i­
lar to the ones that cause the
disease. The new vaccines might
simply contain the key proteins that
set off the Immune reactions.
If this direct approach tails, re­
searches have another strategy they
can fall back on.
The proteins can be used to
Identify the genes thut detail how to
make them. These genes can be
Inserted Into harmless microorgan­
isms. which would then produce an
Immune response without causing
disease.
"T h is technique allows us to
srurrh very thoroughly through the
organism's DNA for the appropriate
genes, and h a vin g th orou gh ly
searched allows us to Isolate and
use them to produce large amounts
of proteins." said Richard A. Young,
a blui-hemlsl at the Whitehead
Institute In Cambridge. Mass.
The researchers hope to use their
findings to "sou p up the preexist­
ing" vaccine for tuberculosis and
expand It to protect against leprosy
as well, said Young. It Is not clear
how long (hat will take.

JA C K ANDERSON

Misgivings About Oman Contract Surface
By Jack A nderson
and Dale Van Attn
WASHINGTON - Some of our
recent columns have kicked up a
sandstorm In thr strategic sultanate
of Oman, and the dust still husn'l
settled.
We reported that the Atr Force
has hern quietly negotiating an
ugrermrnt to give a British firm thr
niu ltl-m llllon-dollar contract to
operate three U .S -built bases — and
the super-sec ret equipment they
will eventually contain — in Oman,
near the approaches to Ihe Permian
Gulf
Alterward, Gen John Chain, chief
of Ihe Slate Department's bureau of
politico-m ilitary affairs, flew to
Omun to review Omunl-U.S. affairs.
An ungry Omani foreign minister
erroneously accused him of having
been our source.
The Air Force, meanwhile, has
used one excuse after another to
stall the implementation of the
contract, which was supposed lo
have been signed months ago.
Chain reportedly told the British

they could "g o to hell" before they'll
get access to U.S. communications
and other sensitive equipment at
the Omani bases.
Pentagon sources say the Air
Force has Just asked for an addi­
tional 90 day delay In awarding the
contract. Hut there seems little
likelihood lhat the deal can be
undone, since the sultan o f Oman
and his British advisers Insist the
British firm grt the contract.
The concern Inside Ihe Pentagon
Is that sensitive military and In­
telligence Information would neces­
sarily come (nlo the hands o f the
civilian contractor who maintains
the base. For example, in the even!
of a U.S. decision lo use the Omani
bases for their intended purpose —
us staging arras for U.S. rapiddeployment forces — the contractor
would need to know In advance.
The British company that has
been secretly upped for the con­
tract on un ostensibly competitive
basts. Atrwork Ltd., tried to defuse
the objections by taking on an
American company. Vinncll Corp .

as a partner. But Vlnnell was
apparently signed on mainly as
window dressing
Hrrc. meanwhile. Is what our
sources have told us about the
situation:
— The driving force behind the
award of the contract to AirworkVlnnell Is British Air Vice Marshal
Erik Bennett, a tough minded Ul­
sterman on leave from the RAF to
serve as commander of the sultan's
air force. He has had extensive
Middle East experience. Including a
stlnl as adviser lo the Jordanian air
force.
"H e can be totally charming or a
bit of a bastard.*' one source said.
"H r Is the single most Influential
figure on the Omani defrnse scene
next to the ruler himself."
The same source wrote In a
confidential paper lhat Bennett "Is
dedicated to the proposition that the
Sultanate of Oman Air Force was In
the beginning. Is now snd ever shall
be British equ ipped."
Of 11 major Omani defense pro­
jects last year totaling 9635 million.

British firms got all but two o f the
contracts.
— Vlnnell'a selection as Junior
partner may have been helped by
the p resen ce on Its board o f
directors of John West, former U.S.
ambassador lo Saudi Arabia. W hile
he was ambassador, the Saudi desk
at the S ta te D epartm ent w a s
manned by John Countryman, the
current U.S. ambassador to Oman.
Even m ore Interesting U our
sources' report that a major stock­
holder In Vlnnell la linked closely to
Ghassan Shakir, a Saudi business­
man who la a close adviser to the
sullan of Oman. A businessman
d e s c r i b e d S h a k i r aa a k e y
behind-the-scenes power in Vlnnell.
Neither Shakir nor a Vlnnell repre­
sentative were available for com ­
ment.
Despite the Air Force's belated
qualms o v e r the contract, the
Omani governm ent haa already
been notified that Airwork Vlnnell
got It. Countryman reportedly con­
firmed this at a recent business
lunch In Muscat.

�Teenage Girls Abducted
Forced To Snort Cocaine
A lJ -y tr a i old A lta m o n te
S p rin g s g ir l told S e m in o le
County sheriffs deputies that
site and a 14-year-old Orlando
girl were abduned by two men.
taken to a Sanford motel and
forced to inhale cocaine,
Th e girls claimed they were
not sexually assaulted, but were
held captive from about 10 p m.
Friday to 9 a m. Saturday. They
named the two suspects who
picked them up at an unknown
location In Herm its W oods,
Altamonte Springs, a sheriff's
report said.
The men promised to take the
girls to the Discount Food Store
on Magnolia Avenue at county
Road 427. Altamonte Springs,
but Instead drove to the Day's
Inn. at Interstale 4 and state
Road 46. west of Sanford, the
report said.
The girls told deputies the
men took a room at the motel
and forced them to spend the
night there and to use cocaine.
They were released Saturday
morning at 202 Magnolia Avc..
Altamonte Springs, where one of
the men told the girls he would
kill them If they reported the
Incident.
S em in ole C ounty s h e r iff s
Copt. J a y Lem an said th e
mother of the Altamonte Springs
girl filed a report with deputies
Tuesday complaining one o f the
suspects has taken her daughter
to a motel for the night to use
Illegal drugs before.
S h eriffs Investigators are look­
ing Into the claims. Leman said,
but so far no arrests have been
made.
Q U N W O U A N NABBED
A 3 7 -y ea r-o ld C asselberry
woman who allegedly forced her
way Into a Sanford woman's
home, brandished a gun and
chased her own husband Into a
bathroom and hit him on the
head with the weapon has been
arrested, a sh eriff s report said.

Action Reports
★ F ires

* Courts
★ Police
Carolyn J Martin. 30, of 2231
Center St.. In the Midway area,
reported to Sem inole County
sheriffs deputies that the sus­
pect, who weighs 250 pounds,
forced her way Into her home at
about 9 :15 a.m. Monday.
The suspect was armed with a
22 caliber handgun and she
chased Johnny Rozler, 36. of
2460 Center St.. Sanford. Into a
bathroom where she hit him on
the head with the gun. the report
said.
Deputies arrived at the scene,
but Rozler refused to press
charges and the suspect left. But
a sherlfTs deputy parked about a
block from Ms. Martin's home
and within about 10 minutes
spotted the suspect back In the
area.
Margaret Sweet Rozler. of 106
McKay Blvd.. was charged with
armed burglary to an occupied
dwelling at about 10:12 a.m. on
Crawford Drive at Granby Street.
Sanford. She has been released
on 8 1.500 bond und Is scheduled
to appear In court July 8.
B URG LARIES A TH EFTS
Jim Parsons. 44. o f DeLand,
reported to sh e riffs deputies
that a 855 extension cord and a
8170 table saw were stolen from
a const met ton site shed at 2071
Hutton Point, Longwood, be­
tween Saturday and Monday.
The items belong to Bank Con­
structors. Inc., of Clearwater.
A sofa bed, an amt chair, two
end tables, two lamps and a
mirror with a combined value of

Made Possible By New Banking Laws
,

8 1.198 were stolen from a Car­
dinal Industries apartment at
5281 Red Branch Lane, Winter
Park, between June 14 and
Monday, according to a sheriffs
report Bled by apartment m an­
ager Roy L. Brown
Sheryl L. Carpenter. 29. of 300
N. Jungle Road. O viedo, re­
p o r t e d to d e p u tie s th a t a
3-year-old male German shep­
herd worth $1,200 was stolen
from her home on Sunday or
Monday.
Boating Items Inclu din g a
propeller, tools, a marine radio
and a depth finder were stolen
Bom the boat of Jerry L. Hen­
derson. 42. of 657 Longmeaduw
Circle. Longwood. The boat was
stored at Sabal Point Storage.
W ilderness Road, Longw ood.
when the theft occurred between
June 9 and Saturday, a sheriffs
report said.

First Union, Atlantic To Merge
JACKSONVILLE OJPII - With the Ink barely
dry on last week s Supreme Court ruling. First
Union Corp . the giant Charlotte. N.C. bank,
plans to acquire Atlantic Bancorporatlon In a
stock merger valued at S496 million
Allantic Is a S3.6 billion asset Institution In
Jacksonville whose major subsidiary Is Atlantic
National Bank of Florida.
Officials said the merger, announced Monday,
will take place late this year or In early 1986
Shareholders o f Atlantic and hanking re­
gulators must si 111approve the deal
First U nion, which has unsuccessfully
pursued other Florida banks In the Iasi year us it
Jockeyed for position In ihc race lo rrmaln one of
the biggest banks In the region, has 87 9 billion
In assets.
The new corporate olTlccs o f the combined
Institution will lx* In Charlotte anil Edward
Crutchfield, chairman o f First Union, will
continue us chairman after the merger

Crutchfield said.
Walker said the combination would "allow ihc
combined Institutions to look with confidence
towards a deregulated (ranking era In Florida.
North Carolina and Ihc Southeast ''
The banks said under the agreement, Atlantic
shareholders will get l ‘ V shares of First Union
common stock per share of Atlantic for an
estimated value o f 8496 million. Additionally.
Atlantic Issued warrants to First Union io
purchase up lo 3,5 million shares of Atlantic's
common stock.

But IIJ Walker, president ot Atlantic Bancorporal Ion, said Atlantic plans to retain Its
headquarters In Jacksonville and continue
using its name He will become a vice chairman
of First Union Corp, and will continue as
president und chief executive officer of Atlantic.
“ Management of the two organizations Is very
compatible, personally and philosophically.”

Sun Banks of Orlando and Trust Co of
G e o r g ia a n n o u n ced M on day r e g u la t o r s
approved ihelr merger and it will become
effective July I. Ihe first day that Florida and
Georgia's reciprocal banking laws lake effect.
The legislatures in Florida. Georgia and North
Carolina passed laws last year lo permit
reciprocal interstate bunking effective July 1.

The merger agreement makes Atlantic the
third Florida hank to succumb to an out -of stair
trunk under new regional interstate banking
laws which were upheld by ihe Supreme Court
last week.
It Is the fifth merger In ihc southern regional
zone, which Includes Florida, Georgia, the
Carol litas. Tennessee and Virginia

Tw o televisions worth 8400
each were stolen from the home
o f Gordon L. Lincoln. 75, of 1601
Lake Markhum Road. Sanford,
on Saturday or Sunday, deputies
reported.
Jewelry and cash wlih a com ­
bined value of about 84.000
were stolen from I he home of
Donald K. Wetzel. 26. o f Branr h w o o d A p a rtm e n ts . 7 7 4 0
Uranchood Road. Winter Park,
o n M onday of T u e s d a y , a
s h eriff s report said.

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D U IA R R E S T
The following person has been
arrested In Seminole County on
a charge of driving under the
influence:
—William Dale Pusiema, 25, of
2108 Mugnolla Ave., Sanford,
w as arrested at 12:14 a m .
Tuesday after a sheriffs deputy
reported seeing his car chasing
another vehicle at high speed on
U.S Highway 17-92. Sanford.

P e r s o n a l In c o m e D r o p p e d . 5 %
WASHINGTON (UPI) - U.S personal Income
fell 0,5 percent in May. the largest decline In 13
years, but only because of special factors
unrelated lo the stale of the economy, governmem economists », JJ unlay.
II April's Income hnd not been boosted by
unusually large price support payments to
farmers and a retroactive wage payment to postal
workers. May's Income w ould have looked

W«lr»*t&lt;L*y J u st I t . I W — j k

Evening H erald, Senlord, F I

Pair Claim They Were T aken To Motel

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We Must Reduce O ur Inventory!

stronger In compurtslon. up 0.4 percent, the
Bureau of Economic Analysis said

ALL DIAMONDS
IN STOCKI

Take-home pay, alter Income lax was withheld,
soared 1.6 percent, largely because of the arrival
o f delayed Income tax refunds. That Increase In
disposable Income amounted to 8177 on average,
bringing the per capita average Income to
811.011 a year.

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Solitaires!

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nfuum i a n ».

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Earrings

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•SE IK O •L O R U S

Fa.I l l i . r r 1

IT T T L I
SAVE ON OUR
BEST ATHLETICS
Choose from men’s, boys' and ladles’
Joggers and athletics.

PEASANT TOPS OR
PULL-ON PANTS
Polyester print peasant tops and solid
color pull on pants. Regular sizes.
EXT RA SIZES................................. 3.09

25%

Genuine Stone
Pendants
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Htat

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VALVOLINE
MOTOR OIL

VAiyoUltf

Regularly To 1.19.
10W40 or HD30.
lim it 5 quarts.

PUREX
BLEACH
Regularly 87*.
Liquid bleach.
Limit 2 gallons.

f t w

e x

Bleach

A n n iv e rs a ry

ALL DIAMOND

20" BREEZE
BOX FAN

LJ

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UL approved.

25% „
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V a lu e s !

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$99
One
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D ia m o n d E a r r in g s

I f

ALL STONE
&amp; SIGNET
RINGS

25% to
33%
OFF!

W f *°“! *950

3.5 OUNCE IRISH
SPRING SOAP
Regularly 2 For 99*.
Deodorant soap.
Limit 0 bars.

STORE HOURS
UON 5AT • AM • • PM
SUNDAY t PM • S PM

^

Sanford Plaza
Altamonte Mall
Winter Park Mall
413 E. FIRST ST.

H l l $ t s W N &gt; H ttX 4 4JUUI» t o SHOW U h l XII.

(Neil To Wliut Otitol

w tMitutiiMituMji o M n M u m s tir s iiii

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�»A-E»*nlr*fl Marald, Sanlord. FI

...Budget

Wadnaiday, June tt, l«J

Continued form page 1A

FLORIDA

sinners Sandra Glenn aad Fred
Streetman voted for $40,000
while Commissioner Dob Sturm
opted for $37,000 and Commis­
sioner B arb ara Chrlatenaen
voted for $35,000. Since none of
the sums had a majority of the
commissioners vote for them.
KlrchhofT w ill have ihe deciding
vote. The organization received
$35,000 from the county last
year and asked for $50,000 this
year.

IN BRIEF
Judge, Ex-Prosecutor Indicted
For Manipulating Criminal Cases
JACKSONVILLE (UPI) - A Duval County Judge and
former state prosecutor both fare up to more than 130
years In prison on charges Involving manipulating criminal
cases In exchange for goods and services.
In a 13-count federal indictment delivered by a special
grand Jury Friday and unsealed Tuesday. Judge Jessie H.
Leigh and Halph N. Green III were charged with conspiracy
and mall fraud.
Leigh, 64. was charged wllh 11 counts o f mall fraud and
one count of violating the Hobbs Act. using his official
position to extort free goods and services from a
businessman.
Green. 41. former chief assistant state attorney for the
Fourth Judicial Circuit. Is charged with 10 counts of mall
fraud.
If convicted o f all counts. Leigh would face a maximum
sentence of 80 years In prison and a fine of $31,000. Green
would face a maximum of 53 years In prison and a $20,000
fine.

Police Search For Missing Girl
ORLANDO lUPfl — Police officers fanned out again today
In search of a man who Is believed to have abducted a
0-year-old girl as she played with two friends In front o f an
aparlment complex Tuesday.
About 60 officers searched for the man and child
Tuesday night and today, police said.
Police on horsebuck. a helicopter and tracking dogs also
were employed to search a wooded area near the girl's
home.
Ftrglnn Mae Armstrong was playing with two other girls
when a stranger walked up to them around J p.m.
Tuesday, according lo police. He told the other girls to
leave, grabbed Ihc girl and took off. police wild.
Her parents. Hob and Donna Armstrong, told (Killer that
no ransom note had been received.

2 Dead In Airport Bombing
FRANKFURT. West Germany
(UPI) — A huge explosion, prob­
ably caused by a tximb, rocked
the International departure ter­
minal at Frankfurt Airport to­
day. killing ut leasl two people
and Injuring 24. four seriously,
authorities said.
Officials said there were few
Immediate details but a Drel of
umbulances. lire engines and a
rescue helicopter were sent lo
the airport 10 miles south of
downtown Frankfurt and adja­

cent to the sprawling
Main U.S. Air Rase.

Rhein-

They said two people were
known dead and 24 were In­
jured. Fire officials and police
said four o f the Injured were In
serious condition.
An airport spokesman said the
blast w as alm ost c e r ta in ly
caused by a bomb und apjieurrd
lo huve occurred at the checking
counter of Alitalia. Hie Italian
ulrllne.

STOCKS
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AREA DEATHS
B A R A K J. SM ITH
Mrs. Sarah J. Smith, 76, of
3U1 E. Altamonte Drive. Alta­
monte Springs, died Tuesday ut
her residence. Born In Crystal
Spring. Pa. on May 24. 1909,
Mra. Smith moved to Altamonte
Springs from Glussport, Pa. In
1981. She waa a homemaker
and a member of the Gluaaport
Presbyterian Church.
She la survived by her brother.
Nathan Hixson. Longwood.
Cox-(barker Guardian Funeral
Home la In charge of arrange­
ments.
K O N R A D NEUNER
Mr. Konrad Neuner, 50. of
4765 S, Seminole Ave.. Goldenrod. died Sunday In Ooldcnrod.
Horn In Germany on July 23,
1934. he moved to Goldrnrod
from Altamonte Springs In 1977
He wus a retired U.S. Airforce
master sergeant, a member of
Sts. Peter and Paul Calhollr
Church, and thr DAV,
He la survived by his wife,
Sylvia; three sous. Kelly Conrad.
Michael David. Puul John, ull of
Goldenrud; two brothers. Joact
and Andreas, both o f West
Germany, and live sisters, Anne.
P o u g h k ee p sie , N .Y .. M arla,
Catherine, Gerllnda. Anita, ull of
West Germany.
Winter Park Funeral llom r la
In charge of arrangements.

JOHN BENNETT
Mr. John Bennett. 73. of Red­
ding Gardena, *36. Sanford, died
Sunday al Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Sanford. Bom
Jan. 24. 1912 In Orvlllo. Ala., he
moved to Sanford 20 years ago.
He waa a retired laborrr and a
Protestant.
He la survived by a devoted
friend, Mrs Edna P. Watson.
Sanford.
WUaori Eichelbcrger Mortuary
In charge of arrangements.

• T h e G r o v e C ou n selin g
Cenler $34,304, up from last
year's $15,000.
• Christian Enterprises Inc.
L ig h t h o u s e Y o u th R a n c h
$ 1 0,000 . It had asked fo r
$30,000 and received $12,000
Iasi year.
• Legal Aid Society. $36,000
It received $34,000 last year.
The funding for this organiza­
tion comes from $5 of each
case's filing fees from law suits
In ih ecounty.
Requests for money from In­
form ation and Referral and
Ursula Sunshlnr Child Abuse
Prevention were rejected.
KlrchhofT must break statemales on an allocation for Arts
United Fund of Central Florida.
Mra. G le n n and S treetm an
approved $20,000, but Sturm
and Mrs, Christensen voted for
no funding
KlrchhofT also must decide on
funding for W e Care, a suicide
prevention organization. T h e
group asked for $10,000 and got
$ 6 , 0 0 0 lu a t y e a r . M r s
C hrlatenaen und Streetm an
voted for $6,000 while Sturm
voted for $7,000 and Mra. Glenn
voted for $10,000
In the early afternoon. Dr.
Jorge Deju. county health and
h u m an a e r v l c e s d ir e c t o r ,
persuaded com m issioners to
give his department $76,000 In
new money for the public health
department. Saying Ihe county
portion of the health department
totaled $414,000 last year, the
county's shore In the new year
will rise to $400,067. Much of
Ihe funding for the health de­
portment conies from the stale
und federal government.
Other u n its under D eju 's
supervision und their budgets
tor the new year are: veteran's
service $55,588. down from
$&lt;11,656; welfare $88,471, up
from $81,325; animal control
$298,601. down from $302,008
T u esd a y , co u n ty attorn ey
Nikki Clayton failed to get the
support of three commissioners
lo expand her uiUce by addlnu
three new em ployees — an
assistant county attorney, a
property arqulsllon coordinator
and a senior secretary. She Is lo
be back before commissioners
again later this week to try
again.
Her office now lias two at­

Ms. Clayton said the employee
would coordinate negotiations
for acquiring rights o f way. land
appraisals and would expedite
title searches and participate In
some negotiations.
—Donna Ealea

than In the past, he said. So If a
dealer can turn the m ileage back
on a car that otherwise looks to
be In good shape, “ he can turn a
healthy profit.” Llpham said,
U.S. car buyers lost about $2
b illion last year because of
odometer tampering, he said.
"T h a t's a lot of bread."

...P riso n
Continued fro m page 1A
t a m p e r in g is b e c o m in g
widespread because people are
k e e p in g th e ir c a r s longer,
Llpham said. Cara made In
recent years also hold up better

...Jury

the summons.
He said his superiors told him
not to report to Jury duty and
that they would fix the situation.
Subsequently. Circuit Judge
K e n n e th L c ffle r fin e d the
association $500 for contempt of
court In firing Neldhart.
According to testimony, an
association officer said Neldhart
w a s fir e d he c a u s e o f I n ­
subordination stemming from
his belligerent attitude about the
summons and other problems al
work.
—Deane Jordan

Continued fro m page 1A
a resident o f Lake Mary but
working In Clearwater, was a
senior accounting clerk In the
association's Clearwater office
when he was called to Jury duty
In July 1982.
Neldhart maintained In his
c iv il suit, file d In Pinellas
County, that he was fired after
he told superiors that he was
going to lake a day off to a n s w e r

...Hijack
Continued fro m page 1/
a submachine gun. The phot
was looking extrem ely tired
hut smiling a little out thr
window."
" I ’ m fine and the mrssuge to
my family Is they can worry a
little, but not too much. Our
treatment has been tolerable."
said First Officer Philip Marescn.
o f Salt Lake City.
"Everything's OK. We re sur­
vivin g ." said Flight Engineer
B en jam in Z lm m c rm a n n . of
Cascade. Idaho.
O ther jo u rn a lis ts tried to
•ppnw rh the strrrstt. but a
gunmen unleashed a burst of
subm achine-gun bullets and
warned the control tower to clear
away Ihe Journalists "o r we
shoot them all."
Nablh Bertl. the Shtltr leader
whose militiamen guarded the
Amerlcuns at undisclosed Iocs-

LO U ISE CECELIA
B IN O LE TART
M rs . L o u is e C e c e lia
S in gletary.74. of 1012 Olive
Ave., Sanford, died Saturday at
Life Care Center. Altam onte
Springs. Horn Nov. 27. 1910 tn
Fernandlna Beach, she moved to
Sanford In 1912. She graduated
from Seminole County public
a r b o o ls , w o rk ed fo r A fr o American Insurance Co. and waa
a beautician. She waa u member
of All Souls Catholic Church.
S h e la s u r v iv e d b y h er
tmsbund, Morse, Sanford; two
slstrra, Ernestine Garret. New
York City, und Victoria Laillmorc, Brooklyn. New York.
Wllaoti'Elchelbrrgrr Mortuary
In charge o f arrangements.

M .P .O .

F I S H

Four-year-old Jason Cuevas
who died Monday after he fell
from the hood of a car on which
he was riding near his Geneva
home died from chest Injuries,
according to the results o f an
Orange County autopsy.
Orange County Medical E xam ­
iner Dr Tom Hegert had not
reported early today whether the
boy died from the fall or If he
was run over by the car he was
ruling on.
F lo r id a H ig h w a y P a t r o l
troopers reported Cuevas fell
from the car driven by David M
Keizer. 34. o f 150 Cloister Road.
Casselberry, at about 8:15 p.m.
Hr w as dead on arrival at
Orlando Regional Medical Center
In Orlando where he was taken
by helicopter after Ihe accident,
hospital spokesman Joe Brown
said.
Florida Highway Patrol Sgt. M.
W Sanders said Ihe Investiga­
tion Into the accident has not
been completed, hut charges are
(lending against Helzrr.
Cuevas o f 280 Jungle Road
North was riding on the hood of
the car with another Juvenile as
the car traveled at about 10 mph
on Jungle Road. Sanders said.
Both youngsters slipped o ff the
hood. Cuevas was fatally Injured
and the oth er child, w hose
identity Sanders does not know,
received a bruised shoulder.
Cuevas' mother. Teresa, last
name unknown, was riding In
the front seat of the car at the
lime o f the accident. Sanders
said. Four children were also
passengers In the car. he said.
—Susan L od en

tlons In thr capital, Insisted
Tuesday that Washington make
the next move to end the crisis.
"T h e matter Is now on the
American side of the table," said
Derr I, 46, Lebanon's justice
m in is te r and leader o f the
c o u n try 's mainstream Shiite
movement. Amul, which means
"h o p e " In Arabic.
Bern said the 40 remaining
American hostages from TW A
Flight 847. seized Friday over
the Mediterranean, could be
freed "In 24 hours If the Am eri­
can people put pressure on the
government lo ask Israel for the
rele a s e o f our p ris o n ers In
Israel."
In Washington. Reagan said
the United Stales "w ill never
m ak e&lt;■.oncrsalons to terrorists."
"O nce we start down that path
... there will be no end,” Reagan
told a nationally televised news
conference.
Nutlonl security affairs adviser
Robert McFartane Hatty dented
today that the United States Is

urging the International Red
Cross to arrange a trade between
Israel's more than 700 Shiite
prisoners and some 40 hostages
held by Shiite militia men tn
Lebanon.
“ The notion Is about and It Is
fiat wrong that the United States
Is urging behind the scenes
some arrangement that Ihe Red
Cross could broker some kind o f
phased m ovem ent" of the Israeli
prisoners. McFarland told re­
porters.
A possible solution appeared
when Israeli Prime Minister
Shimon Peres said he would
c o n s id e r fr e e in g some 760
S h iites rou n d ed up d u rin g
Israel's occupation of southern
Lebanon — the hijackers' main
demand — If the International
Red Cross requested a swap for
the American hostages.
"N o request has been made by
the American government for
Israel to do anything or declare
a n y t h i n g . " P e r e s s a id tn
Jerusalem.

Sanford, with Itw Ray Jam** Lynn. potior,
and Eldar E ll Umpaon parlor el Maw Sawm
Pratbytarlon Church, officiating Burial will
•oilow In Raallawn Camatary Calling how*
w ill ba I I p m
Friday a l thy chapal
W lltom EIrhaibargarMortuary Inchorga

William* o rik la lln g Calling hour* tor lrland*
will ba I I p m
Thurtday al Iha chapal
Wiiwn t Ithyibargar Mortuary by tharga
I I N O L I T A B V . LO U ISE C.
A Mat* will ba bald lor Mr* Loulaa C
Sing lalary, II. ot W it Oliva Ate . Sanford,
who 4lad Saturday. a l W a rn . Friday In A ll
Sard* Catholic Church wlRi Falhar LyW
Danan In charga
Burial will fellow In
Hart lawn Camatary Calling hour* far trlandt
•III ba S g p m Thurtday at Iha chapal
Wilton E ichalOorgyr Mortuary In charga

- G r iv a t .d a tartlca* Mr Mr E la'on Cartwa"
la. o l 1*» Cantar S I . Sanford, who dwd
Wadnatday will ba ha Id a l l p m Friday at
Rattlawn Camatary. llih Slraal and Hardy
A .tn w a . la n ia rd , with ih a B a y O W

HEAT PUMP BONUS

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT MONDAY 8 A.M. - 5 P.M.
THE A L L NEW

321-2398

Tot Who Fell
From Car Died
Of Chest Injuries

CARLWELL. ELETON

— Funaral tarvtca* tor Claranca William
Bi/tlar
Ward, if. ol If William Clartt
C o w l, foulard. who d-ad Sunday W ill ba hold
at 4 p m Saturday al Iha Maw Mount IMS
Mltoianory Saptttl Church, I1M Poor A re.

■ IN N I T T . JOH N
- Gr »»*&gt;«*• torvlco* lor John Hannan, M. ol

321-2398

M A R K E T S ." ?

fn Rear O t VtMepe F/ea Market
1500 FRENC H AVE.
S A N F O R D . FLA.

uruuaw

IS LX.

5 LB.

ROCK

box

■OX

*297S SHRIMP *24”

SHRIMP

L o o k in g lo r ;in
In d ep en d en t
( &gt; 111' I l i l l l H ' s . t \ S i t l u s t .

T

TO N Y ROSSI INSURANCE

11 _

ELETON CARL W ELL

Ph. 322-0285

* 2575 S. F re n c h Ave., Sanford

Mr. Eleton Carlwell. 79. of
2450 Center St.. East Sanford,
died W edn esday at C en tral
Florida Regional Hospital. San­
ford. Bom on April 25, 1906 In
Havana. Fla., he waa a resident
of Sanford for over 30 years. He
was a U S. Army veteran, retired

%^4uto-Owners insurance
I lie. Hume. ( sr. Hu*inrv&gt;. (tar nam* *s&gt;» it all.

FREE S P I N A L

E VALU ATIO N

B

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N

U

S !
l

t. Froqusnt Ho ad sc has
2. L ow Back or Hip Pain

"B U S T E R " W A R D
Mr. Clarence William "Buster"

___ S T Z L i

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t o

ST.'S?*

3.

D lz z t n a s s o r L o s s o f S le e p

4.
5.
0.
7.

N u m b n ess o f Hands or Feat
N ervou sn ess
N e c k Pain or S tiffn ess
Arm end Shoulder Pain

US SAVING BOND
H OO B U N D W I T H P U R C H A S E 01 )•

W ith 60 mo. revolving credit terms of 18%APR

Lac Tat, Start Are let AaB I«A m

• tn ii HATXHT u o u i r 9 'H W H oocw e i r u o t a u ro a ra iw c tit HA* a w a n t to*»r&lt;
H»»aas*.oe M aeweunato eon
aoeihf o»~»h m * v&lt; i it,
now. o« t m a i h c n i w h c m a s « o « h d as a k u u l i o» a m i mtwa. rt noun* o r w
t»*a ro tv* a o u t n id ia r t n i ro e tw i r a i l U « n u lu w a u r K m . on t m a t m o n t

W o w T n ^ o ^ T fI7 5 ^ *a J o n ^ "

jWUIU-

Sturm said he could go along
with Ms. Clayton's requests for
Increases In her budget and
Streetmen said he had no pro­
blem with the hiring o f a pro
perty acquisition coordinator If
that person were also a compe­
tent right-of-way negotiator.

WARD CUtBI NCI W.

Fun«ral N otlc**

CLARENCE W.

a* a

takes a minimum ol six months
after that to go through the
condemnation process In the
court to acquire the property.
Mrs. Christensen ratted Ms.
C l a y t o n ’ s e x p la n a t io n an
"ex c u s e." Mrs Christensen said
the county has known where the
right-of-way Is for years

Raddmg Oardtnt. Sanford. who M
lure f,
will ba held at noon Friday al Haiti awn
Camalory. !JVi Stroot and Hardy Avanua.
Van lord, with Iha H a . O W William* o4
llctaling Calling hour* tar Irlanda will to* 1 1
p m
Thuriday a l Isa chapal
Wilton
Elchalbargar Mortuary in charga

farm laborer and u Protestant.
He Is survivor by a devoted
friend. Mrs. Anna Allen. Sanford.
WUaon-Elchelberger Mortuary
In charge o f arrangements.

Ward. 75. of William Clark
Court. Sunford, died Sunday al
Central Florida Regional tlospli ll Sunday. Born Oct. 18. 1909
In Longwixid. he was a resident
o f Sanford for over 60 years. He
wus a retired laborer and a
member o f New Salem Prim itive
Baptist Church.
He la survived by a daughter,
Nudlne Ward. Rochester. New
York; two grandchildren and one
god-child.
Wllaon-Elchelbergrr Mortuary
In charge of arrangements.

torneys besides herself, a para­
legal and two secretaries.
Mrs. Glenn refused to consider
the $106,068 request wtilch
would not only provide funds for
the new employees but also for
books and book cases and a
desk top copier. Mrs. Glenn said
■he would not consider the
request until Ms. Clayton pro­
vides the commission with a
complete list o f all fees paid by
other county deparm ents to
o u ts id e l o w y r r s fo r le g a l
services.
And Mrs. Christensen criti­
cized the legal department for
delays In acquiring rlghts-of-way
for Improvements planned on
Red Rug Road at slate Road 436.
Ms Clayton responded that
her office received engineering
plans slmwing the alignment of
Ihe proposed rlghts-of-way only
two months ago and It usually

. S A N F O R D
O F

P A I N

C O N T R O L

C H I R O P R A C T I C ,

C L I N I C

I N C .

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SANFORD

Vow NeighUxttood Carrier Dealer

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SPORTS
James Jackson didn't get a
hit every tim e up Tuesday
night, It just seemed like it.
At left, Jackson, Sun Bank's
pitcher, takes a big swing
and miss. At right, he con­
nects on the next pitch tor a
two run single. Jackson hit a
pair of two run singles and a
bases loaded homer to drive
In eight runs as Sun Bank
crushed First Federal, 21-7,
to win the C it y S e rie s .
Jackson was also the winning
pitcher.

kr

Su n

VM cH I

'B a n k s ' O n

By Chris P la te r
H erald Sports W r it e r
The way Sun Bank manager Dootsle
Jackson saw It. Tuesday night's sec­
ond gam e of the Santord City Champi­
onship Series would be a dose one
and. If First Federal won. Jackson
would come hack with mound ace
Derrick Taylor on Thursday.
After an 11 run first inning, all
Jackson had to do was sit back and
watt for the awards ceremony. Sun
Bank never looked back after the first
frame as It rode the pitching and
hitting of James Jackson to a 21-7 rout
of First Federal before 100 fans at Fort
Mellon Park.
Sun Bank swept the best 2 o f 3 City
Series and kept the title In the
American league for the second year
In a row. Prior to 1084. the National
League had won the title four straight
years.
"I thought this one would be close
but Jam es (Jackson) got the Job done."
manager Jackson said.
Jackson allowed only tw o hits

through the first two Innings as Sun
Bank built a 150 lead. Jackson gave
up eight hits for the game and struck
out eight, Joe Wiggins accounted for
five o f First Federal's seven runs with
two home nins. one a three-run shot
and another two-run blast.
What was more surprising then his
pitching pt rformance was the powerful
bat o f the 12-year-old Sun Bank
standout. Jackson was 3 for 4 with a
grand slam home mn and a pair of
two-run singles for a total of eight
RBIs. It was Jackson's second homer
of the season.
"It was my best gam e hitting."
Jackson said. "1 did all right pitching
except for those two home runs.
" I told them (First Federal) we'd beat
Ihem the first day," added Jackson.
"But they kept bragging so we had to
show them ."
In the two games o f the scries. Sun
Bank scored 38 runs on 19 hits and
held First Federal to 12 runs on 10
hits. First Federal added to Its pro­
blems by making 15 errors In the two

Ja ck so n
Baseball

games.
"T h e y had too much for us." First
Federal manager Larry Bridle said of
Sun think. "But we also let their
reputation beat us. We made more
errors than we have all year Sun Bank
played an excellent twill game They
didn't make any mistakes und capital­
ized on the ones we m ade."
Ills disappointed left fielder agreed.
" I didn't think Sun Bank would beat
us that bad." added a disconsolate
Smith. "W e Just made too
muny errors."
First Federal got Its first two runners
on In the top of the first but Jackson
gut Mlkr Billion to pop out for the first
out and then Joe Wiggins hit line drive
to Lorenzo Polk In center and Polk
doubled Shawnle Higgins off second
base for an Inning ending double play.
Five First Federal errors paved the
way for Sun Bank's 11-run first Inning

F o r

outburst. Leadoll man Tony Duncan
drew u walk off First Federal pitcher
Alonzo Brundldge, stole second, took
third on a passed ball and scored on an
error on the play. Jackson followed
with a walx und Taylor lined a single
to right to put runners on first und
third. Taylor then stole second and
Jeffrey Ingram followed with a two-run
single to right for a 3-0 lead,
A1 Perkins followed with a walk and
Keith Armnndl also walked to loud the
buses. With one out. Terrence Lawson
walked to force In Ingram with the
fourth run and number nine hitler
Anthony Simpson also walked to force
In Perkins for a 5-0 lead. With two outs
In the Inning. Jackson drilled a single
up thr middle to drive in two more
runs for a 7-0 lead. Three consecutive
errors by First Federal enabled four
more runs to score as Sun Bunk mudr
the second deposit toward the city
title.
Jackson shut First Federal down In
the top of the second and Sun Bunk
pulled away with four runs In the

Foreigners
Spice Draft

The Los Angeles Clippers then grabbed the
shot-blocking Benjamin. Seattle followed with 6-8
Xavier McDaniel of W ichita State. Atlanta
selected 7-0 Jon Koncak o f Southern Methodist.
Sacramento lagged 611 Joe Klelne of Arkansas
und Golden State picked 6-6 Chris Mullln of St.
John's.
The Dallas Mavericks, using the flrsl of three
first-round picks, chose 6-9 West German Detlef
Schrrmpf of Washington. At No. 16 they took 7-0
Canadian Bill Wennlngton o f St. John's and one
pick later tapped 7-2 West German Uwe Blab of
Indiana.
"Dallas has become the foreign legion of the
, NBA." said league scouting director Marty Blake.
Choices No. 9 through No. 15 were: Charles
Oakley IV trgln la Union) to C leveland. Ed
Pinckney IVlllanova) to Phoenix. Keith Lee
(Memphis Stale) to Chicago. Kenny Green IWake
Korestl to Washington. Karl Malone (Louisiana
Tech) to Utah. Alfredrtck Hughes (Loyola 111.) to
San Antonio and Blair Ruamusaen (Oregon) lo
Denver.
New Jersey was the only team without a
first-round pick.
Atlanta, with the 77lh pick, look Arvldaa
Sabonis, a 7-2 center a r i fixture on the Soviet
national team. Indiana University coach Bobby
Knight suggested last year that Sabonls may be
the world's best player but Hawks offlcU'Is doubt
lie will come to the United Slates.

iMittom of the frame. Polk looped u
single to right center to lead off and,
with one out. Simpson drew a walk
Duncan also walked to loud the liases
and Jackson followed with a grand
slam homer to strulght away center to
pud Sun Bank's cushion lo 15-0.
Flrsl Fedrral broke tip I he shutout In
the lop ol the third. Andre Copper
walked. Andrea Williams singled and
Shawnle Higgins walked to loud the
bases. Copper then scored on Dtllton'a
groundnut und Wiggins followed with
a three-run homer to right center to
make It 15-4. W iggins came back to hit
a two-run homer In the lop of the
sixth.
Sun think scored four more runs In
the bottom of the third with Jackson's
two-run single paving the way. Perkins
crushed a solo home nut In the fourth
for Sun Bank.
"W e told First Federal we were the
best." said Polk, who hit five homers
during the regular seuson. "T h e y
ttellcvc us now ."

S e a rc h O n F o r
W o rs t G o lfe r

NEW YOHK (UPII — Suspense, mystery, foreign
Intrigue. It was all there Tuesday — yet not at
your local movie theater or favorite bookstore. It
all took place at the National Basketball Associa­
tion amateur draft.
There was suspense concerning whom the
Indiana Pacers would select with their No. 2 pick.
There was mystery In what prompted the
Washington Bullets to trade one o f the NBA's
classiest small forwards for a No. 2 draft pick and
a frail 7-foot-6 W center who once herded cows In
the Sudan.
But mostly, there was foreign Intrigue — four of
the first 17 picks were born outside the United
States. Canada. Jam aica. H aiti, Bulgaria.
Finland. West Germany and yes. even the Soviet
Union, were represented In a draft that at times
looked like an Olympic rehearsal.
NBA Commissioner David Stern began the
4-hour. 46 minute draft at Madison Square
Garden's Felt Forum by announcing New York's
selection o f Jamaican-born Patrick Ewing
"T h is feels great. I'm very happy New York
chow m e." said Georgetown's 7-foot center,
flashing a smile as wide as his wingspan. "I think
I will fit In very well with Coach (Hubtc) Brown
and hts trapping defense. I'm gonna try and do
rny own thing and try my very best."
The Pacers next used most of their allotted five
minutes before choosing 6-9 Wayman Tisdale of
Okluhoma over Creighton's 7-0 Benoit Benjamin.
"It was a very difficult decision." Indiana coach
George Irvine said "Both players could wind up
being great players In the NBA. Wayman Is
probably a little bit more of a sure product."

T itle

Ww*»Sv Ti«*r Vl*t**»

Leonard R ich ard so n fights off dust storm to tag M oose's A rth u r Bradford.

No Rest For Sanford Fans
Edwards Opposes Lucas As Junior Series Begins
By S sn C s sk
Harold Sports Editor
There's no rest for busrball
fans In Sanford,
Just 22 hours after Sun Bank
put the finishing touches on Its
Florida Little Major League
City Series champlonhlp. Ball
Motor Line and Klwanla will
open their battle for the Florida
J u n ior M ajor L ea g u e C ity
Series title.
The first game o f the best 2
out o f 3 series is tonight st 6 at
Chase Park. Ball Motor Line,
managed by Jim Lucas. Is
favored because o f a strong
second half. Lucas, who pre­
v i o u s l y c o a c h e d In th e
Seminole Pony Baseball orga­
nization. guided hla aquad to a
perfect 8-0 second half record
to earn a spot In the playoffs. It
la 14-4 overall.
Ball Motor Line had been the

11-7 victory ovrr Moose. Jesse
Bell Is the Kiwunls manager
and Charles Rouse Is the coach.
Bell said he Is not worried
doorm a t alncc Joinin g the about Ball Motor Line's strong
Junior League several years second half. "W e Just have to
ago but It turned It around this play our game, like we did
year. Boll Motor started quickly ugalnsl Moose." said the former
In the flrsl half but faded to a S e m in o le H igh b a s k e tb a ll
player. " I f we play like we did
6 4 mark and aecond place.
There was no fade In the against Moose, we can beat
second half, though, as II won anybody."
K lw a n ls w ill op en w ith
the title going aw ay. T w o
makeup games due to rain and Bernard Mitchell at first base.
a possible forfeit were not Duck Grayson at second base.
needed to determine the out­ Oscar Edwards at shortstop
und Leonard Richardson ut
come.
Klwants. m eanw hile, tied third base. The outfield will be
Mooae with a 7-3 record for the Shawn Roberts. Adrian Rouse
first half but was a mediocre and Chuck Williams or Kerry
W iggins from Irft to right.
c lu b In the s e c o n d h a lf,
Ruben Blake will catch and
finishing with a 4-6 record
Klwanls. nevertheless, put It crafty Sammy Edwards will
together In last w eek's playoff pitch.
Set JUNIOR. Fags SA
gam e to come awav with an

B a s e b a ll

I

l*ONTE VEDRA BEACH (UPIJ - Alter a practice
round In which they hit neurly 700 shots, four
golfers tec off today at the Tournament Players
Course and the high duffer will win the honor o f
being the Worst Avid Goffer In America.
The golfers expecl that Unlay they will top
yesterday's outing, said Kelly Ireland of Tyler.
Texas, who shot a 180 Tuesday on Che par 72
course.
"W e'll probably go Into It with a different
attitude (Wednesday), knowing we ll do b eiirr,"
he said, "And Lord knows w e've seen an awful lot
of this real estate. I've seen places Tom Watson
has never seen on this course."
In Tuesday's practice round, the four men each
shot between 185 and IHO, and they lost nearly
100 balls — 73 of Ihem In water hazards They
ulso gained a grrat respect for the professionals
who shoot In the 60s on the course
The foursome — Ireland. 42; Jack Pulford, 48,
of Moline. III.; Joel Mosser, 45. o f Aurora. Colo,
and Angelo Spugnoln, 31. o f Fayette City. Pa. —
were determined by Golf Digest magazine lo be
the lour worst avid golfers In the country
There were qualifications which had to be met.
mild Peter Andrews, of Golf Digest.
Andrews said the duffers had to be men of
reasonable physical ability who play a minimum
of 21 rounds a year and carry al least a 36
handicap, the highest handicap recognized by the
United Slates Golf Association.
Ireland said he had a grrai time trying to
conquer the course.
"It was wonderful." he said. "It's a grrat course
and a whole great hunch of people putting II on
here."
However, when he hit Into the rough, the going
got even rougher, hr said.
Ireland said he look the most strokes on the
Itar-5. 529-yard 11th hole. "Most of those strokes
were In fringe grass und I used every club In my
(tag to gel out o f It. and It was Just Impossible. It's
u very unforgiving course."
On the course's most famous hoi'', the par-3,
132-yard 17th. the grrrn Is surrounded by water.
Only two o f the goffers could hil the green from
1he tee.
Ireland got on In his seventh shot, while
Hpagnola made It In 13 shots Mosser hit 12 in (he
water before giving up and taking his final ball to
ihe 18th hole, and Pulford hit 10 In before going
to the drop area.
Ireland said playing the course helped prepare
he four for Wednesday's competition.
Is he worried about running out of balls?
'Fortunately G olf Digest Is going to furnish the
balls, so I'm not too worried about that." he said.

SENIORS COMPETITION SUPERB
CLEVELAND (UPII - U there la anything Ihe
players on the Senior Tour have proven. It la that
"senior" Is not synonymous with "old."
" I know there was a time when people regarded
Ihe Senior Tour as a bunch o f 50-year-old and
over fogies making last has-beens," Arnold
Palmer said "It simply Isn't so. and we've
demonstrated that time and again.
"T h e competition this week will be superb. I
ran stale that with confidence. If anybody haa
any doubt*, let them come out and ser for
themselves."

�( A - E v e n in g

H o r o id , S a n f o r d . F T W e d f W t d a i ^ J w n e 1», 1 H S

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McWilliams Shuts Down Expos, 4-1
M O N TR E A L (Ul'll — Managing the Pittsburgh
Pintles can lie enough lo turn anybody pessimistic.
Kven ('buck Tanner lapsed Into a rare moment of
negativism Tuesday night, but then again, having
Ix'ulrn the first place Montreal Expos for Ihr second
straight night may have had the I’litnlnirgh manager a
little disoriented
" I hope our momentum has changed." said Tanner,
the eternal optimist. "O nce before wr won two in u
row. bul I lien we losl seven."
Lurry McWilliams gave I he Uucs Ihrlr second
consecutive success with a three-hit. 4-1 victory over
Montreal.
"Baseball Isa freaky th in g." said the left hander after
his six strikeout performance and second complete
game o f (he season. "A t any time, a Iasi place team can
tx-ut a first place team."
" W c 'rr 10-10 iigalnsl lefties." noted Montreal
manager Buck Rodgers. " I guess my lineup Is made lor
right-handed pitchers. McWilliams has a very fast
move in the plate, and that pul us off our gam e."
George Hendrick was on his game, hilling a pair of
doubles and driving In u run for Ihe Pirates. " I don't
know how far buck wr arr In Ihe slundlngs (14 games),
Iml It's not a lot of ground to make up when there's
more than IOO games to play." said Tanner, reverilng
to form. "L ook al the Boston Red Sox, Where were they
lust week*/ And look where they are this week."
Th e Red Box had closed to within 'l Vi games of
Toronto. io|Mi In the A l. Eaist entering Tuesday's night
game.
"In spring training f suit! It would be u slx-lram rare
in ifir Kant." uild Rodgers. "W e still have 100 gam es lo
go. We can't lake I’lllsburgh for grunted They have a

N.L. Baseball
good ball clu b."
Elsewhere, Cincinnati defeated San Francisco 6-1.
Allanta edged Houston 3-2. New York downed Chicago
5-1, St. Louis beat Philadelphia 6-2. and San Diego
lieul Los Angeles 4-0.
In the American league. II was: New York 6.
Baltim ore 4; Detroit 9. Boston 8; California 7.
Cleveland 3: Chicago 4. Oakland 3 In 13 innings;
Milwaukee 4. Toronto I; Kansas City 10. Minnesota 1;
and Texas 8. Seattle 5.

Reds 8. Giants 1
At San Francisco. Frank Paatore pitched a four-hllter
In his second slurt of (he season lo lead Ihr Reds
Paslore. 2 0. surrendered four singlrs while walking
one and striking out three to break Ihe Giants'
three-game winning streak. Bill Laskey. 1-8, went fi 1-3
innings and took the loss.
Ilraves 3, A s tro s 2
At Atlanta, Glenn Hubbard ripped reliever Julio
Solano's first pitch over the left Held frnce lo lead off
the eighth Inning and key the Braves' victory.
Hiihburd's blunt made a winner of ttrucc Suiter. 4-2.
Solano felt to 1-2

Mats 8, Cubs 1
At New York. Gary Carter drove In two run* wllh a
•air o f nlngles and Ed Lynch hurled an right-hitter to
irlp the Mela hand I h e Cubs their seventh straight
loss. Lynch Improved to 4-3. Steve Trout. 6-3. took the
lo s s .

...Junior
Continued from 7A
Sammy Edwards, like Ills
mound opponent for tonight.
Jimho Lucas, relics on his
breaking pitches. Edwurd* has
excellent control and can throw
his curvchull and knucldrhal!
lor strikes.
Hall Motor was pretty much
unstoppable Ihe second hair ol
the season and Jlmtm Lucas
said his team doesn't plan to
letdown.
"W e started good the first
hall. t&lt; K&gt; ." said Jim bo Lucas. "I
guess w r got to thinking wr
wrre loo good Ik-cause we
didn't llnlsh strong."
Lucas, a 14-yrur-old right
hander, said an Improved at­
titude by thr tram was the
dllfrrrncc In thr second half.
H*i *M FSofo Ky T t x n i V in t an!
"Wr knew we couldn't let that
JIm bo Lucaa will re ly on hla Itapjicn In the second half II wc
c u rv c b a ll against K lw a n is.
wanted to make tin- playoffs."

L

Florida Schools
Support Proposals
NEW ORLEANS (U l'll - A set
ol 12 prnjtosuls designed lo clrun
up college athletics will lx- voted
on (his week In New Orleans at a
s|M*clal NCAA convention and la
Just ihe first step In a long
pin rr** of restoring Intrgrlty to
tollr glair sports. Flurtda college
officials say.
The convention, only thr fifth
s p e c ia l c o n v e n tio n In th e
NCAA'fc 79-year history, begins
imlay and runs through Friday.
Huudrrda of college presidents
a n d athletic directors will be ul
ih r convention, designed to
locus on "Issues of Integrity or
e c o n o m ic s In In lcrcollcglu tc
a lh letk a ."
T h r y w ill be voting on s
package of 12 proposals set forth
by Ihe I'resldrntsCommission.
Som e of Ihe proposals arc
classifying violations us either
m a jo r o r m inor 111 n a tu re;
punishing a roach Involved In
vkilutlons. even if he ts no longer
coaching ul the school where the

NCAA

Lucas hasn't pitched against
Klwanis although Hull Motor
Line has won 3 of 4 games
against the first half winner,
"E vrryilm c we played them
m y arm was Injured.” he said
" I Just plan to throw a lot of
rurveballs. T h a t's m y best
pitch."
Jlmbo Lucas said Klwanis
has u good team and five
h lltrrs In purtlculur bother
him He tlrkrd off the names of
Sammy and Oscar Edwards,
Mitchell. Richardson and Duck
Gruyson as Ihe good sticks
" T h e y ’ re all bu se-hlltcrs
e x c e p t for B e r n a r d ." said
Jlm bo Lucas, "H e 's got some
|Kiwer."
Jim Lucas said Ills plan Is go
start will) his son and gel
"three or four Innings from
h i m " b r fo r r b r in g in g on
Ronald Cox, who has been the
Hall Motor Line ntopprr this
year.
"Rnnuld has pretty much
curried us through the season."

Glenn Hubbard
...Rips reliever

L a rry MaWlUlame
...Stymies Expos

Cardinals 8, P h illie s 2
At St. Louts. Torn Lawless drove In Ihrre runs and
Vince Coleman banged out three hits and stole two
b a s e s to pace the Cardinals. John Tudor, who won his
fourth straight game, raised his record to 5-7. The loser
was Sieve Carlton. 1-7.
Padres 4. D odgers O
At law* Angeles. Dave Druvecky. 0-4. hurled a
three-hitter and Tim Flannery drove In two runs to
spark a lO hit attack. The Padres' southpuw held the
Dodgers hlllesa through 4 2-3 Innings and struck out
six. Hub Welch. 1-1. making only his third start of thr
season lN-ruusr o f an arm Injury, was replaced In the
slxlh after yielding nil of San Diego's runs.

'Cox and N athan Hava bean our boat hlttara.
W han they hit th« b a ll, It'a hard to (laid.*

— Jim Lucas
said Jltn Lucas "It's better to
have two pitchers available In u
Iwo or thrrr game series, I
d o n 't want to get ca u gh t
short.”
Cox w ill play first, T ro y
R ollin s w ill be at secon d.
Humeri Washington bundles
third and John Hendricks takes
care o f shortslo|). The outfield
Irum left to right Is H illy
Osborne. Leonard Williams and
Cuilim Smith. Kevin Nulhun
handles ihe catching,
"C o x and Nallnm have been
our best hitlers." said Jltn
Lucas. "W hen they hit the bull.
It's hard lo field Jlntho and
llurnrtt Washington havr been
s t e a d y h it le r * and J o h n
Hendricks had a real good
second ball."
Manager Lucas Is leery of
Sammy Edwards, too "Sam m y

W i l l , IOSO &amp; D I U - W

»
n
sm
AN
telM
fi
"mm?

Violation occurred; requiring
schools (n report Ihr number ul
student athleles who do not
meet s c h o o l w id e a c a d em ic
standards and to report the
number o f students graduated;
and a two-year ban on s sport at
an Institution that has com ­
mitted major violations twice
within a three-year period.
University of Miami Bresldrnt
Edward T. Foolr said Ihe pro­ i hl» Is only Ihe beginning."
Duncan said "Tbere are other
posals. expected lo be passed
While the propooult are Ihe ureas that havr lo be addressed,
without much controversy, will Ural step In s long process. It Is a hut I think this Is a very, very
help athletics.
step that Is very late In coming, good beginning."
"I think It will have a good several officials said
rile d ." he auld "It's an Impor­
Most Florida college officials
" I d o n 't think th e ru les
tant step In a long Journey."
agree that the rules should havr
Stetson University President lieen m arled years ago and (hat them selves are going to rut
Pope Duncan, who ts on thr the participation o f college pres­ down on thr violations, but t
commission that drew up the idents gives ihe movement more think by the presidents getting
involved. It will cut down on
package, maid. "1 think thr weight.
Important thing Is that this
"Most of these things should (violations!." said Florida Stale
won't be Ihe last set of reforms. have been done years ago," Athletic Director Hootlr Ingrain.

has a good fuslball." hr said.
"H r didn't throw a lot of
breaking pilches against Mixtsc
but I figure he'll use (hem
against us,
"Their coach (Hell) has done
a good Job with them all year. I
expect a lough gam e."
The Klwanis bralnlmst. Hell
and Rouse, meanwhile, had
lieen counting on facing Cox as
the Ball Motor Llnr starter.
"Cox Is the ace pitcher and the
ore liatter." said House. "H e's
thr main man In thr clutch
situations. I figure w ell see
him sooner or later.
"H e's delivered all year hut
there's not a one-man team.
Thry have got some real good
hlllers. A lot of those kids live
across the street Iron) me. I
know how good thry can play."

Parrish
Lances
Red Sox
DETROIT fUPU — U n i t Par­
rish treats Bruce Hurst the way
the Sioux treated Custer.
Parrish absolutely destroys
Hurst, so it came an a bit o f a
surprise Tuesday nl({ht when
Boston Red Sox manager John
McNamara left Hurst In to pilch
to the Detroit Tigers' slugging
catcher with the bases loaded.
"T h e last thing I expected was
a home run." said McNamara,
who watched dumbfounded as
Parrish drilled a pilch of! the
facing of the upper deck of Tiger
Stadium for a grand slam In the
sixth Inning to spark Detroit to a
9-8 come from behind victory.
McNamara hasn't been doing
his home work. If he had. he
would have noted that Parrish
had collected 10 hits In 18
previous at-bats against Hurst,
including five homers
•'You know . I thought to
myself when l stepped Into the
tiattrr's box. 'This would be a
great time lo hli a home run."'
Parrish said, " I'v e l»een pretiy
lucky against Bruce In the past,
but I don't know how much
longer it’s going to last
Parrish's fifth career grand
slam rapped a Detroit romrbat k
and enabled the Tigers to break
thr Red Sox' six-game winning
streak
Yankees 6, O rioles 4
Al Baltimore. Krn Griffey lined
a pair of run scoring singles and
Rickey H enderson collected
three hits and stole three bases
lo lead Ihr Yankees to their third
straight victory. Joe Cowley. 5 3.
allowrd two singles over five
Innings but needed relief help
from Dave Rlgheltl. who gave up
home runs to Eddie Murray and
John Shelby, and Brian Fisher,
who pitched the last Inning for
his second save.
B re w e ri 4, Blue J a ys t
Al Milwaukee. Flarnest Riles
drove In two runs to supjtort Ray
Burris' seven hitter and help (he
Brewers hand the Blue Jays
Iheir slxlh straight loss. Burris.
4-5. struck out five and walked
one In pitching his second com­
p l e t e g a m e . S in c e 19 H2 .
M ilw au k ee Is IB-4 against
Toronto.
Royals 10, T w ln a 1
At Kansas City. Mo.. Frank
W h ile rapped three singles,
drove In a run und scored two
others to carry Mark Gublcsa
and the R o y a ls to victo ry .
Gubk-*a scattered three aingles.
walked five and struck out two
Iteforr departing after seven In­
nings wllh a slight groin pull He
evened his record al 4-4 wllh
Dan Gulsenberry finishing op
A ngels 7. In dian s 3
A t C le v e la n d . R e g g ie
Jackson's two-nut homer and
RBI single paced u 20 hll attack
that hel|ted the Angels delrat the
Indians, Jackson's homer was
thr 512th of his career, putting
him In a tie with Em le Banks
and Eddie Mathews for I 11It
place on Ihe all-time list.
Rangers 8. M a rln ere 8
A l A rlin gton . Texa s, Brie
O'Brien Ignited a six run first
Inning with an HHI double and
added his seventh homer lo help
Ihr Rangers snap the Mariners'
three-gam e w in n in g streak
Frank Tanuna. 2-7, rreorded Ills
first vtrtory since May 26 by
pitching 5 2-3 Innings and
allowing six hits.
W h ite Box 4. A 'e 3
At Chicago. Harold Haines hit
a 400 foot upper deck homer to
lead off the bottom of the 13th
Inning and give the While Sox
Ihe victory. Baines' homer, his
fifth of the year, was his third hit
o f Ihr* game and gave reliever
Gene Nelson his fourth victory In
stx decisions. Krlth Atherton.
3-2. took thr loss

Officials Consider
Tough Regulations
NEW ORLEANS |UPI| - Col­
lege and university presidents
attending a special meeting of
the National Collegiate Athletic
Association wifi consider a tough
package of regulations that of­
ficials hope will rnd Ihe ethical
and legal nightmares that havr
plagued college sports
Within the last year, the NCAA
has had In deal wllh frequent
rrporia of drug abuse, academic
chesting and corrupt recruiting
The top p er was ihe recent
point-shaving scandal at Tutanc
University.
The Integrity of Intercollegiate
uthlrlics Is the main topic of the
New Orleans meetings which
begin Thursday.
University representatives will
consider establishing "m a jo r"
and "secondary" categories of
violations and tougher penalties
for coaches who break NCAA
rules.
Schools that rommit major
violations could be prohibited

NCAA
from competing In some sports
for up to tw o years. Major
violations are defined as t h o s e
that provide “an extensive re
crultlng or competitive ad v a n
tage "
Repeat offenders, those with
multiple major offenses during a
five-year period, also will be
dcall with harshly under the
proposed rules changes
However, university officials
may grant special consideration
to schools that uncover and
report violations before they are
caught by the NCAA.
Under another proposed rule,
coaches who violate NCAA rules
may be punished "even If he or
she la employed by an Institu­
tion other than Ihe one at which
the violation occurred."

�Evening H erald. Senferd. F I.

SPO R TS
IN BRIEF
Slanoy Falls 7 Seconds
Short Of Mile World Record
VANCOUVER. British Columbia (UPI) — Mary Decker
Slaney will have to cross an ocean to find the kind of
competition good enough to push her into running a
world-record mile.
Slaney. who possesses every U.S. distance record
between 800 and 10,000 meters, hoped to run a record
mile Tuesday night at V ancouver's Harry Jerom e
International Track Classic but fell short by almost seven
seconds.
"The first lap was right and then I slowed down. I Just
didn't have any push." said Slaney, unimpressed with the
quality o f competition at the meet.
"I wanted to break a world record to give me a
competitive goal." she said after easily winning the mile In
4 minutes 22.30 seconds, well ahead of Canadian Olympic
bronze medalist Lynn Williams at 4:28 03.
"I'll have another chance this summer (In Europe), but I
would have liked to have done It here," said Slaney. "1 sort
of like doing things In North Am erica."
Slaney. who rocketed Into International notoriety when
she collided with South Africa's Zola Budd at the Los
Angeles Olympics, said Vancouver would be her last North
American event o f the season.
She will tour the European track meets this summer,
hoping to compete against Budd and Natayla Artyemova.
the Soviet runner who set the world record at 4:15.80 in
Leningrad earlier thts year.
Slaney said she was still suffering from a recent muscle
Injury In her left leg.
"I wanted to run much faster, but 1 still didn't feel that
strong." she said. "I was anticipating feeling stronger but I
Just w asn't."
Canada swept the top two positions In the m en’s mile
with Dave Reid winning In 3:59.03 ahead of teammate
Dave Cambell who finished In 3:59.51
Former world champion marathoner Alberto Salazar,
recovering from a severe hamstring Injury Jogged through
the 3,000-rneter event placing last, far behind the pack
The race was won by Canada's Graeme Fell In 7:53.56,
ahead of Australia's Andrew Lloyd with 7:54.65.
Salazar, three-time winner of the New York marathon,
was disgusted with his time and said he would stop
running for at least two months, possibly for additional
surgery on hlsleg.
"I shouldn’t have bothered showing up." said Salazar. "I
can still feel the pain In my right leg ... running races like
that isn’t healthy."

Martina Drops Sot, IY/ns Match
EASTBOURNE. England (UP1I - Martina Navratilova
rebounded from a first-set defeat against Lori McNeil
Tuesday to score a 3-6. 6-2.6-0 victory In the second round
of a $175.000 women's grass court tournament.
Navratilova, who wrapped up a 6-4, 6-4 first round win
over compatriot Betsy Nagelsen earlier In the day. turned
on the power after her first-set lapse against McNeil.
Gabrlela Sabatlnl. the 15-year-old Irom Argentina who Is
the latest teen sensation of women's tennis, bowed out In
the second round. Sabatlnl. seeded 15th at Wimbledon
next week, lost 6-7. 6-2, 6-3 to Pascale Paradis of France.
Paradis. 19. preceded Sabatlnl as the world's leading
Junior.
Another Wimbledon seed to fall was Canadian Carling
Bassett. She found the experience of Australia's Dianne
Fromhollx Balestrat too much for her. crashing 6-3.6-0.
Bulgaria’s Manuela Maleeva, fourth seed at Wimbledon
next week, had the unhappy task of dispatching her
16-year-old sister Katerina from the tournament 6-1. 6-3.
while Australian Wendy Turnbull. 32. fought back to oust
Wendy White of the United States 6*7.6-2.6-3.
C zechoslovakia’s Helena Sukova, seeded to meet
Turnbull in the final 16 at Wimbledon, defeated Janlne
Thompson of Australia 6-2. 6-3. Other winners were
Catarina Llndqvlst of Sweden, 6-2, 7-5. over Adrtana
Villa gran of Argentina, and American Kathy Rinaldi. 7-5,
6-1, over Switzerland's Chrlstlane Jollssalnt.
Home fans spent a miserable 43 minutes witnessing the
further decline o f recent heroine Jo Dude. Sagging under
the pressure af carrying the British flag on the women s
tennis circuit. Durle's downward spiral continued Tuesday
when she was routed 6-0,6-0 by American Zina Garrison.

Gullikson Produces 1st Upset
BRISTOL. England IUPI) — Tim Gullikson Tuesday
produced the first upset of the rain hit West of England
Grass Court Championships when he eliminated Slobodan
Zlvojlnovlc In their first-round match.
Gullikson. 32. fought back for a 2-6. 7-6, 6-4 victory over
the powerful Yugoslav.
Zlvojlnovlc. 21, reached the semifinals of last w rek’s
Queen’s Club tournament, showing form that could trouble
fourth-seeded swede Mala Wllnader In the first round of the
Wimbledon Championships next week.
But Gullikson withstood the barrage, leant on his
experience to gel through the tense tlebreak In the second
set and then took the cut and thrust final set for a place In
the second round.
Tim 's left-handed twin brother Tom also reached the
second round, scoring a 7-5. 6-2 victory over West
Germany's Rolf Osterthun.
Zlvojlnovlc wasn't the only physical giant to be felled
Tuesday. American Chip Hooper loat to 28-year-old Italian
Gianni Ocleppo. 7-6.6-2.

S

w

e

d

e

n

' s

Many of you. I am sure, watched the
French Open on television. I am sure that
you were happy when Chris Evert Lloyd
won the w om en's title, and sad that
McEnroe and Connors lost In the semis
Of course. Mats Wllandcr won this year's
men s singles title with a four-set victory
over Lendl. Winning the French Open Is aii
awesome task. It Is a grand slam event and.
along with the Australian. Wimbledon and
the U.S, Open. Is considered the most
prestigious tournament on the tour.
Even though Wllandcr was seeded fourth,
behind Lendl. McEnroe and Connors. It was
no surprise to most tennis fans that he won
He had won the event before and Is very
much at home on the slow, red clay courts
at Roland Garros
Also. It Just once again points out that
Sw eden Is far and aw ay the dom inant tennis
country In the world as far as m en 's tennis
Is concerned.

At the present time, of the top 10 men's
singles players in the world, five are from
Sweden. Wllandcr Is ranked third. Anders
Jarryd Is sixth. Henrik Sundstrom Is
seventh. Joaklm Nystrom Is eighth and
Stefan Ed berg Is tenth.
To top It off. Sweden has several other
world class players like Thomas Hogstedt,
Jan Gunnarson and Pelcr Carlson, who are
In the top 50 Add to that list over 150

KISSIMMEE — Bob Parker was 2 for 4 with a double and
scored the winning run In the first Inning and Arbrey
Lucas pitched four-hit ball for seven frames as the Osceola
Astros blanked the Lakeland Tigers. 5-0, In Florida Slate
League action.
Lucas. In hta second start o f the season, pitched a
four-hitter through seven Innings before Jim Shaab went
the last two frames to preserve the shutout.
Parker, a former Lyman High and Seminole Community
College standout, scored the first run o f the game when he
doubled In the first, went to third on an Infield single and
scored on Brian Job's sacrifice fly.
Parker singled and scored In a four-run fifth as the Astros
added some Insurance.

OVIEDO We brought our
bats but we left our gloves at
home.”
T h at w as D avid A u s tin ’ s
assessment o f his Oviedo Or­
ioles' 16-9 victory over West
Volusia Tuesday night in District
14 Senior Top Team Tourna­
ment bow ball at the Oviedo
Little League complex.
It wasn't pretty, nine error
seldom are. but Austin couldn't
c o u n t fir s t b a se m a n R. D.
P e lla rin um ong the fu m b le
Angered. "R.D. played a hrekuva
gam e." said Austin. "H e must
have dug out five or six throws.
He scooped the ball real w ell."
Oviedo, which faces Malllund
and acr pitcher Willy Daunlc at
7:30 tonight at Dr Lund's field
(Howrl by the dump, fell behind.
5-0. but Austin said his Orioles
didn't panic.
"W e hit the ball preity good
the first couple of Innings but tt
didn't drop tn." said the 14-year
Oviedo Little League coaching
veteran. "W e fell behind pretty
quick, but once we got rolling we
couldn’ t stop. We got a couple of
key hits from guys who hadn't
tvren hitting."
Oviedo scored In three Innings
Tuesday but made them all
count. An eight-run third set the
trend for the gam e. C ed ric
Watson walked and nnr nut

B

e

g

a

n

W

i t h

C a s tle
H ERALD
TENNIS
W R ITER
university players In the U.S. who ure from
Sweden.
Of course, the NCAA singles champion for
the past two seasons. Mike Pernfors. Is also
Irom Sweden. The list of world class and
high quality men's tennis players Just goes
on and on.'
Expert* say that we really haven't seen
anything yet They are saying that Sweden
ha* a crop of 12-. 13-. and 14 year-olds that
will be much brticr than the players they
have now.
That's awesome, because Sweden Is
already the Davts Cup champ and has such
an array of talent that one wonders how it
could get much better.
How did this little country, with only a
couple of month* a year of warm w-calhcr,
liecomr so dominant In the world of tennis?
Most tennis expert* from around the world

Top Team
Tournament
A lty m o n to A m o r lc o n
inning*

A. O v io X o

1,

h u m

Tm A i
A lto m o n te M ottenol 10 M a lt U n d 1
M O p m *1 E u t t li — Allomonte
A m * , a an v t Hoc*hw*»l V o tu tU . i u i t l i
or loutSwotl Votutl*

TWyXor
r M p m tt Ovteda — O-Mg vt
totort' brockyt turvlvor
F rM sy
* 1 M p m (1 Altamonte — Altamonte
Am ortconvt lo*orV brockol »lnnar

!*•»•* [otyw Cr—kt-vd OtvHten
A lta m o n te E ip o * t . A p o p k a S
I X p m *t S o ilin g M ills — A lla m o n to
E i p o t v k le w r o 'b r o c k e t w m ner
ta s te r le a g u e . D o to o n 1
O . s d o i , lo u t* w ot t V olw ole I
TuotUoy
O v ie d o U W a tt V e lu t ia *
M O p m of D o L o n d D u m p — O vied o
v t M e llla n d

Fittingly, the Orioles closed
the seventh on a 6 4 3 double
play on which Pellarin fished out
of the dirt for the flnul out. He
nlso came up with a nice scoop
when Green lossed a bluer oul
from cenler field.
"Green will pilch with four
days rest W e d n e sd a y ." said
Austin. "So everything worked
out good. Wr were hoping to get
toy tonight without him and we
did "

SCOREBOARD
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By Bam Cook
H erald Sp ort* E d itor
Not only did Andy Spolski
pilch the Altamonte American
League Astros past Maitland
Tuesday night, hut hr found
lustier us well. Just three days
ago. Spolski threw u no hltter at
Maitland — and lost
B u i l h e h u r d - 1h r o w I n g
12-year-old wasn't to be denied
Tuesday night aa hr ullowrd Just
two hits, struck out five und
walked five. David Robison had
the hlg hit of the night as he
slugged a grand-slum homer to
euse Altamonte past Maitland.
10-3. In District 14 Top Team
Tournam ent basebull at the
Pierson Little League complex.
"T h e tales were turned this
tim e," said Altamonte skipper
Duke Ptctcones. "Th eir pitcher
was wild and Andy hud Ids
control. He pitched a trem en­
dous gam e."
Altamonte Journeys to Etiatla
to n ig h t to m eet S o u th w est
Volusia. Nnrlhwrsi Volusia or
Eustla. A win tonight puts the
Nationals In Ihe losers' bracket
filial Thursday against Oviedo at
O viedo. Chris Plelcones w ill
pilch tonight for the Astros.
Along with Spolskl'a strong
mound effort, manager Plelcones
Upped his cup (o backstop Rich
Schou. who turned In three
stellar defensive gems Schou
bucked up an errant throw to
first and gunned Ihe runner oul
at second. He also threw a
would-be thief oul al second and
then scrambled to the backstop
for a wild pitch and tossed lo
Spolski to nab u runner trying to
score.
Schou also scored Altamonte's

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T O P T I A M T O U K N X M E NT
M*|o» Lu | M D S H I h t

later. Richard Cobh walked A
wild pltrh moved I hem both
ahead and Alan Greene doubled
to left to score both, Green then
stole third and Poochie King was
hit with a pitch. King stolr
second to set the table for Gary
Got wait who doubted to right
em lcr for two runs to bring
Oviedo within 5-4.
Pellarin then walked and both
runners moved up on a wild
pitch. Ron Fuby walked to load
the bases. Bobby Wyatt then
missed a sq u eezr hunt hut
Gotwalt avoided the lug for u
stral of home to tie the guine.
Watson, up for the second
lime, was hit with a pitch to load
the bases and
Klnnalrd pro­
mptly doubled lo right center for
three runs and an 8-5 lead
The Orioles pushed across five
more In the fifth. Klnnutrd and
Cobh had an RBI grounds while
Green rhtpped In an KBI single
and Gotwalt drilled the big hit of
the Inning — a two-run double.
Klnnalrd started for Oviedo
but wax relieved by Gotwalt In
the third. "G a ry pitched good
enough to get the Job done." said
Austin. "T h e y only got four runs
off him ."

B

believe that It all started the BJortt Borg.
I didn’t even mention Borg earlier because
he has really retired from tennts. but he will
probably go down In history as the greatest
men's player that ever lived. Borg set the
standard for the young Swedish players to
atm at. They all copied hta style, hts topspln
forehand and two-fisted backhand, and hts
calm, cool demeanor on the court
Borg played with his head and hts feet, not
his mouth. He was a great role model for the
young Swedes. From Borg's exam ple,
hundreds of players started to gel Invotved
at a very early age.
The Swedish Tennis Confederation gave
much support and supplied leadership, a*
well as (acllltles and excellrnl coaching,
throughout Sweden Programs started on all
levels were very organized and disciplined,
and all aimed at developing each player to
Ills fullest potential (To make sure that
everyone has a chance to get enough work
on their tennis, the Indoor courts arc kept
o|&gt;en 24 hours a day I
Mike Pcrnlors used to have matches and
practices scheduled at 4 a m That, my
irlends. takes dedication and commitment
to your sport. All of these factors have come
together to put Sweden right on lop of the
world In men's tennis.
And. It looks like they |ust might stay
there (or a long, long time

L a rry

Baseball

H aa
44
14

It 4
XX

14

4d

I m p r iim
l|W Mo t &gt;t loot

first run when he walked In the
first. Mark Plelcones walked and
Chris Plelcones also drew free
pusars to load the buses Two
outs later. Schou scampered
home on u wild pitch
Altamonte added a pair lit (hr
third when Chris Plelcones and
Spolski singled and Robison
drew a walked lo loud the bases
Scott D avis coaxed another
freebie for an KBI and Jay Kane
plated the oecond run with a
groundout.
In the fourth. Alfie Cornell
w alked and Kyle Elschlm an
walked Rich Schou singled to
score Cornell and Mark Plelcones
walked to load buses. Chris
Plelcones followed wllh a liner lo
left center for two more runs and
a 6-2 lead
Holding a 6-3 edgr. Altamonte
put the game away In the sixth.
Schou. C hris Plelcon es and
Spolski walked In fill the sucks.
Robison then drilled a deep fly to
to right center which cleared the
fence for hts grand alam.

Desigued and engineered lor a
smooth ride and long mileage
LUesaver XLM whitewall
|
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GENERAL
ADMISSION

Late Error Downs O-Twlns
GREENVILLE. S C. — An error by third baseman Greg
Morehardt enabled Tom m y Thompson to score the
winning run In the eighth Inning Tuesday night as the
Greenville Braves slipped past the Orlando Twins. 4-3. In
Southern League action.
Orlando Jumped out to a 2-0 lead In the top of the first
but the Braves tied 11 at 2-2 In the bottom half of the second
on Jeff Ransom's two-run homer.
Mark Davidson gave the O-Twlns a 3-2 lead with a solo
homer In the fifth frame, his 11th of the season.
Greenville's Randy Ingle slammed a solo shot In the
seventh to retie the score. 3-3.

i s e

Pellarin Scoops Orioles
Past West Volusia, 16-9

mrow- in* ■ pn

Parker, Lucas Carry Astros

R

Wednesday. June I f , I f t l —fA

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X t e f t lV T O O A Y ■ I W t T M T

Elsgsnl Dining In our Chlsl Oscsola Tsrracs Clubhouts
For Dinner Rsssrvationa Call: #99-4510
mMt-4ro*wnv€&gt;*vo cmcm

M

|CHOICE
i

SANtOKtl

L

�toA-Evening Herald. Sanford, FI Wadnavday, June it, IttJ

B u lle ts S p e a r
7 -7 L io n K i l l e r

BEST PRICES
BEST SERVICE
TRY US!

LANtXJVER. Md. IUPII - The
W a sh in gton B u lle ts took a
toweling chanee In Tuesday's
draft, selecting a 7-foot-7 former
Sudanese trib esm a n named asked the first thing Washington
Manu Ie Bol. who once killed a will do with the Sudanese giant
with stork lik e legs, did not
Hun with a spear
Bol will bring a rail like 195- hesitate la saying: “ Feed h im "
But Shue added. “ We consid­
pound frame and extrem ely
limited baskrtball experience to ered ibis to he absolutely no
the Billie is Bol played Just one gam ble at all. He's a great
year at Division II Bridgeport project.'*
Shue said Bol has a shaky shot
(Conn.) University and Is now
playing In Ihe new United Stairs and limited court savvy — but Is
B asketb all L e a g u e 's Rhode a “ tremendous'' shot blocker.
Asked by an NBA scout about
Island (lulls.
If be makes Ihe Washington Dot's heart on the court, his
team, the former tribesman and agen t. Boston law yer Frank
row herd will become the tallest Catapuno. said, “ Look the kid
killed a lion with a spear. Who
player evrr to play In the NBA
General Manager Boh Kerry, else on your team did that?"
Bol — with tjursllonablc foot
who said Hoi's legs are sklnnlrr
than the grneral monger's arms, speed, an awkwurd gall, limited
nonlhrlrxx added: “ The upside lumping ability and rough hoop
skills — Is a classic project. Shue
Is If hr ran pick up some weight
he's got U chance to to- the best said. •'Everything Just looks so
bad. But lie dries things that are
shot blocker who ever lived."
Bullets' roach Gene Shue, good."

NBA

N B A D ra ft
N BA OrJM
U M M P in * lnl*rn*lwt**l
iT a im br taaml
Atlanta Maw**
I. Jon Konctk, c. Voulharn Mathoditt t.
I or orwo Chart** t. North Carotin* Hot* I.
W drlc Tonay, g, Dayton 4. Arvldat Vabonit,
t. Vovi«l Union, John 0*111*. g. Buigor* ),
Lorry Hampton, g. Falrlolgl* O ld)Inton I,
tony Ouckatt g, L a lt f t H t t. Bob Forry J r ,
g. Harvard
Bolton Cotta l
I. tom Vlmonl. g. Michigan Vf#l# 1. Andr*
Ualtlo. g Loyolo t ill I. 4. Cliff Webber. t.
lib e rty Baptltt &gt;. Albart Built, I. L o U llt t.
Ma'ph law it, t. l*V*ll* 7. Ch rlt Bomtay. I,
Rutgtr*
Chlcaga Built
I, Kailh I t* t, M am p h li Viola J. Xan
John ton. I, Michigan Slata. A iK&gt;r*y Sharrod.
g . W ic h ita V io la . A d r ia n B ra n c h , t.
M a ryla n d
J. Ml** Brown. I c. Gaorg*
Wothlnglon 4. Craig Board t Vamlord I,
Raid Catty*, g. Houtton A, Don Mooghar, I,
Ouk# 7, Jail Ad* In*, g, M ary land
O ty tla n d Caradtrs
I, Chariot Oat lay. t, Virginia Union I.
Calvin Ounran g. Virginia Commonwealth,
John Wllliom i. I. tulano J. Harb Johnion, (.
Tut** 4. Mar* Davit g. Old Dominion I,
Gunther Buanto, c. Watt Gormany 4. Ricky
John ton. g. minor* Slata 7. Burt P#lor*on. g.
North Carolina
Dallai Mavarlrkl
t. Datlof Vlhrompl, g I. Wathington, Blit
Warming Ion, (. VI John’*, IJna Blab, c,
Indiana I. Mark Array f. O ral Hobart* ).
Laonard Allan, c. Von Drago Viola. Harold
Pooling g. Vania Clar* 4. Hubbo Jonkino, g.
Tata* T*rh 1, tommy D ovlt. g. Mlnnatolo
0. Car lion Cougar, g, Tara* 7, Ed Catching*,
t Narada Lat Vagal
Oanrar Nwggtlt
I Blair Ratmutton, t . Or agon, ), Barry
Vtoront. g. Iowa Vial* 4, Fata William*, t,
Arlran* I. Konny Brown, g T a ia t ASM (.
Jua Cor rabino. I, H arvard 7. ( ddlo fmlth. t.
Arizona
Oatratt Plitoat
I. Joa Oumoti. g M iN a a w Vlata Andro
Good*. C. Norlhwaitarn, Rlthta Jobnoon, I.
Evantvillo 4, Spud Wktrb. g North Carol in*
Mai* t. Ml** Lahm. c. M urray Viola 0.
Vinton! Gila*. I, E a tltrn Michigan 7. Prank
Jama*, g I. Narada l o t Vagat
Ooldan vial* W trrM fl
I. Chrlt Molim g, VI John'* J, Bobby L m
H urt, t. Alabama ). Brad Wright, c. U C LA 4.
L u*t*r Goodwin, g. Tara* E l Pato 1. Grog
Cavarrar I, Mittourl A. Garold Croiby. g
Gaorgla 7. Eric Boyd, g North Carolina
AST
Heutton Kackalt
I, Vlara H arm , g Tulta 1. Vam Milt trail, I.
M ortar. Mkhoal Payna, c. Iowa a. Mkhoal
Brook*, g. Tanratio* t. Vam Poltor. I. Oral
Robort* I, Don Turnoy. I. M arthall
Indiana Poratt
I Woyman Titdoio. I. Oklahoma 1, BUI
M artin t. Goorgalown, }. Dwayna Mr Clam
1. Vtllanov* |. Kanny Patlaraon. g DaPaul
4 Vinca Hamilton, g Clarnaon I, Kelvin
Johnaon. g. HKhmond, Ivon Danloll. tc ,
lilln qlt Chicago 0, Vlo Primu*, g. Botlon
( oltoga 7. Jail Aero*. I, O ral Robort*
la* Angaia* (lipport
I Bonolt Btniamln. c. Creighton J Anlcat
Lavodram *. I, Houtlon Baptltt 4. Jim
Dalrwt I. Ar lion* Vial* t, Wayn* Carlandar,
I Voulharn Cal 0, M alcolm Thorna*. g.
M ittourl 7 Gary Maioncon. I. U C LA
Lot Angtlat lakart
I. A C Grtan, I, Or agon Vial* 4. Dollar
V h o u ta
g Soulh A la b a m a
t. T im e
Vaaralainan, c. Brigham Young * Tony
Naal I, foliar tori Viol* 7. Kailh Clopllckl.
William 1 Mar y
Mrlwavka* B n t i
I, Javry Raynoldt, I. Loultiana Vial* I.
Pugana M i Dow* 11 I Florid a
4. Cetall
McQuaan I «. North Carolina Vial* I, Ray
might, t c. Provldanca * Quentin Andarton
I !*•** Toih 7, Mario Uto, g Amancon
Internal ton*!
Haw Jar toy hall
I
Vvon Jotaph. I c
G e o rg ia Tarti,
tarnando Marlin, I Martnd Vpain I Nigal
Miguol g, UCIA V Kally Blam* Ic. South
Alabama t Goorg* Alm onai g Voulhwatl
LawlHan* r, Gary Mr Lain g, Vlllaneya
Now Vaak Knrrtl
I. Patrick (am g. c, Gaorgatown I Garold
Wilkin* g lannaataa Chalianoega «. Frad
Catiaid g E a t lt m M ichigan
S, M it t
Vthlagal t. Virginia Cammonwaeitti t, Kanl
Lockhart g l a i a t t i P a t o I, Kan Barium.
», Lor noil
Philadalahr* Itart
I. Tarry Cai'adg* I South Alabama L
Grog Stokat I low* Volt* Winter*. g I.
Br*di*y
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4,
Dom e* Got*v*. I. T a ia t Van Antonie S. Call
Wright g loulfwrn M alhod'tl A Dory*
L lo y d
t D rat*
7, Jay* Androw l. g
But knoll
P l w M i Sun*
I. Ed Pinckney. I, Vlllanov* 1. Nick Vane*,
c. Santa Clara 1 Jerry Evaratt. g. Lamar A
Gratrgar Mail y Tampi* I. Shawn Campball.
c. Wabar VlaN * Chortot R*yna g Tompia
7 Goorg IGtovckav. Bulgaria
Par Hand Trail Blatart
I, Tarry Porlar. g. Wltconam Vltvan*
Pomt |. Mik* Vmrok c. Conitlua
Gaorg*
Monigomor f I. Illlnotl i. P o n y Yaung, g I.
Virginia Toth 4 Joa Atklnaon. I. Oklahoma
Vlato 1 Jama* Andortan. g Union IXy.l A
C urtu Moor a. g Nobratka 7. AAark Ow*n. g.
Col toga o« Idaho
Vacramoato King*
I, Jo* Klain* c. Arkantot 1 Chariot
BradtoY. g South Florid*. M nhaal Adam* g
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4 .9 9

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IMPORTED
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KAH LUA

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V .V .O . SCOTCH

MARCH OF DIMES
CHARITY COCKTAIL HOUR
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 19.
4 P.M. TIL 6 PM. LOUNGE
REGISTERS LOCKED.
ALL SALES DONATED

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Evening Harald, Sanford, FI. Wednesday, June It. IWS-1B

Happy Birthday Jam es ...
A n Apple
A Day...
Frances

Library-Museum To Open Exhibit Honoring Bird Lover
T h e H e n r y S. S a n fo r d
Library-Museum Is honoring the
200th birthday anniversary o f
the French-bom naturalist John
James Audubon with an exhibit
titled. "Birds o f a Feather.'*
T h e e x h ib it Is a t r ib u t e
Audubon, whose love of birds
led him to spend a lifetim e
tracing their habits and m igra­
tion patterns, not only In his
native France, hut the world
ovef. He followed I he flight o f the
com m on sparrow throughout
the streets and lofts of London;
the e x o tic tropical birds o f
wildest Africa In their native
habitat along the Nile and the
f r a g i l e b e a u ty : an d th e
mysterious endurance o f the
tiny Hummingbird In It's long
and hazardous migrations across
mountains, deserts and oceans

Even the lowly crow, with Its
Intricate plummage. challenged
the talent and artistic Imagina­
tion of Audubon. As an artist, his
beautifully detailed paintings o f
every species In the bird familybrought us closer to one o f
nature's most creative efforts
T h e H e n r y S. S a n f o r d
Library-Museum Is located at
Fort Mellon Park along Lake
Monroe The park Is a feeding
ground for the more or lews
“ permanent guests," such as the
ducks, egrets, geese, gulls, and
an occasional anhlnga or water
turkey, which have adopted
Lake Carola as their home Local
bird lovers, responding to the
needs of these graceful and
friendly creatures, have chosen
late afternoon us their feeding
time, making It a festive part o f
the day. This section of the park

DEAR A B B Y : I thought that
surely the school bus case was
closed, but now 1 feel compelled
to r e s p o n d to " S a d d e n e d
Psych ologist." who took the
parents to task for making their
ft- and 11-year-old sons walk 14
miles a day lo and from school
alter they had been kicked o ff
the school bus for misconduct.
Obviously "Saddened" was
city-born and never held a Job
that required physical labor or
overtim e What difference Is
there In walking seven miles to
school as punishment and get­
ting up before dawn every day to
do farm chores? Pm sure the
farm kids o f our country arc slid
doing some of the same things I
did while growing up on a farm
— I fed the chickens (all 3,000 of
I hem), milked rows and cut
broccoli In the Reid for market
before sunrise.
And how about the thousands
of kids who are up before dawn
d e live rin g newspapers, then
come home for breakfast before
going tu school?
"Saddened" felt that a IO-hour
day was out o f line. Many young
people today are so Involved In

Dear
Abby
sports, they Spend al least four
hours outside their school day.
either practicing or participating
ill one sport or another. This
requ ires m ore en ergy than
walking 14 miles a day — and
ll‘s not for only five days. It’s for
months and years
I wonder how "Saddened"
thinks high school and college
students who also happen to
hold down full-time Jobs manage
lo make It?
N E LL IN L O U IS V IL L E . KY.
D EAR N E L L : If "Saddened"

saw my mall, he’d lie sadder
still. Head on:
D E A R A B B Y t This Is for
"Saddened Psychologist." who
sent you a telegram saying the
parents who made their kids
walk 14 miles to school and back

LEOERLE

500 mg

400I.U.

E
$179
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■ 100

V CENTRUM
Q
Qc
v a v i®

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VITAMIN

j

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH FOR VITAMINS?
co oeo*

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OIL CAPS

BRAN FIBER
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*,$199

RUO»1U N»

seem s lo lx- a natural flv-way
an d the changing seasons finds
th e park host to n u m e ro u s
tra n s ie n ts w h o b r in g color,
m ovem ent and son g to the tall
palm s and statrly m agnolia trees
w hich grace the library-m useum
grounds
It seems a natural transition lo
m ove from the gath erin g of birds
at the park to the rngr-llke
atmosphere of the exhibit room
In the museum w h ere Itfe-stzed
studies of colorful b ird s are on

B a llin g e r , of
N o la n Road,

Sanford,

s h o w s o ff a
batch of her
h o m e grown
Israeli apples
The strain of
a p p l e s are
m ad e to grow
in t r o p i c a l
c lim a te s, she
said, and can
s u r v i v e cold
te m p e ra tu re s

The free exhibit is scheduled
to open Sunday at 2 p.m The
public ts invited and members of
the historical preservation soci­
ety. the Audubon Society and
bird watchers tn general are
encouraged in aiienil. Light re­
freshments will lie served Ms
R ich a rd son . Patrick B ardin.
Grace O'llricn, Orlan Walker and
Ruth Swlnney arr hostesses for
the event The exhibit will con­
tinue during the wrrk. from 2-5
p m on Wednesday. Thursday.
Friday and next Sunday

w

cfc

■

37.5 mg

10000 IU

IRON

VITAMIN A

rr ao g c
■32.; ft*

&lt;1

I I M I I &gt;»*•

■

were guilty of child abuse
I'm 64. and when I was a kid.
not only did I walk 12 miles lo
school and back. I grew iqi on a
farm and had lo milk the cows
(by hand yell) before l went lo
school And when I got home 1
had tn milk our cows again and
do all sorts of chores before
supper. (N oTV In those days I
America Is the only country In
the world where mothers will
drive their kids lo the YMC’A so
they can get some exercise

JU N E 2 0 - 2 1 - 22

JE R R Y Z.

H ere *
another letter from a kid who
walked
D E A R ABB Y: I thought you
might want to hear from some­
one on the side of the parents
who made their kids walk lo
school.
I lived a mile from school, My
mother drove, but she didn't
drive me. She Insisted that I
walk. My friends' mothers drove
them and I thought m y mother
was being mean by making me
walk, so I asked her why ahr
didn't drive me lo school. She
put her amis around m e and
said. " If 1drive you. how will you
leant, and have time to think?
Walk, and leant, dear."
Well. I walked, und learned to
love the smell ol the rain In the
air and the feel ol It on m y face. I
learned Ihc feeling o f snow
crunching under m y feel I did a
lot o f thinking while I walked ll
helped me to think things out
Instead of making quick de­
risions I also met some nice
people on the way The lady who
gave me a flower ior my niuthrr
from her garden. Ihc old man
who was always w alling by Ills
mailbox lor a lellrr or a card
from his children (None came,
but cards for every special oc­
casion did come front m e.I
I am 17 now. and 1 sill! walk
w henever I can because I enjoy
II. My mother w as right I
learned a lot bv walking.
OLAD I W A L K E D
DEAR

TH URSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY

JERRY:

2 5 %O F F

h

D R E S S E S , S L A C K S , SH O R TS
TO P S, SW IM SU ITS, LIN G ER IE
AND S H O E S
(Excluding Colognes, Fall Fashions &amp; Shoes)

SH O P EA R LY FO R
B E S T S E L E C T IO N S

//

All Sales Final
Cash - Check
VISA • MasterCard

;\

w

116 W. F ir s t S t.
Ph. 323-4132
Downtown S a n fo rd

Italian Ice
Cream To Lush,
Soft To Scoop

Lola D y cu s • O w n er

i GRAPEFRUIT
DIET

surgery

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IN WEST BEND. W IS.

ROME (UI’II — Ask for u single
scoop of chocolate Ice cream at a
local "gelaterla" and no matter
how good your Italian accent,
you'll be branded u foreigner.
Italian Ice cream Is loo lush,
WITH GLUCOMANNAN
loo soft, loo velvety rich to form
a neat little golf ball atop a cone
Instead. It Is sla th ered and
Lo***4
»• A iMMCMPi 'I
m ounded Into place with a
UKF4
U M MM * * p O tuCl
plump metal paddle.
p*er *•&gt;«*« to** • *•wpwxj a* rot*
And nobody orders a single
bud* •&gt;!• M U M
**
u*
flavor — Ihe unwritten rule
requires three, with or without a
ARE YOU PAYIN6 TOO MUCH FOR FOODS A COSMETICS? d o llo p o f " p a n n a , " fre sh
whipped cream, to cap It off.
MO SALT .D M 0
oust
* * G e la to * ' (p r o n o u n c e d
’ -T U N A
Jell-ah'-toe) Italian style ranges
RAISINS
from frozen egg custards to
fru ity, eggtess cream s, from
frult-fllled. milkless sherbets to
IIJN^
~
........... .
big crunchy flakes o f flavored
Ice.
j BRAND'S i U M U X
Except for being cold. It has
D in e
l
mu mn
—
1
little In common with Its U.S
CSKA!
counterparts.
No cellulose gum. No calcium
sulfate. No polysorbate 80. No
■ COu m H
carrageenan. No hydrogenated
mhuhs
W
H
O
If
WNIAT
ALOE VERA
vegetable oil.
FRUIT
"American Ice cream la made
with big industrial machines."
said Nazzareno G lo llttl, the
30-year-old owner o f Rome's
nr—
i ■m
i
-------- - ‘ —
!
IlhAtl f M I
f i n u i f IU
best-known Ice cream shop.
m o t w e r tom o r t o u e o s t u w r f f o r o o w or i . c m . im p e iw &gt; .«u t
"T h e re 's not enough air Inside
them.
© General Nutrition Centers
"S o they're hard, loo hard, like
utUKwn aiu
t h is ." he said., rap p in g his
W (RMir&gt;UUA 323.9975
m«ni &gt;q« am ^ knuckles on a desk

S 4 9 ',&gt;

e

Walk Not Child Abuse

Making

mu

Even the lo w ly cro w ,
w ith its in trica te
plum m age, ch a lle n g e d
the talent an d a rtistic
im agination of A udubon.

display.
The exhibit cases are filled
with porcelain birds, many from
the collection of Rarr Birds." by
Nan. There Is also a special
display of song birds from the
collection of Dr. Genevieve Rich­
ardson. who designed the exhib­
it with careful consideration for
Audubon

I

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�BLONDIE

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28—Evening Herald. Ian ford, FI. Wsdnas4*r, Jons 1*. I H i

THE BORN LOSER

by Art Sanaom

ARCHIE
FREO; pO YOU ITEMCA1BER
»TH6 AP VtXJ ANSSVEREt?
'THAT SPECIFICAIIVSAIP
HO C/HiftMAN
W ill C A L L f

by Howl* Schneider

EEK A MEEK

H fS JW T WAtTlIOG TD MEET

| E £ K K X S U T WAUT

CMiOVL OF EOUW. WRKWJG.

5

TO G£T M A P P E D .,.

a

&lt;JD7HEV CAW HAVE
SLMMir COWflRUXE

td h im self ...

Don't Worry, Keloid Scar
Won't Turn Into Cancer
DEAR DR. GOTT - Last year I
rut m y arm badly and got a
keloid scar. My doctor aaya I
shouldn't bother to have It
removed, but my friend says It
w ill turn Into cancer. What
should I do?
DEAR READER - Make new
friends — particularly among
those who are more medically
knowledgeable, perhaps some*
one who reads and enjoys this
column.
Keloids are simply the skin's
o v e r r e a c t lo n to a w o u n d .
Because they are Just scar tissue,
they will not turn Into career.
Some skin cancers can resemble
keloids, but If you truly have a
keloid. It will cause you no
harm.
S o m e p eop le seem to be
keloid-form ers; black people
especially have I his tendency.
Obviously, removing a keloid
may mean that another keloid
will grow at the site from which
the first was excised. This can be
a repetitive and ongoing pro­
blem. Nonetheless, If your keloid
Is In a conspicuous place or Is
cosm etically embarrassing, a
good plastic surgeon may be
able to work wonders.
DEAR DR. GOTT — I do no!
have a uterus and 1 lake Prrrnarln 0.625. There Is no history
of breast cancer In my family. I
am In my 60s. I read that this
hormone should be taken dally
unless It Is used after meno­
pause,
DEAR READER - I am con­
fused by part of your question.
If you have a valid reason for
taking estrogen, you should
have no Increased risk of cancer
because, at hysterectomy, your
uterus was removed. I hope the
surgeon removed your cervix,
too. because that structure,
located at the uterine opening,
can undergo malignant change.
Nevertheless, many women were
given hormone pills years ago
and have continued to lake them
for Inconsequential reasons.
If 1 were you, I'd stop taking
the Preinarln and see what
happens.
D E A R D R . G O T T — My
0-year-old son gets bloody noses
very frequently, lie seems to get

them for no reason at all. and
sometimes he really bleeds a lot.
Can you explain this?
from healing. T ry neosynephrlne
nose spray (one-quaner percent!
three limes a day for about a
week, no m ore.
Send your questions to Dr.
Gott at P.O. B ox 91428. Cleve­
land. Ohio 44101.

DEAR READER — Your son
may have a tiny superficial
artery Iri the lining of his nostril
that bleeds when Irritated. This
can result from allergies, nosepicking. or a variety of factors
that prevent the b loo d vessel
ACROSS
I Mow
5 Gloom
9 Suportotivs out-

fu
12 Troptcsl
group*
13 Aboveboard
14 Sheep
18 Fsney
17 F M
II Japan*** com
19 Cutty tens*
20 Biblical land
22 Rathar than

(post)
23 Tokyo'• format
nama
24 Flowari
27 Faudal outfit*
32 Vmscovarad
34 So |Scot)
35 Company (ft.
abbr |
36 Poetic
contraction
37 Saa bird
39 Call
41 Christmas
44 Something
ramarkabJs
45 Spy group
|*bbr.|
46 Nigartan city
48 Orssk region
SI last queon of
Spam
62 Decline
55 102. Roman
56 Fanes opening
59 £«th santa

Answer to Previous Purha

3 Orlaiportar
4 Pillage
5 Small bit of
food
6 Arrow poison
7 Soak flea
8 Up to tht lag
joints (comp
wd|
9 Ghostly

□ B C D

c o n

10 Bsrwr
11 Wigwam
16 Over (poet)
21 Mild oath, in
Britain
22 Compass point
23 2*s Zsa't sister
24 Person *
manner
25 Part of the aye
26 Com factory
28 Doesn’t s«ist
leontl
29 Holy image
30 One |Gar |
31 Fortuneteller
1

2

1

21

IB

4

49 French river
50 Nibbles

33 Goa* off path
38 Small inlet
40 Hand
implement
42 Hare (Fr)
43 Wanted {at I
47 German article
48 Coder

51 Scottish Gaelic
82 Emerald Isle

53 Mad* t*Mio
54 Mr*. Truman

57 Utility
58 Mala eat
10

[

11
IB
IB

M
11
IB

It

is

Isbbr.J
60
61
62
63
64

Existence (let)
Raw materials
legal mattar
Sow
AJWy ol
slats**

DOWN
1 French woman
lebbt.)
2 River In the
Congo

48

4#

BO

1

lift
IB
•1

(«| 1* • ! b , N I A

I-

l)K

WIN AT BRIDGE
By Jsm es Jacoby
The Htundard lead from a plain
■mlt lucking a sequence ban from
time Immemorial been fourthbeat. There la a strong argument
that thin lead nhould not be uned
agaln.nt a nlain contract. Not
unlng a fourth-bent lead should
make II morr difficult for de­
clarer to count the hand. Of
course the name difficulty would
exist for the lender'* partner.
Declarer succeeded on today's
deal because the defenders were
using fourth-best leads. South
won the ace of diamonds and
drew two rounds of trump end­
ing In tils hand.
He r u ffe d u d ia m o n d In
dummy, played a low spade
back to his ace. cashed the spude
Jack, and overtook the spade 10
w ith d u m m y 's queen. East
followed to nil three spades.
If the opening lead o f the
diamond three was from four or

five diamonds, then East could
not have more than two clubs.
Suiting his action to his think­
ing. declarer plnyed the ace and
king of clubs, and then exited
wlih a trump which East had to
win. Stripped o f all black cards
and of trump, hapless East now
had to play a diamond, enabling
declarer to trump In his hand
while discarding dummy's lone
remaining club.
If defenders' leads against
slams were random rather than
fourth-best, declarer might think
that West could have had six or
even seven diamonds originally.
Before cashing ihr high dubs,
declarer mlghl then play to place
East on lead for a possible end
play In clubs. Declarer did well
on the actual drat, but he was
helped by knowing that the
opponents* leads were tradi­
tional and therefore predictable

NORTH
♦ K y 72

*-!*■»»

♦ A 10 4 J 4

♦ 4
♦ K 105
EAST

WEST
♦ »M
VI

♦ 153

o g « 7 i2
♦ q jt )

V y jg
♦ K J lo e i
♦ 61
SOUTH
♦ A J 10
V K 7 32
0 A I
♦ A 9I 4

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer South
Wait North East

Soalk
I NT

Pass
Pats
Pats
Pass

:♦
4 NT
4*

Past
Past
Past

IV
&amp;♦
Pais

Opening lead ♦.!

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...

' W ‘V

YO UR B IR TH D A Y
JUNE 20. 1985
Recognition
and rrwards long
I
/ cN o W --overdue will start coming your
way In the year ahead. Don't
vve c a n H A V f
write off projects or ventures In
which you've Invested consider­
A TAX" CUT
able time.
O E M IN I (May 2 1-June 20|
u ser s f e e
Measure the severity o f your
statements today so that you say
nothing harsh tiuil could Irritate
I t
your listener Don't Irave a bad
Impression Know where to look
by Jim Davit lor romance and you'll find It.
rhe Astro-Graph Matchmaker
set instantly reveals which signs
are romantically perfect for you.
Mall 82 to Astro-Graph. Box 489.
Radio City Station. New York.
NY 10019.
C AN C ER (June 21-July 221 Be
doubly wary In your commercial
dealings toduy mi ihal you don't
g el shortchanged. C arefu lly
scrutinize merchandise before

COUNCIL OF
IrF^^ECONOM IC ADVISERS

v h r-

II

'

i- t

m

M il

Till

_Cf®&lt;

;

a*

ArAi — w m - i

GARFIELD

making a purchase.
LEO (July 23 Aug. 22&gt; Events
mlghl mu go as smoolhly lor you
as you hope today, but try not to
make your displeasure too e v i­
dent. Chuckle. even If It hurts.
V1ROO I Aug 23-Sept. 221
Today don't ressurrect an old,
volatile Issue on which you and a
(rle n d h a v e n e v e r a g r e e d .
N oth in g w ill be gain ed by
reopening wounds.
L IB R A (Sept 23-Ocl. 23) This
Is not a good day for you to get
Iik) Involved with blends buslnesswlse. Maintain a divider
between your mic IuI and com ­
mercial Interests.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
While you'll be very capable
today, ypu may be tempted to
set more objectives than time or
circumstances permit you to
attain . T h is could lead lo
frustration.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov 23 Dec.
211 Allow friends the opportuni­
ty to think (or themselves today,
even tf you feel your Ideas are
superior. Arrogance breeds o p ­
position.

C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) In an area where you share a
vested Interest with another, an
old problem may make lls pre­
sence fell again Unlay. Treat this
situation tactfully.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20 Feb 19)
D ec isio n s p r e d ic a te d upon
spiteful motives or the desire to
get even wtlh someone you feel
has wronged you could have a
IxKinirning cfTect. Be forgiving.
PISCES (Feb. 20 March 20) It
may be your lot today to clear up
several distasteful chores. Don't
compound your discomfort by
upproachlng this work with a
negative altitude
A R IE S (March 21-April 19)
Investment propositions must be
carefully screened. Do nothing
Impulsively because something
tliat looks good on the surface
may be Just a facade.
TAU RU S (April 2DMay 20)
Today's pressures are likely to
came from family related mat­
ters. They can be considerably
lessened If you're tolerant. Keep
your Irmper In cheek.

ANNIE
K. Ryan

TUMBLEW EEDS
W*

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POTT Puvt ON 6mg&gt;185 TOO MUCH TIMff IN
ft/ YOLTRC new TO
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TONIGHT'S TV
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630

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7 0 JCOPAAOY
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FORT On l*» «Jnd tannday. MuriM
M co m ri th* • pragnam
« (»| TME HEART OF THE DRA­
GON An M U M M c n of O w n
total p m m r n and rattrantt
Wougfi a c a n itudy of a " * 0*t#g
comma*. ■ rota m a dnorca u h

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C l It) MARRY DAYS AGJUN
7:05
12 SANTORO ANO SON
7:30
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e n t e r ta in m e n t to n w m t

) O WHEEL Or PORTUNE
j O
S100 000 NAME THAT
TUNE
I t (Ml BENSON
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8

7:3 5
( I BASEBALL Houafon Aatroa at
Atlanta Brtraa
800
a
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HOHWAY TO HEAVEN
Jontmtn and Mark attampt to nap
• coaaga bttt«ft*a t i v omreoma
baann and acadamc dm cunm |R|

1O
1

A WOMAN OP SUBSTANCE
0*ar Wa ytarv Emma ■ buanau
frowt to ampva propernont and
bftar itNCfi tnaf ana tmda Nappmaaa
ntfi tha daafang Paul McO« IBarry
Boatmctl Finally har
agamat wa faatayt
and har potman at matriarch raM*mt ntact (Part I of J)
0 O f A U OUT Cert I
na» bodyguard for ona of tha
Wont • aaftrvait woman an] tar^t
t aanaa of dangaroua c f M m n
p ig
41 (Ml DALLAS
3 ) (I0| A CELEBRATION FOR
HANDEL W O BACH Tony AanOM
hottt tf«t tnbufa to tha two Garman
ccmpoaart on tha 100th annwarbary of Waa bath Maturing par
tormancaa at tha Penrteyhrarte
Acadamy of tha Fwa A n t mcNdag
Bach a Uagraheat m D Mayor and a
tuna horn Mandat a "Royal Flraaorta MualC~
CD |t) MOVIE How To Rica Up
Ona llt r t l Ftad McCarmn. Daw
Arnai Jr A amaa town boy uaaa hw
amaa and a tapa tacordar to ba­
con* If* world a graataal lotar ''
900
o 3 ) FACTS OF L F E Tool* and
Nataaa art at odda whan Nataaa
aiprataaa har honaat opwaan of
Toot* a entry at a wrthng centaal
W O
E D o DYNASTY Iritarnational photogrN/*r lady Aahwy u.lchaa |Aa
NaacOraw) aa* har aryRita an R W t

KtyWt and »»« « *at Amanda M
nay a * tf bom O n l "13
(U ) O U N CE
(10) MARK RUSSELL Tf*b*w -

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come m

4:30
C L O W O V * Baaan' O M l i Tam
O P O M fO O A

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THURSDAY

1000
O 3D ST ILSCWHCRC A aaridtim oui pftyvean nbti M old
•nand AuacMandar and aaaaa a i d
r*T doner lor an Ahxan boy Crag
and Efvacn fry to ramoia an aipon a bvAat bom a x u d a d aoman
IR)
( L O HOTEL Polar a ramon ntfi

500
OS) NEWS
A U M THE FAMS.Y (MONWEO. FRR

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5:10
Q WORLD AT LARQE (THU)
5:30
O ® THO WEEK N COUNTRY
M USC (
® I S COUNTRY (TUE-DV)
BOB NEWHART

!

600
I &lt;T NBC NEWS AT SLMROE
, A MORfdNQ STRETCH
) O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
. (M) OOOO DAT!

10.20

10:30
&lt;U OSI BOB NEWHART

1(B) JM BARKER
6:30

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I O
C M EARLY MORNING
wa
0 O ABC NEWS THO MORNMQ

(MlPOREYt

11.-00
0 3 ) 3 ) 0 7 O NEWS
1108) BENNY MRL
tp Itot DAVE ALIEN AT LARGE
a IB) HOGAN S HEROES

euntm c

6:45
&gt;O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
1110) A M WEATHER

11:30
O '3) TONIGHT Mott Jonrmy Car-

8

7.00
TOOAY
CBS MORNMO NEWS
0 0 O 0 MORNMQ AM( WCA

TAXI

ABC NEWS WOHTUNE
(M l C H C O ANO THE MAN
IS) HOGAN'S HEROES

1

1200
3 ) O NaGMT HEAT OBnan and
G*mbor* nrattigata thraa brutal
madara that ha.a tan orpad tha
city (R)
O THE SAINT
(IS)RHOOA
(t) MOVIE For Ma And My Oaf
I tbaii Judy Garland Oar* *aay

2

12:30
0 3 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LfTTERMAN SchadMad PN*r aaptar* contaal w n w t Mmmaaar
Jonn Watert
HI (M| I LOVE LUCY
12:50
Q
MOVt* B O A " (Ibttl Ed­
mond O B r* n Rama* BnHon

1:00
d ; o aaovw Scudda H00&gt;Scud
daHayi (tb4t) Jur* H am . Lon
1t (M) c h i l d r e n
ANO DEATH

3 1O M o v e thght Ot Tha Claw '
Iltd?) Roban Lanwng Naata Tal­
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2 :3 0
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(M)OUNSMOHE
2 :4 0
12 MOVIE Up Tha Down Slaacaaa (IMF) Sandy Omaa. Itaan
ttact an
2 :5 0
0
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It*SSl ForrwM Tuckar Barbara Bntlan
3 .3 0
g i (M l FAM0.V AFFAIR

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110) FARM DAT
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7:15
(M| A M WEATHER

7:30
(Tt (M) TOM ANO JERRY
C :* " !S E S A M E STREET(R)g
( I (t) INSPECTOR QADOET

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12 I DREAM OF JEANNE

8:35
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BARNAAT JONC1
[ (M l WALTONS ■
t i w t (R)(
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B 31 LOVE CONNECTION
d lf lG O O E T

n t s a l e or t h e c e n t u r y
T f lf w a im u o
( t '3| H -1 c o n t a c t (R ig
(T (») NEW O C R VAN DYKE
SHOW

a

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a

One month ago. C asselberry
resident Harry Wucst got a new
lease on life.
At 40. Harry w as suffering
wi t h a de b i l i t a t i ng d is e a s e ,
causin g his heart m uscles to
11:30
gradually deteriorate. He w as
dying a slow. Inevitable death
o RYAN'S MORE
until an Atlanta family gave him
)|IO|FLORKSASTYL«
a "secon d chance" at life.
AFTERNOON
W ith a heart donation. H arry
w-as able to have the transplant
12.00
s u r g e r y h e so d e s p e r a t e l y
) IMOOAT
needed to survive.
10 O NEWS
W O F L -T V , channel 35. and
[ (1$) BEWITCHED
|t0) NATURE OP THMGS W D B O radio In Orlando w ant to
(MOtfl
give thousands of others thetr
0 ) 1101 MASTERPIECE THEATRE
“ second chance" at life. In a
011)
i n (W) MY8TERYI (WEDl
cooperative com m unity effort,
(C ItO) NOVA (THU)
ihe tw o will Join forces with
0 (Ml THE HEART OP THE ORA
OGN (FRO
F lorida H osp ital's O rg a n
OdlUANNU
T r a n s p l a n t P r o g r a m to e n ­
12^)5
co u rage Central Florida re s i­
12 UTTLE HOUSE ON THE PRA*.
dents to give the gift of love
NE
through organ donation.
1230
The following areas have been
)SEARCHFOR TOMORROW
YOUNG ANO THE RESTchosen a s designated sites for
LESS
con cern ed Individuals to get
0 LOVING
additional Information and
(Ml BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
d o n o r c a r d s : Qua l i t y Out l et
1:00
Center. Orlando. 'June 22. 10
I T DAYS OF OUR LIVES
) U ALL MY CHILDREN
a m .-2 p m.: Lake Square Mall.
! (SSI OCX VAN DYKE
Leesburg. June 29. 10 a m .-2
|(MlUOV« (MON. THU)
(Ml GREAT RAILWAY JOUR­ p.m.; and Merritt S qu are Mall,
NEYS OFTHE WORLD(WED)
Merritt Island. July 6. 10 a m .-2
0 (Ml FLORIDA HOME GROWN
pm .
(FRO
T h e C en tral Florida D on or
a m m o vie
Drive w a s Inspired by a one hour
1:05
public service special "S e c o n d
MOTE (MON. WED-FRH
NBA DRAFT(TUE)
C h a n c e " which aired on W O F L
1:30
on J u n r 14 and 16
3) o AS THE WORLD TURNS
Although miraculous
1J (Ml OOMER RYLE
tC (Ml MAGIC OF PAJNTMQ advances have been m ade in
KEEPSAKES (TTY)
organ transplant research and
surgery. 97.000 people still die
200
ANOTHER WORLD
each year that could tie saved
ONE LIFE TO UVE
through organ donation.
[ (Ml AHOY GRIFFITH
W O F L and W D B O firmly
) 110|ALOHA CHMA (WEDl
) 1101UNDER BAR. (THU)
believe public aw urrn ess and
)(t0) JOTOF PAIHTWtQ (FRO
personal commitment can alle­
2 :3 0
viate these critical shortages nnd
3) O CAPITOL
oiler those In need a "se c o n d
D 7S|OREAT SPACE COASTER
ch an ce" at life.
0 1101MNOVATION |MON)
0 (Ml calligraphy with ken
As H arry W uesi says o f those
BROWN (TUt)
0 (Ml MAGIC OF OIL PAJNTPtG who helped give him new life,
"M y feelings toward Ihem will
§ n
0 (Ml UAGC OP WATERCOL- never die and will keep me
ORSfTHU)
0 (tO) MAOC OP DECORATIVE hum ble forever "
PAJNT1NQ(FRI)

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" L o w e s t P r ic e s O n
B ra n d ■

In

S e m in o le A

Th is W e ek ’s Specials!
15% O F F ALL
VITAMINS
10% STORE WIDE
DISCOUNT

30% O FF
ENTIRE LINE OF
KAL VITAMINS

N A T U R E ’S A N N E X

Center Mall

Hwy. 17-92 Sanford, FI.

(NEXT TO OUINCVS)

3 2 2 -5 2 2 2

______ CLINICAL WUt a i UONKl C O M U I I I N I

«ICH«aDC MI CMf AL. F S O

WE
B U Y

MORTGAGES...
We a lso m ake 1st and 2nd m ortgage loans
on R esidential or C o m m e rcia l R eal Estate
up to $100,000.
P e rso n a l loans a re a va ila b le
R e v o lv in g Credit L in e .

300

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In R 0 » r O l V m » o » Finn
1500 F R E N C H AVE.

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|OUKXNQ LIGHT
|GENERAL HOSPITAL
(M) BUGS BUNNY ANO
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321-2398
M .P .O .
321-2398
M E A T M A R K E T S ir ?

3 WOMANWATCH (THU)

13 ) FACTS OF L E I (R)
O HOUR MAGAZINE
I U SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
[ |M| fUQ VALLEY
110) ELECTRIC COMPANY |R)

Including

C A L L TO L L F R E E

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THE ALL NEW

WHEEL OF FORTUNE
PRICE 19 WONT
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I (Ml EIGHT Q ENOUGH
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I t OS) PRXPENDENT NEWS
® HI POL C E WOMAN
12 MOVW TNa Th»d Day" (tMS)
Gaorga Pappard fkraOatk Airaay
An tmnaaiat &gt;t ace mad by Na « N
and coutm of itkjrdarmg a aoman
andharenau

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11:00

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Hijacking Threw M onkeywrench In Works

MOVtllANO O 'l

CBS Updates Its Documentary
On Anti-American Terrorism
By Joan llanaucr
UPI T V W rlttr
N E W YO H K (U P I) ’'T h is
show 1b right on ihc m oney.”
Burton ” B u d ” Benjam in said
with a com bination of exh au s­
tion and exhilaration
Me was referring "Terrorism :
W a r In The S h a d o w s ." a C B S
Reports docum entary to air to
night at 10 w hich even Includes
a brief Interview with Nablh
Bcrrl. leader o f the Shiite Am ai
(till it In w h o has been acting as
m iddlem an In com m unicating
with the hijackers o f T W A flight
H47.
Since F rid a y , w h e n Shiite
Moslem gu n m en hijacked flight
B47 out o f A th en s with 153
people aboard — mostly Am eri­
c a n s — B e n ja m in has been
reworking the show to reflect
currrenl events.
The docum entary was com ­
pleted long before the hijacking,
bui ihc Shiite terrorists have put
across the sh o w 's point with a
vengeance — that according to
th e U S
S t a t e D e p a rtm e n t
almost 40 percent of terrorist
attacks throughout the world are
aim ed at A m ericana.
In the show B ern complains
that Am ericans call A rabs terror­
ists. but turn a blind eye when
Israelis attack A ra b villages, and
he said:
“ I would say you have to deal
with what It inruns to be a
terrorist. If everyone w ho fights
against the Israeli Invasion is u
terrorist, m aybe I am the biggest
one. Let s speak very frank

T h e sh o w Is r e p o r t e d by
W alter Cronklte. w h o currently
Is v a c a t io n in g o n M a r t h a 's
Vlnyard. Mass.
" I f the situation Is volatile on
W ednesday night, if It seem s as
If som ething m ight happen any
m om ent. Cronktte w ill open the
sh ow live." Benjam in said. " I f
things appear stable — tt will be
the middle of the night over
there — we w o n ‘t need to do
that.
" I f Cronklte o p en s the show,
he will say In effect that If
an yth in g happens durin g the
hour, w e will Interrupt for the
n e w s."

"O bviously, w e will lead with
£47. W e have rewritten part of
the show, m ostly to get In the
Stull on 8 4 7 ." said Benjamin.
Who had to aban d o n plans to
relax and play som e tennis over
the weekend.
"We w orked late hours all
Weekend. W e 're no* doing an

"I'v e done docum entaries in
the past." he said, " a n d you do
one on the plight o f migrant
w orkers or dlaclm lnallon or the
situation In South A frica and It la
rath er straightforw ard at the
end. You come to a conclusion,
som ething ought to be done and
you specify.

2 3

( a m i| u n v

^

CALL

NAinN ICOn. MCA
ON 8.R. 434. NEAR 17-92

NO
SMALL
AFFAIRl

In Tbs Park Squats Shopping Clr.
Long wood, FL 32760

831-3400

W E E K LY S P E C IA L S

"H e re they are hijacking a
plane with Am ericans on hoard
because they want the Israelis to
release Shiite prisoners. N o one
really know s what lo do. Do we
have (o become terrorists to fight
terrortMn? Do we have hit teams
to assassinate terrorist leaders?
In the docum entary o u r purpose
Is to lay dow n the o ption s."
A m ericans urr a prim e target
because the U S. Is u superpow er
a n d terrorists believe w e can
influence others.
" W e don't hear about terror­
ists attacking Ihe Russians, but
that d o esn ’t m ean It doesn't
h a p p e n ." Benjamin said. "W ith
a controlled press, we m ight not
hear about It. W r can assum e
that If a plane from K abul.
Afgh an istan w as hijacked, w r
w ou ld never know It unlesa It
cam e d o w n In thr W e s t ."

W h tlr Benjam in blocks out
c h a n g e s In the p ro g ra m , he
m ust deal with an on goin g news
story and must be prepared for
breaking developm ents.

For Benjam in an d those re­
sponsible for the C B S Repona
documentary, tt w aa back to the
d r a w i n g b o a r d o v e r the
Weekend.

A
171b
W ITN172
ESS

F A M O U S R E C IP E

- p r o d u c e r B u rto n B o n ja m ln

hour special on this, so the main
thing Is to stay on top of the
story and show how It affects
what we are dealin g with — the
problem s of terrorism for Am eri­
cans.

F a m ily C r a d J t S e r v ic e s . I n c .

5 2 50

SECRET 9
ADMIRER rss

‘Do wo hovo to bocom o terrorists to fight terrorism ?
Do w e hove hit teem s to a ssassin ate terrorist le a d e rs?
In the docum entary (we) lay dow n the options.*

" I 'l l be in ihe control room all
W ednesday aftern oon ." he aald.
"a n d we can m ake changes If
w e have to. By late W ednesday
afternoon, we will be pretty well
restricted in w hat changes we
cun make. By W e d n e sd a y even­
ing. If there are m ore changes.
Cronklte will handle it live."
Benjam in him self la baffled by
the dilem m a lerrortals pose.

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Ribs Salad, Ice Cream: The Makings Of A Great Cookout
,

M ix l u s c i o u s s u m m e r
lomuloes with sweet corn, add
o l d - f a s h i o n e d r ib s and
iKirbrcued chicken, ({real [*otaln
salad, homemade bread and a
finale of cool, creamy homemade
ler cream and you've got the
aaaklnga-of a great Fourth of
■July cookout!
""these tempting recipes come
from The Sunshine Sampler, a
cookbook that features many
Southern regional recipes, pro­
duced by a Florida community
service club.
Make the b arbecu e sauce
ahead Start manualIng the rib*
July 3. Chill the potnto salad
overnight Fix the tomato-corn
dish In the morning Siart the
bread baking as company ar­
rives. Get the whole family
Involved In the Ice cream pro
ductlon And declare indepen­
dence from the kitchen on the
Fourth of .July!
Incidentally, the wife of the
l»arl*ecue sauce cook says this
Htiuc r is too good lo save for
chicken alone. Her family keep*
II on hand al all limes, and use*
II for pork. ham. I»eef. and "Just
about anything II sound* good
with "
I1AHBECUE SAUCE
4 cup vinegar
cup water
2 tablespoons sugar
I i a b le s p o o n p r e p a r e d
mustard
'A teaspoon p e p p e r
I '4 iea*|Kion* salt
U teaspoon cayenne pepper
I lemon slice
1 medium onion, sllcrd
'.« cup bulter or.margurlne
Hi cup catsup
2 tablespoons W orcrslcrslrr
sauce
In a saucepan. mix all Ingrr(Units llrlug lo a boll, lower
head, and simmer lor one hour.
When It’s time lo grill, baste
chlckrn pieces constantly with
barbecue sauce
M ILL CREEK M A R IN A TE D
RIBS
10 mealy short ribs
I cup vegetable oil
3 tablespoons honey
Juice of .Tlemons
14cup soy sauce
I clove garlic, mtuerd
Mix the nil. lemon Juice, soy
sutler, honey and garlic In a
blender for a minute, or until
th o r o u g h ly b le tr d r d
Pour
m a r In a tie o v e r m e a l and
marinate (nr at leal H hours or
overnight, turning several limes.
Iimll meal over charcoal, slowly,
45 minutes for medium rare,
banting with the sauce us you
turn Serve*H lo It)
TOMATO-CORN BAKE
;t small i I|m- tomatoes
i cup corn (rooked In liolllng
sailed water for one minute)
1 tablespoon green onion,
sliced
' g cup processed Swiss cheese,
shredded
( ' u I I o in n l n r t I n h a lf
crosswise, rem ove seeds and
most ol the pulp from center of
each Sprinkle cavities with sail
Combine corn, cheese and on­
ion. Firmly pack 2-3 tablespoon*
ot mlxturr Into tomato hull.
Place In shallow baking pun
(take at 350° for 20 125 minutes
Serves &lt;1 Note Use vlnerlpenrd
tomatoes and tresh com.
1IERBED P O T A T O SA LA D
2 |rounds |Mitatoes (6 Clip*.

cooked and diced)
Add lo potatoes. Mlx lightly.
1&gt;4 teaspoons sail
i over and chill. Serves 8.
'4 onion, chop [&gt;ed
ONION-CHEESE SUPPER
1'A cups celery, diced
BREAD
2 tablespoons chopped fresh
14 onion, chopped
dlliwrrd. or 2 teaspoons dried
3 ta b le s p o o n * m arga rin e,
divided
dlllwerd
14 teaspoon dried tarragon
1egg. beaten
leaves
'A cup milk
VS cup mayonnaise
I'A cup Blsqulck
1 tablespoon mustard
I cup sharp cheese, shredded
1 tablespoon vinegar
I tablespoon poppy seed
'A teaspoon hot [irpper sauce
Cook onion In I tablespoon
Peel anil dice potatoes. Ikill In m argarine until transparent;
sailed waler unlll tender hut combine egg and milk and add
firm. Drain. Add onion, celery, to B lsq u lck ; stir Just u n til
d lllw r e d and larru gon, Mix moistened. Add cooked onion
together mayonnaise, mustard, and half o f ihe shredded cheese.
vinegar and hot pepper sauce. Spread dough In greased 8-Inch

tainer; freeze. Vary basic recipe
by adding fresh fruit or crushed
peppermint sticks. This recipe is
best If container Is placed In
refrigerator freezer a few hours
before serving.
Southern favorites abound In
this cookbook that emphasizes
Florida Flavors and seafood —
using citrus, produce, fish and
shellfish
The Sunshine Sampler was
produced by Entre Nous, a
women s community service or­
gan iza tion established more
than 50 years ago in Bradenton,
Florida. Entre Nous volunteers
handle cookbook sales and dis­
tribution to preserve all proceeds

square pan. Sprinkle lop with
remaining cheese and poppy
seed D rizzle 2 tablespoons
rnrlled margarine all over. Bake
at 400° for 20-25 minutes. Serve
cut In viuares while hot
HOMEMADE V A N IL L A ICE
C R E AM
6 eggs
1 pint whipping cream
*4 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons vanilla extract
3cuj&gt;ssugar
'A gallon milk
Beat eggs vigorou sly; add
whipping rream. salt and vanil­
la Gradually beat In sugar until
completely dissolved Add milk,
Pour Into 5-quart freezer con­

Rawson, The N ew Owner
A Renewed Commitment
Rededication To You

GPride
PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY,
JUNE 20 THRU WEDNESDAY. JUNE 26,
1965. QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.

iICKORY SMOKED

CENTER CUT

SMOKED
HAMS

BEEF

69‘

«

GATORADE

SHANK
PORTION

TH IR ST Q U E N C H E R

460Z

US.0A GRADE A

99

CHUCK ROAST

FRYER
T H I G H S or
D R U M S T IC K S

«

I

*Jp*j|Swj *1 * S

1 —■&gt;-

LB

&lt;

69

'v ,

C
US DA TOP QUALITY

FRESH PO RK

'a

, 'fdK.

.

$139

fAANTATION

U aOA TOP QUALITY

SUCED
BA C O N

!1 "

C EN TER CUT
PORK CHOPS
U A O A TOP C M O C f

SMOKED HAM l.1.99

U A O A TOP QUALITY
■ im K U M
■

6 ROLL BATHROOM

TISSUE
ON PAPER TOWELS

3 ROLL

i l b * v a s w a .iL i. O A

LEAN TTNOCX I

CHUCK CUBES . 1.79

MR. BIG

ONOUMO

FRYER WINGS

SIRLOIN HALF .u1.39

BEEF C H U C K .. u1.69

SHORT RIBS

MR 1 U M ) IMOKID

CM KXJSH

ICVBAYO O O M D
MAT B U T

SMOKED HAMS ,..89

SAUSAGE

u1.79

** **

FISH C A K ES

D A IR Y
CfTHUS HILL*

ORANGE
JUICE
COUNTRY

RICH &amp;
CREAMY
ICE
CREAM

ixuMxnwMtxj

132.99

rr\u
160Z PKG

HALF GALLON

$169

S K IN LE SS
FR AN KS

$169

MEAT OR BEEF
mjmhtlanu mlu cmmot

SMOKED

l«1.89

crock

toot 1.79

cuts

M OZZARELLA

nmnrr

GREAT DOGS

aot
exa

ROSES BACON

££1.59

SlOO CANADUN

•«« .79

CH EESE

mox

'££1.89

s a u s a g e

owalthcy? oocxen on

SAA1TBT

COTTAGE

.1-1.39

DELI
OSCAR M AYER

. k w t x iq u la x a c x x b t

LONGHORN

lb.69

rtM X X TASTY BCTF

BUTT TOMTOM
MCKORf (MOOED

$159

Enjoy Exotic
French Fish
Stew A t Home

I

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SUCED

Q U A R T E R LOIN

u+uu% imiu

By A lle c n C laire
NEA Food Editor
Cricket's In Chicago's Tie
moot Hotel Is a cozy restaurant
drcoialrd In early Americana
Its clirl. Guy I'rlll. emphasizes
fish and srulood in continental
dishes tanging from light lo
heavy hire, You muy sample hi*
easy lo do tinolltuhalssr IFrench
lull slew) at home
CRICKET'B B O U ILL ABAI88E
It i up olive oil
I large onion. iho|i|H-d (I rupl
I large leek, thinly sliced
4 cups Clumuto Juice
I cup dry while w ine
I hay leal
teaspoon thyme
■t irasjMKin ground red |K-p|H-r
l 'Inch aaflrun
I pound im l llllets. cut into
I-Inch chunks
IB mussels or clams, well
scrubbed
1 loaf French bread, cut Into H
slices. loustrd
Chopjird paisley
In a large [ h»i . heal olive oil
over medium heut Saute onion
amt Irek u n lll len der. Add
Clamalo. wine, bay leaf, lliyme.
pepper and saffron. Simmer
uncovered 40 minutes
Arid fish and m ussels or
clam s; sim m er t o m luuirs
lunger or until mussels or chum
open. Place a slice of toastrd
b re a d In each soup bowl Top
w ith bou illabaisse. Sprinkle
parsley over tup
Th is k llc h e n -le s trd recipe
makes 8 servings
Clam and tomato Juice cocktull
adds Us own d ia m eter lo a b a sic
iHHilUalialsse,

for charities and scholarships.
The Sunshine Sampler Is a spiral
bound book with a durable
laminated cover. It contains 330
pages o f 660 prized recipes from
Entre Nous members.
An e x t r a featu re o f th is
cookbook Is Its unique and
colorful cover, depicting counted
cross-stitch patterns that are
contained a! the beginning of
each of the 14 chapters In the
book.
For further Information about
The Sunshine Sampler, or to
order the book, please write to
Sunshine Sampler. P.O. Box
105. Bradenton. Florida, or call
IH131 792-7398

7Q
.7 9

MR HXWXY lU C tl) ■
SEQULAX OS BACKED

,»,1.89

TURKEY BREAST £S1.49

HALF GALLON

FROZEN

BAKERY

$ 2 8 9

PANTRY PRIDE

HAM BURGER
or H O T D O G

MORTON
DINNERS

ROLLS

MWY SALfitMYV CMCMN
U fX I LOAZ HiAMS»(WrfO,
MI K AN VEAL PAMMtSA*

BUSH ’S
BAKED
BEANS

2/79

2102 CAN

FREHCHBREAD 2/1.19
SAXTir*

BAR-BO BREAD ixu .79
sam txt

“NEW ”
DENTAGARD
TOOTHPASTE
4.502 PUMP

o n s e A G H trn

8 PACK

&amp;

HEALTH f, BEAUTY AIDS

m u*

WHITE BREAD

3/1.49

1102
FROZEN
k a m b u k o a w n w a ia u s a o c .
CAMAOAN BACON OH C O M M A TION

. a jftn , Buecn

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; MMUTt MAO tOOZ MDUCXO ACXV

.99

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ORANGE JUICE
AAKTXY M U

1.29

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POTATOES ••*■iFRGZEfi1.09

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SHENANDOAH
APPLE
I JUICE

COOL WHIP

moiXl .09

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89

count

.99

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m uxum

V A B e jM NTTMBtV* C A M

BABY POWDER

1502 CAN

5 /n

SANFORD » « 4 ORLANDO ROAD, ZAYRE PLAZA AT THE CORNER OF 1 / « A ORLANDO ROAD

on ttxxo

TOOTHBRUSHES . 4/1.

H ENN Y PEN
DOG or CAT
FOOD

7 5 0 2 BOX

«

TAM PO N S

F U E X S X Z S 1 ........ mu1.59
tix

KRAFT

M ACARONI
&amp; CHEESE
DINNER

6402 JAR

TAMPAX
NBVUM AUTYTO

BUN WtXS

RAISIN MUFFINS back1 .99

on o n o M i seq u lax

.

m.1 .9 9

COCA C O L A
DIET COKE,
TAB, SPRITE,
M R PIBB or
m ello yello

8 PACK 1202 CAN

S

2 09

�E v t n m g H e r a ld

Oriental rooking makes use of
fresh ve g e ta b le s and sm all
amount* of meat or poultry.
Cooking time Is especially short
when using the microwave oven
Dinner can be ready In less than
15 minute* and the kitchen will
not be any warm er because
microwave oven* do not getter
ate heat (Think of the savings
on vour electric bill )
STIR-FRY BEEF OR PORK
1 (&gt;ound round steak or (fork
steak, thinly sliced
3 tablespoons soy sauce
3 tablespoons sesame seed oil
8 cups sh red d ed Chinese
cabbage
2 carrots, sliced thinly (diag­
onally)
3-4 green onions, sliced thinly
luse lops tool

M icrowave Magic

Who Needs A Wok?
Use Your Microwave
For Oriental Dinners

M id g e
M y c o ff
Home Economist
Seminole

Community College

S a n fo rd

rots, garllr. 2 tablespoons sov
sauce and sesame seed oil
Microwave covered 4-5 minutes
until lightly steamed Cabbage
will be tender crisp, not soft
Combine vegetables with meat
and additional soy sauce and
sesame seed oil to taste
A (lank Is a less tender cut ot
marinated to Improve flavor and
te n d e r n e s s
T ill* m a k es a
budget-wise dinner lor four
M ONGOLIAN BEEF
1 (found sliced Hank steak
2 cups thinly sliced green
onions |scalllonsl
8 10 doves of garlic minced
2 tablespoons oil
1v teaspoon salt

M ICRO W AVE MOO
G O O G A I PAN
I chit ken hrcusls
1 tablespoons oil
3 ounces snow (teas
'■&gt; cop mushrooms, thinly
sliced
' i cup water chesimits
1cup water
2 traspoon* instant chicken
granules ilximllnnl
2 lalfles|xx&gt;ns soy sauce
2 teaspoon* corn siarch
'•j lcas(MXfi) ground ginger
1» tea*)HM&gt;n pcp|wr
Hernovr skin und Ixmr Irom
(lie chicken anil cut Into bite
sized pieces Mix chicken and oil
in a 3 quart microwave sale eus
serole Microwave on 100 |fer
rent |xiwer 8 It) minutes Let
stand covered 5 minutes Add
(teas, mushrooms green onions
and water chestnuts Microwave
on 100 p e rc e n t pow er 4 5
III I II li I c s
H r III a V e I r o III
microwave oven
In a 2 cup glass mcasurr place
wilier chicken granules, corn
starch, soy sauce anil spices
Microwave on ItKl'V power 3
minutes, oi until Ihlckrnrtl Sill
every minute I’oui nvci chicken
and mix well Serve with rice

--------------------------- PRODUCE----------------PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY.
JUNE 20 THRU WEDNESDAY. JUNE 26.
1965. QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
r

FRESH

JUICY

VINE RIPE
WATERMELON

FRESH
PEACHES

l i

PER
POUND

FLORIDA FRL5H

CALIFORNIA

!
C ABBAG E

CRISP
CELERY

green

LB

FR ESH
N E C TA R IN E S

79

c

BAR-B-Q SAUCE
1&amp;OZ BOTTLE

89

69
7 /n

stalk

FLORIDA SWEET

CALIFORNIA

KRAFT

c
29

PER
POUND

ntOHCiuo

M AZO LA
CORN
OIL

•NO WHTT1

R A D I S H E S *•■ PW
flL .1 0

O N IO N S

3/1.

HJNCH

M USHROOM S

^ 1 .0 9

4BOZ BOTTLE

SM UCKERS
STRAW BERRY
PRESERVES
18-OZ

$

1

5

ft . h c a w

am

WHfTt 00 ASSCHUD

100
sa

K R A FT
fUMaunaay

S~ \ \

catllsu

hot

ooa swur on

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SUGAR FREE

.8 9

KOOLA1D

ROACH TRAPS
X&gt;COUWY 1*01 FUNOAY

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V L A S J C R E L IS H .

Mazola
!*T-'¥1

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4/1.

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D R E S S IN G .

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$ 1 6 9

FAYOO

llloonum

REYNOLDS WRAP
m o o t (TAuAw on

SARAN
W RAP

T IS S U E

50
COUNT

JAR
V i sa

BATHFOOM

LU N C H
PLATES

9

$969

NORTHERN

HEFTY FOAM

«

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YELLOW
CORN EARS

LB

SW EETHEART CUPS

.8 8

MAKES 8 QUARTS

V

FOR ALL JUNE BRIDES
A GIFT FROM THE PANTRY BAKERY

TORPEDO
ROLLS

•10.00 O F F

ROAST
BEEF

ANY 3 TIER

W ED DING
CAKE
0 0 0 0 FOR THE MONTH OF JUNE

HALF
POUND

1*

TWO LAYER

CHOCOLATE FUDGE

CHOCOLATE
D U TCH LO AF

CAKE

«5£o1.39

2"

6 /8 9

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RUBBERMAID
ROUGHNECK
REFUSE CONTAINER

20 GALLON

O LIV E LO A F .

.9 9

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UTCKHI

P A S T A SALAD

PO
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POTATO
BUDS

CHOCOLATE FLAVOR

SYRUP

U 7SO ZBO X

24CZ

26 G A L L O N -

• • •

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BEER
REGULAR O R UGHT

24 PACK 12-OZ CANS

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BETTY CROCKER

HERSHEY

I clove garllr. minced
4 Florida eggs
I cup Florida milk
IVY tu p s C heddar chrese,

black

pepper

MMOUI

1
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P E P S IC O L A .;
D IE T P EPSI. •
P E P S I FR EE. !

l 9

diced

1Vv tra.*|Kx,n • salt
teaspoon ground

G R A I N B R E A D .............. 8 9
A N G E L FO O D C A K E 1.39

8

2 m e d iu m - s iz e d F lo r id a
tomatoes
I ‘ Mneh (&gt;le pastry shell,
unbaked
3 Tablespoons butler or mar­
garine
I cup onions, chopped
I cup Florida green (x-pper.

shredded
FWCSH OAXU} NAYUOAL

ALL WHTE MEAT

KAHMIPAPO*

SAVE 4 0 '
C A S H ja .

$

J

FRESH BAKED

KITCHEN FRESH

V e g e ta b le * p r r p a ir d Ib is
micro quirk method are a* at
tractive as they are llavnrlul It
you are eating " litr ” meals no
meals are necessary
STIR-FRIED VEG E TAB LES
2 tablespoons peanut oil
1 clove garlic
cupsoy ounce
Vv cup water
1 tra s| io o it In s ta n t tie e l
bouillon
'* tras|M)ou ginger
3 tablespoons corn starch,
dissolved In 1v cup water
tv cup celery, sliced diagonally
Hj cup green onions, sliced
diagonally
•v cup broccoli llowrreis
'v cup nmshriHiins. sliced ill
agoually
'V clip carrots, slliril dlagou
ally
‘ v cup caullllowei flowerets
2 teas|xxms sugar
Ileal the oil ill a 2 or 3 quart
micro-sale casserole oil 1003.
power - quickly- stir In the
v e g e ta b le s
C over and
microwave 5 t» minutes Stir
alter 3 minutes Sill together
corn stareli, bouillon, water,
gln gri, soy saner and garlic
Pour over vegetable*, microwave
on IOO (M-rrent power 3 minutes,
u n c o v e r e d . S t ir a lte r I '-V
m inutes A llo w to stand 3
mlnules Ifrlnre serving

Tomato Pie
A Cheesy
Delight

IN THE DELI/BAKERY STORES ONLY
V j£

4 tables(foons sov sauce
l tablespoon dry sherry
1 teaspoon black (fep(fer
3 tablespoons m id water
2 leas(f»x)iis corn siarch
1 leaspoon sugar
1 tablespoon oil
Slice the flank strak very thin
across the grain w hile the meat
Is pari tally frozen Combine
marinade ingredients In a howl
add sliced Ifeef. mix thoroughly
and set aside lor ai least 30
m inutes M icrow ave on 100
perm it power the oil. garlic and
ix-cl covered, about 3 minutes
Silt In 2 tablespoon* *ov sauce
Microwave scallions, covered. I
m in u te a n d s tir in m eat
Microwave 1 minute longer, add
2 teaspoon* sesame oil* Serve
with rice
•Tin* oil adds distinct flavor
When l eat out at an Oriental
restaurant I most nllrn Itxtk for
this chicken dish on the menu
It's easy to prepare at home with
the microwave oven

O f Pantry Pride Brings
To Excellence And
Our Valued Customers.

&lt;

W e d n e w J a y , J u n e I t, l » t i — J B

M a r in a d e :

licet that can Ik - sliced thin and

2 cloves garlic
Slice of fresh garlic tor dash ol
powdered ginger I
Freeze meal for l hour so that
it can l&gt;r sliced across the grain
easily Microwave on lOO percent (lower 5-6 mlnules Add l
tablespoon each of soy sauce ami
sesam e seed oil Add fresh
ginger. Cover and set aside
Combine cabbage, onions, car

FI.

*0M|

I

Use lumaloes held at room
temperature unlll fully ripe
Preheat oven to 450*F, Slice
lomaloes: set aside Prick bot­
tom and sldea o f paalry with fork
tinea: refrigerate for 10 minutes
Hake until g old en , about 8
minutes Rem ove (tie shell Re­
duce over temperature lo 325*F
In mrdlum skillet melt butter.
Add onions, green pepper and
garllr. Saute for 5 minutes. In
medium bowl lightly beat eggs
Stir In milk, cheese, salt, pepper
und saulrcd vegetables. Arrange
tomulo slices tri the bottom of
the pie shell Pour rgg mixture
over all. Hake unlll u knife
Inserted In Die center comes out
clean, aboul 50 minutes Let pie
stand at room trmperuture for 5
minutes before rutting.

i

�(B

Evening H*ra1d, Sanford, FI

Wodrwsdjy, June 11, IfBJ

Fugitive Killer Led
Quiet Life In Small Town

legal Notice
IN TH E COUNTY C O U R T ,
IN A N D FO R
SEMINOLE C O U N T Y .
F LO R ID A
C A S E N O t M-MIICC-IS-F
H U M A N E SOCI E T Y O F
SE M IN O LE COUNTY,
a corporation

POTTSTOW N. Pa. &lt;UPI| - Raymond Philip
Wilson, who broke out of prlaon 10 yean ago
while serving a life aentence for murdering a
wealthy widow. K illed Into a quiet life as a
"mild-mannered" man who tended his garden
and helped hts neigh bon
"T h e whole neighborhood was shocked," Police
Detective James Den said Tuesday after Wilson's
arrest.
The 62-year-old Wilson, wanted since 1975
after escaping from the state prison In Hun­
tington. was taken Into custody Monday while
working In hts garden. He did not resist arrest.
Police said Wilson moved to f-otlslown about
IVY years after his escape and had lived there, a
block from the local police station, ever since,
marrying a local woman and "basically keeping a
low profile."
He even used his real name,
"Everyone said he was a real good neighbor,
the kind o f guy who would help you carry In the
groceries or shovel the snow out of your
driveway.** Derr said.
By the time Wilson escaped from prison, he had
already served nearly 20 years of a life Kntence
for the 1955 robbery and strangling o f Lulubel
Hosstmin, 76, In her Philadelphia hotel room.
Rossman, an eccentric who kept a small fortune
In cash stashed about her room, was robbed of
about $ 140,000
Wilson and three other men were convicted of
first-degree murder In 1956. His 40-day trial was
reported at the time to be the second-longest
criminal trial In Philadelphia history.
Because Wilson never used a lalse name, he
was relatively easy to locate once police learned
through an Informant of hts general whereabouts.
Derr said.
Neighbors. Including the Rev. Stanley Wagner,
pastor o f Zion United Church of Christ across the
street from Wilson's house, were surprised by the
arrest.
"It shocked me most because he was such a
quiet, mild-mannered person." Wagner said.
Police said Wilson was lending his garden when
jiollcc arrived to arrest him.
Said Derr. "H e dldn'l K e r n that surprised. Il
was almost as though he wus expecting us."

United
Slashes
B y U n it e d P r e s s

w e e k e n d

Ih at

ushers In the vacation
season.
P e o p le

Defendant
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO t O N J A CAPONE
YO U A R E N O TIFIED that a
Complaint action pursuant to
F lo rid a Statutes ITS #TJ hat
been tiled against you seeking
custody, central and ownership
o' an animal lound In dltteeta.
to wit: a white horse nomad
"R u naw ay'. In the Seminole
C o u n ly C eu rt, In S a n fo rd ,
Florida You art required to
se-vr a copy at your written
dalentat. If any. to the action on
P e titio n e r* attorney whoso
name and addrstt It R O B E R T
G P E T R I E , US South Court
Avonus. Orlando. Florida. TTOCI.
on or before June 77, IMS and
tile tha original with the Clerk ot
this Court, either before service
an Patltlonar's attorney or Im
mediately thertefter; otherwise
a Judgment will ba entered to
Iha rs lls f demanded In tha
Potmen
W ITNESS my hand and tha
seai of this Court an M ay IT.
IMS

ISEALI
D A V ID N B ER R IEN
A t Clerk Of ths Court
By Virginia Vlamlsto
Aa Deputy Clark
Publish Junw S. 11. If. M. IMS
D E G JT

IN TH E CIRCUIT C O U R T
FO R SEM INOLE C O U N TY .
FLORIOA
P R O B A TE DIVISION
File Number IS 014 C P
DtrtsMn PROS AT I
I N R E E S TA T E OF
J A M E S C STOCKTON.
Deceased
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Tha adm inistration ot Iho
o s l o t s ot J A M E S
C
S T O C K T O N , deceased. F ile
Number IS 717 CF, Il ponding In
the Circuit Court ter Samlnolo
C o u n ly . F lo r ld o , P r o b e t a
Division, tha addrost of which Is
Sam Indio County Courthouse.
Sanford. Florida 1111}
Tha
nerves and addresses at tha
pa tonal representative and Iha
personal representative's at
humey are eat forth hetew
A ll Intarastod parsons o rt
required to file with this court.
W ITHIN T H R E E M O NTHS O f
T H E FIR ST PUBLICATIO N OF
THIS NO TICE III all ctotm*
agamsl Iha estate and II) any
a b lo c lle n by an Interested
parson on whom Ihls notice was
vo-vod that challenges Iho volte
ity ot the will. Iha guellllceHont
ot tha personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction ot tho
Covrt,
A L L CLAIM S AND O B J E C
TIONS NOT SO F I L E D W ILL
BE F O R E V E R BAR RED
Publication ot this Notice hat
begun on June It, IMS
Personal Representative
/S/B R I A N S STOCKTON
a&gt; Council Street
N legsrs Falls, No* York
u
Attorney for
Personal Representative
L A W R E N C E L L IO F R L O T
ES Q U IR E
Suite D
M l N Orlande Avenue
Maitland. Florida T ’MI
Telephone IJOS) SJd M44
Publish Juno I). It. IMS

FICTITIOU S N A M I
It hereby given that I
•m engoged In business it H I
W SU M Rd 4it fu llt 1011.
Altamonte Sprin g,. Samlnolo
C o u n ty, F lo r id a undor tea
fictitio u s n o m a o f C A R L
SH EAR . INC d/b/0 TAN SPA.
and trial I inland to register told
noma wit* th# Clark of tfia
Circuit Court. Samlnola County,
Florida in accordance with the
p rovision s ot tn« Fictitious
Namt Statutes To wit Sac lion
M l » Florida Statutes IM7
/%/ Eartin# S Melons
Fubttth Juno S. II. It, M. Itti

U n lt r d A i r l i n e s ,
scrambling to recover
from a 29-day pilots'
s t r ik e . In o f f e r i n g
half price tickets on all
domestic flights during
th e b u s y s e u s o n *
opening Fourth of July
holiday week.
Eastern, TW A. Delta
and USAIr sutd they
still are studying the
U n lt r d m o v e , a n ­
nounced tn full-page
newspaper ads Tues­
day, which could set ofT
an air fare war during
Ih e

P la in tiff,
vs
SONJA CAPONE,

Legal Notice

Fares
For 4th

E x p r e s s

Airlines, based In New­
ark. N.J., said It hud no
plans to lower Its al­
ready cut-rule fares.
The United promo­
tion Includes a shorten­
ing of the normal 30day udvunce purchase
period for "ultra-saver'*
tickets tu seven days
through the end of this
month und free up­
grades to first class for
m e m be r s o f th e
airline's frequent flyers
club on a first-come
busts through Aug. 15.

OEO I
FICTITIO U S NAM E
Notice It hereby glv*n Ititl I
am angagod In b u tln ttl at 101
Eastwlnd C l . Van lord. Samlnola
C o u n ly , F lo r id a u n dtr Iht
Iir til lout rusm* ot A FLAGSHIP
C L E A N I N G S E R V I C E S , and
Itiot | Inland to register said
narna with tha Clark at tha
Circuit Court. Samlnola County.
Florida In accordance witn Iha

Rrevisions

ef tha Fictitious
tma Statutes To wit: Sactlan
Ml OS f lor Ida Statutes its'
III Jim m y Palmar, Sr
Publish Juno II, If. H 4 July 1.
IMS
D EG 43

DEG 40

FICTITIO U S NAM E
Nodes It haraby glvan that I
am tngagsd In butlnstt at III
E 1st Street. Sanford. Samlnola
C o u n ly. F lo r id a undor Iha
fictitious tern s ot HAMPTON
C A R D E N S , and that I intend to
register said noma with tha
Clark at tha C irc u it Court.
Samlnola County, Florida In
accordanca with tha iwevltiont
ot tha Fictitious N am t llltutas.
Tow ll
Sactlon 141 » Florida
Statutes IH»
/t/ Calotte C Parti
Publish Juno II. It. la 4 July I.
IMS

DIO M
IN T H E CIB C U IT COURT.
E I G H T E E N T H JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT.
IN A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E CO UN TY,
F L O R ID A
CASE NO U lp fl CA44 K
IN R E TH E M A R R I A G E O F
RO GER W JO H N STO N
Patltionsr Husband

A m erican A irlin e s
said It hud decided nut
to match the United
(are rut. but wuuld
follow Us competitor's
leud In reducing the
advance purchuK req u I r e m e n t fo r
‘ ■upensaver" tlckrta to
seven days from 30
days before June 30.

TOBY E JOHN HON
R atpondant Wlta
N O TICE OF ACTION
TO Toby E Johntlon
H7 AteiancMr SI
Truodrlckt. V A
YOU A R E N O T IF IE D that an
aclwn tar dissolution ot mar
riaga hat boon mod ogaintl you
and you ora required fa tarva a
capy of your written detente*. It
any. to It la Jamas R Awttant.
F atlllon ar's attarnay, whata
addrstt it » t North Ftrncroek
Ave . Orlando. FlorMO UNU. on
Of boloro July tl. IMS. and Ilia
tha original with tha Clark ot Iho
Court, tlthor botora tocvKt an
Patihonec't attorney or Imma
diataly thoraattar, otherwise a
dtfeuil will be entered against
you ter the relief demanded In
the complaint er pelillan
DAT E D on Juts*7. ItSS
I t lA L I

A t U n lt r d h e a d ­
quarters In Chicago,
spokes m un Joe
Hopkins said "people
urr lumping a t" the
a irlin e’ s SO percent
tare reduction and a 50
percent cash re but r on
tickets alread y
purchased for the July
1-July 7 period,

IN TH E CIRCUIT C O URT
POR S EM IN O LE C O U N TY .
FLORIDA
P R O B A T E DIVISION
Fite Number U TIT C P
IN R E ESTA TEO F
G E N E V I E V E N M E R R IL L .
0 / k / o G E N E N M E R R ILL.
Deceased
NO TICEO F
ADMINISTRATION
The adm inistration ot the
o t t o t s ot G E N E V I E V E N
M E R R I L L , a'k/o G E N E N
M E R R I L L , d o c t s io d , F i l e
Number IS 117 CP. Is ponding In
Iho Circuit Court tor Seminole
C o u n t y . F lo r id a . P r o b a t e
Division, tha eddrost ol which It
Seminole County Courthouse.
Norlh Park Avenue. San lord
F lo r id a
The nam es en d
addresses ol tho personal repre
sen! til vs and Iho personal rap
resenteti.e s attorney are set
lor th be lew
A ll interested parsons a re
required to file with this court,
WITHIN T H R E E MONTHS OP
T H E FIR ST PUBLICATIO N O F
THIS N O TIC E: 0 ) all claim s
ogaintl ms estate and (I) any
o b le c tle n by an in te re ste d

served mat challenges the volte
Ity at the -III. the quelltkattene
at me personal ropraaantatlvo.
venue, or luritdklten at tha
court

ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVBNBARRED
Publication at mis Not lea has
begun an June II, IMS
Personal Representative
/*/ OAVIDR MERRILL
1140 FlamingoWoy
Winter Pork. F ter tea UTfl
Attorney lor
Personal Rfpreaentatlve
JAMES A BARKS.*!
Shtnhocter. Meaner tel.
Barks4 Reid
P 0 Be* 717*

Chavyl R. Franklin
Oapufy Clerk
Publish
IMS
DEG M

Legal Notice

Santord F L n r n n t f

Telephone IMS) m teed
Publish June It If. IMS
OEGdl

Juno II. IE. H July L

PUZZLES
b r CO04NX WKhER

FRPVV
—

UYRF

CYALW

VRXPVV

KRC

'v * .

-

0 0 X

IV

V

BRCXA.*

U err.eye It Iha only aJ van lure open to th* cowardly'

— V0H4M0

S U V

PQOA

VMRCA

PVIWOX.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION

•

VYKADLYO

* • • • ■ » ■ »
**

Plaintiff,

DENISEC MCKINNEY.etal.
NOTICE O F S A L E
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN
met on Iha Mh day a! July, Ittt
at II to a m at Iha west front
door ol tho C o u rth o u se in
Seminote County, ot Santord.
Florldo. the wider signed CterS
wilt otter tor sale the following
described real property:
Unit I K S , Sondtewood Con
dominium, recorded In 0 R
Book MS, Peg* S40. Public
Records ot Semi net* County.
Florid*
together a im o il structures.
Imporvementt. natures, oppll
ences. tnd appurtenance, on
sate land or utad in conjunction
The aforesaid sate will ba
mads pursuant to a Summary
Flenl Judgment entered In Clrll
No (4 n n CA 00 K new pending
in the C ircu it Court at the
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit in
and tar S a m ln o la C o u n ty,
Ftertee
OATEO this ID day ot June.
IMS
ISEALI
DAVID N B E R R I E N
CLER K OF T H E CIRCUIT
COURT
By Cheryl R Franklin
Deputy C ter S
Publish: June 11. If. IMS
DCOM
INTH E C IR C U IT CO URT.
IN A N D FO R
SEM INO LE C O U N TY .
F L O R IO A

CASE NO IS MS* CA ft O
AMERICAN HOUSING
GROUP. INC . a corporation
Plolntlff.
vt
EARL CARR, and
CASSANDRA CA R R

Defendants
N O T IC E O F S A LE
N O T I C E IS G I V E N Iha
pursuant la a Final Judgment
dated June IT, IMS. In Casa
Number 44 M]4 C A Of G, of Itte
C ir c u it C o u r t In a n d lo r
Semi note County, F lor Ida. In
whkh Amar lean Housing Group.
Inc It iha Plaintiff and E t r l
C trr end Cassandra Carr are
Defendants I will tall to Iha
highest tnd best bidder tar cash
a&gt; th* Watt Front Door ot tn*
Saminete County Courthouse In
S tn fsrd . S a m ln o la C o u n ly .
Florida, a l l l 00 o'clock A M on
July 11, I f t l. th* following
described property set forth
below
From mo Southwest corner ol
the Northwest quarter ot to
North well quarter of Section 17.
Township II South. Hongs 11
Estt, run North ***14 H ” East.
411 Ioel mors or last to a
concrete monument on Iho East
rught of woy lino ot Overlook
Drive s i ihown on the proposed
p ltl ol C H U LA VISTA . Ihenc#
run south l* 0 irn '' West 1JB4S
tee* lor t Point ef Beginning.
Ihenc* run South I V f f 'M " East
MO It Feel to 0 conel. thence
Southerly along said canal 100
tee, theme Norm ***** ]* West
MO A) teat to Iha East Right at
way lin* *1 Overlook Drive
thane* Harm W t r
East 100
teat te the Point ef Bagk
Being Let II. Block 1.
I. Cl
CHULA
VISTA. Section n . Township II
South. Rang* » East. Public
Records at Samlnolo County,
Florida
D A T E D mis 17th day ot June.
IM)
(SEAL)
DAVID N B E R R I E N
Clark efth* Circuit Court
By /*/ Cheryl R Franklin
A t Deputy Clark
Publish June If. M. IMS
D E G 100
IN THE CIRCUIT C O U R T
OF THE E I O H T I E N T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF F LO R IO A .
IN AN D FO R
SEM INO LE C O U N TV
CASE NO U aaes C A et o
O E N B R A L JURISD ICTIO N
DIVISION
FED ER A L
N A T IO N A L
M O R TG AG E ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff.
vt
R IC H A R D W E N D E L L

(T I WART. * tingle man. *t at,
N O TIC E O F S A L E
NOTICE H hereby given that,
pursuant te m* Order *r Plant
Judgment entered In this causa.
In th* Circuit Court ot Sam mole
Cuuv.lv, Florida. | w ill tall Iho
property situated In Seminote
Count, 7 tend*, described at
TH A T C E R T A I N CON
DOMINIUM P A R C E L KNOWN
AS UNIT NO 71. D E S TIN Y
SPRINGS. A CO NDOM IN IUM .
A N D AN U N D IV ID ED 00*444
I N T E R E S T IN T H E LA N D .
COM M ON E L E M E N T S AN D
CO M M ON E X P E N S E S AP
P U R TEN A N T TO SAID UNIT,
A L L IN AC C O R D AN C E WITH
A N D SUBJECT TO T H E COV
(H A N T S CONDITIONS. HE
STR ICTIO NS. T E R M S A N O
O T H E R PROVISIONS OF TH E
D E C L A R A T IO N O F CON
D O M IN IU M O F D E S T I N Y
SPRINGS. A CONDOMINIUM.
AS R ECO R D EO IN O N BOOK
11)7. A T F A O E I B M . A S
A M E N D E D IN O R BOOK I14R
A T PAGE 1447. A L L O F THE
P U B L I C R E C O R D S OP
S EM IN O LE C O U N T Y .
FLO RIOA
at public sate, t* th* highest end
best bidder, ter ceee at Iha
W EST FRONT DOOR O F T H E
SEM INO LE C O U N TY CO URT
HOUSE. U N F O R D . Flarida at
)l H a m .an July t. I f U
WITNESS my hand and seal
*4 sate Court on Jun* 7. lest
ISEALI
D AV ID N B E R R IE N

Publish June 11. If. 1M1
D I O 47

C ELEB R ITY CIPHER

SUVA

S A N O L E W O O O CON
D O M IN IU M OW NERS
ASSOCIATION. IN C .

Clerk a! m* Clrcutl Court
By ra'CTtarylR Franklin
Daputy Clark

CooerHp Ccpner ciypsogreme ee u mated hwo ceoHemute e&gt; iq»*m* verse, peal tn*p&gt;*
lee* teller n N t e o Vianet lev anusne, ' M e n u * O e sv ea i

• KRC

IN T H E C IRCU IT CO URT
OF T H E E I G H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIRCU IT
IN A N O F O R
S E M I N O L E COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO S4 M rs CA ee K

FICTITIOUS N A M E
Mafic* It hereby given that w*
ara vngtgsd in butinea* at IKK
South French A r t , Santord.
Saminete County. F ter id* under
Iho fictitious harts* a! M R C'S
SO U TH ER N F R I E D CH ICKR N .
and mat w* intend Id register
us id name ssith the Clark et m*
Circuit Court. Saminete County.
Florida In accordance with the
p r o ? Isitn t el Iha F lc lllld t it
Nam* Statutes. Tu w lt Section
441 f* F ter tea Vi elutes I f f 7
t%t Jang CM U u
/%/ SuaHweiLIu
Publish Jun* IL If. M 4 July 4
IMS
D I G 41

71— H «lp Wanted

71— H « lp W t n t t d

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611

Orlando * Winter Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 t i m . .....................67C ■ I
HOURS
3 consdcutift times SIC • I

8:30 A.M. - 5:30 M l .

MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Nd#n

7 consecutive tins** 52C a I
10 C M idctitivt times 4fiC ■ I
Cen tric! Rates Aral labia
3 Lints Minimum

D EA D LIN ES
N o o n The D a y B e fo re P u b lica tio n
Sunday - N o o n Friday
M o n d a y • 11:00 A . M . Saturday

D ESK C LE R K S - no •spec tone*
necessary , E« cel tent oppor
tonify to wort with state *4
th* a rt com puter system.
Friendly, n tat personable
Apply n person Qettona Inn.
E X C U T IV E S E C R E T A R Y
With #r without shorthand i
Attest Temporary Servk et
H i itse
Federal, Mato. 4 Civil Job* new
available Us your aroe Call
ld ) t M B t i l l tor into Jarirs
Full and part ttm* pen tun* now
aval labia Mutt be ever IB
years sad to operate retlew
rant equip'**"* A p ply In
person et R a i s. &gt;000 Watt
Mwy ala Langnaod. Fl
GAS A T T E N D * N T
Top salary, hoapitoiitatton. t
wee* paid vacation every *
months.
other
bans! its.
apply
m N
Laurel A t * ,
( 10 AM 4 70 PM
HAIR D R E S S E R to taka ever
small el tentote In Dalton*
Call S7e-«SI7

33— Real Estat*
Courses

25— Special Notices
* M A R Y K A Y COSMETICS *
Is m car* and cater Hair
CONNIE
........ 11177!*

R «tl Credit Cards'
No credit/ badcred.tr
Receive Malar Credit Cards
Tree Brochure MS 417 MM
* S A N FO R D POLICE *
* B E N E V O L E N T ASSOC *
will be holding an Old Fash
rorted Rummage sate on July
0 m s Tha tel* start* at I AM
4 will ba held st the Santord
Police Banavolant Building
located an L*k* Monro* |utt
east at Central Fla Regional
Hospital. Santord T*» Da
d u t i a b l e D o n a tio n s ot
claming, or ether Items will bo
greatly appreciated Far traa
pick up er further Information
pteata cell m«7S0

27—NuriBry &amp;
Child Cate
B a b y s i t t i n g In m y h a m s
e v e n in g s 4 w o s k e n d t

Certified4 Bap Ml 44)1
I will babysit in my ham*, full or
per 11me Infants 4 toddlers
Grove view village J1I ted)
M ature Woman will babysit
your child, any age Mon F rl
llll a P M Call Gina 111 111*

* * * *
* Thinking ol getting * e

* Reel f slats Licenser *
W* stter Free Tedten
end centwvevt Training I
Call OKfc er Vicki ter details
*71 1447..J U tMt

ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff.
J A M E S E SMITH RUTH M
SMITH. U N IT E 0 STATES OF
A M E R IC A , end FINAN CE ONE
C R E D IT O F FLO RIOA IN C .
and S E M IN O L E CO UN TY.

D E A L E R S W AN TED Maw end
unique proven energy product
Company paid toad program
Law prk*. Large profit) Not a
Irene ruse Local assistance tor
training Small Investment tor
Inventory Strtout cells only I
Call Mr Vos I » 1 7SJ 70I0
I make over It!.(XXI a month
with my telephone You can.
too Part FulHIm# 117 *101
or 444 ta il
Work frr n home 140 pr 100
insert.to tnevelopos For In
tormatlsn sand stamp to K S
E nter prises, T O « M UO l AWE
Bioomlieid N J 07001_______

61— Money to Lend
Business Capital 110 000 to
11000.000 onu over P O h i
7411 Winter Fk Fla 117S0
71 — H «lp W a n t e d
teener I. aependobto people to

work In csnyffilanc* stores
Paid vacations Group Intur
one* available Polygraph
required Apply In person a l:
Lilli* Champ Food Star*. If»
French Av* . Senford
Avan Beauty Cempany
Full or perl lima Call Immedi
islet, 173 It to or H U M *

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
FO R S E M IN O L E CO UN TY.
FLO R ID A
P R O B A T E DIVISION
File Number U IT*CF

IN R E E S T A T C O T
E V E R E T T A LFO N S O
M E R R IT T .
CNk l i i f t j
NO TICE T O C R IO IT O R I

tSummery AdminlsIrsHon)
TO A L L P E R S O N S H AVIN G
C L A I M S OH D E M A N D S
A G A I N S T THE A B O VE
EST A T E
Pteei* be edvlsed that an
Order ef Summary Admlnistr*
lion hat been entered by th*
tbev* styled Ceurt and that tha
total value ot lb* tita t* la
M l i t 41 consisting et
1177 Detsun automobile. S
Fishing boat. 1st* Wars
Savings Account. First Fader
*1 Savings A Loan *t Orlando
Real property t it William
St Altamonte Spring*. F L U T fl
Ihomestead
eeempt)
and that l a d assets have bean
assigned to E V E R E T T M I R
R ITT. JR
and E M E R S O N
M E R R IT T
Within three months from th*
tint* of th* ftrtl pubuettwn *1
this nvtlc* you or* required to
III* with the clerk a! th* Ckcutt
Court at Sem inal* County,
Florida Probate Dlvlsten. th*
addrou ol whkh it laminate
County Courthouse Santord. PL
B i l l , a written statement ot any
claim or demand you may have
against th* estate et E V E R E T T
A L F O N S O M E R R I T T , da
Each Claim must be m writing
and mutt Indicate the basis tor
at tha creditor or hia agent or
a tta rn a y . a n d Ih* am ount
claimed It th* claim la nat yet
due. the date ehan it will
became due shall be Hated It
th* claim It contingent er unit
q u ite tod. Ih# neturt ef th*
uncertainty shall ba slated It
th* claim It * * ..—d . th# social
ty shall ba described
Th*
claimant shall deliver a espy ol
Ih* claim to th* Clark who than
tarva a copy an the personal
representative
A L L C L A I M S A N D DE
M ANDS NO T SO F I I C 0 WILL
BE F O R E V E R B A R R I O
Dated Jim* to. ltd*
M A C K N C L E V E L A N D . JR ,
ES Q U IR E
P O Drawer Z
Senior#. F L V in t ill
Telephone i m h i h Ufa
Publish Jun* If. M. IM l
0 ( 0 Wf

C R T OPERATOR
Del* entry eaperienc* or good
typing Permanent position
■Hh growth potential Stover a
Ft*

TEMP PERU____ 774-1341
Developer needs couple
Tor general clean up 4 small
repairs Full tlm* Trentpor
teflon required C«H m 7147
I C*. Needs D ra tls m a e
Tram** Send return* to M 1
Ce . MOO State Road 417.
Sanford Fla 77771
Mater* Salesperson with retail
asp tor ladtot lathten shop
Apply at Bigger and Batter
Fashions. H I E 1st Street
July.
'IS, In downtown Santord
Posit tent aval labia in Orlando
4 Santord stores Hiring Ass I
M g r , C re d it M g r
Salat
personnel Rettll asp helpful,
but not m e Call l a ta S U l

NEWSPAPER CARRIER
NEEDED
Chutoot*. Oviedo area Mutt be
bondebl*. hav* dependable
transportation hav* teteptum*
and be rooem tbte T* work
between 1:00 P M 4 4 00 PM
For more Into, call Tony.
H I M IL between 1100 AM
end 4 00 PM_______________
NURSE'S AID ES: All shifts
Eipartencod or certified p rt
ferrod Apply In parson at
Late,tow Nursing Cantor. 01*
E Tnd V . Sen lord
Part Tim* Catering Help- R e
sponsible adult*, m a la er
tomato Soma tood prepara­
tion and servk* Varied days
end evening hours Including
■ • sta n d s
C a l l 1110**1
B u ck 's C a f t r l i t i , tor oppalntment

P H O N E W O R K E R S - Mostly
Tuttttm*. but wilt consider port
time 44 00 h r . plus good
bonuses M#i* or fsmol#
dents Cell 0*40*1
Resident Moneger/Acthrlttos
Director ter Sewter Adett Apt
C e m m e n lty . R esponsible,
creative mdividuei te Hvq on
prom ltd* and plan ratfeaftonai and social activities
Mutt enjoy people and ba
energetic Ideal tor recent
retiree! Lovely apt. meals
and other amanlttes provided
HI M M Man
F rl
Santord
Landscape Laborer mutt have
transportation 4 good driving
record laftSOd ___________
Lie* In Housekeeper wanted
own room Lake Mery Art*
H I 40*0
________ ___
Pert ttm*/ Full time Earn U \
o r m a r * c o m m is s io n s
Supervisor positions ava il­
a b le
C a ll M r
M o o r*
I 000 417 *404. E vt F LM
SEMI T R A I L E R M ECHANIC
Minimum 1 years tiportenc*
with good work record Must
have hand tools l&gt; per hour
plus t ic e lle n t benellls In­
cluding company paid health
insurance Apply In parson
Transport Brakaragt.lac.
I M S . French Ave
(Stoto Farm ers M erkel I______
S E R V IC E W R ITER
I U Busy dealership! Any type ot
•ipartenc* or will train with
m echanical background In
N issan e r D a t tu n l Graat
(hones tor mechanic trying to
change careers'

yflfeto Employment
flm
323-5176
H H French Are

SHIPPING SUPERVISOR
M a n u fa ctu re r ol alum inum
windows and sliding gists
doors It soaking a highly
o r g a n li a d I n d iv id u a l to
supervise our shipping dt
partmanl Mutt be familiar
with D O T regulations tnd
* , per lanced In th* scheduling
and maintenance *4 a I1**l ot
trucks Practical *«per tenet
In loading and protecting alu
minors windows end sliding
glass doors or ralatod mater I
a lt It desirable Also, ft
sponsibM tor maintaining an
orderly warehouse Mutt ba
abto to work undtr aitrame
pressure and rotate with ail
levels at management We
otter e liber al compensation
and benefits package It Inter
ested and y*u moot (has*
requirements, bond return*’,
or call
MARCAR A L U M IN U M
FR O O U C T S CO M P A N Y
7 0 Deaseor I
L Fl.

A L L T Y F E S JOBS
S TA R T WORK MOW I
A

O, tender.It

N O T IC E O F
FO RECLO SU RE U L E
N O TIC E It hereby given that
iha undersigned D A V ID N
B E R R I E N Clark ef Rw Circuit
C o u rt of Som lnolo C ou n ly,
Florida, will on th* tilth day et
July. ms. between H e m and I
p m at the Watt Front deer el
th* Sem inole County Court
bouse Santord. Florid*. otter
tor sale and 4*11 ot public outer,
to the highest and bast bidder
tor each, th* following described
property situate In Seminal*
County. Florida
Lot f l . A C A D E M Y MANOR.
UNIT O N E . according to Ititplat
thertol at recorded In Plat Book
t l Page f l. Public Records ol
Sam mote County, Florid*
pursuant to m* Flanl Judgment
entered In a cal* pending in said
Court, tha style ol whkh It
indicated above
W ITNESS my hand and ot
Iklal teal ol u i d Court this 7th
day at Jun*. m i
(SEAL)
D A V I D N B E R R IE N
C L E R K OF TH E CIRCUIT
COURT
By /s/Cheryl H Franklin
Deputy Clark
Publish June 11. It, m i
D E G 41

7741W*

55—Business
Opportunities

Lego! Notice
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT.
IN A N D FO R
iS M iW G lf i C O U N TY ,
FLO R ID A
C A S E NO at n i- C A e t O
M C L E A N SAVIN G S A LO AN

E rs

Keyes*4 Florida , Inc.
IS Vsers 1 1pectone*I

teoutaparonte couple er mature
adult Christian shelter tor
abused and troubled teens
14f lOrt
_____________

Part tins# L P N needed tor &gt;11
shift Good etmospTter* EOf
Apply at Dobary Manor a* N
17 f l . Dabary

non / 4 - V
Mm**M« ^ r j r

la

1 NO

K m c*
|H( »«!

f EC I

^

Hfporf Tsedf for work «t 4 AM
407 W lif St
Untord

321-1590
Auto Pact! Counts! Ps-son
F ett growing erganllstten Ee
per tone*d only ne«dsd Apply
in parson * am to 4 pm
Automotive I Parts Servk*.
100 S Perrsnmr* Av* , Or
A U T O S A L E S M utt b* salt
starter, have out going par
tonality, be ambIHous. and
hav* a desire to make money
Due to our aapanison. w* n**d
1 persons immediately lor
used car Mtes Ron H I 4071

EXCELLENT
MANUFACTURING
OPPORTUNITIES
Cardinal Induitrle*. Inc., has po iltlo nt available In
o u r Temporary Pool II you hav* Initiative, drlv* and
th * desire To learn and aarn a good hourly wag* Car

dlnal hag a position tor you.
These Individual* w ill work In our a*g«mbly plant
whore we build m odular homos
Positions will possibly lead To full tins*. High school
diploma or G E O equivalency required
II Interested, please stop by the security office ef our
plant located at:
1701 S. Sanford A ve.,
Sanford, F L . 13771

AV O N EARNIHOS WOWIIt
O P E N TE R R IT O R IE S NOWIII
M l l l l l er 173 Salt

C A R D IN A L IN D U STR IES, INC.

Babysitter Wanted Responsible
teenager to keep 1 children in
my home S days a wees Call
Bator* Mean 111 44*4

E O E M /F/M /V

CARPENTER
With own tools
any time

Call

117 ! W

Cashier NigM position, service
t'atlon 40 hrt Security 113
•410 Leonard t Shell
Can*!
C le a n in g la b o r
M ate'Fam ew . full or pt tins*,
days winter ip rln g i Area
H I Sdl7, attar T pm
COOK
R a lla t
E e p t r la n c *
h elp lvi
Lasaviaw Nursing
Cooler, t i l E Tnd S t .
A I D E S Ail shuts Esp 4 - or
certified Goad almasphare 4
bonatils EO E Apply at D»
lie- y Manor . SON H u y 17 f l
AD M IN ISTR ATIV E ASST
ACCOUNTINC C L E R K
SECRETARY
K E Y PU N C H ER
W ANG O P ER ATO R
C L E R K TYPIST
C R T O P ER ATO R S
Immediate sssignaiawh avail
ebte In Lake Mary and San
tard Area Cell ABtesf Tamp*
rary Servk vs III le t * ______

" T h t Best P ls c t Y o u 'll C v t r W o r k "

Triedmarfs
IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G
Ex p e r ie n c e d Bo o k k e e p e r
F R IE D M A N 'S JEWELERS (he South's leading
and most aggirssivt retail lewder has on opening for
a bookkeeper Eioencnce preferred but not man­
datory Individual must he friendly, outgoing and
efficient Friedman's otters its employees an e icrllem compensation package including Maiot
Medical hospitalnation, life insurance, paid vac­
ations, paid holidays, sick leevr, retirement program
and other benefits Apply in Frrson
AN EQ U AL O P P O R T U N IT Y E M PLO YER

A.C Mechanics B tarvlc*
testaHaIts* Salary bated an
asp

&gt; barsatit* HI 41*1

A crylic Applicator* needed te
apply protective coating an
cars, beats and planet U te
SI) per hour We tram For
work m Santord area call
_____ Tampa H I M * 1)11
L A B O B E H 4- Strong reliable,
general laborers nu des Im
mediately DHterenl totetleni
Phene and trensparletien a
m utt Never a tee Apply

K tU V SERVICES

(60-7339
LA40411 IS
ASSEM BLERS
W A R EH O U S E W O RKERS
Assignments available In Son
fo rd . L o k t M ar y ana
L o n geo o d ar*a
No toe
Abtosl Tem porary Servlet
HI 1*M

Sanford Plaza
A p p ly In Person

Triedman’s
IM M E D IA T E O PE N IN G
Ex p e r ie n c e d

s a l e s pe r s o n

FR IE D M A N 'S JEWELERS, one of the fetes
■rowing retail chains in the Southeast is teekini
friendly and outgoing individuals wuh sides ability
Eapenence in retail soles preferred but not maml*
tory Friedman's otters us employees an eiccUrn
compensation pdekage indludmg Magsr Medici
hospittlicanon, life insurance, paid vacations, pan.
holidayt, sick kivc. retirement program and othci
benefits Apply in Person
A N F.QUAL O P P O R T U N IT Y EM PLO YER

Triedm anfe
Sanford Plaza
A p p ly In Person

" i l f t t S 'V W i 'f t k

�♦ *

« 1 •

I

K IT t r C A H L Y U I 'b y Lorry W right
17— Apartments
Furnished / Rtnt

71-H e lp Wanted
H C I I T t l r (or f in a n c e
• co m n n ir E ic*ll*r&lt;t tTp irtg
U llit t U knowledge oi bee*
k e e p in g n e c e e ip r y .
Diw rtlftod office duttet Good
opporhosiiy tor mature. at
tractive p e r n that enter*
Working with public Call
M l MSB__________________
IIC IIT M III
Well prganlied. goad typing,
••erd procattlnq e ip a r le x * *
plut Permanent potitien t
teeveralee I
T E M P P E RAOm-pea_________
SHOWROOM R E C K PTION 1ST
m You wen t be bored here I
S m l l t l G re a t c w lt a m e n ,
handle phone* Train ler lit*
bee* keeping

m

Employment
323-5176

_____________m s PreacR Aug.
SledeetV Retiree V Hautowtva*
Pert time er full lim e I I G H .
long term automatic rettdu
* H D 7 T M l,x A 4 * » * il
SWITCH ROAR O O P E R A T O R
P a r t lim e , I P M P P M .
W*d Sun Light typing, tiling
Mutt be dependable Apply in
per ion at Seminole F e r d .lx .
l i b S Orlande Or Sentard
Tired at tab Huntingf
C a ll F u tu re *
th e y h a v e
hundred* ot tab opening* tar
thote who n *n t te n or*
m a t
D E L I V E R Y H E LP E R S - no ee
parlance neerttery Full time
Good Iter ting per *'» OOO
O E N E R A L
O F F I C E
T R A IH E C I
Greet darting
|0b Several opening* Good
pay a r s o n

a C O U N T R Y SE TT IN G b
Large I A I Rdn
Aden LahavtowFamfty

MASTIKS COW___ J23-7100

CALL........... 322-1051

Odea* I
* « ta * . s c re e n e d p e t it .
Huntey «3BBmo X)1 m i

127— Office Rentals

RIKEWOOO AIMS ATTS.

Long wood Protetitonal Ottlca
Space Hcatad 4 4 t l/ i 104
MO *g f) Modern, attractive
building C a ll Malta C o rp .
Orlando. K » O ta 0*44_______

Monday thru Friday
* to 1 10
Saturday from
— 10 H I

Near Downtown ] bdrm I bath.
e ttp a t
a p p lia n c e *
Down*t*ir* ep« ►*« p , u u i l
a mo . *J00 security M l Sill,
or M l AtOO

,

.

IM M E D IA T E O P EN IN G S
General Construction labor
Good pay art OOO

Spot leu* Apartment* Minute*
from Hwy H i t
Leketront,
pool, lennli. adult*, no pat*,
laundry Starting at UOS a me
Call MSOTMIOkoo________

TR U C K D R IVER S Long haul
immediate! Good driving re
cord Over IS art *300

t and 1 bdrm A lto turnlthad
efficiency from SIS week U R
depot! t No pat* Call M l 4)01
SI PM II) Palmetto_______

LO CAL O R IV ER t
Straigh t
trucks Good pay Start right
aeay *rt &lt;M

I bdrm
large living room,
kitchen with appliance* SIN
month . depoelt MI MW

R E C E P TIO N IST . O F P IC E
H E LP E R S . C L E R K S . CRT
O P E R A T O R S - Im m a d la ta
openings Good pay scale*
Call srt AXO NOW!

1 bdrm/1 bath nice arte
UR
1 bdrm I beth new duple■ U t)
Wt have eiher realal* I
Untied Sale* A t o x . l x .
R E A L T O R ! ..................Mt-MM.

O R Y W A L L - With or without
a ip a r lo n c a
I m m a d la t a
opening* Good pay C a ll to
day «n i W _______________

TRUSS ASSEMBLERS
’ Experience preferred but e lll
train E mediant banalitt with
c o m p a t a llv a p ay
A p p ly
Low a's T r u is P la n t. l* t l
J Aileron Clr.. Sentord Airport
Indullrlg l Park____________
y
W AN OO PERATO R
Opening* In Lake Mary Ho lea
C a l l A b le k l T e m p o r a r y
Service* M l l t d ___________
Wanted Grandmother type
•are tar 11 month twin* and or
, J'y year old In my home ] or J
day* a weak Reference* re
! qulred Pleat* call M l t i n

ta

WAR I HOUSE T R A IN E R
)S4 10 par hour La rgt dl d r Ibutor
&lt; will train for all pha*ad * day
Groatl

Employment
323-5176
&gt;SM French Are

♦3— Rooms for Rent
Chr Id ie n Apr* A Heme*
TV . kitchen, laundry, meld. VSO
'
** up Or I d l SOPS'*11 aaio
. f urnidwd Room lor rent See at
H U Gata PI 1 block* ott ittti
St A Sentard Aro___________
I S A N FO R D Furnished room* by
J the weak Rea ion able rata*
M aid karvice Call 1U *30)
SI P M i l l Palmetto Ave
S A N F O R D FurnUhed room
Home A pool prlvetago* Call
M7 r ie l after t P M _
T H E FLO R ID A H O T E L
. tOOOe* Avenue
M l ARM
_ R a a w n a b H W o a d £ R a te ^ _

17— Apartments
Furnished / Rtnt
C E N T U R Y II
KISH R E A L E S T A T E

1 bdrm1. I bath. Oatva* Apt
*1M security depot ! U/0 per
month Loll M l *1)0________

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent
Lovely On* B d rm Cattag*
Private yard *00 par week
plut SJOO security Call M l
I M t e r lD N U

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
B d rm , d upiai
all conve
n la n c e t . n ic e a re a , t i l l
*oc Call M l l l t l

MIDDEN L A K E
1 b d rm . 1
beth. kid* o k , no pal* Set)
pgr month Call 111 ta ll
a t e IN D E L T O N A • * *
a * HOM ES F O R R E N T * *
* * IIS 1*1* k *
Lake Mary
1 Bdrm . ] bath
H u g h t h a d a d lo t , q u la l
neighborhood Good school*
Wall*** C rv ti Realty
R E A L T O R ...................... MIAM I
Lea* Mary J or 4 bdrm , 1 bath
new appliance*, tcraan room,
ta xed yard Available July 1
SeMtec 1*10 mo Reference!
m i cm
Sentard watt of I 'A 1 bdrm 1
bath central a ir /hoot, ta x a d
yard dbi garage lake ecceti
*5)0 a mo First, last, wcurl
ty M l *1*4
SA N FO R D 1 bdrm . 1 bath
Villa F .replace double cor
garage D l ) m e . D l ) tec
Immadiai* x c u p a x y l
LONG WOOD 1 bdrm . 1 bath
N*w
E a e c u llv a
H am el
E ■elusive areal SAM m o .

SUNLAHD E S T A T E S 1 Bdrm .
1 bam ex p a t, klde ok. SMI
par month * security Avail
abtaS/tS Call le t t*44

FO R R E N T i I Bdrm
apart
matte turnlihad UOOOO pet

) Bdrm . t bam. ta x a d . SO) par
month . SOS tocurlty deposit
reference* required C a ll
IS* ISM

Fore Apt* tar Samar CltMeas
)l| Palmetto Ave
J Cowan No Phono Celle

) B d rm . n y bath Raca'Hnt
condition ICC par month plu*
SM4 security 1*400*11 Call
M l 44*4or M l MR*

m oan

Hugh 1 bdrm apartment Me* I
children Complete privacy
IMS per week glut U R aecurt
ty depoti! Call
M l no* of
M l MM
Lake M a ry Fu rn
Apt
lor
Single working man. no kidt
or pal* Call after S M l W O
Large Fv
' near
M l tlta. evo*

m
wk . I I H 1

1 bdrm apartment*

M l W Lake Mary Beofevsrd,
Sulfa 4. S M I month Im
mediate x c up x n y M l 110*

NEW HOME
Lovely ) Bdrm 1 bath with
greet room, l.rtpleco. oat In
k it c h e n , d in in g r e a m ,
boeutllul wooded tot SI*.*00

woo tq. It office spec* avail
able, second lleor ol ad
mlnltfrattv* building Sanford
Airport. S4 10 par tq It In
dud** Air. boat. |enltorl*l and
perking Cell Sanford Airport
Authority tor detail* M l f i l l

WORE 323 44*3
tor quality crattmanahip and
compatitiy* p rlctt let ut pr*&lt;*
out your m
No qualifying Naw 1 Bdrm . ]
bath, garage *4 MO down
I tty X 10 y * if m o rtg a g e
Move right In Cell *44 *B*0
alter 4 PM
_____

141— Homes For Sale
A T T E NT I ON
H O M E BUTERSI
Buy direct and tava St OOO 4
bdrm . 1 bath, large groat
room and large living room
Com plataly remodeled and
radxoratod intida and out
Central l y located, do** to
ichoot. shopping ale Nice
yard a x ) many other **tra*
s s t.n o
C A L L F OR AFP-TI
M l 44*4 X M i n i l __________

No Qualifying New 1 bdrm 1
barh on 1 acres Horses ok
O m n Imaxing- prim* area
S7TW0 see S ilt ____________
Santord hies 1 bedroom home
with living room, dining room,
paneled family room, laundry
room, workshop Call tor In
formation 11) 1104 O' t ie *4)1
*4) 000. x bast otter

BATEMAN REALTY

ST

Lie. Reel Etlato Broker
1 Bdrm I Bem firaptec#, rv *
kitchen, bath A root, fenced
back
W a t 1)4. *00 now
*7* *00 Buyer par* doting
144* Santord Ay*

OENEVA
Like new double
wide ) bdrm . i both mobile S
acres cleared ta x e d Storage
shad, pony Sian
S41.000
Txm t

BY O W N E R e’ hdrm/) bath
screened porch many a itra t
I 1) assumable mtg S4t.no

m im _______

O TH ER HOMES. LOTS.
A C R E A G E . IN V E S T M E N T
PROPERTY

D U P L E X ON LY 4*4,to*
Recently refurbished Including
n tw c e n t r a l a ir /heat
E ic a lla n t location produce*
SAJI rant
Assumable FH A
mortgage H U R R Y ON THIS
ONE I

CA LLA N TTIM E
R E A LTO R M l 4*tl

C A LL BART

SU TOU HEED
K

H

A

10 IRON
IN RUE (STATE

STENSTROM
ns •&gt;%»%%»nfia*Ttji

REALTY*REALTOR

KISH REAL ESTATE
siio.n« oo
POOL ) Bdrm . ) bath, attic*,
braaktatl nook, lamlty room,
on I acre t lot
4)* FOO 00
L A K E M A R Y NIc* and clean 1
bdrm . I bath, screen room.
CH/A. attic Ian Fenced back
yard
so* n o o o
POOL L x g * oak tree* shad*
Ihla 1 Bdrm . I bam heme
H xdw ood floor*, knotty pm*
kitchon ce b ix ts . brveiewer
to gar eg* q u x ry til* floor
Sta te* 00
LOOK at Ihlt 1 Bdrm . I bath
on toncod corner lot Walk to
downtown V x y convenient
and V A appeal sad
O P E N S UNDAYS . I tot PM

(305) 321 0041
*U W llth Street
Santord. FI IlFtl

l ONO W O O D 1 bdrm . 1 bam
Haw roof Low down payment
O w n er fin a n cin g
M1.S44
Ml 4 W
LOOK SJOOO DOWN I Santord 14
bdrm I bath, hug* lot. central
air/heat Why pay 11%
eapon**t I'll accept 1 4 ! I
S4».*** Call M l 1411________

LON DOWN FATMENT
Lavaty 1 Bdrm country ham*
• im yard and big garden
a re a
A ffo rd a b le monthly
payments Call **S IIP*

H ALL

IM IV y8C
■«*418
IS «&lt;!•% I I N N N I

I For
ty equipped F
C O B it e S lt
Retail A Ortua Space MO up H
1 404 tq ft *1*0
abta m * m

121-Condominium
Rantals
SMS mo

1 bath
1*1 te
utility

A P L E A S U R E ! I bdrm I bath
home Easy to shawl Central
alr/haef. taxed yard, outside
utility Cfasatotownl toe.to*

AFFORD ARLEI
) kdrm ■/
lr|. K T M i i i ptrdLe In i h M
yard. F H A or V A h o a xin g I
IN.to* Can ueqwtckl

pay
Greet tar Rta smell
l i t tad

323-5774
____

StM M R rV .lt*&gt;

work Raatonabiy y rlc N
ttattard-CdM: » 1 B * 4
R I

In

Broker

O I I T R E S I SALE
■ I Bdrm. t
Ian*. A
v e rtic a l b lle d t
Ix lu d a d
B R I N O O P F I R I S*l,«l*

W ATER R I O S A C C e F T E O t

321-1911

nn

DISTRESS SALE
Investor* U A » nagatiekie )
B d rm . I bath Country C M
x t e C X I P a Fold

m mo

Familtet_____ B ______Adults
M U Nary If *1.................. TO HO*
P U R C H A S IN G
A M O B IL E H OM E?
Fra* con*ult*tlon on horn**,
park*, land, ftn e x in g . toning
A sk tor Ron MS 11) &gt;100
« E POt R E p o t ) bdrm . 1 bath
mobiI* homes tit* mo Some
assumable C a ll 4 a ik tor Mr
Orr. 104 111 11)4

WOW I ) bdrm
)
d o u b le w id e ,
th ln g la d ro o t .
SIS too Call A ask
*04 Ml TIM

both, new
m e s o n itf
I lr t p la c t .
tor M r Orr

U S I0I Mobile Hama* s ix ling
at DUO Call A ask for Mr
o r to* i n m e
_____
lt*l CHampton 14X14. 1 bdrm .
I bath, fam ily p x k .ID.W0
Call » ) IM*

111— Appliances
/ Furniture

P O E N E V A O S C E O LA RD. a
ZO N ED FOR M O B IL ES !
I Acre Country tract*
Watt tread a* paved Rd
M X Down 1* Yr» *111X1
Frem 11AM* I

322-2420
)
Bdrm . | bath. DM g x a g *
l x go ta xed y X d C X I . ItF
IFIP

141— Commercial
Property / Sale

Sub* equipment Com plate set
ol O S Diver * equipment
Like new
B C . octopus, act
Call U f AMO
W f DOING GOWN
Sire IS, lx * A train. AMO
M ) 4)14

_________
Peodl* *
all shot*
altar l PM
a n y llm *

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
FOR SALE M NV Park AAodtl
traitor F i x condition, tully
turnlthad H a a l/A lr. screen
ro o m , p a t i o l u r n l l u r *
carpeted storage shad, all
Ixludad SI OOO firm Print!
plat only. Call IT) 41 If

231-Cars
203— Livestock and
Poultry

Bed Credit?

No Crmtet? |

Honey f tell contained
tlldt In cim p e r A/C, ) way
ralrigeraioc. floor turnac*.
holding tank. Ilk* now II 000
Call M l INI

j o - J u n k Cars

Wt FINANCE

211— Antiques/
Collectables

W* Has* * Limited Number at
Rapa * tor as Law as SIM Ouwal

A N T JUNK C A R S A TRUCKS
Bovpht From si* IM A n u n
C*M 1MI4M-.....................m-4111

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1120 S. Sonfotd...... 321 4075

TOP Dollar P a id tor Junk A
Jtad c x i.lr u c k s A heavy
equipment M l H W

Ita) C t o r f H i 4 Or hatchback
Auto. A M FM tterao. I* mot
worronty E icaltenf condition
) lt l*S»
_________
II Malibu Station Wagon. V/»,
p
window* brake* tteorlng:
auto, *lr: crulto Needs tom*
work MOD Mt )»H_______

W A N T E D BY COLLECTOR:
Top pv'ces paid tor batrbe!!.
football card*, c o m . stamp*
a x ) com ic book* Cal! M l

213— Auctions

M Mustang 1 c y l . P*. A M F M
c a tta il*
Eatr* n ice tool
dwn .H in e s top** ***0*00

AU C TIO N E V E R T FRI NIOHT

1*41 Cadillac
Dr Ivan d ally
Call M l fctll alter 1 P M week
day*. Anytime weekends

L &amp; E AUCTION
SO* Santord Avt
C O N S IG N M E N T S W ELCO M E I

1234513

USED C A R S

FO R E S TA T E
C o m m e r c ia l or Rasldantlal
Auction* A Appraisal* Call
Pell * Auction M l &gt;*»

T H E B E S T IN T O W N
t t-Z T E R M S

WE PAY TOP O O i l * e f o b
JU N K CARS A N D T R U C K S
CBS AUTO P A R T I 1*1 4*At

1981 OLDS CUTLASS
LS
*4993
1976 CHEV. CAMARO
*1993
1983 FORD CROWN
VtCTPRU I W.
*4300
1984 FORD RANGER
PU A C

215— Boats Rtsd
Accessories

* 4 3 0 0

1975 MERCURY

«*t *9*1

I f Orlando C U pp x * Mors*
power Johnson motor and
traitor A ll In perfect condl
Non Call TO M i Dh * PM

CRED IT H A S SLES?
•

14 It Open Plohxm an. 41 h p.
M ercury, palvenltad trailer,
and a it r a t D I M Call after 4.
M l TMI

e

217— Garage Sales

•
•

Highland* Garage sal* Rained
out last Saturday This woe*,
114 Galloway Casrrt Saturday
J u n a Z M M to tln o o n

1*1 u t w ort* a b o u t your
c re d it problem *
W e can fin a n ce a lm o s t
a n yo n e
D o w n paym ent a t to w a i
SJOO 00
W a taka Haile*
Payn w rit In IH your txidg*)

D ISC O U N T A U TO S A L E S
1501 T ren ch A k o .
S 2 3 -1 M S

I960 RENAULT
LECAR
*14931

SAN FO RD
M O T O R CO
AM C

JEEP

SOI S F r e n c h A v e
m 4 ) iz

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Additions A
Remodeling
RLHOOCLING SPECIALIST
W f H ondX
The W h Jb Beil Of Was

I E. LINK CONST.
322 7029
F m e x ln g Available

Appliance Repair
Aliens AppliBRCR Same*
II hr Sxvlc* No E it r e Cherge
IF y ra a e O O A S X I. *14*41)

Carpentry
A G R E A T OIP T l Hava Her
Kitchta Rem ediladt Alt type* at
Carpentry
Rean ut M e PrMat
I I P X M X ad
...... Rotor o x el
Vary RatteRta...........M*-**1FXI*
AH typo* ol exporter r 4 r*
modeling V y rt tap CXI
8 n hard Grose M l WFI

Cleaning Service
•CO M PETENT C LE A N IN G .
* S E R V IC E *
Avxtebte f* day. Sat Only
IF*
________________ set)

111— Investment
Property / Sale

Head Carpal CtoaatUR Lfrtog.
Demag Roam R Hall U*.M.
Sate A Ototr, SIB. IM kMB

153—Acreage*
Lots/Sale

mo

STOPI
'11 Seltol U t Adult owned and
maintained G ro at cond . v x y
clean Hat m x sy a it r a t Need
money now. m utt toll I t*T*. or
botl offer C T H t H r M l W l l

CONSULT OUR

C O M M E R C IA L SP E C IA LIS T
L A K E MART R E A L T Y
RO B B A L L -JR ............... J O -F 1 M

CA SSELB ER R Y t a r t »n*d
P R I S4J OOO W Malic rows* i
REALTO R
M l FSB)

231— Motorcycles
and Bikes

R EPO SSESSED
Mutt tall 1 ouontal ttyte stoat
building* Brand new navyr
erected Ot* It aO'XlG'. M ill
•all tor batenc* owed Cell
Adam 1 *00 S3! 4*44

•
Dining Room leute and chair*
Sts c h a i n . A s k i n g r too
Call M ) TO*
Ilk* now sofa earth
ton*, chai r , doth, tabit*.
lamp*, cater T V . doubt* bad.
I bikes. Call M l )SM

tte* XLT Ford Pick Up solid
b ix k Take o v x payments

Pick tomatoes
Groan*,
pink*, ripe* *4 per bos Cal
ary A x ) M A M Frl Sal

MINI BIKE
Good condition Asking
C all 1)4 SMt

A*brat F x Sal*
Psgs tm paatt. min burr**
WHc* Tatok, Hwy U W I l l U h

Ut|tsT Htw i . Used Ubfc.k
Horn* D o l t i in this Ai m

235—Trucks /
Buses / Vans

mils*

223— Miscellaneous

R O TTW E ILE R S
l month* No papers tx x *a

O W N ER M O TIV A T ED I
I
bdrm. 1 bath ham* with grtal
r e a m , c a th e d ra l c a t lla g .
central aw/hael. p x c h Owed
Weal ten I teLHB

D ELTO N A

WoB 14 Company

A D U LT PARK
L IFE T IM E R E N T S
IIBM M t
I n clu d e * w a t e r , g a rb a g e
pick up. y a rd m a in !
Im
mediate occupancy
Gregory Mobile Hamas 11MW*

E A S Y ASSUMPTION! 1 bdrm
1 bath bant* With aal in titch
an. cantral airib aal. gam#
room X workshop area In
parop*. le x o d yard U l.l t *

W IL L BUILD TO SUIT! Y O U R
L O T OR OURSI E X C L U S I V E
A O E N T FOR W IN IO N O
D E V CORP.. A C E N T R A L
F LO R IO A L E A D E R ! M O R E
H OM E FOR LESS M O N E V I
C A L L TODAVI

U

Ability K anna I* Dog boarding
Country A lm o tph x * Reason
a b le R a ta *
) 1 ) 1110

W h ile A K C Toy
month* old Hat
lt) 0 C all M 3 D M
d u r in g w aak,

* * LIMOUSINE * *
1*1* Cadillac lim o D x k Mu*.
with parfltlOH. SWOB O * Tl4*

UVC HUE CKAfS
111*D*

l i t — Pets 4 Supplies

S U P E R ! 1 bdrm t bath ham*
with Itstld* utility, tpllt bdrm
piaa. aal In kitchen, a itr*
targ* living room *** ***

1)000 down. A it u m a b l*

COUNTRY NIDI IULTY

SIN G LE S TO R Y
LIVIN G
i Tom. tom
Toot RroOiI

Call

D O L L H OUSE! I bdrm
ham* In Its* country
k itc M n , 1 parch**,
room HI.)**

CALL A N Y TIM E

Easy Naaiclwgt D t am

Car
bdrm , I bath
I lf S t t M

WE LIST A N D S E L L
M O RE HOM ES TH A N
AN YON E IN N O R TH
SEMINOLE C O U N TY

It you art leaking ter a sec
casitut career to Real Estate.
SVensfrum Realty I* leahleg
ter y*u Cell La* A lX fg h t
today al 111 HI* (rem a p s
m tm

Mt A Up .

guiat realdtntlal. U f l par
month plu* d o p ed ! C a ll:
m a t*
_____________
I bdrao E M c t o x r Per tact tar I
pereon Complete privacy W
l wk Include* util t&lt;M toe
dap M l Hoe or M l H U

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

Sanford's Salts l*»d*r

Mat P A R K A V E -----tel LA Mary Rtod........LA M ary

3&amp;3J4I

Sandalwood Condominium. 1
bdrm . 1 both A ll appliances
w a ih e r / d r y a r
P rtc * Re
ducedt S it.*O 0
REALTY
STORE. Roaltar* 111 t*M.

Dr Aar r Arte A M a n x Sales
Acrwtt Ih* rhrar. top *1 but
111 Hwy 11*1 P a Gary toAOSM

Paying CASH ter
Aluminum. Can*. Capper.
Brat*. Lead. Newspaper
Glass. Gold. Silver
Kokomo Tool. *1* W lit
I ) on Sal * 111)1100

Zenith 11 cater television Orig
mol price over 1400 B a la x *
due tloa 00 cash or taka over
payment* SIS month Still In
warranty
NO M O N E Y
DOWN Free horn* trial no
obligation Cell M l DM . day

F R E E C R E D I T C H E C K BY
P H 0 H E I E a s y qualifying
C a ll A ash lo r M r
O rr,
*04 Ml TIM

LIST WITH USt

R E A L ES TAT E
RE AL TOR
M ll H E

Baachs.de Realty. R E A LTO R S
to*atr *)*»— ........Open l Dgy*l

F x more details
I to* TSSAMI________

Head Crib*. Piaypan*. Baby
fu rn itu re clo th in g
Good
Prices After f P M
M l S14J

* * C O LO R TEL EVI SI ON * *

e m p e r

D U P L E X Posltiv* cash flow
Owner will lln a x o
Set.M0
with 11S OW down

321 0751 Eve 322-7443

MIW S M Y R N A E EAC M
Drastically 'educed } bdrm 1
bath Ocean Front furnish'd
Condo SMOOdown

I v x y Wed Mite a l l M PM

* Where Anybody *
a Can Buy or Sell! *

Bod*. Strollers. Ctofba*.
P la yp o at. Etc. P a perba ck
t 11)4171 M l *S*4

221— Good Things
To Eat

wax..........D iyH « u l M « l

• * * 8 • NN8*(tl • • 8 • • •
runic AUTO WKTI0II

211—Wanted to Buy

155—Condominiums

Co-Op / Sr I*

Ottlca lor rant IS to M0 *q It
available flacaptienitt avail
a b le
L a k e M a r y a r* a
IBS M i PCD_______________

1 Story T awwha vsa ] bdrm., Hy
hoik. Control hoot and air

117— Com m ercial
Renta It

I

141—Homes For Sale

Hwy n

1 family yard lei* Thur* Bat
P T Lot* of Huff! MS Carport
tor Q»toon Cell M l 0**1

113— Television/
Radio / Stereo

113— Storage Rentals

Or * tt« rtb F ir * Rr r I
on I bdrm turn apt*

SANFORD CRT. APTS.

Raetonabto and conv*nlent
M I N Mapta. Sanford
M l WHO

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent
1411 ■ MettamrUta 1 B d rm . 1
bam. air. appliance*. SMS par
month ptut 113* locurtty da
petit Call: (11

★ DAYTONA AUTO *
★ AUCTION ★

27TH STREET FURNITURE
ni mi
im w m b si..

REALTO R
INLAND R E ALTY .IN C.
R E A L T Y W O R LD
Ml HU

Moving Sale Thur F rl. t AM
B!hat. furniture, old g le n
war* lodtet Ixp* ill * l*th
lent, loft of good stuff! M l
E e*1 Crystal Drive

Used Washer* Part* &gt; Service
tor K a a m o rH ................m o o t !
V AP P LIA N C E S

OtfiCBS to RorI

.M l 4441
i.. 1 bam sen
Call Me

231— Cars

• R E N T TO O W N .
T V * . stereos washers
dryer*, refrigerator tr* * ix*
lum ltvra. video recorder*
Special H i w **k*rxtelS 00
Alternative T V A Appi Rentals
Xayro* Shayping Cantor
m poo

C E N T U R Y II
KISH R E A L E S T A T E

O PLTO N A |
m e . piw
salt

W e d n e s d a y . J u n g 1*. I t t S — TB

217— Garage Sales

Reconditioned Appliances
hews 14) W AR RANTY
B A R N E T T S .. C ASS E LB E R R Y
M S i l l ........................... MR H I)

■a- 114
1 bath

Sanford newty remodeled large
1 b d rm . new kitchen, w/w
carpel, air, SJOO ♦ **&lt; Its 6
S Fork Ave Call HUSO* M M

P A IN TER S A P A IN T E R
H ELPERS
I m m e d ia t e
openings, good darting pay
Call today a n AJOO

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
l i m i t h u t ............ m s o n
e e C O U C H A C H A IR e e
BESTO FPER
______ t i e m i _______

LAKEFR0NT
LUXURY ADULT
COMMUNITY
★ NOW LEASING ★

0&gt;K9vfH far

Airport Blvd 1 bdrm
S ill mo I m Mas.

Appliance* F i r Safa- all In
aacattanl Canadian 4 tolly
.................M l-O ta

* 1 MO 2 BEDROOMS *

RAMROO C O V E APTS
m E. Airport Itvd
PHONE m o o t . M l04*I

F A C T O R Y A S S E M R L Y and
PRODUCTION W ORK Mo*I
Mutt* open Good pay scale*
ir u j o o

W E L D E R S Cartlllad Eicaltan t
par scalas Call today art
IXO

l

f t — Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

U fllfttd TtIRB O llh
ft oft F if* I Month* Rent
IStORdgawoodAva
Sanford. FI*.
CA L L
M l M M ------ _ ---------M l *MI

181 — Appliances
/ Furniture

SAlLMlNTT"
AT
LAKE MONROE

tri
i

tu t
M l *7*4. Eras

E v e n i n g H e r a ld . S a n fo rd . F I .

125— For Loose

MAIDS T* O f4 * i
CMateos*** tt w i t T* Oadl i x t t

CALL NON! 339OM0

Electrical
C O N T E M P O R A R Y E LEC T R IC
Comptota E Metrical S x v lc n
TV A Telephone*
M l MFF
D A S E Metric
, M l *0)0
Naw A ramodaimg addiliant.
Ian*, t o c if lfy light*, t im x t
plus all a Me t x v ic e t Quality
Sprufcd-Lie anted S Bcrndrd

Fence
INSTALL S E L L A REPAIR
&lt;rx**4 ...CJtoM Lmk .-.Wood
Foot* tl» H it
a a a a a a a a a a a e i
Ru*i t e ll!
U h The Nereid Classified*
C A L L TO D A Y
Ml tall

Health 4 Beauty
TO W E R 'S S E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H x rto tt t Baouty
SIP E t t ts t M l M i

Homo Improvement
CanMr-* R X M M r B
Ha ta* T x Smalt
III Burton L a
__________ H u m _________
THOM AS 4 TH O M AS. Ham*
repair, c la m ing, town cart
Call M l 1SX

“

Call M l Me)
M em tertexe of all type*
C x p x if r y . painting- plumbing
andatecN tc M ) M M

Landclearing
dew*, cabuwta. tlta. •**

MOdR dwn TO4F me Sacra*. MB
II
p*v*d rd
I r e n lA R e .
hx»to*ii*thp mabttetl T O M X

Electrical

* acre*, p x tiy ctaxed, water B
electric M l 000 By
M ) mm

AarNUag tte c trtc X Since l*r«i
Ithmate*
M H r. U r v k l Cob*
Tom'*(lactate Service m i n t

A C E LAWN S ER V IC E
Pruning
CM iniwg Tbalchteg FartlUiw g
Proa EiW m aNl . - .......J U I t l l

ru

0 I A T T H E H IA T I
Call Christian Bro s

j

Com pldU L i r e C lfE
l u s o t i i b l f H it t s

_

323-4401

Lawn MainMnax#
Lpndocaping lu sh Hag Mowing
__________SoMBH
_______
Lj w r U e * in ( .........Law P r k t t

_________ m

to* ________

LINNS MOHfD IT R IH M U
Spring Yard O t w i n

.TO-Ita)

QNsItty L i y b Cx i
At Attxdw bMPftcrs M l tf/1

Masonry
d E A L Caxrgto^ N Ax^ uam ^ *
Oparalion Palteo Drlvwway*
O j j iB ir o j d L ^ in i

Nursing Cart
o u t RATES ARE LOWER
*1* I . b a t e I I .
M tAtal

Painting

Home Repairs
CARPEN TER

O C N E V A L A N O C L IA R IN O
L X 'L a n d t ta x in g
Fill dirt
Topwtel Pond* Drain ditch**
Ste* P r t p x a h a n C x i so* HI*
T H O R N E LAMOCLEJkRIHO
P I L L D IR T * C LA Y p
SH ALE R H A U L IN G
Ml U U

I

Plastering

Lawn Service

Bast P. Nat N r willpapurtog.
paMtswg. t mar* R X V x y
RaltabM M)-**1FKM
F Mr Ida Mold A
Sate tails! I
IS y rt t i p
Fro* f i t
len d er
Inturud
W G IR IR B Y ................-MSMR)
I A Watt I
Youtary materiel!
Wo ta«XY M * x To S A V f to*
TO M l!
■Ill
ptate y w Home x Bualnoo*
*lc Otto your pruktemt ta u t
WE C A R E Qualify atari. JB
yr* aop MF IMF L k carte

BALL
t e a , H ard Coal,
B rick M l I f f l

Plumbing
I^ ^ u d d ^ a M 5 a R ? * r v ic ^ *
Repair * Rapiaca * Ramadel
a Fra* (in m a tes t M l BMP *

Sowing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners
Sawing Mechina Repairs *11
met** W yr* a a p x t o x * In
hornet Retired Ml 4FM

Sprinkler*/Irrigation
ABOUT T I M I i a A 4 A ! l O M
Naw Ixlaltettan*
Fro* l i t
■ i p x l Rtpalr ■ t l Campteta
Sprite Mr Syttem*
T lm x i
Pump*
IN
**S H M

Tile
A t a t lL I C x a m lc IIM totes 4
ln il* il* tie n
B a lh . f i x ' * ,
ramodaimg repair* Lots X
• lie * . B a t lf n * . p a lt p r n i.
g reu tl s a ltin g m a la ria l* ,
c ita n a rt. c g m a n t. m a ilic .
Ihlntal In ttaila lix s*
Show
ream. W I l» lh S I . Sentard
John Parser Tito CarterxMr
TO 1H4. X OP* OOP*_________
Scattmawn Tlta C x a m lc . Vinyl
Asbestos etc Intuited 4 r*
lo p . r e t , lie Fr**
E04F4I

Tree Service
A H T ro a T x ^ "

I C H O L S T R E E S E R V IC E
Fro* I shote to el Law Prtaatl
LM t x Stump OrtnXng .Ttof
M&gt; TOf d ay x art*
**LXRto P rita k ll l t t N R» W .
JOHN A L L E N S L A W N 4 T 1 1 ■
Ctead trm rtm pval Lie 4 l x
F r m a t l M l SMB

I

I

�• •

IB —Evtning H«r»ld, Sanford, FI. Wednesday, June 1», l»»5

High Altitude Photos
Available To Public
People who want to nee what Florida looks like
from 40,000 feet In the air can find out through
I he National High Altitude Photography program
coordinated by the U S. Geological Survey
Hlgh-altltude photographs produced under the
NHAP program and available to the public from
the USGS clearly depict. In either color-infrared
or black-and-white, 93 percent of the state's
58.402 square miles of lund and water areas.
Each color Infrared photo shows an area of about
68 square miles and each black-and-white photo
depir«n about 130 square miles.
Even from 40,000 feel, features an small ns
houses and twain are distinguishable because of
the quality and high resolution of the photo­
graphs. said Hoy Mullen, acting chief of the USGS
Eastern Mapping Center at the Survey's National
Center In Hcslon. Va.
l-arger features such an airfields, parks, large
build logs, highways, lakes, streams and canals
are easily Identifiable. The Florida Keys and the
Iniruc oastal Waterway, for example, can be seen
clearly on the photographs of noulh Florida and
nerve an landmarks for locating other roastal
features.
On the color-Infra red photos, areas of healthy
vrgetatlon such ns swamps. Irrigated croplands
and urban parkn appear In red. while ureas of
sparse or no vegetation appear In shades of blue,
gray and brown, bodies o f water, as In convcn
tlonal color photographs, range from light blue to
hla&lt; k.
Mullen said thut under the multi-agency
roopertalve NHAP program, more than 80
|&gt;ercent o f the area In the 48 conterminous states
iuu ta-en photographed and complete coverage of
tlir 48 states Is expected hy the end of 1986,
Federal agencies that contribute to the program

Include the departments of Agriculture. Defense,
Commerce and Interior and the Tennessee Valley
Authority.
The high quality of NHAP photographs is the
result of exposing dim In precision aerial cameras
during near-optimum weather and seasonal
conditions, plus the application of sirlngent
Inspection and processing procedures before the
USGS accepts the photographs from aertal
photography contractors.
Photographs produced under the program are
Intended primarily for mapping, scientific re­
search and resource and land-use planning
proposes Out Mullen said they also can appeal to
people who want hlgh-altllude views of their
h o m e s, h o m e to w n s , fa r m s , ra n c h e s ,
neighborhoods or other favorite spots.
(Tints of the high altitude photographs are
available In standard 9-by-9-tneh size, with
enlargements available In sizes ranging up lo
36-hy-36 Inches, Cost are 85 for the 9 by-9-lnch
black-and-white print, 815 for the 9-by-9-lnch
color-infrared print, and up lo 870 for the
36 by-36 Inch color-infrared enlargement.
The black-and-white and color Infrared photo­
graphs are taken at an altitude o f 40.000 feet
above the ground with two 9-by-9-lnch format
aerial cameras, A 6-Inch focal-length camera
loaded with black-and-white film produces photo­
graphs at a scale of 1:80.000 (one Inch on a
photograph represents about 1 25 miles on tbe
ground) and each photograph depicts an area of
nearly 130 square miles, ('holographs from a
8 25 Inch final length camera loaded with col­
or-infrared film are ut a scale o f 1:58.000 (one
Inch represents almost one mile) and each covers
nearly 68 square miles.
An Index to available NHAP photographs of
Florida, a schedule of prices and assistance In

Refugees Not Required To Report
To Closest INS Office, Court Says
NEW OHLKANS (UPl) A
m e m b e r o f the S a n c t u a r y
movement charged with trying
to sn eak three Salvadorans
around Horder Patrol check(mints was Innocent of iruns
I anting Illegal aliens, a federal
appeals court has ruled.
Th e 5th Clrrilll Court of Ap
(reals Tuesday reversed the
iwo-year sentence and convic­
tion of Stacey Lynn Merkl. a
layworker al tbe Homan Catholic
Diocese of Itrownsvlllc's Casa
O s c a r R o m e r o S h e lt e r lo r
Central Americans
The case was sent for recon­
sideration to U.S. District Judge
Fllrmon Vela, who presided over
her trial after her arrest In

February 1984
Vela had instructed lhe Jury
that If Merkl was Inund guilty ul
I n I «■ n d I n g I ii l a k e l h e
Salvadorans to any INS olflce
oilier Ilian I he nearest one, she
should be found guilty of Iraus-

(Mining

Illegal aliens.

The closest office was In Harl­
ingen. Texas, where Merkl had
argued the Salvadorans would
have been denied status as
political refugees and treated as
lllrgal aliens, resulting In Im ­
prisonment and deportation.
Merkt said she was on her way
to the INS olflce In San Antonio
where the refugees would only
I k - asked to complete applica­
tions for political asylum, and lie
free until a hearing.
The Ihree judgr panel of the
circuit court ruled the Judge’ s
Instruction was linptoper.
"T h e Judge's Instruction — by
Inierpretlng the law to mean the
nearest INS office — In essence
ordered the Jury to find her
guilty.” Sheehan said. “ Th e
Judge was basically saying the
Jury should Ignore the lllegul
conduct o( the (Harlingen) o f­
fices, hul now die 5lh Circuit
has said they can't."

Merkt said she was excited
atmut the appeal* court ruling
She Is under a gag order pro
hlblilng her from discussing the
case while she works as a
volunteer ul Proyerto Llbcrtud. a
non-profit org a n iza tio n Ihol
gives Irgal aid lo I hr Central
A m e rica n s w a d in g thr Kin
Grande Into (he Unllrd Stales.
The Sanctuary movement Is a
network of 180 churches that
have defied limnlgralloti laws
and declared them selves re­
ligious sanctuaries for Central
Americans fleeing ihrir war-torn
countries.
Lost November. Merkt was
Indicted again for transporting
Salvadorans.
Her two-year probation was
revoked earlier this year and she
was sentenced to n combined
179 days In prison on the two
convictions, hul has been free on
bond (lending the outcome of her
appeals.

A e ria l photograph of Sanford and p arts of
Lake Monroe and Lake Jesup. Downtown
Sanford Is in the upper left corner with the

Sanford m arin a site distinguishable lu ffin g
Into L a k e Monroe.

ordering photographs for areas wanted are
available from the Eiosiern Mapping Center-NCIC,
U S. Geological Survey. 536-A National Center.
Heston. Va. 22092, telephone 703 860 6336.
Hl.uk and white and color-Infrared NHAP prints
i an lie ordered from the same office. Mall orders

must be accompanied by checks or money orders
payable lo the Department of the fnterlor-USGS.
The Eastern Mapping Center-NCIC also has
Information on other htgh-altltude photographs
and maps of Florida al various scales, as well aa
other cartographic data pertaining lothe slate.

3 Sentenced For DUI, I Acquitted,
Another Guilty Of Reckless Driving
The following persons have either plradrd or
been found gullly of driving under the Influence
or having an unlawful blond alcohol level
The flrsi-llm e offenders have had their
driver's license Hus|&gt;rndr&lt;I for 6 months, been
ordered to pay a 8250 fine and court costs of
$27.50, and complete 50 hours of community
service. When a gullly or no contest plea Is
entered or If the defendant Is found guilty of an
alcohol-related charge, other charges are usually
either nit prosecuted or dismissed. Most o f the
first-time offenders are allowed lo apply for
business only driving permits In cases where
Ihe senlcncr differ*, thr actual sentence Is
reported:
—John Lee Ward. 32. of Ft. Myers, arrested
March 25 on slate Hoad 426 at slutc Hoad 419.
Oviedo, after his car had stopped In an
intersection. He reportedly gave Oviedo police
permission to search his car and they found a
small quantity o f marijuana and a pipe believed
lo lie used to smoke pot. a (M il le r report said. In
addition to the DUI senlrnce, he was given a
year probation for possession o f less than 20
grams of marijuana.

—Todd David Krsslnger. 27. of Houle 4. Box
llfai. Apopka, arrested June 4 after his car was
seen weaving on state Hoad 434. Winter
Springs. He was lined 8500 and hla driver's
license was suspended for 5 years
—Gary Edward Campbell. 32. ol 180 Manor
Drive, Altamonte Springs, urreslrd March 24 on
Post and Hall Hoad. Longwood. alter he was
lound asleep In his car with the engine running,
lie was lined 8500 and his driver's license was
suspended for 5 years
O llier dispositions:
—Francis Ann Hubbard. 36. of lllrrh Terrace.
Winter Springs, arrested Jan. 27 lor DUI after
hrr car failed to maintain a single lane on U.5
Highway 17-92. Sanford. She was found guilty
ul willful and wanton reckless driving and fined
8250 and was ordered to pay thr Public
Defender's OfTlce 850
—Gordon Francis Cartwright. 28, of Orlando,
arrested Dec. 30 on a charge ol DUI after bis car
was seen making a U-turn on the grassy median
of U S Highway 17-92 al Dog Track Hoad. He
was found not gullly by Jury
— D ean e J o r d a n

Early-Morning Search For Taxi
Nets Man 3 Years In Drug Case
A Mnltlum) man who was stopped by a police
olflrrV because he was staggering acrusa a
(tarklng lot trying lo hall a taxi has been
sentenced to 3 years In Jail for possession of more
lhan 20 grams o f marijuana.
Donald Harold Walls, 19. of 3-lt Twin Lakes
Manor, was also ordered by Seminole Circuit
Judge Dominick J Saif) (o serve 2 years of
community control, u form of in-house arrest,
alter thr prison lim e Wall was sentenced as a
youthful offender, meaning he will probably be
sent to a prison with counseling and educational
opportunities and which houses offenders near
Ills age.
He was given credit (or 98 days already served.
According lo his arrrsl report, Walls was
weaving across the Kmart parking lot In Fern
I’urk. 431 U S. Highway 17-92, on Nov. 17 when
an olflccr spotted him ll was 3 18 a m. and Wall
was searching for a taxi.
When the oflicer approached Wall, he smelled a
strong odor of alcohol and saw a clear plastic bag
containing what appeared to be marijuana
sticking out ol Wall s jacket pocket.
Wall pleaded guilty to the charge
In other court action
— Leonard Blair. 37. formerly o f 1318 Waler
Hoad. Oviedo, was sentenced to 7 years In prison
with credit for 537 days served He plead guilty
Jan 10 1983 In the arson of a boat hut failed to

appear March 25. 1983 for sentencing, He was
arrested Feb. 15, 1984 tn Los Angeles after he
failed to show up at the L.A Central Jail on an
unrelated charge. Salfl also ordered Dlalr to pay
82.400 In restitution
— Hobert Allen Fletter. 19. of 728 Cherokee Circle.
Sanford, was sentenced to 30 months probation
and 20 consecutive weekends In Ihe Seminole
County Jail for auto theft. Salfl also ordered
Fletter to pay the victim 8100. his parents
8 1.000. and 8500 to a fine and forfeiture fund. He
was arrested In Sanford July 14 about one hour
after a 1977 Honda Ctvlc was stolen from a
Sanford woman.
—Gerald David Ulalne. 18. of 124 Jackson St..
Altamonte Springs, arrested Jan. 13 and charged
with the theft of 8332 from a cash box at Royal
AMC Jeep, Casselberry, was sentenced to 18
months. Hr was Identified by fingerprints left at
the scene, according to his arrest report.
—G rrgory Davis. 30. of 2213 W 13th St.,
arrested Dec. 21 for possession of more lhan 20
grams o f marijuana by Sanford police after they
served a warrant at his home, was sentenced to
30 days tn the Seminole County Jail and 5 years
probation. The marijuana. In 28 medium-sized
envelopes, was hidden In a wall of his home,
according to the arrest report.
—Daaas J ord a n

Lawyers Not Present

Clemency Hearing For \Mercy Killer* Delayed
TA LLAH ASSEE (UPl) - A
Fort Lauderdale man convicted
ol llrat-degrrr murder for killing
his terminally 111 wife must wait
until next month to plead for
special treatment o f his clemen­
c y request.
Gov. Boh Graham and the
Cabinet had been prepared to
take up the case of Hoawell
Gilbert on Tuesday, but agreed
lo his request for a delay to allow
hts lawyers to be present. Since
no clemency board hearings are
scheduled In the meantime.
G ilbert's next chance for a
hearing will be the July 2
Cabinet meeting

I

2

U n d e r s ta te c le m e n c y
guidelines. Gilbert. 75. would
have to wait 25 years for a
chance for release from prison
unless Graham and the Cabinet
Intercede
Gilbert was convicted May 9
and U currently being held In
the state prison at Avon Park on
a life sentence for flrtng the two
gun shots that killed hla wife.
Emily. 73,
Gilbert said he killed her after
she begged him to put an end to
h e r s u ffe r in g c a u s e d by
Alzheim er's Disease.
In another case. Graham and
the Cabinet voted unanimously

to restore the civil rights o f Vito
Petraltts. 74. of Levy County,
c o n v ic te d o f a C on n ecticu t
murder In 1932.
PetralUs was released from
prison after 16 years and later
moved to Florida, but he never
requested reinstatement o f the
civil rights stripped from him
upon conviction
Now terminally Ul. PetnUtlt
requested that Graham and the
Cabinet cut some bureaucratic
comers and restore those rights
because he wanted to feel like a
full citizen before hts death,
according to Art WkdUtgcr. a
lawyer for the governor

(

�E vening Here Id - W fd rw td ay, June If , lt « i

Cook Of The Week

Hereld Advertiser — Thursdey, June :0 . I t u

Sentord. F I .—1C

Georgia Chorpening Learned Country Cuisine Down On The Farm
By Dorothy Greene
Hereld Correspondent
It's n long way from Arkansas
to Sanford, but after about GO
year* our Cook o f the Week.
Georgia Chorpening. Is here to
stay.
Georgia's cooking skills began
when she was quite young on
the family farm In Arkansas
"W e grew cotton, corn, peanuts,
p o ta to e s and lo t s o f other
th in gs." says Georgia. There
were always three hearty meals
a day on the farm and Georgia
remembers that each member of
the family had to pitch In and
help with the chores. "A t the
tim e I thought It was just
terrible." says Georgia, "but I
gu ess they w ere ju st good
trainers. We children had to help
with whatever was being done.
W e baked pies and cakes, and
two or three of us would sit
around and string the beans for
the evening meal. W e did a lot of
canning and I still make my own
Guava Jelly an bread and butter
pickles ’ *
H o m e m a d e b i s c u i t s fo r
breakfast, fresh meat from the
sm okehouse, and vegetables
from the garden conjure up
some fond memories for Georgia.
"W e had no refrigeration and no
electric lights In those days."
says Georgia. "W e read a lot and
knitted and crocheted for enter­
tainment. I don't ever remember
b e in g b o re d ." B ecau se her
mother died when she was very
young. Georgia's grandmother
helped raise her and this, she
feels, was an Important Influence
In her life
When Georgia graduated from
high school she came to Sanford
with an aunt who lived here and
began working In Churchwell s
Department Store which was
then located at the com er of
Park Avenue and First Street. It
has slnre been replaced by a
paiklng lot. but It was there that
she met Carl Chorpening, her
husband o f almost 5(1 years.
G e o r g ia has s e e n m a n y
changes lake place In Sanford
ovrr the years, but "h o m e " has
been the same for 56 years "O f
course we've added, repaired
and redone from time to tim e."
says Georgia.
Nestled In one o f Sanford's
line, old neighborhoods. Georgia
and Carl's comfortable home
rellrcts the busy lifestyle of this
sprite octagenartan
"M y life Ls so hccUc at times.”.,
she says, "but 1 like to stay
bu sy." Crocheting Is a relaxing
h o b b y (o r G e o r g ia a n d a
brilliantly colored afghan In a
Navajo pattern Is Just a small
e x a m p le o f her h a n d iw ork ,
lieautlful needlepoint seal covers
a d d a p e r s o n a l t o u c h to
Georgia s dining room chairs,
and a healthy display o f African
Violets nurtured by her green
thumb add a cheerful touch (o
i he cozy sltl Ing room.
Georgia and Carl have one
son. Carl. J r . who Is a conductor
for Amtrak. Five grandchildren
an d on e g re a t-g ra n d s o n .
16-year-old CltfT. have been a
very special part o f Georgia's
life. Caring for the grandchildren
as th e y w ere g r o w in g up,
Georgia says. "I loved them as If
they were my own. and now CllfT
spends all his free tim e with us.
so w e're still raising children!"
Georgia and Carl are happily
looking forward to the birth of
their second great-grandchild
this month
"M a m m a " C horpening has
somehow managed to devote 30
years o f service as a Pink Lady at
the hospital working In the gift
shop, at Ihe front desk, or
whrrevcr her help Is needed. She
also drove a school bus for 23
years, and "I meet the kids
constantly around town.” says
Georgia. "IPs a funny thing, but
they all sllll know me. They've
grown and changrd so much
lhat sometimes I don't recognize
them. I've bused the children to
and from school on several
routes and we always had a good
relationship. It was a very en­
joyable experience In m y life."
G e o r g ia Is p r e s e n tly the
chairman of a circle of United
Methodist Women at the First
U nited Methodist C hurch of
S a n fo rd . " W e m eet on ce a
month for Bible stu dy." says
Georgia, "and we try to care for
members who are 111 and vlait
(wiiirnts In nursing homes.”
An especially proud moment
for Georgia look place when she
was uwarded a plaque "In rec­
ognition of faithful service" as
Church Woman of the Year In
1961. " I really have u busy life."
says Georgia, "and have enjoyed
everything I've been Involved
in ."
Traditional family gatherings
tve changed somewhat over
ic years as the grandchildren
avr grown and formed families
their own. but holidays are
III special and summer vacsuns are always s good reason
ir visiting home. At these times,
eorgla always tries to prepare
irmly favorites.
A s the grandchildren were

growing up. Georgia baked all
their birthday cakes and her
buttermilk pound cake was a
favorite request Below. Georgia
shares several lime and lovetested recipes with us.
B U T T E R M IL K POUND C A K E
2 sticks butter
2W cups sugar
5 eggs
I cup buttermilk
W tsp. baking soda
I tsp. vanilla
3 cups flour
Cream together the butler and
sugar. Add eggs, one at a time,
beating well after each addition
Mix the buttermilk, baking soda
and vanilla. Add alternately with
the flour. Beal well Bake in a

greased and floured tube pan at
350 degrees for one hour.
EGO C U STARD PIE
3 eggs
Vi cup sugar
2 cups milk
Nutmeg
I unbaked 9-Inch pic shell
To slightly beaten eggs, add
milk and sugar. Mix well. Pour
Into pie shell, sprinkle well with
nutmeg. Bake al 425 degrees for
15 minutes, then turn beat down
to 375 and continue baking until
knife Inserted in center comes
out clean, then remove from
oven at once.

FRUIT COCKTAIL CAKE
I ‘■‘i cups sugar
2cgg»

tv cup salad oil
tv tsp. salt
2 taps, baking soda
2 cups flour
1 can fruit cocktail
Beat eg g s, su g a r and oil
together. Sift flour, soda and salt
and add to egg mixture. Add
juice from fruit cocktail, mix
well, then add fruit. Bake at 350
degrees for 45 minutes.

TOPPING
1 stick butter
4* cup sugar
tv cup canned cream
Mix above Ingredients together
In sau cep an a n d b o ll one
minute. Remove from heat and
add tV tsp. vanilla Add tv cup

See COOK, page 2C

G eorg ia Chorpening s tirs up one of her country favorites.

It only makes sense that the best supermarket has the best beef.
Beef. Lamb. Veal. !\&gt;rk. Poultry Publix offers you the tastiest meats,
conveniently packaged. In all different sizes. Need a special cut — just
ask. w e ll he glad to help. W hen your menu calls for a hearty main course
serve quality meats from IHiblix.

It's the little things that make
the difference at Ihiblix.

§ g Publix Beef, Gov’t.Inspected Boneless
Publix Boef Gov’t.Inspected Boneless

Shoulder
Steak
...

$ 4 57

ib.

Publix B eef, G o v’t
In sp ected , Fre sh

g| Chuck
p Roast
Top Sirloin jp
(L )
per lb.
Steak
tr *3 27 __
Publix B e e f G o v ’t.In sp e cte d B o n e le ss

Ground

j

U.S.D .A. C h o ice

Leg O ’ f
Lamb
p er lb .

French B rea d ...... CVi

O live Loaf............
Taste-Tempting

Shoulder
Chops

Serve with Sandwiches

B eef Stroganoff .. »'
Macaroni &amp;
C h o o s e .................

Potato S a la d ......

Fresh-Baked

197

Approilm ale Weight
(Pound*)

Meat Thermometer
Reading (*F)

A pproilm atc Cooking Time
(Minute* per Pound)

V to 9

I TO lo ISO*

30 lo IV

GLAZES FOR LAMB
Indeed ut uvng any other MMurung u&gt; inverting
gerlK n Urob during the U il hour at routing,
beuih l#-nb every IV m nuitt *u h on* at Ihe M
loving gUie* lenough lor 4 pound raeill Serve
try remaining g lue •&gt;* Mure

Hot to G o or Hoat A S erve

U.S.D.A. Choice

... *

TIM ETA BLE F O R R O A 8TIM Q LAM B
(Oven Temperature 323*F)

Leg

New Orleans

D elicio u s M ortodella or

Ham A
Bacon Loaf..........

Blueberry P ie ...... *£/

Deli Custom Mode

Pepperoni
P iz z a ................. 5

Deli White, W heat or Onion

Pita B re a d ............

BUY ONE..
...GET0NE

SEASONINGS FOR LAM B
Brtore m ating, ipnnkle lemb with one d the M
towing (Mtorwiga tenough tor 4 pound roeM)

Apricot c u re : rivet «« tup mmlflevoted «ppt*
jrit, uni4 metlnl St* #» 2 w* &lt;4G ounce* each)
itrtmed epocott fhetry food)

Egg B ag els....... 6 .« 99'

Mmtrd Clew : Heel I *er (10 ounce!) mart flavored
Ippfe |r*y. 2 clove* gertc, cruthed end I leWe
tpoun v Her tt.n n g cunUenlt, until Jeff, me*!

Fill With Cold Cuts A C h eese For
A Wonderful Meal!

Onion R o lls ...... 6 tw 79'

Win* C lu e M u 2 uMetpooni pecked U o v n
tuger 2 Iratpuura tor enterch m l H IM tp cn i dr mi

Great Tatting!

betd leeve* m eeucepen St* #&gt; •« cup toy Mure
end &gt;e cup dry * M * o n e or eppie juu* Coofe.
paring contienlly until m itur* thekent end

G lazed D onuts.. 8

99'

(Regular Price $1.56
Each Dozen), Perfect
Afternoon Snack For Kids

Oatmeal
Cookies

boil! Boil oral !l* I nunuie

Ly kes Wieners

Swift Premium Original,
Sage or Hot Brown ’N Serve

Roll Sausage.......

,«£'1

Swift Premium Sliced Beef

THIS AD EFFECTIVE
THURS., JUNE 20
THRU WED.,
JUNE 26, 1985 . . .

Delicious (8-Inch)

Peach

Bologna^ Spiced Luncheoj^or

Sunny land Sliced

Seafood
Fresh (4 to 6-Lb. Average)

Sockeye
Fresh

Salm on Fillet....

Something A Bit Different!

Rum Rings............ •£*
Freeh From iTte O ven!

Dantali Cherry
S trip ............. ........ •£* M Bt

Fresh

Serve WUh Butter F o r A Healthy
Breakfast....

Salm on Steaks

B ran M uffins.... 6

Peeled A Deveined

Large Shrimp...

99'

Item *

Abu.* A .a d a b i* at » « Pubu« Sloe**
...th l«-£lu«* b * * * it * ( O n ly .

�• I

JC-Evtninfl Mxraid - Wtdrwidzy, Juw it, tttS

H r ltd AdvgrHxer — Thuridar, Jvw M, m s

|gn«trd, FI.

Mexican Wedding Cakes A Sweet
Way To Top Off Any Ceremony
Mr mean Wedding Cakes are
delirious butler per an tea cakes
prrfrrt for celebrating any holi­
day.
This recipe a llow s you do
m ake your ow n refrigerator
cookie dough. Shape the dough
Inio rolls and wrap In aluminum
foil. After storing overnight In
the rcfrlgrrator. simply slice the
dough and shape Into balls for
talking. Line a cookie sheet with
aluminum foil to save time and
ellm ln u tr w a s h in g betw een
batches. To re-use the cookie
sheet Immediately, sim ply lift off
the entire sheet o f foil and add
another.
With today's limited cooking
time. Ibis recipe offers a bonus ...

Too H ot? Let
Lim e C o o k ie s
Cool You Off
FRESH LIME T E A SQUARES
1 cup margarine
'&lt;4 cup confectioners'
sugar
2 'A cups all-purpose
flour, divided
1 Vi teaspoons grated
lime rind, divided
4 eggs
I Vi cups sugar
I cup freshly squeezed
lime Juice
1 teaspoon linking |Miwdrr
In large mixer bowl, cream
m argarine and confectioners’
sugar. Add 2 cups Hour and Vi
teaspoon lime rind: heal on tow
speed uniII well blended. Press
do ug h e v e n l y Into a
13-lnch-by-O-lnrli baking pun.
Bake in a 380-degree oven 20
minutes.
R em ove from oven. Leave
oven on
In container of electric blender
combine rggs. sugar, remaining
Vi cup (lour, lime Juice, remain­
ing 1 teaspoon lime rind and
baking jxjwder; cover; blend 5
seconds. Scrape down sides of
blender container; cover; blend
10 seconds longer.
Pour over p a rtia lly baked
crust, Return to oven and bake
23 minutes longer or until top Is
golden brown. Cool completely
on wire ruck Cut Into squares
This kitchen tested rrdpe makes
24 sqoures.

you can bake fresh cookies from
refrigerated dough us you need
th em .
M E X IC A N WEDDINQ C A K E S
&gt;4 cup butter, softened
V4 rup powdered sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla
2 cups flour
VS teaspoon salt
I cup finely chopped pecans
Powdered sugar

up over roll. Fold down In locked
folds until foil Is tight against
roll fold short ends up and over;
crimp to seal. Chill overnight In
refrigerator.* Preheat oven to
400®F Unwrap and cut rolls o f
dough Into Vi-Inch slices Shape
into l-tnch balls. Place on cookie
sheets lined with aluminum foil.
Bake 8 to 10 minutes. Remove
from c o o k ie sh eet; roll In
powdered sugar while still hot.
Place on rack to cool. Roll again
In powdered sugar, tf desired

heat butter until lluffy. Add
sugar and vanilla, treating until
well blended Combine flour and
Makes; 3 Vi to 4 dozen cookies.
salt; gradually add to butter
•Rolls o f dough can be frozen
mixture. Stir In pecans. On two
sheets o f Reynolds Wrap alum i­ up to I month Thaw cookie
num foil, shape dough Into two dough In refrigerator before us­
H-lnch rolls Bring 2 sides o f foil ing

O ran ge, O sctola ft S em in ole
Counties Only!

Breakfast Club Florida
Grade A White

Publix Milk
gallon size

I tsp baking soda
1 tsp, baking powder
Vi tsp. salt
I tsp nutmeg
I tsp. cinnamon
Combine all Ingredients und
mix well Pour into 13- by 9-Inch
baking pan.

29-oz. can

THIS AD E F F E C T IV E : THURS., J U N E 20
TH R U WED., JU N E 20, 1005 . . .

T O PPIN G

Dole Tidbits in Juice or Sliced, Chunks or Crushed
in Heavy Syrup or Unsweetenod Pineapple Juice

Pineapple............... 2 K&amp; 88°

Pineapple................

(50c Off Label)

A sso rted Paper

All Temperature

Soft Ply
T owels

Cheer
Detergent

te a

49-oz. box.

Vi cup brown sugar
*■4 cup unis
1 tsp. cinnamon
B le n d u lm vr In g r e d ie n t s
Ingelhrr und sprinkle over cuke
batter In pan Cover und re­
fr ig e r a t e over n l g lil. N ext
morning, bake ill 350 degrees (or
38 40 mlnutra. Serve warm for
breakfast
BREAD AND B U T TE R
PICKLES

1

32-oz. jar

Dole Tidbits In Juico or Slicod, Chunks or Crushed
in Heavy Syrup or Unsweetened Pineapple Juice

Publix

2 cups Hour

Vi cup Crisco shortening
Vi cup peanut butler
Vi cup brown sugar
Vi cup while sugar
l egg
1Vi cu|Mt Hour
1 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. salt
I tsp. vanilla
Cream shortening, sugar and
peanut butter. Deal In egg. then
stir In flour and other dry
IngrrdlentB. Add vunllla Place
irus|MH&gt;nluls on cookie sheet und
prrss with a (ork. Bake at 375
degrees for 7-8 minutes, wat­
ching carefully, as they bake
quickly. Shortening makes a
crisp cookie. Butlrr may be
substituted fur a chewy cookie.

Fruit
Cocktail

Pineapple Juice.........*.« *119

* i cup butler or margarine
I cup sugar
J eggs
1 cup sour cream |Hoz.|

PEANUT BUTTER COOEIEB

Blue Plate
Mayonnaise

It's the little things
that make the difference at h/blix

OVERNIGHT COFFEE CAKE

1 tablespoon celery seeds

In Heavy Syrup, Libby’s

Hawaiian

coconut und Vi cup chopped
nuts. Pour over hot cake.

2 tut)les|MX)iis mustard seeds
I tsp Turmeric
Place sliced cucumber* In a
large container und stir salt In
well through the cukes. Caver
with Ice cubes unit let stand 2 or
3 hours, adding Ice cubes It
necessary. Drain Add sliced
onions Combine remaining In­
gredients In saucepan und boll
ten minutes Add to cukes und
onluns und bring Just to u boll.
Place In prepared canning Jars
und seal.

Sizzlean

Real Mayonnaise

12-oz. pkg.

Continued from IC

2 quarts slicing onions
1 quail elder vinegar
4 cups sugar

Swift Premium Brown
Sugar Cured, B eef or
Meat Breakfast Strips

Fresh Homogenized

...Cook

4 quints sllrrd cu cu m bers
Vi c u p sail
Ice critic a

These puffy, pecan delights are a favorite south of the border.

la rg e
rolls

ruiuim iNvit

Publix Special Recipe

Ice Cream
or Sherbet
*

0

half gallon

$429

the right

Assorted Fruit Flavors

towiiOM*imf

Hi-C Drink.................. t z 69«

Butter Sesame
B re a d ..................... 2&lt;SSr*1w

White House

Apple S a u ce ................... ®13®

Publix Special Recipe Sesam e

In Oil or Water, Chicken of the Sea

Sandwich Rolls......... Ul 59c

Chunk Light Tuna......Wr 59c

Vacuum Pack All Method Gtlnd Coffee

Chock Full O ’ Nuts....

*1SB

Vanilla, Chocolate or Butterscotch

Sugar Free
Jell-O Pudding...........2 U',v *1

(Limit 1 Please, with Other Purchases of S7.50
or Moro, Excluding All To b a cco Items)
Decaffeinated ADC or Electric Perk Coffee

Maxwell H ouse......... ’*.v *319
Tetley

Old Tap B e e r....... X

Chunk Chicken................ 79°

Old S ty le
B eer

Miller
- Beer.-'..

12-oz. can s, 6-pk.

12-oz. c a ns, 6-pk.

_

III

£

Smuckers Orange Marmalade or

G raps J e lly ......... V ‘ 89«

Product 1 9 ................. "***1M

Lite or High Life

$

Vlasic P ic k le s .....
In 12-0z. Cans, Lager or Light

Reg. or Light

S -J 6 9

Polish or Kosher Dilla

Kellogg's Cereal
Swanson's

Tea Bags..................... Vt*.1*13®

(Lim it 4 P la a x e , W ith O th e r
f u i c h a m o l $ 7 . 5 0 or M o re ,
E x c lu d in g A ll T o b a c c o I te m ,)

Assorted
Dairi-Fresh

1- _

(Lim it 1 P le a s e , W ith O th e r
P u r c h a s e s of S 7 .3 0 or M o re ,
E x c lu d in g A ll T o b a c c o Item s)

79c

3

9

(Lim it 4 P le e * e , W ith O th e r

Purchase* of $7.50 or More,

Reg. C o la or
A ssorted Diet

Shasta
Soft
Drinks
12-oz. ca n s, 6-pk.

$429

1 — 3 E x c lu d in g A ll T o b a c c o Ite m ,)

Rich 'n Chewy C hocolate Chip,
Pecan or Fudge

Grandma's
C o o k ie s ................
Thomaa Raisin

English Muffins ...
C ra c k e rs ..............

80*

Keebler

Tow n House
C ra c k e rs ................S?»1M
King Size Dish Detergent

J o y Liquid..............T £ ’®1.?#
King Size

-

Mr. C lea n ............... £ 2 * 2 “
(20c OH Label) Fabric
Softener Sheeti

B o u n c e .................

t

•1,t

Nabisco Premium Saltinas
or Unsaited

i&lt;

99*

H

�Herald Advertiser — Thursday. June 10, 1WJ

Evening Herald — Wednesday, June 1», IftJ

Sanloid

? !.— JC

Summer Tomatoes Bursting With Flavor, Vitamins
D id y o u k n o w F l o r i d a
tomatoes are field-grown and
hand-picked when they are not
yet fully ripe Since tomatoes are
a fruit rather than a vegetable,
they should be treated Just like
bananas. Don't put them In the
refrigerator. They should be kept
at room temperature until they
are com p letely red and d e­
liciously Juicy. There are many
methods o f "kitchen ripening"
tomatoes Put them In a fruit
bowl. In special ripening bowls
or right out on the kitchen
counter. T h e method makes
little difference. It's the room
temperature that brings mil the
best fla v o r and texture In
tomatoes
Fresh Florida tomatoes are low
In calories, low In sodium and
high In nutrition A medium-

A teaspoon garlic, minced
4 Florida eggs, lightly beaten
I cup Florida Half n Half
h cup M ozzaiella cheese,
shredded
k teaspoon salt
A teaspoon Italian seasoning
A leaspooon ground black

sired tomaio contains only 27 o f eggs, and "sa lt” or "sugar "
calories and 4 mg of sodium but Freeze up to one year. T o use.
provides half o f the recom ­ thaw- and use the ones with
m ended da lly a llow a n ce o f added sugar tn desserts and ones
Vitamin C and nearly a quarter with added salt In main dishes.
F l o r i d a eg gs are truly
o f the RDA for Vitam in A.
Tomatoes are also a good source '"Nature's perfect package.” Two
o f potassium and contribute large eggs supply nearly one
Iron, the B vitamins, phospho­ third lhe recommended dally
allowance for protein and con
rous and calcium.
S e l e c t e i t h e r w h i t e - o r tain all the vitamins, except
hrown-shellcd Florida eggs as V itam in C - for on ly 160
shell color makes no difference calories! They also provide sub
In nutrition or flavor Eggs will sianttal amounts of many min­
keep 4-5 weeks In the refrigera­ erals, Including Iron
FRESH TO M ATO PIZZA
tor without significant losses In
2 m e d i um - s i z e d Florida
quality. They may also be frozen
for longrr storage Simply add tomatoes
1 Frozen 9 Inch deep dish pte
either 'ti Iraspoon salt or 11*
teaspoons sugar to every two shell
2 Tablespoons buttrr or mar­
w hole raw eggs and beat Put the
mixture in a covered container garine
1« cup onion, chopped
and mark with the datr. number

,§&lt;,v i

pepper

Use tomatoes held at room
tem perature until fully ripe
Preheat oven to 350° F, Cut 4
slices frum the widest (*orilon of
each tomato. coarsely chop re
mainIng tomatoes. Set slices and
chopped tomato aside Thaw pie
shell slightly Pierce pie shell on
the Itotlnm and sides with lork
nnrs. prrbakr for 10 minutes
Hrmcivr from oven and set aside
to cool. In medium skillet melt
butter Add onion and garlic
Saute until tender about 2

minutes Add reserved chopped
tomato. Continue to cook until
tomato Is soft, about 5 minutes
In a medium bowl combine
tomato mixture eggs. Half 'n
H a lf, c h e e s e
s.iit. I t a l i a n
seasoning and black pepper.
Pour Into reserved pie shell.
Arrange reserved tomato slices
over the top. Hake until a knife
Insetted In the erntrr comes out
clean, about 50 minutes Serves
6
MOCK 9 E A F O O D S A L A D
5 medium Florida tomatoes,
peeled, diced and drained
I m ed iu m Fl or i da g re e n
pepper, finely chopped
1 me d i um onion, f i nel y
chopped
5 Florida eggs, hard-cooked
and finely chopped
2 lu b es salt Inc cra ck ers.

Meed ttM

r 1ta*f Pm • L#*~c&gt;.m£ •»"Mu- *•#

Frozen Pet Ritz Chocolate
or C o c o n u t Cream

Cream Pie
14-oz. pkg.

12-Inch W ide
Alum inum Foil

Reynolds
Wrap

A s s o rte d C h arm in

(5c O ff Label) Liquid

Bathroom
Tissue

Clorox
Bleach

4-rolt pkg.

gallon Jug

25-sq. ft. roll

In Orange, Seminole And
Osceola Counties Only

Mt. Dew or Reg.
or Diet: Pepsi Free,
Slice, Dr. Pepper
or

39&lt;
J

PEPSI

Publix Teller
f C * *4 HOUR CONVl NtCNCf

12-oz. cans 6 pk.

*CKJCAN HANK OH ,

S=| 2 9

IProduce
Ripe, Juicy Delicious

Fresh Peaches...........

33c

vm H m iiiu in e H sin iH tH B H m

S e rv e With C h e e s e S au ce . Sno-W hite Fresh

70c OFF

Cauliflow er.................£3 99c
Orange J u ic e ............. 5- $169

With This Coupon ONLY
Scented or Untcenlod
Antl-Persplrant

Fo r Salads 01 Slicin g, Flotida (Large Size)

M itchum R o ll-O n

M ade From C o n ce n tra te , Troplcana Chilled

Tasty Tom atoes........ x 39e

1.5-oz. tiro
(Effective June 20-26 19051

F re sh Tender

Broccoli.......................S3. 89c
F lo rid a Ripe, Flavortul
Fresh M angos............r 99c
F re sh Aw ard B rand
Cole Slaw .................... 'ZY

iztiimmiHimiiiiimiiiiHiiu

30° OFF

59°

F lo rid a Ju icy S e e d le s s

With Thle Coupon ONLY
Style a 127 or »1 2 3

S u m m e r L ’e g g s
P an ty H o s e

Fresh Limes................8 •*. *1

per pair

A sso rte d C olors, F re sh Cut

Mini Carnations...........b^ $349

RVf t THf RIGHT
OUAhTlTtf &amp; ftOtO

Th e Natural Snack,
California White

For Breakfast,
Snacks or Dessert!

G rapes

G olden
B ananas

89

York

VOLLMI II
Vrfflable* A-/.
VOLUME IJ
No-Tim*- To-Cook

*1.79-.

Wauk k« Sr* keA i

Peppermint
Patties............... 3'::.V 89*
York Bite Size

— Pepsi 16-oz. bots., 8-pk.

Peppermints......... '*.S* *219

Sebastiani
Wine
1.5-liter bottle

$ 4 8 9

This Ad I n .c t i ,. Al That* Location, Onl,

THIS A O E FF E C TIV E:
TH U R S ., JU N E 20 TH R U
W ED ., JU N E 26, 1083 . .
S A V E $5 00'

Hydro Sw eep...... •£? *1995

Peter Paul Mounds or

Almond J o y .......3' b*&lt;» 89*

■Health &amp; Beauty!
For Permed Hair or Balsam &amp;
Prolein Extra Body or Normal to Dry

Flex Shampoo...... *139
For Permed Hair or Balsam &amp;
Protein Regular or Extra Body

Flex Conditioner... ’*oV *13®
Chenin Blanc,
Zinfandet or
White Zinfandel

19(161

■xttMiinmiittmimmmtmmmnr

$«|39
ICandyl

T h u * t t k i fcjtu rc

( E llv c t n o Ju n e 20 26

(Plus Tax &amp; Deposit)
Mt. Dew or Reg. or
Diet: Pepsi Free,
Slice or

°

M e C a ir
COOKIHXW
COLLECTION

~

Polk, Highlands, Oranga,
Lake, Samlnola, Oscaola Co.

pertb.

j j e L i h v --------------

m

( 3 0 c O K L a b e l)
R eg u la r

Close-Up
Toothpaste

HANG ONTO
YOUR
MEMORIES.
8 x 10 $ 8 ."

11x14

VI

LONQWOOD
VILLAGE
CENTER
LONQWOOD

Save on beautiful color
canvas-textured enlargements
in handsome wood frames.
fond Jim . (vh &lt;K&gt;u XX h

"
5 S

6 .4 -o z . tu b e

99

SANFORD
PLAZA,
SANFORD

Bonus Prints
&lt; m
1M

M

i l

I N N IV M
V M .H N

• • • » 1 N K W I Hn D w
r * . # .l t v . M l, »• U N )|

* rw M tm * * M U • «* w

•' I N N

• «vW&gt;

“ FREE FILM

Publix

____

crushed

»ali and pepper to taste
rup mayonnaise
Mix all Ingredients and press
i nt o l oaf pa n
Refrlgcratr
overnight to allow flavors to
blend Serves 6
BACON-TOM ATO OMELET
1 Tablespoon sour cream
dash onion salt
2 Florida eggs
2 Tablespoons w ater
A leuspooa salt
1 Tablespoon butter
2 slices bacon, crisp-cooked,
drained and crumbled
2-3 thin slices Florida tomato
Mix sour cream and union salt
together; set aside Mix eggs,
water, sail and pepper with fork
Heat hotter In omelet pan or
skillet (about 8 ") until Just hot
enough to sizzle a drop of water
Pour In egg mixture Mixture
should set at edges at once With
pancake turner carefully draw
cooked portions al edges toward
center, so uncooked eggs can
llow Slide pan rapidly back and
forth over heat to keep mixture
In motion and sliding freely
While top Is still motst and
creamy looking place bacon and
tomato slices on hall ol omelet.
Sprrad toniatos with sour cream
mixture With panrake turner
told In half or roll, turning out
onto plate with a quick (lip of I hr
wrist Serves one
DEVILED FLO R ID A
TOM ATOES
6 medi um sized Florida
tomatoes
v, iraspoon stilt, divided
A cup mayonnaise
A cup Florida green |&gt;ep|&gt;er.
diced
A rup onion, minced
A teaspoon ground red |&gt;ep|&gt;er
(&gt; hard-cooked Florida eggs,
chopped
Use tomatoes held at loom
temperature until fullv ripe Cut
ou t s t e m e n d c o r r s f r o m
tomatoes, place stem end down
on a board. Cut Into 6 wedges
almost to the bottom Spread
open slightly, sprinkle with A
teaspoon of the mill set aside In
a medium ImiwI mix mayon­
naise. green |&gt;e|i|&gt;er. onion, red
liepjier and temalnlng A leas
poon of ihr salt Stir In eggs Use
alMiut Vi cup of the egg mixture
to fill each tomato Top with a
s w i r l of m a y o n n a i s e and
chopped chives, II desired.
Serves 6
C H ILI CON QUEBO S T R A T A
2 cups C he d da r ch eese,
shredded
2 l ans |3lx ox. each) chopped
green chiles, drained
(I slices day-old bread, cubed
Li cup onion. rhnp|M-d
6 Florida eggs
A cup Florida milk
1can (H o/| tomato satire
11 teaspoon garlic sail
2 medium Fiurtd.i tomatoes
Combine cheese, rhlllrs. bread
and onion Place In greused
h inch square baking |um Heat
together eggs, milk, tom aio
cilice and garlic salt Carefully
(lour over hrrad mixture m pan
Cover and refrigerate 4 hours or
overnight Hake, in a preheated
F. oven lor .'10 minutes
Place tomato slices on top of
strata Continue talking 20-30
mlnutrs or unill knife Inserted
near center comes out dean Let
stand 5 minutes lieforr slicing
Serves 4 6.
CHEESY S K IL L E T SUPPER
1 cun 111 o z .) condensed
Cheddar cheese soup, unilltulrd
2 cups (4 oz I uncooked egg
noodles, cooked and drained
1'A T a b l e s p o o n s ch opp ed
chives
(1 Florida eggs, hard cooked
and wedged
2 Florida tomatoes, wedged
Heat soup In 10" skillet over
medium heat, stirring constantly
until bubbly. Stir In noodlr* and
i hives Gently (old In eggs and
tom atoes C over; si mmer 5
minutes or until serving temper­
ature. Serves 3-4.
EGOS AND T O M A T O S A L A D
2 m r d I u m •s 1z r d F l o r i d a
tomatoes
6 hard cooked Florida eggs
' « Iraspoon salt
A teaspoon Worcestershire
sauce
Use tomatoes held at room
temperature until fully ripe.
Finely chop tomatoes and eggs,
place In a medium bowl. Add
salt and Worcestershire sauce,
mix well. Serve on a lettuce leaf
garnished with green pepper. If
desired Serves 6
TO M ATO PU P P Y OM ELET
2 cups Fl or i da tom atoes,
chopped (about 2 medium)
A cup onion, chopped
A cup green or red pepper,
chopped
I tea sp o o n basi l l e a v e s ,
crushed
A teaspoon garlic sail
4 Florida eggs, sc pa ruled
A teaspoon cream o f tartar
vegetable cooking spray
grrrn or red pepper rings,
optional
In s m a l l s a u c e p a n , st i r
t og et her t omat oes , onion,
pepper, basil and garlic salt
Cover and cook over medium
heat, stirring occasionally, until
vegetables are soft, about ft-10
Bee P L A V O R . p a g s 0C

�4C—Evsnlng H erald — W tdnetdey, Jo n * It , IMS

M*r*ld A d v « riH *r — T h u rw l*r, Jurt* 50, IMS

Sanford, FI

The 'Top Banana' Of American Desserts
hersecake first gained fainr
a superlative dessert among
glamorous stage, screen and
lo stars who gathered al
dy's restaurant In New Votk,
nr o f a legendary “ secret
Ipe" cheesecake. Now this
i, luscious dessert Is vying
h the more traditional apple
for llllc of "to p banana"
ring desserts. A recent Gallup
Ing-Oul Poll has the two lied
first place as Am erica's
Kite restaurant dessert.
if||h the pr ol i f e r a t i on o f
rlous cheesecakes on rrstnut dessert carts and menus.
ue cooks may lie timid about
-moling to make a cheese-

Note: Leftover cheesecake may
hr frozen. Wrap securely In
tnolslure-vaporproof wrap
Freeze up to 2 weeks
R A S P B E R R Y S W IR L
CHEESECAKE
I cup cornflake crumb*
,'J tablespoons sugar
3 l abl espoons ma r g a r i ne ,
melted
2 H-oz. pkg* cream cheese,
softened
'A cup sugar
2 eggs
Vi teaspoon almond extract
'/Acup red raspberry preserves
Combine crumbs, sugar and
margarine: press onto bottom o f
fl inch sDrlngform nan Hake at

350°. 10 minutes
Combine cream cheese and
sugar, m ixing at medium speed
on electric m ixer until well
blended. Add eggs, one al a lime,
mixing well after each addition.
lilend in extract; pour over crust,
Drop rounded teaspoonfuls of
preserve* onto cream cheese
m ixture. Cut through batter
with knife once for marble effect.
Hake at 350®, 45 m inutes.
Loosen cake from rim of pan:
cool before removing rim of pan.
Chill,
10 to 12 servings
Variation: Substitute apricot
preserves for red raspberry preserves.

B anana nut cheesecake, shown above, is a cream y lavorite

Convenience

11
•

With all the great frozen foods
Publix offers, meal planning has
never been easier or tastier.
We’ve delicious main courses and
luscious desserts. In fact, you’ll
find something for every taste, every
day of the week at super Publix values

Publix

its the little things that m ake
the difference at Publix,

IFrozen Seafood!
Mrs. Paul's

Fried Clam s.......
* * * * ?!•
M S**®

Mrs. Paul's C risp ie r Crunchier
7 ly-oz. Pish S tic k s or 8Vi-ox.

Fish Fillets.........
Mrs. Paul's

Deviled Crabs....
--------------

Save 40c, Mrs. Smith’s
Natural Juice 41-0z. Apple
Streusel or 37-Oz.

Save 16c, Buttermilk or
Regular Homestyle

Save 40c,
Birds Eye Frozen

Eggo
Waffles

Cob Corn

Apple Pie
each pkg.

Halibut G reat
For G rillin g
F o o d s c o o k e d o v e r I hr
luulH-cur arc thr highlight ol
summertime entertaining Hull
hut from thr clear, colli Mains
oil thr coast u( Alaska Is a
wonderful choice lor cooking
ovrr thr grill.
Aflrr iimrtnatlng in u sprightly
blend of oil, while wine, vlnrgur.
lemon Juice and seasonings, (hr
snow while chunks of halibut
are t hreaded on I ndi vi dual
skewers al ong with colorlrtl
chunks ol green pepper. cherry
lomutoesund fresh mushrooms.
Th e (Inn Irx tu rr o l Alaska
halltiul I* an ldr.il choice for
tsirhrculug It co ok * quickly and
the delicate flavor Is enhanced
by u variety of seasonings and
murlnadrs

Versatile Alaska halibut Is an
excellent source ol high quality
protein has a minimum of txuirs
and Is low In lut, sodium and
calories, contai ni ng approxi­
mately W7 calories In a 31* ounce
serving
G R ILLE D H A L IB U T KABOBB
2 pounds Al aska tiullbut.
thawed If necessary
•A cup dry while wine
cup olive oil
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
I tublrs|xmn minced onion
I clove garlic, crushed
I teaspoon s a il

•a teaspoon oregano, crushed

'* teaspoon freshly ground
pepper
Green pepper, cul Into squares
Cherry tomatoes
F resit mushrooms
Cul halibut brio chunks dis
lord skill and hours Combine
wine, oil. lemon Juice, onion,
garlic and seasonings. Pour mixlin e ovrr halibut, marinate sev­
eral hours or overnight. Thread
hullhut on B skewers, altrmattng
with a cherry tomato, green
p e p p e r

a n d

m u s h r o o m .

Itarbecue kabobs over m edi­
um hoi coals 8 to 10 minutes or
until halibut Hakes easily when
tested wtlh a fork: turn once
Haste frequently with marinade.
Makes ti servings

Save 40c, Frozen
All Beef Sandwich Steaks

Steak-umm

pkg. of 12 ears

14-oz. pkg.

Save 20c, W elch's Concentrated
Cranberry-Apple Juice or

Save 20c, Mrs. Smith's Lattice

Apple P ie....
Savo 30c, Mrs. Smith's Lattice
Cherry Pie

Cranberry
Juice Cocktail.........

Lasagne...................

pkg.

Save 10c, Birds Eye “Quick Thaw" Regular or Lite

Strawberries.......
Sirloin Steak.......
Save 20c, Lo-An
Shrimp Egg Rolls ..
Save 10c, Bridgford
Parkerhouse Rolls

c»n

Save 30c, Button!

30-oi

••■••••••••••••a

II Ol

Save 20c, Celeste 6 V o x . Cheese,
6*«-oz. Pepperoni, 8 Vi-ox. Deluxe or
9-ox. Supreme with Meat
t ia ilv

Save 30c, Clark's Chopped

Pizza*For*One.........
Save 20c, Sara Lee

Pound Cake.............
Save 30c, Sara Lee Walnut, Streusel or Pecan

Coffee C ake...............'Ur*1

lOh-ot.

■ pkg.

Save 20c, Sara Lee All Butter,
Cheese or Wheat 'n Honey

Croissants..................*
Save 20c, Birds Eye Regular or “ Extra Creamy

Save 20c, Bridgford (Makes 3 Loaves)

Cool Whip............

Bread Dough.......

Save 10c, Fleischm ann's

Egg B eaters.........
PtctSweot Cut Leaf or Chopped

Save 30c, With Cheese Sauce
Birds Eye Frozen Broccoli,
Peas &amp; Pearl Onions,
Baby Brussels Sprouts,
Broccoli, Cauliflower
A Carrots or Cauliflower

Save 20c, Minute Maid
Frozen 10-Oz. Reduced Acid
12-0z. Reg. or Country Style
Concentrated

Cheese Sauce
Combinations

Juice

Orange ®
each can

Spinach...............
PictSwoet Brussels Sprouts or

Cauliflower.........
Save 16c, Ore Ida's Shoestring

Potatoes..............
Savs 20c, Ore Ida’s Country Styl&lt;

Dinner F rie s .........

®

10-oz
pkg.
PU BLIX HE S E R V E S THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QU ANTITIES S O L O

where shopping is q pleasure 7 days a week

IO-OJ.

M |b » i

�Herzld Advertiser — Thursday, Juss W, IMS

Evening H«r*ld — W e d n e vJzy. June l*. H U

towlwd* &gt; I.-1C

Pasta Salad A Cool Italian Treat

Sausage P asta Salad, shown above,

6 ounces fresh mushrooms.
One of the most popular cold
salad ingredients this summer Is sliced
l « cup rice vinegar or malt
pasta served In a variety of
shapes and sires. Since the days vinegar
6 ou nces sliced soft beer
of such early adventurers as
Marco Polo. Italian cuisine has salami or colto salami
3 ounces sliced Genoa salami
influenced the food trends of the
world. Many of today's popular or German salami
3 ounces sliced hard salami or
sausages take their names from
the Italian cllies where they Italian salami
2 medium sweet-bell peppers.
originated: Genoa salami Trom
Genoa, bologna from Bologna diced
2 bunches green onions, sliced
and romano from cromc Vege­
tables such as spinach also are liltxiul l t cup)
6 ounces fresh spinach leaves
treated royally by Italian rooks,
2 pickling cucumbers or zucwho have learned to blend herbs
Ingeniously Into nearly every chlnl. about 4 Inches long
l cup crisp rice noodles or
recipe.
.
chow mein noodlrs
lluon appetltol
Oriental Treasure Dressing
MARCO POLO SALAD
Cook pasta In boiling water
8 ounces rollnl (spiral pasta) or until almost tender, about 10
shell macaroni
minutes. Rinse, drain very well.
Bolling water
Chill

Is a spicy, crunchy side dish.

Toss mushrooms with rice
vinegar In large bowl or contain­
er. Cut the salami slices tn
quarters or bite-size pieces. Add
salami, pasta, peppers and on­
ions to the mushrooms. Do not
m ix .

Remove stems from spinach,
then wash. Roll single layer of
leaves tn paper towels to dry.
Slice cucumbers.
P repare Ori ental T reasu re
Dressing by combining % cup
letlyakl sauce wllh 2 teaspoons
fi nel y c h o p p e d cr y st al l i z ed
ginger. 2 teaspoons soy sauce
and I teaspoon brown sugar or
honey. Shake to mix. Pour over
salaml/pasta mixture. Toss to
mix well Serve over a nest of
spinach leaves Garnish with
c u c u mb e r sl i ces and c r i s p
noodles.
Ma ke s about 2tk q uar t s ,
enough for 8-10 servings.
A N T IP A S T O PLA TT E R
E||e In Neats:
3 hard-cooked eggs
1 (B ounce) Jar mari nat ed
artichoke hearts
3 carrots, (tnely shredded
4 o u n ce s thinly slic ed
mortadella or berrwuret
W (2-ounce) can rolled an­
chovies or caviar
To make Egg Nests, peel eggs
and rut lengthwise In halves or
quarters. Drain artichokes and
toss with carrots. Makes nests of
th e c a r r o t m i x t u r e o n
mortadella. Top nests with eggs
and garnish with unchovles.

Dairy products

y

Zucchini T id b its:
2 smal l zucchini, about U
inches long
4 ounces sliced mozzarella
cheese
4 ounces thinly sliced pepprronl
Wooden picks
To make Zucchini Tidbits cut
zucchi ni lengthwi se Into
quarters; cut each quarter Into
2 Inch pieces. Cut mozzarella
Into) strips aboul Its Inches
wide; cut strips into 24 pieces.
Wrap each piece of zucchini in a
piece o f mozzurellu. then wrap
with peppcronl Secure wl l h
wooden pick

'

are a great way

^

to enjoy good
V
~
nutrition every day. And
when they come from Publix,
you know they're as wholesome
and fresh as can he.

^

June Is

Sausage Strips:
Complete antipasto selection
with an assortment of luncheon
meals or dry sausages cut In
strips. Celery sticks, cucumber
slices, tomato wedges or cherry
tomutoca all add color lo the
platter.

OLIVE SALAD
1 (6-ounce) can pitted rtpe
olives, well drained
4 ounces bologna, cut In
julienne strips
2 ounces (W cup) diced provolonc cheese

Kraft Individually-Wrapped
Sliced Cheese Food: Pimento,
White American, Swiss or__

Pasteurized Process
Cheese Spread

Kraft
Velveeta

Sliced
rreg
American ; \.rt'

2 slices red onion, separated
Into rings

^ (H-ounce) Jar pepperonclnl.
drained
6-12 smal l ribs celery or
fennel, wl lh leaves
Dressing.
1 cup thinly sliced celery or
fennel
VScup olive oil
Ik cup red wine vinegar
I (2-ounce) Jar plmlento strips,
with liquid
IV teaspoon dry oregano leaves
tti tea sp o o n dry t ar r agon
leaves
C o m b i n e ol i ves, bol og na,
provolonc and onion. Add VV cup
of dressing. Mix well. Layer
pepperonclnl over lop. Rcmalner
of dressing may be drizzled over
other antipasto foods.

Philadelphia Brand
Breakstone

Sour C re a m ................

Cream Cheese

Cheese
Kraft Deluxe C h eese

Assorted Yogurt

Sliced A m e ric a n .......

La Yogurt...................3 «

Kraft Mozzarella or Sharp

Shredded C h e e s e .....

Regular or Unsalted Corn
Oil Quarters

Delicious In Laeagna, Maggio

Ricotta C h e e s e .........

Mazola
I
Margarine ■

Pauly of Wisconsin Chunk Style

Munchee C h e e s e ....... X
Cheddar or
M ozzarella.................. X
Sliced V e lv e e ta ........................ ’X*

*1

Kraft Thin Sliced Cheese

Natural S w iss............................ X

Plllsbury Buttermilk, Buttery or
Southern Style

Green Onion or French Onion

Big Country Biscuits 2 VXL

Sharp Cheddar or Swiss Almond

Hungry Ja ck Biscuits ’f.V
Mrs. Filbert's Regular Golden

Margarins Quarters.... £

D ean's D ip ................................. tJI

»1
9:

M erkt's Cheese S p re a d .......... ’?£*' *2
Treasure Cave Crumbled or Portions

Blue C h e e se .............................. X

0*

Kraft Grated

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Sliced Mild Cheddar, Brick
or Muenster

Parmesan C h e e s e .....

Natural C h e e se ......................... X

*1

IS]

« With This Coupon ONLY
| pu X
: Halfmoon Colby, Halfmoon
2 Old Fashlonsd Swlaa or
:• Baby Swlaa Wedge

£ Amish C h eese
ip a r p k g .

3

~ (Eriectlve June 20-20, 1000)

H

X m im n iim m iiim im m iim iim j
i/ in m in n iii

With This Coupon ONLY
■ KHk
Mild, Sharp or Medium Sharp
Cheddar, Longhorn, Sharp Colby, Old World Swlaa or
Fullmoon Longhorn

ii

par pkg.

Kraft Mozzarella, Brick,
Muenster, Monterey
Jack or Pepper Choose

(E ffe ctive Ju n e 20-26, 1985)

) iiiiiin iit im » ifiim m u m n i» » ig

Casino I p
Brand

MW*

Mozzarella

Light 'n Lively Lowfat
or Ssaltest Small
or Largo Curd

£ fn n fiiifin a in iiw n n n m H i| ^ «

| 2 0 'OFF

...Flavor
Conttnusd fro m page 3C

89*

County Line C heese

2 'f g s *

Wisconsin Cheese Bar
M U or Medium Cheddar,
Colby Halfmoon,
Monterey Jack or

M 3*

DairMmage Shredded Imitation Cheese

Kraft Individually-Wrapped

Plllsbury Buttermilk or Buttertastln

II o f
PM

m lnults. Uncover and cook,
stirring occasionally, unlil liquid
evaporates. Set aside In large
mixing bowl, beat egg whites
with cream of tartar at high
speed until stiff but not dry. Just
until whites no longer slip when
bowl Is tilted. In small m ixing
howl, beat egg yolks at high
speed until thick and lemoncolored. At low speed beat In
reserved vegetables Gently but
thoroughly fold yolk mixture
Into whiles.
. Spray 10“ om elet pan or
skillet, with ovenproof handle*,
with cooking spray. Heat over
mrdlum-hlgh heat until Just hot
enough to sizzle a drop of water,
four (n egg mixture and gently
smooth surface. Reduce heat to
m edium . C ook unlil l i ght l y
browned on bottom, about 5
minutes. (Lift omelet at edge to
Judge color). Bake In preheated
3SQ* oven until knife Inserted
halfway betw een center and
oul.*r edge comes out clean,
about B-10 minutes. To serve
lo o s e n o m e l e t e d g e s w i t h
spatula W llh sharp knife cut
upper surface down center o f
omelet but DO NOT cut through
to bottom o f omelet. Fold In half
and turn out onto plate with a
ulck flip o f the wrtat or serve
Ircctlyi from the pan. Garnish
with pepper rings if desired. Cut
in half or into wedges. Serve
immediately. Serves 2.
*To make handle ovenproof,
wrap completely wllh aluminum

S

where shopping is a pleasure 7days a week

(o il.

I

i

�i

*C— Evtnlng H *rjld - W rdntiday, Jum It, 1WS

H « ra ld A d v t r t i n r — T h u n d iy , Ju n e

jo ,

l» * j

lin ford . f t .

It's tim e for gettin' in
to cookin' out.

BONELESS
SIRLOINTIP

CLOROX
BLEACH

irlcuTip3looitttg.

PR ICES G O O D
J U N E 20*22, 1905

SOUTHERN
PEACHES ,

B h SIRLOIN
W Y TIP ROAST •
WO mAMO UlOA CHOCC H I P •

SIRLOIN n p STEAK

BUCKET OF £
FRYERr*PARTS u S
v u rt a t * n*i*

«***« • »*•

IrKitqvortw &gt;. 99* Legquorters

CUCUMBERS or M
SELL rcrrERS

$100

WLAD~AVO«'o 6

.6 ™ 99

es '.

I ?

S A LA D
TOMATOES

PORK
CHOPS.
(I TO I I t « Q II 99) I

IN G LEN O O K
W INES . . . .

tOMfiltt MftCMIO«r*

BUFFET HAM

Swiss Style
YOGURl

r BONELESS
$095
•\ DELMONICO. u 0
^ D E W 0 W h ' l A K S U“ “

YELLOW ONIONS

o h c im

( u a o iN m et

O N IO N DIP

''lf4

SAVE 4 0

VEGETABLES

SUPERBRAND GRADE 'K

FOLGERS FLARES

LARGE EGGS

M AYONNAISE

CRISCO OIL

TISSUE

$139

•j

■&gt;

l® s iU s ‘

CHARCOAL

COFFEE

SAUCE

D ETERGEN Tr^/PIM EN TO CHEESE

. $139 IT

O tic

71
DI1IANA

WAFFLES

---- -

HORMEL LITE W LEAN

= 1 -1 SHORE. GLAZED BARBECUE

H S L IC E D HAM

DEU GLAZED

CHICKENS

$039

DOUGHNUTS

I

$139

' “J+A

V
atBafAvUMimmm

�</text>
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                    <text>76th Year, No. 143-Thursday, February 2, 1984— Sanford, Florida 32772 1657

Evening H e ra ld -(U S P S 481 280)— Price 20 Cents

Billion-Dollar Village Toured

Jeno F. Paulucci

...b u ild in g a 'w o r ld
class com m unity'.

L

More than 1.500 political, business and social
leaders of Central Florida took advantage of
invitations to preview the past two days and today
the 1.200-acre Heathrow, a planned SI billion
development by I’auluccl Enterprises ofT Lake Mary
Boulevard near lntcrstatc-4.
Billed by entrepreneur Jcno F. I’aulucei as a
"world class community." the guests toured via
double decker buses the rolling acreage dotted by 25
lakes where 10.000 persons are expected to live
when development Is completed.
Villas and condominiums at the property arc
planned at sales prices ranging from $200,000 to $1
million with executive homes In the $250,000 to
$500,000 price range and executive estates ranging
from $500,000 to $ 10 million.
Paulucci said Heathrow will be a catalyst for
development In the area and that he and Mrs.
Paulucci may make their permanent home In a
penthouse at the condominiums when they arc
built. The Paulucci family has homes in Sanford and
Duluth. Minn.
Paulucci, known for founding the Chun King

oriental food empire, later sold to the Reynolds
Tobacco Co., and for founding tbc Jena's frozen
Italian food company, and his family began
purchasing the property where Heathrow Is to be
built some 17 years ago.
At the entrance to the development is a one-acre
pool with seven 20-foot-high Jet gyser fountains.
The English style gatehouse where security
systems are planned for monitoring each home to
protect against fire, unauthorized entry and medical
emergencies Is approached by a quadruple laned.
divided driveway containing 250.000 hand-laid
bricks.
The SI million preview center, under construc­
tion. is to feature a preview hall and sales and
administrative offices. The center Is also to house a
communications center designed to incorporate
pay-per-view programming, computerized business
information and as services arc available, computer
banking, shopping and Information retrieval will be
offered, said sales staff members of Huskey Realty
which is marketing the development.

See HEATHROW, page 10A

Laser Seeks
Fingerprints
On M u rd e r
Victim
__________________________

H * r * M P t» *# S» T » m m » V ln c » n t

A s shown in fhis aerial photo, gyser jets, a one acre pond and a brick
quadruple laned entrance road lead to the gatehouse at the $1 billion
Heathrow community.

SEEDCO 'Viable Business'

Dispute With Feds
Hasn’t Cost Grant

In a first-lime attempt by the
Volusia Sheriff's department, the
body o f an 82-year-old woman
found murdered In DeBary Monday
was examined by laser light for
latent fingerprints.
Results of the laser probe are not
yet known, a sheriffs department
spokesman said.
Tuesday, the body of Ethel E.
Johnson. 48 Community Drive, was
flown to Tallahassee to the Florida
Department of Law Enforcement
crlmb lab for the examination.
Sheriffs Capt. Ed Carroll said he
was not sure o f the results and
would not comment further. The
woman's autopsy was completed
Wednesday.
Johnson's body was found In a

By Donne Estes
Hereld Staff Writer
T h e S e m in o le E c o n o m ic
Employment Development Corp.
(SEEDCO) Is still In the running for
a state grant of $100,000 and a
federal attorney denies published
reports that he has declared the
Sanford-based agency is improperly
using federal funds to match the
grant.
But the federal government docs
have a loan default ease pending
against SEEDCO. SEEDCO Presi­
dent Horace Orr denied any Impro­
priety In handling government
ioans and said the federal govern-

wood* off (lie aoulii end of Shell

Road at 11:30 a.m. Monday by a
sheriffs deputy. She had been shot
once In tfnr'upper body."
Carroll said Miss Johnson had
been m u rd ered and that the
homicide appeared to have been
motivated by robbery. He added
that no other assault took place. He
declined to say specifically where
she had been shot or how much
money may have been taken from
her.
According to Carroll, a composite
sketch of her alleged killer will be
released late today or early Friday.
He said the sheriffs department has
received several leads from the
com m unity and had eight In­
vestigators working on the ease.
To date, the sheriffs department
has determined Miss Johnson was
driving her gold-colored 1073 Ford
Maverick along Shell Road Friday
probably between 4 and 5:15 p.m.
when her car ran off the road,
hitting some small trees and caus­
ing minor damage. What then
occurred is not known but Miss
Johnson's body was dragged from
the car Into the woods. After the car
was discovered Sunday night. K-0
dogs were brought to the scene but
failed to locale the woman. Monday,
a deputy found Miss Johnson.
Initially, the sheriffs department
said there were no visible signs of
injury on her body.
The caliber of the bullet used to
kill Miss Johnson has not been
determined.
A c c o r d in g to re p o rts . Miss
Johnson was a retired principal and
had lived in DeBary for more than
25 years.
—Deane Jordan

H t n M P tw io by T a m m y V m &lt; tn l

In her second public protest, Laurel K. Islng holds a sign decrying
Circuit Court Judge Dom inick J. Sa lfl's divorce decree that orders
her to sell her home and give half its value to her ex-husband
Arthur Marsh.

Saifi Protest Re-Run
An A|&gt;opku woman protesting the
divorce decree issued by a Seminole
County judge held her second
placard demonstration In front of
the Seminole County Courthouse
today.
Laurel K. Islng. of 3202 Holiday
Avc.. has sued Circuit Court Judge

Dominick J. Salfi. of 350 Markham
W oods Road. L on g w ood . d is ­
agreeing with his order that her
house be sold to pay a $25,000
divorce settlement to her second
husband. Her second husband.
Authur Marsh, reportedly of Pine

See PROTEST, page 10A

Phil Sees Shadow — M ore Cold Weather
I’UNXSUTAWNEY. Pa. (UPI) N early 1.000 ch eerin g people
braved a 13-degree temperature
today to see the "Super Ikiwl of
w in t e r " — g ro u n d h o g Punxsutawncy Phil spotting his shadow
to predict six more weeks of cold
weatherWhile bystanders chanted "W e

wat.l Phil." the native groundhog
saw his shadow about 7:20 a.m.
under clear sunny skies ut Gob­
bler's Knob In Punxsutawncy. a
town of 8.000 located 65 miles
northeast of Pittsburgh.
Today marked the 98th celebra­
tion o f G ro u n d h o g D ay.

have the money to pay them off."
Orr said SEEDCO. with $14 million
In assets, will have no problem
paying them off. He said the whole
thing Involves a game being played
by the Reagan administration.
An official of the Florida Depart­
ment of Community Affairs said
Wednesday he will announce late
today whether SEEDCO will be
given the state grant of $100,000 It
is seeking and has received for the
past two years. The funds arc used
for administration of the agency,
formed In 1971 to assist minorities
and others In developing busi­
nesses.
Spencer Lott, a U.S. Department
o f Health and Human Services
attorney representing the federal
government in a default action
against SEEDCO concerning $2.6
million In loans, denied published
reports that SEEDCO has handled
the loan money Improperly. He
added that he has no knowledge
about whether SEEDCO Is using
money due the federal government
as matching money for the state
grant.
"It's a complex issue." Lott said.
"W e are in litigation with SEEDCO
and had declared the loan In
default. But we arc also In negotia­
tions with SEEDCO and do not wish
to prejudice the ease.
"There are a lot of issues as to
whether the funds are properly used
or not. And since the default was
declared there are a lot of legal
issues." Lott said.
A t t h e s a m e N i n e . D ic k
Studebaker of the state Department

'R eagan 's trying to kill all
these p ro gram s...1
of Community Affairs said matching
funds by SEEDCO are only a small
part of the grant requirement and
many other Items are considered on
a point system before an award Is
made.
Orr said two federal loans are at
Issue and both were used for the
specific purposes intended. He In­
sisted payments on both arc cur­
rent.
The lirst loan for $600,000 was to
corporation to develop seaplanes
and the second of $2 million was to
be used to help Dade County
provide housing for South Florida
migrants.
"T h e specific purpose of the $2
million loan was to lend the money
to Dade County. We couldn't do
anything else with It." Orr said.
"The loan was approved by the
HHS director and the Justice De­
partm ent. W e w ere called by
Washington and asked to do It. If
SEEDCO had loaned the money to
someone else, the federal govern­
ment would have had a case against
us," Orr said.
"W ith all the headache and trou­
ble, I'm thinking about giving the
money back tp them." he said.
At issue. Orr said. Is SEEDCO's
benefiting because It borrowed the
money at one rate of Interest from
the federal government and loaned
the money to Dade County at a
higher rate of interest.
"And we won't give the federal
government the spread (profit). We
are paying the federal government
according to the terms of the note
we have and that's all they are
entitled to." Orr said.
"T h e bottom line is that the
federal government is scared that
later on when the loans are due we
won't be able to pay them off. We
have enough money In assets to pay
off those loans any time," Orr said.
Of the pending DCA 9100.000
adm inistrative grant. Orr said
SEEDCO has gotten identical grants
the past two years.
"SEEDCO will have 9125.000

Changes In Store For 10th Golden Age Games
Bjr Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer
A 6-mile marathon, a triathlon and a
long distance swim may be a part of the
10th Annual Golden Age Games to be
held Nov. 5-10 in Sanford.
These were among the additions and
changes to this year's competitive events
for senior citizens 55 and older men­
tion ed by G a m es C h a irm a n Jim
Jernlgan at the first executive committee
meeting of the new vear.
J a ck H o rn e r. G r e a te r S a n fo rd
Chamber of Commerce president told
the Games Executive Committee today.
"Let's go all out to make It the greatest
one we've ever had."
In celebration of the 10th anniversary
two events were suggested In conjunc­
tion with the Games, but not in
competition for medals. They are a
sailing regatta on Lake. Monroe on the
Sunday prior to the start of the Gann?
and a canoe trip from Katie's Weklva
River Landing to the St. Johns River
with a cookout afterwards for partici­
pants.

1,
A

The marathon will be a street race
sponsored by Central Florida Regional
Hospital and will start from the city hall
following the opening ceremonies.
The triathlon as proposed would Include
the marathon, a long distance swim on
Lake Monroe, and a 5-mile bicycle race.
Bowling, horseshoes and table tennis
will now have winners In age categories
and (here will be a 75 and up class in the
Decathlon. There will be singles and
doubles competition In dominoes this
year.
Larry Castle, tennis eoaeh at Seminole
Community College, will lie in charge of
the tennis tournament this year. Emma
Spencer, who had been In charge of the
event since the beginning of the Games
In Sanford, will remain on the committee
In an advisory capacity.
The Rev. Paul Murphy, pastor of First
Baptist Church. Sanford, will represent
the Sanford Ministerial association as
chairman of the table tennis event and
will serve as chaplain of the Games,
replacing the Rev. Leo King, who has
retired. Roger and Jackie Quick of

4

BowlAmerlea will be in charge of the
bowling tournament.
Jernlgan announced that although the
J.C. Penney store In Sanford Plaza no
longer sells bicycles, the manager has
agreed to order and assemble enough for
the bicycle races as had been done In the
past by the store.
Because o f the large number of
persons participating In bridge, the
Sanford Woman's Club has dropped Its
sponsorship of the canasta competition,
formerly held at Its clubhouse in con­
junction with the bridge tournament.
Canasta is being taken over by the AARP
(A m e rica n A sso cia tio n o f R etired
Persons) and will be held at the Sanford
Civic Center.
The shuflleboard tournament, which
has been held entirely on Saturday, will
begin on Friday (his year because the
large number of entries makes It difficult
to complete the play In one day. Entries
will close at 5 p.m. on Thursday before
the tournament.
Gene Kcltncr. executive director of the
Central Florida Chapter o f the American

Red Cross und a member of the U.S.
Olympic Swimming Committee, sug­
gested a mile swim In Lake Monroe for
long distance swimmers.
"I was at a meeting of the Long
Distance Swimmers Association In Col­
orado Springs last weekend and the
masters people arc Interested In coming
here to compete if wc have a long
distance swim ." Kellner said.
In line with making this a very special
year for the Games. Jernlgan said he has
asked Martha Yancey, chairman of the
variety-talent show, to put together an
entertaining variety show leaving blocks
of time for the talent competition.
Jernlgan told the event sponsors that
any rule changes in the various events
must be submitted within 10 days as he
is getting ready to send the rule book to
press. Changes in the schedule and entry
forms must be made by the next meeting
to be held on March 7.
Horner told the group that General
Foods/ Post Cereals Is "ex trem ely
satisfied" with the operation o f the
Golden Age Games and will sponsor
them again (his year.

;

•a a n M O n

-• ■.

Income we will use to match the
state grant. Probably we will have
more. Some will come from Dade
County, but it will be the portion of
interest money SEEDCO has com­
ing."
Lott said the Rural Development
Loan Fund of the Department of
Health and Human Services de­
clared the $2.6 million In loans in
default In January. 1982. because
SEEDCO was In arrears In Its
payments.
"After we issued the default letter.
SEEDCO filed suit preventing us
from executing the Judgment. To
this day we are discussing settle­
ment. There were problems with
payments and some possible vio­
lations of the regulations controlling
the program." Lott said. "I don't
wish to prejudice those negotia­
tions."
"Reagan's trying to kill all these
programs." Orr said. "Yes. we sued
Health and Human Services to
enjoin them from executing a de­
fault judgment against SEEDCO.
Our payments arc current." Orr
said.
"Some 22 groups — 5- black. 3
Chlcanoand 14 basically Caucasion
— borrowed money from the federal
government at the same time. When
Reagan came Into ofTlcc audits were
called on the eight minority groups
and a report was written and
circulated. We had no chance to
respond." Orr said, adding after the
fa lse rep o rt c o n tin u e s to be
circulated long enough, people start
believing It.

TODAY
Action Reports...... .... 2A
Around The Clock... .....6A
Bridge............... .... 4B
Classifieds.......... ...2,3B
Comics............... .... 4B
Crossword.......... .... 4B
Dear A b b y .......... .... IB
Deaths...............
Dr. Lamb........... .... 4B
Editorial.................6A

Florida.......... ....... 3A
Horoscope...... ........ 4B
9A
Hnsoltal
Nation
P p o o Ip

Cnnrts
Television ......
Weather

2A
IB
7.QA

IB
2A

World...........

Williams Fought For Post
It was Incorrectly reported In Wednesday s Eve n in g
Herald that Seminole County School Board member
Roland Williams, following appointment by Gov. Reubtn
Askew in 1978. ran unopposed for the school board In
1980. Actually. Williams served from May to November,
1978. under appointment, then ran successfully in 1978
for the post, opposed by John Carlson of Longwood. He
was also opposed In 1980 when he successfully ran
against Bill Spegcle of Casselberry. Williams' appoint­
ment was to (ill a vacancy created when Davie Sims of
Altamonte Springs resigned. Williams' name will appear
on the ballot in the March 13 presidential preference
primary as a delegate alternate chosen by and pledged
to Askew. The Herald regrets the error.

�2A— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thonday, Feb. 2,1914

NATION
IN BRIEF
18 Die In Rash O f
Hom e , Hotel Fires
United Pres* International
Ten children were among ihc 18 people killed
today and Wednesday In seven fires In houses
and a New York City hotel, authorities said.
Two people — one a 7-year old — died today In
Elizabeth. N.J. In a fire that spread lo three
homes. Three other people were missing and
many residents had to leap from windows In
16-dcgrce weather.
The cause o f the blare was not Immediately
determined.
Washington, D.C. firefighters Wednesday
fought a similar blaze In three row houses that
killed three adults and four children. Authorities
said 15 were Injured, but many residents
Jumped to safety.
One relative of thr victims said the house
where the fire started was undergoing electrical
work. Another said the family used space
heaters.
The blaze, 11 blocks from the U.S. Capitol,
was Washington's worst fire since a 1976
nursing home blaze killed 10 people.
Seven persons died In two separate fires In
New York homes. Wednesday. A fire In a Times
Square hotel killed the occupant, and a
39-year-old Bethel, Conn, woman died when she
failed to follow her husband and young son out
an upstairs window of their burning home.

Ever Considered Suicide?
SEATTLE (UPI) — Nearly 42 percent of 2.000
p e o p le w ho a n sw ered a U n iv e rs ity o f
Washington questionnaire said they had
seriously considered suicide at some I line
The study, conducted In shopping malls and
street fairs throughout the Seattle metropolitan
area, also showed 10 percent or 12 percent of
the random sampling of subjects said they had
attempted suicide at least once.
The study also revealed 20 percent to 30
percent of the 2,000 people questioned were
actually serious enough about suicide lo "gather
the means." Including accumulating pills, guns
and razor blades.
University psychologist Dr. Kirk Slrosahl cited
the rising divorce rate, increases In the number
of single parents, a mobile populace, transient
friendships and alcohol abuse us contributing
factors In the higher suicide rate.

Reception For Veteran
Educator In Civic Center
A reception honoring Mary Joyce Bateman. 33-year
veteran Seminole County educator who Is retiring, will
be held Friday from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Sanford Civic
Center.

Democrats Preparing Deficit-Cutting Plan
WASHINGTON |UI’I| - Congressional
Democratic leaders arc drafting a plan to
ofTcr lo President Reagan that would
shrink budget deficits by $200 billion,
partly by attacking two of his favorite
Items — defense and tax cuts.
House Democratic leader Jim Wright
of Texas revealed the Democratic pre­
parations Wednesday Just hours after
Reagan sent Congress Ills $926 billion
1985 budget that projects $180 billion
deficits In each of the next three years.
The Reagan budget — hailed by
Republicans and denounced by Demo­
crats — contains no major tax Increases
or spending cuts lo reduce the red Ink.

The administration did not reject the
Democratic counteroffer out of hand. "It
all depends upon what Items they have."
Treasury Secretary Donald Regan said
on NBC's Today show. "II their Items are
acceptable lo us, ccrtalnlv."
Wright. Senate Democratic leader
Robert Byrd and Sen. Daniel Inouve.
I)-H aw aii — the D em ocrats on a
bipartisan dcflcit-reducHon task force
created at Reagan's suggestion — will be
ready to meet for the first time with
Reagan's aides next week, possibly to
oiler their proposal then. Wright said
The plan will Include some reductions
in Reagan's Increased military spending

By Deals G.Gullno
WASHINGTON |UPI) — President Reagan's spending
blueprint to Congress for fiscal 1985 abandons hope for
a balanced budget through the end of a second White
House term and Ignores next year’s expensive debut of
tax Indexing.
Instead, the enormous budget numbers, bound In
soothing blue covers, show the national debt reaching
$2 trillion In 1986 — double the red Ink on government
books as recently as Reagan's first year In office. 1981.
Taxpayers now pay Interest on $1.4 trillion In

B u d g o t In clu d e s e d u c a tio n
cuts, S ta r W ars w e a p o n ry ,
s to rie s on p a g e 3 A ; e c o n o m ic re p o rt
n o t o p tim is tic , p a g e 10A
accumulated federal borrowing but the total debt will
grow to $1,828 trillion In fiscal 1985. which begins Oct.
1. the budget documents estimate.
Of the $976 billion In spending recommended for
fiscal 1985, one dollar In five — $180 billion — will be
borrow tJ tuotiey.
That Is, If the Initial borrowing estimates do not turn
out to be far loo low. as as happened every year of the
Reagan administration.
The budget document says Interest alone on the
national debt will cost $ 165 billion in fiscal 1985.
It projects interest rates shrinking by nearly half late
In the decade. But at today's rales for government
borrowlbg the cost ot the Interest atone on a $2 trillion
national debt would be more than $200 billion a year.
Even in 1989. federal spending and Income are
projected to remain seriously out of balance.
But where the Congressional Budget Office sees
annual deficits climbing toward $300 billion at the end
of the decade Rragan sees them falling toward $100
billion.
In a marked departure from proposed budgets earlier

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HOSPITAL NOTES

J « n ln * M M &lt; C * b *
A r n o ld W F lood. D e lfo n *
E lu a b e lh M C o o d n o *. O ra n g * C ity
C h * r l * t V A u ttln , O rla n d e
J u lia N u llin g . O r M o
D IS C H A R G E S
San lo rd
P a u la D D ando

C a ro l J F ly n n O ra n g e C ity
B IR T H S
S a n fo rd
S am ay a n d V U a y v a n h S a n a n iL o n *. a

boy

J e r r y a n d P a tr ic ia S u th e rla n d , a
ba by boy
S co tt A . a n d C a ro ly n K ln n a lrd , a
baby g ir l

In his administration. Reagan this time asked lor no
major spending cuts.
Defense spending goes up by 13 percent. Health and
welfare spending climbs 7.1 percent.
And Reagan maintained his strong opposition to any
substantial Increases In government Income.
"T o those who say we must raise taxes. I say wait,"
Reagan told Congress.
lit fact. Ihc only tax Increases proposed arc relatively
minor changes in the law that could raise $7.9 billion.
Notable by Us absence In the budget message was any
mention of 1985’s precedent-shattering debut of tax
Indexing that Treasury Department revenue analysts
said Is equivalent to a tax cut of $47 billion over the next
three years.
Tax indexing was approved by Congress In 1981
Indore the recession mined the administration's op­
timistic hopes for a balanced budget this year.
Indexing will slow down the expansion of tax brackets

to the rate of inflation, eliminating "bracket creep" as
writ as automatic increases tn government spending
power taken for granted for decades.
Treasury Secretary Donald Regan told Congress one
year ago that to repeal tax Indexing "would result In a
massive $273.2 billion tax Increase between 1983 and
1988."
But administration speech writers lately have been
very careful not to provoke a congressional attempt to
repeal Indexing by pointing out how much It costs the
government. In the latest budget documents, a few lines
arc devoted to passing references tn indexing.
The fiscal 1985 federal deficit, at $180 billion, shows
virtually no change in 1986 and 1987 In the president’s
budget proposal.
Then it heads down to $123 billion by 1989 at about
the same slope the Congressional Budget Office secs It
Increasing to nearly $300 billion by the end of the
decade.

D U I Suspect Couldn't Leave Bad Enough A lo n e

WEATHER

ElmL Ley

bumped Into higher lax brackets
through Inflation. The provision would
deprive the government of billions of
dollars of lax revenue at a time It Is
trying to deal with massive red ink.
Sen William Pmxmlrr. D-Wis.. pre­
dieted the federal deficit for 1985 will be
closer to $250 billion and "could easily
top $300 billion.
"The administration's economic fore­
casters have been m on u m en tally
wt ig ." Proxrnlrc said, noting they
predicted a $27 billion deficit In 1982
that turned out lo bo $110 billion and a
S92 billion deficit last year that actually
was S195 billion.

National Debt
To Double In *1
*86

transporting her lojafi discovered that she had allegedly
slipped two resin-tilled pipes and a small bag ol
murljuauu out of the Winter Springs police station and
hid ilu- contraband in her pants.
The reception, sponsored by students, parents,
Winter Springs officer James McClure, reported
educators and business people, will 1m* highlighted with
arresting the woman lor driving under iI k- influence
a special program ut 6 p.m.
.tiler he saw her car weaving on Slate Road 419 at State
Mrs. Bateman taught English and was a guidance Road 434 at 12 30 a.m. Wednesday. During the arrest.
counselor at Seminole High School and at Mllwee and McClure seized the pipes and the bag of pot. then
Teague middle schools before becoming coordinator of lrans|Mtrted the suspect and contraband to the Winter
career education for the entire county system In 1974.
Springs poller station. Ills re|&gt;ort said. Later, as he took
the suspect lo Ills patrol car for the trip lo the county
Jail, he rc|&gt;ortrd seeing the Items In lhe woman's pants
and look her hack Inlo the (toller station and charged
her will) removing confiscated priqtcrty from the police
department.
McClure did not Indicate on (its report how the woman
retrieved the Items after he had initially taken them
NATIONAL REPORT: A lew showers fell Wednesday
from her. (toller spokesman Brenda Sonafclt said. The
over the upper Great Lakes region and over the northern ri-|H)rt also did nol Indicate why the woman was not
Plateau. More showers were reported over the western
charged with possession of marijuana and drug
Gulf Coast region. Elsewhere across the nation, fair skies paraphernalia. McClure could not I k - reached for
prevailed. Showers were expected today from parts of comment.
Illinois and Wisconsin to Ohio and Michigan. Snow Is
Murt-e G. Brown, 33. of 1393 La Puloma Drive, was
likely farther north. Clouds are predicted from Min­
arrested at 2:48 a.m. Wednesday on the removal of
nesota and Iowa across the Great Lakes region to
confiscated property charge. She (Ktslcd $5,500 bond
Vermont.
and was released bum Jail Wednesday. Sbe is scheduled
' AREA FORECAST: Variable cloudiness today with a lo appear In court Feb. 9 mi the DUI charge and her
high near 70. Wind becoming northeast 10 mph. bearing on the second charge is scheduled for Feb. 17.
Tonight partly cloudy. Low upper 40s to low 50s. Light
BURGLARIES
easterly wind. Friday Increasing cloudiness. High lower
Theodore J. Zucker. 40. of Winter Haven, reported
70s.
that someone broke Inlo un apartment under construc­
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet tion at 390 Weklva Springs Road, latngwood. and took a
out 50 miles — North to northeast wind 10 to 15 knots dishwasher worth $300 from the kitchen between Jan.
becoming variable mostly mostly southeast 10 knots 2 1and Monday, a sheriff s retort said.
A thief who entered the,home of Laura Blakely. 27. of
tonight and southerly 15 knots Friday. Seas 2 to 4 feet
3044 N. Orleans Way. Apopka, between 6:20 a.m. and
Increasing Friday. Partly cloudy.
11:30 p.m. Monday took a ring and a necklace with
AREA READINGS (9 a.m.): temperature: 52; diamonds valued al $980. u sheriff s report said.
.overnight low: 38: Wednesday's high: 63: barometric
Someone cut open the top of a convertible owned by
pressure: 30.56; relative humidity: 79 percent: winds: Gloria Capozzl. 23. of 368 Spanish Trace Apartments.
northwest ut 9 mph; ruin: none; sunrise: 7:13 a.m.. Altamonte Springs, and look a camera and lens valued
sunset 6:06 p.m.
at $270. The theft occurred while the cur was parked In
FRIDAY TIDES: Daytons Beach: highs. 9 06 a m.. the lot of the apartment complex between 11 p.m.
9:18 p.m.: lows. 2:27 a.m.. 3:04 p.m.: Port Canaveral: Sunday and 3:45 p.m. Monday, a sheriff s report said.
A thief cut the padlock on the front door of u
highs, 8:58 a.m.. 9:10 p.m.; lows. 2:18 a.m.. 2:95 p.m.;
Bayport: highs. 1:42 a.m.. 2:55 p.m.; lows. 8:44 a.m., construction company office at 1800 Longwood-Lakc
Mary Road. Longwood. and look welding equipment and
8:39 p.m.
batteries, which belonged to Richard F. Brown. 57. of
257 Spartan Drive. Maitland, and Freed Lee Good. 58. of
106 Orange Drive. Sanford. The break-ln occurred
Sunday or Monday, a sheriff s report said.
Stereo speakers, a garage door opener, cassette tapes
and other Items valued al $167 were taken from the car
o f Ricky Aponte. 16, o f 828 Dunbar Terrace.
C e n tra l F ie n d * R t f M n * l H e i p l t ll
J a r r y W L o rd
W e d n e id e y
M a r y R T e r re ll
Casselberry..while his car was parked at Albertson's on
A D M IS S IO N S
B re n t V B o w lt t D e lto n a
State Road 434, Longwood. The theft occurred between
Senlord
I l i a F M o o t. D e lto n a
6 and 11:30p.m, Saturday, a sheriffs report said.
J o n *th e n w A ig tc o u g h
T im o th y G W iilla m i, L a k e M o n ro *
J a n t I K F l g g t ll

and a reversal of some of his tax ruts, the
Democratic leader said.
Reagan asked for a 13 percent "real"
Increase, after adjustment for Inflation.
In military spending that would make It
the largest defense budget since World
War II. surpassing even the peak of the
Korean or Vietnam wars If measured in
constant dollars. Without accounting for
Inflation. It Is an 18 percent hike.
Likely to come under attack by the
Democrats Is a part of Reagan's threeyear 25 percent tax cut plan adopted In
1981. called Indexing.
Due to begin next year, indexing
would prevent taxpayers from being

DRUG ARRESTS
A Winter Springs man and a Jacksonville man who
were arrested on possession of cocaine and drug
paraphernalia charges were bolh released -from the

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Action Reports
★ F ire s
i t C o u rts
■k P o lic e

........... T
«•crnB Tt na lf*r*i
t 1i r
k k n
The assistant manager of Allied Tires, State Road 436.
Altamonte Springs, filed a report with the sheriffs
department and named two suspects who allegedly took
15 tires valued at $670 from that business.
John D. Towk. 33. of Orlando, reported that the tires
disappeared between Jan. 20 and Sal urelay.

JEWELRY GONE
Marie and Alfred Jamison of 221-B Georgetown Drive.
Casselberry, reported that someone, perhaps workmen
who were unauthorized to enter their apartment, took
$2,000 worth of Jewelry between Jan. 6 and Monday, a
sheriffs report said.

Seminole County Jail after posting $2,500 bond each.
The pair were arrested at 2:58 a.m. Sunday by an
Altamonte Springs policeman who had been watching
the pair as they sat In a ear parked al the Hotline Club.
FIRE CALLS
Hl)3 Slate Road 436. Altamonte Springs. The officer
The Sanford Fire Department responded to the
approached the car after watching the suspects for. following calls:
uixmt 20 minutes, and tic reported that the pair had
Wednesday
what later was tested and shown lo be cocaine on a —9:24 a.m.. 315 Palmetto Ave.. rescue. A 65-year-old
loldcr between them.
woman was found prone on the floor. She had no vital
One man bad a razor blade and an additional vtal of signs. An autopsy was scheduled for today at 9 a.m. al
cocaine and a small spoon were found when the men Central Florida Regional Hospital.
were removed from the car. a police rc|xirt said.
— 10:05 a.tn.. 532 N. Palmetto Ave., rescue. A
Thomas C. Farrington. 29. of Geneva, and Bruce Allen 67-ycar-old woman fell and bumped an eye. No action
Mills. 26. of. Jacksonville, were both released from jail taken. She wus transported to the hospital by private
Sunday. They are scheduled lo appear In rourt on Feb. vehicle.
17.
— 10:15 a.m.. 101 S. French Ave., resuce. A car lost
control and ran Into a gas pump. Two persons were
BREAK-IN
Injured. One refused treatment, the other had a leg
A thief entered the home of James Arthur McGauvran. laceration dressed and bandaged. He was transported to
42. of 1019 W. Lake Brantley Road. Altamonte Springs, the hospital by private vehicle.
between 9 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Monday and took cassette — 11:27 a.m.. 1401 W. Seminole Blvd.. fire. False alarm.
(apes, a television and n pearl necklace with a total value A fire alarm at the hospital was accidentally pulled.
ot $432. A screen lo a bedroom window hud been —4:03 p.m.. 301 N, Park Ave., fire. Trash can fire
removed and was lying on the ground, but sheriffs caused by a match In a second-lloor restroom of the
deputies said that the window was closed and dust on courthouse. It was extinguished by a sheriffs llcutenthe ledge had not been disturbed.
tanl. The fire Is under Investigation by the county fire
department.
A LITTLE POT
An Altamonte Springs man arrested on a possession of —7 p.m.. U.S. Highway 17-92 and entrance to Zayre's
marijuana rharge posted $500 bond and was released [larking lot, fire. An electrical short in a 1974 Toyta.
—8:48 p.m., 1704 W. 9th St., rescue. An 82-year-old
from the Seminole Counlyjull.
The man was stopped for allegedly speeding on North woman was unresponsive. Emergency medical techni­
Street ut Murker Street. Altamonte Springs, at 3:48 p.m. cians monitored her vital signs. She was transported to
hospital by ambulance.
Saturday.
Thursday
When the officer asked to see his vehicle registration,
he spotted a plastic bag In (he car's glove compartment —4:17 a.m., 1107 W. 8lh St., rescue. A 73-year-old man
was having a possible heart attack. Ills vital signs were
which contained what tests showed to be marijuana.
Victor B. Johnson. 21. of 610 Plumb Lane. Is monitored and oxygen administered. He was trans­
ported to the hospital by private vehicle.
scheduled lo appear In court on Feb. 10.

Drunk Drivers Sentenced In County Court
The following |x-rsons have been
either convicted or pleaded guilty in
Seminole County Court to driving
under the influence or having an
unlawful blood alcohol level. Most of
them, as first-time offenders, have
bad their driver's license suspended
for six months and have been
ordered lo (&gt;ay a $250 fine, und to
perfumi 50 hours of community
service. In cases where a different
sentence has been given, ihc actual
sentences are reported; .
—Steven A. Rothllsbcrgcr, 26. of
1305 Elliot Ave.. Sanford, arrested
Aug. 12. Charges of an unlawful
blood alcohol level und willful and
wanton reckless driving were nol
prosecuted. A charge of driving at
an unlawful speed |H5| was dis­
missed Probation was extended to
one year.
—Steve M. Ward. 26. of Hollywood.
Fla., arrested Sept. 4. A charge of
falling to carry a driver's license was
not prosecuted and a chagre of

driving on llu- wrong side ol the
road dismissed.
—Karl Howard Williamson, of 200
Swccl Gum Way. Longwood. ar­
rested Aug. 13 on State Road 434,
Longwood. A charge of unlawful
blood alcohol level was not pro­
secuted and a charge of careless
driving dismissed. Probation wus
extended to one year.
—Richard C. Colvin. 30. of Spanish
Trace Apartments, Wyrnorc Road.
Altamonte Springs, arresled Oct. 14
following un accident on Interstatc
4. A charge of carrying no driver's
license was not prosecuted and a
charge of careless driving dis­
missed.
—Julio Albert Bclalcazar, 23. of
O rlando, a rresled Oct. 15 on
W h ooping Loop in A ltam on te
Springs after police received a
re|&gt;ort of a drunk driver In the area.
His driver's license was suspended
for flvr years, a $500 fine wus
levied, probation was set at nine

months, and he was sentenced to 9
days in the county Jail lo be spent
on weekends, lie Is lo arrive at the
Jail sober.
The following people have had a
charge of driving under Ihc Influ­
ence ur refusing lo take a sobriety
lest amended to Ihc lesser charge of
willful and wanton reckless driving:
—Dana Lynn Dunn, 22. of 1321
Queen Elaine Drive. Casselberry,
arresled Nov. 24. A charge of
unlawful blood alcohol level was nol
prosecuted and u charge of careless
driving dismissed. She was fined
$250.
-Susan Frost Heckler. 24. of 614
Sandpiper Lane. Casselberry, ar­
rested July 26 on Stale Road 434 at
Springs Avenue In Longwood. A
charge of unlawful blood alcohol
level was nol prosecuted. She re­
ceived a $300 fine.
—Frederick W. Olson, 38, of Or­
lando. arresled Aug. 13. He was
fined $250.

�Court O verlo ad

FLORIDA
Defense Claims Political
Pressure In Overtown Trial
MIAMI (UP!) — The defense Is using a key
stale witness to try to show that a racial riot and
political pressure from Miami's top authorities
combined to put policeman Luis Alvarez on trial
for fatally shooting a black man.
Veteran detective John Duhcr has been on the
stand two days — the first witness in the trial
that began Jan. 18 — and was called back today
for more cross examination by defense attorney
Roy Black.
The Cuban-born Alvarez, 24. is being tried for
manslaughter In the killing o f Nevcll Johnson
Jr., a 20-ycar-old courier. Inside an Overtown
video game arcade on Dec. 28. 1982.
Black's questions to Buhrmastcr Wednesday
also emphasized that the on-scene police
Investigation was cut short and hampered by a
mob of up to 300 that was rioting in the streets
outside the ghetto arcade where the shooting
occurred.

TAI.LAHASSSEE (UPI) - The Florida
Supreme Court says the crunch of cases
that almost overwhelmed It a few years
ago has reappeared — this time at the
district court level.
The high court warned the Legislature
last week that the caseloads In the five
district courts of appeal are "excessive"
and the situation can only grow worse
unless additional judgeships are created.
The Justices blamed the Increasing
caseloads chleny on the state’s booming
population growth.
In Its annual certmcatlon of Judicial
manpower needs, the high court said at
least six district court Judgeships arc

CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - The shuttle
Challenger was loaded with oxygen and
hydrogen for Its generators today and every*
thing was "g o " for Its launch Friday morning on
a mission that will pave the way for u satellite
repair (light In April.
Shuttle pilots Vance Brand and Robert " H o o f
Gibson got In some final landing practice at
dawn by flying Jets to simulate the shuttle’s
steep descent to the 3-mile-long Kennedy Space
Center runway on which Challenger will return
Feb. 11.
The five crewmen will board Challenger at
5:45 a.m. Friday. Six rats will go aboard tonight
in an unusual experiment to sec If the lack of
gruvlty in orbit will relieve symptoms of
arthritis.
NASA considers the mission critical to the
(light in two months in which another shuttle
crew will go up to capture and repair an orbiting
solar observatory. Two spacewalkers on this
night will ny up to 100 yards away from the ship
without lifelines to rehearse the repair opera­
tion.

In comparison with the intermediate
level appellate courls in the nation's 10
most populous stales In 1982. the
Florida district courts had the second
highest number of appeals filed, the
third highest ratio of filings per Judge
and the greatest number of published
opinions, the high court said.
The Justices said two more Judgeships
arc needed In the 2nd DCA In Tampa,
two In the 4th DCA in West Palm Beach
and one each In the 3rd DCA In Miami

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sales of
new homes soared 28.5 percent in
December — the biggest monthly
increase In more than two decades,
the government said.
The rush to buy did not drive up
prices, and the average price of a
new house remained $91,000. the
same as In November, the govern­
ment said.
T h e D ecem ber im provem ent
helped make 1983 the best year
since 1979. with 623.000 units sold
— 51.7 percent more than in
rcccsslon-tarnlshcd 1982.
The housing Industry already
knew It enjoyed a good year, hut
analysts had not expected De­
cember to be the best month,
economist Michael Sumlehrast said.
"It Is a surprise month at that
level." Sumlehrast said, speaking
for the National Association of
Home Builders. "January Is proba­
bly going to be strong as well."
On tiic strength of December’s
sales performance, the association
Immediately raised Its forecast for
1984 housing starts to 1.8 million
units. 100.000 better than 1983.
"A s long as Interest rates remain
at current levels, we could have the
best spring since the boom years of
1977 and 1978." said Tucson. Arlz.
developer Pete Herder, this year's
president o f the home builders
association.
Housing starts arc the first step In

While housing starts have boomed, prices haven't.
The average price of a new house remained
$91,000 In December.

M ilit a r y

S t u d y in g
—

•

WASHINGTON (UPIJ — The Defense Department for
the first time has earmarked money for the "potentially
feasible" creation of a defensive shield to protect the
United States from a nuclear attack, possibly with the
use of Star Wars-llkc Ix-am weapons.
The Pentagon set aside $1,777 billion for fiscal 1985
for the research and development of technologies and
weapons capable of destroying Soviet missiles from the
time they leave their launch sites to the rc-enlry of their
nuclear warheads on their way to targets In the United
States.
The expense of the radical program was underscored
by the rapid escalation of Its cost, with the Pentagon
planning to more thun double spending on the project In
fiscal 1986. The budget shows proposed spending of
$3,789 billion for (hat year, which begins Oct. 1. 1985.
Before It had a name, the Pentagon committed $991

^

'S t a r

LAKE BUENA VISTA (UPI) Many
Americans feel that, although they are not

getting enough exercise, they are in pretty
good shape anyway.
In a survey for the Epcot Poll, four out of
five participants or 82 percent, believe they
need more exercise — generally a lot more.
But when the same group of 5,500 people
were asked their perception of their physical
condition. 72 percent claimed to be average
for their age or above.

The committee, using the higher
education portion o f Reagan’ s
budget, showed that need-based
student aid would fall about $326
million — from $3.98 billion to
$3.65 billion.
Reagan sought a similar cut last
year, but Congress Instead In­
creased funding by about $500
million. A spokesman for the educa­
tion committee said the group
would seek an increase of about the
same size this year.
"W e are hopeful Congress will
reject Reagan’s proposal and pro­
vide some selected Increases." said
Charles Saunders, a vice president
o f the American Council on Educa­
tion, a member o f the committee.

Need-based student aid Includes
Pell Grants, federally funded college
work-study programs. National
Direct Student Loans and the
Supplemental Educational Oppor­
tunity Grants.
Saunders said that since 1980.
federal funding of need-based stu­
dent aid. after allowing for Inflation,
has dropped by about 21 percent.
About 5 million o f the nation’s 12
million college students receive fed­
eral uld. The proposed cuts would
eliminate about 797,000 graduate
and u n d e rg ra d u a te fin a n c ia l
awards. Many students receive
more than one award.
The education coalition said there
would be no new funding for:
—S u pp lem en tal gran ts, now
funded at $375 million. The pro­
gram provides grants for needy
students selected by their schools.
—National Direct Student Loans,
now funded at $161 million In
federal contributions. The program
provides students with low-interest
loans, with the government putting
up 90 percent of the money.
—State Student Incentive Grants,
now funded at $76 million. The
program encourages the creation of
state scholarship programs for

construction and are the best
measure of the rale at which the
Industry gobbles up steel, glass,
brick s, a p p lia n ces and o th er
supplies from the rest o f the
economy.
The South, with half of all new
houses sold last year, did the most
to boost December sales, reporting a
record one-month Jump of 66.1
percent.
The North Central region, where
cold weather discouraged house
shopping, was down 39.1 percent.
Northeastern states showed a mod­
erate 8.5 percent gain, and Western
slates were virtually unchanged.
The Jump in home sales "reflects
a great sense of optimism among
Americans," Herder said. "Housing
consumers are more confident
about their own jobs as well a» the
general slate of I he economy."
The average price of a new house
throughout 1983 was $89,400. 6.6
percent more than 1982 s average
of $83,900, the department said.
Mortgage rates ended 1983 about
where they began, with conven­
tional loans running al about 13.5
percent.

Tuesday the government's Index of
le a d in g e c o n o m ic In d ic a to r s
cllmlred 0.6 percent In December,
but only four of 11 Indicators
pointed to an Improving economy In
the weeks ahead.
" I don't think we have any
Indication here that the business
expansion Is fizzling." said Robert
Ortncr. the Com m erce Depart­
ment's chief economist. "In fact. 1
think the greater risk would Ire II
the economy did not slow down."
A runaway economy, he noted,
would mean renewed high Inflation.
On Capitol Hill. U.S. trade Repre­
sentative William Brock said an
overvalued dollar. propped up large­
ly by high U.S. budget deficits. Is
the biggest single cause o f the
nation's trade problems.
Brock said Congrcsshould not
yield to "quick-fix" proposals, such
as Import quotas, because It would
only make the problem worse In the
long run.
Brock said protectionist measures
would remove the Incentive In­
ternational competition provides for
American business to become more
efficient and adjust to changing
conditions.

"A s murh as anything. It tells you
that the price of money is not
The U.S. merchandise trade deflinhibiting (he selling of houses." ‘ til with the world reached $69
said economist William Dunkelberg billion last year, and Brock Joined
of the National Federation of In­ other administration officials In
dependent Business.
saying it may reach $100 billion by
The Commerce Deparment said the end of 1984.

Initiative Is designed to build weapons that could engage
and destroy Incoming ballistic missiles and their deadly
warheads along their trajectories from launch to
near-impact. In effect. It would create a missile shirk)

S y s t e m

The age of the participants had little effect
on the responses until the age of 65. Those 65
and over fell they were doing better In both
areas.
Women, however, generally Indicated they
were In worse shape and needed more
exercise than did men.

The United Slates dismantled Its Safeguard ABM site
In North Dakota shortly after the treaty was signed. The
Soviets have one ABM site near Moscow and another In
Ihe central Soviet Union.

T o u r JUNX &lt;» &gt;*o,1h ttC X V M lS

GARAGE
SALE-$3.00

FRIDAY?,

FLEA

Only 11 percent overall felt they exercised
properly.

Federal Student A id Faces 10% Cut

The Action Committee for Higher
Education said (he budget, which
Reagan presented to Congress
Wednesday, docs not provide more
money for National Direct Student
Loans but Increases funding for
work-study programs by $330 mil­
lion.

The 1980 amendment was inspired by
1
a Supreme Court caseload the Justices
said was staggering with decisions being
issued at the rale of more than 200 a
month.

........ — ■ ---------------- -------_____
----- :
A
,! • ■I • i ■«ti iif*r* i * r v ‘Ttrurmillion In various research projects to the program this over (he United States.
»
Uulrkly dubbed the "Star Wars" Initiative because of
fiscal year, which began Oct. 1. But It waited until the
publication of Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger’s Its probable reliance on the type of beam weapon* that
annual report to Congress Wednesday Ik1fore Identifying appeared so prevalently In science-fiction movies, critics
have denounced the program because It could lead to
the projects connected with It under one heading.
development of a treaty breaking existing anil-ballistic
Formally titled the Strategic Defense Initiative. missile or a space-based weapons pacts.
President Reagan announced the program In March as a
means of ending "the threat of nuclear ballistic
The 1972 ABM Treaty limits the United Slates and the
missiles" by the lurn of the century with weapons that Soviet Union to two ABM sites — one near their capitals,
could defeat any attack launched against the United the second to protect an Intercontinental ballistic missile
States.
launch site. They must not lx* capable o f providing a
Unlike systems that defend one potential target, the nationwide ABM defense.

in Reagan's Budget

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Federal
student aid based on need would be
cut by about 10 percent under
President Reagan's proposed fiscal
198^ budget, a coalition of educa­
tion groups say.

The district courls then beramr the
courts of last resort for most types of
appeals.

W a r s ' D e f e n s e

Poll: Americans Say They Need More Exercise

firm of Yankelovlch.

and the 5th DCA In Daytona Beach.
The district courts took on more
importance when voters approved a
constitutional amendment In 1980
clearing the way for the Supreme Court
to restrict the type of cases it would
consider.

Housing Sales Up; Prices Stable

GAINESVILLE (UPI) — A University of Florida
fraternity has been suspended from activity for
one year because six members allegedly gang
raped a freshman coed who wanted to be their
"little sister.”
The suspension will be appealed by the
accused members of the PI Lambda Phi
fraternity.
In a written statement forwarded to the
fraternity. Dean for Student Services James
Scott said the group would not be allowed to
participate In recruiting new members or social.
Intramural or service activities. He said the
group would lose its campus charter If any
violations of the penalty occurred within one
calendar year.
The girl told police that the frat brothers told
her she would have to have sex with them In
order lojoln the group's sister organization.
The frat members maintained the coed was a
willing participant and used rape as an excuse
to tell her parents because she contracted
herpes during the Incident.
Officials said no charges against (he frat
brothers were filed by the state attorney's office
because the coed did not have a medical
examination after the Incident and there was
not enough evidence of a sexual assault to
prosecute.

Shuttle Ready For Launch

practical, to the standard recommended
by the A pp ellate Structu re C om ­
mission."

needed this year.
The court also requested 14 new
Judgeships at the circuit court level and
13 at the county court level.
Last year, the Legislature refused to
fund the 27 Judgeships the high court
said were needed at that time.
The Appellate Structure Commission
In 1979 adopted a standard of no more
than 250 primary cases assigned for a
slnglcjudgc at any one time.
"A ll of the district courts presently
exceed this standard." the high court
said. "In order to ensure the integrity of
the appellate process, this excessive
caseload should be reduced, as soon as

Frat Suspended For Rape

New York research
Shelly an d While./

Thursday, Feb. 1 ,19H-JA

Lawmakers Told Additional District Judges Needed

IN BRIEF

(Editor s note: Tlw following E/xm Poll was
conducted al Wall D isn ey W orld's Epcot
Center. Visitors to Epcot are /tolled dally and
their responses arc tabulated by computer.
Tile results of the poll arc analyzed by the

Evening Herald, Sanford, Ft.

needy students by providing funds
that slates match.
t

—Graduate Student Fellowships,
now funded at $ 14 million.
Other areas of the proposed
budget include:
— Pell Grants, the basic federal
student-grant program, would be
funded al the current level of $2.8
billion, while federal funding of
college work-study programs would
be increased from $550 million to
$850 million. Students In workstudy programs would be required
to contribute at least $500 toward
(heir educations before qualifying
for grants.
—Guaranteed Student Loans
would be revised to require a test
determining whether the applicant
needs the assistance. Currently,
only applicants with family Incomes
of more than $30,000 are given
such a test.
—Proposed for elimination: The
Cooperative Education Program,
now funded at $14 million, which
permits students to get work expe­
rience while attending college, and
the foreign-language area studies
programs, now funded at $31 mil­
lion, which encourage international
studies.

V

NOTICE
Seminole District Boy Scouts
Chicken Bar-B-Q
Has Been Cancelled.
Refunds May Be Picked Up
At The Chamber Of Commerce
Feb. 4 From Noon To 5.

�*A-Everting Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Thursday, Feb. 2, l t «

Olympic
Traffic
No Hassle
For Rich
LOS ANGELES (UPI) The rich who plan lo
a t t e n d th e S u m m e r
Olympics and want to skip
some of the compellllon —
like marathon traffic Jams,
fighting for parking and
wrestling with road maps
— have created a brisk
market for commercial
helicopters.
A survey of rental and
c h a rte r a irc ra ft firm s
th r o u g h o u t S o u th ern
C a lifo rn ia show s that
choppers are at a premium
— with the price to match.
Some companies said they
have been booked solid for
months. Others plan to
bring helicopters In from
surrounding slates to fill
(he demand from July 28
through Aug. 12.
Federal A viation A d ­
ministrations officials are
drafting special rules to
g o v e r n the In flu x o f
private choppers, although
officials conrede they are
nol quite certain what to
expect.
"W e re trying now to get
a handle on It and how lo
p r e p a r e . " s a id FA A
spokesw om an Barbara
Abels.
Peter J. McKernan. pres­
ident of Jclcoplers Inc.,
said the suburban Van
Nuys firm began taking
orders 14 months ago and
had no problem signing up
business for the two-week
duration or the Games,
e v e n w i t h r a t e s of
t #450 an-hour for a fourpassenger helicopter und
$600-an-hour for a six-seal
craft.
One attraction Is the
time helicopters can save.
Twenty-three Olympic
events will be spread over
an area exceeding Los
Angeles County's 4.000
square miles. Some will be
200 miles apart.
"The freeways arc going
lo be a mess." says Doug
Morgan, a pilot at Santa
Ana's Blackbird Helicop­
ters. echoing the fears of
residents, visitors and
&gt; Olympic planner*alike.
A trip from Beverly Hills
to the dow ntow n Los
A ngeles Coliseum , the
innln site for much of the
competition and at least a
half hour drive in light
traffic, takes four minutes
by helicopter.
A n o t h e r tlraw,
McKernan believes, is the
cachet.
"For the very wealthy,
for wealthy corporations
having guests. It's not only
the quickest way to get
there, there's also the
prestige." he says.
Mike Dressman, general
manager of Helltac Avia­
tion Inc. in Los Angeles,
said a good chunk of the
business he has bookrd
has come from Southern
C aliforn ia banks, con ­
cerned about millions of
dollars in bank drafts and
clearing-house securities
being tied up In truffle.
Some department stores
have discussed the possi­
bility of transporting daily
receipts via helicopter.
Dressman said, adding his
company “ may have to go
out of the area to try and
gel some more" crafts.
An FAA plan to restrict
a ir t r a ffic . In c lu d in g
helicopters, during the
Games met sharp criticism
at a December hearing.
- Aviation officials called
‘ the rules — which would
Impose u mandatory res­
ervation system at six
S o u t h e r n C a lif o r n ia
airports and Las Vegas
und limit charter opera*lions — unnecessary and
overly restrictive.
The system would also
apply to private and un­
scheduled aircraft arrivals
at the seven fields, with
such flights required to
obtain FAA clearance ut
least two hours before they
take olT.
Charter companies, an­
ticipating restrictions on
how close helicopters will
be allowed at competition
tjle. are arranging ground
transportation from landWg areas nearby.
&gt; The FAA’s final rules arc
inspected to be Issued this
l^onlh.

J S i-

— K

Shorts
And
Creepers

Sale 2.99
to
5.60
Togs for toddlers.
Tops and bottoms lor inlants and
toddlers All o( easy-care polyester/
cotton
Reg. Sale
Polo shirt. V 4
... 3.22
2.M
‘ Boxer pant. 'S -4Y... . . . . . ,3 66
2.99
Striped tops.................... 7 00
5.60
Novelty l o p .................... 5 50
4.40

Sals S4 to 6.40. Playtime Is savings time.
With this sundress, short set and
creeper for Infants And a short set for
loddler boys All of polyester/cotton
Reg
Sale
2-piece sundress. V 2 ...... 6 00 4.80
Short set. Vi-1*................ 5 00 4.00
Strtpw reretoper. W -1’# . . . . . B OO

e.40

Boy’s short set, 2T-4T...... 6 50

5.20

r

\ ...

1

iv

$
j

f

.

--------

Sale 39.99 20% off
All bedding
to
54.99
and underwear.
Save on all car seats.
All strollers, too.
Here's a sampling ol the selection in
the store.
Reg
Sale
Strolee* car seat............ 59 99 47.99
Maxi Taxi'* stroller......... 69 00 54.99
One-Step'* car seat......... 49 99 39.99

n

WS4*

Sesame Street* only from JCPenney:
Reg
Sale
Receiving blanket.......... 6 25 5.00
Thermal blanket............. 10 00 8.00
Fitted crib sheet.............. 6.50 5.20
Crib blanket.................... 7 00 5.60
Convertible comforter
13 00 10.40
Underwear set ................ 5 00 4.00
Underwear set ................ 8 00 6.40
Sleeper...... .................... 800 6 40
Undershirt or Pilucho* ... 3 79 3.03

'

Y

I

i* ia &amp;

\V

Other sleepwear sets and items on sale

•S .s i

A '- i v . *

m

V £

C U M of Horn. M t w y
X t I t M l ) M p « u ie up
phon* And cppnng N d m
C «I ut w in |Ou&gt; c .u u g onto)
«nd lie s - mmd o . . * 4ngm to

•« • t««&gt;si»w I

JCPenney Catalog

U

•r g*

CFtenney
Sanford Plaza

J

ia
Store Hours
Sunday
12 To 6
Mon. • Sat.
9:30 To 9

• IH 4 . i C P w otoj Com pon* Inc

1

l

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.
—

f
n
n
o r n a :- e e
d

11 Idl v
J C P e n n e y

s a lu te s

th e

’8 4

G a m e s

w ith

Vi

tr i-c o lo r s e p a r a te s .

t

Thursday* Feb. 2, 1tS4—5A
— —
i---- :—^

Dog Catchers.
Arrested For-Selling Dogs ) '

CHICAGO IUPI) - L *
derrover agents have o j c o v e r e d m ore than a
quarter of the city's dSl
catchers stole pets anil
pedigreed pooches to sell
on the black market.
Investigators said lh«;y
hope a "paper trail” of
evidence will help lhelp
reunite families with lltcfr
missing pets, hut they fc.ir
some animals may haiv
been sold to laboratories
for research and m.l'y
never be found.
T e n a n im a l eonli'Jfl
workers and four other's
were arrested on charges
of stealing the dogs, whfylt
ranged from pedigreed
show dogs to family j&gt;cl*
The IO employees — mdrv
than one-fourth o f the
department's 37 workers
— were suspended.
James Maurer. dlrccUjr
of the c ity 's Office iii
Municipal Investigation,
said the 14 were arrestcd
In a "slin g" operation that
capped more than (our
months of undercover lit
vestlgallon.
The workers are sus
| x t ted of picking up dqgV
after citizen complaints,
then selling the animals th
private kennels or Individ
uals Instead of taking
them to the city pound.
Maurer said.
Some of the dogs w i'fr
strays, but others were
wearing Identification tags
when they w ere sotd
m ay oral aide M ichael
Hnlewlnsk! Indicated.
Valuable watch dogs or
pedigreed show dogs were
stolen from yards and then
sold. Maurer said. One was
sold for $8(X) on the black
market. Holewinski said.
Maurer said citizens
have complained for sev
eral years they bclicvld
animal control workers
had either taken their dogs
from their yards or made
off with pels which had
run away.
" I t seem ed to be 'a
city wide phenomenon',"
he said.
Maurer said kennel re­
cords were seized Tues­
day. In hopes o f tracking
down other dogs lost be­
fore the in v estig a tio n
th MHfrVfilpaper trail Investigation."
he said.
In the Investigation, he
said, undercover police of
fleers tried to buy (logs
from the animal |M&gt;nn&lt;f
Undercover agents a Ho
bought dogs, then re­
ported them as strays.
they would he picked Up
hy city workers.
Maurer said ultoul HK&gt;
dogs were sold after being
picked up or taken mprtghl.
A lth o u g h no p u blic
money was taken, lie said
people who lost their dogs
had little chance of ever
seeing again.
’**

$300 A Day
Rents Rolls '

25%

Off

25% off

Show your colors! It s red, white and
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— and have $5,000 -w
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,,,
7-11 Rent-a-Car Inc.,of
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I!f
They can be rented JL^v
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The driver who canrjgt
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,»
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Twill pants......................... $22 1150
Not shown,
solid p o lo ........................$ 1 3
175
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m\t t;

�E ven in g H erald
(USPS a i :«0I
300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FI A. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Thursday, February 2, 198-1—6A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, *4.25; 6 Months, *24.00;
Year, *45.00. By Mail; Week. *1.25; Month. *5.25; 6 Months,
*30,00; Year. *57.00.

By Satan Loden

To Market,
To M a r k e t . . .
A s a result o f a consum er lawsuit, the U.S.
D epartm ent o f Agriculture has had to reopen Its
hearing on how far the Lem on Adm inistrative
C om m ittee can go In restricting the num ber o f
fresh lem ons Its farm er-m em bers can sell.
T h e Sunklsi coopcrtlvc. which dom inates the
com m ittee. Is livid.
But the rehearing should be w elcom ed by
everyon e else as an opportunity for the Reagan
adm inistration to m ake good on the reform s Us
ow n agriculture and finance experts have pro­
posed — and the W hite house has repeatedly
blocked at Sunklst’s behest — In the operation o f
this and other agricultural m arketing com m ittees.
Since the depression, the governm ent has not
only perm itted farm ers to Join together to ensure
the orderly m arketing o f a particular crop; It has
enforced the resulting "m a rk e tin g ord ers" — rules
the farm ers set for them selves — by collecting
fines or Im posing Jail term s on m arketing order
violators.
O riginally this arrangem ent was necessary to
ensure farm ers the clout they needed to deal with
the va g a rie s o f w ea th er, transportation and
m iddlem en.
And in the case ur the three dozen m arketing
orders that still exist today and limit them selves to
things like ensuring uniform grading standards
and im posing quality controls, the arrangem ent Is
still w orth m aintaining.
But the m arketing orders can no longer be
Justified w hen they cross the threshold from
im posing quality controls to Im posing sales quotas
on their m em bers, w hich keep perfectly good
produce o ff the m arket sim ply In order to drive
prices higher.
If that Is what the lem on com m ittee Is doing —
which the new hearing should determ ine — it
ought to be stopped.

Old cars can take you places new cars
can't and Seminole County sheriffs Capt.
Jay Leman's restored 1957. two door
Chevy sedan took him and wife Sandra to
a Tampa Super Bowl pre-game party on
Super Bowl Sunday.
The NFL paid Leman and three Orlando
residents who own '55 and '56 Chcvys S50
each to drive to Tampa so their classic cars
could help create a 1950s atmosphere at a
tent party for corporate brass. Sports
Illustrated executives and celebrities such
as Jimmy The Greek.
Leman's $6,000 metallc red car. which
is heavy on the chrome and boasts a red
crushed velvet interior, attracted extra
attention, because Washington Red Skins'
fans appreciated the car's color which

A ll th e U S D A has p ro p o se d Is to m ak e
m arket-order sales quotas m ore flexible and,
w here they are Indefensible, to phase them out.
It should be allowed to proceed.

BERRYS WORLD

the Red Skins started at 4:30 p.m. the
Lcmans turned down free tickets, because
they wanted to get back to Sanford without
having to fight post-game traffic.
Leman's classic car. which he and his
wife began to restore about a year ago. will
be on display, along with other vintage
cars from the 20s through the 60s, at
Florida Festival. Saturday from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. The show is free to the public. And
the public will decide which of the car
owners will take home a best of show
trophy. Leman said.
Leman enjoys his Chevy and also owns a
'55 Chevy truck. "T h e y bring back
memories for me and allow other people to
bring back memories. It's a nice clean
family hobby." Leman said.
.

AN T H O N Y H A R R IG A N

W ASH ING T O N WORLD

Reagan
Says He's
Not Unfair

United
States,
Canada

By Helen Thomas
UPI White House Reporter

Canada is the perennially neglected
country In U.S. foreign policy planning.
Americans take Canada for granted. If
they think of It at all. It is In terms of the
world's largest undefended frontier.
A new year is a good time to rethink
the American relationship with Canada.
Certainly, there arc problems in the
U.S. relationship with Canada. It is a
mistake for Americans to take Canada
for granted as a friend and ally.
If Americans don't realize that there
arc problems, there is ample recognition
of them on the northern aldt of the
border.
Canadians arc very mindful of the
difference In size, power, and Influence.
They feel under the shadow of their
giant neighbor to the south.
Under the clrruinstances, it Is hard to
be a Canadian.
Canada Is profoundly affected by
everything that happens In and to the
United Slates. Americans are hardly
aware at all that Canada was harshly
affected by the U.S. recession of
1980-1982.
The Canadian recovery has been
much slower.
To be sure, the Canadian government,
under Prime Minister Trudeau, has
been responsible for much of the
economic trouble cxprlenced by the
Canadian people.

In the 1970s. Mr. Trudeau determined
to crack down on U.S. investment in
Canada. This policy damaged economic
Farm ers today have enough other w ays to
opportunities for Canadians. He also
protect them selves that they no longer need such
engaged in a politically unwise policy of
extraordinary powers. Indeed, the greater danger
granting foreign aid to Cuba and other
today is that such Industry prlcg-fixlng w ill be
h arm fu l not only to c i w m u n e t » . b u i il ir t f I M a W i i f - .syffittteU U th i Sov^vs£j?\i^A m erican Investment In Canada
Itself.
always will be a sensitive matter, but
U.S. financial resources are necessary
A rtificially high prices can drive farm ers to
for Canadian economic development.
overproduce a crop, m isusing resources tliat could
However. Canadians can now take
m ore econom ically be put Into other crops or
into account the fuel that their Investors
Industries.
have put tremendous sums Into com­
mercial development In the United
T h e quotas m ay also, according to a 1981 USDA
Stales,
study, create m ore market Instability than they
This means that investment Is a
prevent, by m aking It Im possible for farm ers to
two-way street.
take advantage o f futures market hedges and the
The two peoples — Canadians and
other free-m arket m echanism s that now exist to
Americans — arc different, though the
control price fluctuations.
differences sometimes are hard to define
T h e quotas, m oreover, produce such absurd
exactly. They share Anglo-Saxon politi­
cal traditions, but have different politi­
spectacles as the California lemon grow er w ho last
cal traditions. They should be able to
yea r had to Import lem ons from Chile, because he
coexist und cooperate In a good spirit,
was not allow ed to market all o f his ow n crop, and
keeping their political institutions sepa­
the California orange grow er who. tw o years
rate by accepting a very large degree of
before, was prevented from givin g his "su rp lu s"
continental economic Integration.
orunges to a poor people's food coop.
Progress In U.S.-Canadlan relations
It Is the U SD A'sJob to see that m arketing ordrrs
would be more rapid if the American
don't cross tills threshold, a task the W hite House
people devoted more attention to Cana­
prevented the departm ent from perform ing In Its
dian attitudes about the United States.
lust review o f the lem on co m m ittee’s quotas.
For this to happen, the American
H opefully, this tim e the USDA will be able to
fully consider the econom ic im pact o f the lem on
quotas and to order w h atever m odifications are
necessary to bring them into conform ity with the
departm en t’s own m odest reform proposals.

matches that team's red and yellow colors.
The 1.500 dignitaries who had been
flown Into Orlando and taken to Tampa In
14 chartered buses for the party and Ihc
game flocked to Leman's Car to pose for
pictures with Tampa Bucs cheerleaders
and team mascots, who were dressed in
character costumes.
The ‘50 theme prevailed at the party.
The front of the tent was disguised as a
drive-in restaurant, where the cars were
p a r k e d . T h e g u e s t s f e a s t e d on
cheeseburgers and ice cream from giant
stands beneath the circus tent. And more
contemporary fare of hot and rold snacks
and a giant 2-foot-by*3-foot roast beef were
gobbled up by the guests.
When the game between the Raiders and

n ew s m e d ia m ust r e p o r t
extensively on Canadian affairs.

m ore

Plea$e Write
LetU rt to the editor ere wel­
come for publication. All lettera
must be signed and Include a
mailing addraaa and, If poaalble,
a telephone number.The Keening
Herald reserves the right to edit
lettera to avoid libel and to ac­
commodate space.

JEFFREY HART

The 'No Stuff': Glenn
With the whole world — supposedly —
watching. Senator John Glenn on TV in
Hanover. New Hampshire, committed a
supreme political Indecency.
Glenn is not only running as a
celebrity, he is running as the repre­
sentative o f the Old Virtues, the
Midwestern straight guy of the "Right
Stuff" book and movie.
And there he was. in broad daylight,
coming out against Indexing the tax
rodr to tik r iM o u n ta ttnltailon. " "*
You don't have to know any more.
What Inflation docs to your lax
situation, of course, is push you Into u
higher tax bracket without any Increase
in your rcul earning power. Because ol
the Inflation factor, you pay more
dollars Into the federal treasury. And
because you do, your own purchasing
power in real terms declines.
Of course, this is tremendously con­
venient for liberal politicians. They can
Increase federal spending, and raise the
money to pay for It through the
"Inform al" tax of inflation. In other
words, they are raising taxes without
the embarrassment of officially voting
for tax Increases.
Poor John Glenn. Right out there in
the open, explaining how he would cut
the federal deficit, he came out against
indexing.
Now. of course, a federal spender Is
against indexing. And for inflation.
As the rate of inflation goes up.
everyone sails Into higher tax brackets
and pays a steeper "progressive" in­
come tax. And with Ihc stolen lux
dollars. Glenn und his friends can fund
the programs that reward their political
backers. The old. naive "tax and spend"
has become "Inflate and spend."
The best definition of Inflation I have
ever heard was articulated In three
words by President Calvin Coolldge.
who Is experiencing a modest elevation
of historical reputation, und who had a
considerable gift for epigram. "Infla­
tion," said Coolldge. "Is repudiation."
Coolldge. the honest Vermonter,
meant that through Inflation the gov­
ernment was repudiating the value of
the currency In your pocket. Senator
Glenn wants to curry such repudiation

one step further and steal more of your
m on ey by pu sh in g you up in to
steeper-lax brackets.
So m uch fo r h is M ain s tr e e t.
Midwestern virtues. He should name
Jesse James or W illie Sutton Ills
vlce-presldenllal running mate.
Back In 1970. when Richard Nixon
w-as w o rry in g about a p rojected
challenge in 1972 from then Senator
Edmund Musklc. his advisors urged him
to -dlMlInKulsh Ijrtwecii (tie actual Ed­
mund Musklc und "the idea of Edmund
Musklc."
In media theory. Musklc was "Lincolncsquc," an honest New Englander
from the state of Maine whose craggy
visage would compare favorably wit it
the perceived Nixon plastic-man.
Well, the actual Musklc crashed in
New Hampshire and then in Florida.
There Just was not much substance to
him. an organization Democrat when no
one wanted an organization man.
The actual John Glenn, similarly. Is
turning out to Ik- quite different from
the Idea of John Glenn as projected
several months ago. This Is no na­
tional-hero Eisenhowcr-style candidate
who will roll over the opposition.
The actual John Glenn is a fairly
iKirlug fellow of no visible ability to pul
together a national organization. He has
nothing much to say. On some Issues,
such as a federal homosexual rights law
— he's opposed — he stands a bit
ccntcrward of Mondale. But on all the
other lilH-ral Issues he goes through
routine genuflections
Trying to push my way through the
crowded Hanover Inn lobby the morn­
ing before the eight-candidate debate. I
found myself buffeted by green-tagged
reporters, overweight TV cameramen,
hard-looking females (every candidate
has a female rampalgn manager. It
sometimes seems) and last-moving
young Secret Servicemen with walkietalkies.
And. there was John Glenn. The great
moon face, the tiny hooded eyes.
And after Ills debate performance, 1
knew (hat my old primitive historical
intuition was still true.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presidential
candidate Ronald Reagan Is riding high
In the polls, and he Is enjoying the
privileges of Incumbency as he starts
down the campaign trail.
But he feels he has been maligned by
opponents on two fronls that he views
us political hurdles — the so-called
"fairness" Issue that he is not con­
cerned about the poor and the dis­
advantaged. and the image that he Is
"trigger happy." Right now he is bent
on c l e a r i n g up w h a t he c a lls
"misconceptions" of his views.
He did not help the situation much
when he said In an ABC "Good Morning
America” Interview that even In the
best of tunes people sleeping on outdoor
grates in the big cities arc homeless "by
choice."
He was responding to a question
regarding charges that he favors the
rich and his policies arc causing misery
to the less fortunate.
He (old Interviewer David Hartman.
"Sure, when someone is down on his
luck and Is having hard times and
they'd like to have someone to blame,
they have heard a steady drumbeat
(that he is unfair). Now, they've been
told over and over again that because
we're trying to hold down government
spending that somehow we're taking It
out on their hides."
In response to a similar question in
Newsweek Magazine. Reagan cited
"some misperceptions that have been
carefully crafted by a certain amount of
demagoguery on the part of opponents
of what we’ve been trying to do here;
Iu u m (hat would have me uncaring for
certain groups of our citizenry — and
they're not iruc at all. And they
probably have been the most frustrating
thing that I personally have fell."
He summed up his feelings by saying
he believes the fairness Issue has been
"very unfair."
Reagan came into ofRce with a lot of
baggage concerning his view s on
welfare and equity. In the '60s he
opposed nearly every "Great Society"
proposal, which became law under
Lyndon Johnson, including voting
rights, civil rights. Medicare, and
minimum wage. He also suggested In
1964 that Social Security might be put
on a voluntary basis.
During his first year as president he
made social programs his target for
cutting big government, aiming at
disability payments, school loans,
school lunches and other entitlement
programs. Such programs, he said,
should be only for the "truly needy."
In that respect he has halted the
growth of these programs. The cuts
added a burden to the big cities with
their population growths and the recent
deep recession, which is not over In
some industries.
In his current budget, Reagan also
proposes some lesscr-than-expected
cuts in food assistance and medicare.
But again he is not asking for funding
for legal services for the poor, an
assistance that he appears bound and
determined to wipe out. It Is the target
of activist conservatives In the country.
H e w a s t o ld b y R e p u b lic a n
lawmakers, according to House GOP
leader Bob Michel, that big cuts In socialprograms during an election year would
be politically unwise.

JA C K A N D E R SO N

Advisers Split Over Recovery Strategy
WASHINGTON - Two things will
happen today (Feb. 2). The famous
groundhog will [x&gt;p out of his hole In
Punxsutawnry. Pa., and the President's
Council of Economic Advisers will
release Its annual report In Washington.
DC.
1 won't predict whether the groun­
dhog will sec his shadow or not, but I
can tell you there'll be enough sunshine
emanating from the economic report to
daz/le every groundhog in Ihc country.

"It the groundhog sees his shadow, does It
mean you'll be wearing that suit for six more
weeks?"

The cou ncil's chairm an. Martin
Feldstein. will predict continued eco­
nomic growth, declining unemployment
and a low rate of lnllution. Last year,
when Feldstein wrongly forecast a
historically weak recovery from the
recession, some of his fellow economists
labeled him Dr. Gloom. This year,
they'll be calling him Mr. Sunshine.
But behind the rosy report, the
president's top advisers are bitterly
divided over economic policy. Most
Americans will shrug off this high-level

disagreement as notning more than a
philosophical pillow fight. But unfortu­
nately, the president’ s decision on
which advice to follow will afTect the
pockctbook of every businessman, wage
earner, pensioner and taxpayer In the
nation.
The spilt among top economists Is
deep and unbridgeable. As one insider
described It to me. It would be only a
slight exaggeration to say that (In­
differences In economic policy within
the administration are as fundamental
as If the CIA and the Pentagon disagreed
over whether the Soviet Union existed.
Basically, the jnosl critical problem
Feldstein secs for the economy is
continued $200 billion budget deficits,
which he wunls to reduce by a combina­
tion of spending cuts and tax Increases.
This will assure the durability of the
economic recovery, he feels.
But other senior economists disagree.
Th ey believe the Federal Reserve
Board's tight-money policy. In force
since last summer. Is not only choking

oil the recovery but Is sowing the seeds
for another recession tty the cud of the
year. They believe that a slow, steady
growth in the money supply Is the best
way to achieve a healthy economy und
avoid the unsettling (tostwar cycle of
boom and bust.
These monetarists were the only
economists who correctly forecast both
the severity of the lust recession and the
strength of last year's recovery.
What particularly infuriates them Is
that the Feldstein report will give gold
stars to the Fed and Its chairman. Paul
Volcker. The Fed's erratic manipulation
of the money supply last year resulted
in a confidential Cabinet-level report
critical of the agency.
"W e are really concerned." one ad­
ministration official (old my associate
Michael Blnstcln. "and we are convey­
ing that to the Fed. What happens in the
next month or two will determine
whether It will be the death knell for the
recovery or whether the Fed will bring
us back from the hrlnk o f disaster."

Feldsleln’s critics are also bitter at his
tendency to Ignore divergent views In
preparing the economic report. "The
hidden agenda of every chapter Is to sell
the Feldstein line, which is that high
d e fic its raise Interest rates, and
therefore you have to raise taxes."
In an election year. Feldstein Is
unlikely to get (he budget cuts and tax
Increases he feels are necessary. He
would be likely, therefore, to Insist on
hewing to the Fed's tight-money policy.
Then neither Feld steln's nor the
monetarists' suggestions would be
followed, and the public would wind up
with the worst o f both economic
theories.
If there Is indeed a recession this year,
one official pointed out. both sides will
howl " I told you so" — and use the
disaster as a vindication of their theory.
So the economists' argument will
probably continue ad infinitum, with
the American people caught In the
middle.

�SPORTS

Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Feb. 2, 1984—7A

i

It's Tougher For Today's Heroes...And For Hero Worshipers

j

\ For the past few years, our of the most
fomm on phrases I’ve heard lias come from
the mouths of those far older and wiser than
| is. "W e Just don’t have the heroes like we
when 1was young."
* Now that I’m old enough. I’ve pondered
that statement. I believe they’re right — and
l-bclicvc they’re wrong.
Yesterday's heroes came from limited
areas. Decorated war veterans made
excellent heroes. They made such goocf
heroes because there were such good
vllllans years back. Germans. Russians and
Orientals were constantly messing with lhe
Americans. If you protect your country from
those kinds, you could qualify for hero
status.

armor was kept sterling clean by the press
and later the electronic media.
People back In the 30's. 40's, and 50's
needed to look forward to an afternoon
game, or a Saturday night fight. Once they
sat In front of the radio, television or In the
ball park, they could say hello to their old
friends in uniforms.
We ask a lot more of our heroes today
than in past years. And with the print and
clectrjnic media the way It is today. It’s
harder for them to keep their armor a bright
sterling.
Stories about drugs, and contract disputes
are as common In the newspapers and on
television as the scores of last night's
games.

Today, we don'l clearly know who the
vllllans are so Its hard for our heroes to
protect us from them.
Another good sourse for heroes was. of
course, the sports world. Who didn't love
"the Babe," "the Galloping Ghost [Red
Grange).” Jack Dempsey. Lou Gehrig, or
Joe Louis. They were heroes all right and
every young kid wanted to grow up to be
like one or all of those great legends.

Rut it's not fair to today's heroes. A lot
more of our athletes would be hero status,
and not Just because of their high salaries. If
their private lives were kept private.
Not many people knew back then what a
rowdy person the great Rabe Ruth was. The
press loved the Babe for his fun-lowing
approach to the game and protected him
and overlooked his less-lhan-wholesome
side. News o f his escapades came to light
long after he ended his glorious carrer.

It was easier to lie a hero in those days
because we. the general public, usked very
little of them. It was a tonic lor us that their

Even so, tod a y’ s people seem too
sophisticated to actually have a hero: or for

Lou
Stefano
Herald Sporta Writer

that matter even to look up to somebody.
They pay lhe mortgage on their hero every
month and look up to their hero sitting in
the driveway. We used to look for an escape
in a Babe Ruth home run or In a Joe Louis
right cross. Now. no one is good enough to
hit a home run or deliver a knockout blow
except ourselves.
Maybe it’s a lack of trust. Just over 10
years ago. our own president let us down.
We’ve read o f congressmen and generals not
measuring up to the standards of the past.
And our athletes of today ’’seem" to not be
what they were in years gone by.
In spite of the past few hundred words I've
written, I believe that there arc heroes
today. We Just have to accept them as they
arc and not ask them to be someone that we

ourselves cannot lw.
game of the week, which was my favorite
I'm happy to say that 1 have a hero, a sports TV show. I babbled to my mom about
couple In fact I'm even happier to say that this guy I "played against In high school" as
I've talked to one of-them recently and have J,* Garigiolla mentioned Tim 's name as a
a chance to meet him this weekend.
laic-inning pinch runner against the New
1 grew up loving sports and fantasizing York Mcts In early October 1980.
*
about being a professional athlete. In the
When he played In the All-Star game, and
spring, I wanted to be a professional
also in the playoffs. I was with him on that
baseball player. Autumn brought on my
field, even though I was watching on
desire to play pro football and winter drew
television. I even felt financially secure
my attention to a professional basketball
when he signed his new eVmlract a couple
fantasy.
years back even though my savings account
The dream never materialized. But it did
was no richer.
for someone else that 1 knew about. And his
When Tim had his problems with dnigs. I
reality satisfied my dream.
was hurt, mad and disappointed. He had
1first saw Tim Raines play baseball in my
something that every guy wanted — and he
Junior year of high school. I sat on (lie bench
almost lost It. But II made me realize that he
across the field and marveled at Ills talent.
was human. It took me about two months lo
In later years. I would lib to listeners that
get over It. I agonized with hint. But I
there were scouts at my baseball games.
res|H’cl him because of what he went
The only problem was that they came to
through and overcame.
scout Tim and not me.
There is a part of me and a lot of others
When Tim signed with the Ex|xis, I was
that is sallsfied and rests easier because of
thrilled and fell closer lo being filled of my
what Tim Raines has done and will do as
fantasy. I watched his rise through the
years go by.
minor leagues and bragged to my eollegues
It takes a big man to be a hero and a big
at work about this guv I "played against In
man lo have one. We both fit the bill.
high school" who Just recently played h-fmc
Some heroes conquer countries, some
50.000 people In Denver's Mile High
become presidents, and still others walk In
Stadium.
space. My hero made my dream come true.
I also remember Tim's first time on NBC's

Lady Seminoles
Battle Deland
In Pivotal Game

R a m s F in d W a y
Past Cohen
F o r 3 -0 V ic to r y
By Lou Stefano
Herald Sporta Writer
Lake Mary head soccer roach
Larry McCorkle said the Ram soccer
(cam didn’t play well Wednesday
night against Seminole at Lake
Mary High School. "I talked to the
guys [before the gam e) and I
thought they were ready, but It's
obvious they weren't. It wasn't a
very good performance."
• Seminole head coach Howard
Hawkins, on the contrary, was
pleased with bis team's perfor­
mance. ■..vrrfcey'rc (th e H r m ln o k -o t
Steadily improving." said Hawkins.
•*We look Lake Mary out of their
passing game and that was our goal.
We forced (hem to play kick and run
pretty much."
Can you tell from these quotes
who won the game? It was Lake
Mary with a less than impressive
3-0 victory.
The game was really a match ol
the Lake Mary offense versus the
Seminole defense, which means all
|0 Lake Mary attackers against
Seminole goalie Rob Cohen.
The Seminole game plan was to
mark Lake Mary man-lo-man and
bunch up in front of the Seminole
goal. The strategy worked for the
llrst 37:35 of the game as the Tribe
continually frustrated the Rams and
kept them from scoring.
Finally after what had lo be the
15Ui Lake Mary throw in from near
the Seminole goal. Ram left winger
Alsushl Ichlhara was left unmarked
and as the defense went right, the
ball came left and he pounded a
shot past the diving Cohen.
By contrast. Lake Mary had 26

The Seminole's girls buskclbnll
team can Just about clinch the Flvr
Star Conference tiilr tonight, but
the Lady Seminoles must beat a
lough DeLand leant at DeLand. The
game starts al 7:45 p.m. since
DeLand doesn't have a Junior
varsity team.
The Lady Tribe stands at 19-4
overall and 13-1 in Ihe conference
while DeLand. ranked seventh in
Ihe 4A prep poll. Is IH-4 overall and
12-2 In the conference. The last
time the two teams met. Seminole
came away easy victors as Maxine
Campbell did a fine defensive Job on
high-scoring Bridget! e Gordon.
In other Five Slar Conference
action tonight. Lake Howell’s Lady
Silver Hawks. 16-8 overall and 9-5
in the conference, (ravel lo Lake
Brantlcy to face the upscl-mtndcd

Prep Soccer
shots on goal many of which were
taken in point blank range on
Cohen. In the first half. Ram
attacker Marcus Slebmann had
Cohen one-on-one three times and
each time Sicbmann blasted a shot
that the senior goalie was able to get
some part of his body on. By game's
end. Cohen had "Spalding" en­
graved on the various parts of his
|x&gt;dy which he used to block shots.
Lake Mary might nave won the
game, but Cohen outplayed the
Ram attackers. For the evening,
l^ike Mary had a phenomenal 46
shots on goal and only scored three
goals.
Sicbmann finally scored on Cohen
with 18:42 left in the game,on d
breakaway to close out the scoring.

L a d y P M tto U . • ’

Seabreeie Boys........................2
Lake Brantley..........................1
DAYTONA BEACH - In a crucial
F iv e S ta r C o n fe r e n c e gam e.
Seabreeze. 15-1. had to go Inlo a
d ou b le-overtim e, sudden-death
shootout to trip the Lake Brantley
Patriots. 2-1. at Welch Memorial
Stadium.
The win keeps the Sanderabs. 7-0.
on top of the Five Star while the
Patriots arc 6-1. Brantley narrowly
missed a chance to win the game In
regu lation when standout Mo
Moghaddam’s shot rolled In Just
after the final buzzer from six feet
away.
"T h e buzzer sounded Just before
ii crossed the line." said Lake
Branlley spokesman Joe Rath. In
the first overtime, each team kicked

H o ra M P la t * k y T a m m y V in c tn t

Jose Del Rosario, left, winds up for a shot at
Sem inole's goal as the T rib e 's Matt Albert moves
to In defensively. Lake M a ry peppered Seminole

keeper Rob Cohen and eventually came away with
a 3-0 victory in Five Star Conference soccer at
Lake M a ry High School Wednesday night.

— Chris Fitter
County Qlrls Cage Leaders
Waring

In four of five attempts. In the
sudden death. Eric Nelson came up
with the game-winner for the Crabs.
After a scoreless first half. Kenny
Quick gave the Crabs a 1-0 edge 10
m i n u t e s i n t he f i n a l h a l f .
Moghaddum. though, took a fed
from Steve DcLong and kicked in
Ihe lying score with nine minutes
left to play.

Lyman girls............................ 3
Buchholz.......................... ...... 1
Lyman’s Lady Greyhounds con­
tinued lo roll, picking up their 16th
straight win against no defeats in
girls soccer Wednesday. Sheila
Matidv and Alyson Barnes each
Ilooted a goal and Buchholz helped
out by scoring once for Lyman In a

3-1 v ic t o r y o v e r G a in e s v ille
Buchholz at Lyman High School.

Oviedo boy*............................. I
Trinity Prep............................ O
In other county action. Oviedo.
7-4. used a shootout to defeat
Trinity Prep. 1-0.
The game ended 0-0 and Oviedo
ou tshu t T r in it y . 6-5. in the
shootout.

Graceful Linny Leads Raider Rout

• '

In an Orange Belt Conference
matchup. Oviedo's Lady Lions hosl
Leesburg. Oviedo is riding the hoi
shooting hund of Stephanie Nelson,
who scored 21 points In a win over
Bishop Moore and 23 In a loss to
Lake Mary.
Another key Five Slar matchup Is
set for Friday as l-ike Mary's Lady
Rums
travel lo Mllwee Middle
School lo lake on Lyman's Lady
Greyhounds, bolh teams are 8-6 in
Ihe conference. Luke Mury ran
pretty much sew up fourth place In
Ihe conference with a victory.

•

F o r m e r B o o n e S t a n d o u t K e y s 4 - M i n u t e Blitz T a T r i p Central Florida
By 8am Cook
Herald Sporta Editor
Every once in a great while there’s an athlete which
Ives up to his name. Lynn Swann was as graceful as his
vinged namesake on the football field, making breathaking. finger-tip catches while gliding Into the end
:one.
Years ago. the Baltimore Colts had a linebacker named
»teve Stonebrcaker. You can image what he liked to do
o opposing ball carriers.
Seminole Community College’s basketball team has
me of those gifted athletes this year. His name is Linny
iracc. He’s Just a freshman, but the 6-3 swingman has
he court presence and elegance lo more than Justify his
asl name.
He showed olT his style In Wednesday night's second
lalf against Central Florida Community College. SCC
vad charged to a 33-22 halftime lead but was showing
ilgns of going Inlo Its usual second-half lethargy until
3race set the pace.
It took Just lour minutes.
• Taking taking advantage of a CFCC turnover. Grace
teored on a breakaway fora 35-22 lead...
• Thirty seconds later. Grace tossed In a short Jumper
rom the wing for a 37-24 lead...
• SCC goes full-court man-to-man defensively and
3race picked Ihe ball away from his man and whipped a
iuper pass to Delvln Everett for a basket and a 41-24
cad...
•A fter two CFCC free throws. Grace turned In hls
nost graceful ael. He broke down the baseline away
rom his man. took a perfect lob pass from Mike Tolbert
ind dropped It In for two points and a 43-26 lead...
-'•L a ter, he added a slam dunk to cap hls excellent
■vening.
: The Central Flordia momentum has been crushed and
3race and the Raiders rolled lo a 76-62 victory before
102 fans at the SCC Health Center In Mid-Florida
Conference basketball.

J.C. Basketball
CFCC did cut the margin lo eight points with H:15 to
play, but Luis Phelps tossed in a Jumper. Payton hustled
a great pass lo super sub Artis Jackson for a basket and
Tolbert added another one lo pul Ihe game out of reach.
Grace led all Ihe SCC attack with 13 jwlnts while
Everett added 11 and Phelps had 10. Jimmy Payton
handed out five assists and Tolbert doled out four.
Payton had four steals and Everett added three.
"W e Jusl ran a little more and got open." was how Ihe
modest freshman described the Raiders' four-minute
spurt. "W e're getting better at keeping the lead. W e’re
running through the offense more and running time off
the clock."
Tim e la of an essence to the Raiders. They arc 5-2 in
the Mid-Florida and 17-9 overall. Fourteen games make
up the season. Wednesday's game didn't count In the
conference standings because Central Florida. 11-15. Is
Ineligible for giving oul loo many scholarships. The
Raiders have a big game Saturday al Daylona Beach
against the Scots, who arc trying to hang in the
conference race, although they lost 41-40 at Lake City
Wednesday. Bolh clubs are 4-3.
Florida Junior. 7-1 after Wednesday's win over Santa
Fe. holds a 1VS game lead. FJC erased a 37-33 halftime
lead at Gainesville to post an 83-77 victory over the
Saints behind 26 points from Rod Kittles.
Benny Gabbard. CFCC’s outgoing coach, likes what he
sees In Florida Junior, but he Isn't ready to concede
anything. "FJC has the best collection of talent." he
said. "But. I don't know if they have the best team."
Gabbard's Patriots hung a two-point loss on SCC
earlier this year at Ocala. But he sees a different Raider
team now. "They're getting better play oul of their big
men." said the big Samoan. “ Bill (Payne) has done a

See G R A C E F U L , Page 9 A .

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-------- JO

A
\

Harold photo by Tammy Vineant

SCC's Linny Grace drives past Jeff Foreman for a basket In
Wednesday's 76-62 victory over Central Florida.

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S O U B C Ii C O U N T Y C O A C H IS

*

�I A — Evening Herald, Sanford. FI

Thursday Fet^h l*H

R e v o l v i n g

O w n e r s

Roller averaged
{ about 8 yards
per carry.

M ik e Ro/ier, N e b ra s k a 's H eism an
Trophy running back, is an example of
fhe U S F L ' s c h a n g in g p h ilo so p h y
Ro/ier will m ake a million dollars from
the Pittsburgh M aulers in his rookie
season

C h a n g e

\KW YORK lUI'll - When (lit USF1.
npi-ned lix lirsi season, it strived to
|Hiptilari/e spring football and vowed to
i niiivale iis own stnrs rattier lit.in &lt;It.dirtier
the NFL lor htgh-snlnrlcdplayers
One year later, the new league has signed
a « rop of NFL stars, gone to court over
s&lt; veral players and has set up a eoimnltlee
to look Into moving its season to the tall
IT|e new philosophies are primarth due lo
tin league's changing owners almost as
IteipientU as it changes players Only seven
ol the 12 original owners are still around
Add si\ cypatistuu t*1mos and ibo&gt;—.v*v-&lt;ii.
owners .ire a minority in the league they
helped found
Hut w hile newcomers like Donald Trump
Jerry Argovit/. Kil Deikutolo Si and dames
liottman advocate challenging the NFL tot
veterans as well as drall choices, some ol
the original owners maintain their eon
sctvallvc approach
Hungs haven t changes as tar as I in
concerned.
lantpa Bay liandiis owner
lolin Hassell sdltl ['lillosoplilc.ilIv I don't
approve I didn't get into tins thing to get
into a wat wnh tin NFL
Hut the secret ol running am business is
hung in tunc with your market Mavis* li I
was in New York I d do the suite tiling as
Donald Trump
File (lamlits proved a franchise doesn't
have to oversjH’tid lo sui’eeed Alter starling

U S F L

I m a g e

Pro Football
Iasi season with no high -priced players,
lamp.i Hay Imtshrd 11*7 and led I he USFL
m attendam &gt; av eraglng |nst under -tO.tXX)
The oilier extreme was the Chteago Hill/,
who ha,i eoai li George Allen and the most
name players In the league The Hill/ was
a disappointment at the gate and owner Dr
Ted Diethrich moved the IranetUse to
Ari/ona alter the season
Dleilirt»4e-.!.. a: i advocate ir-v.ar lH*tween
the leagues, either
I don’t helteve it's a war We re emu petlug lor a lew key players at the skill
positions It s more of a battle than a war.
Dteihrlelt stld "t don't think we can
eompete head to head They have the televi­
sion dollars we don't have "
The other franchises with their original
o w n e rs
are Ht r mi ngham. Denver.
I'lnladelphta Michigan and Oakland
Despite USFL owners playing down their
con filet" with the NFL. salaries have
s k y toe keled at the greatest tale lit pro
toothall Insiorv NFL Commissioner IVle
Uo/elle calls mil.ited salaries caused by the
l SKI. the major problem facing Ins league,
and many in the USFL aren't too happv
about the situation, either
New Orleans Breakers coach Dick Coury

F o r

2 n d

has blasted teams like New Jersey.
Philadelphia. Michigan and Arizona lor
going overboard with thetr budgets
Philadelphia President Carl Peterson singled
out New Jersey owner Trump for overpay­
ing
Kxeeuttves throughout I lie USFL are
warning that salaries must eventually
decrease
T in alraid." Birmingham President Jerry
Sklar s.i|d "Sottu of the salaries are out of
line and I don I h'*lte\e It
1 don t think there can be a continued
rsial.itIon." Dh ihrleh-s.U! "At somr-point.
you have to have a stahllt/attou of salary "
Some of the free-spending ow ners feel
out bidding the NFL lor players will lead to
parti v on the held, paving Ihe way for I he
USFL’s move to the fall Trump and
Houston Gamblers owner Arnglvll/ see it as
a three-step process, similar to that of the
old American Football League.
First the USFL moves to a fall schedule,
i t s champion meets the Super Bowl winner
m a world championship game and then the
leagues merge.
Oakland ow ner Ted Taubc doesn't
advocate merger, but suggests a common
draft or shared television rights to squelch
Hie bidding wars
A com m lltce rn n si-ltllg of-H a s sell.
Frump. New O rleans o w n er Joseph
Cam/aro. Los Angeles General Manager Don

S e a s o n

Kloslerman and Piilshorgh General Manag­
er Paul Manila is rurrcnlly studying the tall
move.
Among the Items to be studied are
stadium availability, attendance patterns
and — most Importantly — a TV deal
I hope the study lasts about lji
intitules.” Bassett said ” 1 don't look
forward lo playing in the fall I shouldn't say
no right nil the top ol my head, hut I'd have
to be convinced. I'm not in their ramp at
this point.” ^
Despite their differences on some key
matters, the original owners aren't dlsen
chanted with the league The reaction In lIninaugural season was upbeat. All Involved
with the USFL were satisfied with,overall
television ratings and attendance Tinowners are optimist!Ir lor 1984. partly
because of solid expansion franchises and
new ownership that should help In the three
major markets — New York. Los Angeles (J
William Oldenburg) and Chicago (I lollmanl.
“ We built a solid base Iasi year." Dietrich
slid "W e did belter than I anticipated
ABC's TV ratings were betler than they
expected, we hail excellent attendance In
some areas and the quality of play was
belter considering the players we had."

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prep tennis results
Wednesday
Boys
LAKE M ARY 5. EVANS 2
Viner iLMl d Euh.mks
8-0
McNeil ( L M I d
Hustumantr 8-7
W li i g h a m 11. M I d .
Newhard 8--|
Kessler IK| d McDonald
8-7
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BOONE 9. SEMINOLE 2
Htituhv iHi d Huaman
M-7
McNeil (Sid. Bean 8 1
Sherman (Bid. Tyre 8-4
Gaines (B| d. Volpl 8-7
W hile|S)cl llas(|ugsH-6

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Eubanks Husiam.mte 8-3
Baslle-.lolmson II.Ml d
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Records: Lake Mary l-O.
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January I t 1*14
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Mi Ncil-Tyre 8-6
Records: Seminole 0-1,
Boone 1-0

Frldj. I 044*1

SUNDAY

FEB. 9

Laka Howell Plaia

671-8804

OPEN
7 DAYS

APOPKA
123W Mam St
88 6-8 82 0

SANFORD
60SW 25lfi St

A u to S u re

9:00-7:30

9:00-6:00

A U T O M O T IV F
AUTOMOTIVE

m

SUPERMARKET

M I DORA
38 3-8 13 5

S a tu rd a y -S u n d a y

ParteCity.

3 2 3 -4 4 7 0

Goldtn Tmngli Ctr

M o n d a y -F rid a y

ORLANDO
1311 Fairbanks Ave.

“.d t S r w '
W INTER GARDEN

PARTS CITY alto in MERRITT ISLAND •TITUSVILLE • W•*,
SATELLITE BEACH •MELBOURNE * ROCKIEDGE *
--------------------

LEESBURG

618 South 14th St.
3 2 6 -2 5 8 5

***” '"■
Sl

H77-2861

J

�!

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

'Aggressive' BoHannon
Leads Hawks By Wymore
Lake Howell bounced back from a tough loss
to Seminole a night earlier to defeat Wymore
Tech. 64-45. Wednesday night at Lake Howell
High School. The win upped the Silver Hawks
record to 3-16.
The Hawks were led by Junior forward
Crockett BoHannon who scored 22 points on the
evening. "BoHannon has become more ag­
gressive with his inside game as of late and it's
showing In the box scores." said coach Greg
Robinson. Against Seminole. BoHannon scored
12 points In the second half. I f s also the second
game In a row (hat he has led the Hawks In
scoring.
Botiannon's scoring took the defensive pre­
ssure of the Hawks regular scot tng leader Efrem
Brooks. Brooks added 19 points against
Wymore
Lake Howell travels to Lake Brantley Friday
night to take on the Patriots In a Five Star
Conference game.
L A K E H O W E L L | 8 « | - BoHannon I I . W ooldridge I] . A rt! }.
A nderton 4, Brooks 1», B ea tley 10. E v e n i 0 , G am m ons 4. J e n n t I
T o ta l* M I I 19 84
W T M O R E T E C H (4 8 ) — Johnaon a, Spark i t . M an u e l 10. M obley
I . A le ia n d e r 3. Lau rey 13, B u rk * 0. O rr 0 Total* 70 S 19 AS Total
fo ul* — Lake H ow ell I I . W ym o re IS T te h n lc a t* - none Fouled out
— none

Burgess, Jiunto Win MVPs
The Seminole High swlmmln.g team held Its
annual awards banquet Monday night and the
following awards were preset tied by coach
Donalyn Knight and assistant coach Laura
Kcrbcn
The most valuable swimmer awards went to
Stacy Jiunto and Chuck Burgess
The most improved swimmer awards went to
Shawna Cole and Mike Horner.
Letters went to Shawna Cole. Kristy Keeling.
Tracey Reed. Jiunto, Chris Sp arrow, Jennifer
Cowley. Lisa Cooper, Patti El Imore. Horner.
Mike Butt. Stuart Thornton. Brian Sparrow.
Chris Meglll. Andy Ellmore. Gerald Collazo and
managers Cindy Barnes, Connlt • LaRosa, Chris
Higgins. Jill Bedenbaugh. Lisa Meyers and
Chuck Hayes.
Receiving bars were Tim Dycus, Burgess.
John DuBols. Dana Ray. Alison McCall. Suzy
Porter and Liz Prior.

Ripken Gets Big Backs

f

BALTIMORE (UPII — The Baltimore Orioles
Wednesday announced they have signed
shortstop Cal Ripken to a four -year contract
extending through the 1987 season.
Terms of the agreement were n:&gt;l released, but
Ripken reportedly will cam close to $1 million a
year — making the 23-year-old superstar the
youngest player in baseball at this salary level.
i t i p k e n w in * t h e A m e r ic a n

1

L r u ( f u e 'i* R o o k ie o r

the Year In 1982 and Its Most V aluable Player
last season.

M ays Stuns Stemmier

Prep Wrestling

It was the second victory ol the season for the Tribe,
which forfeited four matches, giving Spruce Creek 24
points. The Hawks only managed 12 more points as
Seminole won sever, of the remaining nine m a t c h e s .
Shcrallon Mays got the Tribe oil to a good start as he
came through will) a clutch effort, winning a superior
decision. 17-3. against Spruce Creek s Doug Stemmier
at the 102-pound weight class. Stemmier was the
district champion last season and is the Five Star
Conference runner-up this season.
"That was a real pick-me-up for us." Beathard said
"H e (Stemmier) Is Spruce Creek's best wrestler."
After a forfeit at the 109 pound class. Seminole's Doug
Alkinson came up with a key victory. 22-6. over Spruce
Creek's Brian Douglas at 116

David Dehose made it two in a row lor the Tribe as he
pinned Steven Rawls with a grapevine in 5:16 at the
171-pound class Another clutch performance for
Seminole was turned m at the 189-|&gt;ound class by
Dwayne Hall. Hall who had |ust been moved up from
Junior varsity alter winning the Seminole County JV
title at 189. used a halfnelson to pin Spruce Creek's
John Monroe In I 53
Hall's victory gave Seminole a 34-30 lead and James
Cheese Morgan came through with a pin at 223 to
sew up the victory for the Tribe. Morgan pinned Paul
Isettbarger III 1 02

g o o d j o b with them They're more consistent reboutiding-wise. Last lime, we dominated them on the hoards
in the second hall — that won II for us,"
The statistics confirm what Gabbard Is saving SCC
grabbed 38 boards to the Patriots 23. Luts Phelps led the
way with eight while Bernard Mcrthle snatched seven
amt Tolbert grabbed six.
Despite the big rebound margin and 57 percent
shooting (34-511 from the field. Payne wasn't satisfied
with the performance. "W e looked like we were
sleepwalking nut there." he said. "I don't know It n was
because the game didn't count or what. We had loo
many turnovers (241 and we shot poorly from the foul
line (14 of 27 for 52 percent) again.
"But that's roach (Terry) Woods' fault." Payne
laughed, " lie coaches the offense and free throws."
Grace had some offers from Jacksonville. Tampa and
Flagler, hut the Hold freshman didn't think he was ready
tor major-college hall after a brilliant senior season when
he helped Orlando Boone to the 4A slate championship.
Grace was used to a slower tempo at Boone, hut said
adapting to SCO's faster game hasn't been a problem "I
used to play a lot o f street hall." he said "So It didn't
make much dlllcrcncc how we play."
Payne and Grace, who Is averaging 12.2 points and
4.4 assists per outing. l*oth believe his hallhandlmg
must Improve in the next two years before he goes to tug
l i m e . V i l e ' s i l o l n i i l o | &gt; lu y g u a r i f j i l u m u j o r q q f t e g e . " s a u l

Payne, "llalmandllng Is what he s got to work on He's
Mill making the transition from high school forward to

Seminole Is hark m action Friday at Winter Garden
West Orange
S E M IN O L E 40 S P R U C E C R E E K }*
107 M a y * lS» d S te m m ie r 17 J

SO* Spruce Creek wonby forfeit
lid AtktmomSld Douglas??*
tJJ
1)0

S pruce O e e k won by fo rfe -t
S p 'u c e C re ek w o * toy fo rfe it

I36 Sprwee Cfre* wonbyforfe11
IJ?

Sanford Recreation
meeting on Tuesday. March 6 at 7 p.m. at the Youth
Wing. Tryouts arc March 13-14 at 4:30 at Chase Park,
the draft Is Thursday. March 15 at 7 p.m. at the Youth
Wing and the season opener Is Tuesday, April 2.
The Pee Wee League's organizational meeting Is
Tuesday. April 5 at 7 p.m. at Ihe Youth Wing Tryouts
are April 10 at 4:30 at Chase Park, the draft Is
Wednesday. April 11 al 7:30 at the Youth Wing and the
season opener Is Tuesday. May 1at Chase Park.

i*

K n o u b lS C 'p T ip » o *1 SJ
T u fn # f |S&gt; w on by d e fa u lt

ip

DebpseiSip Raa'iS '6
Hilftilp Monroe l S)

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B ro w n ( S ip L o m t t 4?

Rams H a m m e r P atrio ts '
In other wrestling action Wednesday. Lake Mary s
ran their record to 12 0 lor the season with a 53-9
rout ol Lake Mr.mtlev's Patriots at Lake Branllev High
School
Lake Mary won 11 of the 13 matches Wednesday with
Bill Black and Joe Waresak the only Patriots to come out
nil lop. Black won by default at 130 pounds while
Waresak outlasted Brent Blakely. 7-4, at 159
The Rains go lor thetr I3lh straight victory Saturday
as |hev host a Irt match with Winter Park and Lake
I Inwell
Lake Mary's junior varsity also came mil on lop
Wednesday, upending the JV Patriots, 46-30
R a n ts

42
4«
13*
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LAKE
MARY
SI.
LAKE
BR AN TLEY*
102 — J p trn io fi i L M i d G re ensle *n

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L a k e M a r y won by fo rfe it
C wrb'A I L M i a B a ttle i f )
L»kens t L M » p S tre e tm w n j 25
B la ck ( L B l won by d e fa u lt
B e a u ch a m p i L M i p Kenney

C h a rle s i l M ) d H a r ry 12 $
L «dQo&gt;»» i l M ) d K o * n 12 I
W a re sa k &lt;L B J d B la k e ly 7 4
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Schumann 162
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R a w ls i L M i p M u ll )0
E v jn w f Lym an

no re p o rt

H t r t l d photo b y T o m m y V tn c tn l

S C C s Delvin Everett chases down a loose ball.
. It

g u a rd

And m a k in g II pretty well. loo.
C K N T H A L F L O H 1 I1 A 1021 - W tlu-n I * 1 1 t F w e m a n t o o l

Is P f ir y

5 10 4 4 14. O ver «0fi 6 14 0 J 17, jo n e * 1 1 0 0 7 R G re en 0 1 0 0 0 F o n te n o t 3 3
0 0 6 L e *i% 0 0 0 0 0 H e rn d o n § 1 1 2 1 C a rr 1 7 3 7 4 M G reen 0 0 0 0 0
T o ta l* 73 3) 142 M 17 10 16? \ ) *7
H i t 174*1
P h . 11 p \ 14 4 4 6 P a y to n ) J I ) / G ra c e 3 I ) 6 IJ, T o lb e rt 4 6 0 I
0 Johnson ) 1 2 ) i M e t thus J 0 ) 4 * E v e re tt S 7 1 7 IT, Adkm% 0 0 Q ML M a tte r
0 0 0 0 0. (Veil I 2 0 3 2. S m ith 1 t 0 0 3. P t * i p t 5 11 0 I 10 T o ta l* 3134 13 3% )
14 17
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SCC JJ C e n tra l F lo rid a 73 F o u l*
C e n tra l F lo rid a 7*. SCC TO
F o o le cfo u t O v e rto n T e c h n ic a ls — none A
107

United Press International
If the game was so funny, how come LSU wasn't
laughing?
"It was Looney Tunes out tltere tonight." t.SU coach
Dale Brown said Wednesday night after Darryl Gresham
scored 20 points In leading the Florida Gators to a 78-60
upset of the 14th ranked Tigers
"Dalis Imimelng nil
_
.
, «
..
guys' heads, missing
B a S K C t D a li
slam dunks." continued
Brown. "I don't now where
onr biorhythms were tonight. The game was a Joke I
can't believe how badly we played."
The Tigers, led by Jerry Reynolds' 16 points, fought
an uphill battle from the opening lap as the Gators
grabbed an 8-0 lead to gain momentum early.
LSU, which shot 38 percent In the first half and 37
percent for the game, made a modest comeback to stay
within 35-27 at the half
Florida dominated the boards In the first half 27-12
Ronnie Williams (lulled down 10 rebounds in the first
half. 16 on the game.
Derrick Taylor, who sal out most ol the llrsi hall in
foul trouble, moved I.SU to within 37-31 early In Ihe
second half, hut Ihe Tigers could get no closer.
"In my fondest fantasies I never envisioned we would
win In the manner we did," Gator coach Norm Sloan
said.
In other games Involving ranked teams. No 1 North
Cutofinu drulilM-d Clcinson 97-75. No. 14 I’urtlue topped
Northwestern 52-44 and No. 19 Louisville heat Tulnnc
62 56.

AO K

Inter-County Basketball
each. David Nlreu and Hobble Slavik six apiece. David
Eagle led Weslmtinle with four.
In Varsity hoys (8th grade) action, the South Seminole
Bobcats Increased their lead lo two games In the
National Division as they won a pair. 42-40 over the
Westmonte Patriots and 37-32 over their closest
pursuers, the Jackson Heights Knights.
Against Westmonte. Ihe Top Cals were Erie Wright
and Phil Clarke with 10 each and 26 rebounds between
them. Add Rlek Wright's 11 boards, the Bobcats
controlled bolh ends of the court. Garth Bolton added
eight points. Brian Dill seven. Corey Prom, the Burger
King ICBA Player of the Week the previous week, led tin
Pals with 15. Clay Thompson. Henry Kellom and Mali
Lamb all added six each. Garth llolton tupped the
scorers against the Heights Knights with 11. Erie Wright
had 10 again and 15 rebounds. Dill. Daunlc and -J.J
Miller all scored four. Lorenzo l.lngard was the Knight
vyJHi the golden touch as he tallied 14.
In the American division, the Eastmontc (Mllweel
Greyhounds beat previously unbeaten Winter Park to lie
It lor first place. Craig Radzak was the hot hand with 23
and lots of boards as the Hi unds rolled lo a 54-35 win.
Monte Stevens and Kenny Day added eight each. George
Watkins five. Terry Dixon led Winter Park with 15.
Frank Freeman had 11 and Ed Simmons eight.
Winter Park knocked off Westmonte. 48-41 as Charlie
Herman scored 24. Dixon had 12. Freeman seven. Prom
led the Patriots with 18.
In other Varisty games, the1Tuskawllla Warriors heal
the Jackson Heights Angelo s. 61-44. Aaron Gammons
and Alan Greene led the way with 18 and 17 points.
Alonzo Robinson had 11. Gary Peterson eight. Greene
pulled down a whopping 20 rebounds and Robinson
added nine. John Pettit led Angelos with 13. Ron Veres
and Steve Kandell had eight each.
The Eatonvllle Lakers rolled to a 96-42 win over the
Jackson Heights Lions. Darryl Gallagher led 12 different
scorers with 21. Darren Lawrence had 16. Larry Hayes
12. Shawn Beauford 11. Damon Taylor. Robert Johnson
and Jeff Matthews all seven apiece. Joe Long topped
Jackson Heights with 13. John Dowdle had 10. Andy
Devine eight.
Burger Kipg ICBA Players of the Week for week four
are Craig Radzak of the Eastmontc Varsity Greyhounds
— 23 points against Winter Park: and Kelley Grider of
Tuskawllla girls for 18 points In their first win.

i9

G a to rs S trik e A g a in ,
B ite N o . 14 LSU, 7 8 -6 0

Continued from 7A.

Umpire Clinic, Organizational Meeting Planned
The Sanford Recreation Department will hold an
umpire clinic for the upcoming youth ha seball seasons
on Tuesday. March 20 at 7 p.m. at the Sanford Civic
Center's Youth Wing. All roaches and umpires are
Invited.
The organizational meeting for the : Sanford Little
Major League will be held Thursday, Mar-eh 1 at 7 p.m.
ai the You 111 Wing. Tryouts for the Little Major League
are scheduled for March 6-7 at 4:30 p.nt.; it Fort Mellon
Park. The draft will be held on Thursday. March 8 at 7
p.m. at the Youth Wing and the season opens on
Monday. March 26.
The Junior League will hold Its c Tganlzallonal

Troy Turner got the string started .is lie won by
dclauil at 159 Turner had taken an 11-1 lead, then got
his opponent In a hammer lock and turned him over on
tin already Injured shoulder. Turner Improved Ills record
to 19-2 lor the season

...G racefu l

Kittens Scratch Past Blue Bandits
In 3 OTs; Radzak, Kelley Honored
The most exciting game o f the yea r took place tills
past weekend In the girls division of the Inter-County
ifaskethall Association as the South ! scmlnolc Kittens
scratched their way to a trlplcovcrtli nc win over the
Jackson Heights Blue Bandits.
The game see sawed back and forth until momenta to
go In the third overtime period when i South Seminole's
Tamara Lewis scored the go-ahead la y-up tor a 33-31
win.
The Blue Bandits jumped out to a 6-1 first quarter
lead. They led 12-9 at the half. Lewis t ook charge In the
third period scoring ten of her game high 17 to give the
Kittens a 21-16 lead. The regulation gam e ended at 24
all.
Monica Wilson's follow-up of a missed loul shot gave
the Bandits another lie at 27 as time run out in the first
overtime. Eva "Cool" Miranda sank two free throws
after time expired In the second overtime lo keep South
Seminole alive.
Miranda scored six. Shannon Freeman four and Shari
Slegrlst Hirer for the Kittens, billowing Lewis' 17. Vonya
Hamilton led Jackson Heights with 10. Wilson had
eight. Bridget Jcnncrrcle added seven and Betsy "the
Bomber" Hughes had six.
In other girls action, the Tuskawllla Warriors won
their first of the season with a 37-30 vie lory over Walslr
Ward Girls Club of Pine Hills. Kelley Grl der pumped In a
big 18 to lead the way.
The Blue Bandits came hack to defeat Trinity
Lutheran. 32-14. Betsy Hughes led with seven. Suzanne
Hughes had six. Hamilton six. Llita Taube lour.
Jcnnerrete four and Loan Le three, 1.aura Jones led
Trinity with 10.
In JV boys play, the battle for second |ilacc was fought
between the South Sem inole T o m c a ts and tfie
Eustmonte (Milwee) Greyhounds. T h e y both had 4-1
records and Ihe Tomeals prevailed, 42-2-4. Willie Daunlc
was the top gun with 13. Brad Bolton sc ored 10. Danny
Rubin eight and J.J. Miller six. Mike Vv'hlttlngton and
Jarvis Watkins led Mllwce with seven catch. Sieve Jerry
added four.
A JV thriller took place between the J ackson Heights
76ers and the Eatonvllle Lakers — the lead kept
changing bark and forth until the ve ry end when
Jackson Heights hung on for a 42-41 win. Charlie Knolls
threw In 21 and Tyrone Bird 13 for the 76crs. Andrea
Johnson had I I . Alton King 10 and Vaughn MrCall
seven for Eatonvllle.
The Jackson Heights Bruins won thel r third, rolling
over the Westmont Warriors. Danny Phill ips led the way
with 16. Chad Duncan and Charles Warn er scored eight

Tribe Upsets Creek

By Chris Flster
Herald Sports W riter
PORT ORANGE — Even before the match with Spruce
Creeks Hawks started, it second Wednesday night
would be another long one for Seminole H lglfs wrestling
leant. The bus the team took to the game ran out of gas
'1 thought we had a good chance alter Mays and
on 1-95just before the Port Orange turn off,
. Iiisunwou. Beathard said.
"Things Improved aftrr that." said Seminole coach
Si minute then lotleiu d the next three mulches to give
Roger Beal hard
Spruce Creek a 24-10 lead Totiv Brown then came up
The Tribe showed no signs o f repeating the with his 21*-t straight victory as lie used a cradle to pin
performance of the Inis Wednesday as It wept In and Wi sh \ l.o iii'in I 42ut the 1 42 JTiVuiid class.
Immediately took charge of the match cn route to a
40-36 victory over the Hawks.
Spruce Creek won the match at 149 to take a 30-16
"With all the forfeits wc give away. I figure a team lead but Seminole came back and won the next lour
would have to give us back some before wc would win." mulches in take a 40-30 lead loellneh the victory.
Hcatbard said "But. the kids went out from the first
whistle and were aggressive. They were definitely at
their best tonight."

Thursday, Feb 7, 1 W — 9A

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Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Feb. 2, ItH

Feldstein Issues W arning Abouit Deficit

WORLD

W ASHINGTON (UPI) - President
Reagans lop economist, having failed lo
sway administration policy toward lax
Increases, has little of Reagan’s op­
timism about the future of the economy,
an annual report to Congress showed
today.
Publication of the document. The
A n n u a l Report of the C ouncil of E co n o m ­
ic A dvisers, appeared lo extinguish
lingering support within the administra­
tion for tax Increases kept alive by
council chairman Martin Feldstein.

IN BRIEF

Export Of Radioactive
Steel Table Legs Blocked
JUAREZ, Mexico (UPI) — The exportation of
restaurant table parts Into the United States was
blocked by Mear'^an Nuclear Safety Commission
inspectors and U.S. Customs officials because of
radiation from Cobalt 60.
The table parts were manufactured at a
Juarez foundry where traces of the radioactive
Isotope were found. The foundry Is located next
to a Junkyard where radioactive materials were
discarded, then sent as scrap metal to a foundry
In Chihuahua City, officials said.
Nuclear Safety Commission Investigators
Wednesday said the radiation came from part of
a cancer treatment machine, which contained a
capsule of Cobalt 60. The machine was stolen
last year and sold to the junkyard, officials said.
Scrap melal from the Junkyard was sold to
A c e v e s dc C hihu ah ua, the fou n d ry In
Chihuahua City, and eventually made Its way In
the form of steel reinforcement rods to firms In
Texas, New Mexico, Arizona. California and
Colorado.
At least four people who came In contact with
the radioactive material are being treated for
radiation at a Juarez hospital, officials said.

M others M arch

Hills. Is co signer on the deed lo the house.
To keep from selling the house. Mrs. Islng has filed a
civil suit demanding S I00.000 In punitive damages and
mor? than $12,000 In compensatory damages and has
filed motions asking the sale of the house be stopped.
M o. Islng said in her suit that the ruling to scii her
home was Issued by Salfl only because he has a
long-term dlslkc for iter from her appearances in his
courtroom for two divorces and the sentencing of one of
her children to reform school.
When Salfl. according lo Mrs. Islng. would nol view
new evidence Jan. 17 as lo why the house should not be
sold, she filed her suit.
Today, with fewer lhau 12 supporters carrying
placards around her. Mrs. Islng answered questions
regarding her suit and her previous divorce.
According lo testimony In her divorce from Marsh.
Mrs. Islng staled she had Marsh co-sign the deed
because she did nol wanl her previous husband. Konrad
Islng. from gelling the house and the custody of the
children should she die. Hut Mrs. Islng said at her first
courthouse protest and In her complaint that she had
Marsh s name put on the deed because he beat her.
Today she saltl she did nol mention the alleged
beating in divorce court because she was frightened of
Marsh.

G ERALD O. ADAMS
Mr. Gerald O. Adams.
62. of 817 Phillips Drive.
New Smyrna Heach. died
W e d n e s d a y In t h e
Oceanvlcw Nursing Home.
Horn Dec. 11. 1921. In
Trilby. Fla., he moved lo
New Smyrna 10 years ago
from Jacksonville and was
a former Sanford resident.
He was retired from the
U S. Marine Corps and was
a member o f the Elks
Lodge. New Smyrna, the
Fleet Reserve, and the
New Smyrna Men’s Golf
Association.
Survivors Include his
w ife . K llc a b e th : n o n .

Hob-

14. 1744
D E P 130

IN T H E C ia c U IT C O U a T
OF THE H IM
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
•
C ASE NO. 13 &gt; m C A *7 E
F IR S T A T L A N T A M O R T G A G E
C O R P O R A T IO N , t i c .
P t e ln iit l.
v»
JO H N W E L A M , t l t l .
D e fe n d a n ts
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O : JO H N W E L A M
J A C Q U E L IN E K E L A M
II a liv e , a n d o r if dead.
I h t ir kn o w n h o lr t. d tv i t t t t .
logo lo o t o r g ra n te e * a n d *11
p t r t o n t o r p o r t * * c lo lm in g b y .
th ro u g h , u n d tr o r a g a in s t Ih t m
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D th a t on
A c tio n fo r to r« &lt; le *u ra o f a m o rtg a g e
on th e fo llo w in g p r o p t r ly in S tm m o lt
C o u n ty . F lo r id *
L o t 4, B lo c k C. S K Y L A K E SU B
0 ( V IS IO N . a c c o rd in g lo t h t P lo t
I h t r t o l « l ro c o r d r d In P lo t Book I f .
P o g t t 14 o n d IS. o l t h t P u b lic
R t c o r d i o f S t m ln o lt C o u n ty .
F lo r id a .
h a t boon f i l t d a g a m tt yo u a n d yo u
a r t re q u ire d to t t r v t 0 c o p y o f y o u r
w r itte n d t l t n t t t if a n y . lo It on
S P E A R A N O H O F F M A N . A tto rn e y s ,
w ho se a d d rts s I t C o ra l G a b it t F ed
t r a l B ld g . ISal Sun s a l D r iv t . Second
F lo o r. C o re l G a b le t. F lo r id a 3J I 4J.
on o r a b o u t th e } 0th d a y o l F e b ru a ry .
I t a t . a n d to I I I * th e o r ig in a l w ith th e
C la rk o l th is C o u rt e ith e r b e lo r*
s e r v ic e o n S p o a r a n d H a llm a n ,
a tto rn e y s o r Im m e d ia te ly th e re a fte r,
o th e rw is e a D e fa u lt w ill be e n te re d
a g a in s t y o u to r th e r e l i t I d e m a n d e d
In th e C o m p la in t o r P e titio n
W IT N E S S m y h a n d a n d 1**1 o l th is
C o u rt on th is la th d a y o l J a n u a ry ,
1744

(S E A L!
ARTHUR H BECKW ITH. JR.
A i C te rk o f th e C o u rt
B y : E te a n o r F . B u ra tto
A s D e p u ty C le rk
P u b lis h J a n u a ry I t . M 1 F e b ru a ry ) .

1.1tea
O E P fi

i

IN T H E C IR C U I T C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U O IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A H O 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
C A S IN O . 444144 C A t f O
R IC H A R O E W IL S O N .
P la in t I It,
vs.
THEO O O RE R B R A M E an d
J A N E T E . B R A M E . hu sban d a n d
w i lt , a n d F R A N K F R E IT A S ,
a / k / a F R A N C IS C O F R E IT A S .
D e fe n d a n ts.
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O : F R A N K F R E IT A S ,
a / k / a F R A N C I SCO F R E IT A S
JIT L lt g a r S tre e t
T o ro n to . C an ada
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D th a t an
a c tio n to fo re c lo s e a m o rtg a g e on th e
f o llo w in g p r o p e r t y In S e m in o le
C o u n tv . F io n a *
L o t 101, R A M B L E W O O D, a c c o rd
In g to th e p la t th e re o f *■ re c o rd e d In
P la t B o o k 23. p a ges 1 on d I . P u b lic
R e c o rd s o l S t m lq il * C o u n ty ,
F lo r id a
ha s bo on file d a g a in s t yo u o n d you
o r * re q u ire d to s e rv o a co p y o l y o u r
w r itte n defenses. I t a n y . to i t on
R O B E R T D R O V S T O N . J R .. E l
q u ir t , o f P A T T E R S O N . T U R K A
H U D S O N . P A . P la ln t lt t 's a tto rn e y ,
Whoso a d d re s s Is 073 D e l P ra d o
B o u le v a r d . C a p o C o r a l. F lo r id a
33104. on o r b e fo re M a r c h I, I H a . a n d
I I I * t h * o r ig in a l w ith th e c le rk o l th is
c o u rt e ith e r b e lo r * s e r v le t on P la in
U N 's a tto rn e y o r Im m e d ia te ly th e re
a f t e r ; o th e rw is e « d e fa u lt w ill b *
e n te re d a g a in s t y o u to r th e r e tie l
d e m a n d e d In t h * c o m p la in t o r p e ti­
tio n .
D A T E D on J a n u a ry 23. IN 4
(S E A L )
A R T H U R H . B E C K W IT H . J R .
A S C L E R K O F -T H E C O U R T
B y : K a r o n R o b o r ts
D e p u ty C te rk
P u b lis h J a n u a ry le A F e b ru a ry 3. f .
Mu M B*.
O E P 131

Hut the report also says that, at least In
1984. the federal red Ink appears lo be
doing more good lhau harm.

The report warns In strong terms of
the danger of continued federal deficits.

" T h e direct fiscal stimulus of the large
1984 deficit will do more lo raise
demand In 1984 than the Increased real
Inter* *st rates that result from the 1984
deficit will do lo depress demand." the
rcjxir l said.

"T h e administration’s economic'pro­
jections Imply that the budget dcflcll will
remain roughly $200 billion a year - or
about 5 percent of GNP — for the rest of

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o lle * 1s h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
e n g a g e d In b u sin e ss a t 471 La ke
M e r y B o u le v a r d . L a k e M a r y .
S e m in o le C o u n ty . F lo rid a u n d e r the
fic titio u s n a m * o l N A T IO N A L T IL E
R E S T O R A T IO N , a n d Ih e l I in te n d lo
re g is te r s a id n a m * w ith th * C te rk o l
th * C irc u it C o u rt. S em in o le C ou nty.
F lo r id a in a c c o rd a n c e w ith th * p ro
v is io n s o l th * F ic titio u s N a m * S la t
utes. t o W it S ection 443 Ot F lo rid a
S ta tu te s 1757
Show er S afety S eal. In c
IV C h a rle s A L ib e ra to r *
P re s id e n t
P u b lis h F e b ru a ry 3. f . 14,73. IT t4
DE032
N O T IC E
N o lle * Is h e re b y g iv e n th a t on
J a n u a ry 24. 1714. F L A . L id . file d w ith
th e
F e d e ra l
C o m m u n ic a tio n *
C o m m m ls s to n In W a sh in g to n . D C.
a n a p p lic a tio n lo r a c o n s tru c tio n
p e r m it lo r a n o w A M b ro a d c a s t
s ta tio n a l L a k * M a r y . F lo r id a T tw
p ro p o se d s ta tio n w ill seek a u th o rity
to o p e ra te on a fre q u e n c y o l 1440
k H i. w ith * p o w e r o f I 0 k ilo w a tt
d a y tim e . 10 k ilo w a tts n ig h ttim e , and
Its tra n s m ittin g a n te n n a w ill b *
d ire c tio n a l.
e m p lo y in g
s e v e ra l
to w e rs , th * ta lle s t o l w h ic h w ill b *
433 41 to o l a b o v t g ro u n d le v e l. T h *
lo c a tio n o l th * a n te n n a is p ro p o se d to
b * a t 2 t* 4f 4 1 " N L a titu d e . I t * 30'
T T W L o n g itu d e
T h e s tu d io o f th * p ro p o se d s ta tio n
w ill be lo c a te d a t a s ite in L a k *
M a r y . F lo r id a , a n d Its tra n s m itte r
w ill b * lo c a te d In San lo rd . S em inole
C o u n ty . *1 Ih * In te rs e c tio n o f O re g o n
S t r t e l a n d O tuo A ve n u e
F L A . L td I * a lim ite d p a rtn e rs h ip
in w h ic h Q T t c h A ss o cia te s is th *
G e n e ra l P a r tn e r w ith a 3 0 \ In te re s t
In t h * lim ite d p a rtn e rs h ip F irs t
C o lu m b ia C o , In c . is th * lim ite d
P a r tn e r w ith a 70% in te re s t In Ih *
lim ite d p a rtn e rs h ip
A c o p y o t t h * a p p lic a tio n on d
ro ta te d m a te r ia ls a re a v a ila b le lo r
p iA llc In sp e ctio n d u rin g n o rm a l
b u sin e ss h o u rs M o n d a y th ro u g h
F r id a y , a l th * L a k e M a r y C ity H a ll.
1)4 N . C o u n try C lu b R oad. L a k *
M e r y . F lo r id a 3374*
P u b lis h F e b ru a ry 3 .3 . ♦. 10.17*4
D E Q II

While tallies are incomplete, Harold Sheffer,
executive director of the Central Florida chapter
of the M a rc h of Dimes, said over $50,000 has been
raised so far In the Semlnole-Orange-Osceola
counties area. Approxim ately $20,000 has been
collected in Seminole County, over $5,000 of that
com ing from the Sanford area, Sheffer said.

Baldwtn-Falrchlld
Funeral Horn*. Goldin rod.
Is In charge of arrangemrnts.

AREA DEATHS

him." and she fell that In the event of a divorce that the eit V. Adams. U.S. Marlnc
property would be transferred back lo her. The transfer Corps. North Carolina:
of the deed was declared a gift by Salfl. and the Florida daughter. Mary Jo Brown.
Supreme Court on September 2. 1982 agreed with his J a ckson ville: 5 grand­
decision and the divorce decree.
Further. Marsh testified during the divorce that In­
made up lo $20,000 worth of Improvements In the
le g a l Notice^
house and that he gave Mrs. Islng $5,000 lo hold for
him. the combined total of which was the amount
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
of uthe
i v udivorce
i i w s c udecree.
c u c c .
N o '1” •* fw re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
In her complaint against Salfl. Mrs. Islng states Salfl J
w*o W V i l l y ,
would nol view new evidence she had produced lo F lo r id a---u n d-e r th * fic titio u s n a m e o l
support her claim that the house sale should not T H E C A R P E N T E R SHO P, a n d th a t
I In te n d to re g is te r s a id n a m e w ith
transpire.
th e C le r k o t I h * C ir c u it C o u rt,
According to courthouse flics, the motion Mrs. Islng S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a In * c
filed was not the usual motion lo consider new evidence c o r d a nce w ith Ih * p ro v is io n s o f th *
F ic titio u s N o m e S tatutes. lo W t l
and the motion that was entered said there were S ection a a i Ot F lo r id a S tatutes I7S7
attachments when there were none.
/S / M ic h a e l C a rp e n te r
Court records also show that Mrs. Islng asked Marsh to P u b lis h J a n u a ry l» , 34 A F e b ru a ry 2,
O E P SO
live with her and that Ihey lived In a domestic situation , - ,W4
F
IC
T
IT
IO
U
S
N
A
M
E
extending longer than and prior lo the three months
N o tic e Is h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
Ihey were marrlrd.
e n gage d In bu siness e t P 0 Bo» 400.
Mrs. Islng In one letter Included among her divorce 3301 S e n lo rd A v * 437. S an fo rd. F L
papers said Marsh Is a lot like Ills son. "kind, gentle, 33771, S em inote C o u n ty . F lo r id a un
d e r th * fic titio u s n a m e o l P A Y N E S
considerate and generous."
O F F IC E S E R V IC E S , a n d th a t I
Marsh, who has said through his aitorney that the In te n d to re g is te r s a id n a m * w ith th *
house Is worth $200,000. has offered lo seltle out of C le rk o l t h * C ir c u it C o u rt. S em in o le
C o u n ty . F lo r id a In a c c o rd a n c e w ith
court for $60,000.
t h * p ro v is io n s o l th * F ic titio u s N e m *
A hearing on the suit and slay is scheduled Feb. 7. S ta tu te s , to W it : S e c tio n 141 Ot
F lo r id a S ta tu te s ltJ 7
according lo Mrs. Islng's nephew. Sean Davis.
/ s / E li i a b e t h J P a y n e
—Deane Jordan P u b lis h J a n u a ry 34 A F e b ru a ry 3. ».

le g a l N o tic e

the decade unless there is legislative
action in reduce spending nr raise
reven tie.” the report said.

Through last year. Feldstein had said
as much, but expressed fear that 1985
would be too late for deficit reduction lo
sa ve the e c o n o m y from an oth er
downturn later this decade.

H * r * M P hoto h r T o m m y V in c e n t

M arch of Dim es volunteers, from left, Denise
Jones, Dorothy Carter and Frances Hirst, turn in
collections from M o n d a y 's M o t h e r 's M a rc h
against birth defects to Sharon Russl, Em pire of
Am erica Savin gs &amp; Loan assistant branch m anag­
er, Sanford. M ore than 750 local volunteers
canvassed their neighborhoods for donations.

Continued from page 1A

Legal N otice

"The unwillingness of Congress lo
accept the proposals that I offered (In
1983) has made It clear to me that wc
must wait until after this year’s election
to enact spending reductions coupled
with lax simplification that will even­

tually eliminate our budget deficit.

Social Studies Fair
Set Saturday At LMHS

...Protest

.
‘,,c
bowevex. Mr». Islng saljl she
had Mnniti s namr^tnrrd on ihr drrd hrraiiM* **! inmtrd

Wall Street analysts, anxious about
the possibility of higher Interest rales,
could find ample confirmation within the
report of their fears that Washington Is
nol about lo face up to deficits In 1984.
In his brief pream ble. President
Reagan spells It out.

children: a brother. J.
R oss A d a m s . C ry s ta l
River.
Hrlsson Funeral Home.
Sanford, is In charge of
arrangements.
EDWARD FACKINA
Mr. Edward Facklna. 75.
of 452 Rainbow Drive.
Casselberry, died Tuesday
at his home. Horn June
28. 1908. In Hazleton. Pa.,
he moved to Casselberry
from New Jersey In 1979.
He was a retired general
co n tra ctor and was a
Catholic.

JO H N T U R N E R

Mr. John Turner. 65. of
1609 Southwest Road.
Sanford, died Jan. 27-at
Central Florida Regional
Hospital. Sanford. Horn
A ug u s t 22. 1918, in
Arlington. Ga.. lie was a
longtime resident of San­
ford. He was a retired
laborer and a member of
Ml. Sinai Missionary Haplist Church.
Survivors Include his
wife. Corine Harp Turner:
four sons, Frank. Sanford.
Aaron. Memphis. Tcnn..
Prince. Atlanta. Charlie.

Survivors Include three
"ont. Edward. Allendale. • Albany.. G a : four daughN.J.. Kenneth. Rlugwood. l e r s . M a r y A l i c e
N.J., Thomas H.. Wana- Whitehead. Augusta. Ga..
que. N.J.; and 14 grand­ Made McWllson, Albany.
children.
Ossie Lee Turner. New

le g a l N o tic e

le g a l N o tic e

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o lle * Is h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
e n gage d In bu siness a t 401 R iv e rv le w
A v * , S a n U .d . S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
F lo rid a u n d e r Ih * fic titio u s n a m * o l
G * H E N T E R P R IS E S , a n d th a t I
In te n d to re g is te r s a id n a m * w ith th *
C le rk o l th * C irc u it C o u rt, S em inole
C o u n ty , F lo r id a In a c co rd a n ce w ith
ih * p ro v is io n s o l th o F ic titio u s N a m *
S ta t u t e * , to W it : S e c tio n M S 07
F lo rid a S ta tu te ! ITJ7.
/ * / H a r r y 0 K te e m a n
P u b lis h F e b ru a ry 3 .7 .1 4 .3 3 .1 7 *4
D E Q 3 5 ____________________________

N O T IC E O F
S H E R IF F 'S S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N th e l
b y v ir t u * o l th e l c e rta in W r it o l
E lo c u tio n Issued o u t o l a n d u n d e r
th e seal o l Itie C o u n ty C o u rt o t
S em in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a , up on a
• In a l |u d g m e n t re n d e re d In Ih e
a fo re s a id c o u rt on Ih e t t t h d a y o l
A u g u s t. A D 1742. in th a t c e rta in
ca se e n title d . E m m e tt L H a rts tle ld .
P A P la in tiff, - y * - P h illip A 4
B a rb a ra J F u t li. D e fe n d a n t, w h ic h
e lo r e M ld W r it o l E x e c u tio n was
d e li v e r e d to m e a s S h e r i l l o l
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a , a n d I ha ve
le v ie d upon t h * fo llo w in g d e s c rib e d
p r o p e rty o w n e d b y P h illip A A
B a rb a ra F u ltz . M id p ro p e rty be in g
lo c a te d In S em in o le C o u n ty . F lo rid a ,
m o r e p a r t ic u l a r l y d e s c r ib e d a s
fo llo w s
L o t 711. H ig h la n d s P a llo H o m e *.
A m e n d e d P la t, P la t Book 17. P ages
73 7 ]
a n d the u n d e 'v g n e d a t S h e rill o l
S e m in o le C ou nty F lo r id a , w ill a l
I t 00 A M
o n th e J4 th d a y o l
F e b ru a ry , A D I7M . o ile r lo r M l*
a n d t a ll to th e h ig h e s t b id d e r, lo r
ca sh, s u b je c t to a n y a n d a ll e i i t i m g
le ln t. a l Ih e F ro n t (W e s t) D o o r a l Ihe
steps o l th e S e m inote C o u n ty C o u rt
house In S a n lo rd . F lo r id a , th e a b ove
desc r ibe d re a l p ro p e rty
T h a i M id M l* I t b e in g m a d * to
M tis ly Ih * te rm s o l M id W r it o f
E ie c u tlo n
Jo hn E P o lk . S h e rill
S e m ln o l* C o u n ty . F lo r id a
To be a d v e rtis e d F e b ru a ry J, t . 14,
73. w ith th # M l t on F e b ru e ry 34.
IT U
D EQ 34

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o lle * Is h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
engage d In b u sin e ss a t 1431 S em ln o la
B l v d . . C a s s e lb e r r y , F L 33707.
S em inote C ou nty. F lo r id a u n d e r Ih *
f ic t it io u s n e m * o f M A S T E R
M E C H A N IC S . F L O O R C O V E R IN G ,
a n d th a t I In te n d to re g is te r sa id
n a m * w ith th * C te rk o f th * C irc u it
C o u rt. S e m in o le C o u n ty . F lo r id a In
a c c o rd a n c e w ith Ih * p ro v is io n s o l Ih *
F ic titio u s N a m * S ta tu te s. t o W it :
S a d Ion M S 07 F lo r Id a S ta tu te s 17S7.
I l l R ic h a rd D T e re b o
P u b lis h J a n u a ry I t , 24 A F e b ru a ry 7.
♦. I7 M
.O E P 73
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o tic e 1s h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
e n g a g e d In b u sin e ss e l 304 B e n tle y
D r . lo r g * o o d F L 32777, S em inote
C o u n ty . F lo r id a u n d e r t h * fic titio u s
n a m * o l H O M E S T E A D IN F O R M A
T IO N S E R V IC E S , a n d th a t I In te n d
lo re g is te r s a id n a m a w ith th * C le rk
o l t h * C i r c u it C o u r t. S e m ln o l*
C o u n ty . F lo r id a In a c c o rd a n c e w ith
th * p ro v is io n s o f th * F ic titio u s N e m *
S ta t u t e * . t o - W it : S e c tio n M S 07
F lo r id a S ta tu te * I7S7
D a v id A S h to h a n
P u b lis h J a n u a ry 24 A F e b ru a ry 3. f .
_____________ ■ - O f P I TS
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o lle * Is h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
e n gage d in b u sin e ss e l H e n derson
L a n * . S a n lo r d . F l o r i d a 22 771,
S e m ln o l* C o u n ty . F lo r id a u n d e r the
f ic t it io u s n a m e o l IN N E R D O G
T R A IN IN G , a n d th a t I In te n d to
re g is te r M id n a m e w ith th e C te rk o l
th * C ir c u it C o u rt. S e m ln o l* C o u n ty .
F lo r id * In a c c o rd a n c e w ith t h * p ro
v is io n s o l Ih * F ic titio u s N a m * S lat
utes. T o W it. S ection U S 07 F lo rid a
S ta tu te ! 17S7
*
R o b e rt L . F o ilts
P u b lis h J a n u a ry 13. 17. 24 A F e b ru
a r y l.lf* 4
DEPS*
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
N o lle # Is h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
•" g a g e d In b u sin e ss e l SOJ F re n c h
A v * . S a n lo rd . F L 32771. S e m ln o l*
C o u n ty . F lo r id # u n d t r Ih # fic titio u s
n a m # o l H A IR N ' P L A C E , o n d th a t I
In te n d to re g is te r u . d n a m * w ith th#
C te rk o l Ih * C irc u it C o u rt, S om lnote
C o u n ty . F lo r id a In a c c o rd a n c e w ith
t h * p r o v is io n * o l t h * F ic titio u s N e m #
S ta tu te s , to W it : S e c tio n U S 07
F lo r id a S te tu tts I 7S7.
I V B o tty N o rw o o d
P u b lis h J a n u a ry 17, J# A F e b ru a ry J.
7,17*4.
O E P 71

SEMINOU MONUMENT CO.
DISPLAY/SALES
2206 W. 25th S t
Sanlord, FL 32771

3 2 3 -5 6 8 5

‘S S ,*

J ersey. Teresa Porter
A lb a n y: tw o brothers
Mose and Prince Turner
both of Miami. 28 grand
c h i l d r e n : 10 g r e a t
g r a n d c h i l d r e n : t hr e e
stepsons.
Sunrise Funeral Home.
Sanford. Is In charge of
arrangements.

Funeral Notices
ADAMS. M R. G ER ALD O .
— F u n e re l W f v . c n lo r M r G e ra ld
0 A d a m s « . o l 117 P h illip s D riv e .
N e w S m y rn a B e a c h «*ho d ie d
W edne sda y w ill be a l I I a m
F rid a y a l th e g ra v e s id e In O a k la w n
M e m o r ia l P a r k w ith th e R e v
G e o rg e A B u ie I I I o ffic ia tin g
B rls s o n F u n e ra l H orn# in ch a rg e
T U R N E R , M R . JO H N
- F u n e r a l s e rv ic e s lo r M r Jo hn
T u rn e r, as. o l 160* S ou th w est R oad.
San lo rd , w h o d,e d J a n V. w ill be
h e ld S a tu rd a y e l noon e l M l S ln a l
M ie e W n a rr R a p lttl ChbrrW w d h m *
R e v l R M e y e r s o l l ic la li n g
B u r n l in S hilo h C t m o tt r y , Son
lo rd V ie w in g j y p m on F rid a y
S u n rise F u n e ra l H om e. *00 L o u c u s t
A v e . in c h o r g t

le g a l N o tic e
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
IN A H O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
C ASE NO. M &lt;144 C A M P
I N R E : T H E M A R R IA G E O F
C H AR LES E P A R K E R .
P e lilio n tr /H u tb a n d
an d
IR M A S P A R K E R .
R e s p o n d e n l/W ilt
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O : IR M A S P A R K E R
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y N O T IF IE O
th a t a p e titio n lo r d is s o lu tio n o l
m e r ria g # h a t been file d a g a in s t you
In S em in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a a n d you
a re re q u ire d lo s e rv e a co p y o l y o u r
w r it t e n d e fe n se s . I t a n y , lo th e
p e titio n on th e p e titio n e r 's a tto rn e y .
J A M E S E S H E P H E R O , ESQ . P O
B o i 7734. O rla n d o . F lo r id a 27102. on
o r b e fo re th e 27th d a y o f F e b ru a ry .
17*4. a n d I I I * th * o r ig in a l w ith Ih *
C le rk o l t h * c o u rt e ith e r b e lo r*
t e r y lc * on p la ln t ltt 's a tto rn e y o r
Im m e d ia te ly th e re a fte r, o th e rw is e a
d e fa u lt w ill be e n te re d a g a in s t yo u
t o r Ih e r e lie f d e m a n d e d In Ih e
p e titio n .
T h is n o tic e s h a ll be p u b lis h e d once
a w ee k lo r lo u r 141 co n se cu tiv e
w ee ks in Ih * E v e n ln g H e ra ld
D A T E D th is 73rd d a y o t J a n u a ry .
17*4
(S E A L )
A r th u r H B e c k w ith . J r
C te rk o l th * C irc u it C o u rt
S e m inote C o u n ty . F lo r Ida
B y K a re n R o b o rls
D e p u ty C le rk
P u b lis h J a n u a ry 24 A F e b ru a ry J. 7.
14.1744
D E P 127

TOTAL
INSURANCE
SERVICE
REMEMBER
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENT SERVES
YOU FIR ST
m

%

Seminolle Students
To View/ M agn a Carta
Groups of Scmli ioIc County sixth graders will visit HitOrange County lit slorlc Museum on Feb. 8. I t and 15 to
View the "Lincoln exemplar" — copy ol the Magna Carta
— one of i he w orld’s historic documents.
Historians consider Hu- Magna Carta the foundation of
•he legal system in the Untied Stales.
In addition to th e display, the students will view a film
about the development and significance of the Magna
Carta and will see a play tracing the major events
surrounding the fr ccdom-glvlng document.
The Lincoln exemplar Is considered the lies! of the
four original eopte s of the Magna Carta In existence.

...H eathrow
C ontinued from page 1 A
Also planned at Heathrow are |x&gt;llcc and lire
department facilities, as- 18-hole golf course with
water-related facilities at 18 of the holes: a golf and
country club w ith a lounge, restaurants, pro shop
and social swim m ing complex. The club Is to |„managed by Hu - Club Corporation ol America
’A wntrrfrnn f shopping village anchored hv
several major restaurants and a variety of specialty
shops. Is planned in begin In Hie near future.
Huskey sale stall members said the first of Hie
luxury homrsltes. Ilrlsinl Park, will offer 62 lots
while Chcstnuit Hill will have 22 l o t s at prices
ranging from S 69.900 m $ 179,!K)0.
______________ _________

— Donna Estes

ASPHALT PAVING
D R IV E W A Y S &amp; PA RK IN G A R EA S

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• Niclakhrgma platad (fill*
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Outstanding students from the Seminole County
public school system will participate In a social studies
fair entitled "F a m ily and Community in History" from 9
am . to I pin. Saturday at Lake Mary High School.
Kntrlcs from each .school in the county will lx- In Ihe
categories of current events, extemporaneous essays,
speeches, debates, dramatic or musical presentations,
media presentation:sand projects.
The purpose of tl ic fair Is to make social studies come
alive for students and encourage them to use their
knowledge to com e up with imaginative projects based
on their research. S-chool Superintendent Robert Hughes
said.
The Social Studies Connell and the Seminole County
School Hoard, in cooperation with the Florida Historical
Society and the Historic Preservation Hoard, arc
sponsoring the fa ir for students. Saturday’s fair will be
one of six to be hrlc I In Florida l Ills year.
The winning projects from curb loeal school will lxentered In the county wide fair where winners will be
selected and awarded prizes Saturday. The winners’
names, along with the names o f their teachers, will lx'
published In the F I orlda Historical Quarterly.

Fk. 322-5 7 *2

W ltllo A i H . " B lit- W ig h t C .P.C .U .

u k

.

Sanford

R obert | . -B o b - Korns
V ico P resid ent

ber
Phone 322-0500
S

M opU*

S o n f u fd

�PEOPLE
Evening H tra ld , Sanford, FI.

T h u rtd a y, Feb. Z, 1TM—IB

Fear Of Fat Can Lead
To Serious Condition
DEAR ABBY: I am a young woman
who. like many other women, became
obsessed with the fear of getting fat. It
started while I was In college. I would eat
(and drink) whatever I wanted, then
induce vomiting. I also used laxatives to
excess. I became addicted to this kind of
weight control for four years. Everyone
remarked on my “ beautiful" pencil-slim
figure, but nobody knew how I main­
tained It.
When my menstrual periods stopped. I
became frightened and saw a doctor.
That's when I found out I was suffering
from anorexia and bulimia.
God help me. I never realized the
damage I was doing to myself. And
because I am sure there arc many others
who read your column and are doing the
same thing. I hope you will print this:
People who try to lose weight and stay
slim by doing what I did run the risk of
heart failure, kidney failure and liver
damage, and they Increase the chance of
developing tumors (both benign and
malignant). Other complications include
possible rupture of the stomach or
esophagus, loss of dental enamel and
chronic ear and sinus infections.
Aside from the physical damage, there
is the psychological. My binging and
purging were done secretly because I
was ashamed of myself, so my self­
esteem suffered, too. Thoughts of suicide
crossed my mind. Thanks to a fine
physician and a year of therapy at an
eating disorder clinic. I survived.

M r. and M rs. Joseph P. Stevens Jr.

Mildred Thompson,
J.P. Stevens Jr.
Exchange Vows
Mildred F. Thompson. -UK) Mcllnnvillc Avc..
Sanford, and Joseph P. Stevens Jr.. 3511 5 Park
Avc.. Sanford, were married on Jan. '20. at 10.30
a.m.. at the First Baptist Churrh of Sanford. The
Rev. Paul E. Murphy Jr. performed the ceremony.
A reception-brunch followed at the home of the
bridegroom's sister. Mrs. Peggy Teten. 3511 S.
Park Avc., for the immediate families and First
Hapllst Church clergy and their wives.
The newlyweds, both retired, are making their
home in Sanford.

LUCKY IN
ILLINOIS
DEAR LUCKY: Thank you for sharing
some timely and valuable Information
with my readers. Those Interested In
learning more about this eating disorder
may write to: ANAD, P.O. Box 271.
Highland Park. III. 60035. It's a non­

A fashion show/brunch titled “ Fashion
Fitness. Then And Now" will be held at
Loch Haven Art Center on Mills Avenue.
Orlando, on Saturday. Feb. 11.at 11 a.m.
The presentation will feature active
and spectator sportswear as well as
reproductions of sports apparel worn in
the year 400.
Admission proceeds go to Beta House.

Engagement and wedding forma are arallable at the Herald oftlcea to announce theae
erenti. The forma may be accompanied by
profeaelonal black and white pbotograpba If a
picture la daalred with %be announcement.
Wedding forma and plcturea muat be aubmltted within two weeka of the wedding.

WILBUR
DEAR WILBUR: For the same reason
a man says he’s been fishing when he
hasn't caught anything.

DEAR ABBY: I am In my 40s. My
father died a few years ago and my
mother married a man I abslutely adore.
1 do not regard him as my stepfather
because I was already grown when he
married my mother, so I Introduce him
as my m other's husband. When I
introduce him in this manner. I always
feel that I might be giving him the
impression that I don't consider him
family.
What Is the correct way of introducing
him?

Sa C C C n y

..........

from
James Kenrob
With A Distinctly
Slender Silhouette.
Collarless Knit Jacket.
Slim Knit Skirt-Crepe’
de Chine Suit Blouse.

t lolurimj f ntLom Ju tl For S ou

A D K A irs Writing
Fam ily History

F L O R ID A

Members of Alpha Nu Chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa
were treated to a mini-workshop on “ Writing Your
Family History Creatively" at their January meeting.
The workshop was conducted by Charlotte Geyer.
Seminole County consultant-coordinator for Secondary
English and Reading. Mrs. Geyer, a member of ADK. Is
also a member of the Winter Park chapter of Pcnwomen
of America and Is co-author of a state adopted writing
and reading program.

SANFORD-2994 ORLANDO DR,
COUPONS VAUO THRU 3-4-14

Mrs. Geyer presented suggestions for planning a
family history*. It needn't necessarily be chronloglcal.
she noted. Start with some point In your life — a
particular year, experience or event either personal or
national. Next, recall happenings In your life that
occurred before, after or during this period of time.

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Each event recalled will trigger other events and
before long a highly entertaining as well as Informative
finally history will evolve, she said. This anecdotal form
of family history holds much more Interest for posterity
than the customary chronological one. according to Mrs.
Geyer. (She stressed the importance of leaving some
record of your life for your children and grandchildren.)
Too often family pictures have nothing to Identify
them for the generations that follow. She urged
members to note on the backs of family pictures or on
separate pieces of paper the time, place, and occasion of
the picture. Don't put pictures In albums and desk
drawers until this has been done.
Mrs. Geyer distributed many handouts she had
pepared t facilitate the actual starting of the family
history. Her final plea was. "Don't wait until It Is too
late! Start now!"

A p

J t COAT S

PRINTED* PERCALE

rt

Am ong the other first place winners in the annual arts festival are,
from left, M artha Yancey, Dolls; Jane Pain, W eaving; Virginia
Mercer, Crocheting; Hazel Cash, Ceram ics; and Stella Oritt, Afghans.

C E N T R A L CIRCLE

JACARANDA CIRCLE

100NORTHPAM* AVfNuf PMONtlJllMJ

I— l " * » i

There's more to an Arts Festival than pretty paintings and unique
crafts. When the Arts Department of the W om an's Club of Sanford
presented its Annual Arts Festival, adding to the colorful displays were
two demonstrations, “Cooking With A rt” by cookbook author Elizabeth
Paulucd Helfrlch, and "T a k in g the Snap Out of Snapshots" by Sanford
City M anager Warren E. "P e t e " Knowles. The Herald published
photos of several firsf place winners on Jan. 29. Am ong fhe ofher first
place winners are, from left, Mabel Piety, Holiday Decorations;
Florence Korgan, Em broidery; Melba Cooper holding Bill Gielows entry
in Crewel; and Dom arlous Varn, quilting.

an organization which provides young
pregnant or single parenting women
with housing, counseling and schooling
For further Information call 841-2223.
This is the only collection of Its kind In
the country showing a retrospective op
women's sportswear through the years,
according to Peggy Peoples, chairman of
the fashion show.

The January meeting of Jacaranda Circle of the
Garden Club of Sanford was held at the clubhouse. After
a business meeting including discussion on a mem­
bership drive. February and March lunnchcons were
discussed.
Refreshments were served during the fellowship hour.

97ZaAy-fcAthsihil

SWPUCfTT I NcCALL'S
PATTERNS
r u iin u 1i //

HtroM PtwtMby Tommy Viiurnl

DEAR FEELING: Introduce him as
your step-father because that is what he
is regardless of how old you were when
he married your mother. However, since
you absolutely adore him. quit guessing
and ask him how he wants to be
introduced.

The January meeting of Central Circle of Sanford
Garden Club was held at the clubhouse with Mrs. Jackie
Partaln and Mrs. Mary Muhs as co-hostesses.
Mrs. Blanton Owen of Magnolia Circle, was guest
speaker. Mrs. Owen demonstrated the care and pressing
of flowers and leaves and the art of creating designs. She
had many colorful and Interesting designs to display.
Central Circle will have a table at the Village Flea
Market on Feb. 4. as their ways and means project.

ZAVRE P L A Z A AT AIRPORT BlVD.

F irst In Arts And Crafts

FEELING
AWKWARD

G ARDEN CIRCLES

Just Arrived

tA N F O R O

DEAR ABBY: Will you please tell me
why a woman says she’s been shopping
when she hasn't bought anything?

'Fashion Fitness, Then A n d Now '

GETTING MARRIED

Sa m m e n

profit organization, so please Include a
long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed
envelope for Its material.

The meeting was held at the home of Ekth Whigham
with Sue Burton and Karen Coleman as co-hostesses.
Following the workshop delicious refreshments were
served by the hostesses.
Members present were: Leah Benner (president)
Marcella Brandeberry, Geneva Cochran. Mary Dunn.
Elizabeth Gallant. Mary Groomc. Rebecca Holmes.
Sandra Jennings. Mary Grace Kosky. Hazel Madden.
Kate nash, Alice perry. Roberta Richards. Blanche
Rucker. Belle Rumbley, Elaine Van Lue. Barbara
Vincent. Bette Waterhouse. Elols Wilkins. Lorraine
Whiting and the hostesses.

FASHIONdearanee!

�JB— Evening Herald, Sanlord. FI.

Thursday, Feb. 2, 1984

Legal Notice

TO NIG HT’S TV
ED (1 0) W IL D A M E R IC A ' A nim al
O d d .t* « M a rty ta lk s a b o u t p r t N t to n e an im als, th e n ta k e s a look at
s o m e un u su a l m o d e rn -d a y cre a ­
tu re s . su ch as th e m a n a te e an d th e
during s p id e r g
CD (8 ) M O V IE W W A nd The O k ­
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n o ld s . A rt C a rn e y A ch a rm in g
ro g u e w ith a yen lo r a c o u n try
m u s ic sta r tra v e ls th ro u g h th e
S o u th ro b b in g ga s s ta tio n s

THURSDAY
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2 400 S. French Ave.
Family Dining
Sanford, Fla.
Carry Out t Delivery

321-4440

1 5 IU n I i P ic k -U p • P le a s e C a l A h e a d

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I I sm-12 pm

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119 S. Magnolia, Sanford
| ___________ 321-36QO__________

LAKE MARY BLVD. A HWY. 17.92

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7:05

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•

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N O T IC E C F A P U B L IC
H E A R IN O T O C O N S IO E R
T : b A D O P T IO N
O F A N O R O IN A N C E
B Y T H E C IT Y O F
S A N F O R D . F L O R ID A .
N o tic e Is h e re b y g iv e n th a t «
P u b lic H e a rin g w ill be h e ld a l the
C o m m is s io n R o o m in th e C ity H a ll In
th e C ity o t S a n fo rd . F lo rid a , a l 7 00
o 'c lo c k P M on F e b ru a ry 1). ISM . to
c o n s id e r th e a d o p tio n o l an o rd i
n a n c e b y th e C ity o l S a n fo rd .
F lo rid a , as fo llo w s
O R D IN A N C E NO. l i f t
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E C IT Y
OF SANFORD
F L O R ID 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 O F T H E C IT Y OF
S A N F O R D . F L O R ID A . U P O N
A D O P T IO N O F S A ID O R D IN A N C E .
A P O R T IO N O F T H A T C E R T A IN
P R O P E R T Y L Y IN G B E T W E E N
W r i t * A v fc r v u e A N U M A T T IE
STREET AND BETW EEN PARK
AVEN U E AN D DEPOT AVEN U E.
S A ID P R O P E R T Y B E IN G S IT U
A T E D IN S E M IN 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 IO N
P R O V IS IO N S O F S E C T IO N 171 OM
F L O R ID A S T A T U T E S . P R O V ID
IN G FO R S E V E R A B IL IT Y . CON
F L IC T S A N D E F F E C T IV E D A T E
W H E R E A S , th e re has been tile d
w ith the C ity C le rk o f th e C ity e l
S a n lo rd . F lo rid a , p e titio n s c o n ta in
m g the n a m e s o f the p ro p e rty ow n e rs
in th e a re a d e s c rib e d h e re in a fte r
re q u e s tin g a n n e v a llo n to th e co r
p o ra te a re a o t th e C ity o f S an lo rd.
F lo rid a , a n d re q u e s tin g to be In
elu d e d th e re in and
W H E R E A S , th e P r o p e r ty
A p p r a is e r o l S e m in o le C o u n ty .
F lo rid a , h a v in g c e rtifie d th a t th e re
a re te n o w n e rs in th e a re a to be
a n n e re d a n d th a t s a id p ro p e rty
o w n e rs h a ve sign ed the P e titio n to r
A n n e ia tio n ; an d
W H E R E A S . I t h i s b e e n de
ie rm m e d th a t the p ro p e rly d e scrib e d
h e re in a fte r Is re a so n a b ly co m p a ct
a n d c o n tig u o u s to th e c o rp o ra te
a re a s o l the C ity o l S anford. F lo rid a ,
an d It has been fu rth e r d e te rm in e d
th a t the a n n e v a llo n o l sa id p ro p e rty
w ill no t re s u lt In th e c re a tio n o f an
e n c la v e , a n d
W H E R E A S , the C ity o f S an lo rd.
F lo rid a . Is In a p o s itio n to p ro v id e
m u n ic ip a l s e rv ic e s to th e p ro p e rty
d e s c r ib e d h e r e in , a n d th e C ity
C o m m issio n o l the C ity o l S an lo rd.
F lo rid a de e m s it in the best In te re st
o l th e C ity to a c ce p t sa id p e titio n and
to anne&gt; s a id p ro p e rty
N O W T H E R E F O R E . B E IT
E N A C T E D o » I n k K t o t - l t OfT H E C IT Y O F S A N F O R D .
F L O R ID A
S E C T IO N I : T h a t th e p ro p e rty
d e s c rib e d b e lo w s itu a te d in Sem inole
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p u rs u a n t to th e v o lu n ta ry a n n e ia tio n
p ro v is io n s o f S ection 171 O tt. F lo rid a
S tatutes
L o is I. &gt;. 1 . 1. an d 7. B lo ck I I . L o is
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p ro p e rty d e s c rib e d h e re in sh a ll be
e n title d to a ll rig h ts an d p riv ile g e s
a n d Im m u n itie s as a re Iro m lim e to
lim e g re n te d to re s id e n ts an d p ro
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re s p o n s ib ilitie s o l re sid e n ce o r ow n
e r th ip a t m a y m a y Iro m lim e lo lim e
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a u th o rity o l the C ity o l S anford.
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O vapoer 191. I K K Id o V o tu H S
S E C T IO N I : I f any se ctio n o r
p o rtio n o l a se ctio n o l th is O rd in a n c e
p ro v e s lo be In v a lid , u n la w fu l or
u n c o n s titu tio n a l. II s h a ll no t be he ld
lo In v a lid a te o r im p a ir the v a lid ity ,
lo rc e o r t i l e d o l an y o th e r se ctio n o r
p a r i o l th is o rd in a n c e
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o r p a rts o l O rd in a n c e s in c o n flic t
h e re w ith , be a n d th e ta m e a re
h e re b y re p e a le d
S E C T IO N 5: T h a t th is O rd in a n c e
th a n b e com e e ffe c tiv e Im m e d ia te ly
upon Its passage an d ad o p tio n
A co py s h a ll be a v a ila b le a l Ihe
O tlic e o l th e C ity C le rk lo r e ll
p e rso n s d e s irin g lo e ia m ln e the
ta m e
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C IT Y OF
LO N O W O O D . F L O R ID A
N O T IC E OF P U B L IC
H E A R IN G T O C O N S IO E R
A D O P T IO N OF
P R O P O iE D O R D IN A N C E
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F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
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the C ity C o m m is s io n w ill h o ld a
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p u b lic h e a rin g to c o n sid e r e n a c tm e n t
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o l O rd in a n c e N o SIS. e n title d
S em in o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a u n d e r Ihe
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E C IT Y
OF IO N G W O O O . F L O R ID A . A N
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H E X I N G TO A N D I N C L U D IN G
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W IT H IN T H E C O R P O R A T E A R E A
th e C irc u it C o u rt. S em inole C ounty.
O F T H E C IT Y U t IO N G W O O O
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F L O R ID A . A N A R E A O F L A N D
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S I T U A T E A N D B E I N G IN
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S ta tu te s 1957
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F O L L O W S LO T 10. E N T Z M IN G E R
R O R IC K B U IL D E R S . I N C .
F A R M S . A D D I T IO N N O O N E .
a F lo r id a c o rp o ra tio n
P L A T B O O K 5. P A G E e l. R E C O R O S
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end
A N D E N C O R P O R A T IO N ,
O E F IN IN G T H E C O R P O R A T E
e C a lifo rn ia c o rp o ra tio n
L IM IT S O F T H E C IT Y O F
P u b lis h F e b ru a ry 1 .9 .1 4 .1 1 .19M
L O N G W O O D F L O R ID A . T O IN
C L U D E S A ID L A N O W IT H IN
DEO I I
M U N IC IP A L L IM IT S O F TH E
C I T Y . A U T H O R IZ IN G A M E N D
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T O F T H E
M E N T S T O C IT Y M A P TO IN
E IG H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L
C L U O E S A IO L A N D A N N E X E D
C IR C U IT . IN A N D FO R S E M IN O L E
P R O V ID IN G F O R T H E R IG H T S
C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
A N D P R IV IL E G E S O F C IT IZ E N
CASE NO . 79 119 C A M E
S H I P
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C I T Y .
IN R E : T H E M A R R IA G E OF
S E V E R A B IL IT Y A N D E F F E C T IV E
L A U R E L L IS IN G M A R S H
DATE
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m a y be c o n tin u e d Iro m tim e to tim e
P ie t In D eed Book 99. pa ge 174.
u n til lin e l a c tio n is ta k e n b y th e C ity
P u b lic R e c o rd s a t S em inole C om ity.
C o m m is s io n
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Is po ste d e l th e C ity H e ll. L o ngw oo d.
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th e C le rk o l th e C ity e n d sa m e m a y
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P u b lis h F e b ru a ry 1 .1 . ISM
P u b lis h T ( t r u e r y 2 ISM
O E017
DEO 8

Legal Notice

CLASSIFIED ADS

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T O F T H E
1 IT 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
O E N E R A L J U R IS D IC T IO N
D IV IS IO N
C ASE NO . U -1549-CA 99 E
C IT IZ E N S F E D E R A L S A V IN G S
A N D L O A N A S S O C IA T IO N , e U n ite d
Slates b a n k in g c o rp o ra tio n .
1 lim t .........................64C • ling
P la in tiff.
3 c o n s t c u t i t t t im e s
S R C a lin g
vs
1 : 3 0 A .M . - 5 : 3 0 P .M .
M IC H A E L C Y R U L IN S K I. a Single
7 c o n s e c u t it e t im e s . 4 9 C a lin e
m a n . a n d H U G H E S S U P P L Y . IN C . M O N D A Y H i m F R ID A Y
1 0 c e n s e c u t iT e t im e s . 4 4 C a lin e
a F lo rid a c o rp o ra tio n .
SATURDAY 9 •
$ 2 . 0 0 M in im u m
D e fe n d a n ts
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
3 L in e s M in im u m
C O N S T R U C T IV E S E R V IC E
PROPERTY
D E A D L IN E S
TO
M IC H A E L C Y R U L IN S K I. R esl
N o o n The D ay Before Publication
dence U n k n o w n a n d a n y u n kn o w n
p a rty w h o Is c r m * y be In te re s te d In
.. Su n d a y - N o o n Friday
the S u O ie tt' m a tte r o f th is a c tio n
whose n a m e s a n d re sid e n ce s, a fte r
M o n d a y -1 1 :0 0 A .M . Saturday
d ilig e n t s e a rc h a n d In q u ir y , a re
u n kn o w n to P la in tiff a n d w h ic h s a id
u n kn o w n p a rlie s m a y c la im as h e irs ,
d e v is e e s , g r a n i t e s , a s s ig n e e s ,
lie n o rs , c re d ito rs , tru s te e s o r o th e r
c la im a n ts b y . th ro u g h , u n d e r o r
27— N u rsery &amp;
12— Legal Services
a g a i n s t I h t s a id O a l e n d a n l .
Child Care
M IC H A E L C Y R U L IN S K I. o r e ith e r
B a n k ru p tc y S IM e n d C h a p te r 11
o l th e m , w ho a re no t k n o w n to be
5410 F re e co n fe re n c e A tto rn e y
dead o r a liv e
B A B Y S IT T IN O m y ho m e H id d e n
M P ric e F o r A p p I 4111997
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D t h a l an
L a k e a re a F e n ce d y a rd . 1 5
a c tio n lo fo re clo se • m o rtg a g e on the
y e a rs an d a lte r school k id s C e ll
fo llo w in g p ro p e rty In O ra n g e C ou nty
331 3093 H a v e re fe re n c e s ________
21— Personals
F lo rid a , to w it
C a re to r y o u r c h ild In m y ho m e
C om m e n c e a t th e N o rth e a s t c o rn e r
E ic e lle n t re fe re n c e s D a y s o n ly
C o lo r co m e s lo S a n lo rd D isco ve r
o t L o t 4. B R A D L E Y 'S A D O IT IO N
331 1359
y o u r c o lo rs b y a c e rtifie d a n a ly s t
TO LO N G W O O D . as re c o rd e d in P la l
W ill keep c h ild re n In m y
p lu s e F re e F e c ia l Set F eb 4.
Book I . P ag e 17. o l th e P u b lic
d a ys A n ig h ts F en ced y a rd sea
V40 p e r p e rso n
R e c o r d s o l S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
ra te s L o c a l R et 177 5015
C e ll 149 4410 lo r a p p t.
F lo r id a , th e n c e S 49 *34 '50 " W .
115 00 fe e t a lo n g th e N o rth lin e o l
M A S T E R C A R D /V IS A
sa id L o t 4 ; then ce S 00*11 00 " W
N o w yo u c a n g e t M e s te r c a r d /V lM
31— P riv a te
307 94 te e t p a ra lle l w ith an d 115 00
R e g a rd le s s o l c r e d it h is to r y
Instructions
feet W est o l th e E a s t lin e o t M id L o t
G u e re n le e d l V e ry l e t ! e n d slm
4 lo r a p o in t o l b e g in n in g ; then ce S
p ie C a ll C re d itlin e a t H 0 0 H 1
00*11 0 0 " W 31197 teet to th e N o rth
^sia^Alioopeneventej^^^^^
E n jo y Lessons. P la n o an d o rg a n in
rig h t o l w a y lin e o l Is m A ve nue , sa id
y o u r h o m e L im ite d o p enings
N o rth r ig h t o l w a y a lso b e in g Ihe
now a v a ila b le , b y p ro fe ss io n a l.
23— Lost &amp; Found
N o rth lin e o t E n tim ln g e r 's A d d itio n
D on Ja m e s Phone 471 7407
N u m b e r O ne a t re c o rd e d In P la t
Book 5. P ag es 14 a n d 37. P u b lic
LO S T B ro w n E n g lis h B u lld o g V ic
3 3 -R e a l Estate
R e c o r d ! o t S e m in o le C o u n ty .
H ib is c u s e n d G ra n d v ie w . Tues
F lo r id a ; th e n c e S I 9 * 4 5 I 3 " W .
Courses
d a y R e w a rd 1714407____________
417 73 te e t a lo n g s a id N o r th rig h t o l
L o s t S m a ll W h ite P o m e ra n ia n In
w a y lin e , th e n ce N 0 0 *I3 '1 4 " E .
P e rk in g L o t W in n D l ii e Is ! SI.
B A L L School e t R *4 l E l t l t e
340 00 te e t. then ce N 75*34 1 1 " E .
P le a s e C e ll 111 7403 R e w a rd
L O C A L R E B A T E S 1314111
l i t 11 te e t, then ce N I 9 * H ' 4 | ' E .
LO S T I y r . o ld w h ite fe m a le P ll
M A S T E R C H A R G E O R V IS A
I I I 00 fe e t to th e P o in t o f B e g in n in g
B u ll. N a m e D ia b lo 70 lb s Re
S U B JE C T TO an e a sem en t to r
wsrdSSO 373 t I S f o r 377 7413
in g re s s a n d e g re s s d e s c r i e d as
55— Business
fo llo w s
P o m e ra n ia n m a le do g. b ro w n Ran
O pportunities
C om m e n c e a t th e N o rth e a s t c o rn e r
a w a y S al n ig h t Iro m C eder A ve
o f L o t I . B R A D L E Y ’ S A O D IT IO N
e n d H I s tre e t C e ll ow n ers.
i u l u n u w u c j u as re c o rd e d in t-ia t
3110590
E O U C A T IO N A L P R O O U C T CO.
Boo.- I , P a g e 17. o l Ih e P u b lic
H o m e ty p e o p e r a tio n . 519.000
R e c o r d s o l S e m in o le C o u n ty .
T e rm s O rla n d o 1415 I9 M
25— Special Notices
F lo r id a , th e n c e S 1 9 *1 4 5 0 " W .
115 00 le e l H o n g the N o rth lin e o t
6 3 -M o rtg a g e s Bought
sa id L o t 4. B R A D L E Y S A D D IT IO N
C are F a r Senior C ltlie n s
TO L O N G W O O D th e n ce S 00*11 0 0 "
14 h o u r lo v in g p ro fe s s io n a l ce re In
&amp; Sold
W l i t 93 fe e t p a ra lle l w ith A 135 00
P r iv a te h o m e on b o a u tilu l esta te
I t W est o l th e E a s t lin e o l sa id L o t I .
lo r sic k o r w h e e lc h a ir p a tie n ts
lo the N o rth rig h t o l w a y lin e o t 14th
I t you c o lle c t p a y m e n ts fro m e llr s t
A ls o h o u rly c e re on d a lly b a sis
A ve nue , s a id N o rth rig h t o l w a y also
o r second m o rtg a g e on p ro p e rty
A l l w i t h g o u r m e t m e a ls 1
b e in g the N o rth lin e o t E n tim ln g e r 's
y o u s o ld , w e w i l l b u y th e
e ic e lle n t c a re 449 4447
A d d itio n N u m b e r O ne as re c o rd e d In
m o rtg a g e yo u a re now h o ld in g
Dog O be dience T ra in in g
P la t Book 5. P a g e t 14 a n d 17, P u b lic
______________714 3599
B e g in n e rs c la s s t t a r l i F e b 4th 10
R a c o r d s o l S t m l n o l e C o u n ty ,
A M A b ilit y K e n n e l* O steen
F lo r id a ; th e n c e S I 9 * 4 5 'l l " W .
____________305313 7710____________
7 1 -H e lp W anted
191 7 ] te e t a lo n g sa id N o rth r ig h t o l
N ew O ffic e n o w o p ening
w a y lin e lo r a p o in t o l b e g in n in g ,
VORW ERK
then ce N 0 0 *1 1 1 4 " E 143 00 le e l lo
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co n ca ve S o u th w e s te rly h a v in g a ra
START W O RK TOOAY
A lta m o n te A re a C e ll A b le s t
d 'u s o l 75 00 le e t a n d a c e n tra l an g le
R a y C la c k w ill be e l Ih e La ke
T e m p o ra ry S e rv ic e s . N o Fee
F ro n t H o lid a y In n . S a l I 4 P M .
o l 90*01 0 0 '. th e n ce N o rth w e s te rly
171 1940
117I I le e l a lo n g th e a rc o l sa id c u rv e
F e b 4m lo r s t a ll o l G em ston e
B a b y s itte r In m y ho m e , re lia b le
E n l. M u s t be n e a t e n d fre e lo
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w ith ow n tra n s p o rta tio n P e rt
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t r a v e l e ll o l U S 1 w k A ll
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IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T O F T H E
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E IG H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
149 IS le e t to th e p o in t o l c u rv a tu re o l
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A .
e c u rv e cwncwve O e im v a ile if y ha v
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c e n tra l a n g le o l 90*03’0 I ’ . fhen ce
J U O IC IA L C IR C U IT ,
P A N Y INC .e tc .
S o u th e a ste rly 19 39 fe e l a lo n g Ih e a rc
P la in tiff.
IN A N O F O R
o l s a id c u r v e lo th e p o in t o l
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R IO A
vs
la n g e n c y ; then ce S 00 *1 1 1 4 " W
CASE N O . M 4 0 4 I C A M P
T IM O T H Y E G O U L D . * t u « . 4 le l.
341 40 le e l lo Ih e N o rth rig h t o t w e y
D e fe n d a n t*
C R E D IT H R IF T . IN C .
P la in t if f
lin e o l 14th A v e n u e , th e n c e N
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
I t * 45 'I I " E . 50 00 fe e l alo n g sa id
vs
TO
N o rth rig h t o t w a y lin e to th e p o in t o l
D O N A L D R B L A C K . In d iv id u a lly
F R E D E R IC C D E V E L O E R and
b e g in n in g
e n d as T r u s t* *
JA R O S LA V
P H Y lllS R D E V E 1 0 E R
H O T A R E K and H A N A H O TA R E K .
h a s heen tile d a g a in s t y o u a n d you
R E S ID E N C E U N K N O W N
a r t re q u ire d to se rve a co p y o l y o u r
h is w ile . W IL L IA M G L U T Z and
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D th a t an
w ritte n defenses. II a n y . lo II on
V IR G IN IA L U T Z , h is w i l t . U N IT E D
a c tio n lo fo re clo se e m o rtg a g e on Ih e
Susan H o rn W alsh. E s q u ire . P la in
S T A T E S O F A M E R IC A W IL L IA M
to llo w in g p ro p e rty In S E M IN O L E
l i l t 's a tto rn e y , whose a d d re ss is
B L A C K a n d J U D IT H B L A C K , h is
C ou nty. F lo rid a . L o t 19. R E P L A T O F
L e w O ffic e s o l S tu iln a n d C a m n e r.
w ile , a n d A N Y A N D A L L
W Y N D H A M W OODS P H A S E O N E .
9549 K o g e r B o u le v a rd . S uite 109
B E N E F IC IA R IE S U N O E R T H E
a c c o rd in g to th e P la t th e re o f as
G adsden B u ild in g . SI P e te rs b u rg .
P R O V IS IO N S O F A T R U S T
re c o rd e d In P la l Book H . P ages 74
F lo rid a 13701. on o r b e fo re F e b ru a ry
A G R E E M E N T D A T E D TH E 1ST
an d 77. P u b lic R e c o rd * o t S em inole
15. I9M . a n d III# tha o r ig in a l w ith the
D A Y O F J A N U A R Y . 1913. K N O W N
C ou nty. F lo rid a
C le rk o t th is C o u rt e ith e r b e lo re
A S T R U S T *1 0 4 . W H E R E IN
h a * been f ile d a g a in s t y o u a n d
D O N A L D R B L A C K O F 30 1
s e rv ic e upon P la i n t if f * a tto rn e y o r
T IM O T H Y E G O U L D . D E B O R A H
C H E S T E R S T R E E T . M IN N E O L A .
Im m e d ia te ly th e re a fte r, o th e rw is e a
G O U L D , a n d G E N E R A L M O TO R S
d e fa u lt w ill be e n te re d a g a in s t you
F L O R ID A . 37755 IS T R U S T E E .
A C C E P T A N C E C O R P O R A T IO N an d
lo r Ih e r e lie f d e m a n d e d In th e
D e te n d a n ts
yo u a re re q u ire d to se rve a co p y o l
C o m p la in t
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
y o u r w ritte n d e le n te *. it a n y . to II on
W IT N E S S m y ha nd a n d Ih e seal o l
TO F O R E C L O S E M O R G A O E
P a u l F B ry a n . S w ann a n d H a d d o ck .
t h is C o u r t o n t h is lO lh d a y o f
TO D O N A L O R B L A C K . In d lv ld u
P A , P la in t iH 's a tto rn e y , w ho se
J a n u a r y . 1*44
a lly en d e s T ru s te e . JA R O S L A V
m a ilin g ad d re ss is P O B o i 440.
(S E A L )
H O T A R E K end H A N A H O TA R E K .
O rla n d o . F lo rid a . 114010440. on o r
A r th u r H B e c k w ith . J r
h is w ile ; W IL L IA M G L U T Z en d
b e lo re th e 15th Bay o t F e b ru a ry ,
C le rk o l C irc u it C o u rt
V I R G I N I A L U T Z , h is w ile ;
ISM . an d I II * the o r ig in a l w ith th e
W I L L I A M B L A C K e n d J U D IT H
B y E le e n o rF B u re tto
C le rk o t th is C o u rt e ith e r b e lo re
D e p u ty C le rk
B L A C K , h is w ll* . e n d A N Y A N O
s e rv ic e on P le in t ill’4 a tto rn e y o r
P u b lis h J a n u a r y I I . I t . 14 e n d
A L L B E N E F IC IA R IE S U N D E R
im m e d ia te ly th e r e a lle r. o th e rw is e e
F e b ru a ry 1 . 19M
T H E P R O V IS IO N S O F A T R U S T
d e fa u lt w ill be e n te re d a g a in s t you
DEPS7
A G R E E M E N T D A T E D T H E 1ST
t o r th o r e lie f d e m a n d e d In th e
D A Y O F J A N U A R Y . ISC3. K N O W N
c o m p la in ! o r p e titio n
N O T IC E U N D E R
A S T R U S T *1 0 4 . W H E R E IN
W IT N E S S m y h a n d a n d the seal o l
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E L A W
O O N A L O R B L A C K O F 101
th is C o u rt on J a n u a ry 1 0 .19M
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
C H E S T E R S T R E E T . M IN N E O L A .
(S E A L )
th a t th e u n d e rsig n e d , d e s irin g to
F L O R IO A J175S. IS T R U S T E E
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H . JR
en gage In b u sin e ss u n d e r m e
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y N O T IF IE D
C LER K
I k t lt ie u s n a m e o f V E R S A T E C .
I h e • e C o m p la in t lo fo re clo se e
OF THE COURT
IN C . (A K e ro s C o m p a n y ) a l
c e rta in m o rtg a g e on th e fo llo w in g
B y / M E le a n o r F B u ra lto
S uite 110. » 0 I M a itla n d C e n tra l
d e s c rib e d p r o p * ’ ! , . Id w it:
D e p u ty C le rk
P a rk w a y . In th e C ity e l M a itla n d .
L o t 137. T re ilw o o d E s ta te s . S ection I,
Sw
ann an d H a d d o ck . P A
F lo r id a . In te n d s to r t g ls t e r th e
a c c o rd in g to th e P la t th e re o f as
IIS
W est C e n tra l B lv d
M id n a m e w ith th e C le rk o f m e
re c o rd e d In P la l B ook 14. P4ge 17.
S uite 1100
C i r c u i t C o u r t o l S e m in o le
P u b lic R e c o rd s o l S em in o le C o u n ty ,
P O B o i 440.
C o u n ty . F te r Ida
F to r Ida
O rla n d o . F lo rid a
D a te d e l 5 Is m lo rd . C o n n e cticu t,
h a s been H ied a g a in s t yo u end yo u
314010440
m is srn d a y e l J a n u a ry . H M .
e re re q u ire d to s e rv e e co p y o l y o u r
P u b lis h J a n u a r y u , i t , 14 a n d
V E R S A T E C . IN C .
a n s w e r o r p le a d in g to Ih e C o m p la in t
F e b ru a ry 1 . 19M
P u b lis h J a n u a ry 19. 14 i F e b ru a ry
on P le ln llll/ s a tto rn e y . S A M
D EP54
1 . 9 . 19M.
O EP44
M E IN E R o l M e m e r A M e m e r. 34
W 4 II S tre e t. O rle n d o . F lo r id a 37401,
N O T IC E O F
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T FO R
e n d l il e Ih e o r ig in a l a n s w e r o r
S H E R IF F 'S S A L E
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
p le a d in g In th e o ffic e o l th e C le rk o l
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N th a t
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
Ih e C irc u it C o u rt. S e m in o le C ou nty
b y v irtu e o l th a t c e rta in W r it o f
F ile N e m b e r M -M I-C F
C o u rth o u s e . S a n lo rd . F lo rid a , on o r
E
lo
c u tio n Issued o u t e t en d u n d e r
IN R E i E S T A T E O F
b e lo re th e l l n d d a y o l F e b ru a ry ,
m e seel o f th e C irc u it C o u rt o l
M A R IO N C O N N E L L .
I9 M
O ra n g e C o u n ty . F lo rid a , upon « lin e l
D t c iin d
I I yo u lo ll to do so. J u d g m e n t b y
ju d g m e n t re n d e re d In th e e to re s a td
N O T IC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
d e le u ll w ill be ta k e n a g a in s t you lo r
c o u rt on Ih e l i s t d a y o l A u g u s t. A D
T h e a d m in is tra tio n e l th e e s ta te p i
m e r e lie f d e m a n d e d In Ih e C om
1943. In m e t c e rta in case e n title d .
M A R IO N C O N N E L L , de ceased. F ile p te m l
W etson D is trib u te rs . In c .. • F lo rid a
N u m b e r M M I C P . Is p e n d in g in Ih e
D O N E e n d O R D E R E O e l S a n lo rd .
c o rp o ra tio n P la in tiff, - v s - E d w a rd
C irc u it C o u rt lo r S e m in o le C o u n ty .
S e m inote C o u n ty . F lo rid a , th is 17m
V . E b e rh e rd t. In d iv id u a lly a n d d / b / a
F l o r id a . P r o b a t e C i v i l i a n . Ih e d a y o t J a n u a ry . I9 M
C re a tiv e T ile b y E dd . D efe n d a n t,
a d d re ss *4 w h ic h I t S e m in o te C o u n ty (S E A L )
w h ic h a fo re s a id W r it o l E lo c u tio n
C o u rth o u s e . S a n lo rd . F lo r id a 31771
A r th u r H . B e c k w ith . J r .
w a s d e liv e re d to m e e s S h e rlfl o f
T h e n a m e s a n d ad d re sse s e t th e
C le rk o l C ir c u it C o u rt
S em inole C o u n ty . F lo r id a , e n d I ha ve
p e rs o n a l re p re s e n ta tiv e e n d e l Ih e
S e m inote C o u n ty . F lo r Id a
le v ie d upon th e te l lo w in g d e s c rib e d
p e rs o n a l re p re s e n ta tiv e 's a tto rn e y
B
y
;
K
e
re
n
R
o
b
e
rts
p ro p e rty o w n e d b y C re a tiv e T ile b y
e re se t te rm b e lo w
D e p u ty C le rk
E d d . s a id p ro p e rty b e in g lo c a te d in
A ll In te re s te d p e rso n s p ro re q u ire d
P u b lis h : J a n u a ry 19, M 1 F e b ru a ry
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a , m o ro
to m o w it h m e c o u r t . W IT H I N
1 .9 , I f M
p a r tic u la r ly d e s c rib e d as fo llo w s :
T H R E E M O N T H S O F T H E F IE S T
D E P to
O ne 1441 D od ge F la t Bed T ru c k .
P U B L IC A T IO N O F T H IS N O T IC E :
B la c k in c o lo r, ID f IS 4 IM IU 4 . b e in g
(1 ) e ll c la im s a g a in s t th e e s ta te an d
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
s to re d e l C o rn e ll's G a ra g e . 17 41 &amp;
(1 ) a n y o b je c tio n b y a n In te re s te d
N o tic e is h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
414. Lo n g w o o d , F lo rid a
p e rs o n to w h o m n o tic e w a s m e lte d
e n g a g e d In b u sin e ss e l 197 W hoop in g
a n d th a u n d e s ig n e d as S h o rill o f
m e t c h a lle n g e s m e v a lid it y o l m e
Lo op. A lta m o n te S p rin g s. F L H 7 0 I.
S em inote C o u n ty . F lo rid a , w ill o l
w i l l , t h e e u a l l l l r e l l e n s e l Ih e
S e m in o te C o u n ty . F lo r id a u n d e r the
11:80 A .M . o n th o Seth d a y e f
p e rs o n a l re p re se n ta tiv e , ve n u e , o r
llc tlt le u s n a m e e l P E R S O N A L
F e b ru a ry . A O ISM . o ile r to r sate
ju ris d ic tio n a l th e c o u rt.
A D V A N C E M E N T S E M IN A R . T O M
a n d s o il to th o h ig h e s t b id d e r, fo r
A L L C L A IM S A N D O B J E C T IO N S
V U S E M IN A R e n d P R O F IT S E M I
co sh. M te jo c t to a n y e n d e ll a ils t in g
N A R . e n d th e I I in te n d to re g is te r
N O T SO F I L E D W IL L B E F O R E V
la in *, e i th e F ro n t (W e s t) D o o r e l Ih e
s a id n a m e w ith th e C le rk e l Ihe
ER BAR BED .
steps o f th e S em in o le C o u n ty C o u rt
P u b lic a tio n e l t h is N o tic e h a s C ir c u it C o u rt. S e m in o le C o u n ty .
house In S a n lo rd . F lo r id a , t t q a b ove
be e u n a n F e b ru a ry L 1 9 M
F lo r id a In a c c o rd a n c e w ith th e p ro
d e s c rib e d p e rs o n a l p ro p e rty
P e rs o n a l R a p re s a n f a ti ve
v is io n s o l th e F ic titio u s N a m e S le l
T h a t u l d sate I* b e in g m o d * to
/ t / P a u li n e K eys
Utes. t o w n
S e ction 145 09 F lo r id a
s a tis fy th a te rm s o f u l d W r it o l;
A tto rn e y te r P e rs o n a l
S ta tu te s 1957
E
lo
c u tio n
.
IN T E R N A T IO N A L
John E P o lk , S h e rltl
F ra n k M c M illa n
IN V E S T M E N T S
S em inote C o u n ty . F lo rid a
P .Q . B aa 1141
IN S T IT U T E . IN C
T o bo a d v e rtis e d F e b ru a ry 2, 9. la .
O rla n d o . F L U 8 U
/ 4 / H o e M e iV u
7 1 W im th e sa le on F e b ru a ry 14.
P re s id e n t
T e le p h o n e : I t e 9191
I9 M
P u b lis h F e b ru a ry M . I I M
P u b lis h F e b ru a ry 1 .9 . L . 13. is m
D E O -17
D E O -3d
D E O 11

S e m in o le

O r la n d o - W in t e r P a rk

322-2611

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS

831-9993

RATES

.

le g al N otice

Legal N o tic e

�V

71-H elp Wanted
A d m in is t r a tiv e A s s is ta n t 14 K .
P e rm a n e n t p o s itio n E x e c u tiv e
o ffic e T o p s k l l l i co lle g e p re
le e re d N e v e r * Fee
T E M P /P E B M 774 1344
B o o kke e p e r G ro c e ry co m p a n y
has Im m e d ia te o p e n in g lo r e fu ll
c h a rg e b o o k k e e p e r. M u l t be
k n o w le d g e a b le , In p a y ro ll re
lu rn s , a n d a c c ru a l e n trie s fo r
g e n e ra l le d g e r C o m p u te r e x p *
rle n c e p r e fe rre d Send re s u m e to
P 0
Box 2500 S a n fo rd F la
s ta tin g q u a lific a tio n s , a n d s a la
r y re q u ire m e n ts _________________
BO O KKEEPE R SECRETARY
P a rt T im e . E i p .R e fe re n ce s
______________ 121 441*______________
CARVER
To se rve c u s to m e rs a t b u tfe f ta b le .
A p p ly 2 to 4 P M H o lid a y H ouse
R e s le u ra n t. ajOO G ria n d o A v e
H vry 17 41, so u th o l L a k e M a r y
c u to ff.
C h u rc h In th e M id w a y a re a needs a
p ia n o p la y e r to r 1st a n d I r d
S un day 121 SOW_________________

7 1 - Help Wanted
P la s t ic M a t e r ia ls C o o rd in a to r ;
re q u ire s c o n tro llin g a n d m ix in g
p la s tic m a te r ia ls to r In je e lio n
m o ld in g o p e ra tio n , m ass docu
m e n t a t io n , lis t i n g a n d g o o d
w o rk in g a ttitu d e S tock an d In
v e n t o r y e x p e r ie n c e h e lp f u l
A p p ly ; C a lib ro n C orp 400 L a ke
E m m e R d . L a k e M a r y . F la
22744____________________________
P R O C ESS M A IL A T H O M E I *75.00
p e r h u n d re d I N o e x p e rie n c e
P a r t o r fu ll t lm t . S ta rl Im m e d i
a le ly
D e ta ils
s e n d s e ll
ad d re sse d s la m p e d e n ve lo p e to
C R I M 0 P. O 45. S tu a rt F la
114*5____________________________
R e c e p tio n is t, ir o n ! de sk, ty p in g ,
ph one N e v e r * Fee
T E M P / P E R M 774 1144

SALES MANAGER........ 5200 Wk
D i r e c t S e le s e x p e r ie n c e
n e e d e d 'g ro w in g bu siness R e ta il
e x p e rie n c e a p lu s I

Employment
323 5176

C le a n in g W o m a n , e x p e rie n c e d to r
o ffic e a n d re s id e n c e , ow n Iro n s
p o rta tlo n . M o n d a y th ru F r id a y
G o o d P a y . f u t u r e p o te n tia l.
B e n d a b le 121 U22_______________
C le rk T y p is t, w ith a c c u ra te ty p in g
an d g e n e ra l o ffic e s k ills . C a ll
A b le s t T e m p o ra ry S e rvice s N o
F e e M IH a O ______________________
COOK
E x p e rie n c e d In h o m e s ty le food
A p p ly 7 to 4 P .M . H o lid a y H ouse
R e s ta u ra n t. 4200 O rla n d o A v e
H w y . 17 T2. so u th o l L a k e M a r y
c u to ff.
____________________

DELIVERY............. $200 Wk.
B u s y lo c a l e m p lo y e r needs de
p e n d e b le stro n g w o rk e r lo r ca
re a r s p o il

Employment
323 51 76

7740 F re n c h Ave.

SECRETARY
P eople p e rso n n e e d e d /le a rn b ill
In g /g re a t boss fr ie n d ly c r e w !

Employment
323 5176
2104 F re n c h A v4 .

TENNEC0 OIL COMPANY
Is n o w a c c e p tin g a p p lic e tto n * lo r
P / T c a s h ie rs w ith p o te n tia l lo r
A ss o cia te M a n a g e r
E x p e rie n c e Is e p lu s A p p ly in
p e r son 1400 F re n c h A v t
E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r.
T h is Pege B e a m s W ith
R eal O p p o rtu n itie s F or
__________A ll w h o H ead It

2700 F re n c h A ye .
D IS H W A S H E R
M a tu re A p p ly In p e rso n M F /0 5
P M D e lto n a In n ________________
F e d e ra l. S tate A C iv il S e rv ic e Jobs
a v a ila b le C a ll M o l t ) 544 *304
F o r In lo r, 2 4 h rs __________________
F u ll o r P a r t lim e M a n a g e m e n t
T r a in e e s W a te r P u r ific a t io n
S y s te m s o l C e n tra l F lo rid a
______________W i l l i ______________

GENERAL OFFICE______ $115
F ro n t o fllc e s p o t/llg h l bo okkeep
Ing, c o m p a n y ra te d 4 1 In a r e *

Employment
323-5176
2100 F re n c h A ve .
G ir l F r id a y E x p e rie n c e re q u ire d
T y p in g a n d g e n e ra l o ffic e p ro
re d u c e s 111 1100________________
H O U S E K E E P E R F u ll lim e lo r a
new 244 u n it c o m p le x In S a n to rd
E x p e rie n c e h e lp fu l C a ll fo r ap
p o tn tm * n l l7 ) 4770______________
I M M E D IA T E L Y W A N T E D
1500 1 2 .0 0 0 /m o P lu s N e e d 50
O v e rw e ig h t p e ople to lose w e ig h t
a n d sh a re In c o m p a n y p r o fits
_____________ U l *4 4 4 ______________
L IV E I f f : M a tu re w o m a n to c a re
to r young m a n In w h e e l c h a ir.
G ood h o m e an d s a la ry . I d a y o ft
M u t t ha ve o w n tra n s p o rta tio n ,
re fe re n c e s an d no n s m o k in g o r
d r in k in g 122 I t t t ________________
M a n u I a c tu r In g S e e r# t a r y / E n g in e e r ln g D o c u m e n t*
tlo n C le rk ; re q u ire s good ty p in g ,
c o m m u n ic a tio n , a n d g e n e ra l o l
lic e s k ills , a n d w illin g n e s s to
le a r n , E x c e lle n t opportunity.

WANTED
BOYS AND GIRLS
AGES 13-11
A lte r School an d w eekends
E a rn e x tr a m o n e y
C a ll T O N Y 122 2411
________ B etw ee n 4 A 7 P M
W A N T E D C o m p u te r sa le sperso n lo
m a r k e t s o flw e e r a n d o r
h a rd w a re lo m e d iu m an d la rg e
S ite c o n lre c lo rs . In th e O rla n d o
• rid T * m p * / S t . T a t a a r a a
C o m p u te r sa le s e x p e rie n c e re
q u lr e d E x p e rie n c e w ith con
tr a c to r e n d o r c o n tra c to r
s o ftw a re v e ry h a lp lu l O n * o l the
to p s o ftw a re p ro d u c ts In th e US
w ith o v e r 1500 In s ta lla tio n s O n ly
c a re e r en d g o a l o rie n te d people
need a p p ly *50 000 p lu s p o te n
11*1. Sand R esum es lo A tte n tio n
o f Sales M a n a g e r, P O . B o x 1414
P a n a m a C Ity , F I * 11402._________
W A IT R E S S
P M s h llt, e x p o n ly . F in * d in in g
A p p ly 4 S D e lto n a I n n ___________

A p p ly in person o r tend resum e

an d s a la ry h is to ry to ; C a h b ro n
C o rp 400 L a k e E m m a R d L a ke
M a r y . F la 12744_________________
NEED
H IG H SCHO O L D IP L O M A T
__________ C A L L W I 4 4 * . __________
N ow a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r
s h o rt o rd e r co oks, d is h w a s h e rs ,
a n d w a itre s s e s A p p ly b e tw e e n 1
A 2 P M C in d y 's C o u n try K ltc h
en 1500 F re n c h A v e ______________
P a r t tim e a tte n d a n t A le r t . In
te lllg e n l In d iv id u a l ne eded to
lo o k a lte r a m u s e m e n t c e n te r In
S a n fo rd P la t a n ig h ts a n d
w e e k e n d * M u s i be m a tu re , n e a l
In a p p e a ra n c e a n d b o n d a b le
P h o n e lo r a p p o in tm e n t 111 4V01
P a rt lim e pe rso n needed to w o rk
b o o th a l F le a M a r k e t o n
w e e ke n d s W rite S m a rt Fash
Io n s . 42 W a lt e r SI . G r a n d
R a p id s . M ic h 44504
P a rt T im e C ook E x p e rie n c e nec
e s s a ry A p p ly M a y la lr C o u n try
C lu b C o u n try C lu b O r ly *
P it t a C ook P a r t lim e , p re fe r
e x p e r ie n c e d r e tir e e G o u d io 's
F is h F r y . CaH M l 4444___________

W IN A N A V O N C AR 11
S T A R T S E L L IN O T O D A Y II
________ 111 m * e H 2 2 d * 5 * ________
W n -k Iro m h o m e on new telepho ne
p ro g ra m E a rn up lo *4 00 an
h o u r 141 1441____________________
Y o u d o n 't ha ve to be a
D E T E C T IV E fo F ln d a G o o d B u y l
J u s l re a d o u r C la s s ifie d Pages

73— Employment
Wanted
24 H r. B a b y s ittin g S a r v lc t In m y
ho m e I w ill p ro v id e tra n s p o rt*
■um a t o m s .
. . ...............

91— Apartments/
House to Share
S a n fo rd F e m a le to Share tu rn 2
B d rm w ith fe m a le c h ild O K
1200 m o 175 d t p 477 0417________

93— Rooms for Rent
S A N F O R D F u rn is h e d ro o m s b y the
w ee k R ea sona ble r i t e s M a id
s e rv ic e c a te rin g to w o rk in g peo
p ie 111 4507. I l l M a g n o lia A ve
S A N F O R D . R eas w e e k ly A M on
th ty ra le s U t il. Inc. *11 500 O ak
A d u lts 1 141 7441

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
D E L U X 2 B d rm . 2 b a th , I le ve l.
W /W /C . C /H /A
__________ P h 111 7544__________
F u rn . A p ts , fo r Senior C ifiie n s
111 P a lm e tto A v e
J C ow an. N o P la n a C a ll*.

0C U

SATUMAV

• A d u lt I F a m ily
S e c tio n s
• W / D C o n n e c tio n s
• C o b le T V , P o o l
• S h o rt T e r m le a s e *
A v a ila b le

i, *, i k. M

a,

*

m

.tx

1505 W. 25th S t
n

t u

N

F u rn is h e d I b d rm a p t sin g le s o n ly ,
n o k id s o r p e ls a ll u t ilit ie s
In c lu d e d 4125 a m o . *175 d a m
ag e 221 0224 a lte r 5 th ru th e

__________

N e w in
Tow n?
Wo are tool
Need a Fresh, new, convenient apartment?
Com e visit Sanford Landing Apartments.

R * K $ ! W H A T IF T H E C X ih H &lt; x £ b ] E 6 A P /

P &amp; E B ffW

$ C U R ? J E S * P u t u p \ FEW b u c k s /J A K E .
T M A K E IT IE 6 M M ' T lL
r r
C 0V E F THE R E &amp; T!
*-5 ^ 7 E X C E E P -

REMINP
ME OF
A HEN
CACKLIN’
OYER A
&lt;5LA SS

I L L J X IN c S L Y
F A IR
EVEN LET AM Cb HOLD THE
MCNEV $0 y&lt;?U MINNOW*
C A N S L E E P NI6HT5!

L o v e ly 1 B d rm w ith b a th scree ned
p o rc h C o m p le te p r iv a c y . ,1 4 0
w ee k p lu s *700 s e c u rity de posit
A lso I B d rm a p t new c a rp e tin g ,
p r iv a te e n tra n c e *75. w eek p lu s
*200 s e c u rity d e posit
C a ll 221 2244 o r 1 1 H 401
N ic e ly d e c o ra te d I B d r m . q u ie t,
w a lk to d o w n to w n N o pets. *40
w ee k *700 d e posit 121 4507
^^^^^71M a2nohaA v^_^^_

-i

99— Aparlments
Unfurnished / Rent

L a rg e I B d rm . u p s ta irs , I t t h an d
P a rk *275 P lu s s e c u rity
221 4474 A d u lts o n ly

A

LU XU R Y APAR TM EN TS
F a m ily A A d u lt* se c tio n P oolside.
2 B d rm s . M a tte r C ove A p ts
121 7400
___
O pen on w e e ke n d *_________

flat

note

in t h e s y m p h o n y

* la n ia r d C o u rt A p l. *
Studios. 1 b d rm . A 1 b d rm , tu rn .
1 b d rm . e p tt S e n io r C H lie n O H
co u n i F le x ib le leases
_____________ 1711301._____________
S an to rd L o v e ly 1 B d rm . p lu s den.
fenced, new c a rp e t, a p p lia n ce s .
C H /A *4 5 0 * m oo 1451131
1 B d rm . cle a n , q u ie t, w a lk to
d o w n to w n N o p e t*. *75 W k 1200
d e posit C a ll be tw ee n 5 7 P M
121 4507 221 M a g n o lia A ve
1 B d rm , W /W c a rp e l, C /M /A . no
pe ts C a ll be tw ee n a A M to 4
P M 222 5751____________________
5 ro o m s F u ll k i t , k id s , no leas*
SlTO M o Fee. P h 134 7200
5av O n H e n lil In c . R e tllo r

BATEMAN REALTY

\s y

iiil

231-Cars

F a m ily Section of C a rria g e f n v *
For s a l* by owner 1474 17x57
*4400 313 I M
l _______

HORSES B O A R D E D
D e lu x e
stalls p a rtia l board *a$ m o Ph
110 0574 Leave m essage

211— Antiques/
Collectables

New H om es s ta rlin g at *4445 E asy
credit and low down U n d e Roys.
Leesburg US 441 404 747 0124

F u rn itu re and re p a ir stripping and
relintshing staining antiques a
speciality 121 0442

1474 B ro adm ore 14x40 7 B d 'm . 2
bath. C /H /A *1.500 down take
over paym ents D ays 273 **56
eve 111 0M7

213— Auctions
FOR ESTA TE
Cc n m c r c la l or
Residential Auctions A A p p ra u
a Is Call P e t 's A uction 121 5420

T O W E R IN G O A K S an d p a rk lik e
s e ttin g s u rro u n d th is lo v e ly 2
b d rm . 3 b a lh ho m e w ith C /H /A .
M i l l F la / r m . , l / r m , . a n d m u c h
m o r e l C a ll us q u ic k !
E Y E O E A L . * i A c re su rro u n d s th is
u n iq u e 1 b d rm ., w /la m t m ,
tir e p la c e l 1 w o rk s h o p s ! S p a rk l
in g p riv a te p o o l! A ll lo r o n ly
151.544

C A L L US T O D A Y

323-5774
1444 H W Y I I 41

INLAND M
REALTY W O R LD.

S ly r m s . a p p l. a ir , p o rch , k id s
*150 Fee P h 114 7300
Sav On R e n ta l In c . R e a lto r

323 3145
-

'

A lte r H o u rs 111 1131
ttH ttlw IT tm i .

L a k e M a r y 2 B d rm , a ir , k id s , no
le a s * *115 M o F t * P h 111 7200
Sav On R e n ta l In c . R e a lto r
S a n to rd 2 B d rm . 2 b a th , a p p l I
ancos *175 pe r m o 1*1 la s t an d
s o c u rlty 44* *547
S a n to rd 2 B d r m . a ir , a ll a p p l I
a n c t* . w a te r In c lu d e d . 2420 A
L a k e A v e *150.121 4155_________
] t y rm s * p p l. a ir . *250 M o
F ee P h l i t 7200
* a v O n R e n ta l I n r R e a lle r

D R IV E BY 401 S A N F O R D A VE
Your best I n up buy In town Large
7 sto ry on c o rn e r lot needs
e v e r y th in g in c lu d in g a n ew
ow ner Asking 514 400 or m ake
o tter

CALL BART
R E A L ESTATE
REALTOR

BASSc S P E C K S P E C IA L !!
14 I I
C o u r t n e y w &lt;/25 H P
Evenrude w 2 speed prop 55
M in n k o 'a tro llin g m otor M any
E X T R A S R ocket T ra ile r
S U M _______________________ 1M 4111

N E W S M Y R N A B E A C H 5*. Down
No closing Lo s t* 2 3 plus den
O c e a n tro n l B ro k e rs in v ite d
Beachslde Really Realtor
____________404 427 1311

217— Garage Sales

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

Rum m age Sale F rid a y 4 5 Satur
day 4 1 Feb 3rd and 4th F irs t
Christian Church 1607 S Santord
Ave
T H E S A LE
176 E va n sd ale Rd L ak e M a ry
Sa'urday Feb 4th to to 1 P M
Car radio tw in bed Van seat
lots of new and used 1st tim e
Sa e tor a ll Item s No p rior sales
Y a rd Sale F u rn
Avon bottles
misc F ri and Sal 4 A M to 5
P M 210W 15thSi

repossessed

reconditioned freig h t dam aged
F ro m *44 U p G uaranteed
N e a rly New 717 E 1st St 171 7650
C ash lo r good used fu rn itu re
L a rry 's New A Used F u rn itu re
M a r l 115 Santord A ve 122 4133
F or Sale R e lrig avacado green
Hotpoinl Ex Cond *175 Dish
w asher, w h ite exc cond *45
445 4457 a lte r 5 P M ________ __

153— Lots-Acreage/Sale
longs*ood L a te M y r tle H ills Hd
wuytk-tj iuS, ov H A tlS • * i- w v
d o * n . b a la n ce to s u lf 0 * n e r
m iif s
O S C E O L A R D . } Acres M o b ile s
O K High and d ry p e rk les»ed
A ss u m a b le m ortgage
W e llA c t C ress R e a lty Inc
R tft I tor 32) SOt?
6 S A cres Lflke Sylvan Area
I4J.»0 W M a lkiow ikJ Realtor
322 f9B)______________

155— Condominiums
Co Op / Sale
S A N F O R D SA N D A LW O O D
t &amp; 2 B drm Available
R ealtor C all X )i 422 117+

O O U B L E W ID E on a C orner Lo t
I I , C H A F a m ily ro o m , fenced
shed A ssum e m o rtg a g e
Close to 12 92 $417*0

B0BM. BALL JR. PA.
R e a lto r
12) 4111
G M C O O R V XWOI4IV.S H O M S S IN C
A R E A S L A R G E S T E X C L U S IV E
S K Y L IN E D E A L E R
F E A T U R IN G
P a lm Beach V H Ia
G reenleai
P a lm S p rln g s
P a lm M anor
Siesta K ey
V A F H A F in a n c in g
505 17 1 57(10

Kenm o&lt;e p arts service.
used washers 121 044 7
___ M O O N E Y A P P l l A N C ES
W IL S O N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
111 U S E F IR S T S T
177 5473

COLOR T E L E V IS IO N
7 P M iT M M Tnnuvlw fn ln r Television
in valnut cabinet O rig in al price
Over *700 balance due 1145 or
p a y m e n ts |l4 a m onth
NO M O N E Y DO W N W ith w ar
ra n ly F ree H om e T ria l
no
obligation 441 5144______________

W E B U Y A N T IQ U E S
F U R N IT U R E A A P P L IA N C E S
______________333 7140

Good Used T e le v is io n s *!! And Up
M IL L E R S
3414 O rlando D r 332 0352

223— Miscellaneous
A C 74 000 B T U . heat A cool *150
la in electric r a n g e *75
C all 37 11)4*____________
P o rta b le dishw asher lik e new.
W hirlp ool (7 5 E le c tric type
w riter w U nstant era s e r. *125
Heavy gauge steel firepro of sale
w com bination lock *100 171
0101_______ __________
H u ll cut pine
1x4, 4x4. 4x6
________
114 1075 ___________
Used W ork Shoes *3 »4 Pr
A P M Y . N A V Y SU R PLU S
HO Sanford Aye
377 5741
You Can Slay A l H om e and G o *0
Town w ith E venin g H era ld W ant
A ds P la c e y o u r L o w c o s t
Classified Ad between I 00 5 10
117 7611

193— Lawn &amp; Garden
F IL L D IR T A TO P SOIL
Y E L L O W SAND
C lark A H lrl 111 7540 171 7421

199— Pets &amp; Supplies
Dog O bedience Training
B eginner* d a vs si ar I t Feb 4th (0
A M A b ility K ennel* 0 *te e n
__________ MS 323 2220
__ ___
F re e to good hom e (M oving no
pets allow ed I S year old red
m ale Dachshound N ee d * fenced
in yard P re fe r* a d u lt* 323 6S2Q
G erm an Shepard pupp ie* for *a!e
AKC registered 8 m onth* old
B lack, bi tan tU tt apiece CaH
be tw ee n 1 A M h t P M 777 * W

W E F IN A N C E It
77 T o y o ta
O K Cor r a 1 U sed C a r s 1211411
1471 Ford F ISO 4x 4 p ic k up Short
bed Needs body w ork Runs re al
Strong *1 150Cash
H u r r y ! H u r r y ! H u r ry !
_______ 114 Taos or 314 4100
1440 T o y o ta C o ro H a 5 sp e ed
m anual A M F M AC Good con
d t'on *4500 F irm CaH 377 4647
74 C h e v y p ic k u p V4 150
F S PB auto R u n i A d riv e * well
*400
___ 122 4455

Chevy M onte C arlo PS P b a ir
conditioning A T new p am l CaH
M l 111* attee a p m ___
'7 7 F o r d F 100 p i c k u p
307
M yd ro m alic. P S P B A M F M 4
trac k, ru st proof and a topper
S3 400 371 4515_____________ .
74 M a ;d a G LC * door hatch back
m ust sell tl.tO O or best Otter
l i t 6000 betw een 4 and 6 ask tor
Bob A lte r 6 173 Q7J6
'74 P O N T IA C S U N B IR D . *500 00
down ta k e * over p ay m ents at

*137.11or(l.SODcash 172 till
'40 V o lks w a g o n R a b b it fuel 'met.
Non a ir. radio excellent condi
Non *1 500 lir m Ask lor B ill or
B arb day o r night 111 5174______
42 Toyota 4W D Pickup w ca m p e r
AC A M F M , s tereo w tape deck
Tinted windows 122 7474

235-Trucks/
Buses / Vans
T ruck 1466 G M C 16 ft alum in um
box. good tor produce Runs
1464 C 10 P icku p Chevy V e ry nice
6 cyl straight stick, tra ile r hitch.

topper a s k in g *! 145 131 1405__
1476 F o rd F 250 R an g e r, X L T
cam per special AC PB PS
dual gas tanks good cond *7500
OBO A ll a 10P M 111 5414
117! G M C 5 15 V I auto.
topper , good condition *1.750
331 4515______________
1411 G M C S I * P ic k u p w i t h
fiberglass cam per lop 4 cyl.
auto a ir P B P S A M F M
s h a rp s * 400 321 4665or 111 5344

239— Motorcydes/Bikes
For *a l» Puch M oped very good
cond tte a w irtb le C ali a fte r 8
P M 3)9 0184
K a w a ta k a 80 K Z *S0 k e rk e r
header $360 and lake Over
pay men1!* M ark 333 0 9 8 1 _____

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
WANTED TRAVEL TRAILERS.
• C all Ja ck M a r tin 171 2400 a
1440 Chev V an C am per P S P B
77 00 0M ile s E ic e lle n l Condition
1*5 5454 J __________
11 C L E A N USE D R V .'S
R V S A LE S
H W Y 44
NEW SMYRNA
_____________ I 411 4575

231 — Cars

201- H o r s e s

Bad C re d it!
No Credit?
W E F IN A N C E
N o C redit Check Easy Term s
N A T IO N A L A U T O S A L E S
1120 S Santord A ve
17) 4075

EXPERIENCED HOOF TRIMMING
Ml 4411

STENSTROM
REALTY •

Baby Beds. S tro lle rs . C a rse a ts .
P la y p e n s . E t c
P a p e rb a c k
Books 125 4577 522 *504^
G O L D D IG G E R S TW O
Now buying scrap gold and silver
and precious gem s Also E states
and antiques W e m ake house
calls C all 674 1754 or com e to
booth 7a Santord F le a W orld
P a y n g CASH tor A lum inum , Cans.
Copper. Brass Lead Newspa
per. Glass, GuiU. S l** 6 *
K o k o m o T oo l. *14 W 1st
4 5 00 Sat 4 1 173 1100

183— Television &gt;
Radio /Stereo

Call Alters PM

« C a il Jack M a r tin 111 7400*

great Ml 5504________________

219— Wanted to Buy

112 7448

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

W E H A V E B U Y E R S !!
W E N E E D L IS T IN G S !!

T h is Page B e a m s W ith
R eal O p p o rtu n itie s F o r
_______ A ll w ho R ead it

163— Waterfront
Properly / Sale

a p p l ia n c e s

D e b a ry A u to A M a r in e S ales
across the riv e r top ot h ill 174
H w y 17 47 D ebary 664 4564

WANTED GOOD USED CARS

L a rg e sgl in ad u lt park 2 bdr l
bath, den larg e screened porch
and utility room Low re n t in
d u des sewer n a t * r ru h t-sh .ing
m ow ing * l | 4Q0 t ej j {jo /irQ

322-7643

By O w ner, } B r f t B alh split
B d rm plan C h A *45 400
1004 Seal! Ave C all 131_7514
D e b a ry D e lto n a
L is tin g S ales
A ppraisals F u ll Se-vice R eally
* C O R R Y R E A L T Y 441 4714 x

HLLT0M
( in tifu c i

243— Junk Cars
B U Y JU N K CA R S A T R U C K S
F ro m ttO to S S O o r m ore
_____C all 377 1424 M l 4113
TO P D o lU r P a id lor Junk A Used
cars, tru ck s A heavy equipm ent
m 5440
____

WE P A Y TOP D O LLAR FOR
JU N K CARS A N O T R U C K S
CBS A U T O P A R T S 243 4505

C O NSULT O UR

REALTORS

Sanford s Sales Leader
119— Pasture tor Rent
W A N T E D TO R E N T between 20
and ao acres of pasture land
w /optlon 111 7405

141— Homes For Sale.

n

House

SANFO RD R E A LT Y
REALTO R
H I 5124
A lt M rs 173 4454,121 4145

STCMPER AGENCY INC.
O W N ER S ^V S
REDUCED
T h is co u ld be th e o p p o rtu n ity yo u
h a v t been w a itin g lo r T h is 1
B d r m . 1 b a th h o m e h a s a
G R E A T ro o m lo r ta m ily tu n
L o ca te d on a b e a u tllu l lo t on a
q u ie t cu t d * sac W as U 5 000 now
o n ly *54.000 D o n 't w a it to see
th is

FOR A L L YOUR
REAL ESTATENEEOS

323-3200
O R IF T W O O O , V IL L A G E
OH LA K E M A R Y BLVO

KISH R E A L ESTATE
IfM F R E N C H A V E

REALTO R

321-0041

A N D LET AN EXPERT D O TH E JO B

W E L IS T A N D S E LL
M O R E H O M E S TH A N
A N Y O N E IN N O R 7 H
S E M IN IO L E C O U N T Y
W E 'V E G O T I T I 1 B d rm . I b a lh
ho m e in F a ir la n t E sta te s, on a
la rg e lo ti E x tr a * in c lu d e an ea t
In k it c h e n , s c re e n e d p o r c h ,
fenced y a rd , in a n ic e a re a .
*45.544
S U P E R 1 B d rm , f t b a lh ho m e in
m in t c o n d itio n in W o o d m e r*
P a r k l N e w ly p a in te d o u tiid * .
new re e l, n t w c a rp e t C H A and
m o re *47.444
JU S T FO R Y O U 3 B d rm . I b a lh
ho m e in H ig h la n d P a rk , on a n ic e
c o r n e r la n d s c a p e d 1*11 C H .
W W C. c a rp e l, c e ilin g Ians, lo ts o l
tlo ra g e .a n d 10x24 w o rk s h o p lo r
the h a n d y m e n 150 400

To List Your BusinessDial 3 2 2 -2 6 H or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
Additions A Rem odeling
N e w C us to m H om es, b y B ill S tn p p
Lice n se d . In s u re d end B onded

______ 695-7416
Addition * Fireplace Specialist

JU S T L U T E D 4 B d r m . 2 b a lh
ho m e in S u n ljn d w ith yo ur ow n
po ol an d p a lio l B e a u tifu lly re
m o d e le d b r ic k fir e p la c e . F R .
O R. and
lo v e ly le n c td lo t.
*44,400

" W * w ill sa ve y o u m o n e y "
_____________ i » m i ______________

C O U N T R Y S E T T IN G 1 B d rm ., 1
b a th ho m e , on 11 a c re w ith a ll the
e x tra s ! L o v e ly pool an d p a lw .
s p l i t p la n , b r ic k f ir e p l a c e ,
p a n e llin g n e w ly p a in te d , new
re e l a n d o n a ca n a l. P e rfe c t to r
lis h in 'l *42.544

3210342

L A K E F R O N T 1 B d rm ., 1 b a th
h o rn * , on L a k e G leason w ith yo u r
o w n d e c k , scree ned poech. an d
p a tie m a n y b u ilt Ins, fire p la c e .
F R , D R , s p lit p la n a n d | u i t
p a in te d . L e ts m o re l 144.400
O SAN FO R D I 4A44 4
l 1 ■A c re C o u n try h o m e sites.
O ak, p m * so m e c le a re d A p a ved
IO N d o w n t l y r s . a l IT S .
t G E N E V A O S C E O L A RO •
i A c re C o u n try I r a c lt .
W a ll tre e d on p a ve d Rd
11 % D a w n . 14 Y rs . a t 10%.

Bond Money Available
SUPER D U P E R D U P LE X E S I
H U R R VI JU S T O N E LE F T I
In v e s to rs d o n 't m is s Ihoso tw o 2
B d rm ., 1 b a th u n it w ith a ll the
• i l r a s f B u y n o w a n d ch oose
c o lo r il C o n ve n ie n t re n ta l le ca
Hen e x c e lle n t fin a n c in g . F H A .
a n d V A I S ta rtin g a l Itt.lD C .
C a ll Red e r U n d a M o rg a n .

R/Assec tales.

C a ll n o w : 3 2 1 - 6 2 2 0

321-0759 Eve

IN V E S T E R S D R E A M 1 B d rm . I&gt; j
b a th . C /H 7 A , w / F la . rm ,
g a r a g e , e a s y t e r m s ! O n ly
*41.444

1 B d rm , a p p l k id s . p e ls . Itn c e ,
*400 Fee Ph 114 7700
Sav On R en ta l In c , R e a lto r

-

Lie R eal E » tii* rR fo &gt; i*&gt;
2640 Sanford Av«

T E L L US W H A T Y O U W A N T ! W E
H A V E I M S O F H O M E S FOR
S A L E T H R U M U L T IP L E
L IS T IN G S

1444 M a y b e y o u r I* '.* ch ance lo bu y
* house I ha ve s e v e ra l a v a ila b le ,
re n t w ith o p tio n to b u y . C e ll lo r
11*1404 714 W47. O w n e r/B ro k e r
1 B d rm . I ba th , d in in g ro o m , v e ry
cle a n , 1500 S e c u rity , 1*00 m o n th
W ith se p a ra te 1 B d rm a p l 1550
m o n th C all 5 I P M 111 4751

1 *2 —

F o r Sale by ow ner 3 B drm l * i
bath, Cent heal and a if . land
scaped In ground pool w ith large
p atio *4 2 500 121 4014 Eves
F or Sale by O w ner 1 B drm I balh
fe n c e d y a r d good lo c a tio n .
*41 400 A lt e r * 113 244*

t | i l T 9 l«C

OE B A R Y 1 b d rm . a ir . kids,
p e ts o k 111!
5av On R e n ta ls In c . R e a lto r
* • • IN D E L T O N A t • •
* * H O M E *F O R R E N T * •
__________* « *74 1*1* x x_________
L a k e M a r y 1 B d rm .7 B .ra n g e ,
r e f r i g e r a t o r , d is h w a s h e r ,
g a ra g e , fenced *450 p lu s de posit
_____________ 145 4574

M

?

141— Homes For Sale

HALL

103-Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

R E A L T O R 121 4441

APARTMENTS

201— Horses

2 1 B D R M HOUSE
OR D U P L E X )
121 4441

141— Homes For Sale

R ID G E W OOO A R M S A P T S
2540 R idgew o od A ve . Ph 121 4470
1,1 A 1 B d rm s Iro m SKIP

N e w ly lic ensed A e x p e r. lu ll tim e
re a l e s ta te sa le sm e n needed.

1S00 West fest Street (S R U l
Senlotd flotida 32771

T h u rs d a y , F e b . I . 1 4 8 4 -J &amp;

2 1 5 -Boats/Accessories

I ^ na

____ _____________f ’*44hhl • *w *U N— U A Oat|tUO&gt;_________

M a r in e r's V illa g e o n L a k e A d a . t
b d rm Iro m S2I5. 1 b d rm Iro m
*140 L o ca te d 17 42 ju s t so uth of
A ir p o r t B lv d . In S a n to rd A ll
A d u lts 111 1*70_________________
N E W I A 2 B e d ro o m s A d ja c e n t lo
L a k e M o n r o * H e a lth C lu b .
R e c q u e ib a il en d M o r e l
S e n lo rd L e n d in g S R 441114120

T rtp T e x /'R e n r

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

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

159-Real Estate
Wanted

BAM BO O COVE APTS
300 E A ir p o r t B lv d P h 321*420
E ffic ie n c y , Iro m S215 M s 5 %
d is c o u n t lo r S e n io r C itlte n s

1 0 5 — D u p ls x -

£ 0 6 ?

lA l.

G E N E V A ST. J O H N *
R iv e rfro n t 1 homes. Cent H /A .
fenced, la c u ili. boat dock, m uch
m o re S US. too

• Country C lu b Lifestyle
• Clubhouse With Health Club
And Saunas
e Pod d le b o ali On A Four Acte
la k e
e Tennis. Bocquelbol. Olympic
Pool
• On-Site M an age m e n t And
M aintenance
• O ne Of Two-ledfoom Floorplant
• Frost-Free Refrigerator; ice
Mokert. Self-Cleaning Ovens

WHY

6 \S li RUW UN'

1 R 7N T W ANT

* S a tu rd a y a n d Sunday o
F e b . 41b and Sth 10 to 5 P M .
1*2 M a rta R d .O tb a r y .
E x e c u tiv e h id e w a y . la rg a 3 b d rm ,
w ith f o r m a l d in in g ro o m ,
f ir e p la c e f r e e d d o u b le lo t .
en closed g a ra g e , lo v e ly p e n c il
in g . huge k itc h e n w ith c h e rry
c a b in e ts C O R R Y R E A L T Y .
444 47414*4 5451 *44 *474
S A C R IF IC E A p p ro x tU S O O d o w n
A ss u m e m tg a l lo w in i. ra le
B a la n c e a p p r o x 1 5 5 .0 0 0 1
B d r m . la r g e L R / D R a r e a ,
k llc h e n d in e lle . 1 lu ll b a lh *, | u t l
p a in te d m u d * a n d Out. lik e new
C B. C H. e x tr a lg « y a rd P r im *
lo c a tio n In S a n to rd A p p ro x 1700
sq t t u n d e r ro o t T o ta l p ric e
IS I 400 T h is o tte r lim ite d lim e
o n ly Ow n e r 111 5207121 0052

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS

with Major Moople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

A t 121 7424 o r M l 51*1!

CALL AN Y T IM E
m s s . P a rk

322-2420
1 B d r m , f &gt; b a lh . fe nced y a rd
A lm o s t new O w n e r w ill de a l
*4 1 *0 0 L c rw C T M .
• P e t it I R a a lty 424 2414 &lt;

* C0GAR SKYLIGHTS *
A n A ffo rd a b le A d d itio n
To a n y H o m e C e lt to d a y
F o r A F re e E . tlm a t *

Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating
--------------- ^ I l h i a t e r ; --------------C L E A N IN G A N D S E R V IC IN G
C a ll R a lp h 131 4713
10% D isco u n t O n A ll A t p a l 'l
F o r W in d o w AJr C o n d itio n e r*
Ona 0 4 y S e rvice . Pti 272 1611.

Electrical
Q u a lity E le c tr ic a l S e rvice
F a n s, tim e r s , s e c u rity W e t e d d i
tlo n * . n e w s e rv ic e s . In s u re d
M a s te r E le c tr ic ia n Ja m e s P a u l
i l l 7554

General Services
R V. an d M o b il# H o m e , c le a n A
w a x . ro o f c o a tin g , a ll re p a irs etc
F A L M a in te n a n c e
121 0441 o r 33) 1701_________
R A IN B O W P A IN T IN O E X T ./IN T .
D riv e w a y se a tin g , ce m e n t w o rk
D arnel D e k m a r. 111 0344
__________S en io r D is c o u n t

Home Improvement
COMPLETE CONSTRUCTION
N o |o b to s m a ll M in o r A m a jo r t
re p a irs L ice n se d A bonded
______________ 1M 4111______________
P A IN T IN G R E M O O E L IN G
T R E E T R IM M IN G
M l *457

R a n d y * Q u a lity L a w n S a rv lc *
C o m p le te la w n m a in t e n a n c e .
la n d s c a p in g , c le a n ups. M l 0714
T a y lo r B ro th e rs L a w n a n d G a rd e n
S e rvice R e s id e n tia l a n d C om
m e r c la l w o rk H a u lin g , g a rd e n
p re p a ra tio n an d a ll la w n i t r v i c *
F re e E H U l 4715

Masonry

A u s lln ’ i M a in te n a n c e
P lu m b in g , c a rp e n try , e le c tr ic a l.
p a in tin g , re m o d e lin g M l 1414

B E A L C o n c re te I m a n q u a lity
o p e ra tio n P a tio s , d r ly e w a y * .
D ay *1 1 1 7111 E v e *. M U M !
S W IF T .C O N C R E T E
F o o le r * ,
d riv e w a y * , pa ds. Ilo o rs . po o l*.
C h a lt Slone F re e E s t/ 1M 7101

C a rp e n try a lte ra tio n s , g u tte r w o rk ,
p a in tin g , tid in g , p o rc h e s , p a tio s ,
e tc A sk to r A r t H u b b le

_________ m in i._________
M a in te n a n c e o l a ll type s
C a rp e n try , p a in tin g , p lu m b in g
A e le c tr ic M l 4011

Interior Decorating
W a llp a p e r a n d In te r io r P a in tin g
M in o r R e p a irs l J y r t . E x p e rie n c e
R ea sona ble 111 7K &gt; A H S

Janitorial Services
C h ris tia n J a n ito ria l S e rvice
W * d o c o m p le te flo o r * , ca rp e ts ,
^ n ^ e n e r a ^ te a n ln ^ l^ lt^ ^

Landclearing
C o n s tru c tio n , tra s h w ood h a uled
o ft a n d ra k e d . F re e e s tim a te s
_________ 1 M 1617 144 5713_________
L A N D C L E A R IN G . F I L L D IR T .
B U S H O G IN G C L A Y A S H A L E
______________1M 1411

Health &amp; Beauty
T O W E R S B E A U T Y S A LO N
F O R M E R L Y H a r r l t t l ' i B e a u ty
H o o t ^ H f E 1st SI 1M 5741

Lawn Service

Home Improvement

C O M P L E T E L A W N S E R V IC E
PROPERTY M AN AG EM EN T
______________ M IM 5 1 ______________

RENT
SELL
BUY
W ith a
W ANT AD
D ia l M l M i l

Photography
D en nis K e e le r P h o to g ra p h y .
W e d d in g s P o r l r e i l s C o m m e r l
c e l/ l n d W e d d in g S p e c ia l yo u
^ e e g jh ^ w je b v e ^ IM A M ^ ^ ^

Home Repairs

S p rin g c le a n in g e a r ly , t t n io r c it l
le n s 10% d is c o u n t, p ic k u p a t
d o o r V e te ra n s a ls o 10% d ls
co u n t M l 2*17 1*4 5711

A d d itio n s , C u t te rn K itc h e n s , S id in g
A T r im , G u tte rs , E x te r te r P a in t
m g A R e e lin g P h a*4 524A

Lawn Service

J O H N 'S L A W N C A R E
L a n d s c a p in g A M a in ! D e p e n d a b le
S e n io r D is c o u n t. M 1 0164_________
K IN O A SONS L A W N S E R V IC E
E a r ly F a ll C laaa U p. *54 S pe cial
F a r A n y A v e ra g e Y a r d . 1651414
L A M L a w n C a r t S e rv ic e
M o w , edge, t r im a n d h a u l. C o n ta c t
Le e o r M a r k 121 5347 o r U 2 4144

Moving &amp; Hauling
M o v in g ! C a ll R e n t a M a n w ith
V a n L ice n sa . a n d In s u re d B e il
jr lc o ^ r U o w r ^ J ^ H ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

Nursing Care
O UR R ATES ARE LO W ER
L a k e v le w N u rs in g C e n te r
414 E Second S I . S a n to rd
M l 4701

Painting
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A
H a m * I m p ro v e m e n !
P a in tin g , C a rp e n try ,
S m a ll R e p a irs .
U Y e a r* E ip e r la w c t. M 11441.

Plastering/Dry Wall
A L L P h a s e * o f P la s t e r in g
P i ’ t ie r in g re p a ir , stu c co , h a rd
cola, s im u la te d b r ic k M l 544}

Roofing
t tR O O F I N O tl
H ll I m A r t H u b b le
I do b e a u tifu l w o rk I do n e w ro o ts ,
ro o l le e k s I re p la c e o r re p a ir
v a lle y s , ro o ts ve n ts, e tc I w ill
^ a ir t^ o u m o n e jr n iM T e ^ ^ ^ ^

Screen &amp; Glasswork
• G A H E N T E R P R IS E S *
R e p la c e A r e p a i r s c r e e n s ,
H b e rg la ts A a lu m in u m

______ * I MSI 122 4451 a

Sewing
C u s to m E le g a n c e F a n c ie s In
F a b ric b y M l* D re s s m a k in g .
a lte ra tio n , e tc B y a p p l M 3 4014
E x p e rie n c e d S ea m s tre s s w ill do
a lte ra tio n * A c u s to m s e w in g a l
arty k in d N o |o b too b ig o r to o
s m a ll R a ts ra te s M l 4404

Sprinklers/Irrigation

C u n n in g h a m a n d W ile p a in tin g
In t e r io r a n d e x te r io r Q u a lity
b ru s h a n d r o ll w o r k . M A4IB.
* * F R E E E S T IM A T E # a
R hodes P a in tin g A ll T yp es
I * Y r s E x p . 1 4 H r . P h o n e M 1 4 7 1 I.

Ir r ig a tio n c o n tro l re p a ir s H o rn *
a n d c o m m e rc ia l G u a ra n te e d I
y e a r, m o n th ly s e rv ic e r a le
325 1417 344 57M

Paving

A A F IR E W O O D
S p ill S ta ck a d Seasoned
R ea s T m * do w n. 14 h r * M l ASTI

A s p h a lt, d riv e w a y s , p a rk in g lo l l.
e tc V e ry re a s o n a b le .
G u a ra n te e d F re e e s t I m a le s
C e n tra l F la C o n c re te M l t i l l
HUOCONCRETE AND
P A V E M E N T M A R K IN G S IN C .
S p e c le lli* in d r iv e w a y s , p a tio s ,
s id e w a lk s , c u rb s a n d g u tte r * ,
r e t e ln ln g w e lt * . L ic e n s e d ,
bo nded M l 1010 F re e E s tim a te *
Y o u C a n S ta y A t H o m e a n d G o to
T o w n w ith E v e n in g H e ra ld W a n t
A d s . P la c e y o u r L e w c a s t
C la s s ifie d A d b e tw e e n I 00 * »
M l M il.

Tree Service

F IR E W O O D
E x p e rt T re e S e rvice .
C a ll E v e s a n d S a tu rd a y M l 114*.
S a v e l C re d it e a G e e d W e e d l
JA C K S O N T R E E S E R V IC E
M Y r v E x p e rie n c e T I M I IS

Upholstery
L O R E N E 'S U P H O L S T E R Y
F re e P k k u p A D e liv e ry
H O M I- R O A T A U T O M l - I M t
* O P E N IN G S A L E *
Q u a lit y u p h o ls t e r in g l * % e l l
fa b r ic th r u F e b ru a ry M l S1U

�BLO NDIE

&lt;B - E vening H e ra ld . Sanlord. FI.

S ir , w o u l o y o u

I W ANT TO B u v
M Y W IP E A M IN K
CO AT

C O N T R IB U T E T O A
W O R T H Y C A U SE

T h u rsd ay. Feb. J, 1994

&gt;W HY WOULD YOUR
W IPE N EEO A M IN K
COAT

by Chic Youn;
I W AN T HER TO LOOK
N ICE WHEN W E G O f
O U T T O G ET H ER
'

B E E TLE B A ILE Y

by M ort W alker

W HERE'S ZERO ?
ME H A SN 'T,
BEEN
AROUND
ALL DAY

I

PM O

i t '5 j u s t a W i l d
G UESS 8U T I HAVE
A N IDEA

im p o r t a n t
announcem ent

C O M IN S

WATCH THIS

space !

ACR O SS

42 Chemical
suffix
Former
43 S ip
hockey league 45 M ila
4 Piece of work
stepchild
8 South African 47 Defray
tribe
49 Ftm ale samt
12 A lle y _____
(abbr)
13 Smallsword
50 You |F r)
14 Prep achool in 52 W hat parson
England •
54 Animsl of
15 Officer a
South
Candidate
Amanea
School (abbr) 58 Lab burner
16 Feminine
60 Bandas
liu ffn )
62 S p im lh gold
17 E urtio n
63 Hsul up
18 Sport of
64 Rand
Shooting clay 65 Poverty-war
pigeons
agency (abbr)
20 Secret agent 66 Ripped
22 Zodiac sign
67 Cleopatra a
23 Accelerate a
bane ( p i)
motor
68 Time zone
25 Seed pods
(abbr)
27 Run-in
31 P ins Subway
DOWN
34 N lvy ship
preln (s b b r)
1 C ount
35 Thailand
2 Visit a
37 Former S
pawnbroker
Vietnam
3 Pan of a
leader
church
38 Supposing (2 4 Sways
w ds)
5 Likely
40 Playwright
6 Places
Coward
7 Retains
i

2

3

12

THE BORN LOSER

by A rt Sansom

Answer to Previout Puzzle

I

15
18

27

28

34
38
43

58

51

ID

IN

T|All

non □□□

29

Anxiety Can Cause
Medical Ailments

DEAR DR. LAMll - I'm
a 31-year-old man In good
health. Hut three months
ago I started having heart
palpitations, shortness of
breath, tingling scnsalions
I n
my h e a d
a n d
8 L is t letter
33 Prophetic ngn extrem llirs. cold hands
9 Public
36 New York ball and feel, dizziness and
services
sour tastes In my mouth.
club
10 U n frequtnitd
1 had denial and physi­
39
Shame
11 Biblical
cal ex a m in a tio n s and
41 Alphabet
preposition
blood tests, all nf which
19 Be m iitsken 44 Untried
were nrgatiw.
21 D ay(H ab)
46 Legume
24 Ore deposit
I was diagnosed as hav­
46 Greek letter
26 Scarlet
ing anxiety problems. I
50 Put to proof
27 Campus ire s
also had occasional diar­
28 S ovitt Union 51 Director
rhea and Indigestion, hut
Preminger
(abbr)
these symptoms gradually
29 Medittrranean 53 Cheers (Sp)
subsided.
Subcontinent 55 Ship deck
(2 wds |
During the same period,
56 Irritated
30 Thailand s
two other people had simi­
57 Bulb
neighbOi .
lar symptoms and also
19 Mock
32 City on the
were diagnosed as having
61
Plant
fluid
Truckee
a n x i e t y . I f i n d t hi s
4
d ia g n o s is di f f i cul t to
5
6
7
8
9
10 11
b e l i e v e . C pu ld t he s e
13
svmptoms he caused bv a
14
virus?
16
17
DEAR READER a
Viruses and other Illnesses
19
22
can affect the entire body,
21
ca u sin g s y mp t o ms In
23
26
multiple organ systems,
"
such as you described.
32 33
However. It's unlikely you
10
would have heart palpita­
35
3,
tions as well as Indigestion
”
and shortness of breath if
4i U 9
39
you had a virus Infection.
■
A ll y o u r s y mp t o ms
146
suggest an anxiety rearlion. You may not realize
t hat a n x i e t y Is v e r y
“
i
common. Almost everyone
52
54
55 56 57
at one time or another lias
some degree of anxiety.
59

1t■ ■
h
1
■
■
1
■\ ■&lt;
1
J1 ■
47

SO

n n n lc D C jn n n n n
□□□□□■zO ddD D O l

60

61

62

63

64

65

66

67

68

A n x i e t y a l s o Is
a s s o c i a t e d w i t h an
overproduction of adre­
naline. which produces a
lot of the symptoms you
described. Adrenaline ran
he a f a c t o r In heart

palpitations.
Your shortness of breath
actually may have been
hyperventilation, which
also occurs in anxious
individuals.
If you were experiencing
anxiety, the cause evi­
dently Is gone. Perhaps
you were experiencing
new stress at that time
and have learned to rope
with It. or ll has heroine
less threatening.
In addition to situational
stresses that can cause
a n x iety , there can he
d e e p e r p s y c h o lo g ic a l
factors. I'm sending vou
The Health Letter 198.
That Anxious Feeling, to
give you a better un­
derstanding of what anxi­
ety Is all about.
It's Important for people
who have anxiety reac­
tions to make some Im­
portant adjustments In
l heir lifestyle. These In­
clude avoiding ralfelne
and cigarettes and getting
a reasonable amount of
exercise. If you know the
reason for the stress and
resulting anxiety, either
try to solve the problem or
eliminate it from your life
pattern.
S e n d vour question* to
Dr. Lamb. P.O. B ox 1551.
Radio City Station. New
York. N Y .'10019.

HOROSCOPE
What The Day Will Bring .
YOUR BIRTHDAY
FEBRUARY 3, IB84

E E K &amp; MEEK

by Howie Schneider

1

KEEP

KEEP
GOINJ©

CUT

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-

o

'•M N M A n

l

'U N reutranufM

KEEP
OFF

J

*

M R . M E N A N D L I T T L E M IS S

You will gain several
valuable allies this year
who are both Idealistic and
loyal. The efforts exerted
by these persons will con­
tribute to your material
well-being.

by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers

Feb. 19) You could be in
for a pleasant surprise
today w hen m aterial re­
wards come your way.
even though you might
feel you did nothing to
earn them. Look ahead
Into 1984 by sending for
your Aquarian's AstroGraph predictions. Mall SI
to Astro-Graph. Ikix 489,
Radio City Station. N Y.
10019.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) You could be excep­
tionally lucky today where
prominent matters are
concerned, especially If
they arc tied Into your
hopes and dreams.
.

ARIES (March 21 -April
19) Wishful thinking Is not
a frivolous endeavor for
you today. Once your
Imagination Is triggered,
you'll devise ways to turn
fantasies Into realities.

BUGS BUNNY

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10 INV'i1EME10ShAR5
W

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by Stoffei A Heimdahl

. l4 f , - r

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: &lt; B l in d .

*

C o = ? &lt; s ______ _

TAURUS (April 20 May
20| Today your sphere of
Influence Is apt to be
greater than you realize.
You'll be coming through
loud and clear to people
you might think aren't
listening.
OEMINI (May 21-June
20) A problem pertaining
to your work or duties that
has been vexing you can
be resolved today. Your
instincts will help you

ferret out the solution.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) Involve yourself In
a c t i v i t i e s t o d a y t hat
challenge your Imagina­
tion and permit you to
work with your hands as
well as your mind.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Don't be hesitant to use
far-out Ideas today to Im­
prove or beautify your
surroundings. Let your
In v e n tiv e n e s s nnd a e s th e t­
ic Instincts prevail.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) You're very adroit to­
day at directing others and
helping them sort out their
af f ai rs, wi t hout thei r
realizing you're pulling
the strings.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 Oct.
23) Little things become
significant carecrwtse to­
day. Pay attention to every
detail. Liter you'll appre­
ciate the importance of
doing so.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-N'ov.
22) Appoint yourself the
social director for your
gro u p 's en tertainm ent
today. Everyone will enjoy
the activities you arrange.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) There Is a
possibility that you might
receive something of value
today through a relative or
a close family contact.
Attach yourself to kith and
kin.
C A P R I C O R N ( De c .
22-Jan. 19) Promoting a
cause In which you truly
believe or teaching some­
thing of value to another
will afford you the greatest
sense of gratification to­
day.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
4 AQ4
♦ AJ5
♦ A 10 6 2

4713
WEST
♦ 975
* 9 7 12
♦ 9 S4 3
♦ 10 5

EAST
4 K 10 6 2
* K 10 8
4l
4KQJ92
SOUTH
4 JI 3

♦Sili

by Bob Thaves
ECHO

CANTo N ? J u p fe

TA|ce A L E F T ON
PFJA VU PRlVE
THFN A PKSHT o n
FLA W K A C R
. •

l a n
Th a v e j

e

He read East for Just one
diamond and carefully
threw East In with a club.
S o u th

Rrdbl
3 NT
Pau

Opening lead 410

By Oswald Jacoby
and Jamea Jacoby
Here Is a hand described
first by Robert Darvas.
who could think up more
complicated plays than
anyone. If Sout h had
thought of Just doubling
two clubs, he would have
picked up at least 500 easy
points and probably 800.
but then there would be no

East cashed his good
clubs. South chucked u
heart and a spade while he
let two diamonds go from
dummy. Note that If South
had cashed Just one extra
diamond, dummy would
have been squeezed out of
u heart or spade.
East had to lead from
one king. He selected a
heart In hope that his
partner could produce the
queen. South produced
her majesty. A spade was
led to the ace. and three
diamonds were cashed to
squeeze floor East out of
cither the heart king or
protection for the spade
king, and Darvas had his
game.

Lac*, m w* know it, davalopad in Italy in tha I400i.
It graw out of opan or cutwork in ambroidary. It was a
mark of proiparity,
’

G A R F IE L D

FRANK AND ER N EST

The ordinary player or
e v e n o r di na r y exper t
would probably run the
diamonds and would wind
up one In the soup, but
Dmrvmm had a better Idea.

4 AI 4

Vulnerable. Both
Dealer: North
Wrtl Norik Eait
Dbl
l»
Pau
Pau J4
Pau 3 NT Pju
Pau

problem . South got to
three no-trump.
West opened the 10 of
clubs. East played the Jack
and continued with the
queen. South won the sec­
on d c l ub and l ed a
diamond to dummy's ace.

by Jim Davis
ANP WHEN VOU PO. I'M GOING
TO LEAP ON VOU ANP ALL THAT
WILL BE LEFT W ILL B E VOUR
M AILBA G A N P THAT 3ILLV LOOKING WAT OF VO UR9

.

a . j,

by Ltonard Starr

f

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                    <text>Sanford Sewage Battle Means Bill s Going Up

By R ick B ranson
H erald S ta ff W r ite r
The city of Sanford faces "catastrophic"
consequences of fines and a sewer hookup
moratorium If It falls to Implement a method of
sewage disposal acceptable to the state by
January 1987. according to City Manager Frank
Faison.
At that time the city's temporary operating
permit allowing It to dump treated sewage Into
Lake Monroe will expire. If Sanford Isn't
complying with state rules, the state may fine the
city for each day It operates without a permit or
declare a moratorium on sewer hook-ups which

could bring construction In the city to a standstill.
Faison said
And whatever happens, city sewage bills are
destined to go up It's Just a question of howmuch.
The city has a two pronged plan for settling Ihe
problem — either upgrading Its existing plant and
Increasing sewage capacity or going to a more
expensive landspreading method of disposal.
Landsprradlng would cost the city about $38
million. Faison said. Upgrading the existing plant
would run about $28 million, he said.
The problem. Faison told city commissioners
Monday. Is that Sanford Is appealing a ruling by

the state Department of Environmental Kegulatlon (DERI forbidding It from dumping effluent
Into the lake.
While the case Is waiting for a final decision
from DER. expected sometime within the next
two months, precious time Is ticking away and
the city is moving closer to the expiration date of
Its permit — "the witching hour" as Faison called
It And if DER doesn't rule In the city's favor, the
city will fight the agency In court, which would
take another year, he said
But even though the case may be tied up In
court past the January 1987 cutoff date. DER has
not been willing to grant an extension on the

permit. Faison said
The danger, Faison said. Is lhat It would take a
year for the matter to be settled In court and at
least another year to design either Improvements
to the existing plant or a landspreading system
Either way the city would be beyond Ihe January
1987 deadline, which would probably r r s u l t In
the moratorium or fines Faison M id he did not
know how much the fines could be.
It would then be another year before construc­
tion could begin on either system
"I Just wanted to share those sleepless nights
See SEWAGE, page 3A

T o lls
P a y

W o n 't
F o r

E x p re s s w a y
S e m in o le M a y N e e d H e lp Fro m S tate ,
O r la n d o - O r a n g e E x p r e s s w a y A u th o rity
By Doans Estes
H erald S ta ff W rite r
The traditional method of financing
expressways — tolls — will not work
In Seminole County and money from
other sources will huvr to lie found If a
planned expressway Is to tie built
here.
That's what Lurry Sellers, executive
director of the county's expressway
authority, says he'll tell authority

L a r r y S e lle r s
. . . s a y s t o lls
w ould brin g In
o n ly 00 per
c e n t o f th e
necessary
funds

m e m b e rs a n d Ihe p u b lic u n M a y 3 0 .

PDaH Sr

Paa«r

Quarter Horse Twins Gallop Into Headlines
By Jane C asselb erry
H erald S ta ff W r ite r
Four day old rare twin [oals born at
Wondrrwood Farms In Sanlord are
making national news by touting thr
odds us only the fourth set of
surviving twins In the United Stairs
The healthy quarter horse twins
were born at 3 20 a in Sunday — a
coll which weighed 55 pounds and a
filly which weighed 35 pounds The
avernge birth weight Is 05 pounds
Only one In 7lX).(XX) equine births
are twins, according to Wondrrwood
Farm owner Marsha E Ensor And 75

colt or twins." Mrs Ensor said, "but I
wasn't sure until I walked In the stall
and found the colt standing on his
feet and the filly. Ihe weaker of the
two. still in thr afterbirth."
S h r su I d W i n t e r S p r i n g s
veterin aria n Pete H aberley was
amazed that the young horses were
alive. Usually twins are t&gt;orn with
some imperfection, but Ihe Won­
d rrw ood w on ders' blood count,
hearts and lungs are all normal.
Perhaps that Indur to their lineage.

percent o f all twins are either
stillborn or premature, she said Only
25 percent are live births and 18
perrent die within three hours of
birth
Twins are such a rarity that thr
WonderwtMKl pair were featured this
morning on nillonal network news
shows
Mrs Ensor said the mare, named
Cozy Charisma, was due for delivery
on April 23. so she had brrn up every
night checking on her.
"She was so large we knew she was
currying either un extremely large

See HORSES, page 3A

Code Enforcement Board: 'One M ore Time'
T h e S e m in o le C ou nty C ode E n­
forcement! Board Is scheduled to try
again Thursday to pass judgment on a
case Involving a Sanford man accused of
violating a county zoning ordinance by
operating a produce distribution centrr
In an agricultural zone.
The hearing Is set for 2 p m. In thr
County Services Building
The case has dragged on lor six
months not only because of attorney
requests for more time but also because
of the fuilure of the board to have a

Who'll Bo Opsn,
Who Won't On
Mom orlal Day
All Seminole County, state
and federal offices will be
closed Monday In observance
of Memorial Day as will the
city halls In all seven of the
county's municipalities.
Also closed w ill be the
public schools and school
board office, banks, and post
offices.
There will be no garbage
collection In Sanford and
Altamonte Springs Monday.
In Sanford. Monday's pickup
will be made on Tuesday and
Tuesday on Wednesday and
In Altamonte Springs. Mon­
day's pickup will be made on
Thursday

quorum o f Its seven members
And the hearing may be delayed
further If any one of the board members.
Sara Jacobson, chairman. Margaret
C rozlrr-W lm berly. Hugh Hurling or
Michael Hatluway fall to show up
Thursday. At the hoard's April 25
meeting. Miss Jacobson said she and
these other three members are the only
ones who can vote In this mutter because
they heard the original testimony In the
ruse.
Thr ruse Involves Lyle Burk, a Sanford

Sanford Considers FPC Franchise
The Sanford City Commission has put on
hold a request from Florida Rower Corp to
grant the company a franchise to serve future
areas that may be annrxed Into Ihe southern
end of the city.
Fred Stafford, manager of governmental
sales for FPC. said the company would serve
people In lhat region even without the
franchise since ihe southwest edge of the city
falls Into Its Service area. But he said the
agreement was needed so the company could
legally collect a 6 percent service fee It
rharges residential and commercial custom­
ers. which would be turned over lo the city.
Industrial areas are exempt.
The franchise Is also needed. Stafford said,
the southwestern section will remain an
FPC service area. If Ihe franchise Is not
awarded, customers there would be confused
as to which company serves them. FPC or
Florida Power and Light, which serves most
of Sanford.
mi

The two companies have an agreement

&gt;•» •w w- -.a o •o z#

businessman, who Is accused of operat­
ing a produce distribution center In an
agriculture zone near the Port of Sanford
in violation of county zoning law.
Commercial operations are not allowed
In agrtculturallyzoncd areas. Burk Is
represented by uttorney William LefTler
At the board's April inerting Lefller
said he had not received official notice of
the meeting and that Burke has leased
sj&gt;arr at the Florida Farmer's Market In
Sanford and planned to m ove his
See CODE, page 3 A

Sellers said the extra funding will
have to come from cither Increased
g a so lin e taxes, sta le or federal
authorities, or the Orlando-Orange
Expresswny Authority.
The "Information session" with Ihe
public Is scheduled for 2 p m at the
County Services Building on First
S treet and M e lto n v lllc A v e n u e ,
followed at 5 by a meeting of the
S e m in o le C o u n ty E x p r e s s w a y
Authority The authority Is composed
of ull five members of the county
commission plus representatives from
Sanford — David Farr— and Alta­
monte Springs — Lee Constantine
Farr Is chairman of the authority.
How construction of the expressway
Is to be funded must be decided before
the county authority can order con
sultanls to proceed with determining
an exact route for the r«uid and before
environmental Impact and feasibility
studies cun be undertaken at a cost of
$500.000 to $700,000. Sellers said Ihe
money for these studies could come
from bonds which would be Issued by
the authority ufter a method of
funding Is determined
A $50,000 study of four possible
a l i g n m e n t s fo r th e p r o p o s e d
expressway, all of them beginning at
the end of thr planned OrlandoOrange expressway extension near
Dean Road In southeast Seminole,
says that revenues from tolls of 6 25
cents per mile will not lx- adequate to
pay for a 25-year bond Issue at 10
percent Interest, plus pay annual
maintenance costs.
The study was completed over an
18 month period by consultants Howard Needles Tammen A Bergcndolf of
Orlando.
Still. Sellers Insists there "Is a need
for theexpresswuy."

dating back lo 1958 designating winch parts
of Seminole County are served by which
company. Lake Mary and the western side of
ihr county Is served by FPC and Ihe eastern
side Is served by FPAL. The franchise would
maintain Ihe Integrity of FPC's service area.
Stafford said.
II the cliy doesn't grant ihe franchise.
Stafford said FPC may have to lake the city to
court lo ensure Us rights lo serve customers
in lls designated area
City Manager Frank Faison said there
would be few er problems granting the
franchise than denying It. Including a
lawsuit. But Commissioner David Fair said
much of Ihe southwest edge Ihe city Is an
Industrial district, from which FPC cannot
collect the 6 perrent fee. The commission
agreed lo let City Attorney Bill Colbert
examine the proposed franchise before mak­
ing a decision.
Commissioners gave no Indication when
they might take up the matter again
— R ick Branson

Hr sald&gt; the tolls received would
pruvlde enough revenue for about HO
percent of thr financing Thr state
and the Orlando-Orange Expressway
Authority might be uskrd to kick In
Ihe remaining 20 perrent. Sellers
said.
Sellers said the slate has an Interest
In the expressway, pointing out that
such a highway In Semlnolr would
rrlleve traffic-clogged stale roads He
a ls o rea so n s that the O rlan d o
au thority m ight help because a
Semlnolr expressway connected to Its
Orlando counterpart would Increase
rldrrshlp for the Orlando expressway
and thus earn It more money.
Thr study says alternate routes
belngconsldrrrd are across Lake
Jesup from the Orange Seminole
county line to Interstate 4. across
Lake Jesup via a different route to
Interstate 4. across Lake Jesus from
the county line to County Road 435
|Alr|M&gt;rt Boulevard), and across Luke
Jesup from the county line to 14 with
a county Road 425 leg
The consultants said the m o s t
ex|&gt;enslve of thr alternative routes,
and what appeared to be most favored
by the expressway authority at Its Iasi
meeting. Is Alternative D. across Luke
Jesup from the county line to 14 with
a CR 425 leg The consultants said
this route would run 16 miles and cost
$177.8 million for four lane drvrlop
ment and $129.3 million for two
lanes.
The D route would cost $550,000
annually for operation and $320,000 a
year for maintenance In the seventh
Sec TOLLS, page 3 A

TODAY
Action Reports.........................5A
B rid g e ........................................0B
C a le n d a r...................................5A
Classifieds..............................4.5B
Com ics....................................... 6B
Dear A b by................................ IB

Deaths...................................... 2A

E d ito ria l....................................4A
F lo rid a .......................................3A
Hospital..................................... 3A
People........................................ IB
Sports.................................... 6 8A
Television..................................IB
W eather.....................................3A

Quick, Ho's Lost A Lot Of ... Kotchupfl
What Sanlord rescue workers
thought was the bloody scene of a
violent crime turned out to be the
site of a "ketchup assault."
When rescue workers arrived at
Allen Mitchell s home. 717 Hicko­
ry Avc.. Sanford. Saturday nlghl
ihey found him lying on Ihe floor
In a pool of what appeared to be
blood. But as they examined him
they discovered that ihe red sub­
stance was sticky and smelled

"fu n n y."
Mitchell. 69. told police that
someone cracked him on Ihe head
with a ketchup bollle as he enterrd
his house at about 10 p.m. The
allacker lied his hands, feel and
throat with stockings and look his
wallet He managed to get free and
wandered out the door, yelling for
help.
A neighbor called the Are de­
partment .
+

?&gt;■ f /&gt;•# *

- »

�2A— Evening M»r»l&lt;J, Sanford, FI.

Wpdn*iddy, M ay 22, 111!

It's Day-To-Day Battle
For Remaining Septuplets

Fires Burning But Not Spreading
NAPLES. Fla IUPI) - Wildflrrs burned In
18 Florida bounties unlay but a break In the
w raihrr helped krefi them from spreading,
Including a 5.400-acre blare three mllea
smith of famed Alligator Alley In south
Florida.
More than 100 fires since last Thursday
have destroyed alxail 200 homes, killed two
firefighters and c harred more than 170.000
acres of Florida forest and brush.

areas.’ she said.
One of the main blares was near Alligator
Alley, the main east-west highway through
the Everglades from Fort Lauderdale to
Naples. The highway was closed for more
t ban five hours Tuesday.
Other trouble areas Included two fires in
V'olusla County, where firefighters were
using helicopters to flood hot spots, and
blazes In Ocala. Apalachicola. St. Marks and
Telegraph Swamp In eastern Charlotte
County.
"W e've made a lot of progress against
those fires." Tolle said

"W c got some ruin over much of the state
yesterday and that enabled us lo hold all of
th e m a jo r fir e s .” F o re s try D ivis io n
spokeswoman Pal Tolle said unlay. "It's
t»een a quiet morning
"T h e worst of the fires are not contained
yet — that means we haven't completed a
fire line around Ihrm tlui they arc holding
They haven't spread anywhere."

Tolle said fires at Palm Coast, which
destroyed 131 homes and damaged 4(XJ
others, and Port Charlotte, where 25 homes
were threatened Tuesday, had been con­
tained
The National Forest Service said Ocala
National Forest, closed since Sunday
because of fires, was reopened at 6 a m
today, although fires still were burning

Tolle said fires still burning In 18 counties
posed no Immediate Ihreal to populated
areas
"T h ey're mostly In swampland — Isolated

Gov. Bob Giaham said a damage estimate
was premature hut the fires tn north
Florida, where the damage was worst,
seemed to be dying down.
"it appears as If Ihe most serious situation
now has moved from the northeast part of
the state to the southwest part," Graham
said. "T h e rains that we have had. Ihe dying
down of the winds, have substantially
helped Ihe areas that were most threatened
over the weekend."
Agriculture Commissioner Doyle Conner
told Graham and the Cabinet Tuesday it
was a "m iracle” no civilians were killed In
ihe fires.
"W e were just most fortunate to come
through this as well as we did," said
Conner, whose department Includes the
Division o f Forestry.
"Florida has never experienced before In
the history o f our slate the severe fire
situation we had on Friday," hr said "1
don't think we evrr hud conditions as dry as
they were at the end of last week "

ORANGE. Calif. |UPI| - Six
premature babies born to a
woman taking fertility drugs
are fighting a day-to-day bat­
tle for life and have developed
lung problems but doctors
said they have a 50-50 chance
o f survival;
T h e six s u r v iv in g se p ­
tuplets. born Tuesday to Patti
Frustacl. a 30-year-old school
trarher from Riverside. Calif.,
were In critical but stable
condition today and were be­
ing aided by rrsplrators. al­
though physicians said all
ruuld breathe on their own
They arc known as Baby A,
B. C. D. E and F
" 'T h e y h a v e b e e n r e ­
markably stable over Ihe past
2 4 h o u r s . ” D r. C a r r ie
Worcester, director of Ihe
neonatal unit, said on ABC s
"Good Morning, America "

There are some new pro­
blems developing That Is to
be expected. The dad Is aware
of those problems."
She said one problem is
e x p e c te d because o f the
babies' Immature lungs and
she said they arc "seeing
some of those complications
now ." There also have been
problems with blocxl pressure,
she said.
All weighing less than 2
pounds, the babies were de­
livered In about 3 minutes by
Caesarean section A seventh
infant was s tillb o rn and
dociors satd It apparently died
In the womb a few days
earlier from thr effects of
overcrowding.
T h e o d d s a g a in s t th e
normul coneption o f se p ­
tuplets are 500 trillion to one.
thr hospital said.

AREA DEATHS
FRED AUGUSTIN
Mr. Fred Augustin. 78, of 521
W. Fourth St., Chuluota, died
Tuesday at Winter I'urk Memo­
rial Hospital. Born .Inly 4. 1906
In G erm u n y , he m oved lo
C hu luota from B rooklyn in
1073. He was a painter and a
Catholic.
Survivors Include Ills wile.
Agnes; right sons. Fred A .
O rlando, Henry La u n zln grr.
Robert Laiinzlnger and Karl
Laumtlngrr. all of New York.
P a u l L a u n s l n g r r . D e n n is
Launzlnger, Kenneth LaunzInger. John Launzlnger. all of
New Jersey; lltrre daughters.
G ertru d e O rcskuvlch, Helen
Hoyt, troth of Sanford, and Joyce
Graham. New York
B ald win -Fit Irctiltd Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is In
charge of arrangements
W A L L A C E P .U A K E R
Mr Wallace Paul Baker, HI. ul
stale Road 4tl and ( ’enter Strret.
Sanford, died Friday at tils
residence. Born In June 17.
1903 In Jennings, la- moved to
Sanford lo MMt* lie was a
retired (arm lolsirer and a Hap
lint.
Survivors Include three slslers.
Fannie Lawrence, Beatrice Kll/y
and Cresaa Littles, all of Sanford
Wllsou-EIc Itrlla rger Mortuary.
Sanford. Is in charge o f ar­
rangements.
ANDREW BARTO SH BR.
M r, A n d re w B a rto s h H r , H 5 . of

5 0 8 H e lm W a v W e s t .
Casselberry, riled Monday at Ids
huine Born Sept 17. 1899 In
H u n g a r y , h e in n v e i l t o
Cassellterry from llayvillr. N .l .
Ibis year. He was a retired
electrician and a Protestant lie
was an Army veteran id World
War I
He Is survived by a sun,
Andrew Jr.. Nt-w Orleans: two
grandchildren and two great­
grandchildren.
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake
Mary, Is In charge of arrange
incuts
B ERTH A A. BURGESS
Mis llrtiho A Burgess, 72. ol
14 2 H p t l n g w o o d C i r c l e .
l.tmgwiMid, died Monday South
Seminole (Tim nm iilly Hospital
Horn In ProvliUTtuwn. Muss.,
nhc moved tn l.ongwood from
there In IttMl. She was a rcilrcd
trial) Ixmk purchasing agent
Survivors include two daugh­
te rs , K a tlile r ti D lc k e ltn a it,
l . o n g w o o d , a n d llu r h a t a
Harkins, both IIvaunts. Mass, six
g r u t id e h lld c n : l i v e g r e a tgrandchildren
Beacon Cremation Service,
Orlando, Is In charge nl ar­
rangements
C A R L B .C H APM A N
Mr. Curl It, Chapman, ltd. nl
1035 Country Club Boulevard,
Titusville, tiled Monday at Jess
P a rrish M rm oria l H osp ital.
TilMMVlIle. Horn Dec 20. HHH
In Wilkinson County. Gu., hr
moved to Titusville In 1045 He
wus a retired alter 17 yeurs an a
loborrr with thr City of Titusville
Ilea ul tflcat Ion Dipanm enl Hr
bus iM-en a Druerm of Greatrr
B eth leh em Baptist C hu rch.
Titusville,since l ‘.»75
Survivors Include his wife.
Cora la-e Chapman. Titusville;

three daughters. Ruths M (.lark.
VldiillH, Ga,, Elizabeth Myers.
Brunswick. Gu.. and Martha.
Troy, Ala , a son. Ernest, Alamo,
Gu : Iwo sisters, Ola Mae Smith.
Miami, and Laura Wiley. Macon.
Ga.: a brother, tfir Rev Sammlr.
Pun la Gordii; 10 grandchildren
and four great-grandchildren
Wllson-Elchelbergcr Mortuary
is in charge of arrangements
O R A N V 1LLE C . CRAMER
Mr. Granville C Cramer, 93.
Adams Street, Maitland, died
Monday ul the Life Cure Center.
Altamonte Springs Born Aug
21, IH9I in Newburgh. N.Y., he
moved to Mall land Irorn New
Jersey In 1973 He was u retired
auditor and was a Presbyterian.
Survivors Include a son. Rob­
ert. M aitland: three g ra n d ­
children
G arden C h apel Home for
Funerals, Orlando. Is In charge
ol arrangements
LIZ ZIE LEE DIXON
Mrs Lizzie Lee Dixon, 66, ol
2430 Granby St . Sanford, died
Tuesday at Florida Hospital,
Orlando Born May Id 1919 In
Metcalf. Ga,. she moved to San­
ford from Mnnllrrlln. 16 years
ago. She was a homemaker and
a member of Morning Glory
Missionary Baptist Church
Survivors Include three vats,
Jlmrnlc and Berry. Ixiih of Sanford, anti George ul Mont Ice tlo;
(our daughters. Geneva, Msttle
and Susie, alt of Hanford, and
('lirsllitr, Hlvlriu Beach: Iwo
slslers. Maggie Smith, Detroit,
and (tussle Sexton. Tampa. 2H
g r a n d e hi I d e n : 15 g r e a t grandchildren
Wilson Klclirlberger Mortuary.
Sanford. Is In charge of urrangenirnls
BLANCHE W. EDWARDS
M rs
B la n c h e W e s s o n
Edwards. 78. of 104 K 23rd St..
Sanford, riled Tuesday at Central
Florida Regional Hospital Born
In Orlando, she moved to Kanlord Irani Winter Garden In
1979 She was a homeuiakrr
•titid a member ol the Plnecresl
Baptist Church
S u r v iv o r s are a b ro th e r,
Roland A Wesson. Grunbury,
lexas. a sister. Dorothy Mooty.
Orlando: two grandchildren;
tbm- grrut-grandchildren
Hrlsson Funeral Horne. Sunlord. Is In charge of arrange­
ments.
RO O SEVELT FUDGE
Mr, Roosevelt Fudge. HI. of 5M
Taylor St.. Oviedo, died Satur­
day ill Criitraj Flmlda Regional
Hospital Born Feb. 5. 1904
Colquitt, Gu., he moved to Saillord In 1943 and hreatnr a
resident of Oviedo In 1952 Hr
wax rr'ired Irotn Wheeler Fertll
1/erCorp and was a Protestant
Survivor* Include his wile,
Marie; four sons. Kooxrveli Jr.,
U S Army. Hawaii, Rudolph.
H u iio n i, P a . P r e s t o n ,
lialnbrldge. Ga , and Robert ol
Oviedo; lour daughters. Carrie
House. Colquitt, Rose McFurltn
and L iz z ie Fudge, both o f
Irvlnton. N.J., and Georgluna
Yarns. Oviedo; 19 grandchildren
a n d n u m ero u s g re a tgrandchildren and great-great­
grandchildren.
Wilson Elchclbcrger Mortuary,

STOCKS
Thaaa quwfaliani
to member* of
Uto kononoi Aim . i#fionol Swailwi Dealer t
0 *9

r a s o M n lO m « S » Z n S&lt;

9*hot

Atlantic Ban*
American Pienaar SAL
Barnett Bank

AU
!)*• 14
Hi m
ut*

nwUMCmw
4 Liyi

It's

nn

HUNT MONUMCNT CO.
OltfUY YAKO
H«ry. 17-42 - F#m PrtIi
Ph. IJ k W I
0 «na Hunt, Own«r
PrwazB, MarWa 0 OtmHe

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21
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mid morning M ir Intar dealer mortalI
■hanpe threupfiouf 9*to Jar rthot an net
markdown

Isf
'la v lngt
MCA
M vg tw iU ffM r

Murr ton t
NCR Carp

II'*
ii
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Bank
Sun Bank*

OAKLAWN
M rti

44* At Mstfurt M .
b u s U C90091 /MOi 1224241

laalerd L*B* Mtn

J'/ciH-rrs

Legal Notice

DEBORAH LYNN
R A S T O V 8K Y
Miss DrUirab Lynn Kastovsky.
13. of 1223 Las &lt;'ruses Drive.
Winter Springs, died Sunday In
Houston Born Feb 7. 1972 In
Akron. Ohio, she m oved lo
Winter Springs from ('anion.
Ohio. In 1979 Site was a student
and a Protestant.
Survivors include her mother
and stepfather, Llndu and Rod
Hosnicr. Winter Springs, father,
David Louts Kunlovsky. Winter
Springs, half-brother. Stephen
Louts. Winter Springs; halfsisters. Lori Jane Brenner, Lisa,
tmlh of Union Tow n, Ohio;
stepbrother. Rod Hosmer, De­
ltona. strpsistrrs. Gin.i Hosmer
and Lucille Husmer. both of
Deltona; grandparents. David
and Matv Breed Akron, and Roy
and Dorothy Hosmer. Hostile,
NV
Bald w in-Fair eh lid Funeral
Home, Guide nrot I, Is In charge ol
arrungrmenls.

E i v n i i t K llc n ilc l
IU S P S M l 1MI

njMRAL HOMCiCf MCTCRY
Dm butts*: AS »**#**) 4 b W

Bator I I . of SB a* and Canlar Siraal, Eati

Par Larry Sherwood officiating Frwndt
Sanford, Is In charge of ur- Funeral Notices
Sanlord who dtad Friday will b* h*ld al I
may pay thoir respect* al »h# church from
rungrmcnls.
It H a m to toryle# tlm* Thurtday Sanford p m Saturday al Wilton E'chalbargar t Cha
M*tonic lodge *1 Mill conduct graveside p*&lt; 1110 Pm* Ay*. Sanford, with th* Ray
OTIB JONES
Matonic laryicot *1 E yargreen C#m*t*ry In O W William* officiating Burial lo follow In
EDW ARDS. B LAN CH E w
Mr Otis .Jones. 7fi. of 922 W
R »tti»w n C»m*1*ry Calling hour* lor trtond*
San lord Arrangements by Britton Funoral
-funml
w
»
X
«
lor
Mr*
B
lanch#
w
11th St.. Sanford, tiled Sunday
will b* Irom 1 1 p m Friday al th* chapot
Edward* rt. ot 10* E )»rd St. Sanford. *&gt;ho Mom* a Guardian Chaoai
Wilton E ich*lb*rg*r Mortuary In charge
ul Ills residence. Born August 2.
dad Tuasday *111b* al II a m Friday *t th* FUDGE. BOOtEVILT
—Funeral tarylcat for fioot«»*it Fudge II. CHAP M AN . CARL B
1908 la Miami, hr moved to grave*id* in Gmt.a C*m«t*rr with m* B«,
Funaral tarylcat for Carl B Chapman, a*
Sherwood officiating Fnand* moy call of II Taylor St. Oviado who d-*d Saturday
Sanford tn 1901. He was u Lorry
will b* at It a m Saturday at th* Wilton of I01S Country Club Bird . Tltusyllt*. who
it Th* funeral homo Thunday I I pm
Monday, will b* haid *1 a p m Saturday
retired loader with Thom as
Arrangamantk by Britton Funaral Mom* a Exhatborgor s Chapol, IMO Pino Ay* San divd
ford, with Th* May OS Wlll.om* officiating at th# Graatar Bathlaham Baptltt Church, poi
Guardian Ch»p*l
Moving and Storage Co. and was
Burial To follow In Rasilawn Camolory D um m ltt Ava Tilu ty lll# with pattor
LONO. H A R O L D E
a (J.S. Army veteran and a
Funaral tarylcat lor Mr H*rotd£ Buddy Calling hour* lor triandt will b* from 1i p m Dtraiht Groom* oftlating Burial to follow in
Protestant
Long Jr. *0 ol Otcool* Mood Geneva rrho Friday at m* chap*! Wilson Eichoiborgor Davit Memorial C*m*iary Calling hour* lex
triandt will b# h*ld from I t p m Friday at
d rd Monday mill b* •' II * m Thursday at Mortuary it Inch*rg*
He Is survived by a devoted
in# Chap#I Wilton Elchalbargay Mortuary in
BAK Ctl W ALLA C E PAUL
th*
Firtl
Baptisl
C
hurch
ol
G*n*y*
w
ith
T
h
*
Charlie Lue Holmes, Sanford,
Funaral tarylcat tor Mr Waitaca Paul (harg*
and her two daughters. Katlr
Mae Taylor. Rochester, N.Y . and
Daisy Mae Holmes. Belle Glade.
Wllson-Elchelbergcr Mortuary.
ten (all y t t attorney ar# **i
r*nu* 0 ' luriadlction of lha
in t m i c ir c u it c o u m t
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
Sanford, Is tri charge of ar­
forth balow
court
FOR S E M IN O LE C O U N TY ,
OF TH E E IG H T E E N T H
rangements
FLO R ID A
A LL CLAIM S AND O B JE C
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
All Interested p*rtont ar*
TlONS N O T SO F IL E D W ILL
S EM IN O LE C O U N TV ,
required ta Id# with Ihit court
P R O B A TE DIVISIO N
IG N A T IA E. K U L B A K A
BE F O R E V E R B AR R ED
Fit* Numbar H Mt CP
FLO R ID A
W ITH IN T H R E E M O N TH S OF
Mrs. Ignutlu E. Kulbaku. 75. of IN RE i E S T A T E OF
Publication of fhit None* hat
TH E FIR S T P U B L IC A TIO N OF
C IV IL A C TIO N NO kS D O M E
begun on May n . INS
1701 Stanley St.. Long wood, JA M E S A M c O A N IE L . JR
THIS N O TIC E
It) all claim*
FEDERAL NATIONAL
Partonal Raprttantallv*
agamtl th* atlal# and IJ ) any
D*&lt;aatad
M O R T G A G E A S S O C IA TIO N ,
died Tuesday at Florida Hospi­
ANN M CNAIR BUSH N ELL
N O TIC E OF
abjection by an In te rfile d
ate
tal. Orlando Horn Nov 28. 1909
•Of Swoulwatar Bird So
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
person lo whom this nolle* wet
Plaintiff.
In New York City, she moved to
Long wood F I IJTTO
mailed that challenge* th* valid
TO A L L PERSONS H AV IN G
vk
Attorney
lor
C
L
A
I
M
S
O
R
D
E
M
A
N
D
S
dy ol lh# will lh# qualification*
J
N
E
A
L
WISE
ttu*
a
t*1.
lumgwood Irnm there In 1964.
Partonal Hapratantatiy*
ol lh» partonal represent*!.v*
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E
Defendant
She was a home maker and a E S T A T E A N D A LL O TH E R
S M E IL A G W E N L E W IS
vrnu* or jurisdiction of lh*
N O TIC E O F A C TIO N
M ILLA R
ttu-mint ol St. Mary Magdalen P ER SO N S I N T E R E S T E D IN
tour I
TO DORIS A M c D E V IT T and
UX&gt;
Monlgomory
Rd
ALL CLAIM S A N D O B JE C
W ILLIA M F M c D E V ITT
C atholic Church. A ltu m on lr TH E E S T A T E
Long wood. Florida 117JS
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
TlONS NOT SO F I L E D W ILL
R E S ID E N C E UNKNOW N
Springs.
Talapnona IX U lla J l*U
N O T I F I E D m a t th# ad
BE FO R E V E R B A R R E D
YO U A R F N O T IF IE D lhal an
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e h e r ministration of th* atlat# ol
Pubiitn M ayZJ ja i n i
action lo loraclota a morlgag*
Publication ol Ihit Nol&gt;c* hat
D E F i j*
begun on May IS IMS
on lha following property in
husband, Edward; sister. Doris JA M E S A M cO A N IE L. JR
deceased
F ll# N u m b a r
Personal Uepraaenlatiy*
S E M IN O LE County. Florida
I Irtimmond, l.ongwood,
FICTITIOUSNAMF
It 10* CP. It pandmg In I ha
Nancy H Sararet*
Lot Ilk C R AN E S ROOST
Nolle* Ik haraby giran that I
G ra tn k o w -G alties F u n eral C irc u it Court lor Samlnolo
•MAutlin Court
VILLAS. * tubdivikien. accord
am engaged In buvnatt al P 0
Winter Spring* FL Jjroa
Ing to Iho plot Th#,#ot at r*
Home, l.ongwood. Is tn charge of C o u n ty , F lo r id * . P ro b a ta
Bot **I Sanlord Sammol* corded
Attorney for
D'vitlon, in# addratt ol which li
in
Plot
Book
&gt;J.
page*
It
arrangements
County Florida Jllll under th# through 77. of th* Public R*
Partonal R*pr*t*ntaiiTa
Sam mol* County Courthouto.
tlcMiou* nam* of TAILOR CUT c o rd t ol Samlnolo County
Sarah Richardson
Sanford
Florida
Th*
par
tonal
H A R O LD S . "B U D D Y "
LAWN
MAINT
.
and
lhal
I
» J Third Sheet Norm
raprataniatly* ol iho attalo It
F lor Ida
inland
to
regime
told
nam
*
LONO JR.
St Petersburg FLJJJQ I
baan bled agamtt you and J
L i n d a m c o a n i e l . whoto
with tha Clark at th* Ciftuil hat
addroaa
II
&gt;
0
0
0
Colory
Ayonuo.
Neal
Wit*
and
you
aro
required
Talapnona (111) dll a m
Mr. Harold K. Buddy lamg Jr.. tantora. Plariaa HIM Th* Court, kominwla County. Florida to tare* a cap* at yeur written
Publish May it. n . its*
In accordance with in* pro
40. Osceola Road, Geneva, diet! nam * and a d d r a tt at th*
O E F pa
da Ian tat II any to It on
nuonk ot tha Ficlitwut Nam*
HAR LES R GEORGE
III.
Monday al the Orlando Regional par tonal raprataniatly* t at
Slatut** To wll Section Ml DO CSwann
tor nay #r* tat forth balow
and Haddock. P A
Medical Center uftrr he was In a
FloridaStalulOk
1011
All portont haying clalma or
P la m l iH 't attorney
whota
i Michaai Walter
trallb1accident. Born In Sanford damondt agalnti th* atlal* ar*
mailing addratt it US Watl
Publish
M
ay
I,
IVJJ
It
INS
in t m c c i r c u i t c o u r t
Central Boulevard Suita 1100
Nov. 29, 1944. he moved to re q u ire d W I T H I N T H R E E
OEF al
m o n th s fr o m
th e
d a te
FOR SEM INO LE C O U N TY .
P O Bov aao Orlando. Florida
Geneva from Orlando In 1980
o f th e f ir s t p u b l ic a t io n
FLO R ID A
IJSOJ 0 **0 on or before tha Jath
Hr was a clerk lor Ihe Seatxuird OF THIS N O TIC E lo III* with
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO UR T
PROBATE DIVISION
day ol Jun# IMS and III* In#
O F T H E E IG H T E E N
File Number I t TU CP
original with tn* Clark of thu
Railroad for 17 years and a m* Clark ol in* obey* court o
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
wtillan tlalamanl of any claim
Court either baror a tatylca on
IN RE E S TA TE OF
member of ihe First Baptist or
dam and tn#y m ay h a ,a Each
IN AND FOR
Plamlift t tlhirne, or Ifnmtdi
ROBFR TA M ILTO N F U L L E R
Church of Geneva the Hanford ■la m m ult ba In writing and
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY ,
aloly Iheraattor other wit* *
Dec eared
FLO
R
IO
A
mutl
mdicai*
in*
b
a
m
lor
tn#
default
wilt
ba
entered
agamtl
NOTICE OF
Masonic Lodge 02. and tile
C IV IL AC TIO N
claim, in* nam* and addratt ol
you lor the ralwl item ended In
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
Brolhrtliood of Railroad Clerks
CASE NO CI *4 M U CA n P
in# cradilor or hit aganl or
Iho Complaint or Petition
TO ALL FERSONS H AV IN G
lie was scout muster of Boy a tto rn e y and lha am ount
TH E F IR S T F A formerly
W ITN ES S my hand and teal
c l a i m s
or
d e m a n d s
F IR S T F E D E R A L SAVINGS
ol Ihit Court on the 10th day ol
a g a i n s t
T he ABOVE
Scout Troop 837. Geneva, anil a t lai mad It in* claim It not y tl
AN D LO AN ASSOCIATION OF
duo. Iho dal* aiian II w ill
May IMS
E S T A T E AND A LL o t h e r
Vietnam War Air Force vrirran
O R LA N D O a corporation
Iwt oma d.w vha I b* t'olod II
IS E A LI
PERSONS IN T E R E S T E D IN
Survivors Include his wife. Ilia claim It conllnganl or unit
Plaintiff.
O A V ID IS l H R IEN
THE e s t a t e
vt
guidoiad
iho
n*iuro
ot
lha
C
L
E
R
K
OF
TH
E
C
O
U
R
T
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
Luts; two sons. Harold K 111 and
e a r l A TE N N E N T a k a
uncorlamlr thail b* stated II
Hr t'C h a ry l R Franalm
N O T IF I E 0 th a t lh * ad
Daniel I. both of Geneva; daugli
C A H L T E N N E N T and LY N D A
in* claim it tacurod. th* tacurl
Oopuly C tart
ministration ol the **t*i* ol
ter, April C Long. Geneva;
M NE W a 'k 'a LY N D A
ly lh all ba daacrlbad Th*
Publith M * , H It Jun# S. IJ
R O B ER TA M i LTO N F U L L E R
TE
N
N
f
N
T
hit
wit*
*1
*
1
claimant
than
deliver
tuftlciant
IMS
d a c a a ta d
F ile N u m b a r
patcnls Mr and Mrs Harold E
Defendant*
copiat ol in# claim to mo dork
tS TU CP it pending in tha
OEF i »
laing Sr . Geneva: Iwo sisters. to pnabla in# Clark to mall ono
N O TIC E OF SALE
C ircuit Court lor Samlnola
M is
B etty A nn H a m ilto n .
Nolle* It haraby given lhal
copy 'o *#&lt;n partonal rape*
C ounty
F lo rid a
P ro b a ta
tonlally#
purtuant lo lha Final Judgment
Divition Ihe address ol which It
Jacksonville. Mrs Shirley J.
ot
Forte
lokurt
end
te
a
enter
ad
All par tori* interested In tn*
Seminole County Courthouse.
D relfuerst. Sanford; brother atlal* to whom t copy of Ihit
N O TIC E OF S H E R IF F 'S SALE
m the ceut# ponding In tha
Sanlord. Florid* m i l
Th*
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
Charles M Long. Kocklcdgr
C i r c u i t C o u r t In and lor
Notice ol Admmlitrolion hat
partonal r*pr*t*nt*liv* ol th*
lhal by virtu* ot that certain
Sammol*
County
Florida
bamg
baan
m
alla
d
ar*
required
a tla l# It M A R C T H O M A S
llrlv|citi G uardian Funeral
Writ at Elocution ittuod out ol
C i v i l
N u m b a r Cl
it h in
th r ee
m o n th s
D EW B ER R Y who** addratt it
Home Is In charge o( arrange­ w
and under the teal ot th# Circuit
IC laai CA 0* P in# under tigned
FR O M TH E D A TE OF THE
•
II E Highland Drive. Alla
C
o
u
rt
ol
Somlnelo
County.
ments
Clark will tall lha property
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
mOnl« Springs Florid* J1J0I

PiaFtaa I n

forAll(Xtriulona

( L 'u l li i i s
n i i j j j s j 'j
S T iT Z T a
3 2 3 -1 2 0 4

Wednesday. M ay 22. l»BS

VO! 77, No 211
P u b lu h td Daily *"d Sunday. ate apt
Saturday by Th* li n l o id Herald.
Inc. ) M N Fianch * « « , , Sanford.
Fla . 11771.
lacand C la n Pstlag* Patd at la niard .
Florid* 11171
Mom* Daily t r y . Weak Si ll* M*nlb.
M i l l 1 M onth!. I l l 11: I M anila
t i t H i Y**r. I l l M S r M*U W i l l
t i l l : M*nlS. I t H , 1 M o n lb t.
t i l .Mr t Month*, t i l H i Y**r,
to* M
Phan* i m i in !*n.

THIS N O TIC E lo til* any ob
lacliont thay may hay* that
chanang* th* validHy ot Iho
decedent t will, iho gualillca
•ton* ol Iho per tonal copra
tentative or Iho vtnue or
Iur Itdl &lt;I ion ot the tour I
A LL C L A IM S D E M A N D S .
A N D O B JE C T IO N S NOT SO
F IL E D W ILL BE FO R E V E R
BARRED
Date ol Iho firtl publication ol
thtt Notice of Admmlttrotion
May TJ it*l
l i n d a M c Da n i e l
At Partonal R ape atomtally#
ot the E ti*i# ol
ja m e s a

m c o a n ie l

jr

Dacaatad
A T T O R N E Y FOR PERSONAL
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
TH O M A S C G R E E N E
El
QUIRE
P 0 Bo*tat
Sanlord F lorido 11TM
Telephone IJ01I I II B ill
Publ'th May I I t* if«L
O E F US
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
FOR I IM IN O L B CO U N TY ,
FLO R ID A
PRO BAT ■ DIVISION
Fit* Numbar U m CP
IN RE E S T A T E OF
F R A N C IS M A R TlN
B U 5H N E LL
Dacaatad
N O TIC E OF
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
Th# a d m m ltlra lion ol the
atlal* ol FR AN C IS M A R TIN
BUSHNELl
dacaatad Flla
Numbar IS m CP, Ik pandmg in
lh a C i r c u i t C o u r t lo r
S E M IN O L E County Florida
ProbaN Oivman th* addratt ol
which it Probetu Oieltton. Mm
XU P O Drawee C. Sanlord
Hondo 111' I Oata Th* nomot
end addratt#* *1 tn* per tonal
rtprotontotiy* and in* partonal
caprttantative * attorney ar*
t#t lor th balow
All intocottod par tent ar*
r*gu&gt;r*d to til* with Nut court.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N TH S
FR O M TH E D A TE OF TH E
F I R S T P U B L I C A T I O N OF
TH IS JtO TIC E
I I I oil d o o m
again*! th* atlat# and I I ) any
ob|*ctl*nt by an tiH trttla d
par tan to whom notice wot
maned Rial ch*o*ng*« th* valid
Uy at th* will, th* gu*i i he at wni
ot th# partonal rapratontaiiya

tilualad In Sammol* County
Florida deter &gt;bad al
Lol J ). W E IC I V A H IL L S
S E C TIO N ONE according lo
lh* plot iharaol at recorded In
Pial B od* X) Pag* ta Public
Rarordt ol Sommoi* County.
Florid*
*1 public tala to the highatt
bidder lor cath al II 00 A M on
•ha 11th day ot Juno INS. at Iho
Well Front Door of m* Sommoi*
County Courthouto In Sanford
Fiorido
Doled Ihit uth day ot May
INS
iS E A l l
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
Clark ol th# Circuit Court
By IkJC harylR Franklin
Oopuly Clark
Publish May I I » INS
O E F *1
L E G A L N O TIC E
IN V IT A T IO N T O R IO
FL O R ID A D E P A R TM E N T
OF LABOR AND
E M P L O Y M E N T I f C U R ITY
TA LLA H A S S E E . FLO R ID A
Pursuant to Chapter !» II*
l a w s OF FLO R ID A campatl
• &gt;* taawd butt will ba accepted
■n in * O t t ic a pt S u p p o rt
Service* Roam &gt;04 Clifton
Building leal i toeuiita Lantor
C irc le
W att Ta lla h a tta *
Florida U » 1 until it DO a m
Jun* I* INS tor approximately
IMS real rtniabl* t«uar* h a l ol
otfict tpac* in Iti* area at
Santor d F lot Ida boundtd
N o rth by 17 *1 C e n tra l
Florida too
South by Myrti* Sir**!
E a il by R ichmond Straat
Watt by Country Club Drive
Spec &gt;bc altont may ba pickad
up Irom M t Charyl AAaughwn
Managat Job Sarvica OttN*.
JOB South French A w n ut San
•ord Florida
Th* Florida Daparlmanl of
Lobar and Employ mart Sac ur ■
ly totaryat th* right to ro|*cl
any and *u b dt and to maka me
award daamad to b* m th* bat*
mtarokto&gt; m* Hat* al Florida
Tha F land* Daparlman! ot
Labor end Employment
Security
Doarwa Ihlvor.
F acihbot S*r v ita l Manager

Publish May a . Ik IMS
0 1 F 1*)

Florida upon a llnol fudgomenl
rendered In lh* *lt&gt;r*t*id court
on lh* *th day ot March. A 0
IMS m that certain cat* an
liliad Harnett Bank ot Canlrol
Florid* N A . Plomlilt.
v*
Manager* Attoclaiot Inc and
fhaodex* A H*M Oalandam
which aioravad Writ ot Eiacu
tian wot d*l.raced lo me ot
Shonlf ot Sammol* County
Florid* end I hoy* &gt;#v&lt;#d upon
lh* lol low ng daterbed properly
owned by fhaetdor* Hall, ta.d
p r o p a r l, bam g located In
Sammol* County Florida mor#
p a r t i c u la r ly d e scrib e d at
toilewt
On* Iklt Chavrotat Corvall#
w h i l e |n c a l a r , 1 0 r
IZULISaaaOS. tiormg tarn* al
C a m a li t T a w in g , w in la r
Spring* Florida
and th* undari.gnad at Stwrilt
ol Somlnelo County. Florid*
will at 11 00 A M on lh* )0*h
day ol May * O IMS otter lor
tai* and tall to m* highatl
bidder, tor cath tubtact to any
and all o iuting tain*, at lh*
Front l Wool) Door of the slop*
of th* Sammol* County Court
hout* in Sanlord Florid* the
at®.# date i .bed perianal pro

party

That t*&gt;d tai* it being mode
lo tan tty th* tar m i ol laid Writ
ol E vacation
John C Polk Shoe i ft
Sommoi*County. Florida
To b* advertised May I. Ik. ij,
JO with m* b*l* on May H . IMS
D E F a]

IN TH I C IB C U IT C O U R T
FO B SEM IN O LE C O U N TV.
FLO R ID A
P R O B ATE DIVISION
Faa NumberU r t CP
IN RE E S TA TE OF
R A Y M O N D S SAVARESE.
Dacaatad
N O TIC E OF
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
Th* administration el tha
l l l l l t Of R A Y M O N D B
SAVARESE
dacaatad, Fil*
Number BS i n CP. I* ponding Ml
Hi* Circud Court tar Sominow
C o u n t y . F lo r id a . P ro b a ta
Oiuiklan m* addratt ol which It
P O Drawer C. Sanlord FL
m i l Th* namat and addraaaaa
bt n # partonal ropretantati**
a n d th * p a r to n a l r t p r a

Th* nam* and addratt of lh#
partonal raprtianlallv* i *1
lor nay ar* tat forth below
All partont haying claim* ar
demand* agamtt th* at&gt;at# are
•aqwirad W IT H IN T H R E E
MONTHS FROM TH E D A TE
OF THE FIR ST P U B L IC A TIO N
OF THIS NO TICE lit fll* with
in# dark ol lh# above court o
written tlalamanl ot any claim
or demand they may hay* Each
claim m ull be m writing and
m uti mdttal* lh* batu tar th*
claim, th# n*m* and addratt ol
th* creditor or hi* agonl or
attorney and lh# a m o vh l
claimed It m# claim it not yet
du*. lh* data whan It w ill
become du* than b* tiatad II
th* claim It conlingent or unit
qui doled lh# nature ol th#
uncertainty shall be Haled It
th* claim It secured the tacurl
'y than b* described Tha
claimant shall deliver sufficient
copiat ol lh# claim ta th# clerk
*o enable lh* dork ta mail on#
copy ta each partonal repr*
tentative
An partont interested In th#
#*1*1* ta whom a copy ot Ihit
Notice ot Administration hat
baan m ailed at# raqulra d.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N TH S
FROM TH E D A TE O F TH E
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
THIS N O TIC E, ta til* any ab
lactions they may hove mat
challenge lh# validity at m#
decadent * will, lh* quanta*
•ion* al th# partonal rtpra
ta n la lly* . or the vonua or
luntdicltan ot lh# court
A L L CLAIM S . O E M A N O S .
A N D O B JE C TIO N S N O T SO
F IL E D W ILL BE F O R E V E R
barred

Data ot th* lu ti publication ol
this Notice ot Admmltlralion
May Zl. iM l
Mart Thornet Dewberry
At Personal R*pro**nt*ttv*
ol me E stale ol
R O B E R TA M IL T O N
FULLER
A TTO R N E Y fO R P E R S O N A L ^
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
W ILLIA M P M E E H A N . ESQ
••I* Courtney Orlv*. f ] For*
M r a rt FtartdaUW I
Telephone 1111) tj* cue
Publish M a y n .l t . I M i
OEF in

�Evening Herald. Santord. FI.

FLORIDA

Faison C o n so lid a tin g Staff

IN BRIEF

To

TALLAHASSEE — The Senate Education Committee
voied Tuesday to scrap merit pay for teachers but
approved other measures that would create new teacher
Incentives.
The state s master teacher program, passed last year to
reward superior teachers with *3.000 bonuses, was killed
by a 6 to 4 vote. The vote sent a message that the
merit-pay program won't work The program came under
lirr from educators last week after results o f the classroom
performance evaluations used to select merit-pay appli­
cants were released. Some of the state's most’ highly
respected Instructors. Including this year's top teacher, did
not score high enough to get the bonus.
The committee also approved another bill to replace
merit pay. The "Career Teacher Program " would reward
teachers who stay In the classroom and meet certain
criteria with salary bonuses ranging from *5.000 to
*15.000. The program could cost the state about *500
mlllloh.

Under Faison's plan, whal are now nine
separate city divisions would fall Into the
two new departments Doth would answer
directly to him. Under the engineering and
planning department would be engineering,
planning, contracts and building and zon­
ing Under administrative services would
fall personnel, data processing, licensing,
purchasing and internal auditing
The staffs ot those divisions would remain
the same, except for the addition of three
new positions - a city planner for the
engineering and planning department and a
director and budget analyst for the ad­
ministrative services department

Gas Spill Closes 1-4

•••Code
C ontinued from page 1A
"peddler's trade" (here.
Leffler also said that negotia­
tions are underway with county
olflctals for a settlement of the
case and thus board action may
not be necessary
In other business, Clyde H,
Wallace of 793 Rich bee Drive,
who Is charged with (allure to
remove .fill dirt after he was
denied ^ dredge and fill permit
for his property, has been or­
dered to appear so Imposition of
a fine can be considered.
T im o th y C la b a u g h 'o f the
c o u n t y 's d e p a r t m e n t o f
Environmental Services told the
board In April that he tried to
Inspect the Wallace property but
was denied access by Wallace.
He said he and another In­
spector viewed the site from
adjacent property and he sub­
m itted photographs show ing
about seven truckloads of dirt on
the property.
At the April meeting the board
ordered Wallace to comply with
the law by removing the dirt and
restoring the natural grade on

A d d Two Departments,

By R ic k Bruneon
H erald S t a ff W rite r
Sanford's city government mav have two
new departments within the next’ three
months, bringing the total number of
departments to eight. City Manager Frank
Faison asked the city commission Monday
to draw up an ordinance that would create
an engineering and planning department
and an administrative services department.

Committee Votes To Kill Merit Pay
But Approves Other Incentives

ORLANDO — A gasoline tanker overturned and spilled
about 5.200 gallons of fuel on a a lVVmlle section of
Interstate 4. closing the stretch of road for nearly five
hours, officials said.
Police closed the highway at 5:15 a m. between Klrkman
and Sand Lake Roads, bringing rush-hour traffic to a crawl.
Motorists were detoured onto congested International Drive
and other roads Some complained o f being up to two
hours late for work.
The accident occured when the truck driver. Victor K
Kilgore. 44. uf Lakeland lost control of the vehicle while on
i^fuel run Tampa to Orlando, said police Officer Michael
Seufert. who Investigated the accident
Kilgore sulTerrd several cuts and was treated at Orlando
Regional Medical Center. He stayed at the hospital
overnight for observation.

The engineering department would be
headed by the city engineer The city Is
Inicrvtrwtng applicants for the position,
which was vacated when former city
manager Warren “ Pete" Knowles retired
April 30. Knowles also served as city
cnglncrr.
Faison Mid converting and combining the
divisions into departments and adding tinnew stall members would bring more
expertise to municipal government and
make I he city stall more manageable
The staff additions would cost the citv

a d ju s t m e n t a p p r o v a l.

• George and Irrnc Duncan.
2039 Williams Ave.. Sanford,
c h a r g e d w it h c r e a t i n g a
nuisance by accumulating Junk
vehicles on their property.
Other members of the lioard In
addition to llatlaway. Marling.
Ms.Croiler-Wimberly and Miss
Jacobson are Stephan C Kuhl.
Joseph Pavelchak and Joy D.
Anderson,
—Donna Estes

...Horses,

Continued from 1A
Their father is Lawman,
a g ran d son o f I hr fa m ou s
thrornughhrrd race horse. Man
o( War. Lawman is owned by Mr
and Mrs. Joseph Wlsrcup of
O steen and Is tra in e d and
handled by Don Vrlcr of Vrlcon
Stables. Apnpkii The hulls also

...Sewage
Continued from page I A

tentor*

Daorg a i Daugharty Dattoiv*
iM wrafcsm ay. Oattarva
Carat a iattayteaa an* bat&gt;r p el, Sonterd
JIIIM Naianandbatry8.fi Loaa Mary

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT MONDAY 8 A.M. •5 P.M.
THE ALL NEW

321-2398
F IS H

M .P .O .
321-2398
M A R K E T ’S ^ " ?

% m T

juwttW ewo-*--&lt;w/ree»wfcA'A-’ »
- MFl_

^

^

ATCHLEY
SERVICE

_

^

m w — m 11wm" n&gt;i&lt;*

• M lth e fl C a m p io n of AlfArrsomt* Spring* CrumpUpn i« UK#
etty
tor A ffsm ontt Spring* He M i been
City 1 pvbllC

wcrkl

d $ p «H frv t rd |»f*# 1*1 F v J b f ^ f that » « |

•kith Sami no'• County * Environm ent*! Service* D*vnton for
♦our r « fl N# M l M e M &gt; or % Orgey* ir public Adm m titroftos
And p o it QroduAt* c o w rie w o rk in eng. n#*r m g

• Danni* fin c h of O c a Ja fin c h It *h* A im tA n l ctly
yng.naar for O ci«A A poulton M M l M US line# Iff* n*ta, r
»M t M WAS th# City % tom tA ry #ngtn**r for thr*«
F rom I f TJ fo t* M * 1 1 An »ngm *e, mg frame* with fh* it*ty
Department of TreniporfA fion M# M l A M i M lor i degree
Clrlt Engineering
• William Sim m o rn of Lrofton Mary land S im m o n i M t
been chuef Of opetafipni engineering lor Ann* Arundel
County Md tlnct I f l J Before that he w*t general manager
»or a raUroad tom ppny M il JO year Navy career inctuded
potitroni at director of plann.ng tor the Naval fa c ilitte i
fng.neenng Com m and faclitfiaft and howling manager and
civil engineer Me w e t ttationed at Sanford Naval A ir Station
from i n j to Iff* Me M i bachelor % and matter i de gree i in
civil engmerrlng
• Jame* Hobart Sloan* of Sooth Daytona Beach Sloan# h ai
been an engineer with An on Contusing Engineer! In Oayioma
Beach iince Iff* Me * a t director of flight technology at
Emfo-ry Riddle Utaltrerttty In Daytona Beach tor on# year Me
w a i a la ie i engineer with a Moulton firm tor a year before
that and *at a delign engineer for a New Je rie y firm from
If ff to Iff I Me hat a bachelor i degree in civil engineer mg
• David Terwiileger of Sanford Me M i been with *
c onitr m t ion com pany in G am eivll!* lince Iff* holding
potilioni ai la le im a n manager and lupervitor H# M l a
bachelor 1 degree in civ il engineering

t e r e d h e r (a r m 1o r a t s e
quarter horses."I've worked with
horses lor 32 years and have
never had a horse bud (wins,
she said "M y husband, Joseph
is not into horses as much as l
am. hut lie's excited atiout the
twins "
Her daughter. Karen, shows
horses from the faun In local
horse shows.

THE BEST PROTECTION

AGAINST INTRUDERS!!!
C

f f l H

FREE

lif f f i ; n f t M l iT » i
SAN FO R D

e s t im a t e s

323-2600

f* A .

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT M OND AY B A .M .-5 P.M.
TH E ALL NEW

321-2398
M

M

E A T

.P .O .

321-2398

M A R K E T ? ! ? ! ," ? .’

In Hoar O l Vlllag» Finn Markal
1500 FRENCH AVE.
SAN FO RD FLA.

IT’S MEMORIAL DAY COOK OUT TIME
rttlMIUM UADI
SMALL YOUNC TIMM It

W ill HARD - MILT BUSTtR

HOT DOGS
10 LB.$ 1 0 9 5
BOX
1 3

SPARE RIBS
COUNTRY $ 1 7 9
STYLE RIBS
A
u.
u s ox. • rum

ntt MUM HAM

WHOLE
FRYERS

LTENDER LOVING
CARE
.8 3 1-3 10 1

F

U

R

| - A C GROUND $ | 0 9
1 ..
0 9 . . BEEF

N

I T

U

R

E

f a .

c f a u

H a s

F o r

IONQWOOO

D

a d :

Gun Cases . . . .
R e c lln e rs ..........
Rockers .............
F o r

G

................. m

« « up

................. •

9 9

................. •

5 9

................. M

5 9

................. •

8 9

................. •

4 6

r a d u a t e :

Hope Chests . . .
Bookcases . . . .
4 Drawer C h est.
D

up

i n i n g :

Pc. Ice Cream Set . . . . 1
Chlna-Table-4 C h a irs -----------------f 7
3

F o r

Pc. Bedroom Suits . . . . * 4 7 9
2 Pc. Loveseats ................. * 3 9 5

T R A N S M IS S IO N S

F U R N IT U R E

F o r

^

S H O W ROOM
S A M P LE S
CLOSE O U TS
A L L S A L E S FIN A L • A L L C A S H
CARRY •
Al lm «a C h a y.

p

H «y .

2 6 Years Same Location

.v -a

.v

up

E v e r y o n e

3 rd and F re n c h A v « .
1 7 - 9 2 - r ia n t T o L l l C h a m p
PM. 111 - I T H
S a n fo rd
O fjrn Mun T h r u Sal to AM •S I'M

3 2 2 -8 4 1 5

sn -

9 9

5

209 W. 25th StoMt • Sanford

* » **4w -m am **• ♦

2 “

A p t s . - V i l l a s - C o n d o s :

P r ic e s

FRESH OYSTERS
CLAMS - FISH

t

applied lor to hrlp pay lor
w h a t e v e r s e w a g e d is p o s a l
system Is rventually chosen.
Even If Ihe city gets Ihe grants,
customers can expect to pay
about $18 *33 u month over the
next 10 years If the landsprradlug system Is used Without the
grant money on either system.
Sanford cu stom ers' m onthly
sewage hills could climb even
higher to uIk &gt;ui *40 a month.
Faison said.
Improving (he
jirescnt system, with the grants,
would put the customers mon­
thly hills al *14 *31 a months
over the next 10 years, accord­
ing lo ihe reporl
Every
option carries with It a high price
tag." Faison said. "There's no
chruji way out."

The applicants and t hrir backgrounds are

WINDOW &amp; DOOR
GUARDS

T R A N S M IS S IO N
TRO UBLE?
See
HARRELL &amp; BEVERLY

In Hear O f Village Flea Mark a I
1600 FRENCH AVE.____________________ EA N FO B O , FLA.

LARGE
SHRIMP

Quarter horses, known for
their strength and sperd over
short distances, and thorough
turds are basically the same and
ate routinely crossbred. Mrs
Knsor said Either can he en­
tered In quarter horse or thor­

Five people are being consldrrrd for city
engineer Qualifications are a bachelors
degree In civil engineering or a related Held
and "progressively responsible" engineer
•ng experience The Job pays $23,548 to
$32,025 annually.

oughbred races.
The stud colt has been named
Lawman's Go For Gold" and
the filly was dubbed "Lawman s
Raining May."
"Th ey will la- lor sale in the
bill and hopefully somronr will
Im- looking lor good colts to
rare.” said Mrs Knsor
She said she has loved horses
-ill her life and recently regis­

F o r

John■ RrHtSare. OaBary

Hobart aareati. Dailano

arc related to Eternal I’rtn ci.
w ho ran In this vrar's Kentucky
Derby and placed third In the
I’ re.tkness

Faison said It would take 60 to 90 days to
establish the two departments The Civil
Service Hoard would have to advertise for
applicants for the three new positions

SEE Y O U R DEN TIST

Sarnie* 0 Looronca
lirttar I Jaaaiorta
V.chaal A Vallot

SStoSH Wytho

The commission asked City Attorney
William Colbert to draw up an ordinance
and present II al Its May 28 inerting

T O O T H A C III?

O IK M A R O M

Jo o rw B S x t i

Harriett has been serving as acting pollcr
' hid since Chief Den Duller retired April 30
Harriett has applied for the chiefs jot), along
with 41 others, and has made It elear |x&gt;lier
work Is his "first love " The elty com ­
mission Is expected to appoint a new rhiel
some time In June II Harriett Is not selected
chief he will be able lo keep his Job as
assistant city manager, according to Civil
Service Hoard rules

SEE Y O U R D O C T O R

R start G DrvaOtay. Dattorva
Rabates I Frym an, Oa*aan

Dor OPS'in* I W illiam .

Commissioner David Farr also asked
where the assistant city manager would fit
lit the new reorganization Faison said he
"could use one." but added the selection
process of police chief may provide that
answer." hinting that the position may be
eliminated II Assistant City Manager Steve
Harriet I Is selected ns police ehlrf

S IC K ?

HOSPITAL NOTES

KuwdtlO eroQooUi

Commissioner Milton Smith Jokingly said
such a person would be the "D a v id
Stockman" of Sanford and become the most
hated person in city hall. Stockman is
President Reagan's controversial budget
director whose slash lo lhe bone techniques
lor trimming ihe federal budget have
offended many constituents, most recently,
farmers and military retirees

Continued from page l A
year, resurfacing would cos!
another *3.2 million.
The study also shows that In
1989. the first year of operation, Luke M a ry llo u lr v u t.l to 1-4 la lit
revenues from tolls after opera­ th e fu tu re
tion and maintenance costs were
" U n le s s th e re Is a grea t
deleted would be *9.9 million for change In the land use along
alternative D. the highest o f any Lake Mary Doulevurd nothing
of the alternatives.
can be done to change that.”
Sellers said the expressway Sellers said.

WEATHER

RaJpAC Boy**
P w i m m Brinton
DsferaL Duma
A

*36.422 this year and S I 45.688 next year,
he said.
The commissioners voiced no opposition
to the Idea but Commissioner John Mercer
questioned the need for a budget analyst
Faison said an analyst would monitor the
city's spending, "maVlng sure we maintain
our lean and mean approach to budgeting."

might have to be built In phases
with the first phase from the
county line north to SR 434 and
then lo a mulli-lancd Lake Mary
Ikiulevard.
Sellers added that regardless
o f w h a t h a p p e n s lo th e
expressway a four- or six-Uinrd

...Tolls

with you all.'* Faison lold the
commissioners
He asked the commission lo
allow the c ity ’s en gin eerin g
consultuntlng firm of Conklin.
tiv e h u m id ity : 82 percen t;
NATIONAL REPORT!
Porter and Holmes lo start pre­
T h u n d e r s t o r m s s w e p t th e winds: south at 6 mph; rain:
liminary studies and plans for
none; sunrise: 6:31 a m., sunset
s o u t h e r n P la in s T u e s d a y
both systems so that when the
spawning tornadoes and pelting 8:13pm .
dispute Is settled the design on
T H U R S D A Y TIDES:
the region with large hall und
either will begin Immediately.
driving rain More than 3 Inches Daytona Beach: highs. 1113
Another catch is that It the cliy
of rain fell In some areas of a m .. 11:31 p in.; lows. 4:56
loses
Its ruund with the DER and
a
.
m
.
,
4
:
4
3
p
.
m
.
;
P
o
r
t
Texas and Oklahoma. Southeast
Is forced lo go to landspreading.
Texas and southwest Arkansas Canaveral: highs, 1105 a m .
11:23 p m . lows. 4 47 a m.. 4 34 It will have to have hearings
were under flash flood watches.
with the county to determine
Lightning killed one man and p m.; Bayport: highs. 4 45 a.m..
sewage loud limits and negotiate
3:10
p
m.;
lows.
9:48
a.m..
10:54
Injured five others In Missouri. A
a
rezonlng on a large tract of
cold front stretched ucross the p.m. •
county land near Interstate 4 on
B O A T IN O F O R E C A S T : St.
the lower Great Lakes Into the
which to spread the effluent
T e x a s Panhandle, spaw ning Augustine to Jupiter Inlet and
There Is no suitable site In the
showers and thunderstorms. In out 50 miles — Winds southerly
city for landspreadlng. he said
at
less
than
10
knots
through
th e w e s t . C a lif o r n ia w a s
The hearings would gobble up
pounded by strong, gusty winds. tonight. Seas less than 10 feet.
more
lime
A
R
I
A
F
O
R
E
C
A
S
T
:
Partly
Storms were expected to sprawl
Doth systems would be con­
out today over much of the cloudy through Thursday with a
structed and operational by
country. Including the South. 40 percent chance of afternoon
1995. according to a report
mid-Atlantic states, the southern thunderstorms. Highs In the low
Faison gave commissioners.
Rockies and the Pacific Coast. 9 0 s. L ow n e a r 70. W in d s
The possibility also exists.
T h e n o r th e r n s la t e s w e r e southerly, leas than 10 mph.
EXTENDED FO RECAST:
Faison said, (hat the city may
expected to be the nation's
Friday through Sunday. Partly
not get the *9.6 million In slate
sunny spot today.
AREA READ1NOB (0 a.m.J: cloudy with a chance of thun­ and federal grant money It has
temperature: 80; overnight low: derstorms Saturday. Highs In
7 1 ; T u e s d a y 's h ig h : 9 3 i (he upper 80s to low 90s. Iowa In
barometric pressure: 30.07; rela­ the mid 60a.

Iw M

Three Employees

%

the property and to plant grass
seed
The board also agreed to
impose a fine of * 100 per day for
each day the violation continues
Also scheduled to appear at
Thursday's meeting are:
• Ernest and Delores Grant of
2029 Airport Ikiulevard. charged
with violating county law by
having excessive refuse, rub­
bish. Junk, weed growth and
scrap building materials on their
property which Inspectors say
harbors rats, snakes and other
vermin and thus endangers the
health, welfare, lives and safety
o f nearby residents.
• H. Scott Goings. Oviedo,
charged with violating county
law by placing a mobile home on
Ills property without board of

Coatrai I W S a a**MA*l Hatart.i
TumSit
A u M i.iiO M t

Wednesday. May II. m i - 3A

C

W

V AtVJOfT.’ W ,

I

4

�Evening Herald
(LISPS 41 M M )
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Arra Code 305-322-2611 or 8 3 ) 9993
W e d n e s d a y . M a y 23, 1 9 S 5 -Z A

Wayne 0. Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director
Home Delivery Wrrk. i t 10; Month. 44 75. 3 Months.
414 25. fl Months. 427 00. Yrar. 451 00 tty Mail Wrrk.
41 50 Month. 40 00. 3 Months. 4 1ft 00 0 Months 432 50:
Year. 400 00

P h ila d e lp h ia 's
B lu n d e rs
A n y o n e w h o dotihlts the valu e o f adequate
p olice training, p rop er equ ipm en t and sensi­
ble leadersh ip need only (Kinder the disaster
May 13ln Ph iladelph ia.
At least 11 persons arc dead, 53 hom es
destroyed anti eight oth er hom es dam aged In
the w ake o f a fiery police assault on a group ol
radicals holed up In an oth erw ise law-abiding,
w orking-class neighborhood.
Can It rea lly have been n ecessary — to
re phrase the celebrated V ietnam qu ote — to
destroy that W est Philadelphia neighborhood
In order to sa ve It?
T h ere had to have been a better w ay. And
there was. Patience plus skilled negotiators
m ight h ave resolved the a rm ed standoff
w ithout hl'Ktdshed and a co n flagration , a l­
though It m ust be noted that w eek s o f w aiting
w rn t for nought In a co m p a ra b le siege
In vo lvin g m em b ers o f the sam e radical group
In I97H. Hut even If w aitin g and n egotiatin g
could not suffice, properly trained and led
S W A T team s should have h ern able to end
th e s ie g e w ith fe w e r l iv e s (e s p e c ia lly
ch ild ren 's) lost and little or no collateral
d a m age to the nelghborhtMtd.

In the event, ( k i IIcc and Philadelphia city
officials committed one blunder after another
First there was a wild and seem ingly
Indiscriminate shootout that continued for
several hours. On the police side, the shooting
should almost certainly have been confined let
a few SW A T-team marksmen. Th en officials
elected to drop an explosive device of grossly
; excessive force on the riK&gt;f of the barricaded
i house.
W h en the resu ltin g explosion was follow ed
i by a sp readin g lire, officials ch ose to let It
burn u nattended In hopes o f d e stro y in g the
origin a l target, a rooftop bunker. It destroyed
the bunker, the house and m uch o f I tie
uelghlmrhtKKl as well. A cco rd in g to at least
one w itness, tlie ex p a n d in g fire skipped from
. on e row hou se to another for an hou r and 40
l m inu tes Indore fireligh ters In terven ed .
T h e fire d ep a rtm en t's a ctivity m ight have
b ern partially Jnstlllcd by fear o f snl|M-rs. Hut
' no |M)llce plan seem s to have been ready —
S nor w as one app a ren tly d rvlsed on the s|K&gt;t —
that m ight h a v e shielded firem a n w h ile
en abling them In at least retard the worst
residential fire in Philadelphia history.
Fortu nately, the bizarre cu lt w h ose mein*
Ik t s began all the trouble In Philadelph ia Is
quite sm all and ev id e n tly co n fin ed to one or
tw o cities on the Hast Coast. Hut oth er cities
arc hom e to oth er radical grou p s with a
potential for violen ce. And the sm ok in g ruin
ol a Philadelphia n eigh borhood should be
testam ent en ough to the need lor (Miller and
civ il officials to b e lar belter pre|&gt;ared than
authorities there w ere for Just such evenlualltles.

Please Write
L e tte rs to the ed itor arc w elcom e for
pu blication. A ll le tte rs must be signed snd
Include s m ailin g address snd, If possible, s
telep h o n e nu m ber. The E ven in g Ife ra ld
reserves the right to ed it le tte r s to svold
lib el and to sccom m odste space.

• w

t n

w o w tD

A NT H O N Y H A R R IG A N

M a n y M isu n d e rsta n d H istory O f M o d e rn Tim es
Recent events com m em orating the 40th
anniversary of V-E Day revealed the extent to
which the history of modem times Is unknown
or misunderstood. For historical Ignorance or
misunderstanding flows confusion as to choices
In the contemporary world.
Undoubtedly many readers were reminded of
this in reading a syndicated comumn by Ellen
Goodman. She was writing from Leningrad's
P tsk arloskoye M em orial C em etery where
.460.000 Soviet dead are burled. She said that
what the Soviets call the Great Parllotlr War
"forged a nation out of Its diverse nationalities"
and referred to the 20 million Soviets who died
In the conflict against Nazi Germany. She
concluded by saying. "W hat a cemetery this
would have been fora presidential visit."
Wfiat a unfortunate misreading of history.
First of all. Miss Goodman falls to note that
Soviet Russia was a partner with Nazi Germany
In an Infamous "non-aggression" pact that
Involved the partition of Poland The Soviets

JAC K A N D ER SO N

Afghani
Rule In
Exhile
WASHINGTON — Saudi Arabia Is
trying lo set up an afghani governm rnl-ln rxhlle, according to In­
telligence sources Thrlrouble wllh
Ihc Saudi plan Is that they want
rx-Klng Zahlr Shah to head the
rxhllr regime.
The king, who was bcx&gt;trd out In
11)73, Is not popular wllh thr
Afghan rebels who are figtiling
Soviet Invaders and their puppet
government forces. The Saudis are
olfrrlug a powerful Inducement —
540 million In aid lo ihc- resistance
groups — hui are unlikely to win
any of Ihrm over e king The rel&gt;els
figure, probably eorrretly. that the
Saudis will come up with at least
some o f the money anyway.
— Uneasy lies ihe head that wears
a dictator's cap In the Middle East
Iraq president Saddam Hussein
was the target nl an assassination
(tint last October. hul managed lo
foil It. Intelligence sources tell us
Hussein responded wllh his rustninary brutality At least two dozen
Army officers were executed, while
many of their sutMirdlnales sus­
pected o f complicity were dispat­
ched to the battlefield to flghl
against Iran Another two dozen nr
so nffleers, fearing they had liern
Implicated, fled to Syria
W A T C H ON TH E KR E M LIN
Another Sovlei undercover agent
has defecte d lo I lie l lulled Slates.
CIA sources tell us. He Is Vladimir
Ivanov, a 25-year-old KGB agent
who posed us u trade official In a
six-man Soviet delegation to Manila
In m id-January. Young Ivanov
contacted the U S, Embassy there
and was tuken to a "safe house" for
4H hours of Interrogation. Thru hr
was spirited away lo Munich on
Lullhunsa Airlines In early Febru­
ary.
— A recent Issnr of I’ravdn. thr
official Soviet newspaper, gives a
revealing explanation of why it is
tlial 2 1 percent of a vodka factory
workforce was llstrd as ''escorts.'*
Their Job Is lo accompany bright
carloads ol vodku. and as Praida

reports disapprovingly, sometimes
"an escort gels so drunk that not
only Ihe car's contents but also hr
hlmsrll has to 1m- carried out." In
other words, the escorts nerd
escorts
- We recenlly reported a CtA
analyst's recommendation that the
IVtitagnu study the wuy 'he Soviets
d e v e lo p and p rod u ce m ilita ry
hardware. Ap|&gt;urrntly someone at
I lie Pentagon Is taking the advice to
heart. An Indrpth study of the
Soviet bureaucracy — Including the
KGB

were silent about Hitler's evils while Britain and
France were under Nazi attack.
Miss Goodman's reference to the forgoing of
"a nation" also Is mistaken. The Soviet Union is
an empire, not a nation. The Soviets "forged”
tfiat empire by deporting hundreds of thousands
of Latvians. Lithuanians. Estonians, and other
laptlve peoples to Siberia. Those who were
deponed have never been allowed In return.
One wonders whether Miss Goodman Is aware
of the books of Nikolai Tolstoy, of the famous
Russian literary family, who chronicled the
forced return to the Soviet Union of Russians
who knew they would be sent to slave labor
ramps. Including White Russians who had
never lived Inside the USSR-a crime against
humanity In which (he allies sharr complicity
by cooperating wllh the Soviets.
In referring to the 20 million Soviets who died
flglillng the Germans. Miss Goodman falls to
note what the great Russian novelist Alexander
Solzhenitsyn wrote In The Oak and the Calf,
namely that 50 million Soviet people were killed

I THINK YOU
FINRING
IN YOuR ViStTTO OuR.
COUNTRY THAT
ARE
- a - AHEAP OF YOU AMERICAN*;
^
m iio u w

In Soviet purges and deportations. The hideous
Nazi extermination camps have been closed for
40 years, and the world Is aware of the horrors
that look place there. The Soviet concentration
ramps, the so-called Gulag Archipelago, con­
tinue to operate to this day under Gorbachev, as
t h e y d id u n d e r A n d r o p o v . B r e z h n e v .
Khrushchev. Stalin and Lenin.
Victims of Soviet communism are nameless.
They are without monuments except in the
hearts o f Russian patriots like Solzhenitsyn who
know what unspeakable cruelties the Soviet
communist regime has imposed on captive
peoples for almost 70 years.
Tragically the story of the victims of Soviet
communism doesn't seem to Interest many
people In the West The American television
networks aren't Interested tn presenting the
story of the Soviet prison camps Instead, there
are studied attempts to portray the Soviets as
the moral equivalent o f the Western allies. Thus
Is history distorted

D O N
AN? NOW WITH CUR VIGOROUS
NEN l e a pe r we W ill ACHIEVE
SuPEROR'TY i n ALL AREAS

h otel

’

GOT A PHONE BOOK?
I'M TRYING TO FlNP
SOME VEGETABLES
—
cr

WHAT IS PHONE &amp;0OKS
ANR VEGETABLES ?

worn
3 »ft

JEFFREY H A R T

D id H a u p t m a n n D o It ?
Did Bruno Kiehnrd Hauptmann
kidnap and murder ihc child of
Charles and Anne l.lndlw-rgh. the
crime lor which he went tn the
cledrlc chair?
The answer serins to 1m- no. And
this Is not one of ihosc political
cases, like Sacco-Vun/ctll, Hiss, or
thr Rosen bergs. In which a case
continues lo 1m- made that a con­
victed lelllsl was Innocent No. the
Lindbergh kidnapping Is. rather, a
mythic case, brings together many
ol the great themes of Atticrtcuo
history, and Involves, centrally In
Charles Llnillx rgh. one of Ihc genu­
ine heroes of thr 20th century.
Hack in 1078 Anthony Scaduto
published a study of ihe case tilled
Sraprgttal, which argues strongly
lor Hauptmann's innorrncr. The
Isxik drew- sonic al tent ton. hut not
as much as it deserved, perhaps
ttccause Scaduto expressed so open
an antl-rslahllshm cnt Idas. Ills
argument has now been reinforced
by Ludovlc Kennedy's The Airman
ami Ihc Carpenter IVlklng). which,
more measured In Its lone, may
force a wider reassessment of the
case.
For those tiorn around H)30. us
both I and Kennedy were, the
Hauptmann trial is a dim yet
persistent memory, Less than 5
years old. I remember Gabriel Ilealcr's radio reports of Ihe trial
Everyone knew who Lindbergh was
Kidnapping became an rvrr-prrsenl
lear for all parents.
The most dam aging evidence
a g a in si H a u p tm a n n w a s tils
(Missesslon of Ihe I.IndlM-rgh ransom
money Hauptmann was arrested
when he tried lo pass one of the
bills ills own account ol how he
came Into I hr (msscsslnn of Ihe
money, via a shadowy character
named Isidore Finch, by lhai time
dead In Germany, remains only
tenuously plausible
Hut llir stale s case against
Hauptmann lies tn shambles. The
stale |Mi|lcr lauqM'rrd with evidence
th a t s h o w e d th a t R ic h a r d
Hauptm ann (the " B r u n o " was

lacked on by the prosecutors and
the prrs»| was working as a carjientrr miles away In New York City. He
could not have tieen In Hopewell.
\ J . on Ihe day of Ihe kidnapping.
The a u th o rities persuaded u
notoriously unreliable witness — In
effect, bribed him — lo say that he
had seen Hauptmann In Hopewell,
Handwriting evidence was faked
by the ( M i l l e r Witnesses, bribed nr
threatened, lied.
A newspaper reporter wrote an
Incriminating telephone number on
a wall at Hauptmann's Bronx pro(K-rty. arid Huts hail hit "scoop."
The claim that the lumber for the
kidnap ladder came from a missing
IliMir hoard at thr Hauptmann place
vlas entirely bogus
Cllmnctlcally, Col Lindbergh, on
the stand, claimed tn Ik* able to
Identify Hauptmann's voice as I hr
one be had heard In the cr met ary
when ihc runsom was passed —
lhough Lindbergh had heard only
three words, and al a great distance.
In the cemetery.
Kennedy d (M -s lint go Into this, hul
that voice Identification has t&gt;rrn
extensively dismissed In the law
journals.
But Lindbergh had hern min­
x' I n c r d b y I h e p o 11c e t h a t
Hauptmann was guilty, he dkl not
want th r a lleg ed m urderer to
escape, and his prestige was such
ihat ihc Identification was decisive
with the |ury.
The governor of New Jersey, full
of doubts about thr verdict, would
have set aside ihe execution hul did
not have the legal power to do so.
and the verdict was widely popular
A m id s t a s p r e a d in g a n il*
Germanism. Hauptmann, seen as
striking at a great American hero,
had been apprehended Hr went to
the chair In Trenton.
Op|Minrntx of capital punishment
will Ik* enthusiastic over this book.
Uut. ihough Hauptmann In all
IlkellhiMKl was wrongly executed,
the correct answer Is to make
certain that the accused person
rrallv did It.

G R A F F

Fed Up
With
The Wall
BERLIN - She has had It "u p lo
here." she says, wllh Ihe wall. She
and two friends are out for a walk
nrar the Oberbaumbrucke. a pedes­
trian bridge across the River Spree.
Il Is a crossing point for Berliners
between the West and East of the
divided city.
Almost 80 now. she has lived In
Berlin since 1924 and seen II all —
the Nazi years, the bombings, the
r e c o n s t r u c tio n
She w as a
" T r u e m m e r fr a u .” on r o f the
thousands of women who workrd to
clear the streets of rubble so that
rebuilding could begin But she Is
not. she says em phatically, a
B erliner She cam e here from
Llrgnltz In Lower Sllrsla. now part
of Poland
She still has relatives — nieces
and nephews — on Ihe other side of
the w all and vis its them o c ­
casionally. Next week she Is going
to a wedding celebration.
She applied to East German
authorities In March It was six
weeks before permission for the trip
i anir through An outrageous delay,
she says, and she complained to
West Berlin authorities But they
say they can do nothing to speed up
the East's hurraurrney
She has mixed feelings about
seeing her relatives again They are
burners, uceuslomed lo work, and
are doing well In the East German
system, which provides greater
rewards for heavier labor.
They have, they say. everything
they tired and aren't Interested In
politics So what would Ihry have to
gain by trading all Ihry now have
lor Ihe uncertainties of a new life In
the West?
She hasn't been able lo change
ihrlr minds, and Ihry certainly
haven't c hanged hers She has still
had II with the wall and all tt
represenls.
A rrtlrrd couple at West Berlin's
Martrnfcldc reception center has
also hud It. Until 10 days ago they
had lived their entire llvrs In the
East. They are now bring processed
for legal em igres. Elderly East
Germans who no longer contribute
to the work force are allowed to
leave. But It lakes time — six
months from thr lime this couple
applied.
In the East, they were among the
privileged They could travel — a
freedom not accorded younger East
G erm ans w h ose labor Is s till
needed.
But where and how to travel?
Moscow? There was no hope on his
pension of 492 East German marks
a month — worth a fifth ot that in
West German marks, or about 430.
To visit even West Berlin was
proh ibitively expensive at that
rxchange rate.

ROBERT WALTERS

Auto Firms: Years Of Hot Air On Air Bags
It began quietly in July I960
when Intend olflcialn lirsi proposed
(hat all automobiles sold tn this
country hr equipped with air hags
lo minimize the severity of crush
Injuries.
Today, almost 16 years later,
mandatory Installation of air bags
tias become ihe object o f a tempes­
tuous. seemingly Interminable and
still unresolved peddle policy debate
dial liusspicud to all three brunches
o f the federal gavi mmerit.

"/ heard Deddy say your Teflon may be comma
olt. WHERE?"

(

Many ol the nation's leading
m ed ica l a u th orities. Insurance
eom|ianlet. safety organizations and
consumer groups have offered their
unqualified endorsement of the ulr
lu g as a device that could savr
thousands of lives annually.
Thr U.S. Supreme Court. In a
ununlnious opinion two years ago.
drclared air hags lo tie "un elfretlve
an d c o s t- b e n e fic ia l life s a v in g
technology,"
But the safely devices remain
unavailable because. In Ihc words of
the Suprrm r Court, "T h e suto

industry has waged the regulatory
equivalent of war against the air
•hu g"
Stated more bluntly, the industry
has displayed an Irrational. If not
pathological, hostility toward air
hug* |i ha* s|M*nl uncounted m il­
lions o f dollars In every available
government forum to undermind
Ihe devices. It has rep eatedly
advanced specious, deceptive anil
misleading claims about their e f­
ficacy. reliability and cost
It wuan't always that way. In
1970. General Motors pledged to the
federal government that It would
voluntarily Install air liugs on all of
Us ears by 1975. first as options und
subsequently as standard equip­
ment.
T h a t prom ise was p ro m p tly
abandoned, however, as the In­
dustry mounted a massive lobbying
campaign against ulr hags that
reached all the way to the While
H ou se d u rin g the N ix o n a d ­
ministration.
At a private 1971 meeting wllh
President Nixon, officials ol Ford

Motor Co. complained that "safety
has really killed all of our business"
and convinced ihe president lo
withdraw an early version o f the
tederal regulation requiring air
bags.
GM placed air lugs In 10.000 of
Its luxury cars from 1974 through
1976. then claimed sluggish sales of
those models demonstrated that
buyers did not want the protection.
But a W a ll S t r e e t J o u r n a l
Invcstlgallon later found that "the
company and Us dealers actively
discouraged sales " Moreoevcr. the
air bags were available only on
large, gas-guzzling cars marketed
during a period of acute fuel short­
ages.
Other unsubstantiated claim s
have Included allegations that the
chemical used to trigger air bag
inflation Is dangerous and that air
ttugs pose a threat to a hypothetical
"out -of-posit ton child." won't Inflate
when needed, wilt Inflate when not
w an ted and arc p r o h ib itiv e ly
expensive.
In fact, laboratory and highway

evaluations conducted by govern­
ment agencies, auto manufacturers
and private organizations have re­
peatedly demonstrated the air bags'
effectiveness and reliability.
More Ilian 12.000 cars equipped
with air bags have traveled In
exress of 1 billion miles and have
been In v o lv e d In a lm ost 300
front end crashes severe enough to
cause Inflation o f Ihe safety devices.
When the Insurance Institute lor
Highway Safely examined the ac­
cident data. It found that air bags
had produced substantia) reduc­
tions In Injuries.
Finally, there Is the matter of cost.
The auto Industry has claimed that
an air bag protecting only the driver
can cost 41.000 or more per car.
while m ore objective estim ates
place the price at 4300 to 4500.
Now. however, a New Jersey flftn.
the Breed Corp.. has developed u
simplified air bag that relies upon
mechanical Instead of electronic
sensors to detect a crash situation.
It could be sold for as little os 450.

�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

W edneiday, May 11. 1H1— 5A

D rinker A ccused Of Ax-Sw inging Spree At VFW Bar
A 55-year-old Casselbery man
liv in g in a cam per on the
V e te r a n s o f F o r e ig n W a rs
headquarters property has been
charged w ith two counts o f
a g g r a v a te d b a tte ry a fte r
allegedly chasing a VFW patron
with an ax and fishing knife after
he was refused more drinks at
the bar there, Casselberry police
M ooned.

The trouble occurred at 200
Concord Drive about 10 40 p m.
Monday. The suspect allegedly
left the bar after he was refused
further service and returned
with the weapons. He chased
patrons while swinging the ax
over his head, a police report
said. Police captured the man
and recovered the weapons from
the roof o f a nearby picnic
shelter.

Charles Carlton Sessions was
t&gt;elng held In lieu of 85.000
bond
KNIFE T H R E A T
A 31-year-old Apopka woman
has been ch arged w ith ag­
gravated assault, accused of
threatening to stab a Sanford
man while at his home on
Monday.
Emory General Griffis, of 401
Katie St., told deputies the
woman threatened him and two
witnesses supported his state­
ment. a shertlTs report said.
Anita Consuelo Lane, of 302 N.
Maine Ave.. was arrested at
Griffis' home at 9:31 p.m. She
was being held In lieu o f S5.000
bond.
OUNM AN CH AR G ED

A 35-ycar-old man accused of

Action Reports
★ F ire s
* C o u rfi

* Police
threatening two men with a
"lon g g u n " outside the Post
T im e Lounge. U.S. Highway
17-92. Longwood. on May 5
turned himself over to sheriff's
deputies and was arrested at the
Seminole County Jail at about
midnight Monday.
Guy Dale Roberson, of Or­
lando. was being held In lieu of
•5.000 bond.
FIRE C ALLS
The Sanford Fire Department
responded to the following calls

M onday
—6:19 a m . 707 Sanford Ave.,
fire. A car s gas line broke,
setting the engine on fire. There
were no injuries and the amount
of damage was noi reported.
—9 09 a m.. 1600 W Fifth St.,
fescue An 18-year-old man who
was rut with a knife was treated
and taken to the hospital
—9:43 a m.. 718 Pecan Ave.,
rescue An 83-year-old man who
fell out of bed was put back Into
t&gt;ed. He was not Injured.
—4:44 p.m., 22nd Street and
U.S. Highway 17-92. rescue. A
62-year-old woman was Injured
In an auto accident. Patricia
Hannon, of 1628 Deacon St..
Sanford, received a cut on her
nose. She was taken to the
hospital

—7:10 p.m.. 415 Palmetto Ave..
rescue. A 28-year-old woman
received bruises on her face, legs
and bark during a light with her
boyfriend, rescue workers re­
ported She was not taken to the
hospital.
—9:40 p m . 1922 Palm etto
Ave.. fire, Sparks flew from a
power line after It became en­
tangled in a tree. Power cornpany workers took care of the
problem.
—9.55 p.m.. 110 1 E. First St.,
false alarm.
Tuesday
- 2 28 a m., 1101 E. First St .
false alarm.
—6 06 a m .. Third Street and
French Avenue, rescue. Three
people were Injured In an auto
uccldent. Duryl Drudham. 4b. of
4 1 1 Helle Ave . Sanford, received

a bump on his head and a scrape
on his knee. He was not taken to
the hospital. Darlene Miles. 48.
of 13 Wllttam Clark Court. Sanlord, had pain In her shoulder
and was taken to the hospital as
n.ix Helen Ware. 49. o f 117
Anderson Ave.. Sanford, who
complained of pain In her hip
and side.
DUI A R R E ST
The following person has been
arrested In Seminole County on
a charge o f driving under the
in 11uencc:
—Douglas Allan Taylor. 28. of
305 Sunland Drive. Sanford, was
arrested at 2:28 a m. Tuesday
after his car failed to maintain a
single lane on U.S. Highway
17-92. Sanford He was also
charged with driving with a
suspended license

VILLAGE 323-5454
FLEA MARKET

323-5454
Raiderettes Debut
Smashing Success
The All Souls Raiderettes, a
group of 19 students who
attend the Sanford school,
have wrapped up their debut
season. T h e R aiderettes,
under the direction of Fonda
Nobles and Suzanne
Chagnon, marched In San
fo rd 's a n n u a l C h ris tm a s
parade.

SANFORD’S FIRST AND ONLY
REAL FLEA MARKET
NOW FULLY PAVED

1500 FRENCH AVE.

SANFO R D , FLA.

___________ OPER W D L - F ll.- W . - m RAIN OR SHIRE

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT MONDAY 8 A M. •5 P.M.
TH E ALL NEW

321-2398

M.P.O.
DEL! pittas cooo

321-2398

■AY 12 - 21

In Rear Ot Vlllag&lt;* Flea Market
1500 FRENCH AVE.

SAN FO R D FLA.
M l N U I U utctl rt

N 1 IU 1 I

BOILED
HAM

59

*1

m.

ROAST K E F
PASTRAMI or
TURKEY M EAST

Longwood To Discuss Sewage, Lake Maintenance
By Jan e C asselberry
H erald S ta ff W riter
Th e L on gw ood City C o m ­
mission Is scheduled to consider
a sewer agreement with a re­
tirement center drvekipcr and a
proposed four-month uquatic
m a ln te n a n rc program ut a
special meeting Wednesday.
Commissioners arc scheduled
to meet al 4:48 p.m. In city ball
at 150 W. Warren A w
Also on the agenda wilt lie the
department o f public safety and
a city organizational chart. I lie
proposed capital budget, unil the
question o f hiring a consultant
lo help with the preparation ul
the city budget.
J .E . K l r l l r y . o w n e r o f
Longwood Retirement Village,
480 E Church Ave.. says every

day's delay by the city In signing
a sewer agreement Is coating
him $2,000 add preventing him
from grtilng construction money
released to pay his credllora.
He ran'l gel a certificate of
occupancy from the city until hr
Is allowed to hook up a new
uddltlon to the sewer system.
The commission agreed earlier
this month to give the retire­
ment home a 4.500-gallon-a-day
share of the available rapacity at
the city's Sky Lark Sewage
Treatment Plant.
Klrtlcy gave the city SI 1.500
for u sewer hookup III January of
1984 and received a sewer
permit on May 8. 1984. bul has
iirrn prevented Irom lying In
because (he city had overcom-

m ltlc d its treatm ent plant,
which was not functioning projierlv.
T h e s la te D ep a rtm en t o f
K n v I r o n m e n ta l K r gu I a t io n
would noi allow further connec­
tions until recently completed
Improvements were made at the
200.000 gallons a day capacity
plant to bring It up lo DKK
standards.
The latest hold up for Klrtlcy
came Monday night when the
commission refused lo approve
the agreement until the city's
co n su ltin g en gin eer. Rachel
Christensen of Dyer. Riddle,
Mills and Precourl. certified that
the existing lift station at Ihr
retirement center can handle the
additional load without being
expanded.

City Attorney Gerald Knrtnun
said. "W e need some assurance
il you need a larger lift station
you would expand U." Hr sug­
gested Klrtlcy pul money In
escrow for the purpose or put up
a bond
A report by The l-akc Doctor.
Inc., on 36 of the city's lakes und
|M&gt;nds utul u proposed fourthmonth lake maintenance pro­
gram Is also scheduled for dis­
cussion.
Jim W illiam s of The Lake
Doctor has listed right lakes that
would benefit most from main­
tenance, In addition lo a twoacre pond al Columbus Harbour,
which the commissioners have
already hired him to dean up
and maintain lor $ 1.343 a year.

?•
f M| PATHHI ANDANYOlH|NHRI

Lt« T m L SImK A m la * tag M b W h Dk N

''

8 AM . t A h r w s w

r z s in

O F C H I R O P R A C T I C , I N C . r o . , . a w ..x
UP M
24/1 S AIRPORT BLVD - SANFORD ,,s Dl,,‘ *
SANFORD 323 5763
' A. Utu.l thu b.itic. I* Mill ORLANDO 849 0169
to

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT M OND AY 0 A.M. •5 P.M.
TH E ALL NEW

M.P.O. 321-2398
CHEESE STORE

321-2398

In R&amp;ar O l Vlllao*&gt; Flee Market

CALENDAR
W E D NE SD AY. M A Y 22
F r e e p h o t o g r a p h s w it h
fingerprinting o f children altered
by Adam Walsh Child Resource
Center al Chris Yales Photogra­
phers studlon. 11:30 a m. lo 7
p.m., 1726 S. Humby Ave..
south o f Curry Ford Road. Or­
lando. Adult must accompany
children,
"1 Can C ope" program for
cancer patients und fumllles. 2-4
p m.. Central Florida Regional
H ospital d in in g room . C all
321-4500. ext. 761 lor register
Series ends June 26
T H U R S D A Y . M A T 23
Seminole County League of
Women Voters Food lor Thought
luncheon, noon, Quincy's Res­
taurant. Douglas Avenue near
Stale Road 434 Library update
by J ea n R h ein und Sandy
Gallagher.
InteV nu tlonal T ra 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 lu b (p r e v io u s ly
Toastmlslres.nl. 7.30 p.m.. Allamont** Chapel Education Build­
ing on State Road 436. second
and fourth Thursdays.
Sanford Jaycees. 7 30 p.m..
J a y c r e b u ild in g , 5 lh and
French. Sanford.
Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St..
5:30. closed discussion, and H
p.m., open, speaker.
Oviedo AA. 8 p m . closed.

1 Fraquonl Headaches
2 Low Back or Hip Palo
3 Dlzzlnoss or Loss ol Sloop
4 Numbnoss of Hands or Fool
5 Nervousness
6 Nock Pain or Stillness
7 Arm and Shouldor Pain
EHsslNa lactate Ndm Am Ijm, HutMa I mL Start

1500 FRENCH AVE.
First United Methodist Church
Overeatrrs Anonymous, open.
7 30 p m Community United
Methodist Church. H ighw ay
17-92. Casselberry.
F R ID A Y. M A T 24
Central Florida Ktwanls Club.
7 :3 0 a .m ., F lo r id a Fed eral
Savings and Loan. State Road
436 at 434. Altamonte Springs
Sem in ole Su nrise Klwanla
Club, 7 a m.. Airport Restaurant.
Sanford.
O p t im is t C lu b o f S ou th
Seminole. 7:30 a m ,. Holiday
Inn. Wymore Road, Altamonte
Springs.
Central Florida Wood Hank
F lo rid a H o s p ita l-A lta m o n te
branch. 601 E. Altamonte Ave..
9 a.m. to5 p.m.
Gentle Exercise for seniors.
10 30 a.m.. Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry
Wrkiva AA |no smoking). 8
p .m , W c k tva P r e s b y t e r ia n
Churrh, SR 434. al W rkiva
Springs Road. Closed
Longwood AA. 8 p.m., Rolling
Hills Moravian Church. SH 434.
Longwood Alanon. same time
and place.
Tanglewood AA. H p.m.. St.
Richard s Episcopal Church,
laikr Howell Road. Alanon. some
lime and place.

1 DAY
S E R V IC E

Sanford AA Step. 8 p m.. 1201
W. First St.. Sanford

SEMINOLE
SEWl VAC
322-9411
COMNI1 It 91 A
UVI MAMV MLVO
VVtovi Dtaw CottW

Boat Insurance?
( hie name sins il fust.
s

T TONY MJSSI INSURANCE
,

I
x A

P h. 322-0285
2 5 7 5 S . .F r e n c h A v e . , S a n f o r d
u t o - O

WE NOW HAVE
LOW SODIUM AND
NO SALT CHEESE

BLU E

CHEESE or $ 9 9 8
FETA CHEESE: * ■ is .*

F R E E Estimate

S A T U R D A Y . M A Y 25
Fun Fair. 10 a.m. to dark.
Missing Children's Center. 750
W. sla te Hoad 434. W inter
S p rin g s C o u n try -H lu rg ra ss
music, games, contests, kiddle
rides, food, and garage sale.
Fingerprinting and video taping
of children.

Ml

SA N FO R D FLA.

t v T t e r s

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I itr. Munir, ( ar HuMnrxv Un« lunir »a*» ll all.
* Krplztr* \oor old. iridfuirnt unit regarjln* &gt;&gt;| male nr m,-,l, 1
* I tilth i If it trill l hralmt - I’raJtitO oicr Iwnr a- mil, h In at |&gt;t r
wall a. iltiirn ri'Milantc liuiiim run uhrn b ni|Vialuri- i*
ftrtfN I

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• Until I Hu lent t ( ntilin*: inn - Hull k | | R rjin.; m. ai.«
minimcr

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100 N. MAPLE

PH. 322 *321

SANFORD

Your Neighborhood Carrier Dealer

�t-f» - I »I: * m t &lt;

SPORTS

*A— Evtnlng Herald, Sanlord. FI.

Wsdnoxday, M ay n , 1*tS

Sanford Honors Its Champions
Sp e a k e rs Heap
Praise O n Tribe
Track Standouts
By 8am Cook
Herald Bporta Editor
Tltc city of Sanford, (tie Greater Sanford
Chamber of Commerce and the Optimist Club of
Sanford gathered Tuesday at Western Slzzlln lo
honor Seminole High School's track and field
standouts.
No adjective was left unturned as the speakers
saluted coach Ken Hrauman's hoys* state
i humplonshlp and coach Emory B lake* girls’
fourth-place finish.
From Sanford Mayor Bettye Smith to Superin*
tendent of Schools Boh Hughes to Optimist Club
of Sanford President Ernie Butler to Seminole
Principal Wayne Epps to Seminole Athletic
Director Jerry Posey, the praise was lavish and
well spoken.
Mayor Smith read a proclamation which
declared Tuesday ns "Sem inole High School
Track and Field Hecognltlon Day." The mayor
then added, " I ’m very pleased and proud of the
conches. However, the track learn members are
commended on the honor you have brought to
your school and Sanford, I'm very proud of all of

you."

H «r* ld esol* bf Sob S »o » i

Hughes said "E verybody In the school system
Is proud of the success of the Setnlnole teams "
Horner, who announces the Seminole County
Track and Field Championships each year,
lauded I he teams’ |*erformancea under pressure.
"W hen you gel before all those people and
perform that well against the othrr schools'
siars. It's really ipiltr an accomplishment." said
Horner.
B u tler, who heads up S an ford 's m osl
sporta-mlndrd organization, said Ihe Optimists
were proud to share In honoring Seminole's
champions.
Epps, iinderalundably Ihe mosl elated of the
group, said lie wan Impressed with uthlcllc
n h lllly along with Ihe ch aracter o f Ihe
youngsters. "Good guys don’ l always finish
Iasi," lie said about the boyn' ttlle "This 1s one
time Ihe good guys finished first."
Posey, who assists lioys- roach Ken Brauman
from time to lime, said It was a thrill for
everyone to be associated with such a fine
group. "It's really our plensurc to tie associated
with these young people." he said.
ttrsumsn mat IMskr. true to championship
form, promised to return next year — same
lim e. Mime place — to extol virtues of twin 1986
state chumplonshlps.
"It sure would la* nice to do II again." said
second-year coach Brauman.

M a y o r B o tty o S m ith , rig h t, p re s e n ts W a y n e Epps w ith the p ro c la m a tio n .
" I hope It's our turn next year." said Blake
who completed his eighth year as head coach.
Boll) Brauman and Blakr took (tie time lo
Individually Introduce each athlete and give a
hrlet biography on each. Brauman gave an
especially moving talk on mller Billy Prnlck.
" B illy was probably our least-pu blicized
runner." said Brauman "He won Ihe mile and
iwo mile early In Ihe year In Just about every
meet. When we saw we had u chance lo score
some points In the state inert In (hr mile
medley, we started to gear Billy's training tnorr
toward the H80, which Is the final split "
Brauman said a couple of runners from Lake
Mary began to beat Prnlck In the two mile and
questions began to arise about Penlck's kick "It
was probably more poor coaching than Billy's
fault," laughed Brauman.
No one wus laughing In the region and stale
mile, (hough. Pcnlck (lashed an excellent kick to
overtake Satellite's Bill Hibbard at Ihe tape.
"That kick Just destroyed Hibbard's confidence
for the state." said Itrnumnn
In the state mile. Prnlck ran u 58-sec ond (Irst
quarter and stretched his lead lo 40 yards as Ihe
rnllc evolved. Even then Brauman said (tie Held
o f runners wasn't convinced.

"T h ey all thought that Billy would come back
lo them ," Mild Brauman. "But he didn't come
hack He took II lo them and ran Ihe second
fastest mile (4; 18) In Ihe South That's why he's
a state chainplon "
Brauman also died his other state champ.
Alvin Jones In Ihr triple Jump, and reminded
that both Prnlck and Jones are juniors Hr
a ck n ow led g ed Ihe feats o f seniors C liff
Campbell. Frank Harnett, I&gt;eron Thompson and
Ken Tem ple along with Junior Leo Peterson,
tanils Brown, another Junior, was cited Tor
shaking off an Injury to become a key member
on the relay teams
" C liff Campbell has done everything at
Seminole High School hut win a slate champi­
onship." said Brauman "H e wus the best
quarter mller In the stale, he Just didn't have a
chancr to show It."
Campbell was leading the 440-yard dash with
100 yards to go when he relnjured his led ankle
and had to limp home. Barnett finished second
In the 120 yard high hurdles and was the
second-best hurdler In Ihe nation. Burnett
finished I hire! In Ihr stale decathlon and Joined
Thompson and Peterson to earn the Tribe the
stale lltlr ll was Ihe first year a school had ever

won titles In the state meet and the decathlon.
In that meet. Barnett Improved his pole vault by
four feet over last year.
Campbell will attend Auburn and Barnett will
go to Arizona on track scholarships next year.
Brauman praised Temple for handling the
difficult, but important role, as a reserve. He
said hts senior sprinter, who didn t get to run In
the district or region, stepped In when Campbell
was Injured and helped Seminole to second In
Ihe medley relay.
Peterson, said Brauman. was the biggest
contributor to the statr meet with 10 points. He
finished second In the long Jump and second In
the triple jump
Thompson was next. "Deron Thompson was
the 'Relay Man' for us." said Brauman. "He was
a part of all three of the relays and gave us a lead
on each."
Brauman Injected a little levity with his next
two standouts. Junior Pat Davts and sophomore
Earle Martin. "A s you can see. neither Is a
physical specimen." said Brauman about the
smallish pair. " I f we can get Earle past his
90-pound bench press, he's really going to be
something ”
Davis. Brauman said. Is the Asthma Man.'
"E very time wc going lo have a lough practice,
Pat says his asthma bothers him "
Blake, meanwhile, was also lavish In praise of
Ills athletes, assistant Nate Perkins and Injected
a bit of humor, loo, As Brauman did with hts
wife. Lisa, he saluted Ihe patience of his wife,
Bernadette. "I'd like to thank my wife for her
patience." Blake said. "Espedcally since I'm a
girls' coach Sometimes you have to do a lot of
explaining when you come home so late."
Blake cited his Iwo seniors. Trlna Walker and
Glenda Bass, for their contributions since their
sophomore seasons "T h ey were our captains
and ihey showed great leadership." said Blake.
"Both wrrr key members of our stale-champion
relay (mile and medley) learns
"Coach Perkins was Important lo making
those relays go. Hr spent a lot of time with the
girts on them."
From the seniors. Blakr explained why he Is
so optimistic about next year as he Introduced
his talented youngsiers — sophomore Sheila
Crawford and freshmen Dorchellr Webster and
Shownda Marlin
"Sheila did a greal job all year on our relay
lea rn s," said Blake. "D orch ellr Is Just a
tremendous talent. She was probably one o f the
best 880 runners In the state but we needed her
so much on the m edley relay, we had to leave
out Ihe half mile.
"She ran not as a freshman but as a senior."
Martin, the stale champion In the 880. was
next. "You save vour beat for last and Shownda
was our best." he said "S h e set a record In
every meet she ran In. Shownda Is Just amazing.
She's ihe fastest half mller In the state and
hopefully she's a future Olympian "

G a i n In C o n f id e n c e , O p t im is m K e y S u cce ss
li wus art optimistic gathering at the Westrrn
81/zIdi Tuesday. Anytime a group honors a slide
track champion and a fourth-place stale finish­
er. II usually turns nut that way.
Hill whereas, optimism Is a foregone con­
clusion lor Ihe likes o f Sanford Mayor Beiiyc
Smith, Greater Sanford Chamber of Com m rrrr
President Jack Horner. Optimist Club Of
Sanford President Krule Butler and Seminole
High School Principal Wayne Epps, that Imporlain quulliy Is not always present III a young
athlete.
Smith. Horner. Butler and Epps liuvc all met
successes and failures in their careers and
handled them accordingly. They are successful
hi 'heir Iniscu Helds and they know whul It Is
like to waul something and realize the goal of
achieving ll
I nr Ihr youngsters, though, getting over the
Imrdle of conddrncr is some limes a tough
obstacle. Injuries — physical and mental — are
hound to ot cm lo the prep athletes and
somcllmcs It doesn't take a big dose of either to
take away dial competitive edge,
I hat's where coaching comes In. And that's
win lioys' coach Ken Hniumun and girls' couch
Emory Blakr were so lm|iortunt lo their teams'
success They healed the motional and plrysclal
pains ol their uthlrirs and got them ready lor
Ihe day’s competition.
For Itraumun. Ihe record speaks lor Itself, lie
has coached 11 years al Palatka and Iwo years
at Seminole. During Hurl time, his learns have
collected three stale championships
The troys' truck leum Is the stale champion,"
said Epps "That says tt all. When d cumr time
to show and tell, they showed themselves as the
best."

§

Sam
Cook
H ER ALD
SPORTS EDITOR

Epps Mild he was also Impressed whir tltc
team's modesty. "You couldn't walk around the
halls of Seminole High School (ell who was on
'•&gt;« Irat k li am h, s.ud " ['hese guvs ilidn Mi'll
you whul they were going lo do. I hey sliowrd

you.
"Coach Brauman did un excellent (oh You
don't win Hirer Male championships on luck "
Epps was equally Impressed with Blakr
Vouch Blake also did an excellent Job," he said
People don't really realize how close* (5lS
points! Ihe girls came to winning, loo They
have a fine group returning, plus a good crop
coming Irum (he middle schools.
"ll was an exciting year for ull of us and both
teams have pul Sanlord on the map as a truck
(rower,"
But year don't become a track perwer without
some optimism Brauman and lliake. who was
ea|Mhly assisted by Nate Perkins, gave their
learns enough positive thoughts along Hie way
lo bring Hie height of that hurdle down to size,
"W e finished fourth In the slate meet last
year." said Brauman "Everytrody, knew wc
were the team to beat this year. The boys

responded every time out They won every meet
ivr enlered."
Concerning Blake's girls. II dually seems Ihey
have turned the corner. The eight-year Seminole
track coach took a large contingent Into the
state meet and sevrrals of the youngsters —
sophomore Shrlla Cruwtord and freshmen
Dorchellr Webster ami Shownda Marlin —
gained valuable ex|wrlence
In Ihr (Mist. It seemed that Blake would go (o
the stale meet with older competitors Despite
(heir senior status. It wuuld b« a lirsl-tlmc
experience for mosl ol I hem and Ihey didn't fair
very well
Senior Trlna Walker Is an example to ihe
evolution. She ran In Hie slate meet as a
xnphnumrr and gained some confidence Lust
year, lie placed fourth in Hie 440-yard dash and
gained some more. This year. Ihe now op­
timistic senior finished third In Ihe 440-yard
dash and ran on two relay trams which Ix-camr
slate champions
Blake Mild his drsl Hack team had |usl five
girls nn ll A humbler beginning would la* hard
to Imagine "Everybody wanted to run Seminole
then," he said. "Th ey knew they could heal us.
Somrwherr down Ihe line, we had lo changr
their thinking."
The change ot thinking has come about. The
Lady Scmlnolrs won most o f their meets Hits
year and their fourth-place slate finish, plus Ihe
irlurn of state 880-yard run champ Martin,
Webster and Crawford, solldlllcd them as one of
the trains to beat next year
It s an optimistic Blake (hat said. " I hope we
can be rlghl here next year with » state
championship."

S

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M»f ild S » s *» IN Sstrr

Ernie Butler, Optimist Club ot Sanford
president, goes over Tuesday's agenda.

Pernfors Sparks Georgia To N C A A Title

H w sW **•«• b Twsm , VMK»nI

Mike Pernfors smashes a backhand.

By Bam Cook
Herald S p orts E d itor
ATHENS — Mike Pernfors sure
knows tiow lo make his old roach
Irrl rigid at home. Pernfors. who
matured as u tennis player under
Hie expert tutelage of Sanford's
Larry Castle at Srmlnulc Communi­
ty College, sparked Hie University of
Georgia netters to the NCAA chainplonsidp Tursday with a 5-4 victory
over UCLA
"M ike was Just awesome under
pressure." said Castle who was
among the 5.000 rabid Georgia fans
who watched the finals. "H e was
Hie only player on Georgia’s team
that didn't lose a match "
For Ihe Bulldogs, it marked their
llrsi ever NCAA championship. It
was also Hie (Irst time since 1959

T ennis
Bowaro: Poor Pros, 8A
th a t a n y s c h o o l ca st o l the
Mississippi hud won the tennis
championship Noire Dame and
Tulane lied lor title in '39
"G eorgia's tide is a great, great
thing for southern tennis.' said
Castle who coached Pernfors to a
jMlr o l national singles rhampion
ships while hr was at SCC two years
ago
Pernlors. who was the national
No. 1 singles champion last year,
can now achieve an Incredible
quadruple ll he takes Ihe No. I

singles Idle next week.
Georgia whipped Harvard. 3*1. In
Its first test as Pernfors disposed of
l-arry Scot. 6-4. 6-3. Next up was
Stanton) and a chance at revenge
lor hard hilling Swede. Dan Goldie,
ranked No. I In the nation, had
snapped Pernfors’ win streak In
March but the former SCC standout
was bothered by a bad back al the
time, according to Castle.
It was no contest. Pernfors. noting
It may have been his best match
ever, disposed ol Goldie in 38
minutes by a pair of 6-1 counts
"W e were all settled in for a nice,
hard three-set match." said Castle.
But Mike Just blew him aw a y."
P e rn fo rs and No. I d ou b les
partner Allen Miller then came back
to win the doubles and give Ihe

Bulldogs a hard earned 5-3 victory.
That win moved the Dawgs Into
the sernldnais against favored USC.
P e r n fo r s o v e r w h e lm e d T o d d
W 'lts k e n . 0 -4 . 6-1 an d th en
teu m m ed w ith M iller to stun
Wltsken and Jorge Lozano In the
doubles play for a 5 4 victory.
"That doubles win was the key to
the tournament." said Caatlc. " If
they don't win that. It's all over
because USC had three o f the lop 30
doubles teams In the nation and
Georgia's No. 2 and No. 3 teams are
weak."
The win over USC set up Tue%^
d ay's s h o w d o w n w ith U C L A .
Georgia, behind Pernfors 6-3. 6-3
victory over Michael Kures. didn't
need the doubles play as It cruised
to a 5-1 vtctorv.

I

�Evening Merild. Sontord. FI.

BASEBALL ROUNDUP
S T A N D IN G S
N A TIO N A L L E A 0 U E
East
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Atlanta at t l Louta
Cincinnati at Chicago
Ld* Angola* at Monlraal, night
tan Oiago at Now York, night
tan Franclacoal Phlladolphla. night
Moulton at Pltttfcurgh. night

A M E R IC A N L E A G U E

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KanaatCIty 1. T ta tiO
Calltornlal. Detroit I, tt Inn
Oakland], B altim ore] It inn
New York M.teatlle I
Wednetdey't Gemot
Milwaukee at Cleveland, night
Chicago at Toronto, night
Bo*ton al Mlnnetota. night
Kanaa* City at T o ia t. night
New York at Seattle, night
Baltimore at Oakland, night
Detroit at California night

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
Taylor Drives Home 5 Runs
As Sun Bank Captures 13th
Derrick Taylor was 3 for 4 and drove In five runs
Tuesday as Sun Hank ran lls unbeaten string to 13 with u
14-5 thumping of Medco Pharmacy In Sanford Little
American League action at Fori Mellon Park
Taylor roped an RBI triple to highlight a three-run first
Inning, the sorked a two run homer In the second and a
two-run triple In the fifth. Loreruo Polk added two hits for
Sun Bank, which had six hits In the game.
Medco managed only four hits off a pair of Sun Bank
pitchers. James Jackson wast the winner with relief help
from Al Perkins Albert Anderson bad two of the four hits
for Medco while Adaryal Jones ripped a two-run triple
In Pee Wee League action Tuesday at Chase Park.
Butch's Chevron managed to pull out a 10-8 victory over
Mr Robert's Tires without the benefit o f a hit Thirteen
walks and three hit batsmen enabled Hutrh's to claim the
win
McRobert's had two hits In the game olf winning pitcher
Clifton Branch Including solo home runs by Craig
Merkerson and David Styndle
In Tuesday's second game at Chase Park. Jamie King
tossed a thrcr-hllter and displayed excellent control as
Adcock Hoofing rolled past Kokomo Tools. 10-2.
King walked six in the game, which la few for a Pee Wee
L e a g u e c o o l p a l H e a ia o M r u r k o u t eight. A n d r e y H a w l t n g
had both of the hits for Adcock Roofing Including a double
and a triple. Adcock took udvuntage of Its speed on the
basepatha as It swiped 23 bases In the four-inning game.
Quint Hunt led the way with six steals.

Flyers' Defense Stymies Oilers
PHILADELPHIA — Philadelphia's Flyers, who allowed
Just 34 goals In the National Hockey League playoffs,
•continued their stellar defensive showing Tuesday night to
claim a 4-1 victory over the Edmonton Otlers.
Defending Stanley Cup champion Edmonton, which was
averaging six goats a gamr. was (orrchecked all over the
Ire by the aggressive Flyers who look a 1-0 lead In the
best-of-seven series. Play resumes Thursday al the
Spectrum.
Philadelphia outshot the Oilers. 41-26. and held Wayne
Gretzky scoreless. * Ron Sutter and Tim Kerr scored u
minute apart In the third period The victory gave the
Flyers an 84TJ record against the Oilers tn their last nine
meetings.
"Forechecklng was the key." said Flyer right wing Ikka
Slnlsalo "They didn't have much room to skate. I think we
played so good defensively that they had trouble."
Slnlsalo scored on a second rebound tn the first period for
a 1-0 lead before Suiter, who shackled Gretzky effectively
all night, and Kerr added their third-period grails Dave
Poulin scored an empty net goal with 2 1 seconds left

Rotary Holds Off Klwanis, 10-9
Rotary built up a 10-1 lead In the bottom of the fourth
Tuesday, then held oil a late Klwanis rally In the fourth for
a 10-9 victory In Sanford Lassie League softball action at
Fort Mellon Field.
Rotary broke open a dose game with four runs in the
third and then added three more runs In the fourth Kry
hits In the third Included Kldl Toner's RBI triple and
Natasha Beasley's run-scoring single. In the fourth. Toner
ripped a two-run double and Beasley fotlwrd with another
double,
Klwanis. down. 10-1. came back with eight nins In the
bottom of the fourth but couldn't tie It. Catrell Barfield's
three-run homer was the big hit In the Inning
Klwanis had a chance to win as It had the bases loaded
with two outs but Latoya Barrett grounded out to Caroline
Frecney for the final out.

Thlebauth Is Lake Howell's MVP
The Lake Howell High softball team, whtch compiled a
20-7 record this past season, had Its awards banquet at the
Casselberry Senior Citizens Center.
Senior outfielder Eileen Thlebauth. who led Seminole
County tn hitting with a .533 average, was named the Most
Valuable Player. Thlebauth also tied for the lead In runs
batted in with 32.
The Most Improved award went to Junior pitcher Christy
Tibbttta who pitched all 27 games for the Lady Hawks and
also carried a 326 batting average
The Coach's Achievement award was presented to senior
second baseman Sandy Gillies. Gillies was fourth In the
county In hitting with a .474 average. She will continue her
softball career at Wtmhrop (South Carolina) College.

WednsKUp, May II, 155J - I A

Parker Doubles Up Cubs
CHICAGO — Manager Pete
Rose said recently that Dave
Parker in as valuable to the
Cincinnati Reds as Dale Murphy
Is to the Atlanta Braves. Parker
continued to carry the load for
the surprising Reds Tuesday as
he delivered a clutch double to
spark Cincinnati past Chicago.
5-2. at Wrlgley Field.
The Reds' win Inched them
one-half game closer to N.L.
West leader San Diego. The
Padres, who were rained out
against the Mets Tuesday, led
the f^cds by 114 games.
" I 'was looking for something
over the plate to hit hard.'' said
Parker. "It was a little high, but I
had already committed myself."
Parker's double drove In pinch
till ter Eddie Milner who hud
walked to open the Inning. It
snapped a 2-2 deadlock In the
eighth Inning. It also pushed his
hitting streak to 13 games, the
second 13-game streak of 85 for
the former Pirate slugger
Parker, who lolned the Reds

who posted his ninth save. Tim
Raines was hitless In four atbats.
At Pittsburgh. Rick Reuschel.
last year after a stormy career in recently activated by the Pirates,
Pittsburgh, said his good health combined with John Candelaria
and peace o f mind are the main "ii .i 11ki hitler to lift I be Pirates
factors In the turnaround.
Hcuschcl' I -01 gave up Just three
I ' m healthy." he said. "I'm
blls and struck out one over 7*s
thinking about baseball solely Innings. He was signed as a tree
and I've become comfortable as agent In February and has been
a Red The nagging Injuries have tolling at the Pirates* A A A
all healed and I'm swinging the tarmciuh tn Hawaii. Candelaria
bat w ell."
ttnlshed up for his sixth save
Parker ts hitting .345 with George Hendrick and Tony Pena
seven homers and 30 RBI.
tipped RBI singles
Elsewhere tn the N.L. Tues­
At St. Louts, the Cardinals
day. the Expos dim m ed the overcam e tw o tape-m easure
Dodgery. 6-1. the Pirates topped homers by Bob Horner to trip the
the Astros, 3-2. the Cardinals Braves, Homer ripped a sec­
tripped the Braves. 6-3. the ond-tuning solo blast deep Into
Phillies nipped the Giants. 6-5.
i be left field bleachers. Ills
At Montreal, Tim Wullach u n - r u n . s ix th In n in g shot
drove In three runs with a homer bounced otT the scoreboard In
and a sacrifice fly w hile winning deep left field. Vince Coleman,
pitcher Bill Gulllckson 15-41 the Cards' exciting rtxtklc out­
a d d e d a t w o - r u n d o u b le . field. legged out an Inslde-theGulllckson allowed five hits be­ park homer and Tomm y Herr
fore giving way to JcfT Reardon lined a bases-loaded. two-run

N.L. Baseball

SCOREBOARD
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Buddy Lake
Tournam ent
O p e n s Friday
The Buddy Lake Tournament
will Ite held Friday. (May 24)
through Sunday at Sanford Me­
morial Stadium.
T h e d 0 u b Ie •r llm ! 11 a 11on
tourney starts Friday at 6 1 5
p m with the DeLand Arabians
lacing the Orlando Braves. Al H,
Florida Baseball School battles
New Smyrna Beach. Del.nnd
Boulevard Tire drew a first
round bye.
There Is no admission charge
(donation at the gate) for the
tournament

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A.L. Baseball

Altamonte Offers Shuffleboard

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Angels trimmed Ihr Tigers. 2-1.
In 11 Innings and Ihr A s slipped
jiusl the Orioles, 3-2. In 12
innings.
Al Minneapolis. Marty Barrett
drove tn three runs while Tony
A rm a s and D w ig h t E v a n s
slugged homers to hrrak out ol
prolonged bulling slumps to
pro|M-l the Red Sox past the
Twins. The Hosnx drilled four
Twin hurlers for 16 bits Bruce
Klson 11-0|. making bis (irst siarl
since lie suffered a hamstring
Injury Ajmi 14. acatlcred seven
hits over eight Innings to curn
the win.
At Toronto. Jeff Burroughs
singled home George Bell wllh
one out In the ninth Inning tn lilt
the Blue Juys past the Chltox.
Bell doubled to lead off the ninth
and advanced to third on Jesse
Barfield’ s Oy bull Burroughs
followed wtlii a single off Bob
James (1-11 lor the win Gary
laivrlle 11-0). who struck out two
In one Inning's work, was the
winner.
At Cleveland, lormrr Atlanta
Brave Brixik Jacoby sorked a
two-run liom rr to provide the
difference as the Indians lopped
the Brewers J a cob y's blast
earned Bryan Clark 11-0) his firsl
win. Clark relieved slartrr Keith
Crrel and allowed one run and
fnur hits In three Innings

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Rangers' Change A t Helm
Can't Help Hapless Team
ARLINGTON - Whether U s
Doug Rader or Bobby Valentine
at the helm for the Texan
Rangers. Tlie product doesn’ t
seem to get any belter
Bud Black proved that Tues­
day night as he twirled a thrreh lltrr and the Kansas C ity
Royals blanked the hapless
Rangers. 5-0.
The loss was the 26th against
|ust 11 wins for Texas, which
tiled Rader last week and re­
placed hint w ith V alentine,
formerly the New York Mels’
third base coat ll The 297
winning percentage Is easily the
worst In the league. Texas trails
California by 11 games as the
season nears the one-quarter
jMilnt.
While Black 14 3| kepi the
Kangri bats In check. George
Brett provided the offense with a
pair of two-run homers. Brett
socked his find homer In the
opening liming for a 2 Ulead
Jim Sundbrrg rapped a solo
shot In ihr fifth and Brett capped
his four-RHl performance with
another two-run blast in the
eighth Inning
Frank Tanana lost his fifth
against no wins. The Texas
left-hander allowed Just live hits
and struck out four In eight
Innings
In other A L action, the Blue
Jays nipped the White Sox. 4-3.
the Indians topped the Brewers.
6 4 the Red Sox walloped the
Twins. 9 1 . the Yankees clob­
bered the Mariners. 11 1. the

CVM"

single In the seventh to Ice the
win. Lett Barker 11-41 was the
loser and Danny Cox (411 picked
up the win thanks to a strong
relief effort from Rick Horton

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H'tmvia «

Dave Parker had the key hits
as the Reds topped the Cubs
Tuesday.

3 YEAR BATTERY
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A mixed doubles shuffleboard league will t*- held at
Wesimonte Park In Altamonte Springs beginning Muy 22.
The league will be held Wednesday and Friday evenings
la-ginning at 7.
The competition will tie held under Ihe new llghled
courts at Wrstmonte Park with all equipment and team
pairings provided.

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Altamonte Sets Tennis Tourney

r

The Altamonte Springs Recreation Department will be
hosting a men'a and women's singles tennis tournament
June 14-16.
There will be an advanced division and a beginner
division with first round consolations In each division. Play
will be at Wesimonte and Easimonlr Recreation Centers,
For more Information contact Claude Winter at 8620090

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Wadnoiday. May M, IH I
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B e w a re : Poor
Teaching Pros
N e t Beainners
Finding a good teaching pro.
nyt an eaxy tank.
You may be Juat starling Into
Irnnls nr perhaps you have been
In (hr game for years. It doesn't
really matter. Tennis lessons will
become a necessity somewhere
along the way tr you want to
become a really good player.
A series of good tennis lessons
can really get you off In a good
Mart il you arc a beginner or can
m ove you along or Improve
some parts of your game If you
are an Intermediate player. Even
advanced players often go to
their lavorlte coach or pro for
some sort of problem In their
game. Often Just a few observa­
tions from the keen eye of a good
pro can lake care of a faulty
stroke or some other problem
that you may be having.
For sure ft Is almost Impossi­
ble to ever reach a very high
level In tennis without having
some formal Instructions.
The problem Is having to find
the right teaching pro for you.
one that you are sure will be able
and willing In help your game
find give you your m oney's
worth In the lessons
There are many, many scores
of pros In the Orlando area. They
teach al clubs, private courts,
high school courts, apartments,
actually Just about any place
they can find. It's un fort unale
that the beginning tennis player
gets "ripped off" many times by
ingoing up for lessons from a
."p r o " who Is either not experi­
e n c e d enough, or Is too lazy to
really do the Job with you.
T o begin with, teaching a
private lesson — when done
correctly — Is very hard work for
the teacher. Some find a lot of
shortcuts and skimp on thrlr
effort and the student, who has
paid good money and often a lot
of money, comes out on the
short end,
What is a teaching "p ro?"
Well, actually anyone who wants
to can go nut and drum up some
tennis lessons. Even average to
below average players may Ux&gt;k
like great players to someone

O F S A N FO R D
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(or a good lesson I
• Above all; Are his methods
sound? (If you don't know ask
someone who would know}
There are many excellent pros
In this area. These are also many
who are average and several who
are poor. You can find the tight
one for you or your family with a
little work.

W H ATEVER TH E
TEM PERATURE

U se d

.

LIKE
NEW!

H ERALD
TEN NIS
W R IT E R

' Itume.
I have known many people
who have given lessons for $10
to $15 per lesson and did not
even know I he proper grips or
even proper terminology. Often
you find people giving tennis
lessons and making quite good
money at II. When In reality they
a r e pour p la y e r s unit a re
leaching their students wrong
techniques, etc.
These people simply gel a
good Ian. a couple of nice
rackets, a sharp tennis outfit,
nice white teeth and a big smile
and p ro n o u n ce th rrn s e lv e s
"tennis pro."
One man In Atlanta (an ex-pro
Innltudl player) made $H5.000
Iasi year ami knows practically
unlhlng about the game He
teachrs the baseball grip and
Inside out serve. Can you imag­
ine that?
II you urr going to hxrk for
someone to give you Irsaons. the
following urr some guidelines to
go by.
• Have you talkrd with |&gt;eople
who have taken lessons from
.Itlin?
• Have you watched him give
a lesson?
• Have you ever seen him
Ipltiy?
• Ikies he seem enthusiastic,
tines he work his student?
• Is he a member of one o f the
;pru teaching organizations (this
;ln It self does not necessarily
make him a good pro)
• Is hr ulways on time and
eager to gr started?
• Are his ratrs reasonable?
(usually iK-tweru $10 $20 fur
one hour; unythlng less than un
hour Is simply not enough time

B o b ’s A s lig s e s A

ooum m u uittD zsdisli

■wmiui Mim.ii1

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L h lu .l] MILE WARRANTY
IMPOST SOI ITIfL (UOlAlt
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^ iiun

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raiMiuM b iitid s o it iit u

&lt;who lias just started Into the

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�PEOPLE

Evvnlnf Hirald. Sanford. FI.

Wadnotday. May JJ, 1VZJ-1B

Cook O f The Week

Search Is On For
Outstanding Dad

Old World Recipes Pleasing To Palates

By D orothy Greene
Herald C orrespondent
"God Bless Am erica!" Is a
phrase lhat describes the sen­
timents of our Cook of the Week
about our country, and her
experience as a refugee reinforce
those feelings evert day.
Elizabeth Kopr-ut of Sanford Is
a cook whose traditional "old
country" recipes continue io
please the palates ol family and
friends. "I love lo cook." says
hll/ahcth. "M y molher was such
a good cook. I used to watch her
when I was young and some­
times I would take her last egg
so I could make tny own dough I
was so proud that I had made
my own dough."
ikirn In Budapest, Hungary.
Elizabeth's family moved lo Baja
(pronounced Boyal where she
was raised "It was wonderful
then," says Elizabeth. " I want to
remember that Hungary the way
It was. not the way li is now
Everybody went to church. I was
practically raised in church, bui
things are different there now. I
want lo tell every Itody that they
should appreciate the freedom
they have in this country. If only
people knew what life was like In
other countries, they would be
so thankful for what they have In
America, like I am ."
Elizabeth Is the oldest of six
children, but recalls. "1 was an
only child for 14 years. My
parents didn't think they could
have any more children, so I was
treated like a Dresden doll. My
m olher w ouldn't let me do
anything for fear that something
would happen to me. But then
four brothers and a sister came
along and we had a good family
life."
Thr war In Europe was raging
when Elizabeth met Kalman
Kopelll In 1942 and two weeks
later he went Into the Army.
After a 4-year courtship they
were married In 1946. Elizabeth
and Kalman have a daughter.
Eva. and a sou. Lazio, who were
froth from In Hungary.
During the turmoil of the
Hungarian Hevnlullnn in IttOO.
Elizabeth says. " W e alwuys
listened lo Radio Free Europe.
Everyone did We knew things
weren't going to change We had
lost everything — It's hard to
explain ail we went through The
American government arranged
lor our freedom, and so we came
lo this country and settled In St.
Louis In 1957."
"M y husband and I both
worked at Washington Unlversl
ly In St. lands for IH years before
c o m in g to F l o r i d a . " s.ivs
Elizabeth. A dream come true
lor the Koprttls Is the opportuni­
ty to live In a free country, and
lo educate their children In the
Itest way possible As a result.
I heir son. who still lives In St.
lanils. Is a computer technician
lor Ihc Monsanto Company, and
their daughter Is a receptionist

Sail
Dust meat with salt and let set
lor several hours With a sharp,
narrow knife pierce the meat all
the way through Insert a piece
o f smoked sausage In the open­
ing Put shortening and garlic In
roasting pan and heat until
shortening melts Add meat and
'« cup of water. Roost In 350°
oven for 1W h in ts , basting
occasionally with Us own julrc*.
When meat Is done, slice Into
chops and serve with remaining
cooking Juices, Serves 6 to 8.
HOT CABBAGE S A L A D
2 ll&gt; head of white or red
cabbage
2 tablespoons shortening
I medium onion, finely diced

June 16 is Father's Day
W &lt; -ii Hu Herald are
searching lor the annual
Outstanding Dad" in thr
cotniminltv. but wc need the
help ol readers lo lltid this

special man
The Outstanding Dad and
runners tip will bo selected
Irom letters of nomination
To make sure vour favorite
dad gets the proper recogni­
tion. follow thr slmplr in­
structions; First write your
lull mime, lull address, in­
cluding city and state, and
vour telephone number at
the top ol thr page tin-

Vinegar
Salt
Sugar
Shred or slice thinly the head
of cabbage. Add I lahlrspoon
salt and let stand In I m i w I lor 1 5
minutes. Melt shortening in pan
and add the finely diced onion.
I t He* Seer »
C ook u n til g o ld e n b row n
Squeeze water from cabbage and
E liz a b e t h K o p e t ti s e r v e s c a k e .
add cabbage to pan wtht onions
C o v e r and co o k lm 1 0 - 1 5
ai the J.C. Penney computer
CHICKEN P A P R IK A S W ITH
minutes. When c a b b a g e is halt
center locally. Five beautiful
SOUR CREAM
dune, add vinegar to taste and
grandchildren round out the
1 frying chicken
c o n tin u e c o o k in g u n til all
family circle. "1 couldn't ask for
1 medium onion
moisture Is absortx-d. Add sugar
anything m ore." says Elizabeth
2 oz. shortening
lo taste. Serves 6
"1 have a comfortable home and
I tablespoon Hour
STRUD EL
a w o n d e r fu l fa m ily . I am
I cup sour cream
I pkg Hilo upollo strudel
thankful lhal my children grew
Salt to taste
leaves Itro/en food di pt |
tip with good sense and good
Sweet red Hungarian jraprlka
W lb. sweet butter
health."
Cut chicken Into Irving pieces.
4 oz bread crumbs
Elizabeth loves to embroider Dice onion and brown In short­
Fillings:
and crochet. " I love to tie doing ening; add chicken parts. Season
5 ll&gt;s grated apples, sugar to
something all the tim e." says with salt and paprika Cover and lastr and lemon pilt r
steam until the moisture has
Elizabeth " I ran rem em ber
Or:
when we were In a rrlugrr camp tieen absorbed Add less than I
32 oz, cottage cheese. 2 egg
In Yugoslavia for 10 months cup of water, cover again, and yolks. W slick ol holler, and thr
rook
until
meal
Is
tender.
Re­
waiting in br transported to
|ulcr ol one lemon Squeeze Ihc
freedom and l wanted so much move chicken parts. To the juice from apples, arid sugar and
rooking
Julcca,
add
W
cup
water,
to Ik- doing something lhal 1 sold
cook lor 10-15 minutes. Cool and
my winter coat to buy the thread sour cream, and sprinkle In the add I tsp, cinnamon.
flour.
Bring
lo
a
twill,
stirring
I needed to crochet."
If cheese tilling, combine all
until smooth. Serve tills gravy
th e In g r e d ie n ts and blend
Kalman contributes his efforts
over chicken pieces with dump­ together.
la Elizabeth's embroidery by
lings (You may add l chopped
Strudel:
drawing thr Intricate floral de­ green pepper and a dlcrd tomato
Place a large white cloth on
sign* for the lovely pillows,
w hile cookin g. If you lik e.) table. Let the strudel leuvesthaw
scarves and tablecloths she has Serves 4 loG.
out. Take one slo-et at u time,
iiiuilr. Crocheted
somr of
D U M P L IN G S
tmtsh will,*melleU iW M t hotter.
which were mud** while In the
5 eggs
sprinkle very lightly with bread
refugee camp, are decoratlvely
3 cups flour
crumbs. Re|&gt;eal until you have 5
placed throughout the Kopetti
3 tablespoons shortening
sheets piled on one another.
home to give a familiar 'old
Salt
Gently spread the tilling on thr
world charm' to their lives.
Blrud the whole eggs with 1 lop third of the strudel dough.
tablespoon shortening Slowly Take the edge ol the cloth and
Elizabeth enjoys working In
mix In the flour and add enough gently lift up and the dough and
her flower garden and spends
water to niakr a soli dough. In lining will roll up Into u roulade
many pleasant hour* there. A
the meantime, bring lo a boll a shape. Cut according to size of
small garden will) Hungarian
peppers and tomatoes Is a favor­ large pol of sailed water. When
y o u r pan an d p re s s en d s
(Milling, add a leupoonful &lt;&gt;l togrther. Buller the pan and
ite past (me for Elizabeth, "I lovr
dough at a time. Cook until brush top of strudel with melted
lo grow Hungarian peppers."
dumplings rise lo the lop ol the butler, flake In pre healed 375°
says Elizabeth "They are like a
water. Remove dumplings with a oven until golden brown. Slice
green pepper. only the tustc ts
slotted *|MMin and keep warm and serve warm
better. I use them a lot In tny
until ready to serve.
DRUM TO R TE
rooking."
STUFFED PO R K LOIN
7 eggs
When thr grandchildren visit.
5 lbs boneless pork loin
I i up sugar
Elizabeth ts sure to make all the
Smoked nausagr
I cup Hour
traditional favorites, like strudel.
1tablespoon shortening
Separate eggs Im-ui the while*
Chicken Paprikas and slulTrd
l rtove garlic
pm k loin . B elow are som e
See COOK. 2H
Hungarian red paprika
selected Hungarian recipes lor
all toenloy:

ECONOM Y DENTURE CLINIC
UPPER DENTURE

05110* 1 7 3

LOW ER D E N T U R E

05120* 1 7 5

Sam e D itv S e r v ic e Wr/ialrs an d H rlln c s

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W IN T E R S P R IN G S D E N T A L C L IN IC

NO A P P O I N T M E N T
J*1 H W Y

monstrations, fingerprinting

CERAMIC TILE SALES
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207 last 25 lh It. (Ac* H tN w ir* Bldg.)
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children, tree balloons lor all
children, Georgia the Clown, a
dunking booth and relrcsli
incuts
Anyone wishing lo make a
la x - d e d u c t ib le d o n a tio n o f
rummage or baked Items, con­
tact Gloria Simmons. 831-3551.
rxt. 245 before 5 p m . or Capl.
Dave Guildford, 831-3551, cxl,
27H. alter 5 p m

. . .

J Z / -1 Z U Z

• 8" T O 12" W A L L &amp; FLOOR TILES

10 0 0 0 1 U

Casselberry Police Benevolent
A s s o c ia tio n w ill sp on sor a
rummage and bake sale at the
Casselberry Senior Ceriier. 200
N
L a k e T r ip le t D r iv e .
Cassrlberry. on Saturday, May
25. from I0a.ru. t o 5 p rn
Festivities will Include exhibits
bv the Casselberry Fire and
Police Departments, K-U Je*

NECESSARY

« « , W IN T E R S P R IN G S

AmTILE

tlollles.

Rummage And Bake Sale

dcnirath. add the name, full
a d d r e s s a n d t r I e p It o n e
number of the dad you are
n om in atin g Then, begin
vour letter telling us in your
ow n words w h \ I his dad Is so
outstanding Please ivpe or
clearly print your letter
Submit letters ol tiomliui
lion lo PEOPLE Editor Ikirls
Dietrich. 1* 0 Box 1657 1300
\ French A ve |. Sanford
32771. no later than noon.
T h u rs d a y . M a i 30. ih c
deadline lor lodging
Winners will lx- announced
In H ir Herald on Father’s
I lav

CENTRUM*
NMM

250 • S3 39

• H (| (
IIF IM IIIH
• • * • * * • * * * • • • »• ■ * * • I

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: BREWER S HA ST
TABLETS
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IRON
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KIWANIS CLUB
OF CASSELBERRY
M E M O R IA L D A Y C E L E B R A T IO N

FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1985 •7 P.M.
FREE CAKE. COFFEE &amp; DOOR PRIZES.
PRIZES FOR ALL REGULAR GAMES 1 THRU
9 WILL BE $50.00 EACH &amp; ONE $250.00
BONANZA WILL BE GIVEN AWAY.
COME EARLY FOR A GOOD SEAT
AND!

BRING A FRIEND
CASSELBERRY SENIOR CENTER
200 N. LAKE TRIPLET DRIVE
CASSELBERRY. FL.

KIWANIS CLUB
OF CASSELBERRY
695-9821

COUNW

IH0M7S0N SEEQIE1S

UTN SOOIUK

coueOM

couroai

OAtRT FRESH

UP BALM

R A I S I N S : mayonnaise : YOGURT

Si.’ 791.
■m m

Ju st Arrived...Tops And Shorts.
E x citin g D e sign s - Styles And C olors
To Choose From

116 W . F i r s t 8 t.

323-4132
n to w n S a n fo rd
Sanford's Most Unique Boutique

Ai i i

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nmtvm

99 *-; 39 * - is 49 ' -

(x FIA lt 61M

•

U N U IIL M

•

U N M I AAM

........

APRICOTS • MEDIUM \ CORN i ^LABTIN
IMUCWlltUCi • PRU N ES :
FLAKES LLOTION

■*: 991. i SC 891 .1s 695 . -a- 99 *.
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G a n e ta l NutrM on C a n to r *

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SANFORD PLAZA

323-9975

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f’BICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY
MAY 23 THRU WEDNESDAY MAY 29
1985 QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

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member too that cold toodx
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BARBECUE BEEF BRISKET
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MAY 23 THRU WEDNESDAY, MAY 29.
1965 QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

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until I III* II11XIIlf 1 IhhK i m*l .Iflil
[KHII OV1 t flit loMoU lllfl Vi ^i *!
Mrs
t in* tin hi 11 .thh.un ( hoppt .i
I itu ilium 1*1 ♦ • 11 pi ppi 1
&gt; lio p p rt i
I titr ih u iii

onion • li o p p t

tl

1 s i n . ill |.i i p t n m n i» » 1 li o p p t it

f full m il SI I \I
V pi m in I i l k *

1 ,11 in s

u« t l

1 .■

t&gt; H ki .iltf tl fit 1 in s
N on w i l l 111 « 11 ,i I
« 11 1
mit i"\u\t limiiti •»! f iki mu
101 tfits 1v 1 ipt
FRESH APPLE PO U N D CAKE
!'/ 1 ups 1 in*kinr oil
2 ♦ lips Sllli.ll
' eggs
' 1 lip*, limit
I teas|HMih *.alt
I It av|«Mtfi ttakuig •wnta
* te.ISJMMlttS V «|tIilia » V1I .11 t
I l.ttgi uppli
p ille d and
gt atrd
p it tin s .n u t

1 1 u p 1R a tv 1 l i i 'p p i il p i 1 . m x

W COUNT OR

C O C A CO LA. DIET
C O K E . TA B . SPRITE
MR. PIBB or
M ELLO YELLO

KLEENEX
F A C IA L T IS S U E
,V«ri CO A'WJWTl n

175
COUNT

B HACK
1202 CAN

FR1TO LAY
RUFFLES
POTATO
CHIPS
REGULAR BAR DOUC SOUR

t n i n h i i i t nil -.11g.it a n d cg^gx
1m . i I a t m e d i u m x | tri d tin
t
in t it u le * .
A d d 1 .11 tt I ill tt-tl U n t il
H a ll
x m t .1 a m t v a n i l l a
I-tilt! lit
i.|i|»l.'a t.ttil j i r i u iiH M l i ' t t i t m k r tit
* a greasrd ami llnnred 1'2 1 up

ting t *ikc ilixh M nm wave al
•ri ( ) ‘1. |in w n 1ML I l I Itu 12
mlnuteH ami J t x i 'V |r iw ji *i I H
mimilex Let stand env eietl w 11I 1
wav pa|M-t tin 1 iumteitu|i hi
miimlex Invert anti glaze
a illt:
&lt; ditihlnr *. ■ u p liuilei and 1 1 1
1 upx light htnvvit sugar in a di ep
l.iu l lllalfci ImiwII Mlimwavt
1 m MI D 1IMd I (71 t'id jhiw 1 t until
nilvliitt I m gins in Imll A 1I1I 1•
. 1.t» evaporated milk and ton
lllllle lo 111I1 im l.ivr nil 7U'I.
I tow ei 1111111 ml vltii' holts again
t 0 0 k mini ihtik' iud
Add J
I I aspoolis vanilla &lt; mil and
spirad on 1 akt

VfXJH
CHOICE
6 SO.7 BAG

Confections
Crown C ake

CREAM V Of.HON UACOUSOUH
CHLAM OH CHE00ARSCHjR CRLAM
Plpecmwt tamos orsnuertvi vjwat
tt«us.vii. r » a i cm is £aaan on

MILANO C O O I O U

PO TA TO CHIPS

PACXAQf

KEEBLER crutcvuts

CROUTONS

rOASTlD W*tfAT SiSAMt. tot.

one* on Bumncwy&gt;

KEEBLER C R A C K E R S

SOLID WHITE

TURKEY
BREAST
HALF
POUND

$1 "

FO B ALL JUNE BRIDES
A

Gin FHOM THE PANTR Y BAKERY

$10.00 OFF
ANY 3 TIER
WEDDING
CAKE
o
"j

G O O D FOR TH E
M O N TH OF JU N E

COUNTRY PRIDE

HARD SALAMI
M A » WTTM CHABMAT

NEPTUNE

salad

SM OK ED

SA U SA G E

DINNER

FRESH HAtvED

LARGE
KAISER ROLLS

6/79

dWLCt

FRESH FRIED
CHICKEN

RYE BREAD
w it h

UVER LOAF

BAKBUUl

r w o itG

ANO A n i l

HUSH SARLD

CINNAMON tuns
CHI w o CMOCCXAtl BOSTON

CREAM CAKE

SAVE 40
C A S H JR.

A LPO

Beef Chunks
.
MED JUDJ*' mVWf ll OUTTr UUTCQU*L
u k» hwy w u iv imjii
«id n s n&gt;
w» i

Dinner

For Do&lt;3»

I'erbaps 1111 two people are
mote dt serving •tl pialse Ilian
Mom ami I Tail
With Mother s I lav hehlnd us
and Father s I &gt;.1v 1 outing up
s o n s a n d d a 11 g It I * t s a n d
h u s h .m ils and w i v i s 1111.1
Iheuinrlvi'R *wtaitihllttg lot wavs
lo express their applet tat loti
I then the end revolt is illnm 1 in
a t rnwdrd restaur.ml
Instead let this tw tin v»'.u to
honor parents with the |Mitnp
ami ctrt urnsiaiu &lt; "1 rovallv
&lt; Itlhhen .mil s|Miuses now 1 an
en|ov 1 (rating 1 Ids rnodrin dav
t .ike lot Iha ti moms am! darts
alike Ih i a use It n the 1 unity that
helps make the gilt tiriltpir to
rat h parent
i he gill ot 1 andv is a well
established liolldav ir.olltlon
l hereforr this 1 andv rlrr oraletl
1 .ike Is surr to III.ike aliv tlav a
' li m n in g
event
CROW NCAKF.
I p a c k a g e II pound 2 '4
mutt esl yellow 1 ake mix
i I .III ( I (Kiimdl ' feuinv white
frosting
Assorted &lt;undies lor example
gum drops chocolate minis
1 hot rdale pin es
Jelly hearts
Idnrlr r w hljis smug lit orti r ami
hartl t aiidlrs
I 'r e p a r e cake nils at cording to
pat kagr dim linns Spread hut
ter III a greased and tlnurrd
I Iv'lxJ Inch haklug pan Bakr
artnrdlng In ji.n kage tllrrt turns
('mil Remove lioitl pan Make .1
jstjH'r paiicrn in the shajte ol a
5 (minted crown la y pattern on
rake anil cut r ake Into c rown
shape (l.'se lelt over pin es In
other drssrrts I lint hosting
with (nod coloring to a pastel
color Frost top arid sides ol
cuke Decorate with candles
Yield 14 lo 16 servings

�at) - Evening Herald Sanlord, FI

WgdndstJdy. May IJ, lf»S

71— Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS

TONIGHT'S TV
JJTO N BW W ^

O 4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interview win Bogar Uoora no*faood itereotypes of minority

EVENPKJ

1

gyp|
i O WHEEL O f FOTTTUNt
O 1100 000 NAME THAT
TUNC

6:00
0 ® CD O 7 j O

11

Sem inole
7:30

new s

11 (Ml BENSON
CD 111ALL IN THE FAMILY

01 (101 MACNEJL / LlHAER
HEWSHOUB
OB &lt;»l LAVEBNt I SHIRLEY

600
0
' l l HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN
Jonathan Srrwtb an angai on proba­
tion aant lo t erth to help people n
naad enkttt ihe *d o* a hard
dma « g tormar poScaman m a plan
to halo an eklarty women and har
bonds l a n than rahrtmant homa
Bom destructor (R)rj

6.30
N K N TM
C M NCWS
A M NCWS cj
&gt;1AlX I

(•) OOOO TIMES

6:33
IX g o m e b m e

7:00
O ® SALE OF T N I CENTURY
f jj O P M MAGAZINE PhrAogra
phar Iw d Patrick Lchtiakd Pine*
Chariot m o m ) couexn PhpH
Owns
® O JEOPAROY
11 (741 TOO C L O U COM COMCOAT Muriel and Henry i armnev.
•ary (Cane taka an unpleasant turn
•Man W i and har nee trend Wo"foa art arretted
CD 1*0) THE HEART OF THE DRA­
GON Tour n M n o M r stories about
modernwing rural Chm* sat Kf the
rUtege of Maocang reveal the
Strength ol trad lion and the aflat 11
of change □

1 O DOUBLE DANE Diamond
and L u o Iry lo Outart a mobtlar f
gooni aa Ihey March lor a aoman
scheduled lo tesiiff egemst har
(nan sharking terror
(Jl O fa ll OUY Coll Homo and
Jody ara bang pursued by rulhieea
mobsters aho ara Hoc al nothing
lo prrranl tham Irom amnmg a
1 000 m.ia raca doer, Iha Bata pan*
mauls |«K J

1! (» | DALLAS
CD (10) SPACEFLIGHT A survey of
lha ApoMo muaoni Irom lha fail
fatal altampl io Wady Schrrra • Suc­
cessful (light and Nat Armitrong a
moon aaa [J

7:05

u,

12.20

IX MOVIE Biaakout
(1BT l|
jamatOnvy Kathryn Haya

12:30

000

O l. i LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTEBMAN Schadutod aetratt
Charyi Ladd foca tngar Booart
Plant

} o MOVIT Odor (Premwrei
Mithaar Back Baainca Straight Al.
tar bang liofan at cryogenic tutpantnyn tor I datada a daad man
It vtmlwd and toon bagnt lo dra­
pes, luthtaik nnumana banmoi

11fit) ILOVELUCY

_

I O C M NEWS NtOHTWATOt
I I (M ) StIABBE

(] |M| QUINCY
CD 1101 THE WHIMSICAL WOBLO
OP 07 A strut* lo L Frank Baum
author ol lha Ot tanat taalurmg
Mm ehpt mtarvwwi and an aicarpi
Bom Oaray Studio a •Balurn lo
O t~

2:20

11 MOVIE Tha V ang Quaan
|iM7|Don Mivray, AdnamaCcrri
2:30

y

3:20
d j o MOVIE Tha Praardant a
Lady ItbSlI Chanion Hatton 5uaan Hayward

(Ti ST. ILS IW H fBE WMa

a anit to matt lha reunion mth Ma
•Ha and thAdran parmananl tormar hotpilal Ktmin.ll ill or Joan
Haaoran n raMrad Rosenthal k al
lav win a labor madiator heats up

3 30

10:30

K o s f s w s -

400

h a p s o d y

]

11:00
0 &lt;1. WHEEL OF FOBTUNC
PN4CE IS NttHT
ALL-STAB BUT7
(Ml EIGHT IS ENOUQH
_ (I0| WE BE COOKING NOW
0 (I) FAMILY

11:05

11:35

AFTCBNOON

12 WOBLO AT LANOE (TUE)

5:20
11 WOBlD AT LABOE (THU)

5:25

O 4

12:00
m ioo ay

1i 0 ( 7 O new s
11 (Ml SCWITCHtO
(D (101 NATURE OF THtNOE
(MON)
(D (W) MASTEBPtfCf THCATBC
(TUE)
tD|101 MY8TEBY1 (WED)
© (1 0 ) NOVA (THU)
© (10) THE MEANT OF THE DBAOON(FW)
© (IIMANNUI

500

n PENNY MASON

12:30

&lt;i B
O lMOBNINQ STBETCH
EYEWITNESS OAYBBtAK
I I (M|
CM) GOOD DAY)

O l STANCH FOB TOMOBBOW
( ) j O YOUNG ANO THE BESTLE M
d ) a LOWtO
(Ml SFVTBLY HILLBILLIES

CDi (I)
l JIM BAKKEB

0 I f) DAYS OP OUR LIVES

a (D
U
k NSC
I NCWS AT SUNB1SE

I it Ol
T tanyt
*

CANLV MOBNINQ

ABC NEWS THIS UONNING

? l (M l POPEYE
IX FUNTIMS (MON-THU)

6:35

including

Loal iiamaaa cat Saal
Collar and lag lound rKIhlty
ot Ramtrui Lana Cat net
found Hsuaa pa&lt; Raward
Cell 177 0*47

25— Special Notices

Summer day Camp For a IT yr
olda Each waaa Includat.
Swimming, bowling. Mating,
mo*'at. aporta, aria S cratta
and com putar ik itli Cell
77114] 4 tor Intor malign
TLC Far yaw (M M la wry Kama,
alartmg Juna 10 Call I I I 1714.
«&gt;■», a PM___________________

31— Private
Instructions
Guitar Laaaona All Agaa. and
All Ltvatt RaaaonalHa "P ro "
back ground l 771 a4A4

t 10 a l l m y c h il d r e n
M (M| DICK VAN DYKE
© (10) MOVIE (MON. TUE. THU)
© (W) GREAT RAILWAY JOUR­
NEYS OP THE WOBLO (WCOl
© |WI FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FBI)
© ( I ) MOVIE
1:05
IX MOVtS (MON. TUB. THU, FBI)
IX THIS WEEK M BASEBALL

IXFVINTMtlFNO

6:46
( £ O (YtYfiTN iSS DATSBSJUt
• |W »AN WSAYHMt

7-00
O 'll T O O A Y
ITI Q C M MOBNINQ NEWS
7 O OOOO MOBHMQ AM fNCA

33 -R e a l Estate
Courses

ft!

1.00

6:30
O ’0

23— Lost A Found

12:03

O ® TS COUNTBY (TUEFBTI
11 JIMMY s w a g g a b t

O d ) NEWS
[Jl o C M

H ER P ES
N** information on romfttton
control Coll m nOT

27— Nursery A
Child Care

12 LUCY SHOW (MON-WED FBI)
11 WOMANWATCHfTHU)

5:00

21— Personals

• hAABY H AY COSM ETICS •
U ih (a r t and talar Raw
C O N N IE ....... .................. m f W

I SCBABBLE

5:30 i

We also m ake 1st and 2nd m o rtgage loans
on Residential or Com m ercial Real Estate
up to $100,000.
Personal loans are available
Revolving Credit Line.

o I ) sa l e o f THE CIMTUNY
O O FAMILY F1UO
0(1013-1-1 CONTACT (B)[J
0 III BEAL MCCOYS

4:55

® O HOLLYWOOO ANO THE
STABS (MON. WED-FRI)

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES...

10:30

1i BCVTBLY HILL SILLIES (WID|
I t (M )NEWS
11 r r s YOOB BUSINESS (MON)

T:BO
H i O h S TM . warntb
ill (MIGOMCB PYLE
© IW1 MAGIC OP PAJNTIM1
KEEPSAKES (FB I

Thinking al patting a
Raal Ealato Llcanaaf
Wa aHar Fraa Tattle*
and centimrawa Training I
Call Dick *r Vick I tor datalla!
4711U7 77J77M Era 77FI*M
Kayaaet Ftorlda . let
I* Yaara Eiaarrental

7:30
i ll (M| TOM ANO JENNY
© 1 10) SESAME S T B C IT g
© II) P4SPCCTOB GADGET

CAU.

nab hb
O N S .R . 4 3 4 . N E A R 17 02
I n T h « P a rk S q u a r t S h o p p i n g C l r .
L o n g w o o d , F L 32760

scon, nc*

7:35

831-3400

12 10NCAM OF JCANNW
M O
I I (M ) WOOOY WOOOPCCXEB
© (IIH CATH CLIFF

O o n eu feto u v e
ifli (Ml ANOY GBIFFITM
© 110| ALOHA CHINA (WED)
©|IO|UNOCBS4UL(THU|
© ( 10) JOY OF PAJNTINa (FB0

2:30
( J O CAPITOL
IQ (M| OBCAT SPACE CO AS TEN
© |W) MAOIC OF OH. PAINTING
(WID|
© (101 MAGIC OF WATEBCOLORB (THU)
© (101 MAQlC OF DECORA H V I
PAINTING (FR4)

300
O 4 SANTA BARBARA

FAMOUS RECIPE
Weekly specials

J OO

8

g u io in q l ig h t

GENERAL HOSPITAL
(M ) BUGS BUNNY

ANO

|10) F10RI0A8 TVIE

(BIHCATHCUrr
305

11 BUGS BUNNY ANO FRlCNOS
(MON. TUE. THU, FFN)

3 30
©(10|lrN81ER ROOERS(B)

© III P4SPECTOR GADOET

335
11 HECKLE ANO JECKLt (MON.
TUB. THU. FRO

400
0 (4 Lmil HOUSE ON THE
(J O U C R V O R m n N

H (M)SCOOSY OOO
(D ( WISE SAME STREET g
© (Si sure r f r ic n o s

405
FUNTBT0NCS (MON

TU I

THU. FN)

4:20
12 HECKLE ANO JECXLI (WCOl

Doonesbury

BY GARRY TRUDEAU
A U A &amp; 'M i A T
POXJUTHHKCF
evens* t*

M U X *
m

j

VCJV

Auto Parts Counter par ton Fast
growing organliaHon E ip o ri
encod only Apply In person
♦am a PM Auto motive I
parts aarvlca 104 S Par
ramprI Are Orlando
Applications new being accepted
tor full time cashier Apply In
person at Little Food Town
Stores. 7)0 Lea# Mary B ird
EOE
_______
Carpenters and tabors Five
needed See Slava al Floe
World between I 7PM Com*
with tools and reedy to work

71-H e lp Wanted

COLLECTION TELLER
CUSTOMER SERVICE
NEW ACCOUNTS
Previous experience In lha
banking Industry deflnlloly
pretorrtd but we will contld
er an applicants Tha ability
to work with customers and
good communication skills ara
required
S unB enk otters a salary
commensurate with taperl
•"&lt;• arid opportunity tor ca
rear advancement To apply
please complete an applica
Hon at our Samoran Bench
Oftlce. 70S E Samoran, Fern
Park
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
................4A/F/H(V
Capa Canaveral Firm needs
people who want to be their
awn boas Will train U K part
tint#. Skip M l time I I I tTQI
Parsen Far Relief Duly er
R o lltim #. Christian Youth
Ranch tor abuaed 4 troubled
children la* to**

C IR C U IT C O UR T.
IIO M T IF N T M
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 .
FLO R ID A
CASE NO U lto*CA I I E
J O H N B M I L L O N I G and
K A T H L E E N M IL L O N IG . his
wtto.
Plaintiffs
va
H E L E N KO H N a single person
Defendant
AM ENDED
N O TIC E OF AC TIO N
TO H E L E N K O H N
i addrrss unknown I
YOU A R E N O T IF IE D that an
action tor spec i In per tor mams
ot a contract tor saw ol the
following properly m Seminole
County, Florida
Lot M LA F L O R E S TA . OE
L IG H T F U L W O O O ED P LACE.
U N IT N O TW O according to
the p u t thereof at recorded In
Plat Book 11 page Ja of the
Public Records of Seminole
County, Florida
has beet. Med agamst yew and
rou at* required to serve a copy
a* row written deletes. II any.
to It an Erik c Larsen P A .
p le ln lilt t a tto rney, w h ite
address It la l w Park Avenue
Winter Park. Florida UTtf. « »
er betora 17th June t a il and Ma
tha original with me dark ol Hus
c a r l either betore service on
plaintiff's attorney or immodi
etoly the, tetter
otherwise a
dtleuit will be entered agamst
you tor the relief demanded m
the complaint or petition
W ITN E S S my hand and the
seal ef Mia Court on May IT. 1W&gt;
h ea li

D A V ID N B E R R IE N
Clark of Circuit Court
By Jean Brilient
Deputy Clark
Publish M a , 1L XX. 7* June I
&gt;•»
D E » *4

E X P . P H O N E ROOM
M AN AG ER well established
Co needs aggressive manager
in Sanford O ffice O re * ,
commission plus bonus For
appt 777 4*17, act 77
E X P E R IE N C E D P R E IS E R
C O U N TE R PERSON

f .reliant salary 4 tend irons

•al TWO________________
G U A R A N T E E D INCOM E
lo r educational sa'es pros
antat w e Looting tor some
w * who does not rwrmaliy
ans ads Call Downing 1*04)
700 SITS E O E_______________
H A IR S TY L IS T W A N T E D E .
pcriancfd In chamical work
tor Caratrea 4 Relerors Call
777 S7T7 or 177*177___________
INSIDE S A L E S T R A IN IE
u 00 hr Special boss needs you
to charm lha customers

fib

Employment
323-5176

t i l l French***
L A 4 0 RE RS
ASSEM BLER S
W AREHOUSE W O R K ER S
Assignments available in San
ford. L a k t M a r y and
Longwood area
No tee
Ablest Tem porary Service

771 J*aO

____________

LA B O R E R S Strong reliable
general laborers needed Im
mediately Different local w s
Phone and tranaportatw a
must Never a tea Apply

KELLY SERVICES
660-2339

★ BOY or GIRL ★
Wanted lor bicycle
route m downtown area
For mo»* Information call
Tony______________ H I 7*11 a
NightimarWeeSaisd Mechanic
B ow l A m erica
F u lltim e
777 7S47
________________
O F F IC E M A N A G E R
TR A IN to manage busy office
today

Employment
323-5176
m i French Ave
P ER SO N N EL T R A IN E E
W ill train In all aspects ol
personnel Requires 1 year*
•flic* experience typing. In
leltlgenf. and desire tor a
career 714 I Tea

PHARMACIST
Hospital Experience prttored in
IV Additive and Unit Dose
systems Apply West Volusia
Memorial Hospital. 701 Weal
Plymouth Ave OeLend. Fip
R O t.__________ _
Phene Werkar* Wanted No ex
parlance needed U 00 per
hour, pitta bonus 4** I X )
P R O D U C TIO N T R A IN E E

Operate machine*
overtime!

323-5176
R I A R I O W H E E L I N YO UR
F A M IL Y I SELL AVON!
m w it a r m it R
A L L TY P E S JO B !
S TA R T WORK NOW!

Plenty ot

Employment
323*5176

A D M IN IS T R A T IV E T R A IN B E
Personality lets you walk away
I Fun,
with this

_t i l l f r » &lt;bci» A w

legal Notice

I] OSTABTREK

IX

T I M f r u n ..............774-1146

Sun Bank has full lima post
M o n a a v a l l a b l * In o u r
S e m ln .lo bran ch o lllc a t
Positions Include

iT i

© ( W) A 14 WEATHIB

ASSEM BLERS
A T T E N T IO N man SJ I f hr tor
modern manutaefuring plant
SO lbs . atrong. reliable, own
tr entportetton Egual Oppor
tunlty Employer Permanent
potiHona Navoratoal

Bualnaai C a p ita l IM .k e . la
| l« B M M 4 a w &lt; R O N .
aaia a r k w H a i * i t me

Branch Personnel

0 (41 ANO THE B WOBLO

7:15

Acrylic Applicators needed to
ap p' Y protact,«• coating on
cara. boats and planes LS la
111 per hour W » train For
work In San lord area call
Tampa I I I IB* &gt;171
A C T II now hiring lull A part
time positions Direct latos
trparionca helplul however
wa have an aicaltant trainee
program For conlmdontlal
interview, call 777 eM7_______
AD M II4IS TR A TIV C ASST
A C C O U N TIN O C L E R K
S E C R E TA R Y
K E Y PUNCHER
W ANG O PER ATO R
C L E R K T Y P IS T
C R T O PER ATO RS
Immadiata aiatgrimaefa avail,
able In Lake Mary and San
ford A n a Call Ak**«1 Tampa
711 7**a
A ID E S All ahitta ta p S/or
certified Good atmoapfwr. L
benefits EOE Apply a' D »
Bary Manor, aO N Hwy 17 07
A ir Conditioning Mecnamce
Service 1 Inatallatlon Salary
baaed on atp a rl.n ta , plus
benefits
70S 7774M1__________

Employment

1:35

200

71-Help Wanted

61— Money to Lend

11 BASEBALL (WED)

f t (M)FV PITS TONES
ffl(IO ) fa r m d a y
© 111SUPf BFNIENOS

F a m i l y C r e d it S e r v ic e s . In c .
A KjJf•Mlkiiy Of CAS Qtnrgh i Crtf|iunjnK&lt;n

C e n tre d Rates Available
3 Lines Minimum

FACTS OF LIFE (B)

) OHOUBM AGASNE
I Q S A U Y JESSY RAPHAEL
fl (M l BIO VALLEY
(C (10) IL E C TB C COMPANY (B)
CD (t| m a y b e b b y b f 0

O

THURSDAY

10 cs fiM O u tiv s timet 44C ■ line

10:00
0

(7 O BYAMS HOPE
a i l W|Fl ORIOASTYIE

5:05

0 1 ) 0
I O NEWS
II PS) BENNY HILL
(D HO) DAVE ALIEN AT LANGE
CD (!) NIGHT OAILENY

.

i&lt; &gt; &gt; '" «

0:30
0 I ) LOVE CONNECTION
(D (») HEBE S LUCY

11:30

11 AQNICUITUNC U B A (FBI)

11:00

005

11 CATUNS

11 (M| PATTY DUKE

7 c o n t K u t i t f tiBWS 52C ■ line

DEADLIN ES
N oon The Day Before Publication
Sunday • N o o n Friday
M onday - 11:00 A .M . Saturday

IX MOVIE

u (Ml FAMILY AFFAlB

m o b n in q

11 (M l BOB NEWHABT

377 1X11

MJJYlflANOO/l

0 1 OFVOBCf COUNT
! O DONAHUE
QBABNABY JONES
(Ml WALTONS
(10) SESAME STBCrTQ
(D l » PABTBtOOE FAMILY

8

11(SS|OUNSMOB(

3 c o « t » c u t iv E tim *» 6 1 C ■ Hi m

6:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 - Noon

RATES

1 t i n t * ....................... 67C « line

HOURS

6:35

TUir rtRM------- 774-1341

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

C L A S S IF IE D DEPT.

(M l PINK PANTHCN
_ (10) MtSTEB BOOTHS (B)
GDi D F A T A L M B T •

200

IX MOVIE PAari Ol Tha Sky
1194*1 Jail Chandler. Dorothy
Malona A tough aargaant taarnt to
ratpatl tna rran ha one# hatad al­
tar lighting alOngkHla lham

-------------------

8:30

1:00
(J; O MOVIE Captain From CaaMt (tSAII Tyron# P o m Jaan
Patau
11 (Ml CHILOBEN BETWEEN LIFE
ANO DEATH
CD (Si t h e a v e n g e B8

7 U MOV* Bflht To BAIT'
(Premwrt) Fiadanc Fonts! Far mm
Murtato Batad on a trua alory An
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aani ard brutal abuta ot ht* famdy
comaa lo • auddan hart «han h*«
taan aga ton ahoota and t *a him

O

IX BEWITCHED

800

Cd h i k o j a *

O rla n d o - Winter Pork

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

TJ I LOVE LUCY

rj 0 T M I s a in t
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1020

lady
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11 (M l (NOEPENOENT n e w s
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WTO MAT.
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J O NBA BASKETBALL Ptoydt
gama
| ABC NEWS NIOHTLINE
11 (3518ANFOBO ANO SON
CD(I) rwlUOMT ZONE

1000

much

CD (I) JAMAICA INN Returning

IX SANT OBO A NO SON

0 (J) TONIGHT Moat Johnny Car-

12:00

b-wt Kaplan Bab Brown A dahea*
taaian tiara it given a onca-m-aMalima chanta to batoma a mayor
tuttatt by Orgarvjmg a group ol
Oddly ataoriad characlart mlo a
amning bataalbat laam

"JAMAICA INN' -It*
C M M CanduMon

CD HI KAPPY DATE A0AJH

6 05

11:30

8 05

IX A U IN THE FAMILY

n BEVERLY MILLBMJES

&gt;1
IX MOVIE Fait B'ta* |t«T|| Qa-

7:35

60S

homa irom a cammai aha aliandad
arm jam Wary (Jana Saymoial it
ectottod by har drtmtan men (Ba­
lnea McOochan) and latan lo arlnaat a ih p u ttin g iaia&gt; Jam racat to u n Mary a Ma alar ma mad
Bav Oaray kidnapa har |Pari 7 0*

E X E C U T IV E S E C R E T A R Y
Front office, phonea, lllmg.
typing helplul Permanent
potltione Never a toe I

LS17 French Ave
P S YC H IA TR IC TE C H
Part lime Must be experienced
tor crlkla unit In Seminole

Caunty »1 a m

n rn m m ------

Front alllc*. phones, tiling
typing halplul Perm anent
positions Neveretoo l

TEMP PERM..-.... 774-1346
Receptionist with good 1* 1*
phone voice needed tor Sen
fo rd B ran ch of N a tio n a l
Company Call betseean * 4 1.

*04774ms

Daily Werk Oaily Pay
I NO F E E I
Report ready lor work at a AM
407 W 1st St
Sanford
321 1590

Appointment Sellet Needed'
C#lie**e**a
ask tor Cindy
c l U ic a l / T y H I t
Good typing, ganaral otttca *•
parlance Large co Parma
noni positions Never a tee t
T t M P P IR M _______ 774-1346
T r a in

C L E R IC A L ASST.
for all around otflca

Employment
323-5176
M U French Ave
Counter Person needed Mutt be
neat 4 mature Will Iram
Sawing a plus! Apply Car
rlaga Cleaners ala Shopping
Cantor. Longwoad____________
C R T/D A TA E N TR Y
U K wk Top notch cot Ahy
• • p t r l o n c o w in s ! F u l l
benefits

Employment
323-5176
&gt;U1 French Ave
C R T O P ER A TO R
Data entry •iperrencs tar par
manonl positions with growth
potential Never a toe I

TIMr n t u _____ 7741141
D e l i v e r y O r le e r / K lic h e e
Helper Good pay Part and
lull time Carle's Italian Res
I aw ant 10M S French Ave
Santprd OT Tail
____
Delivery Collector aa V Must
have valid Fla drivers license
and good driving record Call

Hi mx_______________
01MCTOt i
ASST. DIRECTOR

tor a Child Day Car* Cantor
Pretor S yr* ripe r lent* in
child related Held Musi have
leadership
and
or garni a
'lonei skill* Salary baaed an
erpertenci Apply M l t Illh
St betore May lath_________
D O O R / Q L A il W AREHOUSE
M 00 V
Any carpentry a ip t
Large established Mfg Co

Employment
323-5176
H U Freed) A re
Legal Sacrelary Receptionist
'K n h f E apar lance requtrod
Local Ganaral Practka Law
F irm Phene77&gt;4t71_________
Local Rooting
openings •or asm* s i peri
•INt no experience necessary
**u*4 be at taaal 10 yes old
end have own transportation
* RURp T# apply: tall. 777

♦ailtar appiirnooni
LOCAL DELIVERY
Go piece* her* I Ca Truck/Slarl

fib

Employment
323-5176
M I! 7 ranch Are

N C P IN E E D C O
for butlnesa account* Full time
*40 000 to M0 000 Part lima
•17 000 to IIOOOO No tail
Ing Repeat business Set your
own hews Training provided
Call 14)7 f l l e«71). Mon F rl I
A M to 1 PM CST
Rattdenl Manager Far Settler
fkdutt Cemmunity Individual
needed aim super personality,
activities coordination shills,
atrong sense of responsibility
Idea l tor recant re tire *
Apartment 4 me*i* provided
Resume to Personnel. 700 w
Airport B ir d . Suit* 111. San
ford Fla 17771
Responsible person to car* tor |
c h i l d r e n In m y h o r n *
Mon Frl Must hav* franspor
teflon and references Call
i n 7417 afar 1PM

RR-IPN
PR N Pool Acuta care with
hoapilal aip*r»n&lt;* to* rpltaf
slatting 111 or I I I Apply
Was* Volusia Memorial Hoapi
tal 701 West Plymouth Ave
DeLand Fl

RN-0B
Experienced In labor and da
l l y a r y , f ami l y art ontad
birthing 111 er It* rn.rt
Apply w Volusia Memorial
Hospital 701 W Plymouth
Ave , DeLand. Fla
tolp Wanted W* need
good herdworking people tor
titormlneting business Mere
11000 to U » per mo C Xpert
once preferred but willing to
tram with sates becSground
Cor allowance, highest com
mission, paid vacation plus

bonuses ate Call a** sasa
Toddy and aaa tor Cindy

SdCftUn Dart Tjptst
Wanted tor front office Must be
able to type at least as WPM
Call l i t T ill tor an appomt
SUM M ER JOBS
Immediate openings oCtorkal
a
Warehouse Never a toe I

TIMR WRM_____ 774-1346
Lendecreper experienced pra
tarred Mutt have valid Fla
drivers liscansa and be It
years er alder A p p ly in
person &gt;4R| w Jlth street
• 4PM

Meintonnnca Person desired
Fam iliarisa tion air condl
H o n in g 4 ta t r lg e r a M o n
•gulpmant O th e r washer s
wanted Apply In person
Days Inn. I i 4 St Rd aa

MECHANIC TR A IN EE
* U Slabia co went* la tram
career mindedl Learn alt
p h a s e s at h y d r a u l i c
machamtsl Newt

Employment

fib

323-5176
7177 French Are

Medical ONkd- parseral ctarkol
and m edical la rm in c lo g y

and Saturdays PU
m il a resume In dam writing to

P O Baa K71 Sentard

�71 — Help Wanted

99— Apartm ents
U n furnished/ Rent

AVO N E A R N IN O IW O W III
O P E N T E R R IT O R IE S NOW! II

Double 0ffic« for rent

a iiiu «f m w

C a ll F u tu ra a they have
hundreds o* iob opemew* for
those who want la work

UU

SAVE

ms

an i n
Rent Naw and E*|*yl
Th u Limited Special:
Energy Efficient
) Rdrm I Rath Apartmanta

D E L IV E R Y H E L P E R S no *■
penance w n w y Pull tlm «
Good darling par **» *J0C
G E N E R A L O F F I C E
T R A IN E E !
Groat starling
Iob Several openings Good
pay a n i n
F A C T O R Y A I ! E M E L Y and
P R O D U C TIO N WORK Mott
fhiftt open Good par scales

) bdrm ) bath alee available
W Oacarativa Wall Cevertwge.
dw.lt in B u k c .v ., Plenty
at Staraga. W ither/Oryar
Haak v* and Carport
Watarbadi Acre* tod

TR U C K O R IV E R ! Long haul
Immediate' Good driving re
cord O r*r is a n 1)00
L O C A L D R I V E R ! Straight
Irucka Good pay Start right
away a n 1)00
R E C E P T IO N IS T . O F F IC E
H E L P E R ! . C L E R K !. C R T
O P E R A T O R S - Im m adlata
op*"Inga Good pay stales
Call a n 4)00 NOW'
WE L O C K ! Cartiliad Excellent
pay u i i r i Can today i n

P AIN TER ! A PAINTER
H E L P E R S - I m m a d la l a
openings good alarting pay
Cali today a n iw&gt;
O R T W A L L With O' without
r ■ p a r im t a
Im m a d la t a
op»nmga Good pay Call to
day a n 1)00
Waltraaa na*d»d lull A part
tlm* M P ura 1 experienced
• lib llalla n Food Carlo a
Italian Retteuranl 100* S
Franch A w . Santord IT ) n i l
W AN G O P E R A TO R
Openings In Lak* Mary No lee
C a ll A b l a i t T a m p o r a r y
Sarvlcoa M l WKJ
W AR EH O USE
A T T E N T I O N man Shipping
R*&lt; laving API* to lilt SB I b t .
own trantportatlon |a an hr
Par manant position Navar a

*1

rtur perm .

77U3*i

W* hava Job* wa naad paopial
Caraar Flndara. Inc 1*01
South F ranch )J1 I I I )
W O R D PROCESSOR
IS to Id par hour Immadlata
opamnga
Parmanant pov
&gt;-ona Navar a taa I
a IRM D IS P LA Y W R ITER
a L A N IE R a r a WANG

TEMP PERM....... 774-1141
Wa hara Job* wa naad paopla*
Career Flndara Inc itOd
South French U l 1*1)

91— Apartments/
House fo Share
-■to

-

NoommRtf
only to th «r»
country ttla tt on
$700
8 8 month m SDt

93— Rooms for Rent

&gt;

CPsr isfiAn Apts A Hemes
IV , kitchvn, liundry, ma'd. llfi
*4 up Or I i l l M R i / m N i a _
tiaan CemSertiW# Reen W&gt;0
*0*4 inctudot u IHHUm A m#.id
w rv »c « Call 33i **4 7 or J 13

RIDGEWOOO ARMS 4PTS.

Monday thru F riday

a to S

»

Saturday from

Rooms prnuti intunct
Call
____
M) M i)
SAN FO R D Furnllhad roomt by
the weak Reasonable 'a 'a i
Maid aarvlca Call 17) 007
i 7 PM 41) Palmetto Ava
SANFORD
H eat weakly A
Monthly ralat Ulll me att
SOOOak
Adults I M l TER)

97— Apert merits
Furnished / Rent
Furn Aptt tor Samar Cltliana
)l| F'almatto Ava
J Cowan No Phone Cal It

IUSH CARDENSfTTiNC
I Bdrm
1 Bdrm

...........furnished Apia
litargy IMtoenf
S IN O L1 S i OK T
B U IL T IN BOOKCASES
ABUNDANT S T0R A 0I

SANFORD CT. APTS.
323-3304
Nearly new 7 bdrm 7 bath
washe r d r y e r . I l l ) F i r
month, lit A depot11 Call
pea tea) anytime
Nicely furn 1 bdrm apt bay
w ndowa. Irg tar porch, all
uflllttot pd . 7 bike to town no
pota 777 077*. Navom otaogo
Santord I bdrm Adwlta. no
pota Air. qutot roaldantial
MTS mo B u g | n RSI*________
I Bdrm efficiency par tact tor I
pa'ton MS wk plus 1100
tocurity deposit Call 177 IN *
• room Apt In town I child A
pat OK was mo WOO depot it
I7IOR3I
__________ .

f t — Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
BAM BO O COVE APTS
M R ! A-rpart A'rd
PHONE m M M m a a t i
Elbe fancy tram U M at*
a C O U N TR Y S E T T IN O •
Larga I B 7 Bdrm Apartments
Ad.it LakaviawFamily Pmltrda

MASTERS COVE___12T 7900

321 0759 Eve 322-7643

id to )

Will Stmt Cr.____321 5005
Spec tout Apartmanla minutei
tram H a y ta il Lakatront.
pool tanmt pdultl no pelf
laundry Starting at U » a mo
Call T?) OUT to tar
__
I and 1 bdrm Alto furnitbad
alticlancy trom STJ weak 11)0
dr pot 11 Nopatt Cat, M ) 4 »7
S 7 PM a l) Paimailo_________
I Bdrm . larga living room now
appliance* A In good condl
Hon t)7 lm o *fa last
m s SPECIAL
I A } bdrm from S)I0 Lake
Ada Fleaibleleata 17) *410

Far Sale By Owner 71X40
mobile home with tot 17X17
utility room IJXad ra-tad
•nttotad screened porch
Raised permanent thlngie
rool
Fully carpeted
Overlooking SI John t River
Covered boat slip Uta ot pool
A club houta Call tor app t
604 *041 or 4*4 SJJT

HALL

H AM § t E WOOD 1 STO R Y with
liPHirhilinf pool" Hu^« tten*
ftrtpfac*1 E i t M r a i CAiltnftl
All th# tifrp if Assum « no
q u a lify in f f A f mo if ntwif
S IM M

2 Bdrm house 5325 mo
kith WsOdapotit Call 771 saga
7 or I bdrm newly rv mode lad
I I I ) Lau rel Avenue SaiO
month plua security Rater
encas required 77) U00
__
7 bdrrvy , 7 bath on boautllul
Lake Mary
In Lake Mary
H S attendance tone SSOO
me . plut I MO tec 77) 11*7
) bdrm l , bath, family room
Shaded ya rd convenient
location No pall laid mo t
toe dap Weekday* *a. wa
00*1 ( rat 77MOAT or 77T
0TW_________________
) bdrm. 7 both available June
I ) M O par month WOO tacu
rlty Or pot &gt;t Coll IT* f»*0.
attor 4 PM waokdoyt_________
a B D R M 7 B ATH SISO par mo
MTS dopotll No ralrlgorotor
Toking appitcaliont
S TEM P ER AGEN CY
J77 ***l

A V A IL A B L E 7 bd rm -l boih
CAfptf. ApplIAntAt Kf*#h»d
p t *&gt;o Itu n k y UR O 'lf 1 MSI
Da IH wa N k t 1 bdrm Qutat.
na if thopip'in-qi, $331 mo . p&gt;u»
%#&lt; k laato $74l*H
O « pI • ■ ; Udf m c 4r p o f »
p r ly o t f p i 110 lift, lAwfl
14fN&gt;Ct $111 mo , 31*_34vi|

107— Mobile
Homes / Rent

S T O R Y T O W N H O U S E tn
fifiU tw l N u tW h l 1 bdrm l» i
baHi tM/Urfv
In tHicheiil
Community pool) Priced Nf
ee%y purchase II*.*0*

COOL S P A R K L I N G POOL
«v fenced 4 acre and larpe 3
bdr m homat H uf« matter
bd rm Fire p la ce ! Central
h e a l/ a lr f ) e a r h i M p i l
Assume ne qiealftyinf «e/ let*
down' $94 *00

323-5774
&gt;404 HWY Wt7
Duple* Far Sale Two I bdrm
unlit attached garage newly
renovated IS ) wo 771 wee
Large I bdrm 7 bath brick
home In Highland Park. 7IM
to It with dbit car garaga
plus 14X], patio, largo lot w/
nico landscaping Attumablo
F&lt;yX mortgage with possible
owner financing t u * too
TIT 1)1* ___________

2 R V Spices Available

l%|H'Ft\la|iS|!M"*V||' tXIMlflMri*

t D T L l W ILD E This tpactout
hem* It vacant and ready tor
year la m lty ll i b d rm ., t
balkt, lam lly roam large
gam* ream Owner will atsitl
tn financing I f f .000
NEW LIS TIN O 1 b d rm . 1
baths Oak Heart, taraanatf
P O O L ar ea G reenbeut*
Lovely corner let with large
oak Ireat la*.too

OPE N SUNDAYS 1 PM la S PM

(305) 321-C041

H ir 4 n u th o u ses
as* a uo
— .............m aaia

minimum

Wit!

JUST R IG H T FOR YO U
) Bdrm |t* bath brick homa It
ready and priced right at
tattoo Recently redecorated
large lot Call 'o w e

CALL BART
R EA L E S T A T E
R EA LTO R
_____ U l ,**•

COUNTRY WIDE REALTY

NEW HOME

Rentals

Lovely ) Bdrm 1 bath with
great room llraplac* eal m
kitchen
dining room
loaufltui wooded tot 17* too

7 Bdrm 7 bath naw appliancat
washer and dryer included,
pool S IX per month SMO ko
tu n ly dapotii Coll » l SIS* or

m rm _____________

7 bdrm 7 bath, all appliance*
w ith e r i dryer screened
porch many Wind* drapes
pool wator A garbage WJS
mo m i « leas. 77)11)4

123— Wanted to Rent
Farmhovta or other rural area
tor married protoettonal cou
p i* w i t h 7 d o g t
Have
**c*n*vl retoroncat Pr*l#r
Saminoto Caunty but will can
t-dar naarby tocatton Price
negofieb** Call I MS I 771 )toa

125— For L m

m

SAilMiNTE

PHONE 3231443
For quality crottmanship and
compalitivo pricoe tol us pneo
out your to
Own A New Homa A Pay No
Closing C « H I bdrm J both
with ge'ogo M H O 7 bdrm
7 bo'h with garaga sal OOO
&gt; d Araa Deltona Available
appro* M days ONk Ford
Construction 77) ST)*
_____
Santord N k o I bodrtyom homo
ailh llylng room, dining room
panotod lamily room laundry
room workthtp Coll tor In
to m a lo n U ) HSR or U * aUf
ia ) too orbostoftor
■I I t l O M

STEMPER
I N V I I T M E N T ) units m !
Santord Only 1ST 000 Lg
down or ra tinanco Owner
will ***-&gt;'
7 LOTS IN D E L T O N A
each

iaOOO

pfo&gt;•ii*

pa^mant

immad&lt;aia
Call

143— Waterfront
Properly / Sale
La*a Monro# naar I 4 \ acrv
n t0 traat.canal * barn brick
4 bdrm 7 bam t*9 000 377 079*

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

WE LIS T A N D IE LL
MORE H O M E S TH A N
A N Y O N E IN N O R TH
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY
S PECIAL 7 bdrm t bath hom*
in excellent conditien. porch
with tkyllghtt. utility room

as.too
SUNSHINE HOM E 7 bdrm I
bath hom* with paddle Ians,
tal in. kitchen, large utility
raem Sits on eld letluaned
Brick Streeell sat doe

27TH STREET FURNITURE
ia* w irth st
wu
Appiinc#! Far Sal# all in
•Italian! condition k *ullf
fuarantvad
373 *7**
Bodroom Sat Soi*d mapia twin
badt, dratfkar daih
171 $ W

A T T E N T IO H
) bdrm 1 bath
home with eat In kitchen,
paddle Ians, alarm tytlem
SSI 040
POOL HOM E I bdrm I bath
hom* with fireplace, paddl*
Ians, aaI in kilthen. POOL,
den H I M
NEW H O M E ! I bdrm, 7 bath
hom* on I acre Eal In kltch
tn . p a d d lt l a m , can tra l
i n N i l almond appliancat
W ILL R U ILO TO S U ITI TO U R
LO T OR O UR SI E X C LU S IV E
A O ■ NT FOR WINSONG
DEV C O R P . A C E N TR A L
FLO R ID A L R A O E R I MORE
HOM E FOR LESS M O N E V I
C A LL T O D A Y !

Early Amancan lava taat
and tola $79
Cali 377 ?40*
a f f a r * F‘ M
For ia*t S»ova da%L bdrm vat
v p r In g i and m a H r a t i t i
tablav lampt Call 11) 3722
Fratftr
Upr i ght . I* C u l t
Ctcabant condition $790 or
bavt o'tar 1st 9*A4
Racand!t»anad Appliancat
tram US WA R R A N T Y
BARNETTS
CASSC L U R R Y
•M91I3
*3* 9411
• R E N T TO OWN a
Color TV*, tturaov. *othOf«
dryaf*. rafriptrator froafart,
turnltut*. vidaci racordarv
Spatial H I vraalt i rant $9 00
Altar natty* TV A Aa*l Rantalt
lavra* SNopplnq Cantor
___________ m w w ___________
lla a K a lila W a t l i a r / O r f a r .
Prands t&gt;Ftqtncl»l a»Mirw| %*f,
la a c h tf'i dot* J7I I J f f or
m m j
Used Washer* Parti A Service
tor Kenmares . ............ 7)7 #*»f
M O O N E Y A P P LIA N C ES

NOWLEASING
CAU 322-1051

■e M

a J

j

i

4*uRwRb&gt;

LI ST W ITH US'

U Pick Strawberries Me lb
Season ending June 7 4*SO
Hester Ay* Santord M l D a )

10 Grand Pris
No money down
use.
Courtesy Pontiac
1! ) 1111
AO Mus*eng
loaded
tit* )
Coortoky Pewttoc......... 77) li t l
|1 Buick V a
Fully *ou&lt;pReduced
IN V
C n u r t ,,,

223— Miscellaneous
BonoM Plan! S*i« c o r w of
E a t' }3rd $1 k Pa'mofio (301
E 73rd St 1 Saturday 7S'h
baginning at l AM
Salat Ufa TV Sy flam*
C o^pN 'a All you naad I0CN
Financing No menoy down
1 3M OOUntvartal 131 97*4

C ock atla ls W M t* A grey
Young |us' starting to lay All
birds mutt go 777*17, or
777 71*0 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Fry* to good home all black
labrador mala 7 mo* ail
shot* Evenings M l a*74______
Pretty Pupo-rs Fer Sal*
cockatoo t&lt;7S
M l SIM

WMdan dtfplay SIS w alar'at I
roc* I X ck&gt;thing rack $39
173 $471___
30 in Snappof Comat § HI*
nd«ng mowtr
Saar* Ro'o
T!Ua» powar 'wd rav i HP
Both a tea Man t condition
377 *0*7

203— Livestock and
Poultry

B id Credit ?

t* Pontiac Sunbnd
No monay down
Sato)
Caurtesy Pontiac
M ) 71)1

215-Trucks/
Buses/ Vans

No Credit *

NE FINANCE
NATIONAL AUTO SALES

213— Auctions

1170 S. Santord 321 4075

L A E AUCTION

A DATTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION a

)M Vin*ard Ava
C O N SIG N M EN TS W E LC O M E I

Hwy *7 ....
Dayton* Beach
* * * * * Helds * * * * * *

li'73 GMC 3- * tots Van Throw
H3aad rwatff motor A 4VI Call
373 M*A
1•71 F ofd
F I00%hor*bad
______ 3JI 1109
’ t w» hand it- Maii Jaap Good
working condi'ion Soma body
da^aga $300 373 Ial7 a "a r 4

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION

323 4591

7 7 )7 U I

A&lt; Pontiac Ftoro
Sports Coup* Reduced serve
Ceurtesy Pontiac
)1 ) 11)1

231-Cars

l4b*ei For Sal*
P if i,. tm gaali. min. bur rat
Wilca Salat Hay **W, 177 *&lt;7*

P o m ,* r

l i Cadillac f 'ee I wood
Reduced
W*M
Courtesy Pontiac
1)17&lt;y
'l l Oatsun 11* T.nled Windows
air Wen m j n l j nvd ttaOOor
beet oiler M ) a*v -041
R M* k ) j 47*
Reefs pd
tv s c
Cevrtssy Pontiac
M )) t ) l
*1 Mercury Etphyr GS Settling
eiial* Like new cond ) , too
mi 14 *00 7)1 144)

343— Junk Cars

Every Wed Nit* at f t* PM

FOR E S T A T E
C om m o rcla t or Rattdontial
Auctiont k Appraivali Call
Pail %Auction 373 M70________

* Where Anybody *
* Can Buy or Sell! *
Fey mere details
I to* I ! ) 1)11
DeBary Auto A Marm* Sain
Acres* the rlyer, top *« lull
li t Hwy ,7 ft DttLary &gt;** AM*
Ford Fairiane, 'aa * dr a cyl
*■&gt; shocks, mags many new
parts 777 no* 1*o* I’M

215— Boats and
Accessories
BOAT A AUTO REPAI RS
Loaatt pricav for highovl quail
ty Call )77 *4’* lor av!
Untqw* Auto A Manna Hrpgir
Factory Diract I* tf Canoat
Hand latd llbargia tt S77S
UniqcFt Marina Dittribufort
377 Of/*
19 H a s s BOAT «0 "I* V#*i u r»
with tla in ia tt vita! prop
E lac trie f r ai l I ng mol ot
automatic b*ig# pump tithing
vaatv fora and att Naw galva
nliad tf a il#r with tpara whaai
and lira. 11*71 Call 373 m 3
19 " Mbargiatt &lt; Of#d bow ss
Marc 90 rnagic till Dwnad by
Marc, mac hank S3 790 373
*30* * "or *

O

D IS C O U N T
A U TO
S A LE S

WE FINANCE
110! Franch Ava

113 I N !
1*7* Olds eat CenvertiBI* with
) ) 000 mil** •feeds repair

trgm rust *s *. J ). weekdays
Id Dodge Or,ml
*dr Sedan
Automailc
jm i
CewHety Pentlac............ I I I H I 1
If to Lincoln Town C o' Loader!
Velour Interior f n e H te nt
Condllton U.AM M l dISI
1*79 Magmun KE G T T Top
Buckets 111. Air, **c*llanl
condllton 17,MO Call 177 * m
ifff Chavatl*. air* maw brakat
good firtt Aftklng $1471 Call
*41 *717 mofningt or aM#f
9PM
1911 C h a v o r l a i C a p r l c a
f. Rcaiiant corntt'ion 73 000 ml
$4400 Phont
34$ 4831. or
» M f l«

19 Fi Boni'o Trt Hu", "barglaft
w 31 HP E vfnruda Runt
groat Comai m/ fraHor $190
mi m i

219— Wanted to Buy
Baby Beds, Slrtllars, Clothes
P la yp a m , t f c . Paperback

* m u „ mesaa

Need Crib*. Pleypens. Baby
lu rn ltu r* . elathing
Deed
pr uw* *iie. y p m
H i eta)
PaymgCASM lor
Aluminum. Can*. Copper,
Brass, Load. Newspaper.
Ola**. Gold. Silver
Kokomo Tool,» , « W 1st
• S 00 Sat * I M ) MOO

D udya P k k v y - H u n t a * rfM f,

naw paint. 11050 or mak#
ottar 974 7139
Tf Honda Pra'uda
Black
Au»o Irani .Sunroof
$79f9
Courtaty Pontiac. .......... I l l f i l l

ANY JU N K C A R L O T R U C K !
Bought From l i t l i t A more
Call 1)11414
11)4)11
TOP Dollar Paid lor Junk A
Used cart trucks A hoavr
aqulpmont M l SSOO
WE P AY TD P D O LLA R FOR
JU N K C A R ! A N D TR UC KS
C R i A U T O P A R T ! 7SI t i t )

1 9 7 5 MERCURY
■BtRARCK. A M

* 9 9 S

1984 JEEP CJ 7
•f M LAM

*•993

19 77 DODGE ASPEN
4 BR . 10 M U ! * 3 t 1 9 5

1 9 8 0 AUDI 4 0 0 0

•4993

7 BR

1976 CKEV. CAMARO

•1993
1981 R A T STRADA
L0 to fU t

'1 9 9 3

SANFORD
M O T O R CO
A M C JEEP
5OR S. Frtnch Avg.
Ill O R ]

CONSULT OUR

3 2 2 -2 4 2 0

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

))* ) PARK A V I Santord
Ml Lb Mary Btvd Lh Alary

To List Your Business-

IfM S. Chat# Ave Open Houta
on Sun ) bdrm , Ito bath
U l t li ly rm
A w orkshop,
fenced bock y a rd . Canl
t o il e r . fully carpeted May
h * i^ h n a n c * 7 I )f * S ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

B rO w ner 711T sq tt dwelling PS
K 110 ft tot West Airport
B'vd
Santord Zoned GC 7
Suitable tor professional office
conversion Principles only
m siot
_____
C O M M E R C IA L SP EC IALIS T
L A K E M A ltT Rk A L T Y
ROB B A L L .JR
H im ,
SAN FO R D *1 X 700 tomed tot
Well A septic Good Terms
Wallace Crest Realty. Inc
R E A L TO R
MiaSTT

151— Investment
Property / Sale
C A S S E LB E R R Y I acre, zoned
PR I I4&gt; 000 W Malic lows*!
R E A L TO R
M l 7*A)
NEW S MY R N A AEACH
A C LF Retirement Mom*
Eacoltont Income
leashtid* Realty. . R EA LTO R S
•04*17 111)
Open T days!

151— Acreage
Lots/Sale
17000 dwn U s ) mo I acre*. 110
It p a r e d r d
frentag*.
homoertolno mobiles i &gt;7) *049

155— Condominiums
Co Op / S a lt
Two Bdrm 7 B ATH N EW AP
P U A N C E S WASH D R Y E R
I N C L U D E D pad screened
porch L i t 900 Win consider
toaso option Call M l StW or

»7 rm

___________ _

157-Mobile
H o m ts / Sala

,V

F ami,tot______ a ------------- Aduttt
7 1 tW »* 1 7 'W ...... ............m u M
M Stotta Key
7 bdrm
) bath Split Call
Ml S4*4 Sun Thurt

*

i' i
e* 1
e*e*J

Additions 4
Remodeling
F re* E ilim ttt t B Consulting
Lie
Bonded
Insured
W* Spec 1*11&lt;o in Oual ity I

Stage Builders_________R* WW

RlMOOfLING SPECIALIST
We Handle
Th# Whole Ball Of Way

I. E. LINK CONST
3227029

Cleaning Service

Lawn Service

Plumbing

Spec i#li,ing In elite tot A
Warehouses
Llrented
E tt
Reasonable
Pleat* Call
E A L C Waning Sarvlce
M l 040)

A C I LAW N S E R V IC E
Malntonence Seeding Pruning
Cleaning TBetcBIng Ferfillilng
Free BtHmetoe............... SMIF71

• Rudds Plumbing Servlcd *
Repair • Replat* e R im id ll
* Free Itllm a to t * I I I 4*M a

Electrical
Anything I n , ' ....... Since I t it I
Estimates 74 Hr Sarvict Calls
Tam's Electric Sarvlce M l in *

Financing Available

Handy M an

Air Conditioning
* Heating

E ip Handyman. Re* Reliable
Free E tt most any |eb Best
Wales Ml t i l l Call Anytime

Welker's Haattag 4 Aw
Conditioning Same*
Work on window units B NV I

Health 4 Beauty

Ml am

Appliance Repair
A lk m A p p k a M i SefYK*
74By Sorvict fto I itr# Charge
t ly r eap tea ta il. II* M M

Automoliv*
A U T O REPAI RS
Lswell price* tor highest quail
ty Call M l M M tw ett
Unique Auto A Marine Repair

Bookkeeping
Cns c kboek
B a n k t l e t me n t
Balancing we c*n help' Call
Sandy TUOJe* er Terri 17)
IMS

Carpentry
A O R ! A T O IF Tl Hare Her
Kitchen Remedetodl AH type* **
Carpentry
RaeseneMe Pttces
■ ■pertensed
References
Very ReUabto
M l eewxye
All types of carpentry B re

Cleaning Sarvict

Ltf|«t Nen . l lhH Mbbito
Hem Oeetoi ie Ihn fcw

|

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

madallng If yrs eap Cell
RmherdGross Ml MT7

SANFO R D 7 bdrm . 1 both
Fenced yard. Fla room E*C
cond Sal 009

C A LL A N Y T IM E
R E A L TO R 777 a**I

221— Good Things
to Eat

C A L L A N Y T IM E

« OORM C O U N TR Y M O M I IN
O S T K N with 7 stooping
cabins US00O

O IH R R HOM ES. LO TS.
A C R E A G E . IN V E S TM E N T
P R O P E R TY

1I N VW Bug Eiceilan, tondi
*ton Sun root new intorto*
•od tir*» Asking ) U M C*H
17) ***)or M l 9471

II you are looking tor a lire
cettlul career In Real Ellal*.
Stent,ram Realty It leaking
tor you Call Lee Albright
today *1 77) 74)0 Evenings
&gt;1) &gt;M)

AT LUE MONROE
1 pad 2 IIM 00M S
LAKEFRO NT
LU XU RY ADULT
C O M M U N IT Y

Second Imago
needs costume
Iowa try M ) **2i

A U C TIO N E V E R Y FR I N IO H T

Bog R l . leober ...........771 M IS

121— Condominium
Rentals

dawn

contract to purchase
alter a PM MS 777 S77V

R E ALTO R

117— Com m ercial

Retail A Office Space MO i* to
7000 tq n alto tforaga avail
abla 17) aM) _______________

Nice
Naad

attu*T*i&amp;l« loan &lt;jaod farms

149— Commercial
Property/Sale

SIS VS ))th Street
Santord. FI 77TTI

177 ;aai

1 1 3 -Storage Rentals

I Need A 1 Rdrm FAST ,
araa
a*y condition

* G E N E V A O S CE O LA RD *
lO N E D F O R M O B ILE S !
I Acre Cauntry tracts.
Well treed en pared Rd
7SX Down I I Yrs *1 1 1 V
From l i t , SMI

CONDO Newly redecorated
and rtferbithad. 1 bdrm I
story Wen t last at Ml.Sdd

K one r a il air cond
tu p ar
clean.A mealy turn lithing A
poll al back door rani by
weak or t a ll SSOO d w n .
1110*1 mo Adult* no poll
71* **11/77) * » )
N k a I7&gt;M 7 bdrm a ml to
town Older toupN nopatt no
chiIdran Reterencet ragulrad,
water lurnithod la* A last.
SMC mo . 771 77A4_____________
Par* Ava Mobile Park

1

KISH REAL ESTATE

105-DuplexTriple* / Rent

lO N G W O O D ) bdrm I bam
New root Low down payment
O wner financing I l f S00
M l a**)

Sonfocd's Solos Itodti

Deltona 7 bd rm . I W dining
area, k llc h . ter porch Sat
plot Woo aac No pa't Avail
now was mo wa Redciitt
)0 i Wa 1010

• • * IN D E LTO N A • • •
• • H O M E !F O R R E N T • •
* • 174-MM # •
Sanford 3bdrm $490 month
C h ild rtn A p#ti OK Call
4S9Mi l &lt;Mff \______________

141— Homes For Sale

REAlTYeREALTOR

tlAMY me
K iito a
I* Tf*t$ lIN M ftc l

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

159— Real Estate
Wanted

STENSTROM

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent

H3I__________
Giaan room veiffi ttllcNniTlte
Prlvaft b*Ph 111 *0*4 In
cludMf will!"** $&lt;00 encsirlty
(Mpoeit H I **47 or M l *411
R u m F i r Hoof l #M M a t y
4 'ts 190 « * . fci»Cts#n p*M
*a q m m i* u . m i in o
Room in prlv hom# l©f ro
'IfdOntihl* pmt%on Downtown
aroa Kltctitn Pfly 111 *4
tPKludAi Ail utilitue 111 *304

L*&lt; Real Eltate Breker
)*W Santord Ava

Deltona Reduced Owner trant
tarred 7 '* fenced acre* with
treat A garden area ) bdrm.,
7 bath mebtla heme with 7
part hr t wa too

WILSON U*l[* FURNITURE

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

BATEMAN REALTY

limited Tim* Onlj
tyott Flrtt Montht Rant
)SM R-dgawood A&gt;*
Santord Fla
CALL
)))*4M
Miaagi

231— Cars

COLOR TE L E V IS IO N
R C A
IS " color consol*
i*i*viston Original price over
t*a) balance due ilia Cash
or lak* over porments ol t i i
month NO M O N EY DOWN
Still in warranty Free home
In a l, no
obligation Call
*al STQaday or n g * 1__________

Ail Signal Are Gel 7 bdrm 7
baths dan low equity, w a lk
*ng distance to school centra,
air.haot AW *00 Call Now'
77) 1*14______________________

Orlmdo toll free 3SS 4441

W e d n d ia la Y , M a y 7 J. m s - S B

219— Wanted to Buy

113— Television /
Radio / Stereo

an W Lake Alary Boulevard.
Suita a. 1 )0 0 m onth
Im
mediate occupancy 777 TTOI

F I.

131— Appliances
/ Furniture
i l l T O E 1st S T.............. 771 sal)

141— Homes For Sale

321-1911

I M M E D I A T E O P E N IN G !
Gonorel Con* true I ton labor
Good pay art a x »

want

Yw To MccT MY

alii_________________

ONLY............ $419.

an am

cette ;n . i

AvailobtoJuno lit 777*0*8
Winter Spring*- Protoktlonel
OfHca Space tso iso *q ft.
reasonable rant Phone
TIT BT)t or M i M M
1*00 td n woo per mo plus taa.
a calling Ians. Brick A Cedar
I n t e r io r w a lls
Bob M
Ball Jr . P A . Realtor 777

T Ire* *t )*k Hunting f

E v e n in g H e ra ld . S a n fo rd

KIT 'if CARLYLE ’ by Urry Wright

127— Office Rentals

Hand Carpet Ctoawmg Using.
Ommg Raem 4 Hell ITS M
let* B Chau, t i l IT ) 1*4*

MAIDS !e OtWt
Ctoanlmesa IS asst To Gedlrw.il
Call H it Befperst
Guaranteed S a n k * Lew "ales

CAU NOW! 3)9-0400

TO W ER S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y Harrietts Beauty
Nod* I l f E 1st SI B l I W

Home Improvement
Calltor'i Betkdmt B RsmsdiUwg
He M b Tee Small
I I I Burton Lane, laatord
___________ t n - M « ____________
Plumbing. Painting Electric
Carpentry Den t Ve* iff Ask Bel
Ip yrs « a p
»fcL M l OMI
Semi Retired Con tree tor wants
small remodeling |obt Rea
tonabto l » 0 0 » ____________
T H O M A ! A THOM AS Hem*
rape*, cleaning . l* » " tnrn
CaM t H U P f
__________

Home Repairs
CARPENTER
Repairs and
remodeling No fob toe smell
Call M ) to t)_________________
Maintenance of *H types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
end elec trie 77) eOM

Landclearing

L awn Maintenance
Landscaping Bush Hog Mowing
___________ S d H O O ! ________

LAWNS MOWED 4 TRIMMED
S m ^ J f M d |O M n u j* _ J llM M I

Sewing
Allerallont 4 Clothing Repairs
Quick Seryica Eap to a m tlitH
Call anytime
M l 1440

E*es

n ) 1711

may

Nursing Care
O U R R A T I S A R I LOW ER
Lakavtow Nursing Cantor
f If ( Sacend SI . Santord
11) 4 « T _______

Feinting
A Way T* Save I Best Werk
Best Prices tor walipepermg.
painting. ♦ mere Bel Very
Reliable m e l i r K W

P A IN T IN Q
•RONOtO
•INSUAE0
• U C IN M O
• MSfOtwriAL

W.Q. T R IB B Y
OVIEDO FLA.

MS M R)

House Petal mg A Wall Repair
Tau buy mater toll
kerTe l A V I k t l
I T ) MSI
I N S T A L L ...l(L L ...a . R IF A I R
Cypress— Cheka Link ... Weed

_________m i n i _________

O R N IV A LA N D C LIAR IN O
Lo* Land*toering
Fill dirt
Topsor I Pond* Drain ditches
Site Pfeparalien Ceil M &gt;010
TH O R N E L A N D C L E A R lH G
F I L L DI RT * C L A Y A,
SH ALE H A U L IN G
P7

Lawn Service

Painting Inferior E i tor tor f a
tor tor Spade! Pres Wash.
W alerpreel. Seal Prap A
Pa mi U P ! Free E »l Cantacf
J ack aes 7)40.1)0 All*________
Reseenubto Man ead helper pfll
paint your Hem* *r Bwe.nesa

ok Give your problem* leus
WE C ARE

Ouollfy pork, to

yrs «»p MT tot) L k cont
■ I A T TH E M tA TI

r*

CeM Ckristien kf«. J
Cemptote Lew* Ceil

3234401

Secretarial Service

R IALC ancrst* IM an Q u elily
Operation Patio* Drlvewars
tPiciAL
Year Den B rkk Bar B O
O N L Y ......LS4I
C O M P L IT II
t i l 4741 ........................ M l « I T )

• a

^ w m m m m m m m
A LL Typing Secrelarlel t
Ward Precasting Services
•eelary Public
M l IM )

Masonry
Per* O ) TO),

:;:i
t‘t'1

Plastering
P A L L Phases etPtaitoriwgP
Repel*. Stucco. Herd Coat.
S*m*4etod B rkk 771 W*1

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners
Sewing Machine Repairs all
makes 10 yrs experience In
home) I D Retired M l let)

Sprinklers/lrrigation

cl
•! %
•Si

ABO U T TIM E IR R IG A TIO N
New Inslalleliont
Free E lf
Erpart RepeirtcH Complete
Sprinkler Syltems
Timers
Pumps
Efc_______ aes Ik k

Tile
A M T I L I Ceramic IU* salts 4
installation B ath. Iio o ri.
ramodaimg. rtp o lrt Loft of
•n e t d t a ig n t. p a tle rn a .
grouts, ta ilin g m alarial*,
cleaners, carnenl. m dltiC .
thmsel Inalallatlani Snow
room tot E 71th si . Van lord
John Parser Til* Centractor
TT) 7M4 or a*P sae*___________
Ctramic Til* glue e i er mud
me mod Ftoert. wells end etc
Free Etlemai* M l IfM. alto'
h ri 777 f t ) ) J^*m«l E_L** Inc
SceHmann Tito Ceramic Vmyl
Aibettot. * k Insianed 4 re
paired E i* id , Ik Fie*
atfimeSet &gt;7)4741

Tree Service
r*4 to re .* __ ....
------------U R Alter
M l f**«
a rm
t

ECHOLS T R t l SERVICE
Free Csfimaiesi Lew Rrkeal
l k .Im . Slump Gnwdi.g.Tael
M l i n f day or m i *
"Let Rk* Rretostkanelt da IT .
JOHN A L L IN S LAWN 4 T R I I
Died tree removal L k 4 ms
Free oak U l U K

i

�r * *

J

Mi

BLONOIE

Fvxnl ng H»r al d

'XV 0 0 5 5

ro e

W e d rw ld a y . M a y 21, 1U5

Sanf or d, FI

A_t_ 3&lt;3mT //-A" -5
/ o ja e
SG__'*3

}

r/ e * J O M V J
Cm J20G.U )

_E5SOf •«

7V|*J

&lt;2$
*»*
m

i

BEETLE BAILEY
L O O K AT H E R ! A L L
THAT B E A U T Y A M P
0 R A IM 5 , T O O !

THE BORN LOSER
LE‘x£EE,C*VfEAH,

(w i, em usT ( lojb V
\

Wte&gt; 6UEEU

LfLIKE
( KIDU-ECO

ARCHIE
WIRE yOU KANNING ON
0UVIMG ONE OF THfGC OAKS
you NO F t l l t u f j y

x -.w x x x x

V "

y

1

?

j K

^jp&gt;Sr
" u

EEK &amp; MEEK

THE.

vug. H A W t M M i
VULKjePAJBlLITV

T E S ttn t' ^ T T l R A U T m t
^ A ^ S O F M A P O V O O B fc

TO C£AL W ITH

by Chic Young

With Vitamins, More
Not Necessarily Better

When K comes lo giving medi­
cine. the old saving used lo be
Two pills for a horse one for a
man " Among somr consumers,
i h a l a p h o r is m h as b e en
expanded so that when taking
vitamins, the more ihr better
Not only does ret nil evidence
conclusively prove this theory
(.else but there is strong Indira
turn Ihal so-called megadose
by Mori Walker
v i t a m i n t h e r a p y r a n be
dangerous
Vitam in A In therapeutic
quantities IHtXt to 1.000 retinol
rcpilvalentsl Is necessary to
prrvent night blindness and to
maintain normal growth of I Is
sues Doses Ihal exceed the
ret unintended dally allowance
(HDAI can produce headaches,
nausea, vomiting skin shed
ding, hair lows, fatlgur, hemor
rhage. d is o rien ta tio n , live r
enlargement and bone pain
Niac in is essential lor energy
tnrtahnllatn The RDA is Id to 19
by Art Ssnsom
iliac In equivalents Overdose can
cause skin flu sh ing, heart
rhythm disturbances, headache
i ramps, vomiting, diarrhea, rle
V - m c u &amp;h t
vatrd blood sugar peptic ulcer
/ he * A iP
.md gout
HE UKED
Vitamin Hfi Is required for
\ fX C L E ^ ! amlno-acid metabolism and ihr
formallon of red blond cells The
RDA Is alxiut 2 mg Kxcesalve
ingestion of pyrldoxine produces
nerve damage In legs and arms,
seizures and peptic disease IMl
.^
/4LAm decreases the effec t ol the ntedl
• /&lt;
cine I, dop.i so the vitamin Is
by Bob Montana contraindicated in patients tx-tng
treated w ith this dru g for
Parkinson sdisease
Vitamin It 12 is probably the
sales! vitamin The It DA is 2
mlcrograms. but no adverse rf
Iccts are seen with much higher
doses H I 2 prevents jw-rnlc Ions
anemia Hut In cancer patients
taking methotrexate adverse
lute rut lion with It 12 &lt;an cm cur
Vitamin C. with an RDA of GO
mg plays a role m maintaining
Irmly tissues Including while
hlccnd cells No trsponslhlr III
vestlgatlons have shown that
by Howie Schneider high doses protect against the
common cold or any other Inlet
Hon In fact. massive doses may
WEWJ
cause II 12 dr I Icteric v . Iron
o v e r lo a d , d ia rrh ea
k td n ry
stonrs and breakdown ot rrd
tilccocI cells Ascorbic add In
terferes with a varlrlv &lt;d labor,*
tory tests and can Interact with

anticoagulant drugs Rebound
scurvy has been reported in
women who suddenly stopped
taking rnrgadoses

The preceding synopsis Is
based on valid m edical In­
vestigations If a consum er
rhfxrses lo accept. In preference,
non scientific claims based on
unproven opinion and anecdote,
he risks the potential for selfinflicted hazard

Vitamin D Is necessary for
healthy bones The RDA Is 200
to 400 in tern a tio n a l units
Chronic overdose ran produce
nausea, v o m itin g diarrhea,
headache, weight loss, weak
ru-ss fatlgur. confusion, kidney
(allure, calciu m deposits In
kidneys, hone pain

ACROSS

4 Coa1tunnel
entrance

1 Cov*'*d
iv»n u «
7 *%&gt;y "sages
12 VWd ss««c
13 0c*aM*tt tood

5 Mother ot

14 D ltC lO tin g

15
16
17
18
21
23

K**p Cu'ftnt
BxngKo* nttiv*
Jom
J Roman
Fcnmth **«
T o ig*ncy
(•Ob' I
26 Mrd o c a
icomp md |
2B Mmut* inisct
29 Dttactiv*

Spado

Srnri your quest tons in Dr.
Gnu .it V O Vox 9 I4 2 ». Clevel.inri Ohio 44101
Ansma' to Previous Puixle

Pa'seui

6 Mam
7 Irrp.mwu.a

8 V.eid
9 Wave (So I
10 Attar
deductions

11 Famale se nt
(abbr |
13 Raced latte'
18 Tristan s
beloved

19 Antiseptic hq
uid
20 Baromatar line
22 Similarity
23 Similar

compound

30 Bouquat
24 Wiratessat
31 Indalimta pa'
25 Izmir
ton
27 Mma product
33 Favorabla to
32 Barnyard sound
progcais
34 Lotlerms
36 Aiabian Dime*
37 Ganatic
matt'ial labbe)
36 fnglub fivar
40 Vait panod o*
lima
4 1 Always Ipoat |
47 Wood bondla
44 Royal Scottish
Academy
(abb' |
45 fiaquanlty
Ipoat|
46 l»nt*l*
46 ConstaHation
51 Ona mho
maXaa locayt
55 Smuggiai
56 Gasoline rating
57 Jobs
56 Required

35 Hindu
incarnation
39 D npd'y (2
wds 1
43 Trail
45 Farmyard
sound

49 Arthur's
me anan-.a
49 Sma

47 B-'d ot pray

54 Scartat

non

50 Ones |Fr |
52 Ona
breadwinnar

53 Chemical suttn

DOWN
t Auto dub
(abbr |

2 King |Fr |
3 Stray dog

( c l ' v a s n . Nf

i

*4%C

WIN AT BRIDGE
MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
/ H ( , W OUT t
Fl AY A N P
( O l !*&gt;J

l1

w h a t

Ak’ l TH E Y

(

\

\

H A -i K f 1 H A U

U lA Y E P S P /

HO. GILA i ’
IV IO G E A P F

V

.a '-.i’

BUGS BUNNY

POCO rtA9 BECOME A
SAG BASE G X l ECTOG

T ill

F O U R f&gt; tIMi-r
fX AT G O IMT
m e ,WAKIM(3
o r A R o f'fi i

fly J iD ir t Jacoby
Kelsey's
The Mind ul the
by Hargreaves &amp; Sellars l.\|x-M treats some Inlerestltig
d e fe n s iv e p ro b le m s
I’ l.it ■
vnurself In the Knst |misllloii and
pleleiid viin i .muni si-e tin ranis
O l 1vEf
THEY K’ L A
III tile South .mil West hands
G T f ilA lO
Alter winning the opening
u\'AL’ rf r
• luh lead ilrrlaier plays the
d la ill nit ll a r e .im l l o l l s a
diamond Next In plays ilu A K
ot spades, ills* aiding a heart
lions dumniv lollowed by a
In-art in tin king I’arittei plavs
the deuce as you win Ihr ai r
Whai now?
II drt-lnrrr slarteil with six
by Warner Brothers i luhs there will be no delense
llul partner s plat ol the heart
POES n ^ h E
two llow shows all odd iiumhrc
ol raids In the sutll tndli ales
that the South hand has thinheads Ihe defenders need to
play another rluh Hast must he

\r

* atelul Another diamond now
w o u l d e n a b l e d e c la r e r to
i rossrull diatuouds and spades
lor e noug h I r n k s
L eadin g
aliothei spade would let declarer
mil that spade trump another
diamond and then discard a
heart on the lourth spade, pul
&gt;ing Last on frail wtih no chili lo
plat
I hr solution requires a little
*outage Last must plav his
paitner lot the head |ark A low
heart to tile |.i( k enables West to
lead a second * lull, and now 1(1
in* ks .in- tin- limn ol the hand
Sotnr ol ton alert trailers may
have noticed that there ts an
Imerest mg variation to the spade
* out uniat ton On tin loutIh
spade West ran trump In Now
II declarer sheds dummy's last
heart West will In- able to lead
another i lull to scuttle the hand

N O H TH

»it»i

46
V KI J
♦ A J M .1

4 Ky » j
WKNT

HAST
♦ J » 7 11

♦ q 10 s
VJI 2
• q 10 7 2
♦: *♦

V 4 q |0 4
♦ K 94

♦ 1

SOI T il
4AIU 1

VMS
♦ it

♦ A J *0* J
Vulnerable Neither
Dealer South
Wrsl
VoMh Ka»l
I‘XU
I’xs*

I*

l ‘x u

South
14

1‘xvt

14

I'XU

*4
i’xu

l*xu

l*»»«
&lt;Ipening lead 47

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...

FRANK AND FRNEST

YOUR 1URTHDAY
May 23. l»B B
You have a vert’ valuable
liteurl and this (teison eould
M-tve as t our lln.iori.il adtlsei in
the yr.ir ahead Ills tips might
help lattrn voui hank act outlt
G EM IN I (Mat 2 1 June 201
Guard against tendrnrli-s i.xt.it
to think that ntonet ts raster to
come by than ll actually is Try
to tie prudent not impractical
Major changes are ahead lor
by Jim Davla Grinin! In the coining teat Send
Im your Astro Graph pirdlctlon*
today Mall SI to Astro Graph.
Hox 4H5I, Radio t'lly Station,
New York. NY IOOIU He sure to
stale your zodiac sign
CANCER Untie 2 1slidv 221
Make ll a point today to give
credit where credit is due.
especially II an associate's coop­
eration played a key role in what
was achlevrd

LEO 1.1ul v 2.1 Aug 22) Today
m il m old Im- a trifle ton initlller
t*m lot your own giMxt IV&gt; not
lake serious mailers for granted
VIRGO IAug 2d Sept 221 He
careful today no! to reject the
siiuiut advice ol a juil who has
vour Im-si Interest at heart in
order lo comply w ith Ihr wlshrs
ol a know nothing
LIB R A (Sept 2.1-0* t 231 In
c.trrer situations IimI.iv . It s Iwst
not In b ro a d c a s t v o o r In te n t lo o s

In advance The (-(imprtUlon
could get wind of vour alms and
i iit you oil
SCORPIO (Orl 24 Nov 221
Subdue temptations tcMlav to
ollrt unsolicited advice, even ll
you srr someone doing some­
thing Incorrectly that you know
how to do pioperlv
S A G IT T A R IU S INnv 23 Dec
211 Resources that you have
earmarked for essentials should
not he diverted today to fulfill
frivolous desires Manage your
money wisely.
CAPRICORN IDei- 22 Jan IU|

I hr llrsi move will Im- up to you
today d you expert cooperation
Imin others Show a willingness
to I m- hrlplul and they. In turn,
will emulate vour behavior
AQ UARIU S (Jan 20-Frb 19)
Unless pressing tasks are at­
tended to rarlv In Ihr day, I hr re
is a giM id chance they won t g e l
lltilshrd Gel up promjdly when
the alarm giM-soil
PISCES (Keb 20 March 20|
When with friends today, enjoy
them for what they are instead of
probing for their Haws Nobody
is jM-rferi Including yourself
ARIES (March 21 April 19) ikappreciatlve trxlay ol those who
treat you gen erou sly , even
though you might secretly feel
they could do more for you If
they really wanted
TAURUS (April 20 May 201
I “ day you may sell someone on
your pet Idea, getting him all
enthused and eager to proceed.
However, once aroused, don't
leave this person In the lurch

ANNIE
TUM BLEW EEDS
n&amp;eoN

by Leonard Starr
/. /Ye t e t *

]R TMIKMiNd OF
ALL THf
INNOCENT
UfrWSI VICTIMS WftD
H-hEl P A E - M fWC SCiFFEHEP
BJTTEH A^P.

l it t l e

-TUKlOePYOU ;i ^ O d t v v iP O F P
P0WN A6A\H?/

3 ’SUT THAVS NOT VOUff
|COOE. tS IT, ASPf. t
TOO CAJYTIETAE
OtF z t------------ 1

'

'

' pU

na^l * ;
i

me

Yo^tiAmJ

'

,

J

y
Vk^/x,. V

» » « 9 • E

• t * * 1 9 " *

(j
.

j i

J
OM

�Cheesecake

E vrn m g M er.ld -

W e d r w u f j y . AA»y IJ. I t t l

M »r»ld Ad v.rf.ter -

T h u r w i i y . M j r JJ. I H J

Linford

FI - 1 C

Creamy Dessert In Competition With America's Favorite
r\ian rvitin m *
I hr rrra m v
c h e e s e c a k e . a cce nt ed wi t h
■wmi &lt;&lt;wrrt chocolate plrcrsx.
ha* only a (rw Ingredients. and
»*an h r o v r n r r a d v i n 15
mlnutea It use* rrra m cheese,
•hr prrmirr c h rrv ra k r ingrr
dlrm that has been available to
consumer* since 1880 This rich
cheese sets thr standard for
quality and I* a favorite of
restaurant rhcls and hontr rooks
alike
Thr new "Phtllv" rhrrsrrakr
has a graham erarkrr crust and
.in rasy filling combining (hrrr
p a ck a g e * o f errant ch eese,
su^ar egg* mtnlaturr send
swrrt rhocolatr plcrrs and vanll
la Thr rh rrsrrak r ran l&gt;r varied
bv adding a topping of almond
brirklc chips before baking, or
the crunchy crandv can replace
ihr morr traditional chocolair

Canned Pears Enhance Salad
Subtly sweet in flavor and
wonderfullv light and refreshing
canned llurlett |trars ate the
perfect accompanuuent to a
savnrv bulg.tr and chlckrn salad
Kastlv prepared the nutlv
i rat ked wheal bulgur is cooked
in chlckrn broth then cooled to

uMiks as they are perfectly
ripened, pared and ready to
rnjov in sensational saiads.
tantalizing desserts and elegant
garnishes lor meal and poultry
PRAR IUJLGAR SALAD
cups t hicken broth
I can I'iho/ I pears, drained
I cupcrackerl wheat bulgar
1 cup |-l o / | c o o k e d anti
shredded chicken or lurkev
'•j i up chopped grrrn |&gt;rp|ter
14 cup chopped grern onions
2 tablesjroons rhop|&gt;rd parsley
Lemon Vinaigrette Dressing
Parsley sprigs
llrlng chicken broth to boll In
2

llurry...
Sale Ends
Sunday!

Luscious choesecoko is now within roach of tho o vo ryd a y cook

S p c c iu l S e le c tio n ^

14KT. G O L D

YOUR CHOICE

50% OFF!

• Chaim* • Charms • Marring*
• ('.harm Holders* And Much .More
U K l G o ld
iin in lU s il
with IN Inch
lOki 1 hdln

f b e c ia l M e m o r y (

SUM M ER TOPS
AND SHORTS

ilvi Until Mnmtrv llc».l

R»g. To 3.99. Men s |og
shorts with side piping or
assorted printed lee and
muscle shirts S.M.L.XL
Ladles’ solid nr striped
shortn and colorlul tanks
or tops. Regular and extra
sizes Girls 4 to 14 stylish
shirts and shorts

7m m
Nmm
|jtrrltt|&lt;

7 mm

l : a rn n |&gt;

The Perfect Graduation Gift!
Incredible
Values!

Fantastic Savings
J

8 4 sr
0

Q U AKER

Q

:?

O

f

$

SU RFERS
FOR THE
F A M IL Y

OUR
EVERYDAY
LOW PRICE

Pepsi, reg. 4 diet Pepsi Free.
Diet Pepsi 4 Mountain Dew

Regularly 1.03. Regular 30 or
HD j O. Limit 5 quarts.

| c n s c a i F T il

A

and children’s
surler thongs In new colors

Wedding Hands
in lOKt. Cold!

4

B j i 5
r
■
v n 4 .7 5 OUNCE
i |1 m w 4 . L - . T l c H ) 1
■ ■ P A L M O L I V E GOLD
■ ■ R e g u la rly 39* Bar.
Limit 6 bars
1
1

W

4

h

FLAVORFUL
SNACKS

S O L IT A IR E S
1/5 Carat

1/2 C arat
Marcal 2 ply facial
tissues. Limit 3.

l a
| 0 ^ n $

^DIAMONDS
7 IhenumJ
trio

► One
Carat
RSONAI

B

Y
j A

|A variety of deliclousi

t IIARlih ACI O I N I

'c S
S

Sanford Plaza
Altamonte Mall
Winter Park Mall

h
Multipurpose loll

413 E. FIRST ST

II I I VI « « I K &gt; ' V I v| V B t . l l t 1)1 **4014 lit I 411
411 IM 4 444 ISII 141 14. M I % * ■ » * f f » l l U * 4U »
4 V I I I I * * I l « l l l l » 4/t t V M I I • M . l l l t • &gt; % » ■ * » »

• e e e * s * # 9 e»»

# e

�* * * *

#

I C — E va n ln g H arafd — W a d rm d a y , M a y t i . IM S

'A. rn * - # - #

• *

H a ra ld A d v r t l w f — T h u rs d a y , M a y J l , IM S

- *

*

*

• -■ » - #

Sanford, F I.

BMX BIKE SWEEPSTAKES
U. S. CHOICE

GIVEAWAY
ONE PER STORE
REGISTER TO WIN
MAY 23 - JU N E 5, 1985

DRAW ING HELD JUNE 6, 1985

O
PEN
MEMORIAL
DAY

USDA CHOICE UNTniMMED
HEART OF THE CHUCK
WHOLE OR HALF

SUPERBRAND GRADE A‘

REGULAR or BUTTER

LARGE EGGS

CRISCO

MAYONNAISE

$199

»0-2i
LB AVO

PRICES GOOD MAY 23-27, 1905
f

REYNOLDS ALUMINUM

CHARCOAL

U 1 CHO KI

BO NELESS
CH U C K ROAST
W0

MMAMO DtO* CHOlCf &gt; H I AOOMt

SHOULDER ROAST ..

B O L O G N A ..

BO NELESS
TOP S IR L O IN .

H O O W

t W | | T B G M C i l t t IM C

|1« IB ivO )

BUFFET HAM

UlOA CHO(C9 MTHOif UMTMitfWfOll« ««

HTMOm tUOMP Pom %*ovu

BONELESS N. Y. STRIP

PINWHEELS

PICNIC

W -D B R A N D
FRANKS . . .

FRESH FRYER
LEGQUARTERS

PORK
SPARERIBS

$*|59

W -D B R A N D
BEEF P A n iE S
PHIfM MAMA | T

LEGQUARTERS

GROUND BEEF ...

FROZEN FOOD

SPARERIBS

B U t m PEAS a &gt;1"

POTATOES

DINNER .

ICE CREAM
or SHERBET
KAMA i l l |i m

KuPWMMIANO

T U R N IP S .

PARTY ICE .. -j : 67&lt;

com u i

CHEESE CAKE ..

s MtnutaMiLd

B OMNCA AJ*Cl
Counftr **»*•

WHOLE OKRA 2 = s $l 00 ILPVMNANO
C H E ECMftM
S E ...

01HAMACOll AM* HU1

CM pCO iA H M&lt;

SPREAD ..
COMHUISAVI

r o H H tllM A

s m

ORANGE. GRAPE OR
FRUIT PUNCH TROPICAL

DEL MONTE
CATSUP

ORANGE
j u ic ;
.

CHEESE
FOOD
AUPiMBMAMOM4.0 DAi«T *|(

imiiama

IAHI 0 IIAPIACMOA

LILAC
TOWELS

$149

PIEROGILS .,

RELISH

WHITE PLATES

'z? 9 9 &lt;

ly«r«

HEADLESS
SHRIMP
FISHERMA;

WHOLE
GROUPER

l.r.1.

W »* f*
CO.OAVI
&lt; »« GIL CMftM MiQAAAM

PEROXIDE

TOOTHPASTE

$099 $099

DOUCHE

...$ 1 2 9
ENGLISH MUFFINS

“f

is 9 9 &lt;

SSW

BIB*COMiQiAAM

GAINES BURGER
GAINES BURGER

mcarr/r:

t • f f P t

CHIPS AHOY

PRODUCT 19CEREAL., ts

BATH SOAP .

FUDGE STICKS.......... £

IIU L lM

FACIAL TISSUE.

P f * f • P * * • t

FROSTED M IN I WHEATS 12 M «

y u M ti

*

«Y»^

jCMOfMMAUM§ IAM3

*1”
p u j QQ|Q|M ft V t t t f

FUDGE ST RIPS.......... »1«

^ —*

*1"

t ^*

COLD CUPT.

�Evening H r n l d

W N m i d i y , May M , 19tS

coupon

SAUSAGE

BLEACH

.$159

C O U P O N G O O D MAV 23 A 24. 19*5 O N L Y

KETCHUP

Sanford. F I .—

e a r ly b ir d

coupon

3 ROLL PKG TOWELS,
6 ROLL PKG BATH TISSUE
Of 30OCT PKG NAPKINS

Herald A d v e rtiw r — Thursday, M ay JJ. i*»J

COUPON GOOD MAY 23 A 3*. IM S ONLY
Limit t coupon with $5 00 or mor* purch*** ••cl. o g »

HARVEST
FRESH
PRODUCE
COLGATE (ALL VARIETIES!

100H PURE FLORIDA

INSTANT SHAVE

FLORIDA GOLD
ORANGE JUICE

$159
LEMONADE
PRICES GOOD MAY 23-27. 1985
PRESTIGE ALL FLAVORS

GW ALTNEY GRLAI DOG CHICKEN

ICE CREAM

FRANKS

$199

!*-•»

BREAD
SU M M ER
SA LA DS

'■ 'j • ■ B
W
^ 0

MAAVflT F«f *M ftUtftf*

» l " OM fmiD U01I 90+ n CltlflCJOl
6000 0 0 1) Jl M l

BOLOGNA

SPINACH ...

PICKLES ..

• O 0 0 A M Aik Ml Af i A(

FRANKS

M0 r\Al|r PAtTAAMI A

1 * * 0 1 ITAilAN NOT A

TURKEY HAM
miTTini

FRANKS .
MAIm+UM 0NANO C0CHIN

Au

FRANKS .

PAniES . . .

C H EK

SAUSAGE

N A N V flf FN flH

CHERRY TOMATOES

BUDWEISER
or COORS

Ml
| U r.«i.rl

D R IN K S

SLICED
M USHRO O M S

6 $039

l$ 0 9 8

DELICIOUS I APPLES
..I t
HAAVflf rnrtM CALMOflNU
VALENCIA ORANGES

REGULAR
POTAYOES

Chek Drinks.2

FOAMCUPS .2

D IM MOM

TEABAGS ..

POTATO CHIPS

CHARCOAL.
ftOUNTftV COOMM CNAACOAi

DAIRY SPECIALS

LIGHTER ..

iHmrTT t u n « i O W M * C M !

AftAOW « MCN

D IN N E R S.. 4

WHITE PLATES

S W IS S STYLE
Y O G U R T S ..

C O M M liU V tr
1-Of REGULAR A'Y-oi
BACON A SOUR CREAM ,
*i&gt;or SOUR CREAM A &gt;
O NIO N 61&gt; o i B A R B O U E

RUFFLES

N4 Ml f tO IAAM« NfQUlAA K U

PIMENTO CHEESE .
R EG U LAR A LIGHT

ALL NATURAL
STICK CHEESE

CHIPS

SUPERBRAND
M ARG ARIN E 4
.

99c

» .* .

H

i ^

.

1/5

llOUNfffV 1 4 (1 1

CHEESE F O O D ......... ........... m

89*

RAR-B4UE SAUCE

s 79&lt;

PEPTO BISMOL

ICE CHEST

.. $199

SHAMPOO

.. $099

TURKEY
BREAST

...$ 1 3 5

fffW
HW W
M l 00OMW C N C « I« I

GRAVY ........
MtlMJC

57 SAUCE...

SUPER

C H IC K E N

$099 $099

G RAH AM S

POntD MEAT

D t l« OCKXIt I WiHO*
| ARE Aft*, I Tmk. m*
A 1 DRUMSTICK!

SAUSAGE

CHEESE

Vi .

»!*♦ P O R K B U n . . . . ' I ”

“

79 *

PGMNI IA«AB 01fl

GARUC SALT...
SEASONEDSALT

SALAD.

N ACH O C H I P S - *1 ”

%

* % T At |

* RT?

3C

�K M

«C—Ev#nlr»s M«r«ld — WulrvrvJlf, May 21, ttt5

Sanford, FI.

Haralct Advtrlitar — Thurvdaf. May 2). 1*t5

Eat Light And Like It From
Variety Of Salads, Desserts
I f * Ihr sign o f thr 8 0 V fltnr*
p r o g r a rn « . r r I r b r II y f II •
nrn n /r x r r c i * r h o o k a a n d
hundrrdn of cookbook* full of
rrrlpra to krrp ua allm and Irlrn.
There's a rm rw rd Inirrrai In thr
foods w p rai — natural, frrsh.
good for-u* foods. W r rat lots of
frrsh fruits and v rg rta h lr*.
yogurt, cotlagr chrrap. whrat
grrm — fixxl*
high In fiber,
vitamins and mlnrrals hut low In
calories.
Our fllnraa rrgim rn nerd not
Ire dull, at Iraat not as far as food
la concerned. The foods that are
good for ua ran he good lasting,
good looking and rxrltlng. loot

Irult. Make* 4VY cups or 6
servings.
SPINACH AND EOO S A L A D
1 package 14-servlng size)
Jell-O brand sugar free gelatin,
lemon Davor
W teaspoon salt
H cup boiling water
I tablespoon vinegar
VY cups cold water Ice eulies
M cups coarsely r hopped fresh
spinach
I diced hard cooked egg
1 tablespoon minced onion
Com pletely dissolve gelatin
and salt In boiling water. Add
vinegar. Combine cold water and

Ice cubes to makr I VY cups. Add
to gelatin and sllr until slightly
Ihickened. Rem ove any un*
melled Ice. Add spinach, egg and
onion. Let stand or chill until
thickened, about 5 minutes.
Pour Into Individual dishes or a
howl. Chill until set. at least 30
minutes. Garnish with sliced
hard-cooked egg and spinach
leaves. If desires Makes 2 cups
or 4 servings.

VEGETABLE TOOURT SALAD
1 package (4-servlng sire)
Jell-O brand sugar free gelatin,
lime or orangr Davor
VY teaspoon salt

1 cup boiling water
1 tablespoon vinegar
I c o n ta in e r |H o z .) pl ai n
yogurt*
I cup grated carrots
VY cup chopped green pepper
I tablespoon chopped chives
•Lowfat or whole milk yogurt
Dissolve gelatin and salt In
boiling water Add vinegar. Chill
until slightly thickened. Mlend In
yogurt; then fold In carrots,
green pepper and chives Pour
Into 2VY or 3 cup mold Chill
until Drm. about 3 hours. Un­
mold. Makes 2VY cups or 5
servings.

Spinach and Egg Salad complements any lunch or dinner
menu — and only 30 calories per serving.

W ith ihr help of Je ll-O brand
sugar frrr gelatin, wr ran crralc
Inrrriflhly delirious and Imagl*
nal l vr desserts, anucks and
Ellada lo satisfy the taste huds of
any fltnras-mlndrd person.
Sugar frer gelatin la a boon lo
Ihr ralortr ronarlous and to thr
lime conscious, loo. Tfte flO'sarr
a llm r of txiay. Involved people
— busy keeping fit, busy work
Ing. busy making u difference In
Ihr world W r don't want lo
aprnd a lot o f tlm r In thr
.kllrhrn. hut w r want rpilrk,
drill Ions, firallhful desserts.
llrrr'a a quintet of salads and
d r s s r r ls that m r rt the fit*
nrsa/llfrstylc rrltrrta of thr HO*
Kuril Is quirk and easy lo make,
low In calories, high In nutrients
and refreshingly drllelous In
taste,
A special bonus of these reel*
pi s Is the rase of preparation.
S e v e r a l use t he s p e e d -a rt
method, .fust add cold walrr
(with Ire rubes) lo thr dlaaolvrd
gelatin and thru add other recipe
i ng r e d i e n t s as I h r gel at i n
thickens.
Crisp Spinach and Kgg Salad
Is a wonderful complement fur
any lunch or dinner menu. It's
light, tart and only .It) calories
per serving! All you do Is prepare
a package of lemon Davor sugar
free gelatin, nils In chop|&gt;cd
fresh spinach, diced egg and
minced onion, chill and nerve In
Individual salad tmwln Or try
Ihr Vegetable Yogurt Salad reelIK *

R iblix Makes The
Weekend Enjoyable.
f hick, juicy burgers. Tender sicuks. Boneless hams
and U.S.D.A. Choice Leg O Lamb. Fire up your
Mem orial D ay celebration wiih delicious meats from
Publix. Add fresh-made Deli foods ami you're on your
way to a cookout si//ling with flavor and
freshness.

Fresh
lb

P*9

Olde Smlthlield

Meat Franks....... **«

P u b lix

p «i

Braunschweiger

r

Dinner Bell

Boneless
perIb.

*1 49

Lykes

r

H am

79°
r\

Publix Beef,
Gov't.-Inspected

Publix Beef, Government-Inspected Boneless

Eye Round

Bottom Round
Roast

Roast
per Ib.
id .

$957

$189
ISeafood ■ ■
Fresh

Perch Fillot......... S’ 9309

U.S.D.A. Choice

Fresh

Haddock Fillet.... X »37B

Leg O’
- Lamb

Frosh Frozen Wholo

Okeechobeo
Catfish................. W M 89

LIME PEAK CHIFFON
DE SHERI

per Ib.

$189

A Delightful Party Sandwich. It
Comos Stacked with Boiled Ham
&amp; Swiss Cheese on Braided Rye
Bread with Lettuce &amp; Tom atoes.
Serves 8 to 10 People)

THIS AD
■FFSCTIVIi
THURS.,
MAY 2$
THRU
WED.,
MAY 20,
108S . . .

r

Ring Leader Sandwich
with Ham.............
96”

Great for Cookouts!

Fresh-Baked Dutch Apple or

Apple Pie............. •£*

Hamburger or
Hot Dog Buns

»*|99

Plain or Seeded (Party Pak)

Jumbo Hamburger
Buns..................... p.V S * | 4 9

Lykes American Sliced ^

Just Heat These Entrees &amp;
They'ro Ready to Eat

Armour Smoked

Green Pepper
Steak...............
Macaroni A
Cheese................

i* .

p»«

Cooked Ham....... 7»V

• 2 "

•419

Hillshire Farm Smokad, Beef
Smoked. Polish or Beet Polish

Sausage............... ?T 8209
#249

Fully Cooked

Smoked Turkey ... *' M 79
Delicious Franklin Hard Salami or

Genoa Salami...... t 89°

Hebrew National Franks or

Knock wurst........ AV*219
Publix Mild Southern Style
(Family Pack 3-Lb. Avg.)

Smoked
Sausage............... IT *1"
n v tit iV t itM

^

v« cup tMilling water
I package 14 serving sire)
Jell o brand sugar frre grlalln.
any Davor
Vy « up cold water lie cubes

uoo

_____

rx u

container (8 os.) luwlut

Ym «IOO O »&gt;«M •m m *

cottage cheese

k** M h U l
lu ^ tf. M
kK* «» H M D * Mmt^jm

fMH AOMVOfl
(lO gw v

( » i llt n

CkaaJ

0 ’HrtklHU

t X i f k i *w pew*
h f R N SI *»« R * «i
toWl tMrfh
Wei
..................... • •

i P r V V u i l1*

H IM &gt;■ I l a . « ( « w
C V S ...
F . m o ftr w * .. M M a a X a

IM i

HffnanUD IWZMwJ
O a n ^ r O m m U it

X»mi«nt» I n

b in ix. Spt..h i«i* i eeeee&gt;**luMfitekM. o«uu* at tu&lt;*.
f*»k » ro u t ; o k K X i . i . . . i m* m

8. 59°

Lean Delites........ V *2"»

FRUIT AND COTTAGE
CHEESESALAD

I'uur (silling wulrr Into hlrndrr
Add gelatin and blend until
d lssu lvrd . about I m inu te
Combine cold water and Ice
eulies to make I rup Add
gelatin und stir with spoon until
Ire Is almost melted Then blend
' In collage cheese. Pour Into
dessert glasses Chili until set. at
leuat 30 mlnutrs. Top with fresh

1 ib S*f 4 9

Sliced Bacon

frow n strawberries, drained
*« cup (Milling walrr
I package (4-servlug site)
•lell-O brand sugar frre gelatin,
sirawtirrry Davor
I cup lee eulies and water*
I rup thawed Minis Kyr Cool
Whip non dairy whipped lopping
VY lrus|MMin almond extract
•Or use IVY eupn crushed Ire
Spoon straw berries lulu 7
parfall glasses. Combine boiling
walrr and gelatin In hlrndrr
container Cover and tilrnd at
low s|M-rd nutll cumplrtrly ills
solved, uhuut 30 seconds. Add
lee eulies and walrr. sill until ler
Is partially melted. Then adit
whipped lopping and extract
unit blend at high speerl until ler
Is melted, alnuii 30 seconds.
I'our Into glasses. Chill until set.
iitxriit 2 hours Gurnlsh with
sherd slriiwtrerrlrn. If desired
Makes 3*1/2 cups or 7 servings

IVY cups sliced or diced lush
' fruit

s-f ao

Sunnyland Regular or Thick

s*'l tup ktlMsl ln&gt;»h ttr Ihawrit

I

P «»

Pork Steak

STRAW BERRY CHIFFON
PARE AIT

v« rup c h o c o l a t e water crutnhs
I tahlrs|MM)ii mi lied butler in
margaitnr
I package It serving slw l
Jell-O brand sugar Irre gelatin
lime Davor
I cup boiling water
Vy cup cold w ain
I can (HVy o/.| |x-ur halves In
real Irult |ulrrs. drained and
thinly sliced
I container 11 os.) Mints K&gt;e
Cool Whip non dulry whlpi&gt;rd
lopping, thawed
Combine crumb* and biillrr;
*&gt;cl aside Dissolve gelatin In
iMdling water Add cold water.
Chill unill slightly thickened.
Mrasiur Vy cup and |M&gt;ur Into
M inch layer spn. Arrange |iear
slices in a ring on gelatin pan.
( hill uulll sel, hut nut Drill,
alsiut 10 minutes Fold whipped
lopping Inin remaining gelatin.
S p oon c a r e f u l l y I nt o pun
Sprinkle crumb mixture evenly
over top and chill until Drill,
atsuil 4 hours Hmnold onto
serlvn g plutc. Gurnlsh with
sliced prut* Makes H srrvlngs

Its the little things that make the
difference at l*uhlLx.

I n * i m * . . m m o m i . km u m

H C M I N i n , O n i m i H &gt; l . l . l l * I 9 M . . I . * * * n an &lt; n i n . n n . M M 1 . M «
T n m a N M i l . o « « •&gt; I I » « « « ■ « . ) m h i 1. D M n
.. p a * &gt; m h * . , . « .1 m i

fount* MUI, On M100tmm,.— i..n. *&gt;M&gt;to*.l •«MM

Cm pnr . u d

Apricot A Prune

Bear Claws A
Elephant Ears ... 3

Serve Toasted with
Cream Cheese, Plain or

*1

Raisin Bagels... 6 ,« 99*

Above Items Available in Publix Stores with In-Store Bakeriss Only.

Fresh

Items Below Available in All
PubNx Stores and Danish Bakeries.

0»"■»* ■•*•&gt;•

Filled with Cinnamon &amp;
Plump Raisins

Cinnamon
Raisin Rolls...... 6 ... » 1 «
Single Layer

Coconut Cake..... *&amp;* *1"
Great with Coffee. Mini Powdered

^ Sugar Donuts......99*

t U

. ♦.*.* ••

It X V

�H*rjld Advertiser — Thurid»y, May 1J, 1HJ

E v tn irv g H e r a ld — W r d n e t d a y , M a y 11, 1 H J

Sanford. FI. —JC

For H ealth's Sake, Eat Properly

M ix e d Barbecue Kebobs*. A w a r m w e a th e r health treat

Everywhere we look these
days is advice on how to gel In
shape Numerous articles and
books detail exercise programs
and beauty tips We're given
hints on how to exercle at work
and at home. The relative merits
of running. Jogging, walking and
aerobics arr discussed. Health
clubs oflcr special discounts to
those w ho "Join now.”
But evidence exists that more
of us are taking steps to stay In
shape all the tlmr The way our
eating habits are changing Il­
lustrates this trend We're rating
less cholesterol-rich red meat

and more chicken and Osh. More
of us arr cutting back on salt
and sugar and Increasing the
amount of whole grain breads,
fresh vegetables. Irult and fruit
|litres.
th e recipes suggested here
can lie part of a year long fitness
program
M i x e d B a rb ecu e
Kebobs can be grlllrd over the
coals during warm wrathrr or
broiled when the temperature
drops. The tangv sauce Is a
sweet n sour blend of lime juice,
chill sauce and grajs* jelly.
Harvest Shimmer Salad can bo
prepared with the Irutts sug­

P u b lix
For the most memorable
cookout under the sun come to
Publix. Wk'vv plump, juicy chickens,
tender steaks, crisp green salads and
fresh haked rolls: everything you'll need
to make your great American cookout
sizzle with flavor.

Swill Premium Bool
Dmnei. Bun Size
or Bee! Dinner

\

Franks
1-lb. pkg.

Regular or Light Beer

Old Milwaukee
12-oz. cans
12-pk. ctn.

Roast on the Grill, Florida Sweet

White Corn

(Limit 2 Ctns. P l s n s , With Othsr
Purchases ol $7.50 or Mora,
Excluding All Tobacco Itams)

Publix Assorted Regular or Diet

Soft Drinks
Serve with a Slice of Cheese,
Publix Frozen Dutch Apple Crumb or

2-lit.
bottle

Apple Pie

Ready-to-Take-Out Publix Deli

Fried Chicken
Serve with Apple Pie
9-p‘ece box

Publix Premium
Ice Cream

Buy One 9-Piece Box of Fried
Chicken &amp; Get 1-Lb. Potato Salad

half ^
gallon
Breakfast Club

Hamburger or
Hot Dog Buns.......... 2 Pq. 6
Breakfast Club

White Bread ■**#••*••**#*&lt;2*loave§6
Potato Chips...............

Old Fashioned

fi

mb

Serve with Hot Dogs A Hamburgers,
Campbell's

Pork A Beans............. 3 c*£*
Royal Oak

Charcoal Briquets.....

•!

Publix will be
normal hours
on Memorial Day.
i u

New York

Boston
Cream Pie

Strip

P u b lix

where shopping is o pleasure 7 d ay s o week

l

*•

%

H A R V E ST SHIM M ER S A L A D
4 envelopes unflavorrd gelatin
4l x cups cold water*
I can (12 ounces! harvest
Juice blend froren concentrate*
1 can (12 ounces) glngrrale.
chilled
l cup each sliced apple, sliced
strawberries and red grapes
I *X cups vanilla yogurt
l x teaspoon ground ginger
In medium saucepan, sprinkle
gelatin over 2 cups water. Stir
over medium heat until gelatin
is dissolved,' about 5 minutes
fo u r dissolved gelatin Inlo large
bowl; silt In remaining water,
harvest Juice blend concentrate
and glngrrale Chill until m ix­
ture reaches the consistency of
unbeaten egg whites: stir oc­
casionally.
Fold In fruit. Chill until set.
utioul 4 hours Meanwhile, mtx
yogurt and ground ginger: chill.
Serve gingered yogurt with
salad.
* If desired, ti cups Welch's
Itotllrd Orchard Harvest Juice
Hlcnd may lie xuhsliutrd for
water and frozen concentrate
ORCHARD F R U IT T A R T
CRUST:
1Is cups old fashioned or
quick oiils, uncooked
cup finely chopped w alnuts
'x cup butler or margarine,
melted
l s cup sugar
2 tablespoons ujtple-grape
Juice frozen concentrate
Vx teaspoon ground cinnamon
FILLIN Q :
'« cuj) apple-grape Juice Irozrn
concentrate
1envelope unflavorrd gelatin
PEARS;
2 pears. |&gt;eeled
1 package (10 ounces) frozen
raspberries in syruji. thawed
VV cup plus 2 tablespoons
apple-grape Juice frozen con­
centrate water
t vx tablespoon* cornstarch
IW cups cream ed cottage
cheese
■x cup vanilla vOjfwu
Preheat oven to 3 7 5 °F. Place
oats and nuts In 9-Inch (art pan
with rernovuble bottom or 9-Inch
file plate liakr 10 mlnutra or
until lightly tousled, stirring
occasionally. Combine bulter,
sugar. 2 tablespoons apple-grape
c o n ce n tra te and c i nnamon.
Drizzle over loastrd out mixture,
stirring well Press mlxturr onto
Ixittom and sides of j&gt;an; bukr IO
minutes. Cool on wire rack.
Place pears In I quart sauce­
pan Add ruspbcrrlrs with sy rup.
‘/X cup plus 2 ta b lsep oon s
apple-grape concentrate and
rnmigh water to (III pan to
within I Inch of top Bring to a
boll; reduce brut and simmer 20
mlnules or unlll lender. If neces­
sary. place small heatproof plate
III |&gt;un lo keep prurs submerged
In liquid Krrnovr for heat and
Meanwhile. In small saucepan,
sprinkle gelatin over
cup
apple-grape concentrate. Stir
over low heal until gelatin dis­
solves In final jirocesaor fitted
with metal blade or blender,
process cottage cheese until
smooth. Gradually add gelulln
mixture and yogurt. Pour Into
jirepured crust. Chill.
Strain liquid from pears Into
small sauerpan. silr In cor­
nstarch Stir over medium heat
unlll translucent and thickened.
Chill, To serve, slice pears und
arrange on turl. Garnish. If
desired with mint. Serve sauce
with tart.

Publix B

T o m ’s 8 -0 z. Corn Chips, Puffed Corn
Cheese or 7.5-O z. Plain or Rippled

gested here or your own favorite
combination. The Orchard Fruit
Tart lets us enjoy a flavorful
dessert without any guilt feel­
ings about Indulging In too
many calories. And the Spring
Spritzer Is ihr perfect beverage
to toast the new season and your
own good health and fitness.

M IXED BARBECUE KEBOBS
2 small limes or lemons
(A cup chill sauce
'■x cup grupc Jelly
I small red pepper, cut In 8
pieces
1 small green pepper, cut In 8
pieces
8 large shrimp or Mi pound
firm lleshed fish Imonk, halibut,
catfish), cut In chunks
2 boneless chicken breasts,
with skin removed, cut In 2-Inch
pieces
8 ounces whole wheat noodles,
rooked and drained
G ru tc p e el fro m 1 lim e ;
squeeze Juice. Cut remaining
lime Into 8 wedges. In small
saucepan, combine 1 teaspoon
grated lime peel. MA teaspoons
lime juice, chill sauce and grape
Jelly. Stir over low heat until
smooth
On rneial skewers, alternately
place Ume wedges, red and green
peppers, shrimp and chicken.
Brush with chill-grape sauce.
Grill or broil 8 to 10 minutes
until chicken and shrimp axe
tender. Urush frequently with
sauce and turn often. Serve
kebobs over noodles.

* ’«*X

• '» • • F 9 »

�• e

-^

SC—Evsslnf MsraW - Wodnotdzy. May Jl, IN I

Horakl Advsrlisor - Thursday, May M, m s

»*»» # r r

Sawtord. FI.

Applesauce
A True Culinary
Accomplishment
horseradish.
— 2-3 tablespoons mint Jelly.
— V* cup plain yogurt. 2
tablespoons brown sugar and 14
teaspoon ground cinnamon.
— I tablespoon grated onion
and V4 teaspoon curry powder.
— 14 cup sweetened whipped
cream and 14 teaspoon grated
fresh ginger nr 14 teaspoon
powdered ginger.
— 14 cup sweetened whipped
cream and V4 teaspoon each
grated orange and lemon peel.

D iscoverin g deliciou s new
twists to a standard recipe la
always a satisfying experience,
especially when the twists are a
snap!
Take applesauce, for Instance.
First, plan to make It with
summer Granny Smith apples,
the extraordinary summertime
green eating apples which arrive
fresh from the Southern hemi­
sphere from May to August.
Their tangy taste lends a de­
licious difference which up­
grades applesauce from the
mundane to the supreme.
Second, experiment with sev­
eral different ways to prepare the
apples. Steam them In a skillet,
cook them In a microwave oven,
or whirl them In a blender or
food processor. Each method
produces a unique consistency,
although the taste Is still dis­
tinctively Granny Smith.
Third, add some simple In­
gredients to augument taste and
texture, maklngyour applesauce
a true culinary accomplishment.
Try combining applesauce with
sour cream and a dash of
horseradish for a spicy accom­
paniment to pot roast or ham­
burgers. Flavor It with mint Jelly
to serve with lamb. Compliment
c l c k e n a nd t u r k e y wi t h
applesauce spiked with grated
onion and curry |&gt;owder. Or
blend In brow n sugar, cin ­
namon. nutmeg and cloves for
un excellent foil for glared ham
or a thick and zesty topping for
fruit salads
Mix applesauce with sweet*
ened whipped cream and u
touch of glngrr or orangr rind to
give a pork roust or chops extra
excitement. Hut don't stop therel
Let your Imagination and the
special taste o f Granny Smith
apples Inspire other creative
applesauce combinations.
Crisp, fresh Granny Smith
a p p le s co n ta in v ita m in A,
th ia m in e , p o ta s s iu m , Iron,
phosphorous, as well as Hirer.
Their firm texture when eaten
"out-of-hand" acts us a natural
toothbrush that cleans the teeth
and leaves a great aftertaste

Exporim ont and turn o rd in a ry applesauce into an elegant side dish.

(Suf I oitM sues M ud SSH

I eras Suuctur CorlifKilol

Corn Chips, Pretzel Twists
or Cheez Curls or Balls

Assorted Flavor Perfect

Fruit
Drinks

Planters
Snacks
| 5 to 7-oz. size

gallon bot.

39 39
0

(4c Off Label) Liquid

Make Some Sun Tea!

Clorox
Bleach

Tetley
Tea Bags

64-oz. bot.

24-ct. box

99

0

19

0

0

Rose, Rhine,
Chablis, Burgundy

R rb lix M akes Th e
Weekend Eqjoyable.

California
Cellars Wine
3-liter bottle

Whether you re planning a family outing at the beach or a
picnic in the park, don’t lorget 1‘ublix line Memorial Day
weekend. From paper plates to soda pop. everything
you’ll need for a (un filled holiday is at Publix,

$l

It\ the little thinus that make the sfo
difference at f'uhlix.
. z-

-

Q X M tx rtB U T
lA U C S l

6 Granny Smith upples. cored,
pared and thinly sliced
M cup water
t4 cup sugar
I teaspoon lemon Juice
Vb teaspoon salt
Itaslc Skillet Meclpet
In large skillet, combine upples
and water. Cover. Simmer 5 to
10 minutes or until apples are
tender. Stir occasionally. Stir In
sugar, lemon Juice and salt.
Process In blender, food mill or
food processor until desired
consistency. Serve warm or cold
Microwave Oven Method:
In large microwave oven-proof
cusaerole. combine apples and
water. Cover. Microwave on high
7 to H minutes or until apples arr
fork tender. Stir In sugar, lemon
Juice und sa lt. P ro c e s s In
blender, food mill or food proceasor until desired consistency.
Serve warm or cold.
Easy Blender No-Cook Method:
In c o n t a in e r o f e le c t r ic
b le n d e r, c o m b in e h a lf the
apples, water and sugar. Cover.
I*rocraa on high s|&gt;crd 30 sec­
onds or until d esired c o n ­
sistency. Transfer to large twwl
Repeat with remaining apples,
wutrr and augur Stir In lemon
Juice and salt. Chill until ready
to serve.
Yield: A cups.
For a savory accompaniment
with meat or vegetables, try one
of the following:
T o 2 cups applesauce, add:
— V* cup sour cream and 2-3
teaspoons prepared white or red

n . ik ltv
H U O IIX

Publix will be
open normal
hours on
Memorial Day.

lice Cream■ ■

TH IS AD E F F E C TIV E :
TH UR S., MAY 23
TH RU W ED.,
MAY 20, 1 9 8 5 . . .

■HChee.se

Weight Watchors Assorted

Treats..................... X

A ^

M 3B

Cracker Barrel ..... (lic®*k

S-J70

Kraft Individually-Wrapped
Cheese Food

Sunnyland

Sliced American.... p.'« *24B

Ballard Buttermilk

iiciiiir*
COOKBOOK
COLLECTION

IDairyl

Kraft Mellow Cheddar Cheese

A-sYNSi.

Spread....................

*13B

Biscuits.............. 4 can! 99*

Tim beck'* feature
M ill M l S
1 am lh-M ilr
Cookbook

Coffioca or Assorted Nips &amp; Parfaits

Krall Sliced Cheese

Pearson C andy..... bo°.' 79*

Big Eye S w iss.......

Bruch Starlight Mints,
Butterscotch Disks or

Breakstone's Lowfat, California
Style or Smooth &amp; Creamy

Yogurt................ 3 ?£. *145

s 1.79 ...

Krall Cheese Spread '

Sour Balls.............. ".V *1JB

Cottage Cheese.... *&amp;' *16B

Velveeta................ !£ *1BB

Sew fVu k%VWfb !,

Land 0 Lakes Blend: ^
Bowl of Soft or Ctn.
of Unsalted or Quarters

Country
Morning

*13B

Weight Watchers Assorted

Welsh klf

"A

In Heavy Syrup, Libby’s

Hunt’s

Maxwell House

Fruit
Cocktail

Tomato
Ketchup

Instant
Coffee

32-oz. bottle

8-oz. jar

29-oz. can

1-lb. size

Phil Pastoret
Why don't they develop s stapler
that bandages the finger at the same
time the staple is driven'*

A

Kraft Chunk Style Sharp
or New York Extra
Sharp Cheese

Charred barbecue meals raa be
kept Is ■ mtstmum if bsrbeculles
who distract the ebef are kept away
bum Use grill area.

Frlto Lay Regular, Bacon A Sour
Cream, Sour Cream A Onion or
Bar-B-Q (6.5-to 7*0z.)

Ruffles
Potato Chips....... V.V 99*
In 12-Ox. Cane, Lager or Light

Cheddar

Old Tap Beer....... X M M

8-oz. pkg.

3 Bean Salad....... '«'£* 69*

Green Giant

m t ii i eiM ftvtl Dd * « mT

voiee? ouAMfivet »OhO

Eagle Critpy Cut

Potato Chips

Royal Oak
9 9 *

0 Bake
your
best } liSP
With SlUtrStont

e

e • 4» ''s %

Viatic Baby Picklee

Cain Detergent....

Mustard................. 'IV 79*
In W ater or Oil, Bumble Bee

Chunk White
Tuna.......................*«X 99*

t

•V

LeSueur
Sweet Peas......... '!i* 69*

Vlasic Relish......... ’S 4 S9«
French's Squeeze Container

*2 *2”

Very Young Tender

V » 1 0#

Dill, Hot Dog, Sweet,
Hamburger or India

Owce they rleas up the arid raia
problem, they'd heller start Is os
asolher ntesace Is trees — borne
allulmest developers

Maxwell House Decaffeinated
Giant Laundry Powder

’ ossssosse

Every refrigerator would be much
less cluttered If only tomeone would
a the last pickle chip In a half-dozen
ties lurking there

Folgers Coffee .... £ *21*
(Limit 1 Plot*#, with Othsi Puichzuos ol ST.90
oi Mors. Eicloding AH Tobacco Items)

O liv e t.................. * ’£" 69*
Kosher Dills

*29B

Automatic Drip, Electric Perk
or Regular

Instant Coffee

Publix Stuffed Manzanilla
Do you ever have dayi when you
feel that the founding falhcn' politi­
cal processes have been taken over by
the foundering fathers*

Charcoal Lighter...

Northern Assorted

FINAL 2 WEEKS

COMPUTE YOUP SETS NOW't
U iN m M n W w o S M (■Out I0
•icbOuj liZKti jrtiucii I

11 M o ouft

Paper Napkins.... *t£ta1*•
Assorted Paper

Bounty Towels.... TJT 79*
Publix 12-Inch Wide

Aluminum Fo il....SuSlM**

* |p&gt;m

�Evening H«r»W — W*dn*t4ay. May 21. IMS

H«r*ld AdvartiMr — Thursday, May. IJ, IMS

iantoed, F I.-T C

Dinners For 2
Celebrate In Grand Style
Most people ihtnk of spring as
the time when robins return and
flowers begin to bloom. The first
sign of spring also brings newly
picked crunchy radishes, fresh
herb s and lu sciou s b erries
straight from the garden What
better way to celebrate the
arrival of spring than to create a
special dinner for two. These two
menus from the Kraft Kitchens
include delicious dishes that will
help you herald the return o f the
most delightful time o f year.

ESPECIALLY ELKO ANT
DINNER
Bring out your best silver,
crystal and candle sticks to set

Salmon steak and rice perfect for intimate dinner for tw o .

(Buy i *tui iK * raws s *m

S P E C IA L O C C A S IO N S A L A D

I Is cups tom lettuce
1cup watercress
'* cup sliced radishes
ty cup apple slices
Chunky blue cheese dressing
Combine lettuce, watercress
and radishes; place on salad
plates Arrange apples over let*

(Buy 1 wit* * « h M»*&lt;J 5§M

r 5l»mp Write Sp«ct*4 C*'tifK*t*i

Price Specie! CeHiftctUi

Frozen Raisin ’n Honey
or Raisin 'n Wheat

Assorted White Cloud

Bathroom
Tissue

Lender’s
Bagels

4-roll pkg.

Fresh Homogenized

Breakfast Club
Florida Grade A White

Publix Milk

Large Eggs

gallon size

per dozen

10-oz. pkg.

69

the mood (or this very special
dinner. T o start off. serve a crisp
lettuce salad featuring fresh
produce of the season with a
chunky blue cheese dressing.
Tender veal and pasta In a
luxurious lemon wine sauce Is
ihe main course, and for the
finale. Chocolate Mousse Cups

0

$«|99

•« cup semi-sweet chocolate
pieces
2 teaspoons margarine
*-Y c u p in I n I a t u r e
marshmallows
3 tablespoon* milk
'« cup semi-sweet chocolate
pieces
I 3 -ox. pkg cream rheear,
softened
I tablespoon orange flavored
liqueur
VS cup (hawed whipped top­
ping wllh real cream
Melt chocolate pieces wllh
margarine over low heat, stirring
until smooth. Pour mixture in in
two paper baking cups With
back ol spoon, spread chocolate
mixture evenly up sides ot huk
tug cups, Kefrlgeralr ut least l
hour.
Melt marshmallows, milk and
chocolate pieces over low heat,
stirring until smooth. Chtll until
slightly thickened; mix until well
blended. Combine rrriun cheese
and liqueur, mixing ut medium
speed on electric mixer until well
blended, Beat In marshmallow
mixture. Fold In whipped top­
ping. Peel paper baking cup#
from chocolate cupa. Spoon
ma r s h m a l l o w mi x t u r e Into
chocolate cupa; chill. 2 servings.

I 2 N l o w Fal, I N l o w F it o* Skim. Gallon
Sir* A»»il*bl* with On* SAM Stamp Ptlc*
Sa»ai C*'tltlc«ta)

■■Produce I
Green Beans........... r 49°
For Your Picnic Potato Salad, "N ew C ro p "
Red Potatoes....... 5 $129
Perfect Picnic Size, (15 Lb. Avg.) Florida Red Ripe, Sweet
Watermelon.............r $229
Perfect For Slicing, Florida (Extra Large)
Tasty
Tomatoes.....r 39°
Minute Maia Country Style Chilled
Orange
Juice........... $169
Florida Grown, Fresh Flavorful
Mushrooms..............sr
*
179
For A Strawberry Rhubarb Pie (See Recipe In This Ad)
Fresh Rhubarb........ r 59c
Fresh Tender

1 cup sugar
l'i Cup util' pur pot# flour
W ttespoon grated orange peel (optional)
2 cup* cut-up rhubarb(Vvinch pieces)
2 cup* tlrawherfiet
2 tabletpoon* margarine or buiter
Heat oven to €25 Prepare paitrv Nix auger,
flour and orange perl Turn half of the rhubarb
and itrataberrlet Into pastry-lined pie plate,
•prlnkle with half of the sugar mixture Repeat
with remaining rhubarb and! sir at* berries and
sugar mixture; dot with margarine Cover with
top crust that has slits cut In it. seal and flute
Sprinkle with sugar If desired Cover edge with 2
to 3-Inch atrip of aluminum foil to prevent
races allve browning; r amove foil during last IS
mlnutea of baking
Bake until cruat la brown and )uke begin* to
bubble through slits In crust. €0 to 50 minutes
(Pie Shrllx available in mil 'Grocery A I mien Food iDtfil)

California
Ripe, Tasty Fresh

Serve With
Cheese Sauce,
Sno-White Western

Straw­
berries

Cauliflower

Polk, H ighlands, O ra n g a, Laka,
Sam inola, Oacaola Co.
Tab, Mr. Plbb, Mallo Yollo or Rag. or
Dial: Sprit*, Caffalna Fraa Coka or

Coke

large head

each pint

*1.00 OFF
With This Coupon ONLY
On Purchase of Any Bouqual of

Fresh Cut Flowers
(lim n I P*t Fim lly PI****. WUh
Dth** Purcha*** ol S 7 30 ot Mor*
Eaduding All Tobacco lla mt)
lE M .c tl.* May 23 20 1983)

With This Coupon ONLY
Ouy Tw o 16.5-Oz. Cana of
Giaan Giant 3-B*sn Salad
X Gal Ona t 2 -0 i. C*n o l__,

Green Giant
Niblets Corn
FREE

^

Llmll 1 P u rc h ti* Par Coupon
(Effcctl** Ma* 33-29. 1083)

rw w ev w w w v

liiiig m

30® OFF

i

With T h li Coupon ONLY
12-Ox. Cant Tab, Mr. Plbb.
Mallo Yallo or Rag. or Dial:
Caftaln* Fraa Coka. Sprlla or Coha

Coke Can Products

SALMON STEAK FOR TWO
3 tab lesp oon s mur garl nr,
melted
I tablespoon dry while wine
*. I ( I VY to 2 lbs |salmon steaks.
I Inch thick
1 rgg while
3 tablespoons real mayonnaise
1 tablespoon green onion
slices
U teuspoon dry mustard
Combine murgarlnr and wine.
I'lnce fish on greased rack of
broiler pun. Broil 5 to 6 mlnutea
on each side or until fish flakes
easily with fork, brushing fre­
quently wllh margarine mixture.
Beat rgg white until stiff peaks
form. Fold In combined mayon
nulae. onions and mustard.
Spoon unto flab, broil until
lightly browned. 2 servings
Variation; Substitute halibut
slraks for salmon

6 or 8-pk. ctn. (whara available)
limit I Purchat* P*r Coupon
( E lla d l v * May 23-20. 19051

12-oz. cans, 8-pk.

70® OFF
Wllh T h l» Coupon ONLY

Gravy Separator
each
(Edacity* May 23-29. 1983) C

wwwwwm
-

50® OFF
With Thta Coupon ONLY

Goop Hand Cleaner
10.5-ox. alia

THIS AD EFFEC TIV E:
TH URS., MAY 23 THRU
W ED., MAY 29, 1985 . .

Cole’s

Garlic Rolls............

12-41.
can

59*

Vi * 1 "

Deluxe Pizza......... p?.01 l 2M
Weaver's Italian or Original

Rondelets.............. iV *2M
Cooked Shrimp.

a-oi.
PM

wwwwvwwww

I

70

5 x 7 Col or
Enlargements

Dimension Normal Dry

• with 1KLI PIjUk I rjrnc

Regular Hold or Extra Control
Styling Mousse

SANFORD
PLAZA,
SANFORD

IF

■Health&amp; BeautyI
Shampoo or
Conditioner...........** *1"

The More Yuu Order 1 he Mure Y mi Save’
2 t o r jutt

1 l o r Jutl

1 lo t Im l

$|79 $£49 $ 2 *9

L'Oreal Free Hold... K X
\

Frozen Birds Eye
Mixed Vegetables,
Broccoli Cuts or

Green
Peas
16-oz. bag

RICK ELEGANTE
Vy cup rice
2 tubiespoons margarine
1 cup water
VY teaspoon dried tarragon
leaves, c rushed
Dash of pepper
VY cup thinly sliced celery
VY cup (1 ox.) grated pamiesan
cheese
In saucepan, saute rice In
margarine until lightly browned.
Add wulrr and seasonings; bring
to a boll. Cover: simmer 10
minute* Add celery; continue
simmering IS minute* or until
rice la tender Stir In cheeae.
Serve with additional cheese. If
desired. 2 serving*.

Thlt Ad Effect;** At Th**a location* Only

Chicken A 'L ' O range..... V*
Ltngulnl with
ts „
Clam S a u c e ....................... *»•
Chicken C a ccia to re ...... ’ •**•*' *1**

Totino's "M y Classic" Combination

Singleton Frozen

(E d*ctl« * May 23 29. 1985) C

Stouffer’s Frozen
Lean Cuisine

[Frozen Food!
Lemonade.............

VEAL PICCATA
'•* lb boneless, i* inch (hick
2 tablespoons Hour
lY teaspoon sail
teaspoon pepper margarine
\s cup dry while wine
1* teaspoon grated lemon rind
lY cup mushroom slices
2 tablespoons green onion
slices
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
4 o i b . noodles, cooked, drained
round meal to 10 Inch thick­
ness. Combine dour, salt and
pepper; coat meat
Saute meat In 3 tablespoons
margarine until lightly browned
on both sides.
Remove meat to serving plat­
ter; keep m b i i i Add wine, 2
tablespoon* margarine and rind
to skillet: reserve 2 tablespoons
wine mixture. Add vegetables
and parsley; cook until tender.
Add noodles, heat thoroughly.
I’ lace meat over noodles; serve
with reserved wine mixture
Garnish with lemon slices. It
desired 2 servings.
Va r i a t i o n: S u b s l t u t r one
chicken brrust. spill, boned,
skinned, tor veal.

CHOCOLATE MOOSE CUPS

FRESH RHUBARBSTRAWBERRY PIE
(For 9-inch Pie)

Minute Maid Concentrate ot
Fruit Punch or Reg. or Pink

luce. Serve with dressing, 2
serving*.
Variations Substitute Italian
dressing for chunky blue cheese
dressing. Sprinkle salads with VV
cup coarsely chopped walnuts.

Armour Froxtn Tarlyakl Chicken,
Sweet * Sour Chicken, Stuffed
Qreen Peppora, Salisbury Steak,
Chicken Frlcaaaee. Laaagna,
Vaal Parmiglana

LONGWOOD
VILLAGE
CENTER
LONGWOOD

INDIVIDUAL STRAWBERRY
TORTES

($1.00 Off Label)

Signal
Mouthwash

Dinner
Classics

3 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoon* cornstareh
Dash ol salt
IVY cupa milk
I tablespoon margarine
VY teaspoon vanilla
1 cu p th a w ed La C rem e
whipped topping with real cream
2 sponge cake dessert cup*,
spilt horizontally
Strawberry halves
Com bine sugar, cornstarch
and salt In saucepan; gradually
add milk. Cook, stirring con­
stantly. over medium heat until
mixture la thickened. Boli I
minute. Remove from heat: stir
in margarine and vanilla. Cool;
m ix until well blended. Fold In
w h ip p ed topp in g. F or each
serving, spread each cake layer
with cream mixture: stack. Top
wllh strawberries. 2 servings.

Publix
IMIer
row 24HOUW COwyfwfNCI
you CAM BANK ON I V I1. 7" 1

32*oz. bottle

$499

10 to 12-oz. pkg.

$029
r».

- ____

Publix

^

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•$ -*

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Straw b erry
S e a s o n B rin gs
O n D e lica sie s

•C—Evening HaraId — WxtrwuOr, May M, 1H5_______HtfiId Advtninr — Thvrtday, May M. IW ________Buford, FI.

rind and 1 cup whipped topping,
m ixing Just until moistened.
Drop &gt;-« cup batter. 3 Inches
apart, onto greased cookie sheet.
Bake at 450°. 10 to 12 minutes
or until golden brown Remove
from cookie sheet Immediately;
1 3-oz. pkg. cream cheese, cool. Split. Combine strawber­
softened
ries. Juice and sugar; let stand 10
2 tablespoons sugar
minutes For each serving, cover
1 8-oz. container (3 cups) bottom half of shortcake with
whi p p e d t o pp i ng wi t h real s t r a w b e r r y m i x t u r e a n d
cream, thawed
whipped topping Top with sec­
Pastry for 9-Inch pie. baked
ond half 6f shortcake, additional
Place 1 pint strawberries In s t r a w b e r r y m i x t u r e a n d
blender container. Cover; pro­ whipped topping. 8 servings
cess on high speed until well
STRAW BERRY BREAD
blended. D issolve gelatin In
1 cup chopped strawberries
water, add purred strawberries
Chill until thickened but not set.
x« cups sugar
2
cups flour
Combine cream cheese and
2 teaspoons baking powder
sugar, mixing at medium speed
V* teaspoon salt
on electric mi xer until well
V* cup margarine, melted
bl ended. Fold In It * cups
2 eggs
whipped topping spread onto
2 rup* thawed whipped top
bottom of crust Pour gelatin
mixture over whipped topping ping with real cream
• • •
mixture; chill several hours or
until set Top with remaining
1 8-oz. pkg cream cheese,
whipped topping and strawber
softened
rtes
I tablespoon milk
H serving*
Combine strawlx-rrles and U
O RANG E-BERRY
cup sugar. Combine remaining
SH O R TC AK E
sugar, flour, baking powder and
2 cups flour
salt. Add combined margarine,
1 tablespoon sugar
eggs and strawberry mixture,
I tablespoon baking powder
m ixing Just until moistened
l* teaspoon salt
Fold In IV* cups whipped top
I egg. beaten
ping Four Into greased 9 x
!* cup milk
5-lnch loaf pan Bake at 350*. I
■* cup margarine, melted
hour or until wooden pick In­
I teaspoon grated orange rind
serted In center comes out clean
1 12-oz. container |4l* cupa) Cool 5 minutes, remove from
whi p p e d t oppi ng wi t h real pan. Cool
cream, thawed
Combine cream cheese and
•
•
•
milk, mixing at medium speed
2 pis slrawtxrrlrs. sliced
on electric mixer until well
2 tublespoons orange Juice
blended. Fold In r emai ni ng
2 tablespoons sugar
whipped topping. Spread onto
Combine dry Ingredients Add cooled bread slices.
combined egg. milk, margarine.
16 servings
FRESH S T R A W B E R R Y PIE
2 pts. strawberries
I 3- oz . p k g . s t r a w b e r r y
flavored gelatin
1 rup boiling water
• • •

Eggt Special With Zosty C ream Sauce is a nourishing meal w ithin itself.

Easy, Elegant Entree Low In Calories
’ Alter u strenuous workout or rxhllurullng
run around llir track, you're probably ready
for a meal that’* quirk and ensy to make
and won't undo all the good you've done
Egg* Special w,|h Zrsty Cream Sauce 1%an
rosy, rirgant entree that weigh* In high on
the taste scale, but comparatively low on the
calorie count.
Egg* Special star* poached eggs, a dieter'*
boon, because Large egg* are only about HO
calorie* each! Adding excitement to the dish
In tim esaving Zrsty Cream Sauce which
use* reduced-calorie mayonnaise a* a base.
It'* zipped up with savory seasoning* that
help you subtract pound* and Inches
without sacrificing flavor
This nourishing dish I* a meal In Itself,
containing food* from each of the Itaslc Four
Food Croups (Kgg* are such a high quality
protein source that they are &lt;lasslfled In the
Meal Croup I

Itegular exercise I* an Important part of
any fitness program and Eggs Special can
have you out of the kitchen and back to the
gym to shape up In almost no time!
EGGS SP E C IA L W ITH Z E STT CREAM
SAUCE
0 slices thln-sllced whole wheat bread
1 package (It) or.I frozen broccoli spear*
or fmaten asparagus spears, rooded and
drained
C&gt; slices |l oz each) low-caloric American
cheese
Zesty Cream Sauce (rrii|&gt;e follows)
6 (Kiached eggs*
I'aprlka. optional
Divide and arrange broccoli spears among
toast slices. Top each with 1 cheese slice,
(troll about 4 Inches from heal until cheese
I* melted, about 2 to 3 minutes Top each
with 2 tablespoons of the Zesty Cream
Sauce and I poached egg Sprinkle with

paprika.If desired Makes 6 servings
Z E STT CREAM SAUCE
VS cup reduced-calorie mayonnaise
3 tablespoons water
I teaspoon prepared mustard
I teaspoon tarragon leaves, crushed
I teusptxm lemon juice
! » teaspoon while pepper
In small saucepan, combine all Ingre­
dients. Cookovcr low heat, stirring con­
stantly. until heated through.
•To pouch eggs. In 3-quart saucepan or
ID to 12-Inch omelet pan or skillet, hear 2
to 3 Inches ol water to bulling Reduce heat
to keep water simmering Break egg* Into
large Ixrwl Then, slip egg* Into water,
holding bowl close to water's surface. Cook
3 to 5 minutes, drjxndtng on desired
donrness. With slotted spoon, lilt out eggs
Drain In spoon or on paper towel* and trim
and rough edges. If desired

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SA V IN G S
thataddj up!

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The Evening Herald and Herald Advertiser
Special Food Section
In n.-liv.-l-.-ll To

x

27.000 HOMES
hm*li Wcdnchday in llie ^veiling Herald and Tliur*dnv in the
Herald Advertiser, you'll find ontMtiinding bargain* from our
local food MtoreN. Vie offer greut menu ideun, clever recipes
nnd new und different wnys to serve and enjoy the himple
everyday
9
w food*.

&gt;/?

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Phone 322-2611 For Home Delivery
B

Evening Herald
3 0 0 North French Avenue
• • • • •%

Sanford, Florida
• • ••• * « # • i

••••••• •••*

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                    <text>Evening Herald
77th Y e a r . N o. 256 T u e s d a y . J u n e 18. 1985— S a n f o r d . F l o r i d a

E v e n in g

H e r a ld

—

(U S P S

*81

280)

—.

P r ic e

25

C e n ts

Israel May Consider Trade

s, Threaten Other Sites
d
n
a
m
e
D

Hijackers Renew
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — Moslem militia
leader Nablh Berrl. chief negotiator In the TWA
hijacking, released a Greek singer and two
American hostages today and said the rest could
be freed "In 24 hours" If the United States asked
Israel to free Arab prisoners
At Beirut airport, the hijackers renewed their
demands and. giggling, warned: "Remember that
we will strike American Interests and we will
show America what It has not seen yet. We might
even reach the White House.”
And. In Israel. Prime Minister Shimon Peres
said he would consider trading 700 to 800 Arab

Rnlated stories, page 4B
prisoners for the remaining hostages If asked by
Ihe Red Cross.
Berrl today freed Greek singer Demis Ruussos.
who holds dual Greek and American citizenship.
Roussos' American girlfriend. Pamela Smith, und
Arthur Targontsldls. a Greek American from
Brockton. Mass . during a news conference at his
home In Moslem West Beirut.
He said the remaining American hostages — 40

Builders G e t
O ne-S top
P erm ittin g
By Donna Kates
Herald S taff W riter
In Its first day of workshops on
the 1985-86 budget, county
C o m m is s io n e rs M onday
approved "one slop permitting"
for builders, adding six new
employees to Its land develop­
ment department to accomplish
the task Currently builders
must get permits from several
olTlces Incomplete a project.
The commissioners also gave
Ihe public works department
everything Its director asked for
except a new building and
g r a n te d r e q u e s t s by th e
supervisor of elections to allay
any possibility of another llascu
occurring as In November 1984
when It took all 11 hours after
the (Mills dosed election day to
complete Ihe count on election
returns
Yet. the four members of the
board at the day long workshop
— Commissioners Bob Sturm,
Sandra Glenn. Fred Streetman
and Barbara C hristensen —
stayed well within anticipated
revenues and at this point no
Increase In taxes Is foreseen,
said Budget Director Eleanor
Anderson.
Bill Mrs Christensen, made It
clrar she Is willing to raise
pro(&gt;erty taxes to get needed
roads built. If that becomes
necessary. Commissioner Bill
Klrchhoff was ubsrut.
The surprise of the eight hour
session was a report from Deputv County Administrator for
Development Woody Price that It
will cost near $500,000 to up
date the county's comprehensive

land use plan, following all the
state requirements. It would
take, he said, nine nine new
employees assigned specifically
to the project plus a professional
consultant to accomplish the
task by Ihe 1987 deadline.
The commission approved
$ 1 7 8 ,0 0 0 of the req u este d
money for the fiscal year to
begin Oct I
Even Public Works Director
Larry Sellers was surprised
when after an Im passioned
hour-long plea, the commission­
ers voted to give him $&lt;181,563
In new money Including a
$ 1 1 3 ,0 0 0 b u d g et fo r th e
Seminole County Expressway
Authority.
The expressway au th o rity
money Is to be used to hire un
executive director and a deputy
director and do some planning
Sellers has been h an d lin g the
executive director role as well as
hts ow n public w orks d irecto r
|M&gt;st at no additional pay for the
(Mist eight mouth*

While County Administrator
Ken Hooper had recommended
approval of four tiew employees
for public works, plus six tralflc
counters and aerial photographs
of the Weklva-Monroe Basin at a
total cost of about $185,000.
Sellers pleaded to lie given the
resources. Including funds cut
by Hooper for the acquisition of
dralnagr and road rights of
ways, to let hts de|&gt;artment do
Its Job
Commissioner Sandra Glenn
chided him for not getting road
Bee COUNTY, page SA

Ex-Jaycee Chief
Gets Year In Jail
For Embezzlement
The (misI president of the Altamonte-South
Seminole Jayreaa. elected to the position while
serving probation for grund theft, has been
sentenced to one year In the Seminole County
Jail for embezzling about $17,000 from the
club.
At least one Jaycec official said hr thinks the
sentence Leonard Nell Schnack. 34. of 133
Vrspeis Place. Lake Mary, received was too
light.
"Personally. I think he should bum ." said
Jaycee’s vice president Nick Waggoner follow­
ing Monday's sentencing.
Schnack was also ordered by Circuit Judge
C. Vernon Mize Jr. to serve 5 years of
probation and repay the Jaycees at the rate of
$140 a month.
Waggoner said the restitution plan would not
cover the Interest thr organization would have
earned on the embezzled funds.
He said the money was Intended to help
build a playground for handicapped children.
"In my opinion, he should have gotten more
than he did." Waggoner said. "He was put In a
|Miatllon of trust. I think a year Is not nearly
enough time.'
Schnack. elected Jayceaa president May
1083 and who served (or 10 months, em­
bezzled the cash between July 1083 and
March 1084. lie was arrested Sept. 21 after
surrendering himself to sheriffs deputies at
the Seminole County Jail. An Investigation Into
Schnack's activities began with an Internal
probe by thr Jaycees In May. 1084. and was
eventually turned over to the sheriffs deparmenu

While Schnack was Jaycees president hr
was serving 4 years of probation for a grand
theft case In Orange County. In that case,
according to Orange County court records.
Schnack was accused of taking $3,000 from
hla Orlando employer. He pleaded no contest to
the charge and was sentenced to 4 years
probation Feb. 13. 1080 He was also fined
$400.
In the recent case. Schnack opened two bank
• m JAYCKK*B. pags $A

i aw

Sanford's
'Unkempt'
Im age
Blam ed On
City Hall
By Rick Branson
Herald S taff Writer
L ast In a series
When Sanford's Scenic Im­
provement Board Issued a
16-page report earlier this
month calling the city "un­
kempt.” It didn’t level the
charge at only Sanford resi­
dents. Thr board said City Hall
needed to clean up Its own act.
too
The board attached more
lhan 400 violations of city
maintenance codes to Its re(Mirt. some of which had the
city's name on them. In addi­
tion. Ihe board submitted a list
of city-owned properties that
need to be Improved. Including
C ity H a ll, w h ich b o ard
c h a irm a n S ara Jacobson
called a ’’cold fortress" that
needs to be "softened" with
landscaping.
The city commission ac­
knowledged that etty properly
has been neglected and de­
termined to set the pace for
seeing the city restored to a
clean, charming community.
"The city should set the

by a State Dr partem count — could be freed ’in
24 hours If the American people put pressure on
the government to ask Israel for Ihe release of our
prisoners In Israel ”
"The matter now Is on the American side of the
table." Berrl told reporters.
Roussos. smiling and occasionally patting Berrl
on the shoulder, referred to the Shiite militiamen
In the room as "these good people."
Smith, whom the Shiite mtlltamen referred to
as his wife, praised the hijackers for their
manners.
"They were extremely considerate They were

extremely kind and generous to us and we greatly
grratlv appreciate their hospitality." she said.
Russos, who celebrated his 40th birthday
during the ordeal, said he didn't realize how long
he had been held because he'd lost his concept of
time during five days In captivity
"I didn't have a sense of time .... They
mentioned my name and told me I was being
released." he said
Roussos said his captors were "very nice" and
that he sang for them
See HIJACK, page SA

Geneva Boy
Dies In
Fall From
Car Hood
A four-year-old Geneva boy
who was riding on the hood of a
car fell to hts death at about 8:15
p m Monday
Jason Cuevas of 280 Jungle
Riuid North, was riding on the
hood of the car along with three
other persons when he fell off
the vehicle. Florida Highway
patrolmen today said the trooper
who responded to the scene on
Jungle Road did not report on
whether or not the boy was
struck by the car he fell from or
If he was fatally Injured from the
fall alone.
No other car was at the scene,
troopers reported, and charges
are (lending against David M^
Helzer. 34. of 150 Cloister Road
Casselberry, the driver of the car
1 * l-fV
Involved.
i e g r1
The boy was helicoptered to
C 3 W 2 P I -ik*2#r
*-•
.
*
O rlando R eg io n al Medical
MsrsMrw*a Sr Tsmsif Vises**
Center. Orlando, where he was
A d u c k s c a v e n g e s a lo n g th e s c u m m y s e a w a ll o n L a k e
dead on a r r iv a l, h o sp ita l
M o n r o e n e a r t h e m prlna a s a d e a d f i s h f l o a t s n e a r b y . T h e
spokesman Joe Brown said.
Brown said air ambulance
s p o t I s h ig h o n t h e S c e n i c I m p r o v e m e n t B o a r d ' s h it l i s t o f
workers and emergency room ,
c i t y p r o p e r t ie s t h a t n e e d c le a n in g u p .
staff reported the boy suffered
"multlpal trauma." but there
example by keeping parks and In the city, we'll have every
w as no apparent Indication of a
right
to
go
to
the
others
and
other sites well-tended. That
significant head Injury. He had
would be the Incentive for tell them to clean thetrsup."
an abrasion on his back and
In this final report on the
other citizens." said Commis­
likely died from Internal Injuries,
sioner Milton Smith. "If we hoard * recommendations, thr
perhaps to his lungs. Brown
Bee UNKEMPT, page BA
ran get our own house cleaned
said.
An autopsy was scheduled by
the Orange County medical ex­
aminer today. Brown said.
Cuevas' parents weren't Iden­
tified In the Highway Patrol
In ihe home Ik- examined by have led to many casu allies.
school ofllclals who would test
"In states that repealed Ihe report, but Brown said the
whether they were learning.
helmet law. there has been a hosltal has his mother’s name
The helmet bill would have marked Increase In serious Inju­ listed as Teresa, of the same
address, but with no last name
re p e a le d a law r e q u ir in g ries and fatalities." she said.
headgear and allowed bikers
"Any time there Is an Injury, listed.
The boy's death brings to 18
over 21 to ride helmetless. Jill some of the burden of their
Chamberlin. Graham's deputy health care Is going to be the number of trafllc fatalities In
press secretary, said statistics transferred to the public —to the Seminole County this year.
—Busan Lode a
Indicate repealing the law could tax|Miyer." Graham has said.

G r a h a m T ells B i k e r s : P u t H e lm e t s B a c k O n
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - Gov
Boh Graham hu* killed two bills
th a t w o u ld li a v r allow ed
motorcyclists to ride without
hrlmrts and permitted "a more
Indiscriminate use" of billboards
along highways In Florida.
Bui the governor did sign Into
law Monday a measure In­
structing that children rducated

Casselberry Man Guilty Of Attempted M anslaughter
A Casselberry man on trial for attempted
second degree murder has been found guilty of
the lesser Included charge of attempted man­
slaughter.
Desmond Assam. 34. of 771 U S. Highway
17-92 was found guilty Monday by Jury of the
Nov. 4 shooting of Richard DeFazlo. 35. of 30
Jackson Circle. Winter Springs, and Jerry
Stahley. 32. of 390 Marigold Road. Casselberry.
Both men have since recovered
Assam was found not guilty of a second charge,
aggravated battery. He could receive to up to 5
years when sentenced In July by Circuit Judge S.
Joseph Davis J r . according to Steve Laurence,
prosecuting attorney on the case
According to court records and testimony.
DeFazlo and Sluhley were shot while they were
near Joe's Pawn Shop. 761 U.S. Highway 17-92.
Thr shop Is owned bv Desmond Assam and his

lather Joseph Assam, of HI S. Devon Ave.. Winter
Springs.
On the day of th r shooting, a garage sale was
being held for a boy's football team at a nearby
business, Dun-Rite Transmission. 775 U.S.
Highway 17-92. According to testimony of one of
the owners of the transmission rompany. people
attending the sale were told to park In the area of
thr closed pawn shop, though permission had not
been obtained from the Assam* for anyone to use
the (larking spaces
According to court records, shopper* car* at the
garage sale were blocking or using the puwn
shop's parking spaces and DeFazlo and Stahley
were about to move two vehicles from the parking
spaces, when a 1979 beige Bulck owned by Joe
Assam drove at them, striking DrFazlo. according
to witness Ron Mason, a Casselberry realtorAccording to Mason. DeFazlo then entered the
car through the driver's door and confronted the

Mother Jailed For Child Abuse
By D«an« Jordan
Herald Staff Writer
A former Altamonte Springs
woman who let her toddlers
sleep In their vomit and wastes
has been sentenced to 2 1 days In
the Seminole County Jail.
The Department of Health and
Rehabilitative Service* took her
children Into custody.
In similar case*, children stay
In the custody of HRS for 6
months to a year or longer If
necessary, according to HRS
program analyst Mike Robinson.
S h a ro n L y n n C a rr. 19,
formerly of 829 Ash Lane, was
given credit by County Judge
Alan Dickey for 16 day* already
served. Dickey also ordered Ms.
Carr to serve one year probation,
pay the public defender's office
$100 and to cooperate with HRS
ofllclals
According to court records, an
HRS c o u n s e lo r In fo rm e d
authorities of several alleged
abuses after attempts to contact

Ms. Carr. She was arrested In
Orange County Feb. 25 on
misdemeanor charge* of child
abuse filed In Seminole County,
according to the court docket.
She failed to appear for trial In
Sanford In May and a bench
warrant was Issued for her
arrest.
Ms. Carr, who has a 7th grade
education and waa unemployed
for 2 years prior to the charges,
waa rearrested June 3 In Orange
County, according to court re­
cords.
According to sworn state­
ments mentioned In court re­
cords. Ms. Carr's children, a girl,
almost three year* old. and a
boy. 20 months, were often left
several days with thetr diapers
unchanged, were not fed regu­
larly and when they were fed
had food stuffed Into them till
they would vomit. The state­
ments came from other adults
living with the childrens' mother
while she lived in Altamonte

Springs.
According to court records, the
sworn statments also state that
besides sleeping In their own
vomit and wastes, the boy was
often locked In a room except
one or two hours a day. and the
girl beaten with shoes, wooden
s p o o n s , and p u n ch ed and
kicked According to the state­
ments. when Ihe mother slept
she lied the children to her bed
The statements also reportedly
said that when the children wete
b a th e d In th e ir m o t h e r 's
absence, bruises shaped like
shoes were seen on their bodies
Ms. Carr, who will be 20 this
month and Is blind In her right
eye. was accused of abusing her
children while In New Jersey,
where her mother lives, and
possibly In Georgia, records
show.
According to court records,
she Is now employed and Uvea
Orlando where she may face
charges.

driver but did not struggle or fight with him A*
Mason stepped In to break up the set-to Assam's
wife began screaming for help The younger
Assam then reportedly left his nearby home
carrying a .38-callber handgun In both hands and
approched the men with the weapon pointed In
the air.
As Ihe fracas continued, a shot was fired
grazing Stahley's stomach and hitting DeFazlo In
the back.
—Deans Jordan

TODAY
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Comics.............. 61) People.........
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Dr.Gott............. 6B World...........
Action Reports .

ar

Pow dmred Wigs N e x t?
MIAMI (UPI) - Judge Richard Feder says
he wants to bring dignity to the Dade County
Circuit Court, so he's requiring lawyers to
wear flowing, knee-length black robe*
"When they walk Into a British courtroom,
they are hushed, reverent and respectful
When they walk Into an American court­
room. they are reading a newspaper, eating
an apple — It's not a movie theater." Feder
said.
Feder brought a box of the countypurchased $50 robes to the courtroom
Monday and ordered Ihe lawyers to "pick
out one that fits.”
The Judge overruled complaints from
defense lawyers who called Ihe robes
uncomfortable and said they would restrict
their right to represent clients.
"Everybody wants to know when the wigs
are coming." Feder said

�lA - E y s n jo * Hsrsld, t s MardAFI.

T iwsdsy. Juns I I , ltSS

NATION
IN BRIEF
Teen Who A x e d Parents
S e n ten ced To 40 Years
SOUT1I BEND. Ind. (UPI) — Year* of abuse may have
driven a teenager lo kill his father with an ax. but slaying
his mother was “gratuitous and senseless" because she
was controlled by her husband, a Judge said In sentencing
the youth to 40 years.
Dale Whipple. 18. of Lydak. was sentenced Monday to 10
years more than Ihe minimum In Indiana for a
double murder conviction, bul one-third of the maximum
120-year sentence prosecutors requested,
St. Joseph Superior Judge Robert L. Miller Jr. told
Whipple at a hearing Monday the bloody New Year’s Day
killings were “gruesome."
A Jury last month found Whipple, 18. guilty bul mentally
111 on two counts of murder In the ax attack on Wayne and
Sandra Whipple, both 39. In the family home In Lydlck.
west of South Bend. He will have to serve at least 20 years
before becoming eligible for parole.

Dr Ivor’s License Photo 'Graven Image'

Court Defers Major Religion Case
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Supreme
Court, deadlocked In one of this year's
major religious freedom cases, has deferred
until next year a decision on when govern­
ment regulations Impede ihe right to
worship
The Justices. In their eighth tie vote of the
term Monday, failed to set a precedent In the
case of a Nebraska woman who objected on
religious grounds to the use of her picture
on her driver's license.
The 4-4 vole, with Justice Lewis Powell
not participating, upheld a lower court that
said requiring Frances Quarlng to be
photographed as a condition lo getting a
license Inlrrferrd with her belief against the
making of a “graven Image."
Al the same time. the high court placed on
next fall's agenda two similar cases Involv­
ing the First Amendment right to exercise
religion.
In one. an Orthodox Jewish rabbi Is
challenging an Air Force dress code preven­
ting hint from wearing a traditional
yarmulke while on duty. The other Involves
a religious objection lo the use nl u Social

Security number.
Joseph Conn, spokesman for Americans
United for Separation of Church and State,
said the court's stalemate In the Nebraska
case showed Just how divided the Justices
ore on Ihe Issue. Bul he said the court seems
eager for some resolution.
"It sounds like they're trying to decide
what Is compelling government Interest and
what Isn't." he said. "We were thinking this
term was going to be the big one on
church-stale issues. It looks like next term Is
going lo be as well."
Marc Stem, lawyer for the American
Jewish Congress, said he was surprised by
the court's reluctance to come down
strongly for Individual religious rights.
"They're obviously troubled by what
standards the court ought to use to review
free religion claims." he said "Until now.
we've understood that a state has to show a
compelling interest They may be changing
the standard ."
Powell did not vote In ihe Nebraska case
la-cause he was recovering from surgery
when oral arguments were heard His

absence also caused a deadlock earlier this
year on whether a New York suburb could
prohibit a Nativity scene in a public park.
The court also:
-H eld 8-0. with Powell not participating,
that Western Airlines must consider making
pilots Into flight engineers If they request It
when they reach the Federal Aviation
Administration's retirement age of 60 for
commercial pilots.
-H eld 7-2 In a Maryland case that the
purchase of obscene material by an under
cover police officer Is not a seizure under the
Fourth Amendment and does not require a
search warrant.
—Ruled unanimously In a case from
Massachusetts that revocation of an In­
mate's "good time credits" must be sup
ported by some evidence from prison
officials.
-Ruled 7-1. In a suit Involving Ihe
controversial drug Bendectln. that a trial
Judges decision to disqualify attorneys
cannot be appealed before a ruling on the
merits of the case.

Housing Starts
Plunge In May

2 M o re Sp y S u sp e cts In d icte d
NORFOLK. Va. (UPI) — Federal grand Juries have
Indicted two retired Navy veterans accused of being links
In a famlly-and-fricnd spy ring on charges of passing
military sccrels to the Soviets.
Indicted Monday were Arthur Walker. 50. a retired
lieutenant commander, and Jerry Whitworth. 45. a retired
communications special 1st.
Attorneys for Walker, a former engineer at VSE Corp.. a
defense contractor, said Monday he will plead not guilty at
a hearing today lo the seven counts returned against him
by a federal grand Jury In Norfolk.
Whitworth's lawyers said he Is scheduled to appear at an
arraignment today In San Francisco — where he was
Indicted Monday on a single count of espionage — bul
would not say If he would enter n plea.
Wulker and Whitworth are believed to be links In a
wldcs|&gt;cud spy ring thought to have operated out of
Norfolk, site of the world's largest Navy base and home to
the U.S. Atlantic Fleet.
Walker's brother John. 47. charged os the ringleader,
and John's son. Michael. 22. a sailor last assigned to the
aircraft carrier Nlmltz. were Indicted on espionage charges
late last month and are being held In Baltimore.

C h e e se P robe W idens
LOS ANGELES |UPI&gt; — Health Inspectors have expanded
their search for Ihe source of trartcrla Infection In a
Mexican style cheese blamed In 30 deaths to Include more
than two dozen milk suppliers
A weekend Inspection of the Jalisco Mexican Products
Inc. plant, which made the cheese linked to the Infection,
turned up only minor sanitation problems and the plant
was given a passing grade by health officials
Meunwhlle. authorities Monday confirmed an 82-year-old
Hispanic man hud died from Ihe Listeria Infection, bringing
to :io the number of reported deaths connected to the
cheese In Southern California.
Officials said It probably will be several weeks before the
lull extent of the outbreak — Ihe deadliest case of tainted
food In California history — la known because Incubation of
lire burlerlal Infri Hon lakes up to three weeks.
Counting Ihe Ihree new coses. 91 people hove been
confirmed stricken with Ihe Infection In I-os Angeles and
Orange counties

Sim ia n S u rp rise
G e t t in g
g o r illa

h e a rty
(o r

S u p re m e

c o n g r a t u la tio n s

b e in g

C o u rt

c e r t if ie d
Is

by

S e m in o le

fro m

Ih e

a

F lo r id a

C ir c u it

C o u rt

C le r k
D a v id
B e r r ie n .
A c t u a lly
It
w as
S a n fo rd
r e s id e n t
G w ynne
C h a n d le r
ot
B a l l o o n B o u t iq u e j u s t m o n k e y i n g a r o u n d .
O n b e h a lf of B e r r ie n 's c o u rth o u s e c r e w , s h e
a ls o

p re se n te d

B e r r ie n

w it h

a

cake.

To

WASHINGTON IUPI) - Hous
Ing starts dropped 13.7 percent
In May. the steepest decline In
more than a year, the Census
Bureau said today.
Despite the drop the pace of
s t a r t s re m a in e d h e a lth y ,
averaging a higher rate so far
this year than housing produc­
tion for all of last year.
Housing starts in May were at
an annua) rate of 1.663 million
after seasonal adjustment.
The rate of starts from the
beginning of the year through
May averaged 1.795 million, still
above 1984‘s tolal for housing
startsof 1.749 million.
Building permits rose 3 per­
cent in May. an encourglng sign
thut the downward trend may
not continue
Housing so far (his year has
been the brightest spot in an
otherwise slow economy.
Starts of single-family houses
HwiM *■♦*-*»Sr Dum Art** dropped 10 percent while those
of m u lti-fa m ily b u ild in g s
dropped 19.1 percent.
r e m a i n C l e r k o t t h e C i r c u i t C o u r t In F l o r i d a ,
T he decline w as sp read
th e e l e c t e d o f f i c i a l m u s t b e c e r t i f i e d w it h i n
throughout all regions of the
s ix y e a r s b y th e h ig h c o u r t , B e r r i e n s a id .
country with the greatest set­
back In Western states at 16.5
B e c a u s e o f p a s t e x p e r ie n c e a n d e d u c a tio n ,
percent. Northeastern states
B e r r ie n
w as
c e r t if ie d
In
f iv e
m o n th s,
reported a 17 percent drop,
a c c o r d i n g f o t h e S u p r e m e C ourt. B e r r i e n
southern states were down 15.3
to o k o f f i c e In J a n u a r y .
percent and Midwestern stairs
slipped 5.7 percent.

W o m a n S o u g h t In A b d u c t i o n O f D a u g h t e r s

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
La w y e rs Want To Q uestion
M o b ste r In P o p e Plot Trial
ROME (UPI) — Defense attorneys at the trial of right men
charged In the I9H1 attack on the pope uaked a Judge to
summon a crime syndicate Informer who says the gunman
was coached lo Implicate Ihe Soviet Union.
Munlredo Rossi, a lawyer acting for two former officials of
Ihe Bulgarian Embassy In Rome, asked Judge Scvrrtno
Santlaplchl Monday to call as a witness mob Informer
Giovanni Pandlco who claims he helped un Italian
Intelligence service agent prompt Turkish terrorist Mehinet
All Agcaln 1982
Agca. 27. Initially said he uctrd ulone In shooting Pope
John Paul It In St Peter's Square May 13. 1981. An Italian
&lt;ourt sentenced Agcu to life Imprisonment and he turned
state’s evidence In May 1982.
He now Is being bird on a new count of smuggling a gun
Into Italy and three Bulgarians und four Turks are on trial
on charges they plotted the attack.
l-ast week Agcu claimed u Soviet diplomat In the
Bulgarian capital Sofia ordered the attack on the
Pollsh born jmpc and Bulgailan agents helped him carry it
out.

M e n g e le D o ssie r A rriv e s
SAO PAULO. Brazil (UPI) — World War It medical data
could yield solid evidence thut u 0-year-old skeleton dug up
In Brazil Is that of Nazi war criminal Josef Mengele. a
forensic (lathuloglsl says.
More than a week after the bones were exhumed from a
suburban graveyard near Sao Paulo, the 17-member team
of coroners front around the world finally received detailed
medical recordson Mengele Monday.
The Simon Wlrsenlhal Institute In Los Angeles sent the
dossier to Brazil for comparison with Ihe cleaned,
reassembled skrIrion unearthed June 6.
The dossier contained wartime X-rays, a pre-war dental
chan and Information about a motorcycle accident
Mengele suffered during World War II.

HOSPITAL NOTES
CssSal Fto*Ma OstMMl
MsaSsr
A D M IS S IO N I

(ante*
•*aafca i Qwwvt
is m ts L Vi*Vto*4 u4U
(llto*W Carto*. Cataatoarr*
C w M N

C la r k . D a i * * *

Jans SOsMMI. Oaltana
O tlC H A tO IS
I s S ri
J u i n s F O a S a rto to m a la

S alt* D&gt;&lt;ktan

Va*» M Maxidata

tesoa

Ms* Ion a tfnltti
Ms*man H Wslltirsm
CKartst R Walts*. OtOsns
■mil* 0 Walton. L tn fa m l
Carltons l . Oarrltan ana bat* ba*
ta n t a r t
MKSatol Jam atanssas* tor. lantort
■ISTM t
Al ant Manna la r n s t . a tab* *1*1.
Cataatoarty

Sem inole County sht-rllf's
deputies ronilmu* lo search for
two girls and ihrtr mother who
Is suspected ul abducting them
from a Longwood foster home on
Sunday.
Deputies reported that De­
borah Graham. 30, address
unknown, visited the foster
hom e where her d au g h ters
Amber. H, and Michelle. 4, had
Ix-en placed by court order
Cynthia I’ortalatln. 17. of 2260
Churollle St., the daughter of Ihe
girls' (osier mother. Juanltu
1‘ortalatln. 51, iold*drput!ea she
did nol let Ms Graham Into the
home when she came to visit
aliout 3 pm
Ms. B o rta lu tln to ld Ms.
Graham lo wait outside and she
could talk to her daughters
through a screen door, according
to a sherllfs report. Hut when
Ms PortaUtln brought the girls
to tin door Ihry ran outside. Ihe
report said,
Ms Graham allegedly grabta-d
her daughters and placed them
In Ihe backseat of a black and
green Chevrolet She got Into the
pasarnger's seal and an uniden­
tified driver sped away, the
report said
A pickup order has been
Issued for Ms Graham, hut
neither she nor ihe Kiris have
been found Deputies reported
they make have lied to Alabama
or Georgia
P O T IN C A R

The man sitting In Ihe driver's
seat of a car parked at Ihe
Hotline Bottle Club, state Koud
436, Altamonte Springs, along
with two other men. has been
charged with possession of
marijuana
An Altamonte Springs police­
man who upproached the car at
about 2 45 a m Saturday re­
p o rted sm elling m a riju an a
smoke and spotted clgurette
rolling papers and partially
smoked hand-rolled cigarettes
near the driver's seat In the car.
A small bag of pot was also
reportedly found In Ihe pants
pocket of the mun charged The
other two men were not charged.
William Brltion Welter. 20, ol
1520 Ormond Ave.. Apopka, has
been released from Jail without
posting bond. He Is scheduled to
appear In court June 28.
HEY BURGLARY
Mitchell SlafTord. manager of
the Eaatem gasoline slatlon ul

A $250 camera, two watches Second Streel. Chuluota. after
worth $150 each, and a $325 his pickup truck was spotted
handgun were stolen from the weaving and speeding He wax
home of David Sherman Hall, also charged with carrying a
31, of 1245 Rising Sun Blvd., concealed weapon after an open
Oviedo, between Friday and knife was found In Ihe pocket of
Sunday, a sheriff"s report said
Ihe driver's side door of his
truck, a sherlfTs report said.
Deputies have ihe name of a —Eugene Thome Raylc. 28. o(
suspect who may have stolen a Orlando, at 10 20 a.m. Saturday,
*500 couch and a $350 lovrseat on slate Road 434 after his
from Ihe home of Peter Matrix. vehicle ran off the road.
21. of 1022 Worthing Court. —Scott Robert Jones. 22. of 190
E. Wlldnerc Road. Longwood. at
Winter Park, on Sunday.
1129 p.m. Sunday on state
Road
436. Altamonte Springs,
A 1983 Honda worth $10,000
and a briefcase were stolen from after his car failed lo maintain a
the garage of George W. Carroll. single lane. He was also charged
driving without a license.
32. of 3928 Villas Green Circle. with
—
Theodore
Schoonover. 32.
Longwood. on Saturday or of Orlando, atB. 11:59
p.m. Satur­
Sunday,
day a t Longwood V illage.
Three suitcases containing Longwood. after he failed to use
clothes and $200 caah were a designated lane. l\»llce had
stolen from a rental truck at 772 b e e n a d v is e d by a n o t h e r
Baker Drive. Altamonte Springs, motorist of a possible drunk
on Sunday Eva J, Blast. 36. of driver In the area, an arrest
that uddresa. gave deputies the report said.
name of a suspect who may have —Michael Shawn Fowler. 24. of
grabbed the bags, a sheriffs 211 W. Bay St.. Longwood. at
2 0 5 a.m. Saturday on Palm
report said.
S p rin g s D rive. A lta m o n te
Jessie Anna Wilt. 64. of 760 Springs, after his speeding car
Honeysuckle Lane. Casselberry, hit a pole.
reported to sheriffs deputies —Terry Dwayne Young. 22. of
thal $300 rash and five rings 619 Fenton Place *619J, Alta­
with diamonds and other stones monte Springs, at 12:41 a m
with a total value of about Sunday after he allegedly backed
$3,000 were stolen (rom a purse his vehicle Into a gasoline tanker
in a closet In her home between at the 7-Eleven. 401 W. state
Road 436. Altamonte Springs
April 15 and Saturday.
He allegedly left the scene, but
Three potted citrus trees with was picked up at McDonalds,
a combined value of $125 were sta le Road 436. A ltam onte
stolen from the driveway of Springs, a police report said, lie
Edward Eugene Wagner. 40. of was also rharged with leaving
1364 Westdale Ave., Winter the scene of an accident with
Park, between June 12 and property damage.
Saturday, a sherlfrs report said.

Action Reports
★ F lr o s
A C o u rts
★ P o lic e
1385 R Allamonle Drive, Alta­
monte S prings, reported to
Srminble County sheriff's depu­
ties the keys to the slatlon. Its
alarm and vault were stolen
from the shop Sunday.
SlafTord called a sheriffs depu­
ty back to the store at about 2:25
a m Monday and turned over a
burglary suspect hr had ra p ­
tured inside the business, a
sherllf s report said
Slulford said he was hiding
behind a counter when the
suspect, with the missing keys
In tits possession, entered the
building, the report said.
Albert Lee Cain. 24, of 520
Oaks St.. Altamonte Springs, haa
been charged with burglary and
jwtty thrli He was being held In
lieu of 48.000 bond
BATTERED WIPE
A 27-year-old Longwood man
has been charged with battery
spouse abuse after allegedly hit­
ting his wife In Ihe head and
face
Seminole County sheriff's
deputies responded to a dis­
turbance call at 865 Lake Irene
Drive at about 11 30 a m. Satur­
day and were met by Cheryl Lott
Wulker who told them her
husband had attacked her
because she hadn't gotten him
up to go to work, a sheriffs
report said
Mrs Walker was transported
to South Seminole Community
Hospital. Longwood. where she
was examined for possible head
Injuries and released, a sheriffs
report said.
Eugene Charles Walker Jr.
was arrested at his home and
later released on $500 bond. He
Is scheduled to appear In court
June 26.
BURGLARIES A THEFTS
John M. S tew art. 34, c f
Telford. T cnn., reported to
S-mlnole County shertfTs deputlra that $200 In travelers
checks were stolen from a suit­
case in his room at the Holiday
Inn. Intctstatc 4 at state Road
46. west of Sanford, on Sunday.

Terry Roy Melmkamp. 25.
reported a car belonging to
Armstrong World Industries, of
Lancaster. Penn., was stolen
from his home at 323 Shadow
Oak Drive. Casselberry, on Sat­
urday. The 1985 Ford, worth
$9,500. belongs to hts employer,
a sheriff s report said.
DUli
The following persons have
been arrested In Sem inole
County on a charge of driving
under Ihe Influence:
—Joseph David Demar, 35. of
Grant Line Road. Paola. was
arrested at 5 p.m. Friday on

4

E w n in j* lle iu ld
m ip s «si m i

Tuesday. Juo* l*. m i
V s l. 77. No 1S«
F u M t iM O ta r MW iwtoa*. s a c s *
N ' w r * * a* Tito U n to** Harald.
•*C. MS N. Frtnch Art . UfttorS.

■is n m

tM Sna C ists F s t U f t Rato t l lan iard.

FlsrWs urn

Msm# Oallvar* Wash, t l.lt j M asts.
SS.Fll 1 Mania*. 114 11. * Maul**.
U I.SSi V ssr. U l S*. ■* Mail: WaaS
IM S * M asts. M SS: I M sstS*.
IU .S S i S Monts*. m .M j Y sa r,
(M l) m 1*11.

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI

Tw«»4ay. June 11. 1 W J -)A

Auditor Who Tried To Silence Whistleblower Fired
WASHINGTON CUPI» - The Merit System*
Protection Board. In an unprecedented action,
nan fired the chief of Pentagon auditing for
retaliating against an auditor who blew the
whistle on his agency.
In Its toughest action since taking over civil
service duties seven years ago. the board late last
week ordered the removal of Charles Starrett Jr.
- since July 1981 the t72.300-a year director of
the Defense Contract Audit Agency — and fined
him $1,000 for "taking actions against agency
auditor and whistleblower George Spanton.**
The board also demoted and fined two other
audll agency managers In Atlanta. Paul Evans
and Arlln Tucller, who were found "to have taken
or recommended taking actions" against
Spanton

Group Works
To Prevent
July Fourth
Eye Injuries
Special to the Herald
TAMPA — Parades, picnics
and fireworks displays are all
July Fourth traditions enjoyed
by most Americans. Another,
often overlooked trad itio n ,
comes In the aftermath of the
holiday — those news reports
about people blinded, maimed,
or killed by fireworks
The National Society to Pre­
vent Blindness-Florida Affiliate
r e p o r t s t h a t In 1 9 8 4 ,
flreworks-rrlaird Injuries rose 19
percent over the previous year.
An estimated 9.857 people re­
quired hospital emergency room
treatment last year. 1.255 of
them having sustained eye Inju­
ries.
"Fireworks are not toys."
cautions Herbert Goetschlus.
president of Ihe NSPB Florida
chapter, "Yet. 74 percent of all
those people Injured last year
were under age 24. Without
doubt, we need to keep fireworks
out of the hands of young
people."
In u recent study conducted by
A rkansas ophthalm ologists,
boitle rockets were found to be
ihe leading cause of fireworksrelated Injuries there.
The study revealed that nearly
Ihrrr-fourths of all Injuries re­
sulting In permanent vision loss
w ere s u sta in e d by people
harmed by bottle rockets.
"Small, but lethal, a bottle
rocket Is a single fire cra ck er
attached to a stick, and shot
from a s ta tio n a ry o b je c t.
Usually, the suggested object Is
a pipe. However, more often
than not. people use soda-pop
bottles." Goetschlus said.
According to the National So­
ciety lo Prevent Blindness, these
b o ttle s can explode. G lass
shrapnel thrown during Ihe
explosion can strike Ihe face and
eyes of bystanders, often causing
severe, painful and Irreversibly
blinding Injuries.
Among the other commonly
available fireworks Involved In
Injuries are firecrackers. M-80's.
Roman candles, salutes and
snakes. Even sparklers arc un­
safe. The society says that a
blinding bum can result If the
sparkler makes contact with the
eye.
"We recommend that people
enjoy fireworks the one safe and
sane way this July Fourth,"
Goetschlus said. "That ta. view
Ihcrn at a licensed public dis­
play, not on a street comer or In
the backyard ”
Established In 1908, the NSPB
Is the oldest voluntary health
ngency nationally engaged In
preventing blindness through a
co m prehensive pro g ram of
community services, public and
professional education and re­
search.

CAU .TO U r a t e
u s u i an

Bob'* Aitiqaes &amp;
M F iriilire
M ITOCX

You Won’t Walk Away Empty
Handed. If You Don't Like
Our Price We Will Negotiate.
3 2 3 .2 1 M
Hm, 17 *2 So.
SanlsfS. fU .

M r. M S 1 0 4

Sun. 1 0 4

1 DAY
SE R V IC E
FREE Estimate
SEMINOLE
SEN &amp; VAC

3229411
coasts its •

LAMI MAST SLVDi
Wkw D u * C«n*r

As an agency auditor In 1982. Spanton Anderson said the board Is studying possible
reported serious alleged pricing Improprieties at additional penalties against the two men and Is
Pratt A Whitney Co. In Florida. Starre’t said he, examining a fourth person. Stanrtt's assistant.
believed the disclosures were false.
Jam es Brown.
Told of the board's action. Spanton. now
Congress. In the Civil Service Reform Act of
retired, said. "This Is one of the grratests days of 1978. gave the board broad authority to protect
my life."
"whistleblowers," often government auditors
Starrett and the Pentagon had no comment.
ferreting out waste and fraud.
"This Is the first time the board has Imposed
The board found the three Pentagon employees
this penalty." board spokesman Lon Anderson
said at a news conference, adding the Defense "committed prohibited personnel practices when
Department "has to abide by this action" but can they attempted to reassign Spanton lo the West
Coast In an effort to silence his whistleblowing."
appeal to the courts.
The fine Imposed on Starrett was the maximum
Reached at his home In West Palm Beach.
allowed.
Spanton. 64. said. "1 was pushed out because of
Evans and Tuellcr were ordered demoted to my lough audit approach and my reluctance to
non-supervisory positions and fined *500, each. 1tack down."

Saying he had found "waste and abuse was
rampant throughout the Department of Defense."
he added. “ It was caster to get rid of me than to
dean It up.
"About one-third of the defense budget Is
wasted." Spanton said. “Maybe now, as a
taxpayer. I can look forward to more effective
protection of Ihe tax dollar at the Defense
Department."
In 1982. Spanton released a controversial
report on Pratt A Whitney's pricing policies and
revealed "possibly improper expenses" incurred
by the company for rnlcrtalnlng Pentagon
personnel. A year later Starrett reassigned
Spanton. an action lhat was staved until Spanton
retired In December 1983

T h el980’s
Bank ShakeUp:
How’s It Going
To Shake O u l
In five years of deregulation,
weve seen m ore changes in the
American financial system than in
all the other years put together
Today, banks offer discounts
on commissions w hen you
trade stocks and bonds.Stock
brokers offer services that
seem like bank accounts.
S&amp;Ls no longer have their
legalM
ki% edge”in interest rates.
On the other hand, they can offer
m ore kinds of loans.
Even departm ent stores an d
insurance com panies can get in
the act. Now, m ost places are going
to“wait and see" before they m ake
a move; but,at NCNB.we’re not.
Wfe’ll keep working to deliver
the best possible service. It may
not always m ean the lowest price,
but we’ll work to s e e that it m eans
the best value. For example:

M ore For Less.
offeryou
Lots of places
pi
m oney mlarket rates, but
only one offers them along
with other bank services
at special rates or no charge.
Wfe call it Deluxe Banking?
an d we’ve m ade it easier to get.
Now you can qualify t y depositing over their investment situation.
Thatls what our new Investor
just $1000; keep a $15,000 balance
Option IRA is all about. It lets you
a n d there’s no charge.
H igh Rates For M ore People. combine fixed-rate certificates,a
Maybe you've thought about money market account,stocks, and
bonds-w hatever works for you. So
investing in Certificates,but you
haven’t wanted to com mit a $25p0 com e in an d let’s talk it over.
M ore R etirem ent Benefits.
lump sum. Now you can invest in
If you’re retired with pension
any certificate we offerwith a
and/or Social Security payments,
minim um deposit of only $1000.
have them deposited direct with us.
Until this year, youve had to
Well give you tree regular checking,
deposit $2500 in a n account to
earn money m arket rates. Now, on free personalized wallet checks,a
free24*hour banking card and a free
personal accounts, we've cut our
m inim um deposit to just $100(1

M ore IRA Flexibility
A lot of people like the IKA
idea, but would like m ore control

that w e know of offers a 11of them.

A C hanging N eighborhood.
W hat you see here Is just the
beginning.vVbll keep working on
better ways to handle your money
So, if you’re not sure where
yourbank,broker or S&amp;L is shaking
o u tc o m e see us.
This year, next year, and long
after the dust has settled in the
shakeup of 1985,we’ll still b e here
working harder than ever to be the
best bank in the neighborhood

acas
National Bank
All DefMtsitws Instmxl tr&gt;SKXiPUO by FDIC.

�Evening Herald
(U SPS (I1 J M )

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322 2611 or 031 9993
Tuesday, June 18, 1985—4A
W»yn# 0 . Doyl*. Publith*r
Thom** Giordano, Managing Editor
Melvin AdGnt, Advertising Director

Home Delivery; Week. $1.10; Month. $4 75; 3 Months.
$14 25; fl Month*. $27 00; Year. $51 00 Uy Mall tt'rrk.
$1 50. Month. $fi 00. 3 Month* $ |H 00. B Month*. $32 50;.
Year. $0(3 00

Meese's
Legal Advice
The Competition In C o n tract Act. which
became law last year. Is designed to boost
competition among federal contractors and to
keep the coat of government down. President
Reagan signed the bill but Is now refusing to
enforce one key provision. That gesture puts
the president above the law.
the provision that has c roused the presi­
dent’s ire authorizes the General Accounting
Office, Congress’s Investigating arm. to su s­
pend contract aw ards up to 90 days when an
unsuccessful bidder cries foul. Though GAO
evaluations aren’t legally binding, they are
often Influential. Allowing GAO time to look
Into disputes discourages the kind of sw eet­
heart deals that have lately gotten the
Defense Department Into so much hot water.
The administration claims (hat this pro­
vision turns over to Congress what should be
an executive branch decision. What it finds
troubling Is an action giving GAO discretion
to Issue Its opinion at any time during the 90
days, rather than Imposing a rigid 90-day
review period. This technical legal con­
troversy should be settled In a lawsuit
challenging a contract delay; Indeed, there
urr such suits presently In court. Insteud. the
administration hns taken the luw Into Its own
hands, ordering governm ent agencies to
Ignorr thr GAO.
That order prompted an angry reaction
from the House Judiciary Committee, which
recently voted to cut off funds for the uttomey
general's office until Ed Mrese rewrites his
Instructions. This thratrlcul gesture, though
unlikely to receive full congressional approv­
al. certainly got the administration’s atte n ­
tion. A new federal court ruling rejecting the
administration's argum ent ugulnst enforcing
the luw. while less dramatic, deserves equal
attention. What the administration Is doing
"flatly violates the express Instruction of the
Constitution that the president shall ’take
care that the laws be faithfully executed.'"
wrote Judge 1larold Ackerman.
A century-old Suprem e Court decision,
cited by Judge Ackerman, puts the ad ­
ministration’s legal argum ent In |&gt;erspectlve.
"No man In this country Is so high thut he Is
above the luw. All the officers of the
government, from the highest to the lowest,
are bound to obey It." That Includes the
attorney general — and the president.

Worm In The Apple
Mas Apple Computer Inc. founder Steven
Jo b s lost his Job?
No. Apple's In trouble.
There Is talk of layoffs. But Job's Just been
sent back to th^ garage, where he first
designed thr personal computer.
Jo b s’ new Job description: "product vislonury."
Maybe he can Invent a better purpose for
t lie personal computer.

P le a se W rite
Letters to the editor arc welcome for
publication. All letters must be signed and
Include a mailing address and, If possible, a
telephone number. The Evening Herald
reserves the right to edit letters to avoid
libel and to accommodate space.

BERRY'S WORLD

HELEN T H O M A S

Reagan On Campaign Trail For Tax Reform
WASHINGTON {UPII — President Reagan Is
back on the campaign trail — this time to keep
the spotlight on hi* lax reform plan.
Reagan ha* been making two trips a week
outside of Washington to promote the program
that observers believe he wants to leave as the
most Important legacy of his White House years.
The president has four more side trips before
he heads for his California ranch for a week, but
aides Indicate he may make another short trip
on the Fourth of July and then return to the
ranch.
The staging for his speeches are reminiscent
of his 1984 campaign with the emphasis on
American Rags, bunting, red. white and blue
balloons —everything but the cheerleaders.
tic Is stressing that bis lax reform plan Is
''bipartisan'* but lately hr has been combining
his appearances with the promotion of senators
up for re-election

So it gets sticky at times when Reagan
accuses the Democratic Party of being led by the
left wing, without naming names.
When a reporter asked an aide how the
president "can get away with It" In terms of
praising bipartisanship and attacking the op­
position party at every opportunity, the aide
replied: "He is."
The president recently briefed economics
reporters on his tax plan, and may have
regretted his decision to take one more question.
The question "Mr. President, education for
the handicapped has been proven to be an
Investment rather than an expense. For In­
stance. at Cal State Northrldge In Long Beach In
Los Angeles, the Masters program produces
graduates who are able to earn up to $45,000 to
$60,000 a year, thanks to the program for deaf
mainstreamed education there, at the cost to the
taxpayer of $6,200 a year.

"May I ask. what Is the proposal In the tax
plan at the moment to maintain such programs
to help these people to be able to find
employment and so relieve the government of
the tax burden of supporting them?"
The president; "I don't think 1 heard. You're
talking about our aid to college students now?"
Question: "To the handicapped students, the
deaf students, particularly."
Stumped tor an answer, the president said he
should have let Treasury Secretary James Baker
lake the question.
Baker stood up and said : "I think that's a
budget question. If I may say so. You proposed a
budget question, not a tax question,"
Reagan agreed, hut went on lo say that federal
funds had not been actually cut for those
programs but were enfolded In block grants to
the state.

ROBERT WALTERS

D O N G R AF F

Buchanan
In World
Of Past

Tax Code
For Park
Avenue
WASHINGTON (NEAI - "W r
want a lax code for Main Street
America." proclaim s President
Reagan — but muny of the pro­
posals be advocates have been
crafted In Ireneflt the denizens of
New York's Park Avenue or lx&gt;s
Angelrs' Rodeo Drive.
The populist rhetoric the presi­
dent I* offering to promote the
"reforms" he unveiled In late May Is
not matched by the specific pro­
visions of his tax par kage.
Citing "the Reagan plan's bias
toward Ihe rich." conservative polit­
ical analyst Kevin Ph]|ll|&gt;* notes that
only modest financial benefits
would accrue to middle-income
I.nolle*, but "for upper bracket
families, the overall ... reduction
Involve* big numbers "
Similarly. William A. Nlskunrn
Jr,, a recently departed member of
the president's Council of Economic
Advisers, notes thut the Reagan
admin Isl rat Ion has "changed the
progresslvlty of the system ."
Progreoalvity — the concept that
wealthy people should juiy Income
taxes ul higher rates than those who
have less money — has been a
guiding principle of the Income tax
system since the federal tux code
was first enucted In 1913.
In the Initial version of the federal
Income tax approved by Congress
72 years ago the lax rule began at I
perrent for those eurnlng less Ihnn
$20,000 yearly and rose to 7
percent for those making more thun
$500,000 annually.
When Reagan assumed office, the
rules runged from 14 (tercent to 70
percent. His 1981 omnibus tux
package slushed the top rate to 50
percent while reducing the bottom
rat rlo 10 percent.
The president's new proposal
would uguln dramatically reduce
the top rate, to 35 percent, while
raising the bottom rule to 15
percent
Thus. II Congrrss adopts this
plan, Reagan, since he came lo
office, will have cut In half — from
70 percent to 35 jrcrcenl — the tax
rale (or the nation's wealthiest
people while sllghlly lnr 'caslng —
from 14 percent to 15 pcncnt —the
rate lor the country's poorrst taxl*uyrrs
Individuals al the boltom amt In
the middle ol ihe Income sculc
wovdd receive some modest benefits
from Increased slandurd deduc­
tions, higher personal exemptions
and oth&lt; r component* of (he presi­
dent's package.
But (hr Inescapable fact remain*
"When measured either In dollars
or as u percentage of Income, the
tax cuts for the wealthiest taxpayers
dwarf those lor all other groups '
That's the conclusion of Ihe
Center on Budget and Tolley
Priorities, a W ashington-bused
public Intrrrsl group

JEFFREY H A R T

Victorianism Reborn
Victorianism did not die with the
grumpy queen. It seems lo be a
recurrent slate of mind, and we arr
now In Ihe midst of another bout of
ll The spirit of "Don't do It," “It's
not good for you." and “It’s In­
sensitive" Is rani|&gt;aglng around the
land, %
The cnmpalgn against smoking
of course, has been In high gear for
uhoul five years. It's a rare restau­
rant where you cun enjoy an
after-dinner cigar these days. Now I
know th a t som e p e o p le are
asthmatic or allergic lo tobacco
smoke. They have every right to be
spared even u whlfl of It. But the
anti-tobacco movement hus taken
on an ugly Ideologlcul character and
become u vehicle for the universal
hum an desire to push people
around. A friend uf mine recently
complained vociferously that hr had
bent obliged to ride for more than
an hour tn an automobile with a
man smoking a pipe, a horrible
ex|ierlence. Win n II was explained
to him that he might have opened a
window in the car. he actrd as If this
were a new and startling Idea.
Everyone knows that college pro­
fessors smoke pipes. As a matter of
fact, that ts uboul all that some ol
th e m do. Hut an It-s m o k in g
Ideologues have been mounting a
major attack on that, and faculty
meeting ureas now have smoking
sections.
Ads (or tobacco products have
been tunned from television since
1970. and there Is now a move on In
Congress lo similarly tun ad* for
alcohol Al a Senate hearing last
February. Senator Paula Hawkins, a
Florida Republican, said that (be
pressure on Congress lo do Ihts has
"turned Into a runaway freight
train." Al the same time, stale
legislatures have been raising the
drinking age. often to 21. Thus ull
individuals under 21 arr penalized
because of the small minority who

abuse alcohol, drive white drunk,
etc. Women under 2 1 are penalized
despite Ihe fact that statistic* dem­
onstrate that, as a group, they do
not drink more than the general
population. Why has there been no
protest against this resurgent prolubtttonlsm? Mm. Grundy and Ihe
llluenoses are rampaging around
Ihe land but no II I. Mencken has
arisen lo smite them
We also have a federal com­
mission looking Into |Mirnography.
The lust one. luck In 1970, found
thut there was no evidence linking
sexually explicit material to crimi­
nal behavior. The new commission
Is headed by a man named Henry
Hudson who, as chief prosecutor In
Arlington. Va., has succeeded In
tunning most pornography there.
It's u pretty safe bet that thr new
commission will discover all sorts of
links between jxirnogruphy and
criminal behavior.
ll Is my opinion that a community
has the right to restrict material
that can lie publicly displayed. Jusl
us 11 has the right In enact zoning
ordinances. But there Is every
indication that thr anll-pom drive
has much wider goal* In mind, and
that wr may have lu fight thr old
h a ltie s o v er D reiser, J o y c e ,
Lawrence and Henry Miller ail over
again
As In Victorian times, we are now
seeing an enormous compulsion lo
be healthy As headm aster of
Rugby, Thomas Arnold virtually
equated vigorous exrrclse with
Christianity. When not kicking a
lull, Victorians climbed Alps To­
day, hundreds of thousands of
people urr crippling themselves
jogging, and even women are lifting
weights Wr are also faring a wave
of seat-bell and air-tug legislation,
all for our uwn good, of course

White House communications
director Patrick J. Buchanan says
the adm inistration's tax reform
proposal Is designed to benefit the
"traditional" American family, one
where the husband goes off lo work
every day and thr wife stays home
lo lake care of the kids.
As a consequence, he Is taking
considerable flak, especially on Cap­
itol Hill. And well Ire should, since
he Is hopelessly out of date on thr
current composition of the Ameri­
can family.
How far oul happens to be the
subject of a fortuitous study of
changing family and employment
patterns Just released by the Con­
feren ce B o ard , an in d u s try supported nonprofit research orga­
nization.
What the study finds Is that
B u ch an an 's traditional family
hasn't been typical since at least the
end of World War II. which, with the
population surge that followed,
marked a major turning point In thr
characteristics of thr country's
working population.
By about 1960, for example,
working men whose wives worked
outside the home began to out­
number men who were the sole
support of households —I r , men In
the Buchanan family. The rate of
ehangr In this and other family
characteristics has accelerated with
every passing year.
Today, married men providing
thr sole support of families are
down to 10 percent of the total work
force — less then 12 million out of
112 million. They are far outnum­
bered by working couples — 47
million Individuals constituting 40
percent of .ill Jobholders
What the study shows ts that
thrrr ts no longer any such thing as
a typical working family. What ts
typical Is that most adult Americans
of whatever gender and marital
status work.
Broadly classified, (here ore 40
million march J men at work. 27
million married women, 16 million
Individuals who were formerly
married (predominantly divorced
and widowed women! and 29 mil­
lion singles (mostly men).
The working population can also
he broken down Into sevrral other
categories, which, lo some extent,
overlap
Working women, married and
not. represent 40 percent of the
total. They Include a majority of
women with children — 60 percent
of all mothers Working men still
outnumber working women, but the
Labor D epartm ent p ro jects a
work force gender spilt of 50-50 In
another decade.
Another rapidly growing category
are thr singles, now a quarter of all
Jobholders.

JACK AND ERSO N

Air Force Pays For Company's Mistakes

"I know whet you're eeytng. Herriell S o m e h o w .
lo o . w is h t h e Von Bulow trie! h a d never
ended."

/.

By Jack Anderson
and Jospeb Spear
WASHINGTON - When a defense
contractor cracks Ihe whip, the
Pentagon Jumps obediently through
rite hoop — even when Ihe con­
tractor Is one of such demonstrated
iiiiillr.is.incc as General Dynamics.
The Air Force, for example, has
agreed lo jray General Dynamics
uny costs It may Incur If ll conde­
scends lo help Investigate technical
problems with Its own F-16 fighter
planes
Yet Genrrul Dynamics Is under no
obligation lo help with accident
investigations Should it decide to
do so. the Atr Force has agreed to
keep the company'a findings secret.
We've been exposing the cosily
sins ol the military Industrial com­
plex lor more than three decades,
hut It's still a Jolt to learn that the
Pentagon kowtows so abjectly lo
defense contractors.
The Air Force not only admits ihe
shameful agreement but defends ll

on pragmatic grounds. Thr Air
Force claims that If a contractor was
forced to help investigate defects tn
Its products, and was nut promised
that embarrassing facts would be
kept secret, thr company might be
less than truthful
Thr Air Force's startling dis­
closure of Ihe way It does business
was made In response to a lawsuit
filed by our associates Donald
Gold tier g and Indy Hadhwur under
the Freedom of Information Act.
They had asked for secret Pen­
tagon uccldrnt reports. Including
one on the fata) crash of an P-16 tn
Utah In 1961. which led the Air
Force to ground Its entire fleet of
269 F- 16a. citing problems with thr
(light-control system of the $16
million aircraft.
Wr assumed that for $16 mil lion
the Air Force would expect a plane
lo fly or demand an accounting
from the manufacturer. Even a
$6,000 automobile carries a war-

runty.
Bui lo our astonishment, the
contract between the Air Force and
General Dynamics was a classic
example of "buyer beware." Here's
how It was explained In a sworn
statem ent by Ll, Col. Alex J.
Ranclgllo. legal adviser to the Air
Force Inspection and Safety Centrr:
"The contractor shall be reim­
bursed coats Incurred In connection
with mishap Investigation and rclutrd tests or unalysls Nothing I
have found tn the contract, howev­
er, specifically requires General
Dynamics Corp to provide evalua­
tion und analyses after an aircraft
mishap.
"Further, there Is no penalty
provision tn the contract governing
the rrfusal of a contractor to provide
such technical assistance."
In this case. General Dynamics
did provide assistance to the Air
Force. But the Air Force refuses to
release data the company provided
A Justice Department attorney's

I

statement explained why:
"It Is Important lo the military
branches that when investigating
an accident, they have access to
reports provided by Ihe manufac­
turers without regard to poaalblr
adverse reflections.** the statement
said, apparently referring lo public
outrage over fatal flaws in a
multi-milliondollar weapon
"Further." the statement added,
"thr candor of Information supplied
voluntarily in confidence may be
substantially greater than that of
Information compelled to be pro­
duced with the knowledge that It
will be made public."
If Ihe Pentagon truly believes this.
It Is extraordinary. Applied to the
Justice Department’s own opera­
tions. for example, tt would mean
discarding subpoena powers and
trying to wheedle Inlormatlon out of
underworld boaaes by promising not
to make It public — and paying
them for their testimony to boot.

I

�SPORTS

Evening HeroM, Sanford. FI.

Sam
Cook

T voids y. Juno I I . IH J—*A

Sun B ank M a kes 1st D eposit

HERALD

SPORTS

Taylor's Grand Slam
Bombs First Federal

E D IT O R

Rouse Has
The Spirit
For Kiwanis
You've heard of Willie
Horton. He's a former Detroit
Tiger slugger now employed
by the New York Yankees as
a 'Vnlrll coach." It s his Job
lo pump up Dave Winfield or
Don Mattingly when they
have "one of those days.'*
Baseball players will tell
you success on the ball field
Is more menial than physi­
cal There Isn't much dif­
ference In ability. That fine
winning edge may be the
dllference In altitude
You've probably haven't
heard of Charles Rouse. The
45-year-old Sanfordlte serves
the same role as Horton for
Ktwants, which will play Ball
Motor Line In the Junior
Major League City Series
Wednesday night at 6 at
Chase Park
The ballplayers may 10 to
15 years younger but Rouse
says they need the same
Ixxist that the major leaguers
nred. "It's my role to keep
niy players mentally pre­
wired." he savs. "If we ran
keep our players cool und not
fighlng among themselves,
we have a much better
chance to win."
House really couldn't pin­
point why a 13* or 14-yearold would be so easily dis­
couraged. but he did have
one theory. "People put too
much pressure on one Indi­
vidual.” he says. "Then that
player thinks he has to do
everything; thul he’s the dif­
ference between winning and
losing. That put him In a bad
situation tf something goes
wrong.”
Rouse says when some­
thing does go wrong, the
player pouts. Then it's lime
for a little Charles Rouse pick
me up. "1 encourage the
boy.'* hr says. "Sure. If he
makes a mistake, you might
yell at him. That's the way
coaching Is. But If he docs
something good, you pat him
on the bark, too,"
He says discipline Is some­
times lacking "Sometimes
parents don't like It when we
yell at a boy." he says. "But
you have to have discipline to
be a good player. There
w o u ld be a lot b e t te r
ballplayers coming out of this
league If they had more
discipline."
J e s s e B e ll m a n a g e s
Klwants while Rouse takes
care of the morale Bell says
he knows the importance of a
positive attitude "If we keep
our spirit and play like we did
last Wednesday, we can beat
anyone." Bell says.
Last Wednesday. Kiwanis
surprised Moose In a onegame playoff lo cam the right
to face lavored Ball Motor
Line In Wednesday's best 2
out of 3 series The second
game will be Friday and the
third. If necessary. Monday.
All arc set for 6 p m starts.
Rouse, whose son Adrian
p a tro ls c e n te r field for
Kiwanis. says morale Isn't
Just a problem on his team —
but every Sanford team. "I
watched the whole league
this year." he says. "Thai's
the key to the ballgame I
saw some teams lose that
shouldn't lose because of
their attitude."
It w as a problem for
Kiwanis last Wednesday. It
trailed Moose. 4-1. In the
second Inning and things
looked bleak "When we get
behind and someone makes a
mistake, the players have a
tendency to yell at that
player.” aaya Rouae. "That
doesn't help."
W hen th a t h ap p en e d .
Rouae had a ready reply for
his boya. "We weren’t very
far down." he saya. “I Jual
(old them If you're gelling to
get angry at someone, gel
angry at that team on the
field. They're the ones who
are beating you."
Kiwanis took his advice. It
erupted for four runs In the
top of the seventh to pull out
a 11-7 win. Bernard Mitchell.
O scar E d w a rd s. C hu ck
Williams. Duck Grayson.
Ruben Blake. Shawn Roberts
ftss COOK. Pag* «A

F ir s t
ta g

F e d e ra l ca tch e r
on

Sun

B a n k 's

M ik e

D llllo n

L o re n zo

P o lk

h a s th e
but

he

By Chris P lster
Herald Sporta W riter
The question of which of Ihe
two unbeaten teams was un­
beatable was pretty much an­
swered Monday night In the
opening game o( the Sanford
Little Major League City Series
Behind the pitching and hit­
ting of Derrick Taylor, and some
fine defensive plays by second
baseman Tony Duncan. Sun
Bank domlnanled every- aspect
of the game en route to a 17-5
thrashing of First Federal before
200 fans al Fort Mellon Park.
Sun Bank, which won the
Little American League with an
18-0 record, can wrap up thr clly
championship tonight at 6 in
game two at Fort Mellon Park
Although he wasn't at Ills best.
Taylor still overpowered First
Federal as he tossed a iwo hitter
a n d s tr u c k o u t 14. T he
12-yrar-otd righthander also
rapped two hits including an
Inslde-the-park grand slam
home run In (he fourth Inning
"Sometimes you never know
whal's going to happen so we
had to go with our best man,"
Sun Bank m anager Boolslc
Jackson said. "We had to go for
the win In the first game."
Duncan turned In the best
defensive performance In a game
that had 12 rrrors Including
nine by First Federal. Of the 18
Morold t M s ky Tammy V lw aat
outs recorded. 14 were Taylor
strikeouts white Duncan had a
fo rg o t o n e im p o r t a n t It e m
— th e b a l l —
hand In three of thr remaining
w h i c h I s M o a t in g n e a r h i s r i g h t k n e e .
four outs.
Sun Bank Jumped out to a 2-0
lead In the (op of th r first off
losing pitcher Joe Wiggins with
a pair of First Federal errors
(laving Ihe way. With one out,
Lorenzo Polk reached second on
a pair of errors and. with two
outs. Taylor lined a single olT the
center field fence for a 1-0 lead.
J e f f e r y In g ru m r a p e d a
ground-rule double to letl center
lo drive In Taylor with thr
seco n d run. W iggins then
walked the bases loaded but got
out of the Jam by striking out
The first gume of a best 2 out of 3 series Is Jason
Sutton loend th r Inning
always very Important. Sun Bank, the Sanford
In
the
boltom of thr flrsl,
Little American la-ague champions, controlled its
walked leadoff man
own destiny In game one of the Clly Champion­ Taylor
Andrea Williams who took sec­
ship Scries Monday with Derrick Taylor on the ond
on a passed ball. Taylor
mound.
then
caught the next two hlltrrs
Taylor, who threw one no-hlttcr and two
one-hitters during Ihe regular season, overpow­ looking al third strikes and
ered National League champs First federal an fanned Wiggins swinging for (lie
out.
favored Sun Bank won the opening game of the third
The roof fell In on First Federal
series.
Alonzo Brundldge will lx- on the mound for In the (op of the second when It
made four errors which enabled
First Federal, which lost for Ihe first lime Sun
Bank to push across six
Monday, while Sun Bunk munager Boolslc
Michael Clark singled up
Jackson said either Al Perkins or James Jackson runs.
the
middle
to leadoff but was
will pilch tor her unbeaten team

Hunt's Double Caps 6-Run Rally
As Adcock Roofing Wins Crown
Uutm Hunt doubted home the winning runs in
the bottom of the fourth Inning Monday night to
lift Adcock Roofing post Clem Leonard Shell,
16-IS, to the Pee Wee championship at Fort
Mellon Park.
Adcock Roofing und Clem Leonard Clem
tlntshed the Per Wep regular season with
Identical 9-1 records. They split their season
scries so a playoH was needed to determine the
champion.
Jatnle King went the distance for Ihe winners,
King walked 19 bul still won as he allowed Just
four hits. King struck out four. Nevil Ford was
loser despite giving up seven tilts. Ford walked
right and whiffed three. Ten errors by Clem
Leonard made the difference. Adcock committed
Just two for munager Henry Collier und coach
Dion Brown
Hunt, who hud u pair of two-run two-baggers,
came through with his clutch hit ns Adcock
erased a IS-10 deficit without making an out.

B a s e b a ll

B a se b a ll
forced al second on Jam es
Jackson's grounder Polk then
lofted a high f!v lo letl field
which Reggie Smith tried to
make a basket catch of. But the
basket had a hole In 11 and the
ball fell In for a two base error
Polk scored on an error on Al
Perkins' grounder for a 3-0 Sun
Bank lead.
Perkins went to second on the
play and scored when Taylo
reached on another error, In­
gram followed with a walk and a
passed ball moved ihr runners
to second andFlhlrd. Keith
Annondl then drew a walk and
Duncan also walked to force In
Taylor for a 5 0 lead Ingram
then scored on a wild pitch and
an errant throw lo third on the
play enabled both Amm ml l and
Duncan to score as Sun Bank
took a commanding 8 0 lead.
First Federal broke up the
no hitter und the shutout In the
Ixitlom of the second. Alonzo
Brundldge reached on Taylor's
three base error to lead olT and
scored on another error on the
same play. With one out Al
Dixon slapped a single up thr
middle for First Federal's Brat
hit. Smith then hit Into a force
play for the second out and
Taylor struck out Andre Cixiper
to end the Inning
Sun Bank tacked on two more
runs In the top of the third with
both ru n s scoring vln First
Federal errors.
First Federal's brightest mo­
ment of the game came In thr
Ixittom of the third but It wasn't
enough to shill Sun B ank’s
machine. After Taylor struck oul
the first two hitler of Ihr Inning,
he walked Mike Dllllon and
W ig g in s . B r u n d l d g e th e n
s t e p p e d u p and smacked a
Taylor curve ball over Ihe Tcnce
In leftcctttcr for a three-run
hom er which trimmed S un
Bank's lead to 104 It was thr
first hom rr Taylor has given up
this season.
"I was slacking up a Utile
when he hit It." Taylor said.
"They w rrrn ’1 hilling me so I let
up some."
Taylor pitched hitless hull thr
rest of Hie way and Flrsl Federal
scored Just one more run. that
coming on a bases loaded walk
In Ihr fourth.
Sun Bunk put the finishing
See SUN BANK. Psge SA

Cobb's 2-H itter C arries
O rio les P a st SW Volusia

Adcock Roofing'* champion* run off with trophies after

Porter Tunes Up
NEW SMYRNA UEACH Tuning up for this Saturday's
Charlotte IN C.) Miller High Life
300 Lale Model Invitational.
LrKoy Porter won the 25-lap late
model feature on Saturday night
al New Smyrna Speed way.
Lee F a u lk w as s e c o n d ,
followed by Bill Oremovleh,
Sanford's Harold "Fat Rat"
Johnson and newcomer Del
Meeks. David Rogers was at
Georgia International Speedway
to drive Ihe Bemco bouse car in
a 200-lap event which was
rained out.
Kicky Wood drove the Russell
Automotive Camara to victory in
the thundercar finale, besting
Mark Sills. Ben Booth. Tommy

Patterson and Jeff Blehr.
After hugging the low groove
for 25 laps to hold off fourcylinder division's high point
man Bobby Sears. Jerry Symons
won thi 25-lap Cycle Care
Championship. Symons' Pinto
as well as Wood's Chevy were
both powered by Bob Chuk-buUi
engines. Third to fifth were Bill
Hooven. BUI Martin and Kay
Symons.
Street stockrr BUI Klnley made
tl back to (he winner's circle, as
he scored a popular victory over
heat winner Joey Warmack.
Junior Simmons, hit son Marc
and the MUter Beer Machine of
Gary Klein
In roadrunner action, three

W ee title game

OVIEDO - R ichard Cobh
hurled a two-hlder as the Oviedo
Orioles shut down Southwest
Volusia. 6-1, In District 14 Top
Teum Tournament baseball at
the Oviedo Little League com­
plex Monday night.
Manager David Austin's Or­
ioles move Into tonight's 7:30
losers’ bruckrt final against West
Volusia or Deltona. A win to­
night would pit Oviedo against
Eustls or Maitland, the winners'
bracket loser.
Cobb blanked S o u th w est
Volusia for six Innings Monday
before giving up u meaningless
run In the seventh. "Richard
gave up a single to the first hitler
but he was In control after that."
said Austin. "He did an out­
standing Job."
Mlcah Klnnalrd got ihe Oviedo
boys going In the first when he
drew a walk, moved up wild
pitch and stole third. He when

B a s e b a ll
the right fielder dropped Poochlr
King’s fly bull,
Oviedo added lo lls lead In Ihe
Ihlrd when Bobby Wyatt walked
hut was forced at second by
Cedric Watson. Watson stole
second and scored when Kln­
nalrd reached on error by third
baseman. A balk moved Kln­
nalrd lo second and a wild pitch
moved him to third Alan Greene
Ihen re a c h e d on error by
shortstop to push the lead to 3-0.
The Orioles picked up one
more In the sixth and two In the
seventh. In the sixth. Gary
Gotwalt singled, stole second
and stole third K.I) PelUrtn
walked and stole second before
Ron Fahy walked to load bases.
Wyatt coaxed another free puss
lo collect the KBI
—Bam Cook

Kinley Finds Winner's Circle
A uto R a cin g
core crossed Ihe finish line tide
by side, with Eddie Tovct winn­
ing by Inches over Cocoa's Mike
Frttts and Don Roberts Lenard
Deiloff and W ill Smeenk were
fourth and fifth.
L A T IM O O m
F lllm l Ouelltlor L aS or S o rt* . Orlando,
It 041 tec
H ttU W W l) t P orH f
F m ' um i l l
i L »«»r P e rn r. O f
lando. ) I h P a w n . O rlan d e. 1 BUI
Orem eukh. Me* tm y rn o t f eh. I Herald
Fat Bat Jahnann. len to rd 1 Oti M ean
OcaU. t Richard Corn«r*ll Cocot Stack. t
OwwiyKtUy. T t n m w I Jot Middle Mn. lo
Daytona, t. G aorta Pandorgoa*. Hotly Hill;
IS Hoi Ktmsocmon- Mo Miami Batch
T H u fc o tB c a a s
le» it» t OuOliIMT Ricky Wood Orlando.

» It toe
Hoot 11 loo* I I Wood
F eatu re DO loot I I Ricky Wood. Orlondd.
) M ark HIM. Orange City; 1 Son Booth
Oolond. 0 Tammy PafH rton. ItoW im aor, 1
JeM Bionr. OotMno. 4 Jorry S to ry MorrIM
I eland. 7 Jo h n K lrtaord to n lo rd | Ho*
P a rry . M u n i. t John Cochran Holly HIM; IS
C u rl Toarorc. AooiocXIcoia L os Loodon
Tom m y PoHorkani I Mork t i n t I t Ricky
Wood t »
IT R IB T IT O C K I
Hoal ( « los*) I Jooy War m ock to n (or a
F f l u r o (11 tape i I B&gt;H Km lay. Ok loon ]
Jooy W ar mock. tonMrd, 1. Junior tlm m ano.
SonM rd. « Marc KMoy. OkH on. | Gory
KMM. Orlando. 1 Jim Vom. MoWaurno. 7
Nick S r on l Ollondo; I tlw w n M otor. L ota
Ho Ion. t Doug Howard. Loko HoMn. IS
K ioto# Boyd Jr . Fart Leudordete
FOUR C T L IN O IR t
Cycle Core C h o m siam n isO i lo se . I Jorry
ty m o n o . Mow Im yrne S te e l. 1 Booby
W e rt. Ok Hon. 1 Billy Hoowon. Orlando 4
Bill M orttn. ta n lord I Ray tym an*. Mao
tm y rn o S to ck I Jimmy T r*.orO w n Maw
tm y rn o S to ck . 7. Jock H e m . Ocoee. ■

I

o

Ronnie F u ller. O rlande * Hick P a rry .
Mima. 10 Je ll Baev Oolond l e s Ladder*
Curtl* Mil Hr I Billy Haoron 1 Jo rry
lym ont ) U
ROA DBUHNIRI
Matt (4 lose I I Jonn Hock. Long to ed
F f l u r o II lose) I I do-a T o m . M d * o . 1
Mika F rirn . Cocoa. &gt; Dan Retort*. ta n lord
« Lenard O dilon Mo* tm yrna Stock I
Will tm oank. Deiond; 4 Mk« Kuborwk
Lang piped. 7. R o to r« Bruce. Turkey L a ta
Pork. I John Mock. Longaotd t Dor toy
Hugne* J r . P lym outh. M Ckrtt Bionr.
OolHno La* Leader* Ctrl* S mut I Will
Imoonk ) 7 td d ie Tout! 4 14
COMINO IV IH T I
T h u n d er. July a. I p m
GiwHDemolition Derby
U M Morin
The Crool Amor Icon lo ck Roca | i » M arin
144 Lag Enduro
UM M win
Thwndorcen M L o st
Four Cylinder 11 L o st
F ireo o rk t
Lolurdoy. J w h D . I s m
CkortoTH MO LoM Modal InyiMUonol P tu t
ika T h u n d e rc a r* . t i r « e i llock*. F o u r
CylrncMr » *nd m o Raodr unrwr t

- • •

�♦A — E v e n i n g H e r a ld . U n t o r t y F I.

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T u t t d s y , Ju n g » l , I W

BASEBALL ROUNDUP
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Moot Ion (M athlt ) II al Allanla (Smith
141,1 40 p m I at San Prancltca
Pittttoorgh at Montraal, night
Chicago at Maw York, night
Philadelphia at SI Loult. night
Moutton al Atlanta, night
San Dlago at Lot Angalat. nlghl

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Carter's Homer Silences Sutcliffe, 2-0
United Press International
Hick Stitclllfr would not luive Impressed (*y Young
Although Young rnlf{tit have admired Sutcliffe am a
pltrhrr. he rertnlnly would have frowned al lilt lurk of
judgment.
“Never give Ihe opposition an edge," la a credo that
lm*i been around since before ihe days when Ihe great
Young was n sundlottrr. Sutcliffe. Ilic 19H-1 National
incaguc Cy Young Award winner, Ignored Ihe rule
Monday and II cost him
SulclKTe was quotrd Monday us saying the New York
Mels would not iw a fuclor In Ihe National Ixngue Hast
pennant race Sutcliffe said SI. lands and Montreal
would oiler lh« stlffesl challenge in Ills own ChU.a^r
Cubs for lla. til. if n title.
"Maybe In spring liulnltig ll was Ihe Mels, lint now
I'd say our biggest roni|&gt;ellllon Is the Cardinals and the
Expos." Sutcliffe told the Chicago Sun l imes.
"I wouldn't trade any one of our guys lor any one nl
theirs — with one exception. I think we'd l&gt;c able hi
find room for (pliehrr) Dwight Gooden."
Sutcliffe singled out Mets' catcher Gary Carter
specifically us one player who didn't measure up Ills
( libs' counterpart. .indy Davis
"I know all about Carter, but I wouldn't consider for
a second taking him over ((‘ubs catcher) Jody (Davis)
Me cun do all tile tilings Carter cun do — lilt for (tower,
throw mid cull u game In fuel, he calls a heller game
Ills future Issllll ahead lit him." said Sutcliffe
Naturally, when Mels' nnuiagrr Dave Johnson saw
such things In pi tut he derided to use tl to hts team's
Irest iidvniiiugc lie underlined certain part* ol I tic
article onrl (Misled It on Ihe clubhouse tniflrlJn board
The Mrls responded perfectly Carirr fill a home run
ami lion Darling losscrl a five Jill Irr as (hr Mels beat

N .L. B a se b a ll
Sutrlllfc and the Cubs 2 0.
"It’s kind of a sweet end lug when he makes
comments like ihat i»eforr ihe game and then I hit a
home run to win ll Me didn't count the Mels In. and I
think dial's going to tarry over for Ihe rest of ihe
srnson." Carirr said.
Dulling, ti l. hurled his ihtrd camplele game and
second shuloul of lire season by striking mil seven und
walking four. Darling Is 5-0 In his Iasi nine outings.
I lir rigid hander has not iosl since May I when he
dropped a 10-3 decision In the Mnuston Astros He
lowered his KltA to 2,20
Klsewhere. San Francisco blanked Cincinnati 40,
Houston edged Atlanta 4 3 , Pittsburgh defeated
Montreal T&gt;2 and San Diego downed lays Angeles 3-2
In American l.rugur games. Itoston edged Detroit
3 2 Milwaukee nipped Toronto 2*1. New York blanked
Italllmorr 10-0anti KaosasClty rlp|&gt;ed Mlrmesola 10*3.
G lin ts 4, KedsO
At San Francisco, Alice Mamrnaker hurled a
lour hitter and Jell Leonard rl|)|&gt;etl a solo homer and
added an Kill single, leading the Giants to their third
straight victory. Ilammnkcr. 3 0. struck out six and
walked lwo. The loss wcnl lo Jay Tibbs, 4 H
Astros 4 . Rraves 3
At Atlanta. Alan Ashliv wrnt 3for-4 with an Kill and
Hul Garner hnmrrrd to help Nolan Ryan lo his 23fhh
career victory und lift the Astrtks. Ryan. H-3, siniek out
eight lo move within 20 of Ihe 4,000 mark. Dave Smith
picked up Ills 111h save, Steve Shields, 11, took the

Bol: Draft's Big
Gam ble A t 7-6
HOSTON (UPI) - The NIIA
driilt always provides long shots
and this year Its hlggrsl gamble
Is Maiiule Hot
The 7 fool-0 Hoi. from Sudan,
remains an Intriguing option In
Tuesday's NIIA draft lie has
played basket ha II lor only five
years, cine til Ihe Division II
University of Bridgeport.
In the s j ai log. th e I9H|M)umlrr. was thought to hr no
more Ilian a late sreottd-mund
choice, needing long-term rellurm rnt slmlllur to 7-faot-5
lacker Chuck Ncvltt. the tram's
!2th man and l.ivorlte son of the
Forum crowds.
However. NHA teams had lo
take noller when this year's
defensive player of the year
emerged hum a project. Alter a
college earner consisting ol
wulehlng UCLA games from the
trench. 7-4 Mark Eaton devel*
oped with thr Utah Jilt) Into Ihr
NBA's best shot blocker.
ll Is that same factor, Ihe
ability lo Inilmldale and swat
away shots along with unknown
IHitrntlul. which lias NIIA learns
thinking about linl
Thr hlilh of Ihr U S. Basketball League has also aided Ihe
trlhrsinun Irom I h e Sudan's
stock In his first right games
with the Rhode Island Gulls. Hoi
has averaged Hi 3 jxiinls und
14 1 rebounds with thr most
lili|&gt;or tun I slat reading 12.3
blocks per game.
Will hr l&gt;e great or a washout?
The keenest eyes in the sjKiil
cannot discern his luturr
Coaches and scouts Irom ill
least right NHA teams have seen
llol play. Milwaukee llueks

...S u n B ank
C o n tin u e d f ro m 8 A

touches on III I h e top of I h r
fourth with six runs. Polk drove
I n Ihr llrsl run with a n lulleld
single und thr srrond scored
w h e n Perkins wulkrd wiib Ihr
buses full. Taylor then stepped
up with (he bases still loaded
and sliced a fly ball down the
right field line. CtMiper made a

NBA
couch Dun Nelson sprni live
days In Rhode Island
Gulin coach Kevin Slaeom, a
form er Huston ('e lite , said
Nelson claimed "he had never
w ru onyhody block shots like
that ... and Nelson played wiih
(1)111) Ihiasrh."
NHA scout Marty lllake says
an assistant has seen Hoi plav 11
Hines In ihe jrasl year and "lie
cumuil play a lick He’d have to
gain 40 |M)uiuls and hr can't
gain an miner."
The Dallas Mavericks have
tried lor three years lo land a
center, who would ealapull them
Into Ihe league's elite With three
first-round choices m nine. 16
and 17, ilrey can make two
calculated {ticks and then roll
Ihr dice with linl
Coach Dick Malta and two
assistants watched the Gulls,
find Motla said the tranpnrtutlnn
costs relieri Dallas' curiosity.
"If you spend 85.(XX), you'd
have to say there was some
Interest, wouldn't you?" Motla
suld.
Adding lo thr mystery of Hoi's
luturr is the lengih of his past —
no one seems certain of Hoi's
age Speculation Is lie Is any­
where from 2 1 lo 27
"You sec moves or blocks lhal
make you wonder what lhis kid
could do If hr had more experi­
ence and Mime bulk." said Gene
Slme. coach of the Washington
Hullrta. "The raw lulent Is (here.
Right now, though, hr Is lltrrully
skin and hones "
nice diving try ol It but It
sepilrted away ami rndrd up an
insldr-lhr-park grand slam for
Taylor
Sun Hank mudr it 17-5 In the
fltth when Sutton walked and
wrnt around to score when
IVrktnn reached on a llrlder s
choice.
Sun Hank had nine hits In Hie
game Ini hiding two rai l) by
Taylor und Jackson und one
each by (‘oik. Perkins. Ingram.
Armondl and Clark

ft

4

Ron D arling
...b lan k s Cuba

Gary Carter
...gam e winner

loss.
P lratea 9, Expos 2
Al Montreal. Tony Penn had three hits and drove In
three runs, inc luding two with a sixth Inning homer, to
help the Plrcitrs snap the Expos' five-game win streak.
The triumph was Pittsburgh's third In Us last 11
games Jim Winn Improved to 2*1. and Don Robinson
earned Ills second save. David Palmer fell to 5-6. Tim
Raines was tilt less In four ath ais
P adres 3, Dodgers2
Al lays Angeles, Sieve Garvey banged out three tills
and Eric Show posted hts first victory In five wrrks.
enabling ihe Padres to stop the Dodgers' four-game
winning streak. Show. 5-4. last won May II. Rich
Gossagr gained his I Sill save. Rlek Honeycutt. 4-6.
was the loser.

SCOREBOARD
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M it M ilitia
A-MS. H UMID

Continued from 8A
and Sammy Edwards all con­
tributed.
Grayson sturlrd It with a
double. Mltebrll singled him
home. Hl.tkr and Roberts
drew walks and Williams, the
No. 9 hitler, drove In the
lie breaking run with a field­
er's choice. Oscar Edwards
slammed u two-run single lo
lee Ihe game.
Sounds like more ihun one
guy contributed to that rally.
Sammy Edwards. Kiwanla’
beat pitcher, shut down
Moose In the seventh to nail
down u spot In the playoffs
Making thr pluyotTm was
sweet enough (or Klwants, u
tram which no one figured to
be there ufter going 4 6 In the
second.
Hut. as Charles Rouse will

mi

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lell you — a little bit of spirit
goes a long way,
Mike Kirby is missing in
action. Mike, who oversees
the Lit Ur Major League pro­
gram us a Sanford Krcrrulion
Drp?irtmenl employee, was
(loured by food poisoning last
week
Mike also kreps stats for
the Orlando Krnrgudrs. Well.
Mike, they didn't need you
Saturday against Baltimore
but they are a few runs being
scored al Fort Mellon Park.
Hurry up and get buck.
Aimwo Urondldgr will be
on the mound for First Fed­
eral. which lost tor the first
time Monday, while Sun
H ank m a n a g e r H ootsle
J a c k s o n said e ith e r Al
Perkins or James Jackson
will pitch for her unbeaten
tram

Sun Bank is looking to
keep the City Championship
trophy In the American
League. Last year, Adcock
Rooting broke up the Na­
tional League's dominance
by sweeping Sunnlland. Na­
tional League power Poppa
Jay's had won Ihe title the
two previous seasons.
The lost time two unbeaten
team s m et for the City
Championship was In 1982
when Poppa Jay's met Ad­
cock Roofing That senes was
a sweep for l*oppa jay's
The American (lags that
stand along the right and
leflfleld foul lines were do­
nated by longtime Little Na­
tional League coach Jim
Gross who passed away be­
fore this season. The flags
were dedicated in his honor
Monday nlghl.

United P r e a a International
In a clash of runners-up
Monday night. Ihe Boston Red
Sox took the contest a little more
sehously than the Detroit Tigers
lo seize sole command of second
place In the American League
East with a nlnlh Inning, come-from-behlnd victory
The Red Sox. trailing the
Toronto Blue Jays by 2 Vi
games, meet the division leaders
after their current series with the
Tigers.
Dwight Evans look advantage
Monday of a conccnlratlon lapse
by reliever Willie Hernandez and
slapped a game-winning, tworun home run In the ninth
Inning that pare Boston to a 3-2
victory.
"That ball wcnl 326-frrt. 4Inches." Evans said of his op­
posite field home run lhal just
cleared the right Held fence for
h is c lu b - le a d in g s e v e n th
game-winning RBI.
"I was looking for something
In and got something away."
Evans said. "I just swungat It."
But Hernandez had an expla­
nation.
"Sometimes you pitch In pain
and you concentrate more on
your pain." said Hernandez, who
said he entered the game In the
eighth with a sore nerk that he
Intends to have checked today
by a doctor.
Boston has now won six
straight. 14 of-15 and l7-oM9.
Detroit lost Its second straight
following a six-game winning
streak.
"I don’t think I had good
stud." said Hernandez. "I wasn't
100 percent.
“The pain wrnt away, but I
think It was the pills I stopjied
taking Ihe pills — 1 don't want to
takr pills all the time — and the
[win nune back."
Hernandez. 4-3. failed lo save
a game for only Ihr ihlrd time in
48 save situations for Detroit
Al Nipper. 4-5. went the dis­
tance for the victory
Detroit's lead-off man Lou
Whitaker staked the tram lo
14) lead with a mammoth home
run thut landed on top of ihe
94-fo o t-h lg h roof of Tiger
Stadium and bounced back onto
the field. It was Whluker's ninth
homer of the year and marked
the 13lh time In his rarcer that
he has led off a game with a
homer.
The Tigers added a run In the
fourth w hen Darrell Evans
singled, moved op on a groun­
dnut and scored on rookie
Nelson Simmons' twoout single
to right center.
Iiosl on was blanked for the
first six Innings by Dan Retry
but tnanuged a run In Ihe
seventh on a two-out single by
Glenn Hoffman, a walk to Steve
Lyons and an RBI single by
Wade Boggs, off Hernandez.
Y a n k e e s 1 0 . O rio le s 0

BALTIMORE (Ul'lj - Over
35.000 fans came to Memorial
Stadium Monday night rxjx-etlug In watch a battle of wlls
la-tween Baltimore manager Earl
Weaver and New York Yankee
sklpjier Billy Martin.
They anticipated a night of
strategy, of plvltol plays, of
controversial rulings by um­
pires.
What they saw was nothing o(
Ihe kind.
The Yankees — es|ieelally lef­
thander Ron Guidry. 7-3, and
crnler fielder Rickey Henderson
— spoiled any occasion for such
dramatics with a 104) drubbing
of the Orioles,
Guidry pitched a flve-hll shut­
out to gain the Ihlrd win of hts
last nine d erisio n s against
Baltimore and hts 25lh career
shutout.
Meanwhile. Henderson lead the
first five-hit game of his career.
Henderson's performance raised
his halting average to .332 —
tops In the American League.
"I'm really not used to all that
support. "Guidry said. “It's easy
to pitch with a lot of runs. I’m
used to dose games. Still, when
you get four or five runs against
Baltimore that's not much."
Brewers 2. Bine Jay* 1
Al Milwaukee, Moose Haas
fired a three-hitter and Jim
Gantnrr slammed a solo homer
lo lead Ihe Brewers. The Brewers
have now won 11 of their last 12
games against the Blue Jays.
Haas. 6-3. went the distance for
the fourth time this season ta
earn the win Dave Slleb. 6*5*
took the loos.
Royals 10, Twins 3
At Kansas City. Steve Balbonl
walloped two home runs to drive
In (out runs, powering the
Royals past the Twins. BaJbuni
belted hts first homer to lead oif
Ihe third inning and then un­
loaded a three-run shot off Frank
Viola. 7-6. to cap a five-run sixth
Inning. Bret Saberhagen. 7-3;
earned the victory.

�Evening HereW, Sanford, EL___ Tuesday. June H, tttt—TA

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
O p tim istic C a rte r H eads F u ll
S te a m Into U C F C age C h a llen g e
ORLANDO —Maybe LeeCorso Is catching.
Phil Carter, armed with optimism which could make the
Orlando Renegades' coach seem bland, headed full steam
Into the Job of University Central Florida basketball coach
Monday before a media gathering.
Carter. 33. left a secure Job as assistant at HardinSimmons (Texas) to tackle the UCF challenge A challenge.
Indeed. He will not have a paid assistant and only five
players remain from a 10-18 team.
No problem, he said, "I think that the future and the
possibilities are limitless.'* said Carter, making sure the
last word ended In "less", not "ed."
The former Daytona Beach Community College coach
was one of three finalists to replace Chuck Marhock. who
departed with a 25-31 two-year record. Mark Frtedlnger.
who coached previously at Rollins, and Virginia Tech
assistant Ron Schneider were pared from an original list of
156. Frtedlnger withdrew and Carter received the nod from
Cal Miller. UCF's associate athletic director.
"Personally and professionally. I was very Impressed."
said Miller Monday. “The fact that he Is experience dwlth
budgets such as ours and Is will and will work within our
budgets was a very big asset for him."
Carter said he will recruit the Central Florida area,
schedule a lot of Florida schools and play home games at
the UCF gym as opposed to Ihe Orange County Convention
Center
— Sam Cook

B ulls N am e A lb e c k N ew C oach
CHICAGO (UPI) — Ask Chicago Bulls general manager
Jerry Krause to select someone for an NBA head coaching
Job and he'll pick Stan Albeck.
Monday, Krause did It again.
Krause, who became Bulls general manager after Jerry
Relnsdorf bought controlling interest In the club last
February, officially named Albeck as Chicago's coach In a
move that had been anticipated for at least last week.
Details of the pact were not released, but Albeck. who
had one year remaining on his contract to coach the New
Jersey Nets, reportedly will make more than $300,000 a
year for three years The Bulls also paid the Nets $100,000
as compensation.
An official for the Nets denied reports Monday that
Vlltanova coach Hollle Masslmlno had been named to
succeed Albeck Masslmlno. who guided Vlllanova to the
national championship last season, met with Nets officials
last week.
Others who are reportedly candidates for New Jersey's
vacant post are Indiana University coach Bobby Knight,
and NHA assistant coaches Jimmy Rodgers of Boston and
Dave Wohl of the Lakers.

G a m b le rs Land P la y o ff Spot
HOUSTON (UPII — Since they ran oil five straight
victories at the beginning of the season, the Houston
Gamblers have talked of little else but the U S Football
League playoffs.
It took longer to secure a spot than they expected, but
with Monday's 40-21 rout of the San Antonio Gunslingers,
the Gamblers became the eighth and final team to qualify
for the USFL playoffs which begin In two weeks.
"This la sure a relief." said quarterback Todd Dillon, who
threw for 365 yards. Including four touchdown passes, and
ran for a fifth score. "We really didn't want to wait for the
final game to qualify for the playoffs. This gets the monkey
ofrour backs."
Gamblers head coach Jack Pardee said 'he difference In
the two teams was In the trenches.
"Our offensive line gave Todd all the time In the world."
Pardee said. "But I have more and more respect for (San
Antonio quarterback) Rick Neuhelsel every time I see him
He took a tremendous pounding, and he bounced back up
time after time and got after It."

Stadium Turns In to H o m erdo m e
Memorial Stadium turned Into Sanford's version of the
"Homerdome" Sunday as. In two games, six balls were hit
out of the ballpark.
In Sunday's first game. DcLand Boulevard Tire remained
unbeaten as It ou Islugged the Kherdan Stallions. 15-10.
Jeff Drury didn't hit one out for Boulevard, but he
crunched three doubles and drove In four runs. Jeff Spina
smashed a homer runs and double and drove In three runs
while John Brenner unloaded a three-run shot.
The Stallions also shared In the fireworks display as
Andy Mufful and Larry Jones both socked three-run
homers and Jeff Altlre ripped a pair of doubles and drove In
three runs.
In the aecond game, the Orlando Braves won their first
game with a 17-7 shellacking of New Smyrna Beach.
Phil Ramsey blasted two homers and collected four RBIs
lo lead Ihe Braves and Ron Childress added a homer, single
and three RBIs.

TAC Sanctions Lake Mary Meets
Lake Mary High la preparing for Its third year of Summer
Track Meets which begin Friday, June 28.
This summer, the meets will be sanctioned by the TAC,
track's governing body under the name Lake Mary Track
Club. Athletes participating In the Lake Mary meets can
Join the TAC for a $1 membership fee which Includes
group accident Insurance for the meet and for the trip to
and from the meet.
To participate In the meet, which has a number of age
groups from under nine to SO and over, there la a $ 1 fee for
any number of eventa the participant wishes to enter.
Athletes may also pay a $5 fee In advance to run In all
seven summer meets.
Field events being at 5 pm with running events to start
at 6:30. Meets will be held each Friday In July (5. 12. 19.
26) and two Friday's In August (2 and 9).
Lake Mary track roach Mark McGee said he encourages
parents of kids or anyone Interested to help run off meets.

Extra Exciting: Jackson's Arm,
Bat Propel Tigers Past Oviedo
By Chris F lster
Herald Sports W riter
EUSTIS — Chris Jackson drove In the
winning tuns In the top of the seventh then
prevented the tying run from scoring In the
bottom of the Inning Monday as the
Altamonte American Tigers outlasted the
Oviedo Angels. 6-5. in the District 14 Top
Team Tournament Major Division winner s
bracket final at the Eustls Little League
complex.
The Tigers, who ran their record to 21-2
with the win. advance to the Top Team
finals which they will host Friday night at
Eastmonte Field
Oviedo, which had a 21-game winning
slrcak snapped by the Tigers, will play In
the loser's bracket finals Thursday night at
7:30 at the Oviedo Little League complex.
An Oviedo victory would set up a rematch
between the two teams that slugged It out
for seven Innings Monday.
Monday night's battle was an exciting one
from start to finish. It started as a pitching
duel between Altamonte's Chuck Lamb and
Oviedo's David Blanton The two teams then
traded the lead back and forth before It
ended up tied at 4-4 going Into ihe seventh
Inning.

Altamonte (tattled bark with a run In the
top of the sixth and held Oviedo scoreless in
the bottom half lo send the game Into extra
Innings.
With runners on second and third In the
lop of the seventh. Jackson drilled a shot
down the third base line that went for a
two-run double and a 6-4 Altamonte lead
Oviedo didn't give In. though, as It
mounted a comeback attempt In the bottom
of the seventh Blanton drew a two-out walk
to keep the Inning alive and Marvin
"Bubba" Fore doubled to put runners on
second and third Sttckleather then lined a
single to left to score Blanton and Fore also
tried to score on the play. Jackson,
Altamonte's left fielder quickly got the ball
to relay man Pablo Abrru who wheeled and
Ihrew to Koepke ul the plate who tagged out
Fore for the final out.
"Chris (Jackson) made a perfect throw to
the relay man (Abrru) and hr threw the
runner out at ihe plate." Morro said. "It was
•in exciting ending to a tough game.
"Oviedo has a very well organized team."
added Morro. "They're pitcher was always
around the plate so we had to hit. And they
had some kids who put thr hat on thr ball
They're thr best competition we've had all
year and It's the t&gt;esi game we've played."

B a s e b a ll
"The kids all pulled together and never
gave up when we were down." Altamonte
manager MlVe Morro said "We re ready to
play the finals now. especially on our home
field."
Neither team scored In the first two
Innings as Lamb and Blanton were both at
their best. Altamonte's Chris Koepke then
broke up the scoreless tie with a solo home
run In the top of the third.
Oviedo was held scoreless through three
Innings hut gol to luimb for three runs In
the bottom of the fourth Morris Jacobs
reached on an error to start the rally and
Dana Allen followed wtlh a double A walk
loaded the bases and Terry Smith the
stepped up and ripped a double that drove
In two runs for a 2-1 lead. Tommy
Stlckleather's RBI single gave the Angels a
3-1 advantage.
Altamonte scored twice In the top ol the
fifth to tie It at 3-3 but Oviedo pushed across
a run In the Irottom of the frame for a 4-3
lead David Blanton singled and eventually
scared on a passed ball for the go ahead run

A s tro s Stay
A liv e , 13-11

E x p o s H o ld O ff A W S;
M o v e In to T itle G a m e
ROLLING HILLS - Kevin
Walnscott revived Ihe quiet
Altamonte Expos hats with a
three-run triple that highlighted
a five-run fifth Inning and Curt
Prom drove In the go-ahrad run
In the top of the eighth as the
E x p o s h e ld o ff a t o u g h
A)x&gt;pka-West Seminole Angels
leant. 7-6, Monday night In Top
Team Tournament District 14
Junior Division action.
While Kevin Walnscott got the
Altamonte bats going, his futher,
manager Kelly Walnscott. made
a during move In the bottom of
the eighth to aid the victory.
The Expos advance lo the
finals which will be pluyrd
Wednesday night al 7:30 at
Rolling Hills with a second
game. If necessary. Thursday at
7 30 at Rolling I lllis.
Apopka West Seminole built
up a 3-0 lead Ihrough four
Innings Monday before the
Expos roared hack with five runs
in the top of the filth.
David Hamilton got the Inning
going when he dropped a bunt
down the third base line. The
pitcher fielded It but overthrew
first and Hamilton motored all
the way to third Mike Locke
then drew n walk and. with one
out, P at B attle singled In
Hamilton.
Krnt Brubaker Ihen walked lo
loud the liases and Walnscott
drilled a last trail off AWS pitcher
Mark Gabrovlc over the right
fielder's head lor a three-run
triple and a 4-3 Altamonte lead.
Walnscott scored on wild pitch
lor the fifth run of Hir frame

B a s e b a ll
Apopka-West Seminole came
back with two runs in the
bottom of the sixth to tie It at 5-5
but Altamonte scored once In
the top of Ihe sevrnlh for a 6 5
lead. Prom walked, stole second
and scored on u two^nit single
by Locke,
AWS look advantage of a pair
of Altamonte errors to tie It at
6-6 In the bottom ol Ihe seventh
Raul Otero rapped a base hit und
Uxik second when the left fielder
hobbled the ball Altamonte re­
liever Brubaker then struck out
Ryan l-anre on a curve hall but
the catcher couldn't handle It
and. while Lame was forced at
first on the dropped third strike.
Otero went lo third On the same
play, the Expos' first luisernun
threw wild to third und Otero
scored.
Altamonte came right hark
with u run In the top of Ihe
eighth. Battle, the number nine
hitter In the order, led off with a
single but was picked off first
Brubaker th en w alked und
Walnscott smashed a double to
right center to put runners on
second und third. It wus the
th ird hit of th e gam e for
Walnscott. Danny Hendricks
was then Intentionally walked
and. with two out. Prom looped a
single Just out of the teach of Ihe
seco n d b a s e m a n to score
Brubaker for a 7-6 lead.
Apopka-West Seminole threat­
ened In the bottom of the eighth

/
K e v i n W a ln s c o H r ip p e d t h r e e
h it s

M onday,

b a s e s lo a d e d
th e

In c lu d in g

tr ip le ,

A lt a m o n t e

to

Expos

a

le a d
p ast

A p o p k a W e s t S e m in o le .

when, with one out, Brubaker
walked Robert Brown and Scott
Casluldo walked Brubaker came
back lo strike out Gabrovlc
bringing up cleanup hitter Brett
King
Walnscott decided to Inten­
tionally walk King, the best
tiilter In the AWS lineup, putting
Ihe tying run on third and the
go-uhead run on second.
"King knocked me out of top
team last year," Walnscott said.
"And I wasn't going In let hint
beat me again."
The move (wild off for the
Expos as Brubaker Induced
Otero to pop out lo third on the
first pilch for the final out.
“We played prrtty well but our
defense let them stay In the
hallgame," Walnscott said, "We
made four key errors AWS has a
very sound baseball leant We ll
probably play Ihr in again In the
finals "
—Chris F lster

Jay Kane wus hit by pitch to
open the six-run second. Alflc
Cornell an d C hris W elm cr
walked lo load the bases before
Mark Plelcones drilled a line
drive to second baseman, who
let It get past him for an error
which scored Iwo runs Rich
Srhou followed with a single to
drive in Welrner and Andy
S polskl s in g le d to sco red
Plelcones. Dave Robison then
reached on an error by the
shortslop lo scoreSchou.
Spolskl, who led the Astros
wlih a single anil a double, came
through with his his two bagger
In the fiflh. Spolskl'* blast over
the lefi fielder’s head scored Kyle
Else hi man und Chris Plelconea.
Pierson came back with two
runs In the bottom of the sixth
on a two-run homer by Scott
Selrert hut Plelcones settled
down to get the final three outs
on two groundballs and a strike­
out.

C h e n W a s R e a l O p e n W in n e r
lhr fact his action was purely Inadvertent.
He thru i hipped right feel past the hole and
look two more putts lo gel down, but that
wasn't ihe end of It. Successive bogeys on
the next three holes dropped him three
strokes behind North
"Long day." Chen smiled wanly at the
group nf reporters collected around his
locker
"Bad head." hr said, touching his while
cap with Ihe Taiwanese Hag sewn on
Chen's confession wus reminiscent of
nothing so much us Roberto DeVleenzo's
classic “I made a stupid" alter hr mistak­
enly signed his scorecard showing Ihe
wrong total on Ihe 17th hole of Ihe 1968
Musters.
Llkr Chen. DeVlccnxo called the (tenuity
on himself It cost him his chunce lo tie In a
playoff and gave that Masters to Bob
Goal by.
Chen had led through three rounds and
after that horrible right, some wise guys
ftt'ggca'rd T.C. stood for tight collar. He
showed them it wasn't so. pulling Into a tie
for the Irud with North and Barr on the 13th
after North took three straight bogeys
himself on the ninth, l Oth and llth .
By then Ihe whole thing began to look llkr
the Botch Up Open

BIRMINGHAM. Mich. (UPI) - By Ihe way
everybody mobbed him In the parking lot,
telling him how much they enjoyed wat­
ching him play and congratulating him. you
would've thought lor sure Tze-Chtmg Chen
was Ihe U S. Open winner.
Actually. Andy North struggled for that
distinction, winning the Open by one shot
with a less than spectacular 4-over-par 74
Sunday that Included five Imgeya (hat gave
hint his second Open title In seven years.
But In a broader sense, the much bigger
winner was Chen. Taiwan's shy. wlsp-Ilke taking a hacker's eight on the pur-4
140 (round fifth-year pro. even though he 457-yard fifth hole.
blew a three-stroke lead and wound up In a
The details are almost too heart rending lo
second place tic with Dave Barr and Dents recount. T.C. was four shots ahead of North,
six In front of Barr and nine ahead of
Watson.
North merely won $103,000. That wus the Watson when he ran Into disaster trying to
outguess the wind on the fifth hole by using
Ihe first prize, but It was only money.
Chen, or T.C., as they call him on the a 4-Iron for his second shot Instead of a
5-Iron.
tour, did better than that.
That was one mlstakr. He compounded It
He won the people. Not only all those who
watched him here, but many of those who when he put his third shot Into the rough
saw him on national TV. He won them over Chen had a bad lie for his fourth shot and,
by Ihe indomitable manner In which he trying too hard to hole out with his wedge
refused to submit to "The Monster." as Ben Instead of simply putting It up on the green,
Hogan once referred to Oakland Hills' tough he hit the ball twice.
His shot never reached Ihe green, falling
6.996-yard layout, and by the way he
battled hla way back Into a share of the lead short and landing on the collur Striking the
once more after double hitting hla ball and ball twice cost him a penalty stroke despite

M ilton
Richman

Designed andengineered lor a
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Lilesaver XLM* whitewall

O-Twlns Overpower Greenville
GREENVILLE. S.C. - Mark Funderburk. Greg Morhardt
and Mark Davidson each home red Monday night as the
Orlando Twins overpowered Greenville. 11 -6. In Southern
League baseball
Funderburk's blast was his 17th while Davldaon'a was
hia 10th. Morhardi'a homer was a three-run clout which
highlighted a four-run fifth Inning.
Orlando. 27-33. la In last place In the SL, nine games
behind Columbus. The O-Twlns play Grrcvllle again
tonight.
In one other game Monday. Lakeland turned back
Osceola. 7-4. In Florida Stale League baseball at Lakeland.
Marty Freeman and Mas Solo drilled homers for the Tigers.
Ex-SCC standout Bob Parker had a good night for the
Astros with two singles, three runs scored and a stolen
base.

MAITLAND — Altamonte's
National League Astros have
made a habit of playing In the
Top Team Tournament. They’ve
been a participant the past three
years. Monday night, however, tt
look some doing to stay alive tn
District 14. Dlvslon 2 field.
Manager Duke Plelcones’ club
used a six-run second liming to'
lake an 8-2 and then held off a
Iasi in n in g rally for a 13-11
victory at the Maitland Little
Lt-aguc complex Monday night.
Chris Plelcones went the dis­
tance and struck out five. The
Astros (l-l) play Maitland to­
night at 7:30 at Pierson

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FLORIDA

Shuttle Set To Launch $44.7 Million Arab Satellite

IN BRIEF
F o rm e r Ju d g e A c c u se d
O f Lying A b o u t Gam bling
ORLANDO |UPI) — A federal grand Jury has arc-used
attorney Edward Joseph Hanlon Jr. of lying lo It when he
denied discussing establishment of a hlgh-stakes. Illegal
gambling operation In Orlando In 1981.
The lndlctme.it was handed up Friday but wan not
unsealed until Monday after Hanlon had his Initial
appearance before U.S. Magistrate Donald P. Dietrich.
The Indictment charged Hanlon with five counts of
making false declarations to the grand Jury May 6.
The grand jury Is Investigating allegations of possible
illegal conduct In the operation of the Orange-Osceola
County State Attorney s office.

29 R escu ed From Burning Ship
MIAMI (UPI) — Twenty-nine crewmembers stranded
aboard a burning Mexican cargo vessel for four days have
been rescued by a passing freighter and are en route to
Miami, leaving behind three crewmen reported dead and
two presumed missing.
The Coast Guard said the Puebla caught fire Friday In
the Atlantic Ocean off the Florida coast, but the mishap
wnx not discovered until Monday, mild Petty Officer Dave
Anderson.

Waggoner said the Jaycees
have taken steps to assure a
similar embezzlement cannot
occur again.
Continued from page IA
He said the organization has
a c c o u n t s a t S u n H u n k , lightened Its au d itin g pro­
lamgwood. with at least $30,100 cedures and requires Its checks
of the Jaycecs' money without to have two signatures,
Waggoner said the Incident
the Jaycecs' permission or a
corporate resolution, according would not prompt the club to
to Seminole County court re­ conduct background checks on
cords. He then withdrew part of people who Join the organiza­
the money, records show
tion.
Such checks, he said, would
Mize stipulated that Schnack's
Jail time Includr a work release not be In keeping with the
program which means he will Jaycees* philosophy which Is
work during (tie day at a Job what a person Is going to do Is
away from the Jail but sper\d more Important than what they
have done.
—Deane Jordan
nights In the lockup

...Jaycee's

...County
Continued from page 1A
and dralnagr projects completed
which he was assigned In the
past year. "They will be done,"
he responded. And she made the
motion In grunt his requests
exerpt (or u new building which
tie said should be constructed
northrusl of the present public
works administrative building at
Five Points.
Sellers said the old building
was a Jail at some time In Ihr
past, he hus been told, atul It has
b e c o m e something n( a Jail again
with his employers crammed
Into the limited spat r
Hr askrd for $ 1.7ft million In
hln budget which when added to
an Identical amount hum the
environm en tal services de­
partment would permit con­
struction of $3 f&gt; million twostory fut ility sufficient In size for
the next seven to 10 years The
environmental service depart­
ment Is now operating out of
lemporury trailers at Five Points
The commissioners said tliry
will consider tlull request again
later IIds week.

AREA FORECAST: - Today
mostly sunny and rather hot.
S c a tte re d a fte rn o o n th u n ­
d e rsto rm s. High mid 90s.
Southwest wind It) mph Rain
chance 30 percent. Tonight fait
with lows In the lower 70s. Llghl
wind. Wednesday continued
mostly sunny und rather hot 30
percent chance of altrrnoon
thunderstorms. High in the mid
90a
N A T I O N A L R E P OR T !
Thunderstorms brewing In the
Plains threatened sections of
Oklahoma with Hash flooding
today, while the Southern
slurtus that hurled a jwir of
tornadoes ul Mississippi poured
more ruin on Dixie.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Chance of afternoon and evening
thunderatorma mainly north
Thursday and Friday, otherwise
mostly fair. Highn nrur 90 lo inlet

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Arabsat's two stowed solar panels had
partially unfolded Inside a canister In
Discovery's payload bay that protects the
satellite from high temperatures prior to
release from the spaceship
But mission managers said a position
sensor musl have failed because the sun
shield would prevent the solar wing from
unfolding enough to activate the switch. To
make sure, the crew was told to open the
sun shield and Inspect the relay station with
a television camera on the shuttle's robot
arm.
"And there It Is. Houston, a guided tour of
the Arabsat sun shield." Brandensteln said
after showing troth solar panels firmly
locked In Ihc launch position.
"Roger, that's good work, we like the
pictures we see," replied Robert Springer In
mission control. "I think that should wrap It
up for us,"
Saud. a nephew of King Fahd of Saudi
Arabia, la on board Discovery to monitor the
launch of the re la
ihc relay station. He
has few other assignments. The Arabsat

nion" of Sanford’s Image, the
txj.ird said. Therefore, they need
much attention.
5) Cultural Arts Building. Fifth
Continued from page 1A
Street and Oak Avenue. This
city properties, In the order the "wonderful old" building, as the
txmrd believes they need to l*e tioard calls It. needs a paint Job
cleaned up. are listed, as well as and the grounds need to be
a promotional campaign the replanted and redesigned.
Ixiaril hopes will spark rlran-up
Park at Sanford Avenue und
fever.
First Street. The site Is owned by
Im provem ent of City-Owned developer and frozen food
entrepreneur Jeno Pauluccl. The
Property
The hoard recommended a city maintains the park and does
priority list of city-owned pro- not charge Pauluccl for use of
pcrtlca that need to tie Improved. the land. The city should provide
The list Is divided Into two Irrigation arid redesign, replant
groups — those sites that would and trim up the park the report
In- complicated and expensive lo said.
The prioritized sites that
Improve and those which would
be simple and Inexpensive to would be cheaper to Improve
Improve. Miss Jacobson said are:
II Lukefront greenbelt along
l&gt;oth lists could I k - tackled at the
same time because those tagged the seawall, between French
as simple projects would cost Avenue and Mellonvllle. Ten
years ago. 35 beds were planted
little or no money.
with azaleas, pampas grass and
The first list Is us follows:
I)
Municipal Parking Lot.vlburnam along the lake. Holly
S e m in o le B o u le v a rd u n d hushes were added later. Now.
Palmetto Avenue, Place more because of the way they are
trees In und around the lot und maintained, the view of the lake
extend the Irrigation system Is blocked, the report said. The
around the lot.
Sanford Woman's Club has of­
21 Marina and Holiday Isle. fered to help jury for the re­
R ed esig n and re p la n t th e designing of the )&gt;eds. Irrigation
g re e n be It alo n g th e fro n t of the beds also needs lo be
entrance, the entry road und the extended to surrounding grassy
strip on the east side nf Itie areas.
2) Lake side of seawall, across
murtnu parking lot Place trees
und ptcnlc rabies along the from the Sanford Civic Center, ul
shoreline near the iuuUxnk ramp the entrance to the marina. In
and provide Irrigation to all front of the Holiday Inn and
arras along the rnlrance to the along the shoreline lo the
murtnu fence. These areas are
marina and the Holiday Inn
3| CMv Hall. 300 N Park Avr weedy und are lined with trash,
The area around City Hail nerds green scum and dead fish. The
lo hr totally redesigned, re­ board recommends the trash,
planted und Irrigated, the report scum and Ush be removed and
said. Large trees and shrutm the weeds he cut or replaced
need to be planted around the with more attractive plants, like
|K-rlmeter ami In the parking lot. elephant ears.
This could cost ol&gt;out $15,000.
Some of the weeds may not be
removed without a permit from
the rc|M&gt;rt said
4) Medians ul French Avenue th e s ta le d e p a r tm e n ts of
and Seminole Boulevurd. Park Environmental Regulation and
Drive und French Avenue, and Natural Resources because (he
west First Street und French weeds keep the lake healthy.
Avenue. These need lo be re­
3) Police Department. French
designed. replanted und Ir­ Avenue. Heds on the south and
rigated. Medians, the gateway to east sides of the building should
the city, provide a "first opi­ be replanted.

...Unkempt

...H ijack
Continued from page 1A

WEATHER

* ™ k « i Plonssr SAL
Ssrnslt Sank

In addition lo the four new
employees recommended by
Hooper — a senior arc'minting
Clerk, a flnanrlal services man­
ager, a secretary and a project
engineer — the commissioners
approved a four-member tree
crew to beef up Sellers' staff.
Also approved was the up­
grading In salary of a recep­
tion 1st to a elerk-typtst. Sellers
said the receptionist also does
secretarial work for him und
numerous other chores not Ineluded In her joh description.
Also approved were a storage
building, 10 mobile radios, u
road extension Into Mllchrll
Hammock, surveying equip­
ment, computer software, two
computers, a pickup truck and
expansion ol the &lt;ie|tartmen!'H
sign shop,
On the one stop permitting lor
new construction, Price said he
co n ferred with the county
llomehulldrrn Association whose
members agreed to a 10 percent
Increase In building permit fees
for the new service.
Price said It now lakes builders
two weeks lo gel a building
permit from the date of applica­
tions und this will Ik- cut lo
iwo-to three days.

CAPE CANAVERAL (UPII - Taking no
chances, the crew of the shuttle Discovery
today closely Inspected a costly Arab
communications satellite before proceeding
with preparations for launch lo cam NASA
$11.6 million.
The $44.7 million Arabsat satellite is
owned by the Arab Satellite Communica­
tions Organization, a consortlum of 21 Arab
L eague nations In clu d ing Moammar
Khadafy’s Libya and the Palestine Libera­
tion Organization
Commander Daniel Brandrnsteln. eo-pllot
John Creighton and crrwmates Shannon
Lucid. Steven Nagel. John Fabian, Fren­
chman Patrick Baudry and Prince Sultan
Salman Al-Saud blasted off Monday after a
flawless countdown to begin the 18th
shuttle mission.
The International crew launched Mexico's
first communications salrliltr about right
hours after blastoff on the weeklong
mission. A third relay station Is set for
launch Wednesday.
Instrument readings Indicated one of

was designed'to serve as an orbital spare for
a similar satellite launched In February atop
an unmanned French Arlane booster. A
third Arabsat will be held on the ground as
an additional spare.
AH Al-Mashat. director of the Arabsat
program, said Saudi Arabia owns the major
share of the satellite system at 29 percent.
The other four major shareholders. In order,
are Kuwait. Iraq. Qatar and Libya. A NASA
spokeswoman said the FLO owns tess than
1 percent of the relay station.
The International flavor of Discovery’s
mission was highlighted Monday when
Saud celebrated the end of the Moslem holy
month of Ramadan by breaking fast In orbit
David Leestma In mission control told
Saud the new moon had been sighted In
Saudi Arabia signaling the end of the holiest
lonth In the Moslem year. During Ramadan,
devout Moslems do not eat or drink until
sunset.
"Well, thanks very much." the 26-yearold prince said. "That's good news because
I'm really starving up here and thirsty ."

4) Fire D epartm ent. 14th
Street and French Avenue. Dead
plants on the south side of the
building need to be removed an
new plants need to be placed on
the north side.
5) Rlnker Stadium. Mellonvllle
Avenue. Provide irrigation to
roadside greenbelt and buffer
zone on street side of fences.
Require lessee to mend the
fences and fertilize grass. The
city should try lo terminate the
lease and sell the property to the
school board, using the money
from the sale to fund Scenic
Improvement Hoard projects.
6) Catholic C hurch. Park
Avenue und Eighth Strret. Pro­
vide Irrigation lo entire lot and
plant grass seed. Remove the
ehaln link fence and plant a
buffer zone.
7) Brick planters on First
Street. These planters wsre pro­
vided by the city to help the
m erch an ts spruce up First
Street. The plants need to be
removed and replaced with
sprrngerl fern and the parka
department need lo water them
on a regular basts, the report
said
8) Water Department. French
Avenue und 13lh Street. The
building needs lo be repainted
and repaired and the grounds
need to be replanted, with all
dead plants and trees removed.
9) Chase Park. 13th Street.
Replace tree trunk parking poats
with proper posts and paint
recreational equipment. Remove
p a in te d tre e s tu m p s an d
transplant trees to there from
another site.
1 0 | S p e e r G ro v e P a r k .
Mellonvllle Avenue near 20th
Street Add more picnic tables.
Jaycce Park. French Avenue
und Fourth Street. Clarify lease
agreement. If It's the Jaycees'
responsibility to mulnlaln the
grounds, the city should see that
It Is done. The board also
recommends redesigning and
replanting the parking area.
Fort Mellon Park
One of the more controversial
aspects about the board’s plan Is
I t s r e c o m m e n d a t i o n fo r

response to appeals (rom the Greek government.
But us the three were being released, the
hijackers aboard lire TWA Jet at Beirut Interna­
tional Airport said they were growing Impatient
with the apparent lack of progress In securing the
release of fellow Shiites from an Israeli jail and
others from jails In Kuwait and Spain.
In Israel, the respected Haaretz newspuper said
Shiite, U.S. and other officials discussed a
compromise to give the hostages to the Red Cross
In exchange for Israel s commitment to free Its
prisoners "within u short time."
"The U.S has approached us to tell us the
Inirm.iil.rn.il Red Cross may make an approach
to us." AHC News quoted Israeli Prime Minister
Shimon Peres as telling schoolchildren tn Israel.
"II they do, we will listen to them and respond."
Isrorl said earlier It would consider freeing Its
prisoners — taken In security sweeps In south
Lebunon during the Israeli occupation of the
country —only If asked by senior U.S. officials.

"They asked me to sing and I didn't see why I
shouldn't.” Houssos said. "It was my 40th
90s. Lows mostly in the 70s
birthday ut: Saturday and why shouldn't I slim
them."
BOATING FORECAST - St. forAsked
what he would like to say to Lebanon
Augusllne to Jupiter Inlet out 50 la-fore
hr
left, he told reporters: "I'd like to come
tulles — South to southwest back nnd sing
for peace."
wind )0 knots or less through
Be-rl
assured
reporters the rest of the hostages
Wednesday except '•aslrrly sea were In guod condition
und were being well cared
breeze near 10 knots during the for.
uflemoon. Sea 1 to 3 feet A few
"I check Ihelr menus .... I check what they eat.
showers.
where they sleep.
"They are herr in the cupttal (Beirut) They are
AREA READINGS (B a.m.|:
temperature: 82; overnight low: not In the plane f cannot tell you everything now.
7 4: M o n d a y ’s h ig h : OS; but they are not all In one place."
barometric pressure; 30.12: rela­
A spokesman ul Brrrfs home said the minister
tive hum idity: 77 percent: Irced the three us u gesture of goodwill In
winds calm; rain: none; sunrise:
ft 28 a m . sunset 8.25 p in.
TUESDAY TIDES: Daytona
Beach: highs. 8 54 a.in., 9:16
p in.; lows, 2:41 a m.. 2:22 p in.;
Port Canaveral: highs. 84(1
1913. he moved to Lake Monroe
a m . 9 08 p in.; lows. 2 32 a m..
MARY B. DANIELS
Mrs. Mary S Daniels. 90. of In 1976. He was a retired
2:13 p.m.; Bayport: highs. 2:41
a m . 1:18 p m.s lows. 7 44 a m . Hl)4 Celery Avc., Sanford, died electrical m illw right, und a
Sunday at Central Florida Re­ member of the Eagles Club of
8:58 p.m.
gional Hospital. Sanfurd. Horn tn North Campion. Ohio.
Limerick. Ga. on May 27. 1895.
He is survived by his wife.
she moved to Sanford In 1910. V io le t: a s o n . D c W Ig h t.
She was a founding member of Cambridge; three daughters.
Ihe Zion Hope Mlaaiurury Bap­ Mrs. Peggy Larrlaon. Cambridge.
tist C h u rch tn Sanford, a Mrs. Mary Francis Corder. Core
&amp; Light
.... » *
It *
member of the Friendship and City, Ohio, and Mrs Charlene
f 4r Hrogr*t$
. ........ It MV*
Union Society and a member of 1Hills of Searcy Ark.: five slaters,
nw
11
f i iMitum &amp;#vtngi
Ihe Lily White Society.
Mrs. Ophla F reem a n . Mrs.
a$ Ml*
MCA
Huotei S*jppl$
...
JO*
She Is survlvored by two Geneva Pasawatera. Mrs. Shirley
Morrlton • .........
. .....
It*
It*
stepsons. John und Moses Lee Harter, ail of Canton. Ohio. Mrs.
NCR C * p
NW
Danlrls. both of Sanford; five Virginia Dawson. Jacksonville
........ ........ fc&gt; JO1*
PltMty
........
tcgffjr'i
...... .
14 14*
g r a n d c h ild r e n an d se v e n Heuch. and Mrs. Iona Roy,
14%
14*
iowthutl t*n%
Buwerston. Ohio: two brothers.
great-grandchildren
Sun I$ a4 i
40 % 40V*
Funeral services are being Lloyd and Forest. Freeport.
handled by Sunrise Funeral Ohio: 11 grandchildren and sev­
eral great-grandchildren.
Home.
LEATER B. MATHEWS
G uardian Brlsson Funeral
Lester U. Mathews. 72. of 2101 Home In charge of arrange­
Orange Hlvd., Lake Monroe, died ments.
UU&lt;DUJQ^J
HARRY E. FLETC H ER
Monday at Central Florida Re­
Harry E. Fletcher. 47. of 520
gional Hospital. Sanford. Boro In
Cambridge. Ohio on May 17, Spanish Oak Trail. Longwood.

Mellonvllle Park. This park,
which extends from Mellonvllle
Avenue to Sanford Avenue has
“the potential of being one of the
most breath-taking sites in the
county." the report said.
But It Is "overgrown and
underplanted" and It has too
much activity for what It's sup­
pose to be — a passive park.
The board recommends that
the two softball fields be re­
moved from lire park, a sugges­
tion strongly opposed by board
member and parks department
head Jtm Jcrulgan.
The board says there are other
fields In town where soltball
players can enjoy their sport.
Games at the fields, with funs
yelling and screaming, disrupt
the passive naturr of the park,
the board said
It would prefer creating a
scenic park similar lo a lakefrunt
|iark In Geneva. Switzerland.
The board recommends hiring a
landscape architect and "begin
at once to create construction,
planting. Irrigation and funding
plans for this massive project.”
‘Pick A Park'
lorstly, the board recommends
that the city undertake a pro­
m otional campaign to raise
money to help Implement Us
massive plans. Civic, garden und
women's clubs, as well as busi­
nesses. could be lobbied for
donations. the board said. Surh
organization rould "pick a park"
and help pay for Its Improve­
ment. A plaque bearing the
Individual's or group's name
could be placed In the park.
The hoard wrote u promotional
Jlnglr, culled "Pick a Park." to
help sell the Idea.
"Pick your part and pick a park
Pick u park and put It pretty
Pick a plant to plant In a park
Pick a park to plunt your plant in
If you plan to plant a plant tn a
pork
And plan to pick a park to plant
In
Where's the plunt you plan to
plant
And where's the part of the park
to plant It?

Prime Rate
Down To 9Vi%
NEW YORK (UPII - Morgan
Guaranty Trust today lowered
Its prime lending rate lo 9V4
percent from 10 percent, the
first time this benchmark rate
has been In single-digit territo­
ry since September 1978.
Morgan became the first to
make what la expected to be an
Industry-wide move.
Analysts said Monday the
question Isn't whether the
prime will come down but
when.
Most believed, however, that
banks would wall for the Fed­
eral Reserve lo lead the way
with another reduction In Its
discount rate.

AREA DEATHS

(Soiling

ST.— ".

333-1204

died Saturday at Florida Hospi­
tal Altamonte Springs. Born In
Coral Gables on Febuary 22.
1938. he was an electronics
p r o d u c ti o n m a n a g e r a n d
member of Weklva Assembly of
God. Longwood.
He ts survived by a wife. Mary
F.; son. Thomas, Sanford; two
daughters, Carol. Longwood.
Barbara Sawyer, Ocala: two sis­
te rs, Mlgnon Davis. Miami
S p r i n g s . J e n n ie W r ig h t.
Lockhart; mother. Gladys How­
ard. Orlando, and two grand­
children.
Funeral arrangements are be­
ing h a n d le d by B a ld w in Fairchild Funeral Home.
MAMT NUN AN BOAXDMAN

Mm. Mary Nunan Boardman.
94. of 760 Dunlap Circle. Winter
Springs, died Sunday at Ptnc
Acre Golden Age Center. Born Ut
Maybcury. W.Va. on Sept. 25.
1B90. she moved to Winter
Springs in 1972 from Tucson,

Arizona. She was a retli
school principal and a mem
of M argaret Mary Catha
Church.
She ts survived by a a
WtllUun, Winter Springs; th
g ra n d c h ild re n : two gre
grandchildren.
Funeral arrangements are
Ing h a n d le d by Buldw
Fairchild Funeral Home.

Funrol Notic%$
* U t T t U M IB L I

m k n lor Mary S Dm M i . I
■** C*lsnr * « • . U n « V i O l t M k n

■rttl S* h*M U Z M t y •« ] p m *1 2 tan »
• A m m on S*» n.i O w rcs. W afer* mrn
* •» j c * r u . » M c u lM f Viamtna mi
4 * a w . Prmay Burial • ill ts In IU*tl
Cwnsfery kwrUs Fxnsrsl H*m» Indian

i l l T i a s MATHIWS

—S s n s r il u m l c . t fer Ur Lsdar
n . al n s i Oran'S Btv*. I
WurSsy In Canfen. O h * Pth
St B ra u n Sunsrsi Hams a
Sr assn P unsr.l Hams, a

�PEOPLE
Blood Banks Don't Offer Savings Accounts
DEAR ABBT: Regarding the
woman who wanted to "build up
a blood bank In case someone In
my family needs a transfusion."
You responded: ’ ll makes sense
to me. and so does the Idea of
giving one's own blood to store
at the blood bank In case a
f a m ily m e m b e r n e e d s a
transfusion."
Abby. there are several pro­
blems with this concept:
Blood banks do not operate
like money banks; One cannot
simply put blood away and draw
It out at the time of need.
Instead, the nation's nearly 4
million patients whose lives are
saved by transfusions each year
depend on the selflessness of a
steady stream of donors who
come Into the blood bank regu­
larly. to give blood for anyone
who might need It
Even If blood could be stored
beyond Its 35-day outdatlng
period. It Is highly unlikely that
there would be sufficient num­
bers of units of the right type to
meet transfusions needs from
the Immediate family.
The American Association of
Blood Banks, the American Red
Cross and the Council of Com­
m unity Blood Centers have
Jointly recommended against
donors routinely specifying who
will receive their blood, stating

volunteer donors will thank
them!

GRACE M.NEITZER.
PRESIDENT.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
OP BLOOD BANKS

D ear
A bby
that a widespread attempt to
" d ir e c t d o n a tio n s " w ould
seriously disrupt the nation's
blood donor system because
donors m ight refrain from
routine blood donations while
awaiting requests to provide
specific Individuals with blood.
Additionally, the organizations
stated that there Is no scientific
basis for the assumption that
blood from family members Is
any safer than that available
from volunteers at community
and hospital blood banks.
Our n a tio n 's blood donor
system Is based upon generous
individuals giving blood to their
local blood bank for patients In
need, w hether or not those
patients are friends or family
members.
Please. Abby. encourage your
readers to pay a visit to their
local community or hospital
blood bank and make a lifesaving donation The faceless
patients whose lives depend on

your tongue and say. “ I’m sorry,
it's going to be a very small
wedding."

DEAR ABBY; So you don't
Ihink making little kids walk 14
DEAR ORACE NE1TZER: miles a day Is child abuse?
Thank you for your Informative Shame on you! If this had
and timely letter. Blood Is In happened In my town and I
very short supply these days, knew about It. I would have
and donors are desperately called the child abuse hot line
and reported those parents
needed.
This morning I received this
Yes. I know. In Ihe olden days
heartwannlng letter:
people walked that far and didn't
DEAR ABBY; Ever since you think a thing of It. My great­
reminded your readers lo donate grandfather used lo tell how
blood. 1 have made It a point to when he was young he walked
donate blood on my birthday.
10 miles a day with snow up lo
It makes me appreciate being hts hips, but as Ihe years grew,
healthy enough to give blood. I s o did ihe story. The last time I
consider It my birthday present heard It. he had walked 30 miles
to myself.
a day with the snow up to his
BALTIMORE BLOOD DONOR
chin!
DEAR ABBY: I have recently
become engaged, and my fiance
and I are planning a very small
wedding. I've Invited a few close
friends from work, but not
everyone I work with
What should I say when peo­
ple who aren't Invited ask. “Am
I Invited?" I don't want to create
any hard feelings
TONGUE-TIED IN TEXAS
DEAR TONGUE-TIED: Untie

HENRY IN MALIBU

f/s your social life In a slu m p ?
L o n e ly ? Get A bb y‘a updated.
revised and expanded booklet.
" I I ow to lie Popular" for people
o f all ages. Send your name and
address clearly printed with a
check or money order for $2 50
and a long, stamped 139 cents)
self-addressed envelope to: Dear
Abby. P o p u la rity . P O . lio x
3 8 9 2 3 . H o lly w o o d . C a l i f .
90038),

SCC Offers Summer Leisure Time Classes
Registration Is being held for
Ihe following summer Leisure
Time classes at Seminole Com­
munity College.
" T h e s e classes a re selfsupported by student fees at no
expense to Ihe taxpayer." ac­
c o rd in g to Fay C. B rak e,
coordinator of the program Reg
1st rat Ions arc being accepted In
Ihe registrar's office at SCC
• Color wardrobe workshop
for men (evening class) — Dur­

ing ihe flrsl class session, each
man will be analyzed to de­
termine his best colors. The aim
of ihe second session will be to
help each student plan and
develop a quality wardrobe of
coordinated clothing In colors
which arr best for him.
• Color and style workshop
Irvcnlng class) — Two threehour sessions which will cover
personal color analysis, makeup
selection and application tech­

niques. Class enrollm ent Is
limited to six so that each
sludent may I k - given as much
personal attention as jxts-uhlr
• Wu shu kung In (evening
class) — Kung Fu Is the oldest
known martial art and as such
has given birth lo or Influenced
many other styles of martial
arts. The purpose of Kung Fu Is
not only self-defense but physi­
cal and ruenlal discipline.
• Advanced wu shu kung fu
(evening classl — Before a stu-

TONIGHT’S TV
T U E S D A Y _________
EVENING

6.00

® (DO 7 0 N ew s
IM IJE F F IR S O N S

5

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but bar aaaumption about n k o 'i
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buanaaa mordar to protacl an ML
gat rock group baarg ebaatad b | a
racord company |ft |g
(I ) O * WOMAN OF SUMTANCe
A M in n , and poaarkil Emma
Maria iDaboraft K a rri naarty M . '•
win Mf aa a young aarvart on tba
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tuma in form art wban ha hoota up
wtth a group of mobalart (R ig
(M l INDEPENDENT NEWS
t il (TO) THE MILITARY AM ) THE
NEWS M iO U A panaf of nuMar,
m ad ia and lag al ip a c ia lis ti
dracuatat Iba laaua of wbathar and
bow to mvcTna tba ll S praaa wban
an Ryaaion ra ptannad to tuppert
tba ngbl wmg gytwrnmart of a b y
po tb R cal Caidral Amancan nation
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1020
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of Iba annual ritual bom Maddon
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La * Marvin Fuchard Burton Tba
tbanff of a Soutbar n town it caugbl
botwaan tba Ku Mut Klan and ndtant racial tanaona aban a black
man u accuaad of rap#
1100
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(M l BENNY HAL
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8!

11:30
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12:00

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0 (101 NOVA Tba alary of an I t .
rnw old boy • banta to racovar
bam w w i R a n t luborod R a
boma occ f a r t |R )g
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0 ® LATE MONT WTTH DAVE)
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Si

0

AFTERNOON

5:30

®

12:00

THM WTEK IN COUNTRY

MUSIC (MON)

0 ® ES COUNTRY (TUE-FRQ
12 BOB NEWHART
600
ffi NBC NCWS AT BUMNBE
O MOANING STRETCH
O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
(M ) G 0 0 0 GAY!

NEWS
(I) AM BAKKtR

630
® N CW S
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•
EARLY MORNING

0 it) MtOOAT
X a ( 7 ) 0 NEWB
Q (M ) BEWITCHED
0
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(MON)
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6:45

f f i O EYEW ITNESS DAYBREAK
ffiltO lA M WEATHER

7:00

Q lL T O O A V
) O CBB MORMNQ NEWS
f f i o GOOD m o r n in g AM EfkCA
(M l FONT 8 TONEA
(t0 | FARM OAT
(S| SUPCRFRWNOS

7:15

I

12.30
t

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O LOVING
(M l SC VIRLV H ILLBILLIES

0 f f i DAYS OF OUR LIV ES
T O A U MY CHILDREN
Q (M l OCK VAN 0TK E
A ( ICI M OW (MON. THU)
t l 1*01 GREAT RAAW AY JO U R­
N EY! OF THE WORLD (WED)
® 1*0| FLOfVOA HOME GROWN

(FRO
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7:35

O RATHE WORLD TURNS
I IM IO O UER m e
(101 MAGIC OF PA IN Tw a
KEEPSAKES (fR I I

835

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9:00

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BARNASY JONES
1W ALI0N S
|(N R SESAME ATM S1 IR jg

FFWN0 S &amp;U’0 t t U N m J

1:10

200
I® ANOTHER WORLD
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(tSAA)

1:30
200

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2:30

11TO) LRCER SAA. (THU)
| ( f0| JOY OF PAMTMQ (FRI)

230

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2M
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Ih e

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r o u t in e .
Law ,

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p la c e d
f a s h io n

sh o w .

Seminole 4-Hers Win Big
At District Competition
J u n i o r 4 -H e rs fro m
Seminole County participated
In Junior District Events held
In T itusville earlier this
month. The 4-H clubs from
Sem inole. O range, Lake,
llrrvard. Osceola, and Volusia
counties participated In de­
monstrations, talent, public
speaking, and fashion revue
activities. Ju n io r District
Events Is the culmination ol
Ihese activities for the 4-H
year for 4-Hcrs B 12 years of
age
Hecrtvtng blue awards from
Seminole County were: Cindy
Sutton. Longwood. Horse
D e m o n s tr a t io n : C a rrie
Waldrop. Lake Mary, marine
scien c e d e m o n stra tio n s ;
Eddie Waldrop. Luke Mary,
m echanical and electron
science demonstration: Clndl
Meriwether. Sanford, recre­
ation and photography drliuuiktruiton. Renee Law,
Winter Springs, lashton re­
vue; A llison C am m ack.
O v ied o , f a s h io n re v u e ;
Michelle Lyon and Allison
W allace. Sanford.

“share the fun" talent.
Receiving red awurds from
Seminole County were: Jen­
nifer M rrlftrld, S anford,
clothing

dem o n b t r a t Ion;

Dawn T re n c h e r. W inter
Springs, food and nutrition
demonstration: Julie lamdun.
Winter Springs, lashton revue: Jrnnl Meriwether. Sunlord. fashion rrvue; Jent
Hesscsen. Geneva and Betsy
Acker. C asselb erry ,
"share-the fun" talent.
Senior 4-Hers from each
county Judged the competi­
tion. This ts Just one of the
many opportunities given to
older 4-Hers to encourage
leadership development, Se­
n i o r 4- H J u d g e s fro m
Seminole County were: Mike
Lyon, Kristi Meriwether. Stasl
llu ju n o w s k I. J a im e Hojanowskl. Tiffany Wallace, all
of Sanford, and Tiffany Moore
and Franclne Huggins, both
Altamonte Springs
For more information on
the Seminole County 4-H
P rogram contact S hrldu
Wilki ns ut 323 2500rxl 1H0.

Computer Course For Educators
Seminole Community College m icrocom puters. Word pro­
Is offering Appleworks — an cessing. data base management,
Introduction course for educa­ and electronic spreadsheet
tors.
applications specifically d e­
signed lor educators will form
T h is c o u r s e Is a c o m ­ the core of this course
prehensive Introduction lo the
The course will meet on
most useful program currently
available for the Apple II series of Thursday and Friday, from 8:30

a.m. lo 5 p.m. both days. 'Ihe
i min# number Is CON 0141
Set lion 34783. Cost Is 620.
Registration is uudrrw ay.
S|mce Is limited Rrglsler at the
admissions office In the ad­
ministration building. For more
Inform ation call 323-1450,
extension 22H.

Ja y c e e s To H old Little M iss P ageant
Girls between Ihe ages of 5
and H are eligible to compete in
the seventh annual Little Miss
Firecracker Pageant sponsored
by th e A lta m o n te S o u th
Seminole Jaycees. July 4. at 2

p.m.
Applications must be submi tied by Monday to P.O Box
478. Altamonte Springs. Fla.,
32701 along with a registration
fee of 630 per child. Makr checks

payable lo Ihe Altamonte South
Seminole Jaycees, Inc. Only the
(Irst 30 entries are eligible.
Applications may lie obtained by
i ailing Cathy Cold at 834-1078.
jfiR o y d T h — t f

|

Brush Up For Next Year At SCC
SCC'i summer "Shape-Up"
program Is being offered by Ihe
L eisu re T im e P rogram at
Seminole Community College,
Any student who will be enter­
ing grades seven through 12 In
September Is eligible lo enter Ihe
program Classes will meet from
2 6 p.m ., Monday thro u g h
Thursday, beginning on July 8
and ending Aug I. The fee for

Ihe program Is 6100
Classes will Include a choice of
Microcomputing I or II, Archer)'
and Conditioning, or Study
Skills, Keyboarding and experi­
ence In malh, reading. English,
chemistry and forrlgn languages
In Ihe Plain lab.
For more Information call
Seminole Community College al
323 1450. cxl. 302 or 303.

------------

n il w w

‘

BO N D 007

HABiascri r a i n
A big ciTf cop

AVlEWfq A t m a llc o u n iiy tx iy
™A KILL WITNESS
M OVttlANOO/l

5 2

SECRET 9
ADMIRER 6

5 0

ill

I7TS

NO
SMALL

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3

—A E E A i R

FAMOUS RECIPE
WEEKLY SPECIALS

O C A w ra
(M l GREAT SPACE CO ASTER
( TO) MNOVATION (MON)

0 (TO) MAGC OF OH. PJUNTWQ
(WtOl
(D t iv i MAOC
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FAPfTMG (FN)

2:36

]2 WOMANWATCH (THU)

M0

) LOVE CONNECTION

9:35

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1000

1ffi FACTSOFUFE(R)
Q ho urm agam
O SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL

( M tM VALLEY

300

) SANTA BARBARA
kauDMOUQffT
7 GENERAL HOSPITAL
(M l BUOI SUNNY ANO

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306

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(M l CA U JO M PH Y WTTH KEN
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905
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1:30

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6:30

I t (M )Fkd K FANTHER
A I &lt;9| MM TER ROGERS (R )
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m o c lo u o

105

and

o f S a n f o r d , w o n to p h o n o r s

; M OW I MON W TD-FH)
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600

U P A ) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

1:00

s:

(M l TOM AM) JERRY
( 10) SESAME STREET (A )g
(SI M SPECTOA GADGET

Q FU N TST0N ES

1:00
ffi O MOW i Can Oaf a For You
WboMaam UMU Suaan Hayward
Dan Daaay

'

® SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
YOUNG AND THE RESTt l

7:30

0 IW 1 A M WEATHER

O MOUVWOOO AM ) THE
TARS
d l) (M il LO VE LUCT

u (Misery

11.30
0 1 ) SCRABBLE
t o RYAN'S HOPE
&amp; 110) FIOISOASTYIE

5:10
d l WORLD AT LARGE (THU)

Oam-

12 MOW AMaahdar Tba Gnat

6:30

5:00
(M l NEWS
ALL M THE FAMILY (MONWCO.FRn

80S

1:20

f f i O FO UL-O PS. B LEEP S A
BLUhO f AS Faaturad Jo b r Rnar
aarn gabaa kom
Thraa i A

1 ANGIE (R)
t O il EIGHT a ENOUGH
11101WE RE COOMNa NOW
1(1) FAMILY

Q I DREAM OF JCA fM C

12:30

ffi o

11.4)0
11WHEEL OF FORTUNE

H O fK tS M N I

I I (M ) WOODY W OOOPtCKEA
a (I) h e a t h c u f f

® O MAGNUM. R l
f f i O MLUONAJRC W THE

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® |id)SI-1 CONTACT (R )g
Ol l«I NEW DCS VAN DTKI
SHOW

MORNING

Oil

| ® TOFBQHT ftoal Jobm y Car-

(Y) O I r u n r I f uo

dtlMIRHOCM

_ . WEDNESDAY

HAM. TO THE CH IEF Tba
fa at woman praaidant copaa with
tba ittp cb trb ab ta of bar ofbca and
tba com pacationi ganarttad by datfy at* with bar tarry tamd) |R )Q

(M IRHOOA
It ) UOVN

on Barbara Taylor Bradford ■nonf
(Pan t of Z)
T O TH REE'S A CROWD Mr
Bradford tala *&gt; bp aa ada nth an

4 00

9:30

CD a

7:30
0

3 :3 0

dll (M1FAMA.V AFFAIR

dent Joins this rlnnu. he/she must
have taken beginning Wu Shu
Kung Fu. Advanced techniques
will t&gt;e taught.
B S u m m e r Jazz b a n d
workshop (evening class) — De­
signed for selected high school
upper classmen, recent high
school graduates and college
students. An Intensive study of
contemporary and traditional
Jazz literature, Guest artists and
clfnlclans each week.
• Conditioning (evening class)
— Modern day conditioning us­
ing Nautilus equipment. Sclec
lion of Individualized program
Including Jogging, flexibilities
and calisthenics.
• llu s k c tb a ll/o p e n p la y
(evening class) — tlaslc skills tn
basketball will be taught There
y III be some team play.

A b o v e , M i c h e l l e L y o n , le ft ,

u o

9 MOW

1006

10-00

0 f f i SA LE OF THE CENTURY

S

I Ml MB TER ROOERS (R|
(I) PBPECTOR GA0QTT

400

ffi LTTTLf HOUSE ON THS

( D O S T ANTREK

* 1 1

rr

�IB

E v m m g H*r#ld, Sanford, F I.

Tueiday, Juna I t , m j

THE
FURN ITURE HOUSE

The Service Center

1740 NORTH HIGHWAY 17 92
SOUTH O F F L E A WORLD
F IR S T T R A F F IC LIGH T

119 E L M A V E N U E , S A N F O R D

NORTH OF MIOHWAY * « ACROSS FROM MANOYWAY.

NEW-USED FURNITURE
ANTIQUES

323-3966

ALAN'S JRSS

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m om

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ADVERTISING

ADVERTISING

•Ra«aam
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U N I S E X H A IR S T Y L IN O

Tel. 322-8711

l&gt;. v

P h o n e 322-5066
—

AUTO AIR CONDITIONING
PROBLEMS?

CAU US!!
W a'll B rin g O u r M oiling M rpalt S h op T o Y o u r
Horn* O f D u a in a t * C F la ll On Th a S p o t.
C a t* f . T r u t h * D o m a a tlt or Im p o rt*

4

All Work Quarantaad
CO STS H O M ORE FOR U S TO COM E T O Y O U

CAU 321*2391 or 321-2148
ERW IN M O TO R S

D A V E ’S UPHOLSTERY
• FURNITURE • BO ATS • CARS
NOW IS THE TIME fO SMOHTEN TOUR STILL OOOO FURNITURE
•LAROC SELECTION OF MATERIALS * OUAWTY WORKMANSHIP
Fraa tatlmalaa
Fraa F k k a p And DaBaary

490 N. 17*02

M o to rs'

m o tto

is

"You

w o rk , you

SALE

C o m e In
A n d llr m a *

(Ptmi To J r o r l T l T 2 .1-1* I J I

BOO PM

"Say It With Balloons

A CE AUTO

RADIATOR

B a llo o n

711 F R E N C H A V E .

305/323-0400
We Dellvor Bouquet* of Balloon*
"Seven Day* a Week"
For E v e ry Reason end E v e ry Season
P O BO X 174 SAN FO RD , F L JI772 i

AU WORK SUABANTIID
1 DAY SERVICE
SENIOR w r 0 /
CITIZENS 1 3 / 0 D IS C .

Y &amp; &amp; R

R EG ISTER NOW FOR
FLO RA L DESIGN
CLA SSES

DESERVES
PROFESSIONAL

START IM M EDIATELY
PAM B A R K LEY INSTRUCTOR
MURRY WHILE S P A C E
IS A V A ILA B LE

FO R M A L AND
CA N D ID

PHOTOGRAPHY

.

y

D a v e C o rd e k • P h o n e 321-1673
I 13V* W. Crystal A v*.. Lab* Mary 12746
between M lllk* Daibdi Shop and The Pub
STU D IO HOURS) Noon T il B p.m. Tues.-Ftl

M n ^ it

C A L L A N Y T IM E -

SA N FO R D
322-0235
OPEN MON THRU FAI 8 6
SAT. t:3G3

A &amp;
ZAYRE PLAZA
Airport Blvd. &amp; 17-92 323-4569 Sanford

Jum, Jisif, Aug {&gt;•!•• OyMft. Wtddkng Cskai Arranged

DELTONA NURSING SERVICE

BLAIR AGENCY

AFFORDABLE HOME CARE

S P E C I A L I S T S IN

R N 's •

A U T O M O B IL E IN S U R A N C E

L P N 't •

C o m p a n io n s •

S R 2 2 's F I L E D

A id *

S it te r * •

H o m e m ak er* •

L iv e - In *

R N S u p e r v is io n

A L S O IN S U R E M O B I L E
H O M ES, M O TO RCYCLES

1300 Providence Blvd,
Deltona. FL 32725

H O M E S , R E C 'V E E S

574-1322

CAU ANYTlftt
24 HOURS A DAY

Saving S$n laid lor 21 i t it*
O P E N M ON . THRU F R I. 9-5

SUMMER
DAY CAMP

“CALL BLAIR AND COMPARE"

3 2 3 -7 7 1 0 or 3 2 3 -3 8 0 0
2S10A OAK AVE. SANFORD
Comer of S Park A»e A Oak

STIVE SLAIB

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES

11’L L

SPECIAL PROGRAM FOR 6 THROUGH 12 YEAR OLDS

&amp; U hC

0 e v tt

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323-2005

(09* *4 «’ 10MMfRM I 14
0 * 1 N 6 AM lo | PM

WEEKLY Actlvltie* IncM a:
Swimming
Bowling
Picnic*

Skating
Mottle*
Sport*

Arts 5 Craft*
Computer Skill*

7Vent Your Chlhi To An Action racked
Slimmer Of Fun And Daffy Field Trip*

u p to S100.000.
a v a ila b le

In c lu d in g

10 as used car sale*
manager fur Don Reid
Ford Hr knows his
business well Erwin
established Ills dwii
business Iwo yrant ago
011 Monroe Boulevard
In Lake Monroe. Hr
says no) only I* busi­
ness booming. bul hr
has becom e Ire Intis
with many u( his cuslomera.
"Customer sallsfacilon in our mimtirr nnr
concern.'' Erwin said.
What makes Erwin's
car lot different from
others I* (hr ImcI that

WASHINGTON (Ul’l) — The Supreme Court,
ruling In favor of firefighter* and airline pilots In
separate cases. Monday gave older Americans
wllh physically demanding Jobs greater rights In
work beyond traditional retirement age*.
The Justices ruled unanimously ib.u Baltimore
could not force ll* firefighter* to retire at 55.
despite a federal policy of retiring most govern­
ment firefighter* al that age.
The court also held HO, with Justice Lewis
Powell not participating, that Western Airlines
must consider making pilots Into (light engineers
ll they request II when they reach the Federal
Aviation Administrations required retirement
age of 60 for commercial pilots
In* lx it li c a s e s , the court said employers. In
selling mandatory retirement age*, must be able
to prove that age Is a 'bona fide occupational
qualification” for a specific Job. The court said
neither Balilmnre nor Western hud done that.
Five of the high court's nine members ure more
than 75 and another three are more lhan GO.
They serve for life
In other actions Monday as the court pressed
toward ihr end of Us term, the Just Ices;
—Affirmed on a 4 4 vote, with Powell abstain­
ing. a ruling thal a Nebruska law requiring a
photograph on a driver's license Interfered with u
woman's religious belief against the making of
any "graven Image."
—Accepted for arguments another religious
rights dispute over whether Ihc Air Force can
forbid a Jewish officer from wearing a traditional
yannulke while on duty.
—Held 7-2. In a Maryland case, that the
purchase of allegedly obscene material by an
undrreovrr police officer Is not a seizure under
the Fourth Amendment and does not require a
search warrant
—Agrred lo decide whether the federal law
banning discrimination against the handicapped
*

_

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things that Erwin Is
trying Is lo take his
mobile air eondtitoning
repair unit to Flea
World He said no one
has ever tried a drlve-ln
mobile repair unit of
ihls lypr before but he
thinks 11 will Ik- a big
success.
Erwin -wild that cus­
tomers call all the time
lor the mill lo come oul
lo iheir houses or busi­
ness for rrpalr work
' ' I can beat
unybopdy'a price, I
have a car fora
everybody's needs. Youjg
work, you ride.” Erwin**
sold.

percent Interest
Erwin sells to many
dealers berausr his
prices are so low. He
said he also does much
repair because his rrpu l a t Ion for b r in g
honest has grown)
"Wr are Ihr largest
and most picturesque
d ealersh ip In Lake
Monroe. We arc also
o n ly o ne In L ake
Monroe." Erwin said
with a chuckle.
In addition lo cars.
Erwlu said hr sells a lol
of tru ck s Hut you
won't llnd many Im­
ports on Ills lot. Hr
doesn't like them.
O n e of t tie new

Court Makes It Tougher To Force Retirement

Vt /

W b a ls o m a k t 1st a n d 2nd m o r t g a g e lo a n s
o n R a s i d a n t l a l o r C o m m e r c ia l R a i l E s t a l s

alter a car la sold It la
iiui forgotten about.
Every rar on Erwin's
lot Iravra wllh a war­
ranty. Erwin also has a
full-time mechanic on
duty and he haa a
mobile air conditioning
repair service.
“ Wr arc In Ihc proeras nf opening a body
re p a ir sh o p , to o ,"
Erwin said.
Erwin said that (hr
motto for tils business
la "If you work, you
rldr
He said thal hr
slocks ears from $2(XI
lo $2&lt;).(XX) Erwin has
also art up a system
where older ears arc
flounced w ith zero

George Erwin has been
in Htr car b u sin ru tor
15 years — Including

lluy. 17-02 A 27lh St. Sanford

(3 05 ) 062*1000

ON 4 A *M N U I If *1

O ld e r

Is N u m b e r O n e C o n c e r n

NOW IN PRO G RESS
SUPER SAVINGS

C O N N IliN M K N T &lt; T .O T IIIN &lt; *

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D e a l e r : C u s t o m e r S a t is f a c t io n

SUMMER
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lo a n s a r *

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p e r c e n t i n t e r e s t . In a d d i t i o n to s e l l i n g c a r s , E r w l n a l s o h a s e x c e l l e n t r e p a i r f a c i l i t i e s .

Sanford

M7 W. 2Slh 81.

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TERRI ROLER

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-BusinessReview

applies 10 ubewborn Infants suffering from birth
defects who are denied certain medical care
Both mandatory retirement cases stem from
ihc 11167 federal Age D iscrim ination In
Employment Act. which bar* dlscrlmatlon on the
basis of age, The art. which has hern amended
over the years, protects workers Irom forced
retirement up to age 70
Robert Johnson, a Baltimore m y lirellghler.
and five of his colleague* challenged the city's
mandatory retirement policy. Johnson was In­
voluntarily retired on May I. 197H — two days
after hlsdOtli birthday
A court temporarily barred the city front forcing
fbe firefighters' "retirement until the case wa*
completed, and Johnson was returned lo his Job.
The rliy argued firefighters' ability lo perform
their dutlrs safely and efficiently dlmlnLshes after
age 60 The city also pointed lo federal firefighter
retirement provisions as reasoning for Ihelr rule.
But Justice Thurgood Marshall said the re­
tirement rule for federal firefighters was not
tiased on any "bona fide occupational qualifica­
tion for firelighter*'' and Is not a defense for the
city.
''We re going to have older firelighters In the
business." ( apt. John Harrington, a Baltimore
idly tire department spokesman, said Monday
after the ruling.
"I think each ease needs to be treated
separately,” Harrington added. ''Some people are
more adrpt at firefighting, others are not. When
they reach a certain age. they seem more
susceptible to Injuries."
In the pilots' case. Western Airlines had
extended the FAA mandatory retirement age for
pilots lo flight engineers, who usually monitors
Instruments bul may be called on to take over the
controls of the plane In an emergency.
The case began In 1977 when pilots Kulon
Starley and Charles Criswell sought transfer to
the Job of flight engineer on Ihelr GOth birthday,
and Albert Ron. a night engineer, refused to retire
at age 60 In November. I960, a federal Jury
agreed with the three, In June 19B3, the 9th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals agreed.
Justice John Paul Stevens pointed oul In the
Western case that Congress required employers
to "evaluate employees between the ages of 40
and 70 on their merits and not their age." He said
any exception, such as setting a mandatory
retirement age. must be justified

SHERW OOD PRO. B.C.
Reg. S3 2 5
NOW * 1 9 9
Package Sp ecial

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EA R P IER C IN G It*
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Prepared by Advertising Oept. of

Evening Herald
Her.ild Advertiser

Business
Review

FO R CO M PLETE
LAWN C A R E

-

CUTTING — TRIMMING — E0Q IN 0
AVERAQ E LOT *20*30 F R E E ESTIM ATES

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

kj
i

1

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SPECIAL

j »

The best part of Hair
Now is the fact Merle
Resse and Tent Boler
— the duo who run the
beauty salon — can do
Just about anything for
hair, nails and lashes.
The services Hair
Now offers are nail tips,
brow arch in g , hair
removal, lash and tin­
ting, Installation of
false eyelashes, mani­
cures. pedicures, and
ear piercing.
flair Now. open from
9:30-5 pm . Tuesday
through Saturday tias
been In business for
two years and In (hat
tim e, b u sin ess has
boomed because of the
excellent reputation
Resse and Boler have
ac h ie v e d . They do
quality work.
O ne can get th e
usual perms, colors,
f r o s t i n g , and
blruchlng. but If It Is a
punk or new wave
hair-do you’re looking
lor. Hair Now Is the
plare to go.
Resse said one ot the
more popular styles Is

T H U R S D A Y , J U N E 20

323-4401

Christian Bros. Littn S«nrice

Hair Now
Offers More
Than Just
Haircuts

W E D N E S D A Y , J U N K 10

COPE Support Group of Seminole- Ares, 7:30
p.m.. Seminole Community Mental Health
Center. Cranes Boost Office P a rt Suite 377,
Pelican Building. Altamonte Spring. First and
third Wednesdays for families and caregivers of
long-term mentally disabled. Free of charge.

C h r i s t i a n B r o s .~ j,^ - " /

TOURBUSINESS ON SHE

• PUT

CALENDAR

BEAT THE HEAT! y ^ V
CALL
l }-

Call 322-2611 How!

\

■! T

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&amp; B LO W D R Y

9 1 3 50

i
l
i
1
i

i
M

Good Thru June 22
ly n d a Carter D.sne G Ly a d . only ^

►
&lt;
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M A RY’S H A 1R PO R T

Has ■ aw xnu a n .

imsvuiki

ISSVUKl

ra m i m

sir*

t u r m .t u .

•»UT0
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a IVUBtU
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BUD BAKER
Insurance Agency
TELEPHONE
QUOTES WELCOME

N EW L O C A T IO N
tO t ( t i t S T S u ita ( I t
A t la n t ic B a n k B ld g
S a n fo rd F I M 771

Terri Boler and Merle Resse do more than just cut and blow dry
hair. They otter a wide variety ot services at reasonable prices.

the "Rat Tall.” She
an d Holer hav e It
fierfecled Other popu­
lar cuts are mohawks
and splkrs "These are
real popular with high
school students.” He­
sse said

make alter hours ap­
pointments She cures
about her customers
that much.
She said the best
lime to call for an
appointment is early In
the morning

Hair Now c a rrie s
many quality hair eare
products including tltr
highly sought after
Reslken line.
Resse said that even
though the hours are
9 30 5 p.m . she will

★

Honda, Rover Collaborate On Auto
LONDON (UIH) — British ear maker Austin
Rover and Japanese partner Honda signed an
agreement Monday to collaborate on a second
new car.
An Austin Rover statement outlined a complex
arrangement. The two countries will Jointly
design the car. but each will produce Us own
version. Honda will manufacture the Urtlish
version In Japan. Austin Rover Ihe Japanese
version In Britain.
The move followed Monday's announcement In
the House of Commons by Norman Tchbltt.
secretary of ststtc for trade and industry, ol
Government approval of the latest HL (British

». 322-0501

J im
L a s h ’s
B lu e B o o k C a rs
★

S A L E S : cm»*r*vcxt
C C D V irr.
air**

321-0741

R E N T A L S : ? w * MT

SANFORD

b t n V IL t .

★

830 6688

17.92

cast i n v e s t

Ley land I corporate plan
An Austin Rover statement said that the Honda
Motor Cotnpnay Limited and Austin Rover Group
Limited were now able to annoucr that, en­
couraged by the excellent progress Icelng marie
on the Joint "XX Executive Car” program
The new document, signed try Honda Motor Co.
Chairman Nobmu Okamura and Austin Rover
Chairman Harold J. Musgrovc. takes their
i olluborallon several strpa further.
Besides switching technology »&gt;n the new car
project. Austin Rover will manufacture othrr
Honda models for sale In Europe through Honda's
networks.
F . . i „ SAT. A SUN.
* Ml

t I M J p m
f A M

V O LK SH O P

A H Nifhl

C R A V E Y A R D S P E C IA L

ati DvIrhaka
Staok 4 I t ft a
Wtt% P i i u a l t t

MARKET

$2

Jp a cla lliln g In Sarvlc* A Part* For
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89

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SA N FO RD

DAY &amp; NIGHT GRILL

It V. A TINA COK/Kl Owitrr*
IUXUiis M h Suli'l
Ph 333 6738

HOURS
Mon Fri 9 5 30
Saturday » 13 Noon

304 E. COMMERCIAL ST.
SANFORD, FL 327T1
(306) 333-1137

Tac lAf Send
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III m i i* aatit M r

a m

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NOW O PEN

F R E E E S T IM A T E

322 7642

P h ilip s

MADAME KATHERINE

’
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P u t • P m e a l • f a ls r e

H E L P F U L A D V IC E ON A L L
A F F A IR S
• U R • LOW • H A M U M • M t M U

• Clurk - Watrh H&gt; (uir

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S A N F O R D P A IN C O N T R O L C LIN IC
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a A M TO a P M . 7 Oayv A W etk 16S D m A f t p

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Serving

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Sactaty adH ba at

Dally

RKSTAL'HAftT &amp; COUNTRY STORE
A LL T H E FISH Y O U C A N E A T
Evaty WtdnatSay And Friday) Sttvad 1 1 AM 8 30 P M.

Golden Fried O r Broiled Cod Filet
With flinch fuas. Rial M n h a d .JA Q C
0. Baktd Potato. Colt Slaw Of ^ ^ D
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Our best shades
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HOURS 8 AM ■9 PM / Dayi *

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574-4600
--

South Seminole Senior Citizens covered dtsh
luncheon. 12 30 p.m., Casselberry Woman s
Club. Overbrook Drive. Casselberry. Muscial
program by Earl Benge and Bill Kowalski, retired
professional musicians. Those attending should
tiring their own table service.
National Action for Former Military Wives. 6:30
p.m. For Information on meeting place, coll
628.2801
FR ID A Y , JU N E 2 i

Central Florida Klwunla Club meeting at 7:30
a m at the Holiday Inn S.R 436 ut Wymore Koad
In Altamonte Springs.
MONDAY. JUNE 24
Adult swim lessons, 7-8:30 p.m Mondays and
Wednesdays, through July 10. Westmonte Pool.
!RX) Spring Oaks Blvd.. Altamonte Springs. All
levels of skills. Call instructor Claudia Harris.
862 0090.
The Seminole county 4-H club and the
Seminole County Master Gardeners are sponsor­
ing a youth workshop tilled "Mowing for Money."
The workshop explains the basics of managing a
summer lawn business, Topics to be covered
Include tiaslc lawn mower care, how to set your
prices for mowing, identifying different types of
grusses.and how to care for them, How to mow.
edge and trim a yard properly will be demon
strated. The seminar Is open to any youth 8-18
years old and Is free. To make reservations, for
the workshop or for more Information contact:
Shelda Wllkens, 411 agent., at 323 2500 Ext.
180.
The Seminole County Public Library 's Summer
Beading Program kicks off Monday. June 17.
with "The Little Prince" at 2 p.m. at the
Casselberry branch On Tuesday. June 18. Sara
Van Arsilel from Fort Christmas will present a
slide and artifact show about the Seminole Indian
Wars In Central Florida. This Is at the Casselberry
Branch at 2 p m.
An exclusive collection of art will gc on the
auction block June 24 to benefit the Metropolitan
Community Church, The art uuctlon at Expo
Center will lealure international award winning
artists such as Hlnte. Kelly and works from the
School of Paris. In addition to selections from
such world famous artists as Dali. Plcaaao . Mlro,
and Chagall.
The exhibit will open ay 7 p.m. with u
champagne reception. The auction starts at 8
p m. For more Information, coll 894-1081.
THURSDAY. JUNE 20
An educational meeting of the International
Cancer Victims and Friends Is scheduled to
gather on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at Allen Hall.
First Presbyterian Church 106 E. Church St..
Orlando. Scheduled to speak are tow registered
nurses, Connie Knight, and Daniel Erreg, For
mo r e i n f o r m a t i o n , call 8 5 9 - I 9 3 L .
SUNDAY, JUNE SO
The Maitland Art Center Is Joining the city of
Maitland's Centennial Celebration with an exhibit
of Andre Smith and the !*oh Fellows. Tills exhibit
Is free of charge and will run from June 30 to July
21.

LA T V N l f l HOURS
SAT A SUN

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» 4 I

Reagan Orders Review
Of Military Purchasing
WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Besgan. fed
up with those who blame the Pentagon for $435
hummers and $640 toilet seats, has ripped Into
d rfrn sr ((intruding abuses and ordered a
top to bottom review of military buying hablta.
On (hr counterattack against critics of his
military buildup. Reagan let loose with a
broudsldrat the defense community Monday as
hr tapped Industrialist David Packard to oversee
a year-long review of Pentagon procurement and
decision-making practices.
"Waste and fraud by corporate contractors are
more than u rlpoff of the tuxpayer," Itrugan maid.
"They're a blow to the security of the nation. And
this the American people cannot and should not
tolerate."
Careful not to hint at dissatisfaction with hla
Pentagon team. Beugun heaped praise on Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger for "a tremendous
Job at fending out waste and fraud" and said
"many management reforms" already are In
place.
But on Capitol Hill, Bep. Dennis tfertcl,
D Mich., accused Beugun of trying to divert
attention from congressional action on Pentagon
procurement reforms, which Democrats have
used as u political Isaur against the administra­
tion.
"We don't need a commission to study defense
reform, because we've all read about the
expensive $400 hammers and the $7,000 coffeeinakers." Hertel said.
White House spokesman Larry Speakes said
the Idea fur lhe (ommission, first raised on
Capitol Mill, (aught on with Reagan In part
because of the outcry over cost overruns,
blll-paddlng and Illegal expenditures by some of
the nation's leading defense contractors.
Reagan contended the furor was not an
Indictment of his defense buildup but "a
misconception born at least In part of a drumbeat
of propaganda and demagoguery that denies the
real accomplishments of the last four years.
"The situation reminds me of the old saying;
'Don't clear the skeletons out of the closet: they’ll
accuse you of murder."* he said. "Well, we've
Ignored that advice In this administration."
Weinberger, the president said, "went straight
to the skeletons In the closet, and there were
many."
Packard brings professional experience on two
levels to the chairmanship of the Commission on
Defense Management. He Is a former deputy
defense secretary and co-founder of HewlettPaclur'd Co., which did more than BI44 million In
business last year with the Pentagon.
He promised to conduct "a top to-bottorn
review and a tough review."
"I know as well aa any person that these
problems did not begin In your administration."
Packard told Reagan. "I had to deal with the
same problems when I was at the Pentagon 15
years ago."
Speakes said Reagan wants recommendations
from the commission by December, with an
interim report by next spring and a final report In
June.
The other commission members will be named
later.

\

�«B—Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Tuesday, June U, l*tS

Athens Easy Target For Hijackers
U n it e d P re e e In te r n a tio n a l

Denplle concern by world
airlines over lax necurliy al
Ihr Athena airport. the Greek
government loaf month or­
dered the airlines to disman­
tle their own supplemental
security system, air transport
officials say.
A survey by United Press
International showed most
international airport a have
reasonably tight security
m easures and that many
h av e stiffened th e ir r e ­
quirements for (lights to and
from the Middle East.
Hut at Athens' Helllnlkon
airport, parts of the perimeter
fence are down, allowing for

easy access by a determined
terrorist. Last March, for
example, an Arab terrorist
drove a tru c k onto the
tarmac to fire a bazooka at an
Alla Royal .Jordanian airlines
jet.
"We have been able to
operate out of Athens only
b e c a u s e a i r l i n e s h av e
s u p p le m e n te d g o v e r n ­
ment-provided security with
Ihelr own program," said
Rodney Wallis, director of
security for the International
Air Transport Association,
the world body representing
more than lOOalrlines.
"Everywhere else In the
world, either the standard

comes up to what interna­
tional airlines and govern­
ments require, or. where we
have Identified weaknesses...
we tend to have them cor­
rected pretty quickly.”
Wallis would not say that
lax security at the Athens
airport led to the hijacking,
"but It didn't provide much
of a deterrent.” he said.
The Greek government last
month told the airlines to
d ism an tle th eir secu rity
systems on June I but the
directive Is being negotiated
with association officials
Wallis said. The program
Involves sending passengers
through a second metal de­

Monday that ihelr 23-year-old son was
the hostage on TWA Flight 847 who was
slain during a refueling stop at Beirut
International Airport Saturday and
dumped on the tarmac.
The body was to la* relumed to (he
United States today.
I h e passenger who sat next lo
Strthrm on the flight. Ruth Henderson.
16. told reporters In London the hijackrrs kicked the victim In the face and
broke his ribs, bludgeoned him with the
hull of u pistol and shot him.
"He was very proud of being In Ihe
service." Slethem's father said. "We

IIOSTON |UPI| — American hostages freed
by Moslem hijackers on a TWA Jetliner
returned home relieved to be out of danger, but
somr felt guilty about leaving more than 40
fellow passengers In Ihe hands or the terrorists.
Families and friends tearfully welcomed 20
freed hostagrs with flowers and balloons at
1-ognn International Alrjiort Monday uflrrtimm
“ It was like a nightmare," said Sharon
Harries of Hnr Harbor. Maine, who was released
Saturday. "I felt very guilty that I was leaving
Ihose men on Ihe plane."
Dorothy Tresslcr, 62, of Braintree, Mass.,
said It felt "marvelous" to lie bar k In America.
"1 Just want to go home and be with my family.
I've seen enough planes, believe me." she said.
Tresslcr said Ihe freed hostages who (lew lo
Hoston made a pact not In say anything lo
reporters that might endanger ihose still held
by the terrorists
"We decide nol to say anything because the
wives whose husbands are sllll on the plane
usked us nol to. Wr don't wutil to jeopardize
Ihelr snlety," slip explained.
“They were compassionate," she said of Ihe
hijackers. "Thai's what made li so hard. They
were very good to women amt children. They
fed us."
Reunions were drluyrd more than an hour us
Ihr freed hostagrs went through U S Customs
and spoke with Fill and Fcdrrul Aviation
Administration agents,
"It was a terrible way to end a tieautlful
v a c a tio n ." said A gnes L eber. 53, of
Middletown, R.l. "I'm delighted to I k * h ack In
the U S A."
The group returned four days after ihelr
abduction on u (light from Athens to Roinr that
wus bound for Hoston
Of the 26 hostages who returned. 15 dew on
to Chicago while the others remained In New
England.
Harries said shr did nut witness the fatal
shooting of an American Nuvymun ubourd the
plane, but she hrurd Ihe gunshot (rum her seat
In ihe roach section. "Il all look place to (he
first-class compartment." she said "We could
hear it,'*
Harnes suld the passengers spent hours bent
forward In Ihelr scuts with thrtr arms over
their heads, and could not see much
"They never threatened me personally," she
said. "They went Into everyone's bags and Just
thrrw nut what they didn't want. They ihtrw It
everywhere."
"It's greul lo be home." suld William Curorts
of Milton, Muss. T was very apprehensive at
times thut I'd never gel home."
In Chicago. IS passengers from the same
hijacked Might arrived home Monday night and
were hustled off to waiting relatives. Most had
no comment.
Hut Sophie Kowulczy. asked II she would
travel to the Holy Lund again, said. "No. no
more, l'tn Jusl nol going over there anymore."
Ed Llebst was usked what was the most
trying time of the ordeal
"All of It," he said
Flight ultcndunl Judy Cox. back home In
Kansas City alter being rclcuxd from Ihe
ulrllner. suld (he lerrurists threatened several
times lo kill Ihose on board. "Everyone on
txiurd knew you had to slay calm to stay
alive," she said.
“A lot goes through your mind." said Cox,
who wus not harmed. "Wr hail a Ini nt tltnr to
think about things, loo. I thought a lot about
my family und how they must Irrl about all
this. I Just prayed that e v e r ) thing would Ik - all
tight."

WASHINGTON |UPI|
— A Navy task force
waited off Lebanon's
coast today despite
what officials say arr
dwindling prospects for
a dram atic mllllury
rescue of more Ilian -10
A m erican h o sta g e s
h e l d by M o sl e m
gunmen In Beirut.
The force Is led by
the nuclear-powered
aircraft carrier Nluillz.
which was ordered to
the eastern Mediterra­
nean as a precaution In
response to the hi­
jacking of TWA Flight
K47. Navy officials suld
Monday.
At Ihe same tltnr. a
liner-ship amphibious
force hruded by tile
h e lic o p te r c a r r i e r
Saipan with 1.500 U.8.
Marines aboard cut
short a port visit to
Gibraltar and steamed
eustward In Ihe Medi­
terranean. the officials
said. How fur east ihe
force will go was not
Immediately known.
The prospects of IJ.S.
military action lo free
Ihe remaining hostages
— (relieved to number
43. most Am erican
men — d im in ish ed
once (hr passengers
were shifted from the
le llln rr to h ideouts
somewhere in the InwIrss capital.

PU ZZLES
C ELEB R ITY CIPHER

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION I wus m • bMuly conlsst onca I not onty coma m lust.
I was tuhr ihu mouth by Miss CooQsmaiily
Ptiytus Lhltot

legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U t K A M I
N jU t » i* hereby given that I
em engaged in business &lt;1 JVM
S P a rk D r l , # . S tn fo rd .
Seminole County. Florida undor
the llctilious nemo ot G YPS Y
C AS C O M P A N Y, and thet I
inWnd lo register void nemo
with the CN rk of itw Circuit
Court. Seminole County, Florida
In accordanca wits the pro
visions ot the Flctltloua Name
Statutes. T o w n teettan t t l oe
Florida Statutes if St
C u r on EnNrpritaa. Inc
/a/ Laurton Monti. P r»»
Publish Junaa. it. i l . » i s )

“ The scattering of
the hostagrs makrs a
rescue all but Im ­
possible." said a Pen­
tagon official. "It's nol
a good situation
Two Shille Moslem
gunmen hijacked Ihe
Trans World Airlines
plane with 153 passen­
gers and crew uboard DEG H
Friday and spent ihe
F IC T IT IO U V NAM E
weekend criss-crossing
Nance II hereby 9iron teat I
ihe Mediterranean lx-- am engaged In business al I U I
a r t a r Rd , L a k t M a r y .
t we e n Hr I r u t a n d CCommote
County. Florida JVM
Algiers. Algeria. Sun­ undar (ho tlctllloui nama ol
day, II flew for a lhud V E C U R ITV A SOUND, and that
I Inland to register told nama
time to Beirut where II with
fha Clark ot fho Circuit
has been since.
Court. Sominolo County. Florida
In
accordanca
with I ha pro
Mosl of the passen­
of Itw Flctltloua Nama
gers were released over visions
Slatuloa, To wll Saction M l Of
(hr weekend hul Shiite f lor&gt;da Statute, ItU
/* ' Walter A Dorfmoltlor
mlitlta leader Nttblh
Juno IS, U S July 1, ».
Hcrrl said the remain­ I•utillOi
Ml
ing hostages were re- O S O ISO
'moved from the plane
F IC T IT IO U S n a m e
early Monday.
lea la hereby (Ivon that I
"It's u whole new amNolengaged
In pud nett ol Ml
r q u ti tlo n ." an a d ­ N W e y m e n , l o n g w o o d .
m in istratio n source Sominolo County. Florida JJ/SO
the flctltloua name of
said. "Whal may have undar
J E H R C C O C O N S T R U C T IO N ,
ticen a viable option end that I inland lo regular aaid
one day no longer may name with tha Clark ot tho
Court. Sominolo County.
Ik* true, Il sure us hell Circuit
Florida In accordanca with tha
complicates things, "
protrldana ol lha Flctltloua
A U.S. counterter­ Nama Statutes To wit VacI Ion
Florida Slalutea I M l
rorist team uf between M lla/OtJorro
W Fondron
eight und a dozen men. Publlih Juno II. I ) A July 1. *.
IMS
known us Delta Forte,
was flown from Fort D E G 10/
Hragg. N.C., Friday to N O TIC K O F IN C R IF F 'S SALE
the British base of
N O TIC E IS H E R E S Y G IV E N
Akrollrl on Cyprus, that by virtue ot that certain
ol eeocutlon liauod out of
about 150 miles west of Writ
and under the aeal of tho Circuit
Lebanon,sources said
C o u r l of O ra n g e C o u n ty .

Lake Mary Residents
Give City Officials
Piece Of Their Minds
D esp ite d re a d fu l
weather, 51 Luke Mary
residents wen! lo Lake
Mary's city hull Satur­
day and gave Mayor
R ichard Fess. City
Manager Kathy Rice,
Commissioner Harry
Terry and three developen u piece of their
minds.
"Whut's Happening
In Luke Mary Day"
g a v e r eal d e n t s a
chance lo meet the
developers who are
rapidly (hanging Ihe
luce of Lake Mary and
confront city Irudrrs
ubout growth and other
Issues. Residents were
also asked to (III out a
survey,
Mrs. Rice suld the
gathering wus a real
Hucccoa.
"I felt people were

Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

Impressed and excited
that they got a chance
to give their Input."
she said,
Mrs. Rice said the
results of Ihe survey
will he available at
Thursday's d ly com­
mission meeting The
survey asked residents
Ihelr feelings about
growlh. land use plans
and Other city Issues
Including drainage and
gurtuigc collection
Al t h o u g h n o d e ­
cisions were made at
Saturday’s gathering.
Mis Klee said the In­
put horn Ihe residents
w ill Ik - highly useful
and given much con­
sideration.
The Issue (hat con­
cerned residents the
mosl Saturday was the
city's land-use plan, a
blueprint for managing
growth In thli lawn ol
about 4.000.
Lake Mary haa three
separate plans under
cons i de r a t i on und
hopes to have one
picked out for the city
soon. A special work
session of the city
commission lu sched­
uled to meet on June
25 to discus* Ihe three
plana.
Mrs. Klee said many
p e o p le w h o d o n ' t
normally come to city
commission meetings
showed up Saturday.
"Many people said
we ought to have more
of these meetings." she
said.

27— N u r n r y 4

U — Lo st 4 Fou n d

probably need more fighters like him."
The Slrthems are a military family.
Stethem's father Is retired from the
Navy. His mother. Patricia, worked for
the Navy His older brother. Kenneth,
124. Is stationed In Norfolk, Va.. and
younger brother Patrick. 19. will enter
ihe Navy next fall.
Robert Slethem enlisted for a five-year
stint In the Navy six months after
graduating from high school and en­
joyed his work, ratnlly and friends said.
Slethem, a diver and underwater
steelworker In ihe Seabees. held ihe
rank of petly officer second class.

Navy Task Force
Waits Off Coast

More Freed Hostages
Back Home, Glad Of It

CLASSIFIED ADS

tector and a second Inspec­
831-9993
tion of hand baggage at the 322-2611
terminal
The association sent a
RATES
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
cable Monday to Greek of­
I Hint ................ $7C a Had
HOURS
ficials requesting that the
3 consecutive tints* SIC a Kss
supplemental system be kept 8:30 A.M. - 5:30 M l.
7 con**cutiv» tk*ss 52C s Rm
MONDAY Ihnt FRIDAY 10 csasscaths thwst «C ■ tins
In place.
Wallis said "at least one SATURDAY 9 •Noon
Contract Rats* Available
country" In Europe has said
3 lifts* Mu
privately It will refuse to
allow Its airlines to fly into
DEADLINES
Athens unless the program is
Noon The Day Before Publication
retained.
Sunday • Noon Friday
The Greek government de­
nied It has security problems
Monday * 11:00 A.M. Saturday
any worse than any other
International airport, point­
ing lo hijackings in the last
year In Paris and Munich.

Town Mourns Slaying Of All-American Kid'
WALDORF. Md. (IJPI# - Friends of
Navy diver Robert Dean Strthrm. who
was pistol-whipped and klllrd by
Moslrm hijackers, struggled lo un­
derstand why Ihr "All-American kid"
wus singled out by Ihe terrorists.
"So many people don't give u damn
about anyone and then this happens lo
a good kid all the way across Ihr world."
said Dale Cornell, a business teacher ul
Thom as Slone High School, where
Slethem graduated In 1980,
"He was a nice kid —an All-American
kid."
Afler an agonizing three-day wall.
Stethem's family was officially notified

71— H « l p W a n t e d

Florida upon a final ludpement
rendered In Ihe oforetaid court
on tho Sth day of March. A D
IMS In tha I carta! n cata an
lined. Ta rry Sutton d'b/a Top
Dollar Mo text Plaintiff — va—
L Inwood Stlmpeon. Defendant,
which aforeaald Writ of Etacu
Hon wat delivered fo me at
Sheriff of Seminole County.
Florida and I have levied upon
the following deter ibed property
owned by llnwaod Stlmpeon
told property being located In
Seminole County. Florida, more
p a r t i c u la r ly d e scrib e d at
One IM l Ferd Ranger Pickup
T r u c k , R e d / G r a y . ID f
l F T B R I » C t O U B * f ! l f being
tiered al Cornell'i Garage In
Winter Spvingt Florida
and tha undertignad at Shariff
ot Sominolo County. Florida,
will ot II 00 A M on Itw k d day
ol July. A D IMS. otter tor tale
and tall to me highesl bidoer
lor coin. eubiecl to ony and all
a im in g lelna. at tho Front
(Wool) Door ol tho atopa ot Itw
Sam mow County Courthguao In
Sonlord. Florida ttw above da
acribod par tonal proparty
That laid tala la baing made
Id aatlaty Itw torme of laid Writ
at taacutWn
Jury, E Path. Sharltl
SomJrwWCounty Florida
Td be advertlaod Juno II. IA IS.
July 1. with the tote an July L
IMS

DIG S*
IN V ITA TIO N TO BIO
Sealed bed* will be received m
the City Manager a office, City
Hall. San lord Florida tor
A C A D E M Y M ANOR PARK
It Chain U n k Fencing!
11 Parking Lot A M ac Pee

wgl

it Rocraottonal Equipment)
Detailed tpacificoliona art
available In ttw City Manager a
aftlca, C ity H a ll. Sanford.
Florida
Ttw tea led b-di will be re
cat rod la tha City Manogar a
office Room M l City Hall,
laniard. Florida, not later than
1 M PM Wocbwadey, July 1
IMS Tha btda will be puen.n,
opened la tor that tame data al 1
FM In ttw City Cammitalon
Chembers. Room I IF, City Hall.
Senlord Florida
Ttw City al Sanford r earn rot
ttw right to OCCOpt dr re|oct any
and oil btda m Itw boat m toreat
at *w City
Frank A Fotoan
City Manogar
C IT Y OF SA N FO R D
Dele June IS. IMS
H d F U C U K U A la
Pubiiah June i l IMS

DIG tod

Loat Ottoen Area White, mala
pit bull Family pet Block
apot an loco A toil Reword

m ms

15— S p o c ia l n o tic e s
e M A R Y KAY COSM ETICS e
SAM core and cotar Hob
CONN I I .....................„ , m m i

C h ild C a r *
B a b y s i t t i n g In m y h o m e
evenings A weekends
Certified A E rp M l ta ll
I will babysit M my home, full or
pertlma In tarda A
Grevwvtow VlRaga. M l
Mature Woman w ill babysit
your child, ony ega. Mon Frt.
till S PM Call Gina M l 111*

Defendant!

tnno

N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
purauonl lo on Order or Final
Judgmant ot kyocloauro deled
May n , IMS and Order re
scheduling torecloaure tale
dated June F. IMS and enured
In Cate No U 1M) CA Of K ot
the Circuit Court of the Itth
Ju d ic ia l C ircuit tn and lor
S e m in o le C o u n ty . F lo rid a
.h e r e in C I T Y C O N S U M E R
S E R V IC E S INC Plaintiff end
L A W R E N C E G W AR REN end
K A T H E R Y N B W AR R EN , till
.ile . Detendanla. I will tall to
ttw highest and beat bidder tor
cash al lha Watt front door of
lha Seminole County Court
house JOt N Park Avenue.
S an fo rd . Sem inole County.
F tor Ida at 11 00 A M on lha Mth
day of July. IMS ttw following
detcribed proper ft at sat forth
in laid Order or Flenl Judg
merit, to wit
Lot JO). Spring Oaks. Unit 4.
according to tha Plat thereof at
recorded in Plat Book IF, Pages
*SM ol the Public Records ol
SamInato County. F tortdb
dated at Vantord. Florida this
lath day of June. IMS
h e a d

□ A V IO N B E R R IE N
A t Clerk. Circuit Court
Seminole County Florida
By /*/ Cheryl R Franklin
Aa Deputy Clark
Pubiiah June Id. IS. IMS
D E G I0S

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A
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rn e r.
l-MAMMdtl

c a ll to ll

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rORCB
w

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I NO
F ill
Report ready tor work ot d AAA
a#FW l i t C»--------. . .

3 21 -ISM
Auto Safes People wanted tor
used car tot In Santord E ip
not nacetaary. ertll train Ren
n t a g js

__________________________

Full or port time Coll Immodl
atofy m N M or )TS&gt;
AVON E A R N IN O I W O B flll
O P EN T E R R IT O R IE S N O W III
n i-FS S S ar SDOAFf

lANKCUSTOM CI

u n ia k r

Petition available tor Santord
branch String toller evpert
-.V S and sales or tontod per
sanenty required Submit re
sums with salary require
rrwntt to Jerry Robertson.
Em pire al A m e ric a , S#S
Wet Go Springe Rd . Suite J » .
Long wood. F la 11770; or
F rid a y . Fern to e pm E O E
lasbtor Night p o e ltim . se rv ice
station eg h rt S e cu rity J B
BOO Leeward's T
C o n st
C le a n in g L e b e r
M e to 'F e m a te . Full or pt lim e ,
d ays Winter S p rin g s A re a
T O SSIF. otter S p m

an d r *-T im e m i T T iiw fu a l

TM P rt M

Call OSck ar Ylckl tor details
a ll 1147 SIS IMS.. ■** TF4-S#
Kayos at Ftortda., lac.
IQ Years Iipertowca l

Plaintiff.

NOTICE OF SALE
PURSUANT TO CHAPTERal

•Mi wat

* * * *
e Thinking at getttag a a
e Real lata to Ucaawat a
Wa otter Free TalRaa

C o u tsb s

Legal Notice

va
L A W R E N C E G W AR R EN end
IC A TH E R V N B W ARREN
hit wit#

LABOR

Cook upending Child Core
Canter needs port time cook I
day week, min 4 hrt por day
Phono HI MSI tor Interview
CRT OPERATOR
Dot* antry eaporlonca or pood
typing Permanent position
with growth potential Never a
Fee

33—Rb j I Estat*

IN T M « C IR C U IT COURT
O F TH R IIT H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F 0 R
S EM IN O LE C O UNTY.
FLO R ID A
CASE NO S* SMS CA f* K
C IT Y C O NSUM ER SERVICES.
INC .etc .

ALL T Y P IS JOBS
START WORK NOW!

55- B u » i r m *

Co co r T r a in In o ffic e

Emptaymtftt

O p p o r t u n it i e s
D C A L I R t W A N TE D : Now one
unique proven energy product
Compony paid toed program
Low prlco. Largo protlll Not a
franchise Local dial Blanca tor
training Small investment tor
inventory Serious colls only I
Call Mr Vos I MS JO) 1419
make over 110.00# a month
with m y Ntophons You can.
too Port/Fulltime
or aaa t u l
Work from homo MO pr I
Intoning enevetopet For In
tor mat ion land tlemp to K S

UJ«mi

E n ta r p rlt a t P 0

Bloomfield N

J . OJtttJ

B u s m e n Capital SM.000 to
* 1000.000 end over P O Ao&gt;
Jai l Winter Pk Fie MFM

eaeaeaaaaaeeea
B u ild o B ig g e r H u tm o st I
U se The H e r a id C le iiltte d a
C A L L TO O AV
JJ1 M i l

71—Holp Wanted
A .C . M e e k e .ic a A t e r e la e
In elelietto a S alary baaed on
evp a benefits SISdSd)

Acrylic Applicators
apply protective coaling on
cars, boeh end pianos SS to
*11 par hour Wo train For
work In Sanford area coll
l SIS #Sd FIS1
A ID IS - All Ihiltl E&gt;p A or
certlftod Good atmosphere A
benefits ID E Apply at Oe
Bary Manor SON Hwy IFW

Vrto rirts Cm r Im f I
Fail growing ergonlielton Ea
per lerxod only needed Apply
In person t am fo * pm
Automotive 1 Forts Service.

L

323-5176
ISIS French Are
D E S K C L E R K S no s "p erton es
necessary
E r e e l lent oppor
tvn lty to work w ith stato ot
tho a r t c o m p u te r s y s te m
F r ie n d ly , nee I p e rs o n a b le
A p ply In poreen D e l tone l i t ,
_
D IS P A T C H E R
111C go Arty sip w ill S tart you
to d ay I L a r g e g ro w in g co
Good raise s i B e n e fits

y t f h y

E w p to y w w rt

323-5176
M i l F r e w ck A ve

S a t 1901 M 2

i l —Monay to Land

HM I

774-1141

D ELIV ER Y *A L
O FFICE TRA IN EE
Easy I Greet spot tor H S. G rid
wonting ted learn Deliver In

P e r re m o ra A y q .. Or

Triedman’s
IMMEDIATE OPENING
E xperienced Bookkeeper
FRIF-DMAN’S jhVHLHRS the South s kwling
»nd num aggressive rriul i«wrlrr hat *n opening for
* buokkrtper F.ipcritncr prtfettfd hul noi man­
datory Individual must he friendly, outgoing And
riTicieni Frirdm«n‘t oilers its employees in excelleni compenunon ptekdge including M*|or
Medical hospitahjaoon, life insurance, paid vac­
ations, paid holidays, tick leave, rctiremcni program
*nd other benefits Apply in Person
A N F Q U A 1. O P P O R T U N l I i r E M P L O Y E R

F e d e ra l. He to A C iv il Aebe now
ovoltebto In yo u r a re a C o ll
1 S IS IAS 11ZJ tor In to l&lt; h r t
F u ll and port tim e position s now
ovoltebto M u ll bo o ve r IE
y e a r* oM to sporoSe ree taw
r e n t e q u ip m e n t. A p p ly In
parson at R e a 't . loot
I. F I

NOTICE
■ IM # 0

K N IG H T S
OF

COLUMBUS
JACKPOT *2 5 0
BIG N *2 5 0
BIG X *2 5 0
GAMES
S35-S40-S50
Thur*. 4 Fri. 7 p.m.
2 5 0 4 0AM AVE.,
SANFORD

TIM PU SHALOM

BINGO
letarge! 1 4 ) P.M.
Wedwesdiy « 4 ) F a .

US

135 • I M

2 52SO Joekgqti
1785 (Elcam Meg.

iConor Fteildeose Etodl

Delteiu. FI

S a n fo r d P l a z a
A p p l y In P e r s o n

Tnedmari’s
IMMEDIATE OPENING
E xperienced Salesperson
FRIED M A N 'S JEW ELER S, one of the fasten
growing retail chains in the Southeast is seeking
friendly and outgoing individuals with sales ability.
Experience m retail soles prefcried but not manda­
tory Friedman's offers its employees on excellent
compensation package indluding Maiot Medical
hospitalization, life insurance, paid vocations, paid
holidays, sick leave, reiurment program and other
benefits Apply in IVrson
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

KIWANISCLUB
OF C AS SC LK M Y
FVMAt RMMt 1 P N
IZ V IS A IIM
ID U S 4 JACKF0T1
looser CMUtwt Ceetec

EBB-1011

to Utrs
b D M per eqoAT TVto
NaaMeeJeeytatotonq
tbe gob Be st year ctob

oetteMo*.
a t # be

Ito* Bstbig utt

Sanford Plaza
Apply In Person

Eiening llrtuld
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT

m itn

�71 — H e lp W a n t e d

Evontng Hare Id, Sanford, FI.

KIT -N' C A R L Y L E 1by Larry Wright
71— H e lp W a n t e d

U n f u r n is h e d / R e n t
GAS A T If N D tN T
Top sa la ry . h e tp tta llia fla n . i
• * « P M vacation every *

30J N.

L aural Ay* ,

POOL ATTENDENT Appros
X hours par waak. possibility
tor mora. tncludas u w tw y li
tomaavanlng* m T in ________

i jo AM &lt; » p m _______________

S A LE S H E L P W A N T E D

OLAStCUTTER
TIAIN RE

Evparlancad In gualtfy family

U t R * r* tra in s* position! Loam
to c u t o n * In s ta ll g is t s
Becom e S tAmod craftsm an !

S E C R E T A R Y tor fln o n c #
com pany E a c o lla n t typing
M ill* and hnwwttdga ol
k a a p l n g n t ___________
Otvorotftod other duStas (*004
opportunity tor m atu r* at
tra ctive parson th at m in i
w orking w ith p u b lic C a ll

Employment

323*5176

1111 FryncS Pup

G R A P H IC A R T IS T
n D a a lg n , la y o u t A to m *
typosofting Ground floor a *
po rtunlty tor fttiib l* panon
M anagem ent in tutura I

y A s Employment

fiV d

323-5176

a n F ra n c* A rp
H A IR D R E S S E R to la s s ovar
sm a ll cltontoto In D altons
C a ll S74 4U7

Paid • sca t lam Group Intu r
an ca a v a ila b le P o lyg rap h
req uired Apply In parson at
L im a Cham p Food H a rt, tn o
F ranch A y* . Santord
H o u tap aran tt ceupto or m atu r*
ad ult C h ristia n sh altar tor

LA B O R I I I Strong ral la b ia,
g eneral la b o re r, naadad Im
m ed iately D lttarant locations
Phone and transportation a
m u tt N avar a taa Apply

IE U .T SCRVKtS

Me?]))

Lan d tcap a Labortr must tsava
tran sp ortation A good d rivin g
L ly * In Housekeeper nan tad
own room Lak s M ary A rts

m am__________ _
M t Ca
H and s D rs lts m a a
T ra m ** Sand rttu m * to M l
C o . SSOO S la t* Road a lt .
San lo rd F la M77I _____________
M A ID S E spar toncad preferred
Apply In parson M thru F . 14
AM la Noon No phono to lls !
D al Iona Inn. P t lt o n a _________
M atur • takas p o rta* w ith ra ta il
asp lo r i ad Ms fashion shop
Apply at Biggar and Battar
Fa sh io n s. 1I I E 1st S tra ti
Haw M an* SAs* spaaing Ju ly ,
U . In downtown Sanfo rd
Po sit ions * y * l labia in O rlando
A Sanford Storys H iring A tt'f
M g r., C r a rilt M gr
S a la t
porsonnot R a ta il asp halp fu l.
bu tn o tn a c C a ll I fs * SIOI

N C W V A K IC A ItlE I

T?1KHO_____________

SEM I T R A IL E R M EC H AN IC
M tnim syn 1 yaars anpartonct
w ith good w o rt raco rd M ust
hav* hand tool* St par hour
p lu s a ic a lla n l b a n a titi in
eluding compony p aid haaith
In sw an c* Apply In parson
Trans part B ro karag a.lac
t W S . Fran ck A v*
I stato F arm ars M ark at)__________
Students' B a lira a t tte u sam v t t
P a rt tlm * or fu ll tlm # B IG IS
long farm autom atic ratid u
a is n t v n , or AN Oaa l
SW ITC H B O A R D O P E R A T O R
P a r t l i m a . I P M 0P M .
Wad Sun Lig h t typ in g , tilin g
M utt b* dapandabia Apply In
parson a l Sam In * I* Fay a . In c .
JT U S Or land. Dr , Sa n ttrd
T E A C H E R S A ID E
work In
C h ild C a r* F a c ility . S day
waak | h rv par d ay C o ll
I ) f aasstor in tar .la w

Wantad Grandmottwr fyp* to
cars tor 11 month twins .and or
)'S yaar old In my horn* I or )
dayt a waak H. tarany as r*
ouirtd Plats* call n i aar)
♦3— R o o m s f o r R e n t
Christtoa Apts A Ham as
T V , kltch an. laun d ry, m aid . ISO
« k up O r I O SaO A 41) 0*18
Furm shad Room tor ran i Vaa at
10)5 G al* P i I blacks o ff J*th
SI A Sanford Av*

SANFORD Furmshad rooms by
too waak Raosonabi* ratas
Maid sarvk* Call n ) sSOr
I 1PM 111 Palmarto Av*
SANFORD Furntshad room
H am *

a

_^l*asonabl*JJr**k^H^

P a rt tin s*/ F u ll tlm * E a r n llX
o r m a r * co m m issio n s
S u p a ry iso r po sitions avoll
a b le
C a ll Mr
Moor a
I *00 a l 10*04, t i l F L I * _____
P a rt tlm * LP N naadad tor J 11
sh ift Good atm osphart EO E
Apply at Dabary M anorM N
Hw y I f t ) , O abary______________
P H O N E W O R K E R S - M o stly
tu lltlm s. but w ill consldar part
tim e 04 00 h r , plus good
b o n u s** M ala or ftm a l*
Good lum m ar work for stu
pants C a llao * sja t
■a sid a n l M a a a g a r/A a fly lfla i
D irector for Sankar Adwft Apt
Caw sm valty. R o lp a n ilb l* .
c ra a tlv * Ind ivid ual to lly * on
p ra rtsiM l and p lan ra c ra
a'rorva and ooclal octIvltM S
M utt *n |o y paopi* and b*
an o rg allc
Id aal far racant
ra tlro a l Lovaty a p t. m s*I*
and othar am am ttoa proyidad

IH MaO

Mon

Frl

Sanford

Tired at Jap M antlngf
C a ll F u tu re s
th ay ftav*
hundram of |ob openings tor
tnoso who wan t to w ork
a/* ooo
OS L I V E R Y H E L P E R S ' no i i

partonc* nacasaary Full lima
Good starting pay */l ant
G E N E R A L
O F F I C E
T R A IN E E S
G ra al starting
lop S ava ral apaningt Goad
pay O n 4)00
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 RK Moot
sh ifts opan Goad pay ocato*
an 4)oo
IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G IG an aral Construction labor
Good pay a rt a w
TR U C K D R I V E R S lo ng haul

Immodlatol Good driving r*
cord Ovar U M t i H

CEN TU RYn
K IS H R E A L E S T A T E

F u rn Apts tar Sam ar C lltta n *
I I I P tlm a tto A v*

J Cowan Ha Phona Calls
Hugh ) bdrm apartmant Mas 7
children Camplttt privacy
1100 par waak plus SIM sacurl
ty dapoalt Call Xli 1)4*
L a k t M a ry
F u rn
Apt
tor
S ln g l* w orking m a n , n a kids
a r p a t a C*4I afSar k m m o
L a r g * F u rn ish e d » '* Id r r w .
near town U t w k . S IM la c
n ) CTO*, avas

L a v t l y I bdrm E f f i c i e n t s
P a rt** I tor I parton Com plato
p riva cy kao wk Includat u til
ID O ia c dap W » * *

O n * Ugstlk Fro* Rent
on I bdrm turn apti
Alto avtilabto studio
1bdrm apartmant*

SANFORD CRT. APTS.

3213301
I Bdrm . adults, na pats. air.
quit! rasldantlal, tit ) par
month plus daposit Call
B 1 R M ________________________
I Badraam Naar Tawa 17)
waak. 11V0 tacunty daposit
m t ls .E v a s

t f — Apartm ents
Unfurnished / Rent
BAM BOO CO VE A P TS
M *E A irport Btvd
P H O N E D ) MW. m k d l
EHkctowcy tram IM S mo
Ots cwuwt N r Stwtor Cttlrana
• CO U N TR Y S E T T I N o V "
La rg * I A I Bdrm Aportnsawtt
AdwH LakatrtowFam M y Paaistos
A vaitakto Maw O p*" W aakandt

MASH RS COVE____.323 7900
Datum 1 Bdrm. Ouptos Appli
a n c a * . tc ra a n a d p a tio ,
launW y Dddm a n i DM

C A LL

m aaw____________— . m

sm i

Monday thru Friday
Saturday tram

LOCAL D R IV E R S
S tra ig h t
tru cks Goad pay Start right
aw ay a m a w
R E C E P T IO N IS T . O F F IC E
H E L P E R S . C I E R R 1. C R T
O P E R A T O R S ' ImmaOlato
C a ll its

a W NOW i

W E L D E R S C artitlad Escaltont
pay tcato t C a ll today it*

Lo o king ta r gutol tin g i# Or
catw to to font a baautitui 1
Bdrm apt In Daland LIN par
m onth plus security Senior
c l l l i a a s d l • c a u n t
C a ll S H D Ul&gt; anyttm a
N aar Downtown J bdrm I bath.

c a r p a l , a p p lia n c e s
Downstairs apt N* pat* m t
a m a . D M aacurtty m i n i ,

P A IN T E R S P P A IN T E R
M I L P I R S - I m m td la ta
a w n in g s, good startin g pay
Can today A lt a w
O R T W A L L W ith * r without
s ip trla n c *
Im m td lA lA
apaningt Good pay CM) to
P ay ATS * W _____________________

SHENANDOAH
VILLAGE
APTS.
FROM *315
^Rental Office
323-2920

|*0 p«r month

Rttoil I Qffic# 5p#ct 100 mp to
2000 M} ft Alto |fo»*ge *v*il
Ab# 373 4A03

Ilf WOO
LA K f M ARY N ke
ctcan 2
bdrm , \
u r « « n room,
CM A #Mlc I An F » m t d b*ik
fStd

121— C o n d o m i n iu m
R e n t a ls
VandilEtoed Condeminiumi

J

|J7S mo ,

i

Roods!

fuimshod oi UnlMinishod.
Carports
Private Pallet
Lusk Landscaatno Pats Children
WATER BEDS A C CEPTEDI

Call.............. 3211911

or 1)1 **00
dam* lie
Can
Airport Bird I bdrm . 1 bath
s jn m e . t it o m a ____________
t bdrm . now site non w w
cara*&lt; air. L W a aac t i l B
S Park Ava Cali taa tot moo
Spactout Apartmant* Minutes
tram Hwy tala L akafront
paot tonru*. adults, n* pats,
laundry Starting at AW a ma
CaU W AT 41 to taa_____________
I and t bdrm Alta tumtihad
attkctoncy tram SIS waak I M
dapsiii Na pats Call SD aMr
U P M a ll Pal matto _______

] bdrm I bath Mcaarad
) bdrm/1 bath now dugtoa
• IA L T O R 1

-MY

1 M rs. I
S U E s e c u rity dapaalt U R I
m onth C a U S n U W

| * f few 00
PO O L
o#li i r t c i
th ii 3 B d rm . J b#th hom#
floor % h n o ftr pin#
MfcNrn c#bin&lt;vH br##i*«b«v
to g#r#g« q u s r r y til# floor
t J f f f f QO
LO O K «t fhi» 3 B d rm
| b#m
on t#n&lt;«d c o rn e r lo* W illi to
dow fitow n. V # r y co n von ttn f
#nd VA #ppr#ift#d
O PEN S U N D A Y I

SAILPOINTE
AT
LAKE MONROE

CON D O 'S I
1 bdrm 1 bath,
c a n t r a l a ir / k a a t . ca a n try
k itc h a n l E a s y T arm st 1 t*
c h a a s a tra m M S,* t * A M l.MB
SU N LA N D
ESTA TE1 I I
g arg aaw i Names 1 N cheese
tra m A ll Shew b eautifully I
E a s y d riv e to Or lend* Only
M d.tao. t v lee a t il.te a

323-5774

* lmd?8[0«OOUS*
LAKEFR0NT
LUXURY ADULT
COMMUNITY
★ NOW LEASING ★

O U FLEX
P o sitiv e cash flow
O w ner w ill tln a n c* Uf.W O
w ith t i l 000 down
G EN EV A
( . i t * naw double
w id * ) b d rm 1 bath mobile t
a c ta s cto arad toncad Storage
sh ad
p o n y s t a ll
11) 000
T e rm s

LOWDOWH PATMERT
L o v tly J B d rm co u n try bom#
w ith y * r d #mJ big g#»d#fi
# rt#
A f f o r d Ab i t
fk#ym#f*f9 C#H 003 IM f

Offices to lent
Htaionabto and convenient

l o r q u ality c ra ttm a n s h ip and
com patltlv# p ric e s tot us p rice
out your n ew h o m e_______________

W » l f V l k t Hwy 44W in # # 7 f

1 )0 0 0 d o w n . A is u m a b t o
)
B d rm . J bath Dbl garag*
la rg * fen ced y a rd C all ! t f
111*

149— C o m m e r c i a l
P r o p e r t y / S a le
C O M M E R C IA L S P E C I A L I I T
LA KE M ART R EA LTY
BOB B A L L . J R
111 MM

D#V9»«Vt l # # ( K

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION
( v e r y Wed N it* at I S* PM
a

W h e re A n y b o d y

w

______ i taa it ) a i i i_______
D tB a ry Auto b M a r in * La le t
A cres* th* r iv e r , le e a t M il
l f l Hwy I t *1 O a b a ry te a A t**

* * LIM O U S IN E* *

C o lle c t a b le s

ifp* C#«flt#c limo O#rk bind#.
• ithpafM ion 22*00 A34 J74f

W A N TED BY C O LLEC T O R
Top prices paid tor b a se b a ll
football card s coins sta m p s
and comic books C a ll
))t
7210 army tlm#________________

liiiost Now...4.. Uw4 Mobil*
hom* Dtiior in tlm AtiE.
F a m llt o t ................ A .........- ...A d u lt s
M B ) H w y IF M ............ .......... M ) D a *

*

P U R C H A S IN G
A M O B IL E H O M E t
F r * * so n tu lta lro n on h o m o s,
p a r t s , land , llnanclng toning
A sk lo r Ron » ) )1) 1»0

L I E AUCTION

S A LE S

m \ rrto c N A y ..............g
PONTIAC P H O IN IK

C O N S IG N M E N T S W E L C O M E I

it g j Cb#v#M#

3234513

4 dr

h atch b a ck

Auto, AM F M i farMt* if mo#
Mftrranty f Rtf ll*nt condhTion

FO A f I T A T i

J1J IH 7 _____________________________

Comm#fc!»l or K#»ld#nH#l
A u ctto n i I Appr«»t#l»
0*11 * Auction 22J U20

lM l
Uha

ft# * N # | * y e f y t h in g
4)00
m llf i
A sk in g \ \ 9 \* C a ll
331 74 U
________ _______ _____

too Uatord Av*

FREE
C R E O IT C H EC K B Y
P H O N E ! E l l y q u a lify in g
C a l l A a s k lo t M r O r r
*04 U l 11)4

A U TO

WE FINANCE

AUCTION EVERY FB I NIGHT

R E P O I R E P O I ) bdrm ) b a th
m o b iI* homos t i t * mo Som e
a isu m a b to C a ll A ask lor M r
O r ' * 0 . U l 11)1

D IS C O U N T

t t

213— A u c t io n s

C a ll

to M u tta a f

4

c y i , p i, A M FM

f:Nira r»ic#
dwn

1400

JO mo* to p a y 4 f f d*00

215— B o a t s a n d

W OW I ) bdrm
1 bath n aw
d o u b le w id .
m a s o n it e
s h in g le d ro o t, t l r i p l a c a .
t i t ooo C a ll A ask tor Mr O rr
U l 1 IM

A c c e s s o r ie s

239— M o t o r c y c l e s
and B ik e s

I* A Op»&lt;« Fiitorm#* it h p
AA artirrv g tlv« rtii# d tra ito r,
and • t t r a i IJVXS C a ll Aftor 4

m

73ii________________________
i r Flaatwlf^ with fraitar AS
Morta powar Johnwo tlUO
Cali i i f s m

U S E D ! M obile Horn** s ta rlin g
at tlto o C a ll A ask tor M r
O r r so* U l 111*

STO PI

'll Iwitrki Ilf Adult owned and
FTT«&lt;rttain#d G f t a t te n d * v a ry

i l#an Haft many #Ri r a f t N#ad
monay now, muff Mill |f3f. or
b#tf O fto r 333 *4al or 123 f72I

217— G a r a g e S a le s

/ F u rn itu r e

241 — R e c r e a t i o n a l
in

gwaraataad............ ........ MB T IN

No Q u a lify in g Naw 1 bdrm )
baits on ) a c r e s Morses ok
Ow ner fin a n c in g p rim * area
) f t , POO )4 * I I I )
_
Von tor 0 N ic e ) bedroom home
w ith liv in g room , dining room,
panatod fa m ily ream laundry
room , w o rksh o p C a ll lor in
fo rm atio n I D 1100 or 1)1 a t )t
I D *00 or b a il otter

PH0RE 3231443

Longwood Frolatitonal Office
Spec* located 414 R l a wo
tOO sq ft Modern aHractlva
bunding Call Malta Corp,
Orlando Xtt IS* Oku

i n aoti

........ .

• • « « « H#Mt # « • e • #

F a r m a r* d e ta ils

lih e i Fn U k

211 — A n t iq u e s /

A p p lia n c e s F a r S al* a ll
a ic a lla a t can d ilw n A fully

C A L L A N Y T IM E
realto r

HWV

a C an B u y o r S e ll! *

». »m fMts min burros

H I — A p p lia n c e s
O T H E R H O M E ). L O T I.
A C R E A G E IN V E S T M E N T
PRO PERTY

*11 W n t h it r a a t
Santoed F l i m t

NEW HOME

1 2 /— O fficer R e n t a l s

m

H a u l* tor s a l* by awnar Naadt
w ork H aaso n a b iy priced In
Santard C a ll 1)1 IM .

L o v tiy 1 B d rm
1 b#tb wifti
Qr##t room , ftr#pl#&lt;9 »#f In
h it e b t n . d in in g ro o m .
to##ul»fui «ood »d lot I f f fOO

CALL.........322-1051

W l N Mapto. Sentord

la a a H W T I t n

L I S T W IT H U ) l

LONOUfOOO- J b d rm . 1 bath
Naw roof L a w down p aym en t
Owner financing t a f .t o c
m m &gt; _____________________________

»

• DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION ★

tit* t i l t

E X C E L L E N T B U T I | b d rm .
lanced G re e t L a c a lla a l W alk
to a ll k in d s *1 Ih a a a sn fl Un
be I we a k l* te rm s Fat 14*

\ to i PM

REA LTO R

F*OOdl#

Gregary Mabito Hamas Ml it**

( 3 0 5 ) 321 0041
125— F o r L e a s e

Toy

P o u lt r y

A D U LT PARK

KISH REAL ESTATE
IMO 000 00
l*0Q L I B d fm , | b # ih, o ffk *
ix&gt;o4
room,
on ) B i t t ♦ lot

AKC

2 0 3 — L iv e s t o c k a n d

In c lu d e s w a te r
g a rb a g e
p ic k up y a r d m a in !
Im
m a d la lt occupancy

R e n t a ls

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
sn m i , tit i t __ ___m u ll
a aCOUCMBCHAIR* a
B EtT O FFER
_____________ u a t t it ____________
Dining Room '. M r , and fhalrs
Ala c h a in , hiking IIBO
Call D l mt__________________
Moving ilk* new iota earth
ton*, chair, desk, tables.
■
amps color T V . double bad.
) bikes. Call 1)1 &gt;«•
Aacandtlianad ApeHancai
from SAT WARRANTY
B A R N ETTS
CAttELBERRY
u» i i i ) .............. ............ iia t * D
a RENT TO O W N .
C o lo r T V s . ito ra o t w ash ers,
d ry e r s refrig e rato r tra a ia rs .
t u r n lf u r * . vKkaaracordart
S p e cia l tat weak i rant t ) 00
A lt o r n a t lv * TV B Ape1 Rantals
la y t e s She aping Center

U l t*M

No q u alifyin g N aw 1 B d rm
1
b ath , g a ra g *
v s WO down
l l ' s X )0 y a a r m o rtg a g e
M ora rig h t in C a ll «** «H0
altar s p m

M ovin g S al* Thur F r l . I A M
B ik a t
fu rn itu re , o ld g tkkk
w a r* ladtot la rg * t i l * la t h
ions lots ol good i l u t l l I I !
^ ^ a t K r jik t o ^ D r lv ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

219— W a n te d to B u y
Baby. Baas. Slrallars. Clothes,
Playpani, It t . Paperback
Reek*. m « U F ■m *aaa
Need Crib* Plarpano. Baby

V e h ic le s / C a m p e r s
F O R S A L E I T R V P a r k M odal
tra ile r F in * co n d itio n , fu lly
tu rn lsh ad H e a l/ A ir . s cre e n
room , patio f u r n i t u r e ,
carp eted slo ra g * shad a ll
included M
*ttm P r i n t l

plat only jCall Ml
________
Ilf* lien*r » c-’l ii.nl*in#&lt;J
slide In cam per A / C . ) w e y
r e l r l * e 'a to r
floor f u r n a c e ,
holding lank, Ilk * n e w U.OOO
C a ll 1)1 )M1

f u r n l t u t * . c lo th in g
G oad
W o t A fter F P M
Ml tfP
Payin g CA SH for
A lu m in u m , C an t Copper
B r a t s . Lead Newspaper
G la s s . Gold S ilv a r
Kokom o Tool, * i» W 1st

243— J u n k C a r s

2 2 1— G ood T h i n g *
to E a t

ANY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
Beughl Fram ,11 IN B mere
Call m i i j g ....................JD 41 I1
TO P Oollar Paid tor Ju n k A
Used cart.trucks A heavy

LIVE H U E CRABS
in mo

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JUNK CARSANDTRUCK1
CESAUTO FARTS m Ital

I ) 00 Sal t I 111 I too

equipm ent t n sago

CONSULT OUR

1
I I(1I ITOU N UO

B H

V

TQ
ro I ROW

A

J

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

IN
R(i (S1IK
R RIAL

*0*0

4fl W Lak. Mary Bawtovard
Sulla 4. D M

m onth

mad.ataociupanc t

HI

Im

Otlic* far rant IS to 100 tq ft
availabl* Racaptionitl avail
ab l *
Lak* M a r y a r a *
W A D I IW

WOO tq ft ottice spec* a .a 1
abi*. second floor at ad
mlnltftallv* buitd-ng Sanford
Airport E4 M par tq It In
cludaa air. twal, |*nitorial and
parkin* Cali Sanford Airport
Authority tor dala.lt m Iff!

R IK E W 0 0 0 AIMS AfTS.
UiRitod rinse Ontj
Vsofl First Months Rant
IMO Ridgawood Art
Sanford Fla

SANFORD I ONE D COMMER
ClALt Pretty tlttl* ham* with
grawing garrtan naal A ctoan.
paddto fans, aal in kltchan
iupar P rkaa t: Lit mm

W h it #

t &gt; » c # il 322 12H A fla r 4 PM
d u rin g * * « i
any hm i
O tfilH V h ____________________ __

LIF ET IM E RENTS

322-7443

ISHI1U.M1IWSIS SSpiWSSStlS

Tm

FOE RENTi t Bdrm apart
mart!, turnlshad U00 00 par
month
) l) 0041

321 0 75 9 E v e

R*

S T O R E , Realto rs t ll- tF W

H o m e s / S a le

Wo H av* a L im ite d N u m b er t t
Rape's ter a s L a w * * IIM O e w n l

NATIONAL AUTO SALES

mGrtthl Old H it #11 theft

Lie Real Estate Brakar

Bad Credit7
NoCreAt?
Wt FINANCE

1120 S S jn f o t d ...........3 2 1 4 0 7 5

ducadl t it TOO R E A L T Y

1 5 7 - M o b il e

Wall Si. Company .......... Mt tau

117— C o m m e r c i a l

ABiUff K# nn# lt

P.0 B f» m . s n n »
Ot»*#n Ft# J27M

P r ic e

2 3 1 -C a rs

199— P e ts &amp; S u p p l i e s

Vanda Iwaad Candamlmumt 1
bdrm . 1 bath A ll a p p lian ces,

BATEMAN REALTY

1*44 VanSard Av*

L IV IN G
l u u T i r m s to Fit

F u r n is h e d / R e n t

141 — H o m e s F o r S a le

I'B d r m I B a th tira p ia c * n a *
kltchan. b a t " A root, fenced
b ack
W a s ) ) * * 0 0 n ow
l i t *00 B u r * r p a y s closing

S IN G L E S T O R Y

97— A p a rtm e n ts

la m t h 1) color te le v isio n O n g
In al pries ever HOC B a la n c e
due t)aa 00 cash or i * k * ov* r
paym ents 11) m onth S till in
w a rra n ty
NO M O N E Y
DOWN Free hom e t r ia l no
obligation Can M l D O . d a .
Or night

Bee c h i l d . Roatty. R E A L T O R )
o o a a i f t n i ................. Ope* t Pays!

w ash er d ry * '

141— H o m e s F o r S o le

Must salt 1 q u on tet s ty le ttoel
buildings B r a n d n * w never
rractad O n * is ad l t d
W ill
salt tor b a la n ce ow ed C a ll
Adam ' I *o # ) l r_au &lt; ___
Sub* equipm ent C o m p lato sat
ol U S D iv e r 's e q u ip m en t
L ik t new
A C . octopus a rt

Call Ut U)0

. e CO LO B T E L E V I S I O N * •

N EW SM YRN A B EA C H
D r a s tic a lly raducad 1 b d rm ]
b ath O cean Front fu rn ish e d
Condo twoodow n

I t mt g#r#g# for r * n l 5* m l no I#

bdrm , I b#ih
i w rm________

R a d io / S t e r e o

a a c r e s , p e rtly cleared, w e to * A
e le c tric
tl) 000 By o w n e r
I D MW

Mini WifohokiMi
LM A Up
IH H N

pool priuatog-y C am i

r m attar l PM
THE FLORIDA HOTEL
000Oak Avanu*
111 txw

143— T e l e v i s i o n /

C o -O p / S a le

113— S t o r a g e R e n t a l s

REFOSSISSEO

27TH S T t t n FURNITURE
it* w ink tt— ......
n * mm

none dwn U l&gt; mo S a c re s U 0
•t
p a r e d rd
Ir o n t a g * .
h o m e*'**!n o mobiles I ) I ) 0CH0

W.iiac* Croat Ratify

INI B Maltonvllto } Bdrm . I
bath air appliances. D l l par
month plus D l l tacunty da
posit Call U l Ma)

M IN I B I K E
Good condition
A s k in g t l ) 0
C a ll t l * SWk_______________________

tor Kaaaiarot.............. m t s t f

155— C o n d o m i n iu m s

Sanford waal ot I /a. ) bdrm 1
both, cantral air hoot tonetd
rard.db! garag*. laka accats
U K a mo First, last, sacurl
ty P I atat
_____________
SUNLAMO ESTATES ) Bdrm
1 bath carpot. kids ok D U
par month ♦ tacunty Avail
*b*a 4)1 Can s a a m a ___ ___
1 Bdrm I bath tonead salt par
month , Sal) tocurlty daposit
rtfartneat raqulrad Call
EM MW_________________________
) Bdrm, Its bath Escaltont
rendition MOO par month plus
ICC sacurlty daposit Call
1?J sailor D l Uta

223— M i s c e l l a n e o u s

Usad Wither i P a r t * a S e rv ic e

L o t s / S a le

R E A L T O R - _______________ W A S H

Art#

/ F u rn it u r e

153— A c r e a g e -

MIDDEN LAKE I bdrm . 1
bath kids o k . no pat* sat)
par month Call Sta atIt
a a a IN DELTONA a a a
a a HOMES FOR RENT a a
a a If* l o t a a________
Lakt Mary ] Bdrm 1 bath
Hugh th a d td le t. q u it!
n* ghdorhood Good schools

HI

111— A p p l i a n c e s

P r o p e r ty / S a le

MOON E Y A P P L I A N C E S

son__________________

T r ip le x / R en t
E sp ar lane* p rtto rrad . but w ill
tra in E .c t lit n t b a n a titi w ith
c a m p a t a t l y * pa y
A p p ly
L o w * i I r u t k P l a n t , It o i
A lia r on C lr Sanford A irp o rt
In d u strial Park

151— I n v e s t m e n t

C A S S E L B E R R Y 1 a c t* tonad
P R I U ) n o to M allcyo u rtk l
R E A L T O R _________________ P ) tag)

a Bedroom horn* 1*00 00 par
month ................
n I 00. i
DELTONA 1 bdrm* I bam ACM
mo . plus lacurlty C*H ))*

105— D u p l e x -

NEEDED
Chuluota. O «i*do a rt* M usi b*
b o n d ab l*. h as* dapandabia
tranap ortation. Kara Nlaphon*
and b* rasponsibla To work
batwaan I OC PM A * 04 PM
F o r m a rt in fo , c a ll Tony.
m M U . batwaan If 00 AM
and a 00 P M ________
N U R S E 'S A ID Ilt All khltts
F ip arian ca d or cartltlad p r*
tarrad Apply In parson o l
La k a n a w Nursing Can tar. 010
E 2n d SI , S a n fo rd _____________
P a rt-T in s* Catar t ag M at* R *
sp o n slb l* a d u lts m ala or
h f f la t Soma food pra p a rt
Han and osruica Varlad days
and tvantng hours, including
w aaktnd s
C a ll ) ] } g st)
B a t h 's Ca tarlag, far *p

CENTURY 11
KISH R EA L ESTATE

T ltllS ASSEMBLERS

m

Tuesday Jung »g, I f f s - J B

103— H o u s e s

141 — Homes F o r S«le
A*FO RDABLII Can yau ran*

STENSTROM

To List Your Business-

REALTYaREALTOR

Dial 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

Sa.tlofd'i SaIos LooEot
W l LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY
AFFORDABLE!
I baaultlvl
hamatii* an Waktva River all
ctoarad and cawsptoto with
seawall, stall, gad taplic
Lukin it all altars! tat.Ma

REMOOCLINC SPECIALIST
The Whole Ball Ot Wai
ft L LINR CONST.

l ' COO’ II yau hav* reasonable

credit, that's all you -wad
Owner financing will gat you
into this lovaty 1 bdrm i
bath */ family rm . cant
haat 4 air neat to Pirwcratt
school m liar___
_____
ATTINTkON
HOMO OUTRRLI
Buy direct and sav* DODO a
bdrm , ) bath, large great
roam and larg* living roam
Completely remodeled and
radacaratod msM* and out
Centrally igeared clew to
school shopping at* NIC*
yard and many other artras
,1 . agg

CALL FOR APP-T1
w ia a a d a r m m i

RACK ON MARKET
P r »«#* rig h t

M /.000

It

you

naad a large ham* this t* It 4
Bdrm ) bam mother in law
apt Hugh toncad corner lot.
finest quality many a atrail It
Call to saa

CALL BART
REAL ESTATE
r e a l t o r ______________

ro ta a a
• T OWNER 1 M rm . I b*NL
Natinarsca or ttaum* StoX 1st
mor hgag* Owner will tiokd Rid
at II X with MX dawn baa. too
Call a i law
__ _________
BT OWNER a kdrm/1 bafts,
scraanad parch, many astraa
■U aaaumabto mtg U l W0

nsutl

___________________

COO R U T WIDE RiALTY
Rag. R E, B ra tw ..........m « D 0
d is t k e s s SALE
Investors U « nagofiabto )
B d rm . 1 b am C o u n try Clu b
a re a Call P a la u

Electrical

Additions A
Remodeling

COME IE E THIS OMSI
)
kdras IV* bath Kama with
hug* back yard, utility shad
cantral atr/baal U).*M
COUNTRY SIDE I 1 bdrm t
balk waOlla bam* an ) acres.
Iak.lt anf. kauklr wsa*. parch,
cantral alr/baat u a .000
P IE F E C T l 1 bdrm l&gt;, balk
kanst with paddle f a a l,
cantral air 'heat, eak cablnals.
m a r. I u f .W

TER EIFICI
I bdrm l balk
bam* an larg* carnar tot.
I * i t* h llcb ta. flraplac*.
cantral aw/beef. STL WO
WILL BUILD TO SUIT! YOUR
LOT OR OURSI EXCLUSIVE
A O EN T F O R W IN SO N O
DEV COBP.. A CENTRAL
FLORIDA L EA O ER I MORE
HOME FOR LESS MONBVI
CALL TOOATI
aO IN IV A O SC EO LA RO a
IO H IO FOR m o b u I V
I Aar* C*entry tracts
Watt head an pasrad Rd
M X Daw* lOVra. a t l lX I
Fram II I. tool
It yau *'*

tar • trK

Stoattram Realty to
tor ya* Call La# Albngbf
today *1 ID saw Svawtaga
MS MW

CALL ANY TIM E

322-2420
Ital PARR A V I.-.
W t Lk M ary I M

Lk Mary

322 7029
^ ^ ^ ^ n an cIn ^ voltokA ^ ^ ^

Appliance Repair
JU Id fu A p p i s j o t a S d iY K *

&gt;4hr SarvK* N« E.tra Cftorg#
^ U jN ^ a ^ k M B J iM L IfM d ^ ^

Carpentry
A ORE AT O IFT I HavsHtr
Kltchan R * mad* tod1 Ail types at
Carpentry . R ****** BN Prkas
E »parteat ad
Rakaraaca*
V a ry RgRaBSa............
A ll type* a t

m w if X H

c a r pan try

A '*

modal mg I I yrg a.p
Richard Graaa Ml w n

Cali

Cleaning Service
a COMPETENT CLEANING t
a SERVIC E a
Availabl* to day. Sal Only
IF#

Sad)

Carpal Cleaning Ltvlag.
Iearn A Hall Wt k*
Sato A Oaar, Md. SPM di
MAIM- Te -Orfttf
Citiftlifteii it M4t Te GedlMitl
Call Hit balpartl
I Very Ke Law Ratos
CAU. NOVI 33VOCM

dew*, cabinet*, ti w. ato

Elocfrlcai
Aayfksag Electrical Sweattffl
(•NasaSt*. ..94 Hr. larvH* Cam
Tata's EtotSrtc Earvtoa » g l l
CONTEMPORARY ELECTRIC
Camples* Electrical Servwcet
TV A T a e p b o rw t
U l MM

D A S Etotfnc
11)40)0
Naw A ramodaling addiHont.
tang, sacurlty lights. Umars
plus all atoc taryicat Quality
Sarvlca L leantod A Banded

Fence
IN STALL. SELL. .A...EEPAIR
Cypress
Ckato Uafe... Weed
Pane* m if S I
***************
Build a Biggar Business I
Uta Th* Har aid Ctoaaittodg
CALL TO O A Y
I D M il
**************

Health 4 Beauty
TOW ER'S B EAU TY SALON
FO R M ER LY Harr ran. Beauty
Nook S ite l,|St m i l , )

Lawn Sarvlca

P la s t e r in g

ACE LA W N IIBV IC B
Matotonaacg Sodding Pruning
Cleaning Tkalchtog Fart lining
Fra* Estlmatas
H I M il

• ALL Fhawtaf Ptaatartoga
Rapaw. Slues*. Hard Caat.
S'rwvl.tod Erick D i d**)

B E A T TH E HE ATI
&gt;,
Call Chrtstian B in
J
a rv C a m g ld ti Lawn Catt
N . f l e Bliwinlbls N ltts
_ V E ^ s
323 4401

^ ^ a d d ^ e to B a ^ a ^ to ^ ^
Rapau a Ragtoca • Hantadaf
a Free Itltmefa* a 111 k—a a

Lawn Maintenance
Car osr aping Bush Hog Mowing
MB IBM
LAWNS MOWtDft TIIM M E D
Spring Yard Clean apt m IM )
QeaMl laea Cart
At Attardabto Frko* U t4 * f)

Masonry

Home improvement

B EAL Cawcrato 1Man Quality
Operation Patios Driveways
Days U l TU). Evas W IU I

CeMtorto Bofkitop A MbRn J bL b
tog J*B Taa Sasall
111 Bartow Law*. Saatard
n id d a
THOAAAS A THOMAS Haas*
rapakr. cfasmag. tow* tar*
Call 1)1 said

OUR RATES AEE LOWER
lehovlaw Nursing Center
F t, E. Sacawd W . Sawtord
sugrtf

Heme Rtpelri
C A R P EN TER
Rgpelri and
ramodaling N* foB toa small
Cali m taws
Mamiananc* of *11 types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
and atoeu k m dBM

Lendcleerlng
G EN E V A LAMOCLEABIMG
Lot Landstoormg
Fill dirt
Tapaall Pend* Draw dtkhat
Vto Preparation Can lag W »
THO R N E LANDCLEAEINO
f i l l Di RT a CLAY *
SHALE A HAULING
D) UU

Nursing Care

Painting
A Way T* Sargl Bast Wayh
pkUKSag. a mart R*f. Var y
RaMaBto 11)4,11 I H
F tor Ida MaM 4 Msfdaw
Spactalttll
U r 'S C*P
Fra* (g f
tgndad
Inaurad
W C T R IB B V
W R I)
Haw** Pawttog A Walt Repair
Y*« b&lt;ry as*far laII
W* kwapty toBar T t U V I to)
m in i
Re,****tola Ma* and helper will
paint f * « Hom* *r Butinas*
**C Give yaur prablgmg to ut
WE CARE Quality work. M
rrs asp U ) MS) L k cent

*

Plumbing

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaner*
Sawing Machine Repair* all
makes to yrg a .per tone, in
fiomai Retired HI a m

Sprinklers/Irrigation
ABOUT TIME IRRIGATION
New Inglalletlan* .... Fra* Rgf
C apart Repairs of Complete
Sprinkler I t itomt ......THnorg
Pumps
Etc
aasias*

Tile
A a m ti^ a ra m lM N ^ a to ^ A
ingfalldtlan Bam. Hear*,
r amodi ling repairs Lott of
s lia k . daslgni. gaftarng.
grautl, galling m a la ria l,,
clgangr*. cgmtnl, magflc,
minMl inilgliafiang Shaw
roam. Ml E ISfh S I . San tor d
Jonn Parker Til* Contractor
m iD L a lN fU f

UaHwsaaa TH* C aram k. Vinyl

Asbestos tic

in s ta lle d a

P**r*d l a p . r al . Ik
agtimato* SUA14I

r*

Fro*

Tree Service
aa T ar^ ^

Pruning

aM AJSar
4F M
ECHOLS TREE SER V ICE
Fra* EiHwsatotl Law Ft teas I
L k la* Slump Orladtag Teal
»&gt; rn id e ytr nit*
Let toe PrsNisItaaN da W
JOHN A L L I NS LAWN 4 T R E E
Dead baa rama.ai L k A Via
Fiat aal U l SUB

�V

* .

4B — Evontng

B L O N D IE

Mara Id. San toed, FI.

T u e sd ay, Juna U . 1WS

b y C h ic Y o u n g

I D *e rr* a. SOC*c e u ^"J
m c o

B EETLE

B A IL E Y

TH E BO RN

LO SER

A R C H IE
U M -O M / H f &lt;?e

v.

COAAES THAT
C O N C E fT E P KIP WITH
THE B IG B O C K S .'

W iLJ I

Sis
EEK

&amp; M EEK

a e je v c

r r ■» r &lt;

Urinary Block Causes
Pain; See A Urologist

DEAR DR. GOTT — Some­
times It hurts very much when I
urinate. It Is especially true In
the morning I am a 36-year-old
man I don’t think It ts possible
for me to have VD What could It
be?
DEAR READER - You may be
suffering from an obstruction In
the urinary outflow tract. This
b y M o rt W a l k e r
can be physiological (from
spasm) or It can result from an
THE M fM N E E P T H E S E
WO«K AMP STUPV. BEETLE/
actual anatomical problem, like
TRY TO B E 5OME0OPV E l S E !
iMSPlRATlOHAL t a l k s
an adhesion or enlargement
SET OUT OP MV SIGHT/
Some men have difficulty emp­
tying a distended bladder: the
act of urination can be painful If
a full bladder causes disruption
of the normal voiding reflexes.
Some men have venereal disease
and are not aware of It: others
may have a low-grade urinary
Infection, especially In the pro­
state gland, and not know It.
Your best bel Is to see a
urologist. After appropriate
b y A rt S a n s o m
evaluation, he will very likely be
23 able lo solve your problem.
^ . ..T H A T * R fc H T , IT S *Z
W E ' U T E m » T TW5 P E Q H S A M
DEAR DR. GOTT - I am 75
and don’t seem to have good
TUB SWIM6UTCC m R ET O T A &lt; E H O U TC WASHIUETCW
control over my kidneys now. I
often wet myself. I have had a
Pap test and a sugar test, and
both showed nothing
DEAR READER — As women
grow older, particularly If they
have had babies, anatomical
changes are Inevitable In their
reproductive tracts. One of these
changes Is a loss of angle of (he
un-thra (urinary conduit) as It
leaves the bladder. The condi­
by Bob M o n ta n a
tion Is called a cystocele. Sur­
gery Is sometimes necessary lo
"tack" (he bladder up and re­
establish the necessary angle for
cont r ol . Ho we v e r , pelvicstrengthening exercises art
often useful In ullevlatlng (he
problem. Your gynecologist will
be able to train you In these
simple exercises, and they might
enhance your control lo the
point where you could become
continent. Your difficulty Is
probably not In your kidneys: II
Is undoubtedly In Ihe nren be­
tween Ihe bladder and vagina —
b y H o w ie S c h n e id e r
h o m e t e r r i t o r y f or a
gyn e c o lo g is t.

DEAR I)H. GOTT - I went to
the doctor for my annual
checkup. He found a polyp In my
rectum and wants In take It out.
I’m afraid that he might find

something and I don't want him
to do It. What do you think?
DEAR READER — Get tt out.
Polyps are typically benign more suited to Peter Pan than to
growths, but they can enlarge polvps. No sane person asks for
and bleed. Some polyps are trouble, but If difficulty arises,
exceedingly dangerous because the adult deals with It realis­
they are pre-malignant: In time, tically. The chances arc good
they can degenerate Into cancer.
that your polyp Is benign.
If you believe that you can
Send your questions to D r.
wish away something upleasant
Got
I at P.O. Dox 91428. Cleve­
by Ignoring It. you are engaging
In a form of magical thinking land. Ohio 44101.
ACROSS
1 You (Fr.)
S Ptodga*
9 Cofsbtno
12 Rivar in franc*
13 Roman highway
14 Salutation
15 Sou*
16 Mamo
16 6rok* broad

Formal tpooch
Frowry
Ragard
Avangt
Nabratka
county
7 Antiprohibition
ittS
8 Mr*. In Madrid

Answer to Proviout Pu«l#

labbr-J
9 Sarvod

19 S o n gt « f pr*-|a

10 Untold
11 Rafutar
17 Mak* lac*
19 Otf* oppoana
23 Comadian
22 Phraaa ot undorMartin
atandmg (2
24 Savara
wda)
25 Pnait'l mantl#
23
Weight ot India
28 Barman articl*
26 Qanut of olivt
29 Oraftad. in
trooa
heraldry
30 Warning d*v«* 27 Without
rotiatanco
32 Rocky
Mountain park 31 Ponder
34 Shoahonaani
38 Rivor in Walaa
and England
41 6*v*'*g*t
42 Soviat nvar
43 Uncanny
45 Dot ot land
47 Mountain pool
46 Chang*
potition
50 Poat amgar
McKuan
51 Troatiaa
53 Scofl
54 Noun audit
55 Actor Janmnga
56 Electric fiah
57 Royal Scottiah
Academy
(abbr)
58 facil*
59 Author Hart*

20 Icalandic giant
21 laiandaoMha
Bahama*

44 Outmatl
abbrsviation
46 Compatt point

33 Famai* taint
(•W*|

35 Mor* sobbing
36 Land dignity to
37 Laait happy
38 Dawiar
39 Oat"**
40 Mittskst

48 Papa * wilt
49 Amancan
patriot
52 Oolfmg aid
53 Earth daity

10 11

1
i

1?

I 10

&gt;*

11

tt

111
1&gt;4

so

at

Jl

147
to

14&gt;

144

DOWN
1 Sub|#ct to
balloting

M

1%t
( C ) l t l t b , N tA I ik

WIN AT BRIDGE
b y H a rg re a v e s A S e lle r s
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M R - t J R E E P Y f t c T U IP E
TO TA B LE M A N N ER S

BUGS BUNNY

Hy James Jacoby
Declarer knew his percent­
ages. First he won Ihe spade ace.
After drawing trumps with the
hrnrt are and king, hr led a club
back to his king. West look the
ace and quern and played a
third club, trumped by South
Next Soulh played a spade lo
dummy's jack, which lost to (he
queen. When Ihe diamond fi­
nesse also failed, so did the
contract.
Soulh was unlucky In that
Hirer out of three key cards were
badly plarrd. but making the
right assumptions would have
led lo a favorable result.
First, he should assume that
West's nine of spades lead de­
nies possession of the spade
q ue e n. Ac c or di ngl y, after
cashing the ace and king of
trumps, he should play the

spade king, which eliminates the
second spade from West's hand.
Now tt Is time to lead clubs. If
East plays low. Soulh should put
In the l() If East puls up the
Jack. South should cover with
the king In any event. South
should leave West on lead and
when West plays Ihe third club.
South should simply discard a
third low spade from his hand
With no more spades to play.
West must either lead away from
the king of dlumonds or give
declarer a slufl and a ruff by
playing still anothrrrlub.
I w on't criticize West for
nvercalllng two clubs; I. too. like
lo get Into the bidding early at a
low level. However, without that
overcall It Is unlikely (hat a wise
declarer could make all the right
assumptions to help him play
Ihe hand.

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Opening lead 4'J

HOROSCOPE
FRA N K A N D ER N ES T

by Bob T h a v es

X

HARDWARE

&amp;uY

AN YTH I

B

ut

IT

dWlBS THEM SUCH
A

T M P IL L

W HEN

X W AU K I N .
T h Kv c ^

fr* l^

b y J im O a v ls

G A R F IE L D

What The Day
Will Bring...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
JUNK 10. I0SS
It will be lo your benefll In the
coming year to be as actively
Involved as possible with clubs
or social organizations. Fresh
oppor t uni t i e s will present
themselves through the new
people you'll be meeting
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 201 Try
to fieer behind the scenes loday
because there will be goings-on
.hat could benefit you finan­
cially. You'll recognize your
opportunities. Major changes are
ahead for Gemini In the coming
year. Send for your Astro-Graph
predictions today. Mall $1 to
Astro-Graph. Uox 489. Radio
City Station. New York. NY
10019. Be sure lo state your
zodiac sign.
CANCER (Juno 2 1-July 221
Even those who alrrady like you
will see more to admire tn you
loday. This Is because your
A N N IE
ham

! try

ro TAhf H £
FOR A A lt*.
NUY3U?/

t

1

finest qualities will be very
pronounced.
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) The
very things that others have to
stuggle for today will come to
you with relative ease. Your
Instincts will place you In the
right spot at the right time.
VIROO (Aug 23 Sept. 22) You
have the knack for disseminat­
ing the good Ideas of others
today. You'll pick up valuable
Inform ation from divergent
sources and put It to a specific
use.
LIB R A (Sept 23-Oct. 23)
Assume a more commanding
role in an enterprise where you
have a vested tntrrest. It needs
your touch and the momentum
you can generate.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 Nov. 221
Today you may receive long­
distance news that will please
you considerably It will be from
a person with whom you once
had close ties.
SAOITTARIU8 (Nov. 23 Dec.
21) Additional compensation Is
In the offing for som ething

you've done for another, tnc
recipient ts cuger to give you
vour Just dues.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 Jun.
19) This Is one n( those lucky
duys. Right at the lop of the list
will be h a p p e n in g s In Hie
romance department.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
Utilize at least a portion of your
time today by doing something
that you deem to be productive
but. In rrullty. is actually more
fun that work.
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
The cycle will stun changing us
of loday and soon you will be
popular with people you thought
didn't like you He nice lo
everyone.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
People you love and trust could
t»r bearers of material fortune for
you today. They'll want lo add to
your resources.
TAURUS (April 20 May 20|
It's likely that you'll be In the
forefront today. You'll lead not
necessarily by choice, but by
approval.
b y Loonard Starr

owe as
PO ud-Y stK U P M T
HAVE TKlCP r TM C

outA n o u n * !

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E x p lo s io n

Htrild PSoto*by Tommy Vmctnl

A day-old truck owned by Florida Extrusion, Sanford, was severly damaged in the explosion and fire
that followed the accident.

A Sanford fireman extinguishes gasoline-fed flames In a Sanford's woman's car after its brakes failed
and slammed Into gas pumps.

Brakes Fail, Woman Drives Car Into Gas Pumps
B y Susan Loden
H erald Staff W rite r
A 43-year-old Sanford woman whose car slammed Into
gas pumps at the Gulf service station at on U.S.
Highway 17-92 and First Street In Sanford this morning
set off an explosion that sent one man to the hospital
with leg Injuries and a second man limping away
refusing treatment for a knee that was Injured when he
was knocked to the ground by the blast.
Wllllc Hlttcll said she going north on 17-92 at about
10:30 a.m. when her ear's brakes failed. T o avoid hitting
cars stop|H-d at a truffle light she said she swerved Into

the gas station lot and headed for a pole, but hit the
pumps and a 1978 Chevrolet truck tielonging to
Theodore Hardy. 68. of 1910 Bay St.. Sanford.
When Hardy's truck was pushed away from the
pumps he had Just started to fill It with gas. he said. "I
was scared. I didn't know what happened. 1 was
knocked down, but I didn't get burned.”
The threat from the fire came almost Immediately
after the Impact when one of the pumps exploded and
Bill Harness. 43. of Zellwood. who was filling a day-old
1984 Chevrolet truck, which belongs to his employer.
Florida Extrusion. Inc.. Sanford, was standing a little
closer to the flames. Ills hair was singed and his right

leg sustained a large cut.
"T h e fire was all around. I got out of there, what do
you think?" Harness said. Paramedics bandaged his leg
and he was taken to Central Florida Regional to have the
gash treated.
Mrs. Hlttcll. of 193 Windsor Court, and her daughter
Patricia Kramer, 22. were not Injured, but said they
panicked when flames engulfed their 1974 Plymouth
and they couldn't get Mrs. Kramer's one-year-old son
Robert out of his backseat car seat. Station employees
rushed to the rescue and.all three were safrly removed
from the car.
"W e T c okay, thank G o d ." Mrs. Hlttcll said. It

happened so suddenly and I didn't want to hit anyone."
Five units from the Sanford fire department brought
the hlazv under control and Sanford policeman Andy L.
Collazo, who Investigated the accident, said charges are
pending against Mrs. Hlttcll.
Th e vehicles of Mrs. I tit (ell and Harness were severely
damaged In the explosion, hut Hardy's truck which was
knocked away from the blaze was not burned. The
bumper of his truck was torn away and the spare tire
was dislodged from the underside of the truck.
The cost of the damage to the gas station and to the
vehicles had not been determined early today.

Drug Abuse Foes Map Strategy
•4

'teach Kids To Say No'
B y Deane Jo rd a n
H erald Staff W rite r
With plans to fight the student-drug
pusher connection with a battle cry of
"teach them to say no," a Sanford area
anil drag abuse group met Tuesday to
map strategies against "epidemic" drug
abuse.
Members of Sanford C.A.N. (Chemical
Awareness Network) met at 8 p in. In the
Sanford Civic Center to hear short
lectures and see a film about the
prevalence of drug abuse In children,
adults, and possible causes for the
abuse.
After the film, called "Epidemic: Kids.
Drugs and Alcohol"
the 51 people
attending formed five committees —
mem bership, finance, program , re­
search. and Juvenile and law enforce­
ment — to generate Ideas and programs
the group can use to deliver Its message
of drug education to the parent, teacher,
and child.
"W e ’re trying to educate our children
to say one word — no. If a child can be
taught to say no. then there won’t be a
drug sale.” said Philip Goldstlck. presi­
dent of Sanford C.A.N.
He said the first step In educating u
child to say no to drugs is to educate the
parent about the problem.
Education und the awareness of u
drug problem were the (hemes of the
evening.

"I think this Is a good beginning. I'm
encouraged about the Interest of the
people who are here. We've got them
talking." Goldstlck said.
Th e auditorium meeting was the
second major event of the Decemberborn organization which held a drug
education cruise aboard the Star of
Sanford Jan. 17. The cruise was the
group's first volley In Its war against
local youth drug and alcohol abuse.
During that event. 282 Invited comm u­
nity and business leaders were In­
troduced to the group's goals and
projects.
While Tuesday's turnout was far less
than the 200 seats set up. the audience
Included core m em bers of Sanford
C.A.N.. local citizens, and at least one
out of town sheriffs employee there to
evaluate the program and determine If a
similar one can lie set up In another
county.
One m em ber of the audience, u
Sanford man und former Sanford stu­
dent. talked Informally about his past
drug addiction and the extent of the
problem In area youths.
Mike Greanya. of Sanford, said his
Involvement with drugs began at the age
of 12 In the Seminole County schools
and Increased as he neared age 18. By
the lime he was 21. the now 24-year-old
had accumulated several drug and
driving Infractions and was facing up to

25 years In prison for his actions. When
he saw two of his friends receive prison
sentences, he said. It helped to change
his life along with a "Christian experi­
ence."
According to Greanya. schools In
Seminole County arc the easiest places
for students to buy drugs.
"If It Is as bad as when I was In school.
It Is horrible." he said.
He estimated that two or three stu­
dents out of every 10 In the Seminole
County School System are heavy users
of drugs.
He said that us a student he did sec at
least one tearher In Junior high and one
teacher In high school abuse drugs and
alcohol. Each lime was at a private

party. He also said that during hls
juvenile and court hearings and proba­
tionary processes, no one once asked
him where he got his drugs, which was
at school.
Though he has little contact with the
drug users of hls high school days.
Greanya said lie is sure some of those
people he used to do drugs with nowsupply Seminole students with drugs.
Greanya. who Is Involved In youth
counseling. Is active In S.A.S.A.. Stu­
dents Against Substance Abuse
It Is a program In Volusia County
Schools, starting In a Deltona Junior high
school in Feb. 1983. which organizes
Junior and high school students to speak
out against drug abuse.

6 % In High School Smoke Pot Daily
N EW YORK (UIM) - One out of every
16 high school seniors smokes mari­
juana dally and about three out of five
smokers had their first experience with
the drug between the sixth and ninth
grades, a survey showed Tuesday.
The survey was taken for the National
Institute on Drug Abuse by the Universi­
ty of Michigan's Institute for Social
Research. The results were printed In
the latest edition of the Metropolitan Life
Insurance Co.'s statistical bulletin.
The 1982 survey Involved 17.700 high

school seniors from across the United
States.
Results showed martjuanu was the
most wldrly used Illicit drug with 6.3
percent of the seniors using It dally.
Fifty-nine percent of the seniors reported
some use during their lifetime. 44
percent said they used It In the previous
year and 29 percent reported use In the
previous month.
Less than 1 percent reported dally use
of an Illicit drug other than marijuana.

Tax Increases Rejected

Reagan's Budget: $180 Billion In The Hole
By Elaine B. Povich
W A S H IN G T O N (UIM) President
Reagan today sent Congress a red-ink
budget on which he must campaign for
re-election, saying the $926 billion
spending plan with Its $180 billion
deficit and record military Increases will
“ keep the recovery on track."
But the spending plan for fiscal 1985.
which begins Oct. I. seeks no major tax
Increases or spending cuts and raises
m ilitary spending, after inflation Is
figured In. 13 percent to a record $313
billion.
The big. continuing debt — the plan
projects deficits of $177 billion In 1986
and $180 billion In 1987 — may be a
prime campaign Issue for critics of
Reagan, who vowed In hls 1980 presi­
dential campaign lo try to balance the
budget by 1984.
The budget, which is $71.8 billion
higher than last year's, calls for $5
billion In social welfare spending cuts
and about $7.8 billion in minor taxes —

$3.9 billion would be provided by
requiring employees to pay Social Secu­
rity and Income taxes on employer-paid
health Insurance premiums and $4
billion would come from closing tax
loopholes.
The military spending Reagan pro­
posed would make M the largest defense

Florida's Shara, paga 3A
budget since World War II. surpassing
even the peak of the Korean or Vietnam
wars. If measured In consiagt dollars, a
Congressional Budget Office analyst
said.
T h e budget projects total federal
spending of $925.5 billion und receipts of
$745.1 for a deficit of $180.4 billion —
even If all of Reagan’s spending cuts and
lax hikes are enacted.
"Bold, vigorous fiscal policy action to
break the momentum of entrenched

spending programs, together with re­
sponsible and restrained monetary poli­
cy, Is essential to keep the recovery on
track." Reagan said In hls message to
Congress.
"Lim ited measures to Increase receipts
also will be necesary to make our tax
system fulrer and more efficient. But It Is
Important — more than Important,
crucial — to get the mix of spending
restraint and receipts increases right.
There must be substantial reductions In
spending and strictly limited Increases In
receipts."
In his State of the Union address last
week. Reagan proposed establishing a
bipartisan panel to slash deficits by $100
billion in the next fiscal year.
House Speaker Thom as O'Neill has so
far resisted Reagan's proposal for a
bipartisan panel on deficits, warning it
was a "game" that would allow Reagan
lo "pass the buck."
Congress rejected Reagan s past two

budgets, and his new one Is likely lo
meet the same fate. Republican leaders
have said non-defense domestic pro­
grams have been cut enough, and last
year Congress gave Reagan only half of
hls proposed 10 percent Increase In
military spending.
Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd,
assessing the election-year document on
the basis of news reports Tuesday, called
It still one more "spend and borrow"
budget and warned. "T h is check-klllng
cannot last forever."
Republican leaders and key members
of the congressional budget committees
were briefed a day early.
Senate Republican leader Howard
Baker conceded that the projections of
budget deficits In each of the next three
years were “ hair-raising." But he called
the spending proposal "realistic."
Th e president rejected the advice of hls
chief economic adviser and proposed no
major tax Increases to help shrink

Bee REAOAN, page BB

«JL*« «•»

R eu b ln A sk ew

R o lan d W illia m s

Williams Named
Askew Delegate
Seminole County School Board member Roland
Williams of Longwood has been chosen by former
Florida Gov. Reubln Askew ns a delegate alternate
pledged to him.
Williams' name will be on the ballot us a delegate
alternate for the 5th congressional district in the March
13 Dem ocratic presidential preference p rim a ry.
Williams was appointed by Askew to the Seminole
County School Board In May. 1978 and was elected
unop|M&gt;sed In 1980. He Is up for re-election this year.
Other delegates selected by Askew for the 5th district
which Includes all of Seminole County und parts of
Orange and Lake counties are: Betty Ann Bazemore.
state Reps. Fran Carlton and Alzo Reddick, all of
Orlando.
Seminole Countlans who had qualified as Askew
delegates, but who were not approved by the candidate
were Kenneth Bcvln. Casselberry Mayor Charles
Glascock and Ju d y Sledge.
Delegate and alternate candidates chosen by the other
seven Democratic presidential candidates are expected
to be announced later today.
Those who qualified with the Seminole County
Democratic Executive Committee for delegate and
alternate selection by the presidential candidates are:
• Patricia Mosley. Elaine Wack. William Wark III and
Susan McKenna, pledged to Sen. Alan Cranston of
California.
• Marvin Mcltzer. Sheila Morgan. Mark Rablnowlcz
und Dr. Victor Suarez — Sen. John Glenn of Ohio.
• Fred Donnelly — Sen. Gary Hart. Colorado.
•Jackie L. Johnson — Jesse Jackson.
• Steven Atwood. Sarah Bilderbcck and Douglas E.
Wilson — George McGovern.
• Kathleen Reynolds. Waller Mondale.
• No delegate candidates pledged to South Carolina's
Sen. Ernest Hollings.
• Irving B. Gussow was an uncommitted delegate.

TO D A Y
Action Reports......... ...... 2A
Around The Clock... ...... 4A
Bridge......................
Calendar................. ...... 5A
Classifieds..........
fl.9B
Comics.....................
7B
Crossword................ ...... 7B
Dear Abby................
Deaths........................
Dr. Lamb.................

u r &lt;■ *».&gt; .-•:

irv jr .,. A-,

Editorial..........
Florida........... ................ 3A
Horoscope......................7B
Hospital.......... ................2A
Nation............. ................ 2A
People.............. ................ IB
Sports...............
Television.......
Weather.......... ................ 2A
World ...............

�1

JA-Evenm q Herald, Sanlord. FI.

Wednesday. Feb. 1, MM

NATION
Teens A d m it Shooting
In Vigilante Effort
S A N T A C R U Z. Calif. (UP!) — A consuming
dislike for ‘'vagrants, commies and welfare
recipients" apparently Inspired three high
school seniors to begin hunting them down with
a deadly homemade bazooka. Investigators say.
The t:,.cc admitted shooting one long-haired
pedestrian with the bazooka. Miraculously, an
Investigator said, the victim survived.
Tw o of the students — both 17 — are to be
sentenced at a Juvenile Court hearing on Feb.
10. They face a maximum of 4W years In
California Youth Authority Institutions. The
third student, also 17. admitted to being the
trlggerman In the Dec. 4 attack. He faces a
maximum sentence of7VS years.
The suspects told police they had been
hunting "trolls (transients)... hippies, longhalrs.
vagrants, commies and welfare recipients" to
run them out of town.

O 'N e ill To Back M ondale
W A S H IN G TO N (UPI) Today Is Waller
Mondale day on Capitol Hill.
House Speaker Thom as O'Neill, the country's
lop Democrat, has decided to break his tradition
against endorsements and support Mondale.
The former vice president also will Jump ahead
In the delegate race for the Democratic nomina­
tion when House Democrats officially name
their convention delegates.
The prized 0 'N r I" endorsement, according to
Capitol Hill sources, was to come shortly after
the House Democratic Caucus officially names
the speaker and 163 other House Democrats as
the first delegates to the Democratic National
Convention.
Those delegates officially arc uncommitted,
but according to a count by United Press
International, 73 have endorsed Mondale, far
more than his nearest rival. Sen. John Glenn.
D-Ohlo, who has 17 endorsements. Only 45 are
listed us truly uncommitted.

Castration Request Denied
KAN SAS C IT Y . Mo. (UPI) - A Judge has
denied a convicted rapist's request that lie becastrated rather than sent to prison.
Instead. Leon Alexander of Independence.
Mo.. Tuesday was sentenced to 40 to 45 years In
prison for raping and sodomizing two sisters,
ages 11 and 13.
In an emotional plea. Alexander said he was
Innocent but willing to be castrated to keep from
going to prison.
Hut Circuit Court Judge Jack E. Grant said
castration has never been an alternative sen­
tence In Missouri and "the court Is not willing to
plow that particular ground at this particular
time."

WEATHER_____________
NATIONAL REPORT: A storm that dumped up to 14
Inches of snow on Maine and triggered u spectacular fire
In Massachusetts blew out to sea today, leaving behind
blowing and drifting snow. Freezing temperatures
stretched south into Florida. Light rain fell In southern
Texas, and scattered fog cut visibility to one-half mile In
pirts of Washington and Oregon. Warnings for moderate
to hard freezes wrre posted In southeast North Carolina
and In northern Florida, lly early morning the mercury
fell to 30 degrees at ( rest view. Fla.
AREA FORECAST: Mostly sunny and cool today
with a high of 60 to 65. North wind round 10 mph.
Tonight partly cloudy. Low 40 to 45. Light northeast
wind. Thursday considerable cloudiness with a 20
ixirccnl chance of some rain. High mid 60s to near 70.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
nut 50 miles — Northwest to north wind 10 to 15 knots
Ixicomlng northeasterly 10 knots tonight and variableid knots or less Thursday. Seas 2 to 4 feet today and
leps than 3 feet tonight. Partly cloudy with a few
stjower* Thursday.
IAREA READINOS (9 s.m .): temperature: 43:
overnight low: 38: Tuesday's high: 58; barometric
pressure: 30.24: relative humidity: 59 percent: winds:
north at 9 mph: rain: none: sunrise: 7:14 a.m.. sunset
6 &gt;05 p.m.
THURSDAY TIDES: Daytona Beach: highs. 8:30
a.tn.. 8:41 p.m .: lows. 1:48 a.m.. 2:30 p.m.: Port
Canaveral: highs. 8:22 a.m.. 8:33 p.m.: lows. 1:39 a.m..
2^21 p.m.: Bayport: highs. 1:06 a.m.. 2:34 p.m.: lows.
8 ‘ 14 a.m.. 8:07 p.m.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Hatprial

ADMISSION!

Monroe
ManlynnA Clayton. Tltutvllle
DISCHARGES

laniard

Arthur Clt.tUnd
Alai Crumady
Tyrone/ Montgomery

fair it la L. Sutherland
Mary R Terrell
lam B Barakal. Apopka
Nine* Reinhardt. DeBary
Timothy
0
William*.

Lake

Sanlord
Jean! Adam*
Ethel l Bennett
Mary L Daughefyt
FloydG Sander*
Chertet C Fornarl. Deltona
A erlyM Chapman. Winter Park
Donna Ithen and baby girl. Oviedo

a

•
a

—

STOCKS
rjtete

quotatron* provided by
m tlftbtrt of the National Allocution
of Serurrfie* Dea/eri are repre
H-nfafive Infer Prater pricri a* Of
appronmatety noon today Infer
dr^trr marleti change throughout
ihotU y Priori do not include roloil
markup merlddnn
ltd Atk
Atlantic Bank
Ilh V
Bergen Bank
)♦*» It**
F iqylda Power

•

Jf»* JfH
1 lig h t................ .
FI* Progrttt
Freedom Saving*
MCA
......... n&lt; « » * .
Muqhe* Supply
.......
NCR C o rp ...............
Pieoey
. -

It t* 'i

J1 notrede*

IA*« unthenged
Stotty I
Southeett Bank ...... ....*J1»»14V.
...17 unchanged
Sun Bank* ... .

! ____________ _____

fow ling llcm ld

A Haines City man. who allegedly tried lo Interfere
DUI ARRESTS
with the drunk driving arrest of an Orlando man. and
The following persons have been arrested In Seminole
that DUI suspccl arc both being held In the Seminole
County on a charge of driving under Ihc Influence:
County Jail In lieu of $5,000 bond each aflcr they
-P h illip Rene Ledcn. 33. of Orlando, was arrested at
reportedly assaulted and tried to escape from Altamonte
★ Fires
1:55 a.m. Sunday for careless driving on Stale Road 520
Springs police officers.
one mile south of Oviedo.
* Courts
Officers John Hcbard and Michael McAfee reported
— Jerry C. Bcnnrll. 39. of 2500 Howell Branch Road
(hat while arresting a suspected drunk driver on
Winter Park, at 9:01 p.m. Sunday after hts car failed lo
★
Police
Interstate 4 at Spring Lake Hills, (he Haines City man
maintain a single lane on U.S. Highway 17-92 al Stale
drove up. got out of his vehicle and began harassing
Road 419.
Ihcm and encouraging the DUI suspccl. whom he called Ignition, the woman continued lo drive away and — James Henry Cameron. 47. of Orlando. Monday after
by name, to escape, a police report said.
dragged the deputy along before he was able lo stop the his car failed lo maintain a single lane on U.S. Highway
The man refused an officer's order to slay away from car. a shertfrs report said.
17-92 at Lake of Ihc Woods Boulevard. Fern Park.
the patrol car where the suspect, who had been
— Jam es Alvin Plait. 21. of 118 Country Club Circle.
The deputy was not seriously Injured In Ihc Incident.
handcuffed, was sitting. As the suspect began lo scream
Karen Phillips. 20. of 250 Howell Branch Road. Sanford, at 1:21 a.m. In the 2300 block of Magnolia
and kick the windows of the patrol car. the second man Casselberry, was charged with aggravated assault on a Avenue. Sanford, after his car was Involved In an
grabbed Hebard and began lo struggle with the two police officer. She ‘x scheduled to appear in court Feb. • accident.
*
—
officers, the report said.
10. The man who accused her of hitting his car did not
While the men fought, the suspect escaped from the press charges.
FIRE CALLS
patrol car and ran toward a marsh, but fell and was
Th e Sanford Fire Department responded lo the
SPOUSE ABUSE
captured and subdued by officer Ralph Moody who had
A Sanford policeman who responded lo a disturbance following fire calls:
arrived to assist In the arrest.
call arrested a man who had allegedly scratched his wife
Tuesday
The officers received minor cuts on the hands and on the neck and was creating a disturbance by playing a
— 12:16 p.m.. Airport Boulevard and Sanford Avenue,
arms In the fight and MeAfer reported that his revolver
stereo loudly.
rescue. An auto accident with two victims. The first, a
had been dropped In the marsh. The gun was found
The officer reported that Janie Bryant accused her
after Ihc suspects were subdued, the report said. The husband of being Intoxicated when he assaulted her. 34-year-old man. had a bruise on the right side of his
head. The second victim, a 65-ycar-old man. had bruises
two suspects were not seriously Injured.
Th e suspccl was arrested after he refused to turn down
on hla head and neck. Both were transported to the
Tim othy Allen Jones. 30, of Orlando, and James the stereo at the olllcer's request, a police report said.
Central Florida Regional Hospital by ambulance.
Edward Baglcy were arrested al 7:49 p.m. Tuesday.
Warren Bryant J r., of 1804 W. 4th St., was arrested at
Jones faces charges of DUI. driving with a revoked his home at 12:21 a.m. Saturday. He was released from — 1:24 p.m.. State Road 46 and Persimmon Avenue, fire.
license and battery to a police officer. Baglcy Is also the Seminole County Jail without posting bond and Is Heat was radiating from the right rear wheel of a car. No
fire. The car was towed to a garage.
charged with battery to an olTlccr and faces an scheduled to appear In court on Feb. 10.
— 5:52 p.m.. Stenstrom Boulevard, rescue. A 24-ycar-old
additional charge of resisting arrest with violence. Both
VEHICLE THEFTS
man fell ofT his dirt bike In a field. He complained of
are scheduled (o appear In court al 1:30 p.m. today.
Richard A. Ray. 34. of 2512 Yale Ave.. Sanford, stomach pains and had a nosebleed. A cervical collar
reported that a thief drove away In his 1967 Trium ph, was applied and he was placed on a backboard before
CARS STOLEN
Tim othy Dias. 18. of 1032 Martcx Drive. Apopka, which he parked on Lake Emm a Road. Lake Mary, while bring transported to the hospital by ambulance.
reported that someone drove away In his 1973 AMC he went fishing between 4:30 and 6 p.m. Sunday, a — 7:43 p.m.. 709 Cypress Ave.. false alarm.
Javelin which he had parked In his driveway with the sherlfTs report said. The car was valued at $4,800.
— 10:06 p.m.. Shenandoah Village, rescue. A 33-year-old
David B. Keren. 33. ol 204 Colonial Lane. Longwood. woman with a possible drug overdose. An ambulance
keys In the Ignition. The $2,000 car was taken between
reported that a thief drove away In his 1979 Ford truck, transported her to the hospital.
8:30 and 10 p.m. Monday, a sherlfTs report said.
Patricia Ann Mitchell. 30. of 1309 S. Mellonvlllc Avc.. worth $6,000. which he had advertised for sale. The
W ednesday
Sanford, gave sheriff's deputies the name of a man who truck, which had been locked, was taken from his
-2
:4
1
a.m..
2939
U.S.
Highway 17-92. fire. A pot was
driveway
between
6:30
p.m.
Saturday
and
12:30
a.m.
allegedly drove away In her 1979 Brava, valued al
left above a gas burner. No fire loss.
$2,300. Ms. Mitchell said she turned the vehicle over lo Sunday, a sheriff s report said
the suspect at 2035 McCarthy St.. Sanford, because hr
said he would drive lo his hotel and pick up cash to buy
Ihc vehicle from her. The man disappeared with the
vehicle at 9:01 p.m. Monday, a sheriff s report said.
Free Income tax assistance will lx* available for 17 92. Casselberry. 1305) 831-3777 (2 Blocks North of
OFFICER DRAOGED
Seminole County Senior Citizens, starting todav Slate Road 4361
A WIntel Paik woman who allegedly dragged a through April 13. 1984 •&gt;|K&gt;nsoi"d by the TAX/AID/TCE • Thursdays 9 a.m. • 1 p.m.. Hacienda Village. (East
sheriffs deputy about 20 feet when he tried to shut off Program of Ihc American Association of Retired Persons Clubhouse). 500 Longwood Oviedo Rd.. Winter Springs.
the engine of her car posted a $500 bond and was (AARP)niid the Internal Revenue Sendee.
1305)327 0051.
released from the Seminole County Jail.
Trained tax counselors will be available for tax
Persons who wish lo utilize this sendee, should bring
Deputy James C. Jones reported that when he
preparation and assistance at the following locations:
responded to a dispute call In the parking lot of
• Monduys/Frldays. 9 a.m. • I p.m .. Sanford Chamber of with them a ropy of last years lax return and the IRS
Plantation Apartments. 2100 Howell Branch Road.
Commerce. 400 East First Street. Sanford. (305) Package containing the 1983 Ta x Forms. They should
also bring Ihclr W2 Forms and other Information
Casselberry, at about 7:30 p.m. Saturday, he was met In
322-2212.
the parking lot by Scott Renner. 21. who said a woman
• Tuesdays. 9 a.m. • I p.m .. Longwood Recreation showing their 1983 Income.
who was parked In the lot had damaged his car.
Center. 175 West Warren Avenue. Longwood. (3051
Persons who are physically unable to go lo the listed
381 -0555 (Across from Longwcx&gt;d City Hull).
When the officer approached the woman, she
locations, should contact John Campbell • Local TC E
• Wcdncsdays/Frldays 9 a.m. • I p.m.. Com m unlly Coordinator al 830-4913 lo obtain special Income tax
reportedly tried to drive away. When the officer opened
the driver's side door of hfcr car lo shut off the car's
United Mrihodlst Church. 285 South U.S. Highway assistance.

Action Reports

IN BRIEF

(tn lrtl FWnM
*
Tm U i i

DUI Arrest Turns Into Brawl, 2 Jailed

«'•»'

^.Wednesday. February I. IW4— Vol. 7*. No. 142
! Publuhad Daily and Sunday, euagt Saturday bv Tfca Sanlord
; Herald, Inc. 10* N. French Avr. SaMnrd. Fla. H77I.
'Second Clan Pojtaia Paid al laniard. Florida 11771
'Home Delivery: Weak. SI.lit Merr.-t. M.lSi 4 Months. U 4.N i
' Yaar, SUM . By Mail: Wee* SI.IS, Month. U.lSt 0 M * t H . SMM i
Yaar. SSt 40 Phono (NS) C T 14H.___________________________

F re e In c o m e T a x A s sistan ce For S e m in o le S en io r C itize n s

Flynt Given
21 Months
Behind Bars
LOS A N G E L E S (UPI) H u s t le r m a g a z in e
publisher Larry Flynt —
Ids mouth stuffed with a
wad of gauze and tape
wrapped around hts head
— was wheeled before a
frdcral Judge and sen­
tenced lo a 2 1-month pris­
on term for contempt of
court.
During a six-hour courtroom appearance ending
Tuesday nlghl. Flynt un­
le a s h e d a s tr e a m of
obscenities and hurled an
orange al Ihc prosecutor.
More prison lim e was
lagged on to the original
stx-month sentence.
U .S . D is tr ic t J u d g e
Manuel Real had ordered
(he publisher lo prison for
six months for a Dec. 2
oul burst before U.S. Mag­
istrate James McMahon.
Real then slapped the
paraplegic publisher with
u series of 30-day terms,
totalling 15 months, for
p erio d ica lly scream ing
obscenities during Tues­
day's hearing.
At one point. Real or­
dered Flynl forcibly re­
moved from (he court­
room. Flynl was brought
back later into court with
gauze stuffed In his mouth
and tape wrapped around
his head.
Monday. U.S. District
Judge Consuclo Marshall
Ignored F lyn t's cursing
und screaming and Judged
him compelcnl lo sland
trial on charges he dese­
crated an American flag
by wearing It lo courl as a
diaper.
Flynt protested that de­
cision before Real Tuesday
with a string of wildly
contradictory statements
and displays of emotion.
Real Ignored Flynt's two
tearful outbursts, saying
ihc publisher was "doing
II on purpose."
Flynt Insisted he was
m e n ia lly Inco m p e te n t
w h e n he c u r s e d a l
McMahon und usked for
I he right lo challenge the
prison psychiatric report
on which Ms. Marshall
based her Judgment.
He pleaded that he was
upset the morning of the
h e a r i n g b e c a u s e he
claimed his 14-ycar-old
daughter had been gangraped by his se cu rity
guards.
Flynl also argued that
he was broke and could
not afford lo pay his at­
torney. David Kahn, but
Real ruled he had the
money lo pay a lawyer.

J

QUANTITY RICH!! RtSUVIO

”

' « N

CHARGE ALL YOUR PURCHASES
m ON VISA OR MASTERCARD
AT PARK &amp; SHOP. - -DOUBLE-MFC.
COUPONS SUN..MON..TUES. ONLY

! —

SHOP
PARK AVE. A JSih ST.
SANFORD
OPEN I 0 A » S -l AM * PM .

SANFORD AVE. aMth ST.
SANFORD
•a m . a p m

sun

All Items L prices good thru Wed., Feb. 8 ,1 9 8 4 .
Due to our low prices we reserve the right to limit

at

(J.S.D.A. CHOICE

CENTER CUT

TOP ROUND
OR LONDON

CUBED
BEEF

HAMBURGER

B R O IL

STEA K

M IX

S IR L O IN

2

(J.S.D.A. CHOICE

58

T-BONE

STEAK

LB.

O.S.D.A.i
CHOICE ,
LO. I

98

EX. LEAN 1ST CUT SIRLOIN

quantities. None sold to dealers. Not responsible
for typ®flT«phlc«l errors.

2

68

o

6 8

EXTRA LEAN BEEF

FAMILY
PKG.

9 LBS.
OR
MORE

LB.

LB.

BONELESS N.Y. STRIP M A O
C T C A 1/-U.S.D.A. « 7 0
O I t . A K CHOICE J
uB.

BONELESS DELMON ICO m
Q T C A V
USDA
O 1 L A f \ C H O IC E v

q q

LB.

88

6TC117 3L88'
08 11 ^l 8
more
b.

o lf c W

GWALTNEY ALL MEAT SLICED

EX. LEAN BOILED

CHOPS

HAM

BO LO G NA

HAM

FAMILY PAK

BUTT PORTION

FAMILY PAK

FAMILY PAK

98

C

68

LB.

98

C
LB.

EX. LEAN 1ST CUT SIRLOIN
COUNTRY STYLE PORK 4 a p

EX. LEAN 1ST CUT SIRLOIN
PORK LOIN 3/9 LB.

RIBS . . .. 1 10

ROAST - 9 8 *

4*

COOK ’N’ GOOD CHICKEN
U.S.D.A. OR. A WHOLE
TWIN PAK
ami Q

FRYERS D O

FAMILY PACK
C
LB.

CUT-UP FRYERS
CONSISTS OF
3 WINGS, 3 BREASTS.
3 BACKS. 3 THIGHS.
3 DRUMSTICKS AND
3 GIBLETS
W ^ # L B .

6 8

$

LEG Q T R S .O O LB.
COUNTRY STYLE
FAMILY PAK

A

TH IG H S

O O LB.
l

A

^

COUNTRY STYLE
FAMILY PAK

BREAST 9 8

c
LB.

C

WHOLE BEEF QTR.

H IN D ____
WHOLE BEEF QTR.

FRONT . .
FRONT AND HIND QTR.
WHOLE BEEF

S ID E ____
WHOLE BONELESS TOP
19/29 LB.

ROUND . .

1X 4 LB.
9

29
LB.

39
LB.

98
LB.

p oU mU Hn U
o
K

.

.

WHOLE BONELESS
SIRLOIN

TIP

11 8LB.
8

98

8/12 LB. AVG.

WHOLE BONELESS NEW
10/12 LB. AVG.
A Q Q

STRIP

. . .

2 V

EX. LEAN BEEF
HAMBURGER

MIX 10

uupk

7 98

-A

LB.

EX. LEAN BONELESS BEEF
BRISKET 3/6 LB. AVQ.' a

LAMB

ROAST

8 8

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U.S.D.A. GRADE A

BUFFET
HAM

TURKEY
BREAST

1

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68

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HEADLESS 11-19 CT.
SUPER JUMBO

S H R IM P
BONELESS FILET OF
OCEAN PERCH. RED

1

2 9

X

BUY 1 GET 1 FREE
OWALTNEY SLICED PICKLE

PIMENTO

s oz.
GWALTNEY MEAT, SLICED

| 2 9

HAM

J 5 9

BOZ. p k .
GWALTNEY CHOPPED, SLICED
B OZ. PK.
GWALTNEY SLICED

SALAMI

8

1

FLOUNDER
. 2 88

9 8

b o z . pk.

^

SMOKED HAM
HAM ROLL

| 9 8

02. PK.

boz

OWALTNEY BUCED PICNIC
BONELESS FILET OF

J 2 9

pk.

BOLOGNA

SNAPPER! GWALTNEY 4/6 IN
SLICED HAM
9 9 OWALTNEY
BUCED
LB.

q q

1 88

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u ,7 98

WHOLE BONELESS BOTTOM

1

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U.S.D.A. CHOICE GOVERNMENT INSPECTED BEEF

FOR YO U R FR EEZER

5 8

YOUNG TENDER 9-7 LB. AVQ.
LEG O'

2/4LB.
AVQ.

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BONELESS ALL MEAT BEEF

COUNTRY DRY CURED SMOKED
OLD FASHIONED WAY

PORK

«

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pkI
4

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oz.p k . I 59

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LUNCHEON

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BIO EIGHT

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1 9 8
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I

�•Y

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

F l o r i d a 's

S h a re

Proposed Budget Includes $192.3 M illion For State

IN BRIEF

W A S H IN G TO N till'll - President Reagan s fiscal 1985
budget, released today. Includes $12-1.4 million for
military construction funding In Florida.
The budget, which must be approved by Congress.
Includes S23.5 million for a training equipment center
In Orlando.
The budgei also Includes $67.9 In U.S. Arm y Corps of
Engineers funding for the stale.
Much of the proposed Florida Ittudlng In the the
budget is for operation and maintenance of existing
facilities in the Sunshine Slate. However, there Is 824.3
million earmarked for construction in the stale.

Countdown Starts
For Shuttle Launch
C A P E C A N A V E R A L {UP!) — Th e countdown
iK-gan today for the launch of the space shuttle
Challenger Friday morning on an eight-day
mission that sparewalking astronaut Urine
MeCandless promised would open “ new doors
and frontiers."
MeCandless and Robert Stewart will use new
jet-propelled .backpacks to fly up to ?00 feet
away from the orbiting shuttle next Tuesday
without safety lines. Never before has man set
oil In orbit without lies to the mothership.
And In what will Ik* another important first,
the Challenger Is scheduled to glide to a landing
at the Kennedy Space Center launch base Feb.
11.

Other big money Hems on the administrations
military wish list included S7.83 million for addition to
water supply facllHes at the Pensacola Navy Public
Works Center. $6.56 million for maintenance hangar
Improvements at the Jacksonville Naval Air Station and
$6.51 million lor a firefighting training facility at the
Mayport Navy Fleet Training Center.
The budget also Included 86.3 million lor what the
Pentagon called “ eastern lest range rcconfiguration" at
various Florida locations. Another $6.51 million was
uiioted for a reserve Iratning building at Navy Reserve
(aeilitles in Miami.
Other Florida Items on the military construction
budget are:

Search O n For PCB, D io xin
&lt;JA( K SO N VILLE (UPI) — Federal authorities
s.iv lesls show the amount of the carcinogen
I T U released over the city during a weekend
warehouse fire was higher than anticipated.
E l’A Inspectors were collecting samples to
determine If dioxin, a toxic byproducl of PCH.
was present at l he site of the fire Sunday.
The federal safety standard for PCH Is 50 parts
P»*r million. EPA public affairs officer Hagen
Ihompson said some of the concentration that
burned contained up to 37.000 parts per
million.
EPA officials said the area where the fire
occurred would be kept cordoned off. but there
were no plans to move any more than the
residents In 15 homes that were evacuated
Sunday.

It 41 million ton v*ntit*t&lt;on tm
p*o*em*nlt i l !h» Nival Aif Rework
Futility In Jsckionville
-5440 X 0 lor 4 religious education
building *1 the Jacksonville Nev«l
Air Sletion
-t l V
million
lor
«n
ad

facility at Egtin Air Force Have
It 45 million tor alteration) to a
tire nation and 51 1 million lor
vtiitlng officer quarter! 'at Home
Uead Air Force Bate
5)4 million tor a latell'te com
municatloo ground terminal. 51 5

miniktratnre uuiioing at me Mayport
Naval Station
-5517 million lor a bulkhead
!?M 000 for a security building and
land acqulrtlion. II 49 million lor
waterlront utilities. 5400 000 lor
wharf utilities improvement and
51 41 million tor construction ol a
battalion unit complei at Mayport
-51 7* million for personnel houl
ingot the Orlando Naval Hospital
— I t » million tor a gymnailum.
51 44 million lor a ships propulsion
training building and 5540 000 to' a
naval training center at the Orlando
Naval Training Center
— 5115 million tor a tree ascent
tank at the Panama City Naval
{Jiving and Salvage Training Center
— 54 5 million lor modernliahon ot
the manufacture and repair shop and
5490 000 lor lacihty energy improve
ments at the Pensacola Naval Air
Rework Facility
-5 t 41 million tor a child care
tenter at It* Pensacola Na«at Air
Station
-5 1 03 million lor approach light
mg and 5420 X 0 tor radar at the
Whiling Field Naval Air Station
- 5 1 44 million tor a pay and
personnel support otlice at the
Pensacola Naval Air Station and
51 03 million lor a similar facility at
Gulfport
-5TT0000 tor alteralions ot the
central control tacility. 5410.000 lor a
munitions
mamienance
and
assembly lacihty and 51 IS million
tor aiter alions ol a held Naming

O R LAND O (UPI) - A suspended Or
hmdo City Council member who am ised
other officials of using criminals In target
him as a black leader lias been found
guilty of grand theft and acquitted of a
charge he was dealing to stolen property
A Jury of four men and two women
dclilicruicd 3 hours and 50 minutes
Tuesday night before rendering the
verdicts against Ernest Page, who leaned
hack in his chair and stared at the trial
clerk when the decisions were an­
nounced.
Page. 41. said lie will appeal the guilty
verdict.
“ I still maintain I was innocent ami I

T A L L A H A S S E E IUPI) - Gov. Hob Graham
has signed death warrants for two convicts who
arc scheduled to be clcelroducted on Feb. 20.
Graham signed death warrants Tuesday for
Kenneth Darcell Quince, convicted of raping and
killing an 82-year old woman, and Bernard
Holandcr. condemned for four murders In a
cocaine deal that went sour.
Graham has now signed 70 death warrants,
three of which have led to electrocutions. The
most recent execution was that of Anthony
Anlonc last Thursday* for the murder of a
Tam pa police detective.

million tor a tachcai iraming range
5510 000 for alterations to a recre
ation library and 5510 000 tor aircraft
maintenance area lighting at Macdhl
Air Force Base
5T10 000 tor an aircraft mainte
nance unit facility at Patrick Air
Force Bate
-53 4S million tor an aircraft
generat purpose Shop. 5550 000 tor
sound suppressor
support
and
5330 000 tor an arm disarm pad" at
Tyndall Air Force Base
55 75 rnlll on tor a consolidated
support center $1 J million tor alter
ment center. 5440 000 tor 4 water
tank and 5230 OX lor Installation of a
heat recovery center at Eghn Air
Force Base s Aukhtary Field*
-52 75 million for security Im
provements at Cape Canaveral Air
Force Station
54*4.000 for a helicopter landing
lane al the Camp Bianding
-5443 000 Iw an armory at Plant
City
- I I 3 million for a luel cell mam
lenance hangar tl ; million lor base
engineer
maintenance
facility.
5400 000 lor alterations to a hangar
and 5700.000 tor alterations to a base
supply administrative warehouse at
A.r National Guard facilities m
Jacksonville
-51 04) million lor a *0 member
Army reserve center In Milton
- I I *J2 million to add to the Army
Reserve Center maintenance shop In
O'Undo

The largest chunk ol the Aro n Corps tumliiig. $13
million, is set aside for continued navigation construeHon in Tam pa Harbor Another S t i f f million is

Page Says He'll A ppeal

2 Executions Scheduled

was set u|i by tin police." he said. "T ills
was not a criminal trial: it was a |xilttleal
ami a racial trial."
lie could be punished willi a max­
imum sentence of one year in Jail. Ctrcull
Judge Te d Coleman ordered an In
vcsilgallon of Pages background and
scheduled senlenelng for March 28.
I’agc. a real estate agent, had accused
city police, the Florida Department of
Law Enforcement and the OrangeOsceola Stale A tto rn e y's Office of
targeting him amt said they used known
criminals to sei him up. He said the
guilty verdict came only because an
all-white Jury heard his ease.

SUNNY FLA.
EXTRA RICH HOMO
OR LOW FAT

EVERCANE

Im pi t Itpar h a Ctmm Nr
mry t l pm q w l Pali M U f a

0

EGGS
6 8 *00,

SUGAR

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOO THRU 2JS S4

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOD THRU 2 8 84

I BAD

MANDARIN
LONG GRAIN FANCY

BACON

RICE

38

WITH OWE FILLED
BOflUS CARD
GOOO THRU 2 I M

10

1M 4 8

8 8 *

CYPRESS
LEAN SLICED

LB.

a kn p ad a lM p rM m *

.LB

MILK
GAL.

, U-S. Ho. 1 ^

CASSELBERRY

POTATOES

BEEF STEW

WITH ONI M il I 0
BONUS CARD
GOOD THRU 2 8 84

WITH OWE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOD THRU 2 8 84

DINTY MOORE

8.5 OZ. JIFFY
CORfl MUFFIN

HOLSUM WHITE

M IX

EXTRA LEAN

1 99

12 OZ.

88

CAN

€

BREAD

Flood cUm»g* pf»«*f'tion In th*
tentreI and souftwrn Florid* wtlcr
Supply 15140 KOI
— Beach
erosion
studies
et
Panama City Beach 154X 000)
— Navigation In
Port
Sutton
Channel 15133 0001
Another 5440 X 0 It set aside m the
budget tor advanced engineering and
ties-gn work on navigation in Tampa
Harbor t branch channels
Corps proposed operation and
maintenance funding Includes
523).XO tor Apalachicola Bay
-544 OX lor Black water River
— 51 * million
lor Canaveral
Harbor
- 5) I million lor the central and
southern Florida water supply
- t l million for Charlotte Harbor
tl l million lor the Cross Florida
Barge Canal
-SJ20.0K lor the Escambia
ConeciA Rivers
— 12 million
lor
Fernand na
Harbor
-54*3 OX lor Fort Myers Beach
-5450 OX tor Fort Pierce Harbor

C la s s

4

LOAVES*

1

WITH ONE TILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOD THRU 2 8 84

WITH One FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOD THRU 2 8 84

GOOD VALUE

BOUNTY JUMBO

GIANT 49 OZ. BOX

GOOD VALUE

GOOD VALUE

FLOOR

TOWELS

TIDE
J4 8

BLEACH

FRENCH FRIES

CIGARETTES

LB.
BAO

28

18

LB.
BAG

GAL.

98*

WITH Oflt FILLED
BONUS CARO
GOOD THRU 2 114

WITH OWE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOD THRU 2'S 84

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOOTHRU 2 BS4

K R A FT V E L V E E TA

TV 100% PURE

CASSELBERRY

KRAFT

CHEESE

FIESTA PURE
BLACK

ORANGE JUICE

CHIU W/BEANS

PEPPER

MAYONNAISE

6 8 *

2 * 2 98
WITH ONE riLLtO
BONUS CARO
GOOD THRU 1 S S4

SUNLIGHT DISH
LIQUID

D ETER G EN T
n o t.

58

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOOTHRU 2 4 44

8 OZ. FROZEN
MORTON'S ASSORTED

POT PIES

'/.GAL. W
’

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOD THRU ]&lt;BS4
SHEDD COUNTRY CROCK

M A R G A R IN E
TASTES LIKE BUTTER

1 48
1LBS.

X

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOO THRU I'S-BA

TV 100% PURE

BUTTER
QUARTERS

1 29
6 r w

l 9 8

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARO
GOOO THRU lr »S 4

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOO THRU 2'S'M

FRESH PRODUCE
FANCY LARGE ICEBERG

15 OZ.

4 02.
BOX

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOO THRU 2&lt;S 84

WESSON
OIL

.8 8 *

w it h

one f il l e d

24 OZ.

GOOO THRU 2 8 84

98

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOD THRU 2 8 14

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOD THRU 2 * 14

Bonus CARD

SKIPPY PEANUT

DEL MONTE

RAINBOW BATHROO*

54 CT. SUPER OR
72 CT. REG.

BUTTER

CATSUP

TISSUE

PAMPERS

GIANT
IS OZ.

GIANT

88

32 OZ.

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOO THRU 2 S-S4

48

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOO THRU 2'S 84

4

. 0.1
PAK

■799

18

In a three-page order. Hartwell said
the public Interest would be served by
prohibiting Kmart from carrying on
wlih Its financial program jiendlng a
full hearing before Judge Hen Willis
Feb. 8.
"A t no time prior to Initiating this
program did Km art or Standard
Federal consult with this department
regarding Florida law," Lewis said.

SAVE B Q §
DISCOUNT COUPON USERS!
DON'T THROW MONEY AWAY!

COCA COLA 4/ 139 C O R N FLA K ES 7 1 *
CHARMIN BATHROOM

OLD MILWAUKEE

BEER
.
.
24
'Ink 5 88 T I S S U E
LIM IT 2 W /7.50 ORDER EXCL. CIGS.

4 ^ 1 14

LIQUID BLEACH

SUNNY FLA. EX. RICH HOMO.

M IL K

.

. GALLON

■ -

V
r
i
i
i

DISCOUNT COUPON USERS!
DON'T THROW MONEY AWAY!

4

h i&gt;

SAVE

CALL TOLL TREE

Federal Benefits
fo r V e te ra n s
and Dependents

• ELIGIBILITY
WWII, Korea, Vietnam

• MEDICAL
Stnrlcs altd Heo-Servke Connected

• PENSION

94*
I 98 CLOROX
16 OZ. CANS VAN CAMP PORK G

• SOCIAL SECURITY
CREDITS
• These and Many More Federal
Benefits Now Available
I Revised beetle! el Veterans benefits recently pMshed by the Veterms Adndnbtretlen nen avi
|te benertry discharged Veterans at at cast.
FOR FVtTMR MFOMMTIQa AT HOT M IT OR ORUUTMM FK1 OUT COUfOS ROM AW I U IP

a . LL0N

.

I
I
.
»
|

Service and Nen-Senki Connected
WITH ONE F IllE O
BONUS CARD
GOOO THRU 2 814

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOO THRU 2 SS4

KELLOGG 12 OZ.

32 OZ. BOTTLES

-5747 OX tor Pensacola Harbor
— 5*20 OX lor Port Everglades
Harbor
|
53 2 million lor removal ol aqua*
ic growth across the stale
-5440 OX lor St, Lucie Inlet
-1475 OX lor SI John’s River troth
Jac ksonvilie to Lake Harney
121 million lor Tampa Harbor

ys8

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOD THRU 2 1 84

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOD THRU 2 S 84

WITH ONE r illE O
BONUS CARD
GOOO THRU 2 1 84

3/*l

CTN.

52
minion
tor
tfse
Jacksonville to Miami stretch ol the
Inliac oastal Waier way
5100 OX
tor
Intracoasi*’
Waterway. Caloosahatchee River to
Anclote River
-52
million lor
Jacksonville
Harbor
_ _
53 7 million tor the Jim Woodrufl
loak and 0am
-577 OK lor La Grange Bayou
5*20 OX tor Miami Harbor
51* million lor the Okeechobv^e
Waterway
-54,OX lor the Oklawaha River
- 54*4 000 lot Palm Beach Harbor'
-5443 OX
tor
Panama
Ci(y
Harbor
___________

Michigan-based Standard Federal
Savings and Loan Association in I heir
offer of "Kmart certificates." "Kmart
bonus rate certificates" and "Km art
fund accounts."

1-1121
ALL BRANDS
REQ.KINQ* 100’s

s p v n ' fc v ;

The G E D tests leading lo
a F lo rid a hig h school
diploma will he offered al
S e m in o le C o m m u n it y
College oil Feb. 27, 28.
and 29. Eligibility for tak­
ing ilie lests must be
I
| | SAVE hundreds ol dollars a year on your food and
completed by Feb. 17.
J household budget! Receive the wanted diacount
G E D lest orientation will
I coupons of your choice. Hunyl You must enclose a
be held on Feb. 23 at *1
I stamped, sell-addressed envelope lor easy details on
and ff p in. Students quali­
™
m .j, A . a n a k H W i i A S
n a* re I C I n i n
how tom.save
money at your&gt; 1local
store.
fied to lake the lests are
I
,
SEND
TO:
UNITED
COUPON
CLUB.
INC. “FREE"
encouraged m attend tills
'
8427
West
Capitol
Drivs
INFO
class cm "H ow m Take and
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53216
i'ass the G ED Exams."
| *Enclosed la stamped, aell-addroeeed envelope,
For more Information on
j Pltase send (acts on joining the Club.
G ED 's free study program,
call SCC al 323-1450 and
ask lor the G E D office.

GIANT 20 OZ. LOAF

4™ 38*

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOD THRU 21 1 4

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOOTHRU 2'S 84

8 8

WITH ONE FILLED
BONUS CARD
GOOD THRU 2 6 84

CORNED BEEF

LB
BAO 1

98'

10

GIANT
24 OZ.
CAN

T i n - C o r p s ,d « o a f l ' t '- d s i -r - e y Cm***.-

T A L L A H A S S E E (U l'l) - Acting on a
suit filed by Com ptroller Gerald
Lewis. Leon County Circuit Judge
Donald Hartwell has ordered the
Kmart Corp. to hall a new investment
program operating through three of
its Florida stores.
Lewis had filed suit claiming Kmart
was violating Florida banking laws,
which prohibit out-of-state savings
institutions from conducting business
in Florida.
He said the Kmart stores — In Fern
I’ark. St. Petersburg, and Margate
near Fort Lauderdale — were. In
e ffe c t, a c t in g as b ra n c h e s of

O ffe re d A t S C C

SAVE OVER *2832

earmarked fur Hood control work In m u r a l and
southern Florida.
Duval County beach erosion construction gets $3.9
million In the administration budget request, and $2(1
million more would go for ihr same pur|Hiv In I’alm
Ik-ueli Cou m y.
Another $2 million in flood control construction js
planned for Four River Haslns. and 81.4 million was
earmarked for flood control work In Dade County.
:
The Corps also recommended $400,000 be spent I(Jr
beach erosion control In Pinellas County.

Judge Halts Kmart Investment Program

P r e -G E D

5

Wednesday, Feb. 1, If 14— aA

LETTUCE . . 3 ro,$ 1. KING SIZE HOLSUM
BEANS OR GA. RED
3 9 TOMATOES 2 ro» 7 9 *
GRAPES ^6 8 * BREAD
FANCY RED DELICIOUS
26 OZ. BOX GOOD VALUE
COUNTY FAIR HAMBURGER
0 0
A P P L E S s . 3 8 c OR HOT DOG
SALT
.
.
.
4xo.
1
FANCY BARTLETT
_ _ .
R O L L S . ..0, 3 9 * LIBBY’S NAT. PAK 17 OZ. CANS
P E A R S . . s . 3 8 * BEECH NUT STRAINED
GREEN 0EANS
FANCY YELLOW
CORN
f\
Q Q C
BABY
FOOD
5
™?!
SWEET PEAS
£
O O
SQUASH . . 2 « .$ 1
FANCY RED

20 OZ.
LOAF

tu n

OAKLAWN’S VETERANS DIVISION
Route 4, Box 244
Sanford, Florida 3277!

Mw

Na i m

m

.

S titt
Year 01 D ischargi.
Type 01 D ts c h iift.

for

J*

�. E v e n in g H e r a ld
(USPJ M U M )

;

300 N. FRENCH AVE.,SANFORD, FLA. 31771
Area Code 30W22-2S11or 831-9993
Wednesday, February 1, 1984— &lt;A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

'Home Delivery: Week,$1.00; Month, 14.25; 6 Months,$24.00;
;Year, $45.00. By Mall: Week, $1.25; Month. $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

Where's That
Yankee Ingenuity?
‘ T h e nuclear pow er .industry in Am e rica is in a
d itch , but In W estern Europe and Ja p a n , nuclear
p ow er is m o v in g right along. Do they know
so m eth in g we d on 't know ?
Massive cost ove rru n s appear to be destroying
the econom ic rationale for b u ild in g nuclear power
plants in the United States, even though their
operating costs once they are built are m u c h less
than those for plants b u rn in g oil and coal.
■ O ld e r nuclear plants have turned out to be good
Investm ents, but as m u ch cannot be said for some
of the later projects.
N ucle ar pow er m a y have taken its u nklndcst cut
recently w hen a u tility In O hio announced plans to
convert a ncarly-com p jctc n u d f ar plant to coal.
'-T h e atom was supposetPfo liberate m a n k in d
from obnoxious srqokestacks. rem em ber? • ^
T h e picture abroad .Is altogether different. T h e
Japanese and Europeans* began to go full bore for
nuclear pow er after the first roun d of oil shocks in
1973-74. and for the most part they have not
wavered in Ih c ir c o m m itm e n t.
France already Is generating 4 0 percent of its
electricity from reactors, com pared to 12 percent
in the U nited States.
T h e Fren ch still plan to be d ra w in g 85 percent of
their pow er from nuclear plants b y the end of the
ce n tu ry.
•Jlritain. West G e rm a n y . S w itze rla n d , B e lg iu m ,
SWeden, Finla n d and Ja p a n all are ahead of the
U nited States In c o n vcislo n to nuclear, and a
recent New York Ttmes su rve y found no hint that
a n y plants u n d e r construction in those countries
w ill be abandoned.
’W h y this divergence in the w ay o u r com parable
Industrial societies are treating the nuclear option?
T h e re Is m ore than one answ er.
Nuclear plants are co m in g on line In Euro pe and
Ja p a n at far less cost. T h e ir builders have not had
tq apologize for as m a n y goof-ups as their U .S .
counterparts.
.Th e regu la tory process in those countries is not
being exploited to delay projects Tor the sake of
d rla y . G o ve rn m e n t leaders have not been as
Influenced by an ti-n ucle a r groups in adopting and
p u rsu in g energy policies w ith a strong nuclear
c o m m itm e n t.
, a .,
J t w o u ld app e ar fnttf\)tlr friends abroad do kno w
som ething we d o n 't kttow/THM helr procedure A for
plan n in g, designing and build in g nuclear plants
they k n o w that the shortest distance between tw o
points Is a straight line.
T h a t old tru th lias escaped the in d u stry and its
regulators In the United States, where it takes
twice as long and twice as m u ch m o n e y. If not
m ore, to build a plant Identical to one in Europe.
.T h e Europeans and Japanese kno w that power
r &amp; c to r s arc safe If they are built, operated and
m a intained by the book.
Som e U .S . com panies have been disgracefully
slipshod In their attention to detail in using a
technology where details are crucial.
T h e Europ e an s and Japanese know , finally, that
they could wake u p tom orrow to discover that the
oil and gas they Im port from abroad is no longer
available because ofa n international crisis.
'iT h e y know that sooner or later the cost of oil
a^atn w ill rise, reinforcing the econom ic a d va n ­
tages of nuclear power.
*4

IT h e y are fa m ilia r w ith the e n v iro n m e n ta l
p roble m s arising from too great a dependence on
b u rn in g coal. In the United States, we are less
dependent on energy Im ports but o u r vu ln erability
td uncertainties in the price and supply of oil
differs o n ly In degree from that w h ich confronts
ttje Europeans.
:&gt;The bedevllm etit of nuclear, pow er in Am e rica
njiight be acceptable If It reflected a flaw In
technology.
»*

*«But the steady progress of nuclear developm ent
elsewhere suggests that the problem s are of o u r
oWn m aking.
W h a t became or that fam ous A m e rica n kno w ttpw?

BERRY'S W O RLD
i4

By Jan e Caaaelbcrry

Vietnam veterans have gotten a bom
rap. Called upon to fight for their country
In a cruel, costly unpopular war. exposed
to Agent Orange, they returned home to
find themselves ignored and mistreated as
a reward for their sacrifice.
They have often had bad press, which
resulted in a negative Image being foisted
on the Vietnam veterans as a group
because of the acts of some Individuals.
A recent example occurred close to home
and was pointed out In an editorial by
James T . Wilson, editor of "Incoming and
Outgoing." the newsletter of the Vietnam
Veterans of Central Florida.
"In the past week." he stated, "two
unjustified headlines labeling the Vietnam
Veterans negatively led the national news.
A young man murdered a court bailiff and
cel’.lra'.ly wcu..dcd : ; y „ others Ir. the
Orange County Courthouse. UPI (United
Press International) and several local
media (not the Evening Herald) almost
Immediately labeled the man a Vietnam
vet because he had been seen wearing
fatigues. Th is man had N O T served In

Vietnam and In fact never made it through
Air Force basic training.
In Southeast Florida, a 24-year-old man
barricaded himself for several hours and
before the incident was over, a , police
officer was seriously wounded by the man.
Again, the man was labeled a Vietnam vet
even though he had been 9 years old at the
end of the Vietnam conflict. Th e truth Is
that the police ofTlcer wounded was the
Vietnam veteran, but nothing was said
about that fact."
Wilson said the problem of faulty news
reporting and bias against Vietnam veter­
ans Is hardly new. "It is a deep wound
reopened each time such headlines appear.
The important thing is how we as Vietnam
veterans, family and friends of Vietnam
veterans
enlightened mn-VIetJW jn
veterans in the public react. I believe we
must avoid responding with anger, bitter­
ness or emotional appeals for sympathy.
We must use such occasions to take
positive action. Without question, the
truth must be assertively presented and

publicized. Emphasis must be placed on
the vast majority of Vietnam veterans who
arc good and productive citizens. They are
pi Ic e m e n , fire m e n , tr u c k d r iv e r s ,
ssalcsmcn. doctors, attorneys, business
owners, executives, astronauts. Judges and
m uch more. During their service in
Vietnam, they were doing their best to
uphold and defend America. Today they
are doing their ’ best to build a better
community, nation and free way of life."
The Hoy Scouts of Seminole District will
kick ofT Hoy Scout Week and the 75th
anniversary of Hoy Scouting with a
countywide fundraiser this Saturday. The
event — a chicken barbecue dinner — will
be held from noon until 5 p.m. al lhe
chamber of commerce building at First
Street arid sanlord Avenuc'in ftanloru.
Tickets arc available from Scouts In
Troops 844. 500. 529. and 832 or at the
barbecue for a quarter or half-chicken,
slaw, baked beans and rolls. It's open to
the public.

ROBERT W A G M A N

F A R M IN G W O RLD

W e re
Farm ers
Slighted?
By 8onJs HUlgren
UPI Farm Editor
^ W A S H I N G T O N (U P I) Some of
America's farmers felt slighted that
President Reagan failed to address
agricultural Issues in his State of the
Union address last week.
But Deputy Agriculture Secretary
Richard L yng said broad economic
issues in the speech, such as reducing
the nation's budget deficit, are Impor­
tant to agriculture. He added. "I can tell
you it's a good speech, arid agriculture’s
pleased with It."
Sen. Robert Dole. R-Kan.. was one of
the most powerful voices to note
Reagan's oversight of farming and
agribusiness, the nation's largest in­
dustry making up 20 percent of the
gross national product.
On N BC’s "To d a y " show the morning
after the Wednesday address. Dole said,
" I wish he (Reagan) had spent a little
time on agriculture, but you can't
squeeze everything into the State of the
Union message."
In Bloomfield. Iowa, Ju d y Docrschcr.
a farm wife and member of the Drought
’83 Committee, a group which sought
government help to alleviate severe
problems stemming from last summer's
drought, disapproved of the omission.
"Have we become a national disgrace
because we are In trouble?" she asked.
"S u re ly the administration doesn't
believe tf you Ignore a problem long
enough, it will go away."
Peter Croghan. a farmer and execu­
tive board member of the Iowa Farm
Unity Coalition, was very upset.
" I thought he'd touch more on
agriculture, but by his past three years.
I wasn't looking for anything different
lha n what he's had ... w hich Is
nothing." Croghan said. "W ith our
Midwest farm economy, about the only
thing he proved Is that he could still
smile.”
Croghan added Reagan could not
have said much to please farmers,
anyway, because. "If he was going to do
a n yth in g, he would have done It
already. Anything he says now. farmers
will take with a grain of salt."
Like the Iowa Farm Unity Coalition,
the American Agriculture Movement
favors a strong government role in
setting farm prices. So the AAM . which
drove tractors to Washington In 1979 to
demand higher government price sup­
ports. also criticized Reagan's oversight.
To m m y Willis, a Brownsville. Tenn..
cotton farmer and AA M president, said
It was Ironic that such a large industry
was Ignored by Reagan.
"However, being a farmer. I expected
no less having learned first hand from
experience that the farming situation is
going to be continually Ignored by this
administration." he said.
W illis said lack of m e n tio n of
agriculture was galling because many
fanners supported Reagan's 1980 can­
didacy.
"Th e farm problem has now drifted
off the farm and Into the pocketbooks of
businessmen up and down Main Street
U S A ." he said. "Ignoring the farm
problem is not going to set well with the
producers."

High
Stakes
Debuts
M AN C H ESTER . N.H. |NEA) - The
first act of Campaign ’84 is being singed
in two places that are 1.000 miles apart,
vet striking in their similarities. New
Hampshire and Iowa are txith small and
. predominantly rural, with while ma­
jorities — and at this time of year, both
are burled In snow and marked by
bone-numbing cold.
This year, because of the change in
Democratic Part&gt; rules, the first two
events of the 1984 primary calendar will
occur only rigiu days apart, with the
Iowa caucus scheduled for Feb. 20 and
the New Hampshire primary slated for
Feb. 28. As a result, most of the major
candidates — those who can afford a
two-front effort — are running full-out In
both stales simultaneously.
The number of eouveniton delegates
won Isn't ol major importance in these
first two contests. Together, New
Hampshire and Iowa have only 80
delegates — compared to Texas, for
example, whleh has 200. What’s critical
in these first two tests is how well each
candidate measures up to what Is
ex peeled of him by the party prolessionals and the press. It's a battle
William French Smith leaves behind
the Constitution.
against experlations.
him a Justice Department that has
When an Individual violates the law.
In the past two decades, numerous
perverted, twisted, abused, discarded
the wrong may be quickly set right. Hut
politicians have been viewed as having
and ignored the precious fabric of law
when the highest law enforcement
that prolectsmirclvll rights.
lost in New Hampshire and Iowa,
official in the land violates the law. the
although they actually won those con­
Under Smith, the Justice Department
rule of law Itself is Imperiled.
has . engaged in ofTlclal lawlessness,
tests. In 1968. Lyndon Johnson "lost"
W hen the Suprem e C ourt ruled
retreated from the bipartisan policies of &gt;'• against segregated schools 30 years ago.
by not winning big enough In -New
the past, and demonstrated an Igno­
Hampshire: so did Edmund Muskie In
Its most memorable phrase was that
1972. The reverse also has been true: In
rance of the law whleh would be cause
.“ separate but equal has no place." But
1972. George McGovern "w o n " In Iowa
for disbarment in a private practitioner.
under Smith, the Justice Department
by not losing to Muskie as badly as was
When the wrongdoer Is the attorney
tried to breathe new life into this ancient
expected. Th is was also the way In
general of the United Stales, the resull
excuse for racial exclusion.
which the press viewed Jim m y Carter In
is an invitation to anarchy.
S m ith s lawyers argued that even
For more than 25 years, the Depart­
1976. when he actually came in second
though state and local officials may
ment of Justice was held responsible for
in Iowa to a slate of uncommitted
have created a segregated school
delegates.
safeguarding the laws which protect our
system. I hey had no obligation to undo
civil rights. During this period, with the
The polling done In both states Is very
it. Where the officials chose to do so
clear: Walter Mondale holds a very
exception of John Mitchell's tenure as
voluntarily. Justice agrued against
sizable 2-1 lead over John Glenn, while
Richard Nixon’s attorney general, the
them. Where the officials were reluctant
the rest of the field (rails badly, splitting
department generally adhered to its
to desegregate schools, the department
responsibilities.
about 30 percent of the vote almost
encouraged their recalcitrance.
But since Ronald Reagan became
evenly among themselves.
These positions run contrary to 30
president and appointed his private
How will the initial results be Judged?
years of litigation and more than 2.000
lawyer attorney general, a radical
Mondale is Ihe biggest potential victim
separate lawsuits.
change In enforcement has occurred.
of expectations. He must do as well as is
in voting rights. Smith's department
In Smith's three years In office, the
expected or his support will be viewed
has attempted to weaken essential
as "soft" — often the kiss of death to the
Justice department has become the
protection by distorting the facts of the
early leader. The second-rated Glenn
violator of civil rights Instead of their
law and abandoned precious rights
must do well enough for his candidacy
protector, the assailant of Justice instead
when the opinions of highly placed
of its guardian, and the handmaiden of
Republicans intruded.
to remain viable: He must remain
the White House Instead of the in­
within striking distance should the
In employment discrimination and
dependent enforcer of law.
leader stumble later. Those remaining
fair housing, the Smith record is the
Under Smith. Justice has: repudiated
must hope that either contest will let
same.
the Supreme Court's definitive in ­
them emerge from the pack, becoming
For William French Smith. Individual
terpretation of the Constitution and
the one alternative to the "big two."
rlghls exist only when they are popu­
announced that It would refuse to
The expectation Is that Mondale will
larly agreed to. Under his tenure, the
enforce the laws of the land; abruptly
Constitution has become a document of
pull more lhan 40 percent of the vote.
switched sides in cases pending before
Infinite elasticity, to be tailored and
Most [jolts give him between 40 and 50
the high court: launched strident and
stretched to fit the fashions of the
percent of the Democratic vote in both
sweeping attacks on the rights of
moment.
slates. If he wins more lhan 40 percent
women and minorities: allowed Its
in both, hr will have lived up to his
Edward Bates, attorney general to
actions to be shaped by political consid­
billing. An absolute majority in either
another Republican president, Abraham
erations: become the center for anti-civII
stale would be something of a landslide
Lincoln, once described his mission
rights activities In the federal govern­
and would all but bury the rest of the
thusly: "T h e office 1 hold is not properly
ment: and reached Into other agencies
field.
'political, but strictly legal; and it is my
to stop or slow policies it has deemed
duty above all other ministers of stale to
For Glenn. It's critical that he finish
"overly protective" of civil rights.
u p h o ld th e la w a n d r e s is t a ll
second in both contests. All of his efforts
The overriding desire In all these
encroachments, from whatever quarter
have portrayed the campaign as a Glenn
•actions is to lim it (he rig h ts of
vs. Mondale contest; should he finish
of mere will and power."
minorities, women, the handicapped,
third, the result would be devastating.
If that is an Ideal. It Is a motivating
and others. The sum of the Smith
For a second-place finish, anything from
farlor far different from that which has
legary is to position the Reagan ad­
20 and 25 percent would enable his
moved the U.S. Department of Justice
ministration squarely In opposition to
for the last three years.
campaign to remain viable.

J U L IA N B O N D

O n The Smith Legacy

JA C K ANDERSON

Syrians Protect Rich Drug Trade

"Hey, foxy lady, didn't I see you In Michael
• Jackson’s 'Thriller'?"

W A S H IN G TO N - Th e Syrians aren't
clinging so stubbornly to Lebanon's
Uckaa Valley Just to protect their flank
ugulnst Israeli attack. T h e y ’re also
protecting a mulli-bllllon-dollar drug
traffic Involving top-ranking Syrian m il­
itary and civilian officials.
High-quality hashish and heroin are
smuggled out of the valley through
Syria to various Western capitals. The
smugglers arc given safe passage by the
Syrian m ilitary — In exchange for
lucrative payoffs.
F ro m In te llig e n c e so u rce s, m y
associate Indy Badhwar has obtained a
confidential report that details the
whole sordid story. Here are the
highlights:
— A pivotal role in the dope traffic Is
played by the feared Syrian secret
service. Al-lsllkhbaratt As-Souriat. It
was the SS. as it Is called, that brought
In Tu rk ish experts to grow opium

popples In the valley. Th e secret service
uses the money from drugs to bankroll
terrorist attacks and to recruit and
control spies — as well as to line Its own
pockets.

In the port of Tripoli. Th e drug convoys,
under Syrian army protection, travel
the bleak, sandy roads from Baalbek,
Lebanon. Into Syria through the remote
village of Sarghaya.

— Like Chicago gangsters In the
1920s. Syrian generals have carved out
their own exclusive territories to keep
things on a businesslike basis. One
dust-up did occur between two rival
generals. Mohammed G hancm and
G hazl Kenaan. Te rm s of a "peace
treaty" gave Kenaan the take from
smugglers In the Lebanese city of
Shatura, while Ghanem exacts tribute
at the Syrian border post of Al-Massna.

-a Syrian military helicopters have
been used to ship tons of hashish from
Ihe town of Nlhaa In the Bekaa Valley to
Syria, where it goes to Europe. Drugs
bound for A le xa n d ria , E g y p t, arc
shipped from the Syrian-controlled
Lebanese port of Anfa aboard the ship
"Hassan." under Ihe watchful eye of
Syrian agent Mustafa Al Farass. Last
summer. Egyptian officials seized 3.200
kilograms of Bekaa Valley dope.

— The northern Lebanon truck routes
are controlled by Syrian security chief
Rifaat Assad. President Hafez Assad's
younger brother. His minions share
income frdm the northern drug roads
with Ali Eld. an Alawlte Moslem agent

— T h e list of officers enriching
themselves from the drug trade is a
veritable Who's Who of the Syrian
arm y. T h e intelligence report lists
names.
— Also fingered in the Intelligence

report were Syria's defense minister.
Mustafa Talas, and Arm y chief Hlkmat
AI-Shahaby. The y were reported to be
dealing with Syria's top drug dealers.
Ahmad Mustafa Al-Lakklss and Hussein
Abdel Ghanl Tleiss.
— One tap drug dealer, Jam il Abdel
Karim Hamlch. from the Bekaa Valley
village of Taraya. receives full Syrian
m ilitary protection. "W hen his car
passes through a Syrian checkpoint, the
Syrian soldiers do not dare slop It or
question h im ," the report states.
"Hamieh also has close tics to defense
minister Talas."
— D ru g a rre s ts I n v o lv in g the
Syrian-controlled traffic have been
made over the last two years in Egypt.
Spain and Greece. Canadian and French
Interpol agents have nabbed drug
smugglers in Lebanon In an effort to
stem the (low of dope to their countries.

�•0

Porsche-Audi Heads Dealers' Top 10 List
'• D E T R O IT (UPI| — German-made Porsche sports car*and Audi sedans arc No. 1 with auto dealers In a new
quality survey, and other foreign autor.iakcrs grabbed
the remaining nine spots In the retailers' lop 10 list.
The annual dealer poll by Ward's Auto World
magazine found the highest ranking American name­
plate was Cadillac. In 11th place. Ward's senl surveys to
Some 800 dealers, who were asked to score 26
nameplates on a scale of one to 10.
: Porsche-Audl products, marketed by Volkswagen
dealers, received a perfect score of 10. At the bottom of
the list In 26th place was France's Renault, with a score
6f 6.7.
■ Right behind the German automakers was Japan's

Toyota VW and the Japanese automaker Honda
finished In a lie for third, followed by the German
automaker Mercedes-Benz. In the second five were the
British firm Aston-Martin. Japan's Subaru and Mazda.
Sweden's Volvo and Germany's BMW.
Most domestic nameplates finished in the second 10 or
below. They Included Oldsmobllc autos. 14th place.
Ford division. 16th. Chrysler-Plymouth. 17th. American
Motors Corp.. 18th. Dodge. 20th. Pontiac. 21st.
Llncoln-Mcrcury. 22nd. Chevrolet. 24th. and Bulck.
25th.
Japanese automaker Nissan ranked 23rd. the lowest
score for an Import.
The poll found dealers were unanimous In predicting

•'

an increase In sales for 1984. Th e y forecast an average
Increase of 14.6 percent above last year's 9.2 million
total Industry salrs. for a 1984 figure of around 10.5
million ears..
Nearly 70 percent of dealers said they have hired more
sides people In the past three months and 67 percent
have hired more sendee technicians. But roughly 53
percent of the dealers said they will not spend money to
modernize their dealerships In the coming year.
Two-thirds of the dealers In the poll do not want to sec
an end to voluntary cpiotas on Japanese Imports. The
quotas will be raised In March from the current 1.68
million to 1.85 million for a final year, ending In March
1985.

•

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Don't Be
Left Out
In
The ColdI
For Prompt Courtooua
Service On Your
Heating S y s te m -

-Divorce Rate In ‘81 Up Again; '32 Figures Show Decline
W A S H IN G TO N (U l'l) lhe govern
ment reports a record 1.21 million
divorces In 1981. which might be the
last year In a string of Increases In
divorce numbers that began In 1963.
In a report on final 1981 divorce
statistics, the National Center for Health
Statistics said the divorce rate was 5.3
for every 1.000 American In the total
population, equal to the record set in
1979.
In 1980. divorces numbered 1.19
million — 5.2 per 1.000 people.
Preliminary 1982 data already re­
leased by the center Indicates the

percent of husbands under age 25. the
report said. About 32 percent of wives
and 42 percent of husbands were 35 or
older.
The report estimated 1.18 million
children were Involved In divorce In
1981. up 6.000 from the previous year.
California recorded more divorces than
any other state — 133.578. or 11 perrent
of the national total, the report said
Texas was second, with 101.856. Ver­
mont was last, with 2.263.
The agency found the divorce rate was
highest In the West, where statistics
measured 6.3 divorces for every 1.000

number of divorces fell that year for the
first time in two decades to 1.18 million,
with the divorce rate down to 5.1
divorces per 1.000.
Preliminary figures are not vet avail­
able for 1983.
Most of 1981's divorces occurred In
couples married for two years, the
agency said. Th e median length of
marriage for couples being divorced was
seven years, up from 6.8 years In 1980.
the agency said.
About half the divorcing spouses were
between the ages of 25 and 34. with
another 22 percent of wives and 13

people, or 75 percent more than the
Northeast's rate of 3.6.
In the North Central States, the rate
was 4.9 and In the South. 6.1. the
agency said.
The rale ranged Irom a low of 3.3 per
1.000 population In Pennsylvania to
highs of 8.5 In W yoming and 17.6 in
Nevada.
Increases in the number of divorces
were recorded in all geographic divisions
except Ohio. Indiana. Illinois. Michigan
and Wisconsin, where divorces dropped
to 206.946 In 1981. down from 212.405
In 1980.

Wednesday. Feb. 1,1M4— JA

C a ll U s ll
W E O FFE R 24 HOUR
E M E R G E N C Y SER VIC E

Varner

WE SERVICE ALL M AK ES* MODELS
0 A S .0 IL 0 R ELECTR IC

^SKABO UTO UR
SENIO R C IT IZ E N DISCOUNT

ERNAIR
F S A N F O R D . IN C .
Doing Builnes* In Sanford A m Sine* m i

100 N. M A P L E A V E . P H . 3 2 2 4 3 2 1

SANFORD
&gt; •(

Hood* Wants
To Pay Society Back
P ITTS B U R G H (UPI) - Gary Th a rp wants to pay his
debt to society and he's asked the Justice Department to
send him a bill for the 26 months he spent In prison for a
"Robin Hood" robbery.
"Put simply and without melodrama. I have a
responsibility here that It Is m y duty as an American to
take care of." Tharp. 35. wrote In a letter to Attorney
General William French Smith.
He told Smith to bill him for the taxpayers' cost of his
Imprisonment. Including "court costs and any other
miscellaneous expenses."
Tharp, who robbed a bank messenger In an attempt to
get funds for a program for disadvantaged youths, wants
his reimbursement to set a precedent for other
offenders.
He plans to take a draft of his own 31 -page proposal to
Washington, calling for a mandate that all Inmates help
pay for their Incarcerations.
"It's giving (taxpayers) back somethin*] that's already
Ihclrs." Th a rp said. "Every dollar that built every prison
In this country came out of somebody's pocket. They
went out and worked for that money.
"W hen a person Is convicted of a crime, an Injustice Is
done not only to the victim but Is prolonged because
society has to pay for It. W hy should taxpayers ... have
to continually put out this money?"
Tha rp said he committed the robbery Nov. 19. 1973.
to try to save a program he started for disadvantaged
youths.
Tharp, who was a high school teacher at the time, said
he had spent $5,000 of his own money trying to keep
the program going, i
-u
"&gt;
"I became obsessed with the program." said Tharp,
who Is now a chef at an exclusive restaurant. “ I could
see a great future for It. So. I made the decision — It was
very spontaneous — that I would go down to the bank
and rob a messenger.
"It was very Immature. But I didn't think I'd hurt
anyone, the money was Insured so no one would lose
anything."
Tharp's holdup netted him a sackful of canceled
checks from the messenger, a five-year prison sentence
that ended In an early parole and the nickname "Robin
Hood" from his fellow Inmates.
"He Is not. repeat not. a hardened criminal, even
though the crime he committed might so Indicate." the
federal Judge who sentenced him wrote to the U.S.
Parole Board. Tha rp completed his parole In 1979.
"I am only now beginning to realize the benefits of
hard work and stubborn determination." Tharp said In
his letter to the attorney general. "I am slowly defying
the odds against me and I am striving toward being a
positive, effective force In m y community and society In
general.”

‘W

o J k j X z e K A . / iw fc
p ------*1 r

The Shopper’s Center

~ 11 ^
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D IS C O U N T
L IQ U O R

Sanford's
Sanford
Prescription
Center

C EN TER

Rr“ ‘_r.i?*

Calendar
WEDNESDAY. FEB. 1
Rebus and Live Oak Rcbos Club, noon and 8 p.m..
closed. 130 Normandy Rd.. Casselberry.
Aliamonte Springs A A . 8 p.m.. closed. Altamonte
Springs Com m unity Church. State Road 436 and
Hermit's Trail. Alanon meets same time and place.
Casselberry A A .'$ p.m .. closed. Ascension Lutheran.
Ascension Drive. Casselberry.
Born to W in AA . 8 p.m .. open discussion. 1201 W.
First St.. Sanford.

THURSDAY. FEB. 2
Free Income tax assistance for senior clllzcns. 9 a.m.
to 1 p.m.. Hacienda Village (east clubhouse). 500
Longwood-Ovledo Road. Winter Springs.
Lake Mary Rotary Club. 8 a m.. Lake Mary High
School.
Overeatcrs Anonymous, open. 7:30 p.m. Community
United Methodist Church. Highway 17-92. Casselberry.
Sanford A A . 8 p.m.. 1201W . First St. Open speaker.
Sanford Alanon. 8 p.m .. The Crossroads. Lake Minnie
Road off High way 17-92. Sanford.
Oviedo AA . 8 p.m.. closed. First United Methodist
Church. Oviedo.

FRIDAY. FEB. 9
Rummage sale. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m .. First Christian
Church. 1607 S. Sanford Ave.. Sanford.
Free Income tax assistance for senior citizens. 9 a.m.
to 1 p.m.. Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce. 400
E. Fist St.. Sanford, and Com m unity United Methodist
Church. 285 U.S. Highway 17-92. Casselberry.
Miniature World of Central Florida Seventh Annual
Show and Sale. 6-9 p.m .. Expo Centre. 500 W.
Livingston St.. Orlando. Them e "Pioneer Days."
Seminole Sunrise Klwanls. 7 a.m.. Skyport Restau­
rant. Sanford Airport.
Optimist Club of South Seminole. 7:30 a.m.. Holiday
Inn. Wymore Road. Altamonte Springs.
17-92 Group AA . 8 p.m.. Messiah Lutheran Church.
Highway 17-92. south of Dog Track Road. Casselberry.
Weklva A A (no smoking). 8 p.m.. Weklva Presbyterian
Church. SR 434. at Weklva Springs Road. Closed.
Longwood A A . 8 p.m .. Rolling Hills Moravian Church.
SR 434. Longwood. Alanon. same time and place.
Tanglcwood AA. 8 p.m., St. Richards Episcopal
Church. Lake Howell Roqd. Alanon. same time and
place.
Sanford A A Step. 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St.. Sanford.
Closed.

M C Q N O tf T F R M T O P T IO i

oemt$coMomormm

Only
II**.

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•i.*t » i3 t '. . t t *2.tt
Next Day Service, tool

CWAIOMINCO IH J

LIQUOR 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
(Liquor Cloud Sunday)
PHONE 323-9190 RX 321 0250

OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO S P.M.

«
•*"

t

�*\

.

For 60 Years
Day In, Day Out

S f lS w ^

O U tO O O R W S ttt

^ i b a ' 300'01

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60-20TT

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N o -&gt;S ' 9

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$8s*
*

peg

4.99

^

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Advance
ASSORTED SEED

HOME
INSECT SPRAY

FLEA AND TICK
KILLER
Kenco'

For vegetables and
flowering plants.

32 oz. No. 410.

32 oz. No. 810. K enco*

LAWN SPRAYER
Attaches to garden hose.
No. 390-B.

£
G llm o u r

Reg. 6.90

STAINLESS STEEL
SPRAYER

Dwarf
AZALEAS

RID-A-RAT
RAT AND MOUSE
KILLER K e n c o *

In 5" pots, red,
white and pink
blossoms.
Foil
wrapped.

16 oz. No. 930.

Reg. 2.89

No I it o d f d tl t l stare*
MMb quanbtmt last

POLE PRUNER
96" handle. No. G-7097.

Comes with brass pump
assembly. 2 gallon.
No. 106SN.

R c:

ROACH AND
ANT SPRAY
Premixed, with sprayer,
No. 912.
Kenco

E W
Gallon
Reg. 7.47

Refill, No. 913.
Reg. 5.99

ORANGE CITY
2323 South Volusia Ave.
Highway 17 and 92
Phone 775-7268
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
1029 East Altamonte Drive
(Highway 436)
Phone 339-8311
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
875 West Highway 436
Phone 862-7254

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

J .. . .

------ OPEN TIL 6 P M SANFORD
700 French Avenue
Phone 323-4700
Scotty's stores open at 7:30a m
Monday thru Saturday,
Closed Sunday

�DELUXE
SPEED RAKE

Sunco

20 tempered spring steel
tines w ith coiled spring
brace. 48" handle.
No SW18.

hoses
W r -u r t

®-6-6miuziH

R8g. 4.88
•
*
iS T u lh r #

(No.BX58.50 5/8", ,,
Reg. 4.99
E ig h t spikes

A

FERTILIZERS
\\

5 LB B A G
Your Choice

^

/ 39

• ALL PURPOSE
• CITRUS
• ROSE FOOD
• TOMATO
• AZALEA. GARDENIA
• PALM
and RHODODENDRON
Baq
25 Lb Bag

hudswn

pldllU

• CITRUS • TOMATO

V

99
Reg 3 77

361 sq. in. dual burner
with "L ite-A -M atic"
ignitor.

Utility
WHEELBARROW
3 cu. ft. capacity.
No.KS-3.

i
\

399

tin

*

y iiu r Id w m

fit)

Reg 4 29

•• H i.in

in* 6 h h

No

( 'rin p lrp t)«»l
ir11 »*iI Miilnlifin
in ». (iiit|
_____________
/

TRAILBLAZER AXE

IDELUXE
GAS GRILL

CYPRESS
FENCE
SECTIONS

Features 361 sq. in.
dual burners, patio cart
base with side tables,
push button ignitor, lava
rock and 20 lb. tank.
Model 3173-Z.

Reg. 19.88

YARDSAVER
STORAGE
BUILDING
4* x 7'. No. YS-47.

ARROW

United
Services

AH [tUtpOSI'
units i if nulnrnls
1 ft

27.95

Sunbeam

6* high x 8' wide
in Rustic stock-,'Ti
ade style.

GROW GREAT
FERTILIZER

Reg.

Reg. 149.

Reg. 17.59

Hi t)ii(|

No. 60183.

1 0 0 9 5

PREMIUM GREEN
FERTILIZER
.i 1 lIf111S 11f I11,
In ,Mils
1 t i|i,im *
111,III III,mi t) t) t)
Nil f,lifts 'll s&lt;i,i,t
B,*l,im ,'d nutrition

3 Gallon
UTILITY
SPRAYER

GAS GRILL

Your Choice

• ROSE FOOD
• AZALEA. GARDENIA
and RHODODENDRON
f 4»r rl 11 ,11 If]

Rog. 6.49

A99
.
L&gt;
U

n , „1/
. ‘jr. „49
Re

.

^ \

SEVIN DUST
1 lb. cannister.

m
^

Trash and Lawn Bags

7. 33 gal. or 10, 26 gal. sires

77
m
^

GARBAGE BAGS

w ith
Coupon

\Reg. 1.88 UmltJ.pleese
Coupon Good February 3, 4 only

TaX Kitchen Bags

15,11 gal. sire.

Your
Choice:
Reg. 99C
Limit 4,these
With Coupon
Coupon Good February 3. 4 only

£

PRICES GOOD FEBRUARY 3 and 4 ONLY!
OPEN A
upctil T

Scotty's

I

ORANGE CITY
2323 South Volusia Ave.
Highway 17 and 92
Phone 775-7268
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
1029 East Altamonte Drive
(Highway 436)
Phone 339-8311
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
875 West Highway 436
Phone 862-7254

-O P E N TIL 6 PM------SANFORD
700 French Avenue
Phone 323-4700
Scotty's stores open at 7 30a m
Monday thru Saturday.
Closed Sunday

Reg. 139.00
Prices quoted in this ad are based on custo­
mers picking up merchendise at our store.
Delivery is available for a small charge. Man­
agement reserves the right to limit quantities
on special sale merchandise.

FOR YOUR ADDED CONVENIENCE
YOU CAN USE YOUR . . .

V IS A *

�I

m

IA-evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Feb. 1, 1»14

Business Productivity Up

Herald Photo by Jacque Brund

Cleaning Man
On A Wet Tin Roof

James Dawson, 20, does a one man cleaning job on the Vaughn
greenhouses on U.S. Highway 17-92 in Casselberry. Dawson
says he prefers it that way, working alone as he spray cleans
the greenhouses. Just one side of a roof takes two days to
complete, he says, the whole job a few months. And during all
that tlrr. _• he has to guard against the possibility of slipping off
as he walks across the wet tin roofs.

Michael Jackson May Sue
Over Hair Burning Incident
LOS A N G E L E S (U l’t) Superstar
singer Michael Jackson may sue the
special effects crew responsible for an
explosive device that set his hair ablaze
while filming a T V commercial, his
attorneys said.
"W e are thoroughly examining all of
the facts that contributed to this
traumatic injury. Including the possibili­
ty of negligence and possible lack of due
regard for Michael's safely," said a
statement Issued bv Jackson s law firm.
The attorneys said a decision whether
to file suit will be made after a review of
five ta[&gt;es and film footage of thr
accident, which occurred Friday evening
during a filming sequence involving
pyrotechnics.
Jackson was dancing down a stairway
to the tune of his hit litllte Jean when a
special effects device apparently misfired
and sel his sllrkcncd hair ablaze. He
suffered second and third-degree burns
on I he back of his head.

_

Jackson was hospitalized overnight
and went home Saturday to recuperate
from the palm-sized wound. T he state­
ment by Jackson's law firm said he was
feeling belter — In pari Inca use of the
"love and support" of his fans and
friends.
"Michael Is feeling belter. He Is under
the care of his doctor, who advises us
that Michael's recovery is proceeding
well." the statement said.

W A S H IN G TO N 1UPI) — Th e Labor Department says
American business made the biggest gain In pro­
ductivity since the economic recovery of 1976. going up
3 .1 percent In 1983.
The department's measure of output per hour covered
77.3 million workers, not Including those on the farm.
Factory productivity alone showed the best Improve­
ment In two decades.
Out the Improvements In productivity slowed down at
the end of 1983. the department said Monday, with the
non-farm business sector showing Its smallest gain of
the year in the fourth quarter at 1 percent.
The 1983 overall increase was a big turnaround from
1982 s 0.1 percent decline but still may not be the kind
of fundamental shift necessary to resume the steady
Increases once l&gt;plcal of the United Staua. analysts
said.
When business produces more goods and services
without the same Increases In labci costs. I he result Is
an Increase In national wealth Productivity Improve­
ments help keep prices from going up as fast within the
United Stales and also help keep American goods
competitive on world markets.
Hut the musclcbound U.S. dollar spoiled whatever
advantage was won internationally in productivity last
year, making American goods and services far less
competitive when compared to those paid for In virtually
any other currency.
The United Stales has retained its lead In productivity
over every other country, although until recently Japan
and West Germany seemed to be catching up fast.
Th e nation's factories, employing 19 million people.
Increased their productivity by 6.6 percent In 1983 to
show their biggest Improvement since 1963's 7.2
percent.
Unit labor costs In manufacturing actually went down
0.9 percent, the first year that has happened since 1965.
Not only are Industries benefiting from "givebacks." by
which union workers often agree to limit wage
increases, but factories are increasing output with fewer
workers.

Factory output rose 7.9 percent, the number of hours
worked Increased only 1.2 percent and the pay per hour,
adjusted for Inflation, went up 2.3 percent.
Factory productivity was up 1.2 percent In 1982.
The broadest productivity category. lor the business
sector Including farms. Improved 2.6 percent In 1983.
Th is also was the largest Improvement since 1976. Farm
productivity generally changes Independently of the
business cycle.
"W e've had a good cyclical rebound.*’ Robert Ortner.
chief economist of the Commerce Department, said
•'The real tests for productivity lie in the years ahead."
Ortner said. "There, the critical fartor Is capital
spending, and that Is beginning to turn up stronger than
is normal coining uui of recessions."
Only If workers arc given more modern equipment
and training on a massive scale can American business
Improve on the efficiencies being Introduced elsewhere
in the world, analysts generally agree. But 1983 was an
unprecedented third year of decline for capital spending.

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The attorneys said Jackson hopes to
well enough to attend a party in ills
honor in New York Feb. 7. The party Is
to mark his entry Into the Guinness
Book of Records with Ills Thriller album
— the most successful album in re­
cording history.
Ik -

Jackson. 25. has seen footage of the
accident with his attorney and physi­
cian. Dr. Steven Hocfflln. and Is recon­
sidering his earlier inclination to release
vldrola|ws of the Incident to the news
media.

'Failed' Experiment
Clue To Early Life
W A S H IN G TO N (U I’I) — What started as an under­
graduate science experiment In Indiana ended with the
discovery of a "n e w " kind of bacteria that use sunlight
the way plants do and may provide clues about how
early life developed.
The classroom experiment failed, but the bacteria
turned out to represent a new category of pholosynthetlc
organisms that may contain ancient genetic blueprints
showing how living cells began using sunlight to make
sugars from air and water.

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The bacteria were found in soli gathered for an
undergraduate class experiment that failed because of a
preparation error, Indiana microbiologist Howard Gest
said. The flasks were about to be thrown out when a
small greenish patch was noticed.

J K» B#U OfHp
S*4F#P
Of lf*t

"It was some serendipity." said
Mlcheal Gest. a
professor of microbiology and adjunct professor of
htslorv and philosophy of science.

INSURANCE. *

Gest explained in a telephone interview that during
lite first 2 billion years after Earth was formed, the
atmosphere contained no oxygen.

Fimm

According to theory, bacteria eventually fused with
ligh t-cap tu rin g pigments sim ilar to chlorophyll.
I’hotosynthetlc organisms began producing oxygen as u
byproduct, aiding In the transformation of the at­
mosphere.
T h e new bacteria contain a unique form of
chlorophyll, the green light-transforming pigment found
In plants today, which suggests the bacteria evolved
long before there was oxygen in the atmosphere, Gest
said.

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OR. PATRICK L. DELPLORE
FAMILY DENTIST

When teeth are missing, they must be replaced If
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Replacing lost teeth Involves the use of e fixed bridge or partial denture - depending
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Incidentally, behavioral studies on parsons who have lost a pert of their body - com­
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M in o r

�SPORTS

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Feb. 1, IIM — FA

SCC Goes For 17th Win Tonight
Seminole* Com m unity Colleges Haulers go for ilieir
17th victory tonight as they host Ocala's Central Florida
Com m unity College at 7:30at the SCC Health Center.
The Haiders slniul at 16-9 overall and 5-2 in the
Mid-Florida Conference while Central Florida comes In
with a f t - I t record ovt. ill Tonight's gamr dors r..V
count in llie conference standings since Central Florida
is Ineligible In the race because It gave mil loo many
scholarships this year.
Even though the game doesn't mean any thing In the
conference, the Haulers would like to avenge a iwo-polnl
loss to Central Florida earlier In the season.
"I expect it lo lx* a fast-moving game." SCC coach Hill
Payne said. "T h e y ICenlral Florida) like lo run with the
bail and play a lof of different defenses. Th e y shoot well
from the outside, but are not as strong inside."
Central Florida Is led by high-scoring Craig Overton
out of Cleveland. He Is Joined In the starting lineup by
former Vanguard High performer Benny Gabbard and
Bruce Perry at guard, Chris Wejten at center and .Jeff
Foreman at forward.
SCC will go with Mike Tolbert. Jim m y Payton. Llnny

J.C. Basketball
Grace. Dclvln Everett and Luis Phelps in the starting
Hu'*uj&gt; with Bernard Merthle. Arlis Johnson and Mike
Phillips the lop three players ofTthe bench.
Th e Haiders trail Florida Jun io r College by one game
In the conference standings. They are one-half game
ahead of Daytona Beach. The conference season begins
Its second half and Payne is hoping for Santa Fe to
knock off Florida Jun io r tonight. Lake City also plays
Daytona Beach tonight in another Important conference
game. The Haiders travel to Daytona Beach Saturday.
SCC Is coming from two strong showings with
victories over Santa Fe (Saturday) and Lake City
(Wednesday). The trio of Jim m y Payton. Llnny Grace
and Mike Tolbert continues to perform well for the
Haiders while 6-6 Luis Phelps and 6-5 Dclvln Everrtt
have returned lo last year's level In the past two games.
The bench, though, has probably been the difference
in tlte two big ones. Bernard Merthle and Artis Johnson.

'Noles Annihilate
Lake Howell, 86-43
B y Lou S tc fin o
H erald Sp orts W rite r
It was not a night to remember for the
Lake Howell Silver Hawk basketball
teams. They started off the evening by
dropping the Junior varsity game to
Seminole, but that's nothing to fret
about.
But they ended up the evening getting
annihilated by the Seminole varsity.
86-43. It was a game for Seminole where
everybody in orange and black scored
except for S e m in o le coach C h ris
Marlettc.
The Lake Howell cheerleaders were
even oul cheered by the Seminole
cheerleaders. But the Lake Howell fans
did buy more I’epsl at halftime. Probably
lo wash down the 29-10 halftime score.
T h e nam e of the game for the
Scmlnolcs was defense as they held the
Silver Hawks, 2-16. to Just four firstquarter points and only six more in the
second quarter. They did It by switching
defenses and putting their lop defensive
player. James House, on Lake Howell
a ll-cv cryth ln g guard Efrem Brooks,
holding the 5-8 Junior to Just two
first-half points. He finished with 12.
"W e did a lot of different tflings
defensively." said Marlelte.' l thought
that was the key. When you hold a team
to 10 (minis (in the first lialfi and only 30
with three minutes left in the game,
you've played good defense."
Th e Scmlnolcs started off slowly as It
look them 5:13 to get their first lead at
4-2. From there it was down hill for the
Hawks as the 'Noles outscored them 25-8
the rest of the half.
Rouse did the Job on Brooks as Brooks
didn't touch the basketball for the first
lime until only 3:28 was left in the first
quarter. Brooks scored Ills only two
points of the first half, when there was
less than one minute left in the second
quarter.
J im m y Gilchrist paced Seminole in the
first half with eight (joints. The Hawks to
their credit, held ‘Noles forward Willie
Mitchell tojust six points In the half.
The second hall was like the first half
but more of it. Seminole exploded for 57

specifically, have come off the pine to rebound and score
at crucial times.
Johnson, a 6-3 freshman from Greenville. S.C.. seems
to relish his role as the super sub. "Th e way 1 look at II Is
if I don't start there must Ik* people better than me on
the team." he said after Saturday s win. "1 don't worry
about It. I Just go out and play."
Despite battling players four and five inches taller.
Johnson lias held his own — and sometimes dominated
— on the hoards. "I use my weight, just try to find an
open space and then hope it bounces my way.'' he said,
The Lake Brantley High School dance team will
perform during halftime.

Colettl Can't Save Lady Raiders
G A IN E S V IL L E — In girls' Junior college action
Tuesday night. Juana Colettl turned In an excellent
around game, but SCC's Lady Haiders dropped an 88-66
decision to powerful Santa Fe.
Colettl tossed in nine points, handed out nine assists
and grabbed nine rebounds for the night while

S EM INO LE |S6| - Gra* 1. Slillty J Rout* 9. Franklin
S Alc&gt;*nder ). Rob in ion 4, Gordon 13. GilthrDI II.
Holloman II. Brook)*, Wilt hell It Total t Jr I I h i t
L A K E H O W E LL (431 - Bohannon 14, Wooldridge 1.
Andertoo 4. Aril }. Brook) II. BeeCey J. Evan&gt; 4. Jenne
0 Gamm on)0 Total) 17 * 17 4J
Halltlme — Seminole Je. Lake Howell 10 Total loul) —
Seminole IS, Leke Howell 14 Technical) — Brook)
(Capped back board) Fouled ovl - BoHannon

Bruce F ra n klin , left,
takes a swipe at the ball
and Hayward Beasley.
F r a n k l i n a n d his
Sem inole team m ates
turned In th e ir best
defensive effort of the
y e a r Tuesd ay n ig h t
with an 86 43 thrashing
of the L a ke H o w ell
Sliver Hawks.

D c lv ln E v e r e tt
...r e tu r n s to old form

teammate Val Hoessler threw In 15 points and clutched
seven rclxnmds. Pam Lee added I f points and Kim Hoss
( hipped in eight.
Santa Fe. 18 0. raced to a 46-25 halftime lead behind
the scoring punch of Barbara Williams. Williams
finished with 25 |M»lnts as tin* Lady Saints were never
tested In the second half.
The Lady Raiders. 9-16. have a week oil before hosting
Central Florida Com m unity College Thursday. Feb. 9

Auburn Whips
Ole Miss, 60-50

» •Pj V '
► L i . ” L,.

Prep Basketball
points and Lake Howell pupped for 33.
The Seminole guards. Steve Gray and *
Bruce Franklin, hrlpcd key the offense
as they penetrated Into the paint and
dumped, the ball off to Mitchell or
Gilchrist.
"When the guards came In and started
pressuring it changed the pare of the
game," said Marlettc. "T h e y did a real
good Job handling (tie ball on the fast
break. All the guards also did a good job
pcnel rating."
Lake Howell s Crockett Hollannan and
Brooks got hot in the second half as they
scored 12 and 10 points respectively.
But the Seminole defense put the clumps
on the rest of the Hawk offense and the
game was never in doubt.
According to Marlettc, this was a game
that Seminole needed.
"E v e ry b o d y contributed to n ig h t."
Marlettc said "W e've been playing good
ball lately."
A lot of other coaches In the conference
would like lo struggle with a record tike
the 15*6 Semi noles. Sanford ts 9-4 in I be
Five Star and trails Spruce Creek by four
games.
In the Ju n io r varsity game, the
Seminole J V blew lo a 34-11 halftime
behind Daryl Williams and Hubert Hill.
But Lake Howell stormed back lo
outscorc the Noles. 41-28. in the second
half lo make the outcome a more
respectable. 62-52. In Seminole's favor.
W illia m s ended up w ith 16 for
Seminole while teammates Hill and
freshman Antoine Cockcrhan added 10.
Chris Redding lead the way for the
Hawks with 15 (mints. Mark Sehnitker
came up with 11.

A r tis J o h n s o n
...R a id e r s u p e r s u b

Herald Photo br Tommy Vincent

U n ite d Press In tern a tio n a l
Auburn Is not a team that rest son ils laurels.
Th e No. 17 Tigers entered I lie UP! Top-20
basketball ratings Tuesday morning and defraled
visiting Mississippi 60-50 litul night
Auburn has a phenomenal basketball team."
said visiting coach Lee llunl of Mississippi
Charles Barkley scored 22 points atul Chuck
Person added 19 to lead Auburn. 13-5 overall and
7-2 III the conference. Eric Laird scored 20 (minis
and Joe Ayers added 10 for Ole M is s . 5-13 overall
and 0 9 In Ihe S E C .
"I was really proud of the effort our kids gave."
said Hunt. "W e were 0-8 in the league euinlng In
and eomlng oil a 30-(mini loss at Florida. 1 ilioiiglil
tonight they Just played their hearts nut."
In other To p 20 games. No. 9 Maryland edged
Virginia 67-66 and No 13 Oklahoma routed
Kansas 103 84.
At Charlottesville. Va.. Mark Folhcrglll hit his
only field goal of the game with 14 seconds left lo
III) Maryland. Th e Terrapins arc 14 3 overall and
4-1 In Atlantic Coast Conference play. Jell Adkins
led Maryland with 15 (minis. To m Shcchcy had a
career-high 27 points for Virginia. 12-5 and 2-5.
At Norman. Okla.. Waytnan Tisdale scored 28
points and T im McAtlslcr added 27 to lead
Oklahoma Into first place In the Big Elgin
Conference. The victory lifted I he Sooncrs to 17*3
overall and *1*1 m conference play. Carl Henry
paced the .lay hawks, 12-7 and 4-2.
Ai Newton. Mass.. J a y M orphy scored a
game-high 22 polols lo lead Boston College lo au
82 67 rout over Big East rival Connrcllrut. BC ts
14-5 overall and 5-3 In conference, while C on­
necticut slipped lo 11-7 and 3-5. Alvin Frederick
led Conned lent w it h 13 |x &gt;i i h s and Hay Broxlnn
added 12
In other college games. Guy Mlmiillcld scored 19
points to rally Morchcad Stale lo a home-court
69-65 victory over Western Kentucky.

W illie Mitchell, left, cuts off the baseline against Lake Howell's Jeron Evans.

Dupree Will Play (USFL?) Football In '84
H A T T IE S B U R G . Miss. lUPD Marcus
Dupree, who has now Irli two colleges In less
than four monlhs, finally "has his head on
his shoulders" ami hopes lo (day football In
1984 — apparently with the U S . Football
League, a friend says.
Dupree, who transferred from Oklahoma In
October, now has drop|&gt;cd mil of Southern
Mississippi bernnsr* he Is upset over an NCAA
ruling that lie Is Ineligible lo play next fall.
Coach Jim Carmody said Tuesday.
Earlier, the 235-pmmd sophomore tailback
left the Sooncrs saying lie couldn't please
Coach Barry Switzer and ilial be wanted to be
closer to Ids Philadelphia. Miss., home.
"He's made up his mind exactly what he
wants to do." said Ken Fab Icy. a friend of
Dupree's who was Involved heavily in Ids
October transfer to Southern Mississippi.
"Marcus Is not confused.",added Fairley, a
Hattiesburg bookstore owner. "Marcus has
Ids head on his shoulders. He wants lo play
football In 1984."
Although speculation ts Dupree will turn
pro. he apparently is not considered a NFL
possibility. In a brief statement, the NFL said
Tuesday It would not deal with Dupree before
1987. the year after Ills Oklahoma class
graduates.
B u i the U S F L . w h ich broke w ith a
long-standing tradition by signing Hclsman
Tro ph y winner llersehel Walker of Georgia
last winter after Ids Junior season, expressed
an Inlerrsl In signing Dupree II d Is convinced
he wants to play professional fool ball and if
there are no legal complications,
However. U S FL Commissioner Chet Sim-

Football
molts, making a slop In St. Louts during a
lour of non-USFL cities, said ii Is too early lo
say for sure If Dial league will attempt to sign
Dupree, who has two more years of college
eligibility remaining.
"W e went ahead and signed Walker
because we knew If he ever challenged the
law. we would have lost," said Simmons.
"O u r problem with that case was more with
the coaches than anyone. We went through a
lot of turmoil lo prove the sliuallon was
separate from anything anybody had ever
Ix-eti faced with before.
"Dupree could fall under much I he same
circumstances, hut we ll |usl have to wall and
see."
"Th e digitally rule (sour (Hie professionals)
rule." Simmons said. "T h e N C A A doesn't
have a rule Ihal says a kid can t sign uniII his
eligibility expires."
Whatever Dupree does, Simmons said he
hopes guidelines are set up soon for players
wantlnlg to turn pro.
"W e're not talking about every kid."
Simmons said, "hut we need to have some
kind ol middle ground Dial establishes some
circumstances where a kid can he allowed to
go pro early."
Fairley said Dupree had not been In contact
with anyone from the USFL.
"Marcus has hud difficulty raping with the
fact he cannul play college football until 1985
and has talked ol the possibility of playing

professional fnniliall." Carmody said. "H e is
mil sure ol his plans at this time, hut it Is
obvious he will nol lie playing football al
U SM ."
S T . LO UIS |UI*I) - U S. Football League ,
Commissioner Cllct Simmons s a y s ihe league
will lake a "wall and see" attitude oil
whether II will attempt to sign m im ing hack
Marcus Dupree.
"W e're going to have lo wall ami see."
Simmons said Tuesday while making a slop
In St. Louis during a tour of non-USFL elites.
"W e don't know what he wants todo."
Dupree, a form er star at Oklahom a,
dropped out of Ihe University of Southern
Mississippi Tuesday and there Is speculation
lie may waul lo turn pro. Dupree has two &lt;
mure years of college eligibility remaining.
Simmons said Ihe league might Im- Inlcrcsied In signing Du (Tree If II Is ronvineed Dupree
wants li» play professional footl&gt;.tll and II
there are no legal complications.
T h e U S F L last year signed Hclsman
T ro p h y -w in n in g ru n n in g back llersehel
Walker before Ills collegiate eligibility bail
expired. Inti Simmons said Ilia) signing had
1(7 Ik *treated as an Isolated situation.
"T h e ellglbllty rule Is our (the professionals) j
rule." Simmons said. "T h e N CA A doesn't t
have a rule that says a ktd can’t sign until Ills !
eligibility expires.
"W e went ahead and signed W alker
trecuusc we knew if he ever challenged Ihe j
law. we would have lost. O u r problem with j
lhill ease was more w ith the coaches Ilian j
anyone.'*

Lack Of Role Model Creates Bad Behavior For Junior Tennis Player
I was watching a Ju n io r Tournament a
little w hile back T ills was a stalesanctioned tournament for boys and girls 14
and under. Th e rnnqx'iltlun was good and
each match was hard fought.
It was an Important event for ranking
purposes. A lol of pressure was on these
SCC T ennis
young people. Pressure from their parents,
Instructor *I
their private eoarhes. and from their peers
Nol to mention Ih awesome pressure they
(mi on Ihcm sdvs. Some ol the very lop
young players In the Florida were at this * coming from players and parenls alike.
I simply don't believe that tennis has to lx*
tournament.
It should have been really great tennis, a played lhal wuy. I know tennis should not
spectator's delight. It wasn't — I left after lx- played lhal way. Th e more I think about
only about 30 minutes of watching. I really lhal day. the more I am trying In sort out
could not stand ih&lt; re and watch llie racket the reasons why all ibis is happening. And
throwing, see I hi- rampant cheating and ilnii'l try lo deceive yourself. Ii Is going on In
listen to all the had language lhal was a lm o s t e v e r v J u n i o r T o u r n a m e n t

Larry

3 5

Castle

iliruughoul tht U S.
Part of the reason Is. ol &lt;nurse, the
pressure (tut oil some ol these youngsters lo
win. T o win at all cost. T o get that ever
higher ranKing. perhaps to gel good enough
to make the big bucks out there on the pro
lour. Pressure to make Mom and Dad
huppv. etc.
Pressure and pressure situations make us
all do si range things, and ii seems on ihe
tennis courts we sec many Jckyll-and-Hyde
situations. Sill). I ihlnk then- is a more
Important factor involved in ihe ronduet of
lixlav’s young players.
I ihlnk 11 is Ihe lack of pro|MT role models,
l lie young players today simply do nol have
enough solid-acting citizens playing on the
pro circuit In pattern I heir act Ions after.

Unfortunately America's two top male
players are both bad actors on tin court
|Th( ir actions off the court leaves a lol to lxdesired. t(x&gt;! Inhu McEnroe Is. ill course.
Ihe tx-sl player ill Ihe world. I have always
admired hts competitive spirit, tils great
lentils ability and Ills willingness lo always
play Davis Cup I have not enjoyed the wav
he arts during his matches. He ranis, raves,
shoots halls, and hlrds. uses horrible
language. Insults linemen. T V cuincrmen.
tans. 1tallboys, and nu and on Th is Is ihe
number one men's player In iln- world. This
is llie role model for our up and comtng
players.
Jim m y Conners is not a lol heller, and
several of the other top players also leave a
lot to lx- desired Some do nol do a lol of real
obvious things fmi for llie young and

n m ils wise Junior players. Ihe had acting
such us n»| trying or "tanking" a match Is
easy lo pick upon
ll g(x-s even deeper Ilian the top guys we
sec on T V . Many, many oilier top players.
c ic ii college and lixal players simply do nut
set a g(xxl example fur our young*players lo
follow.
Ih e only answer Is for more strict
enforcement of the rules. Tennis has gixxl
rules governing conduct. T h e only problem
is lhal Iimsi tournament olllclals will nol
enforce H u m * rules.
Tennis must dean up Its ael or It will go
llu wuy of pro buskcibull or pro football
when anvihlng Is acceptable and anything
g(xs. At lhal lime this writer will take un
fishing.

�j

i):

f%r

lOA-Evening Herald, Sanlotd, FI. Wednesday, Feb. 1, DM

50-Foot Shot Stuns Lake Mary — Fenning Leads Girls
D A Y T O N A B EA C H - Fred Tombro* has
only coached three varsity names while
Willie Richardson has been In the hospi­
tal,but he's already had enough thrills —
and Incoming gray hairs — for a veteran.
In his first tilt against Lake Howell, his
Lake Mary Rams pulled out an exciting
down lhe-wlrc finish. Then, against Spruce
Creek, the Rams played tough the whole
way before falling short in the fourth
quarter.
Neither game, however, will be etched In
hi* m'nrt like Tuesday night's encounter
against the Seabreeze Sand Crabs.
For good reason. Sand C ra b T e rr y
Johnson threw In a desperation. 50-fool
shot with Just one second remaining to lift

Seabreeze u* n 63-61 victory over the Rams
In Five Star Conference basketball at
Seabreeze High School
"I'm still shaking." Tnmbros said late
Tuesday night. "It was unbelievable.
Johnson hit nothing but net
"W c were definitely expecting it to go into
overtime. It's a shame for our kids to play
this well ...and then have something like this
happen."
The setback dropped the Rams to 9-9 lor
the year and 6-7 in the conference. 1hey
travel to Mllwc Middle School to play
Lyman Friday. Seabreeze upped its record
to 17-5 and 9-4.
Seabrcr/c opened a 14-8 first-quarter lead
before the Rams used a 1-3-1 trapping

Prep Basketball
defense and some offensive llreworks by
Fred Miller. Hilly Dunn and Darryl Menhir
torlaw back Into contention
Doth teams traded buckets throughout
the fourth quarter Finally. Johnson had a
chance to put the game out of reach, but Inmissed the front end of a one-plus-onc with
12 seconds to go.
Th e rebound bmlncrd long and Miller
grabbed It and headed for the other end.
Tile 6-2 guard went coast to coast, head
fa k e d his defender up on lie* baseline and
lilt the lying basket with |ust seem s e c o n d s
left.

Seabrrczc Immediately called a timeout.
Th e Sand Crabs then Iabounded the ball,
but Johnson got caught behind the time
line. He pulled a tricky reverse pivot to elude
the trap, then tossed his miracle shot. It
split the net with just one second to play.
L A K E M A R T |6I|; Merthle 10. Miller JO, Ounn 11. Gf«y»on
4 Reynold! I. Andefion I. Flore* 4 Grey D, William* 0

ToUlt 777 1741
SE A B R E EZ E |63|: T Johnion U. P JoHn»on t. Robmion
I Pork! 11. Jenkln* II. Whit* 7. Gould I. Flynn 0, Kennedy 0
Tolali U S tat]
Halltlm* — Seabreeie 1J, Lake Maty JJ Foul* - Lake
Mary Id. Seabreeze IJ Fouled out — None

While the boys had their heartbreaking
moment, the Lady Rams avoided a trap
which two other county teams — Seminole

and Lake Howell — had fallen Inlo when
they upended the Lady Crabs. -12-34.
Th e victory Improved coach Bill Moore's
g irls ' m a rk to 13-7 and 8 -6 In the
ronferencc.
"Th a t's a btg victory- to beat Seabreeze
over thrre." said Moore. "It's like playing In
a rrlla r."
Stellar, anti not cellar. Is the way Junior
Andrea Fcnnlng |&gt;erformcd. She poured in
13 points to lead the attack.
L A K E M A R T (431: Averlll I Fenn.ng IJ. L Glen I. P
G le n 7, Gregory 4. C Hell 1. L Hell 0. Stone 0. Swart: 0

Tot*!* te ton el

I

S E A B R E E Z E 134): N ToUv*; 4. J Tc L .e r 11, C Wei.ey 4.
L Wesley 4 Eller ion 5 Total* !)■ U ]4
Halttime — Seebreei* ie, Lake Mary U. Foul* — Lake
Mary ie. Scabreeie 9 Fouled out — non*

Bucs Sweep Pair
From Greyhounds

Chris
Fister
Herald Sports Writer

B y C h ris F is te r
H erald Sports W rite r
Early In the second quarter of Tuesday
n ig h t 's g a m e b e tw e e n L y m a n 's
G re y h o u n d s an d D a y to n a B e a ch
Mainland, the fourth-ranked (4A) Bucca­
neers had already built a 19-polnt lead.
34*15. At lhat point, a Lyman fan asked
Mainland coach Dick Tot It if he would
put In his second string. "T h a i Is the
second string." Toth replied.
M ainland's second s irin g , w h ich
played most of the game, looked as g&lt;x&gt;d
as most teams' first string Tuesday as
the Hues rolled lo a 102-50 debacle of the
Greyhounds In Five Star Conference
basketball action at Mil wee Middle
School.
The Burs Improved to 19-2 overall and
11-2 In Ihe conference while Lym an fell
lo 2-15 overall and 2-11 In the confer­
ence
" ll was good lo gel those guys (second
string) some playing lim e," To lh said.
"Th e y will be Important lo us down Ihc
sirelch and they really played well
lonlghl."
Second-stringer Jon Hall led the way
lor Mainland with a game-high 16 points,
lie was Joined in double figures by
George McCloud and Wayne Manning
with 14 points each and David Hinson
with 12. Travcn Flowers added nine for
Ihe Burs.
Lyman didn't have a player In double
llgnrrs. but Greg Pilot. T .J . Sealctta.
Ralph Philpott, and sophomore Brett
Marshall, who made his first varsity
appearance, had eight points apiece.
Mainland came right out and look
control In ihc early going, scoring the
llrst eight p o in t s O f the game.1 Lyntari
pulled as llose as four poirtts tuldwuy
through tin* quarter, but the Bucs went
on another surge to lake a commanding
2 5 -1 1 lead al the end of Ihe first quarter.
To lh pulled his llrst string early in Ihe
second quarter and the second leant
proceeded lo bloW the Greyhounds out
as the flues rolled to a 47-23 halftime
lead.
Mainland continued Its rampage in ihe
t h i r d (| iia r t e r , n u t s c o r i n g th e
Greyhounds. 2 6-11. In lake a 73-34 lead
Into the fourth quarter.

Bulldogs, G raduate Ref
Tough To Top In DeLand

Prep Basketball
LY M A N 1 3 0 1 - DougU*J. Marshall |. Ph.ipoti I Pilot
I. Russell 7. Scaled* I. Unroe 7. Walker 1. Wall J Total*
31 • 70 SO
Haltlime — Mainland *7. Lyman 73 Foul* — Mainland
17, Lym »nJ7 Fouled ouI — none Technical* - non*

What Is it about playing In DcLand's gymnasium thal
seares the heck out of Seminote County coaches?
Is It the rowdy fans? Sometimes. Is It some kind of
Lyman's Lady Greyhounds let a big
Jinx? I'm not superstitious. Is It DcLand's superior
first half lead silp away and Mainland's
talent?Don't make me laugh.
Lady Bucs fnughl hack lor a 64-60
A gtx&gt;d number of times It can be contributed to one
victory in Tuesday night's first game at
person. In my opinion, that ever popular official by the
Milwec Middle School.
name of Bobby Wychc. Every coach who doesn't know
The Lady Greyhounds led by as much
about the Infamous Mr. Wyche should prepare for the
as 14 points In ilu* first half, but Lyman
worst.
didn't have the killer Instinct Tuesday
Wyelie Is a graduate of DeLand High and currently
Lyman rode the hot shooting of Pam
works for the DeLand Recreation Department and
Jackson and Kim Goroum lo a 18-9 lead
knows all of DcLand's players by first names and
a fter one q u a rte r, an d the La d y
probably their birthdays, too. What he Is doing ever
Greyhounds extended the lead to 14.
officiating a game Involving DeLand players is beyond
26-12. m idway through the second.
me.
Mainland fought back to wilhlng seven
Bui. lhat doesn't make him biased now docs It?
though. 32-25. by halftime.
Take Into cxpamplc last week's girls basketball game
Mainland cut Lym an's lead lo five.
between host DcLand's Lady Bulldogs and Lake
34-29. early in the third quarter bul
Howell's Lady Silver Hawks, in their first meeting of the
Goroum swished In a J u n io r to put the
season. Lake Howell came away with an easy 11-point
Greyhounds back up by seven. 36-29.
victory. In the game at DeLand. In which Wyche was an
Th e scrappy Lady Hues then reeled off
official. I he Lady Bulldogs came away with a 76-55
eight straight jMilnis lo take a 37-36 lead.
victory. That's a difference of 32 points from the first
Mainland's first lead of Ihe game.
game. I don't think DeLand got lhat good and. at the
Both teams traded baskets early In the
same (line. Lake Howell got that had.
fourth quarter until Mainland's Sonja
In the second eiirounlrr. Lake Howell, despite playing
Green scored three straight points to
a zone defense most of the game, was whistled for 34
break a 52-52 tie and give the Lady Bucs
fouls. 29 In the first three quarters, compared to Just 15
the lead for good. 55-52. Green went on
for DeLand. seven til lhe first three quarters. Three Lake
to score four more points to build
Howell starters, leading seorrr Ta m m y Johnson, leading
Mainland s lead lo five. 59-54. with 4:30
rchoundcr Juncne Brown, and guard Kathy Barma.
remaining.
fouled out In the third quarter. Lake Howell coach
Lyman pulled to within two. 60-58, on
Dennis Codrry was whistled for two technicals, one
a Jumper by Kim Forsyth with 1:18
when he walked out on the floor to look after an Injured
remaining, bdl Jackson then picked up
player. Codrry was so Infuriated that he left the gym.
her fifth foul and Mainland went on to hit
Can you blame him?
4 of 6 free throws in the last 50 seconds
"W c got Jobbed." Codrey said about the DeLaml-Luke
to tee the victory.
Howell match which was u key game In conference
Forsyth led the way for Lyman with a
standings since a loss would have left the Bulldogs two
game-high 20 points and nine rebounds.
games Itehltid Seminole with Just a few to play.
Jackson added 16 points and Goroum
DeLand coach Clifford Cox said the game was well
tossed In 14 and Kelly Carman did a nice;
ofllrlaled. and lhat Lake Howell could Just as easily have
Job off the benrh with six points and;
Im-cii called for 10 more fouls. Cox doesn't Just know
Wyche as an official, he knows him as Bobby, a friend,
nine rebounds.
I
on and off the court.
Htrald Photo by Tommy Vmctnt
M A IN LA N D |S4| - A b n ,, 10 Green I*. Hlckley 10.'
As with most coaches playing at DeLand for the first
Lew itl*.M **gl*,J. Robertson* Total* 7411 34 44
•
or second time. Codrcy didn't know he was In for an Oviedo's Sieve Cohen muscles Inside Billy Cowart, left, and Brad Hendren
LY M A N (SO| - Carman 4. Forty's 70. Goroum I*.!
for a basket. Cohen hit 4 of 5 shots from the floor and two tree throws lo help
Jackson It JohntonI, Steven* J Total* 79 4 **0
ambush.
Hailtim* — Lyman 37, Mainland JS Foul* — Lyman)
M AIN LAN D |103| - Barmor* 7. Dull art 7. Flower* 4.
Another Wychc Incident happened a few years ago. the Lions snap a (our game losing streak with a victory over St. Cloud
74. Mainland I* Fouled out - Jackson. Goroum •
Jotn Hall 7. Jon Hall 14. Hinson IJ. Lewi* 4. Manning 14.
and I'm Just relaying back what was told to me by Tuesday night.
Technical* — non*
j
McCloud 14 M o rrill Silver I Tout* 39 74 J4IOJ
someone who witnessed It. Wyche was one of the
*
*
J
&gt;
officials at the DeLand-Luke Brantley game at Lake
Brantley High. When some of the Lake Brantley fans got
on Wyche for what they thought were bad calls. Wyche
threw a fit and challenged about four fans to "strp
outside."
'
When Lake Brantley went out to DeLand. Wyche was
B y Sam Cook
bargained lor Irom Lake lira n ilc y
of Ihe second half. Including a three-}
again one of the officials and Brantley coach Willie
H era ld Sports E d ito r
Tuesday night. The conference-leading
point play with 1:33 to play, which}
Richardson refused to go out on thr court. Wychc then
I lawks needed a flurry of free throws a n d 1 sparked the Hawks to a 28-27 halftime}
Willi 6-5 Darrin Reichle sweeping the
challenged Richardson to "step outside."
defensive boards and 6-6 Mike Schwab
a couple of breakaways In the final
lead.
I'luytng at DeLand this season has been hard for not
picking up second shots al Ihe offensive
minutes of the fourth quarter lo hold off
"Th e y pul Fedor at the high post, then!
21-15 halftime lead, turned matters over
Just Seminole County teams, but other Volusia County
end. Oviedo's Lions snap|H-d a four-game
the fiesly Patriots. 63-57. tn Five Star
ran some pick and rolls with him ." said}
to
Schwab
anti
senior
guards
Kelly
(rums. Daytona Bearh Mainland's boys, ranked fourth
winning streak Tuesday night witli a
Conference basketball at Lake Brantley
Peterson. "W ith that much heighth.i
Klukls and Steve Cohen In the second
In Ihc state, have lost Just two games this season. One to 50-43 victory over the St. Cloud Bulldogs
High School.
there wasn't loo much we could do."
hall.
Schwab
tossed
In
12
of
Ills
IH
highly regarded Seminole and one to DeLand. DeLand
in Orange Belt Conference basketball al
"W
e
had
a
chance
to
do
It."
said
The Hawks stretched (heir lead lo!
points in Hie second hail including right
bus at best a mediocre team this season and It beat
Oviedo High School.
Patriot coach Boh Peterson about the
eight points In the fourth quurter. but}
in
tlte
fnurlh
quarter
when
St.
Cloud
Mainland by 21 points.
Oviedo’s win Improved It to H -ll
upset effort. "But the breakaways and
Hodges capped a furious rally with in a;
mustered a belated rally.
But the Bucs couldn't blame that one on Wyche overall and 4-3 in the OliC. The Lions
(he ally-opp (passes) beat us In the end."
three-point play to pull the Pals within!
Th e slim senior, who leads the county
because he didn't work that game. “ No. he doesn't work
lake on Leesburg Friday in another
The victory Improved Spruce Creek's
two midway through the final quarter.
j
With
20
ppg.
slipped
inside
I
lie
Si.
Cloud*
any of our games." said Mainland Prinlcpal Jack
conference clash before hosting Lake
record lo 12-1 with five conference
Spruce
Creek,
(bough,
spurted
with!
defenders for six offensive Ixwrds to
Surrctlc. "H e Is scratched by all of our coaches."
Brantley in a county m atchup on
games to play. Mainland, which has
buckets by Rod Jenkins and Ray Lre for)
finish with seven rebounds for the night.
Wychc Isn't loo popular a fellow at Seminole High
Saturday.
beaten
the
Hawks
twice
and
hammered
a
54*48 lead, then traded Brantley}
Cohen snapped a scoring slump with
School either. Football coach Jerry Posey said he ts
"1 was really Impressed with tint Inside
Lyman Tuesday, Is Just one game back
baskets for free throws to take a 60-52;
10
potnis
including
seven
in
the
second
scratched (coarhcs arc allowed to delete eight officials!
al 11-2. Lake Brantley fell to 2*11 and
play lonlghl.” said coach Dale Phillips
lead with less lhan two minutes to play. ;
hall Th e ti t &gt; senior lilt 4 of 5 field goals
from doing any Seminole football games.
"W e got 30 shots from Reichle and
5 -15 overall.
But Garrlques tossed In two free}
and
2
of
3
free
throws.
Posey recalled his first game against DeLand In 1975.
Schwab ami quite taking those ridicu­
Senior Mike Garrlques turned tn
throws and then added a turnaround;
"Schwab
and
Cohen
got
us
the
potnis
The Semlnolcs Jumped to a 13-0 lead, but all of a sudden
lous outside shots. Our shot selection
another strung performance for the Pals.
Jumper to a pair of Hodges’ free losses to}
when we needed them til the second
the flags starting dropping like paratroopers. DeLand
(and percentage (21-44 for 4H percent)
The hustling guard put the defensive
pull Brantley within four points. Th e }
half."
said
Phillips.
“
Klukls
did
a
real
eventually rallied for an 18-13 wilt. The final drive was
was much better tonight."
shackles
on
hotshot
Rod
"Snow
bird"
Patriots then got the ball back, bul In the)
good |ub as Door general."
aided by two penalties against trainer James "Doc"
Reichle. who lias got Ills game hark on
McCray. Garriqucs limited him lo nine
ensuing scramble for a lixise ball, Fedor!
Klukls
finished
with
six
assists
as
did
Tcrwllllgcr and assistant coarh Jay Stokes. Both were
points, six of w hich came on his
track after a broken linger In December,
o u l l c t l e d to M c C r a y w h o got a)
Schwab who picked up must ol Ills with
|K*nallzed for Incidental remarks made from the sideline,
nickname specialties when he breaks for
gave Ihe Lions alt 11-4 first quarter lead
breakaway for a 62-56 edge to put thej
pinpoint
passes
to
Reichle
underneath.
according I d Posey.
the other end white the ball Istn the air.
wtili six (mints on an assortment of
game out of reach.
;
Th e Lions were without guard Chris
The big play, however. Involved Wyche. Tribe safely
inside power moves and fadeaway JinnPeterson said the breakaways mude
Behind Garrlques’ 15 points. Hodges)
Boston who was suspended (or two
T im Raines and DeLand fullback Sanford Cutis. Culls
|x*rs.
thr difference at the end. "Th a t's at least
chipped In 13. Leroy Brown had 11 and!
games (or disciplinary reasons.
broke Into the clear, but Raines bud an angle on him for
10 to 12 points." he said. " A lot of limes
Groscclose added 10.
"Darin was hot the llrst quarter." said
I he TD-savlng lackle. Posey ihcn said Raines was Phillips. "He's really starting to go to the
Fedor led al) scorers with 19 points)
ST. C L O U D |43| — Simplon 4. Lothenour 4. we were hanging the boards for loose
Carmichael 10 Highland 3. Cowart I, Hendren I, llndiey
clipped, bul there was no call.
balls
when
ll
happened."
while
Lee contributed 13.
tmards. We pluyed a light 1-2-2 zone
9 Total* 17* 13 43
"Th e trailing official (Wychcl said lhat T im tripped."
Along with Garrlques' defensive work,
which forced St. Cloud In lake a lot ol
O V E ID O |SO| - Klukit 7 Cohen to. Kewley J. Hughe*
said Posey. "Bul when we went over the films, it looked outside slinls.”
senior Austin Hodges and junior Dennis
7. Thompson a. Reichle 17. Schwab IE Norton 0 Total*
L A K E B R A N TL E Y [ST| - Garngue* I*. Brown 11. •
111
13U
Groscclose pumped In four points rarh
like a clip.
Trombo 4, Hodge* 13. Growcloi* 10. Event 0. Black 0.)
Hailtim* - Oviedo J1 St Cloud li Foul* - SI Cloud
Most of which the Bulldogs missed.
lo
give
the
Patriots
a
15-11
lead
after
one
"I was prclly green. It was my first year, bul I still had
Courtney* Total*: &gt;311 l* 57
13. Oviedo IJ Fouled out
Cowart Technical* — SI
Reichle. who pumped in 10 of Ills 12
quarter.
■PRUCE C R EEK (E3| - Jenkln* I. McCray 9.1
Cloud bench
trouble believing Wyche would be* assigned lo do a game
iminls In (lie first half also yanked down
Sempitroll 9. Lea 13. Fedor I*. Nichoit) Total* 1* IS 74
In the second quarter, the Hawks
at DeLand where he went lo high school and works. I
nine boards for Ihc night, eight of which
Spruce C r e e k .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . ,,,,,,,,, 0 3 turned Ihe ball over to John Fedor and 43
scratched him right after lhat."
Halltima - Spruce Creek 7(. Lake Brantley 77 Foul*
Lake B rantley.......................................37
came
at
|hc
defensive
end.
the Impressive 6-8 sophomore worked
- Spruce Creek 30. Lake Brantley 17 Fouled out Posey said most officials take It upon themselves lo
Reichle. who helped the Lions to a
S p ru c e Creek gnl m ore lha n il
Garrlque*.
Groteclota TecMncelt - none
his magic. Fedor hit Ihc last five buckets
make a change when they are assigned lo do a school
where there might toaconlllct of Interests.
Thursday night. Seminole High's girls leant, the lop
team In the conference, goes Into DeLand to try and
wrap up the conference title. Seminole hammered
overtime. Lonnie Shelton took
DeLand the last time the two teams met. bul that was a*
Detroit Pistons.
United Preat International
routed Atlanta 118-94, Indt;
the ball out of bounds at
" I (eel like a kid In a candy
Seminole High. You can bci lhat Seminole will have
T o C lif f R o b in s o n , p r o ­
defeated San Diego 111mldrouri and got the ball to
something lo say If Wyche shows up In stripes.
fessional basketball is not a faclory." he said. "1 thought we
H uusion overpow ed Kan
Robinson — who turned and
had won thr NBA champion­
Posey, though, has already checked. W yche.has not multi-million dollar business,
City 122-107. Boston cased o
The victory snapped a fourwhisked off (he game-winning
been assigned lo the game Hut he did give Seminole but a game. And the purpose of ship."
Chicago 106-83. New York
game losing streak for the
3-poini shot Just before the
"People call this a business,
coarh Ron Mcrthie to say that Wyche la "unacceptable" a game Is to have fun.
fealed San Antonio 117-1
Cavaliers and gave them their
buzzer sgpnded.
_ _
II he happens to mysteriously show up.
The 6-f(K)l-9 forward hit a bul I call ll a game and I love
Lo* Angeles edgegd Port!)
R o b in s o n 's last p re vio u s
lirsi victory-over the Pistons In
It." added Robinson, who tossed
Repealed efforts lo reach Wychc were unsuccessful. 32-foot jum p shot at the buzzer
129-124. Utah defeated Sea
ihrce-po intcr was In March
eight games.
to a game-high 32 points and
Bul W ychc probably wouldn't be able lo comment Tuesday night lo lift the host
9 8 - 9 4 In o v e r t i m e , a
1980.
Cleveland trailed 112-111
anyway since tnosl officials associations have a gag rule Cleveland Cavaliers to a 114- grubbed 21 rebounds. "Y o u
M ilwaukee defeated Gob
wtili one second left In the
In other games, Washington
have lo react to this game."
112 overtime victory over the
about talking to the press.
Slate 123-119 In overtime.

Reichle, Schw ab Help Lions Snap 4-G am e Skid\
Prep Basketball

Robinson's Buzzer Shot Drops Cavaliers; Sampson Leads Rockets
NBA Roundup

~

)

�Russia Is Just Nuts

Evening Hereto, Senlord, FI. Wednesday, Feb. 1, lt*d-1lA

Over Smith's Deed
George Smith Is "a hockey nut." All lie
ever meant to do was set right what he
tell was a terrible wrong. Even If It was
against Russia.
He did It. All by himself at first,
thereby accomplishing more than all
those S A b T 2 talks put together, and
ending up one of the biggest heroes In
the Soviet Union.
Smith owns and operates his own
trucking business In Winnipeg. Canada,
where he was born. He was trazy about
lux-key as a kid when bis Idol was little
Bill Moslenko. the Chicago Black Hawks'
Hall of Famcr who once scored three
gads In 21 scronds against the Rangers
al Madison Square Garden and now runs
a howling alley In Winnipeg.
Whenever Ihc Winnipeg Jc ls arc al
home. Smith Is right there watching
them and rooting for them. Otherwise,
like Tuesday night, when the NHb's
All-Star game was being played In
Meadow lands Arena In New Jersey,
you'll find him watching the action on
T V . At 49. Smith loves ihc sport more
than ever.
bet's go hack a bit to September of
1981. The Russian National team beats
Team Canada for (he Canada Cup In
Montreal, and Smith, viewing the final
game on the tube In Winnipeg, sees
C a n a d a 's P rim e M in is te r. P ie rre
Trudeau, and Alan Eaglrson. hockey
promoter and head of the NHb Players'
Association, present the Cup to the
Soviets' team captain.
f Bright and early ths next morning.
Smith woke up and put on the news. He
w*as shocked to hear Eagleson had called
the police and kept the Soviets from
taking the Cup out of the Montreal
Forum the night before. Eagleson felt
that once the Russians got the cup to the
USSR, they'd never bring It back to
Canada.
"I was m ad." Smith told me from
Winnipeg Tuesday. "Here we arc living
in a country where we talk about what's
| right and also the rights of others. I was
upset that the Russians were not allowed
to lake the Cup home. They had beaten
us fair and square. What right did
someone like Eagleson have to keep the
Cup from them?"
Smith was Irked over something else
Eagleson had done as promoter of the
series.
"He came to Winnipeg and called us a
bunch of cheapskates." said Smith.
"W innipeg Is a workingman's town.
Eagleson wanted us to shell out $30 to
watch the Finns play the Swedes al 3
o'clock on a weekday. You had to buy
tickets to bad games like that to see a
good one like. say. Czechoslovakia
'
against Canada."
He called one station which solicited
opinions oil the subject from Its listeners.

Pate
Praises
Mayfair

Milton

Allen Pate, left, hoists
the w in n e r's tro p h y
along with, from the
left, Al i c e Da n i e l s ,
Ernie Horrell and Jack
D aniels. Pate, a
seven-year pro from
Mobile, Ala., won the
M a yfair Open Friday
by follow in g up his
opening round 63 with a
65 for a 128 total for 36
holes and a seven-shot
victory. Pate said after
the tournament he was
Impressed with the way
the Daniels, M ayfair's
club owners the past
three years, had im ­
proved the course. "It's
a nice little course," he
said. " It has a lot of
character the way It's
set up." Horrell was
c o o r d i n a t o r of t he
three-day event which
began with the Pro Am
on Wednesday.

Rich man
Editor
Eighteen of them called In and 17 agreed
with Smith. The other one said the
Russians didn't deserve the Cup any­
way.
Soon, a campaign got underway to
obtain a replica of the Canada Cup and
send It over to the Russians. People sent
in their dollars until the total reached
$3,000.
After Smith and his friends produced a
new C u p , they called the Russian
embassy In Ottawa. They spoke to
Vladimir Mcchulav. the No. 2 man there,
and told him to come and get the Cup.
He did at a special ceremony In
Winnipeg on Oct. 3. 1981. Th e Queen's
representative In Manitoba presented the
Cup to the Soviet representative on
behalf of all the people In Canada and
Mechulav expressed his gratitude.
Then he sent the Cup to Russia. The
Soviets were so moved by what Smith
did. they Invited him to the Izveslia
hockey tournament, one of the biggest
ones they have, which Is sponsored by
one of their newspapers.
"I couldn't have been treated better."
Smith said. "I Tell like some celebrity.
Th e Russian newspapers don't carry too
many pictures but they Itad mine In
them more than a half dozen times."
The Russians really liked Smith. They
Invited him back In 1982 and he brought
the first Old Tim er's Hockey Club from
Winnipeg and they played a couple of
exhibition games against a similar team
of Soviet Old-Timers.
Th is past year, Ihc Soviet Old Timers
came to Winnipeg and played three more
games against the Winnipeg Old Timers.
Each team won one game and the third
one ended In a tie. so It was a standoff.
On one of his trips to Russia. Smith
presented a cap to the latL Leonid
Brezhnev and the Soviet leader wore It. ll
was the right color — red.
In gratitude for what he did for them.
Smith was presented with a 3-W foot
samovar by the Russians and It stands
on one of the file cabinets In hts office.
"You bet they know Wayne Gretzky in
Russia." Smith said, laughing. "But If
you're ever there, ask them If they know
George Smith. I walk down the street In
Moscow and ask a cop directions. You
know what he does? He looks at me and
says 'George Sm ith.' Then he salutes
me."

Metro Connection Lifts Wales Past Campbell
H A S T R U TH ER FO R D . N .J. (U I’l) - T i n a
an* three N HL teams In the New York
inriropolltan area, four if you m in t Hartford.
Conn., and dial connection was vital to the
Wales Conference's 7-6 victory over the
Campbell in the 36th All-Star Came Tuesday
night.
A five-goal first-period outburst was started
by hometown hero Joe C’lrclla of the New
Jersey Devils, and before the game was over
all four of the local skaters had scored. Don
Maloney of the New York Rangers, who lied
an All-Star record with four (minis. was
unanimously voted the Most Valuable Player.
"M v stats aren't that good. I don't score a
lot of goals." said the hard-working Maloney.
"It's nice to Ik - picked for the other things
that Ido."
Maloney said his selection, combined with
the Rangers' push past the Islanders Into first
place In the Patrick Division this week, made
him feel like he had Just won a lottery. But
one of the Islanders. Denis Potvln. also had a
productive game — scoring die Wales' serond

NHL All-Star Game
goal and asststlngon another.
And Islanders coach Al Arbour, who
cllri led the Wales to the triumph, regaled In
the local heroes.
"The game showcased the ever-increasing
offensive talent of our young stars." Arimur
said. "There were a couple of good hits, but
nobody was taking a run ai anyone. They're
not supposed to."
Maloney became the Itrst of three players in
the game to lie the All-SI nr record of three
assists, then scored the game-winning gad at
7:24 .of the third period to pul the Wales
ahead 7-3.
Tw o of Maloney's assists came on goals by
Rangers teammate Pierre barouche, a sub­
stitute for the Injured Islanders u n to r Bryan
Tro tlle r. Mark .Johnson of the Hartford
W halers, who completed the line v.’llh
barouche and Maloney, and Rlrk Valve of the

Campbell also had three assists.
Maloney's four (mints enabled hint to tic
Ted blndsay, Gordie Howe. Pete M diovolleh
and Wayne Gretzky for the All-Star game
(mint record.
As for the Devils. Ctrclla added an assist
later and goallender Glenn Rrsch played well
In the second half of the game, surrendering
only three goals to keep the Campbells from
tying It.
One of those goals was by Gretzky, the
Edmonton Oilers' center, who somehow
managed to score despite a sore shoulder that
was causing hint obvious (tain throughout.
Gretzky, who had four goals In last year's
All-Star Game, said Ills shoulder would InX-rayed today In Edmonton.
"It hurts." Gretzky said. "It was Itad. All
professional athletes have In pul up with
nagging ln|urlcs. and this one Is no different."
Th e combined 13 goals were the most In
All-Star game history, breaking the previous
record of 12 set In 1976 and tied last year.

F R E E 'J
SI’ INAl f XAMINA1 ION

SCORECARD

SPO RTS

PREP POLL

IN BRIEF

M cKinnon's Big Slam
Shatters Tars' Hopes
O R L A N D O (UPIJ — Senior center Isaac
McKinnon shattered a backboard on a second
half slam dunk, scored 17 points and pulled
eight rebounds to help lead the University of
Central Florida over Rollins 96-65 In conference
play 'luesday night.
McKinnon scored hts fiberglass shattering
dunk with 7:56 to go In the contest. Play was
delayed for about 30 m inutes while the
backboard was replaced.
U C F forward Dan Faison led all scoring with
24 points and seven rebounds. Five U C F players
scored In double figures.
The win pul the Knights at 7-12 overall and
4-3 In the Sunshine Stale Conference. Rollins
dropped to 10-9 overall and 3-4 In the
conference.
Former Seminole Glenn Stambaugh hit 4 or
11 field goals and 5 of six free throws for 13
points. Scott McKinney led the Tara with 15
ixjtnls.

C o x Leads A tla n tic Win
Ronald Cox jiourrd In 21 points Monday to
lead Atlantic Bank to a narrow 35-34 victory
over T ip Top Supermarket In Sanford Recre­
ation Ju n io r League basketball action al
Weslsldc Ccnler.
Marques Howard and Carl Easterday added
six points each for Atlantic B a n ya n Anton Reid
tossed in two. Oscar Edwards and Kevin Cotton
had 10 points each for T ip Top. Ron Coefleld
added eight. Adrian Rouse chipped In with four
and Darrayous Grayson added two.

Sam blto M a y Be Starter
H O U S TO N IUPI) Former all-si ar relief
pin her Joe Sambilo was surprised to learn he Is
being ronsldcrcd as a starter on the Houston
Astros as he attempts a difficult comeback from
severe elbow Injuries.

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NOTICE
H e s B e e n C o n ce ite d.

FLAT T M EXCITING

Refunds May Ba Picked Up
At The Chamber Of Commerce
Feb. 4 From Noon To 5.

WCK MX WINNU S
I* A BOW AND
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IJA-Evening Herald. Sanlord. FI.

Wednesday, Feb. 1, 19(4

Democrats Push For M arines Pullout

W ORLD
IN BRIEF

Rebels Warn A gainst
Lebanese A r m y Offensive
M EIRUT. Lebanon (L'l’ll — The Lebanese
government appealed for new efforts today to
end I lit* bloodshed In Beirut. but Moslem rebels
claimed the arm y was planning to attack their
strongholds near the capital.
Druze leader Walld Jum blatt's Progressive
Socialist Party said Tuesday there could In- no
more negotiations w ith President A m in
Gemaycl's government if the arm y begins a
major sweep against Lebanese Moslems, a
Druze spokesman said.
Moslem militiamen will "retaliate decisively"
If the arm y tries to Invade Beirut's southern
suburbs, home of the Shiite Moslem militia, or
the Shouf mountains, a Druze stronghold
southeast of Beirut, the spokesman said from
Druze offices In the village ofAley.

U.S. W ill Accept Outcom e
( AR ACAS, Venezuela |UPI) — Secretary of
State George Shultz arrived today from El
Salvador, where he had promised that nation
the United States would remain neutral In Its
presidential elections In March.
"W e believe In the democratic process. In fair
and open elections." Shultz said at a news
conference at the presidential residence. "We
believe under those circumstances you accept
tin- verdict, whatever It may be. of the people
who do the voting."
‘ "W e re not neutral about the (electoral)
process." Shultz said. "W e want It to go
strongly. o|ienly. fairly. We are neutral about
the outcome."

W
A SSHHIN
ivG
r .T
v iitm
WA
TOnN
(UPI)i - if~..—
House n
Demo­
cratic leaders. In a move to increase
pressure on President Reagan for a
w ith d ra w a l of U .S . M arines from
Lebanon. Is backing a resolution calling
for the troops’ "prompt and orderly"
withdrawal.
The resolution, drafted for a meeting of
the House Democratic caucus today, sets
no deadline, but House S|&gt;cakcr Thom as
O Neill said Tuesday the language
means w ithdraw al should be " I m ­
mediate or right away."
The non-blndlng resolution says the
president should, within 30 days of
passage, explain to Congress how the
withdrawn! is being •'rccmpllshcd or

U n ited Press in tern a tio n a l
Nicaragua has accepted a Honduran pro|&gt;osal
lo exchange 2H prisoners and return 16 fishing
Isiats taken from each other along their tense
Iwirdcr — the first such swap In the course of n
two-year rebel war against the Sandlnlstns.
No dale lor the exchange has been set.

Monday In Beirut where the U S forces
stiffen'd their 259ih casualty since the
Marines were sent Into Lebanon as part
of a multinational force In September
1982.
O'Neill indicated Reagan may not be
able to count on the Republicancontrolled Senate to block the move to
reduce the 18-month authorization
Congress voted last fall.
"There's a crack In the Republican
side In the Senate, and I anticipate that
when this vote comes to the floor. I'd
have to say yes that I'd expect bipartisan
support." O'Neill said
A source In the Democratic leadership
said the resolution was made "m uch

tougher" during the meeting than the
proposal they began with.
"T h is Is a way to hold the president's
feet to the fire, without trying to In*
making tactical ground decisions." the
source said. "T h is Is a clear way to set
policy and at the same time avoid get ling
Into the intricacies of ground troop
management."
The resolution was worked out by
O'Neill's ad hoc monitoring group that
includes himself. Foreign Affairs Com ­
mittee Chairman Dante Fasccll: Rep. Lee
Hamilton. D-Ind.. chairman of the Middle
East subcommittee: assistant Democrat­
ic leader Bill Alexander. D Ark., and Rep
John Murtha. D-Pa.. among others.

Police After Thousands Who Spurned Am nesty
IV h lA V A Iin i I f

iiim i

*. ..

. .

INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Police with new computer and other minor offenses a chance to surrender and
printouts and old arrest warrants nabbed more than 100 agree to appear later in court.
(H-ople in the first day or a dragnet to (lnd 27.000 traffle
Only 2.000 |&gt;cnplc look advantage of the program.
offenders and felons who Ignored an amnesty program.
Authorities now are searching for more than 27.000
The offenders were arrested, handeulled and taken lo people charged on 28.000 traffic offenses. 9.000
the City-County building, where they could admit their misdemeanors and 1.500 felony charges. Authorities
guilt, pay their rines and be released. Sixty were arrested said some people are wanted’ on as many as 17
at thelrjobs.
warrants.
Those who d i d not pay their fines or i m &gt;s I ball were nut
In Jail.
1
Many of tile arrests were made after the sus|&gt;eets'
names were run through computers, which provided
Authorities say the arrests could mean SI million for Information from other local government agencies. The
the city If all those charged with traffic violations pay results were collected on printouts listing places of work
Just the m inim um fine.
'
and home addresses.
Th e well-publicized amnesty program began In
December and lasted 50 days. The program gave
defendants wanted for traffic violations, misdemeanors

U.S. Steel
Loses Big

Police said they also plan lo go after another 1.000
motorists who have failed to appear on drunken driving
charges.
s

Police Lt. Je rry Barker said some rtf the warrants date
back lo 1979. Police will concentrate first on those
wanted on multiple warrants. Barker said.

3 BIG DAYS
Thursday, February 2,
Friday, February 3,
Saturday, February 4

P ITTS B U R G H (UPI) U.S. Steel Corp. has re­
ported record annual and
quarterly losses for 1983
but the firm's top official
c x |&gt; c c t s a * •m a J o r
turnaround" this year.
The No. | steelmaker
said Tuesday it lost S1. 161
billion In 1983.

Prisoner Swap Planned

...
.
why it Is not being done. O'Neill said.
The measure was hammered out In a
two-hour meeting Tuesday evening In
O Neill s office. O'Neill said afterward the
effort should not lie seen as a U.S. move
to "cut and ru n ." noting other proposals
sc: specific deadlines for the U.S.
withdrawal.
"W e think that would In- wrong."
O Neill said. "It route, possibly endanger
the lives of the Marines over ihcrc. That
Is the one thing we do not want to do.
What we want to do Is bring those l&gt;oys
home as quickly and as safely as we
Possibly can. And we think we n doing
it In the Irest w ay."
H ie meeting followed renewed fighting

AREA DEATHS
G LEN N S. BURKE

Mr Glenn Steven Burke.
29. of 117 Hidden Lake
Drive. Sanford, died Sun­
day at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Sanford,
as the result of a motorcy­
cle accident. Born Die. 29.
I Mat.
in Sanford.
He was' »•a\
.........................
.................................bnokkeepffr u r t ir SI r o m t
Itcrg-Carison. lie Is sur
•vlved by bis mother. Mrs.
Billie Covington. Sanford:
father. Carroll A. Burke.
Bowling Green. Ky.: two
brothers. Kenneth A. and
Ronald W.. both of Sanford: sister. Miss Patricia
C. Burke. Sanford: two
h a lf-b ro th e rs. Jo h n F.
Burke. Bow ling Green,
and Steven T . Burke, of
Sa n ford : grandparents.
Mrs. Jessica R. Andrews.
Sanford. Mr. and Mrs.
T a y lo r Burke. Bow ling
Green: and stepmother.
Mrs. Betty Burke. Sanford.
Brlsson Funeral Home is
in charge of arrangements.

I

MARYJANE LEE
Mrs. Mary Jane Lee. 57.
of 713 Balsa Drive. Alta­
m o n te S p r in g s , d ie d
Monday at Florida Hospllal-Allamonle. Born March
1 5 . 1 ft2 6 . in N o r lit
Carolina, she moved to
Altamonte Springs from
Salem. Va. In 1955. She
was a bank clerk und a
Baptist.
Survivors Include her
...
husband. Jesse B.: dough
ter. Susan Lacy. Orlando:
two sisters. Mrs. Dorothy
Lee. Cocoa. Mrs. Nancy
R e v n ic k . M e lb o u r n e :
brother. Curtis Moon J r..
R oa n o k e V a . : o n e
grandchild.
It a Id w I it •F a I r c h l l d
F u n e ra l H om e. Forest
City. Is In charge of ar­
rangements.

GEORGE REX
NICHELSON
Mr. G e o r g e Rex
Nlchelson. 75. of 40 Lan­
celot Court. Casselberry,
died Tuesday at his home.
Born Feb. 14. 1908. in
Springfield. III., he moved
to C a s s e l b e r r y fro m
Kinston. N.C. In 1975. He
was a retired quality con­
troller and wasa Baptist.
S u rvivors Include his
wife. Lena: two sons. G.
Rex. S p rin g fie ld . Ross
James. Grove City. Pa.;
s i s t e r . L e o la H a l l .
Owensvllle. Mo,
B a ld w ln -F a ir e h lld
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs. Is In charge of
arrangements.

THOMAS F. DONLON
Mr. Thom as F. Donlon.

Htwd Moiw moot Co.

75, of 106 Pineapple Lane.
Altamonte Springs, died
Monday at Florida Hospltal-Altamonte. Born Nov.
18. 1908. in Lexington.
Ky. he moved to Alta­
monte Springs from Indi­
anapolis. lnd. in 1967. He
. . . . .
.a
.
. n ,!.
v d l l l i l | | lof
| | «a
«
was
vice
president
.drug store compunvi- &lt; ■ ■■
Survivors include his
wife. Nancy: son. Robert
L.. West Palm Beaeh: six
grandchildren
B a ld w l n - F a I r e h i Id
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs. Is in charge of
arrangements.

73. of 139 Academy Ave.,
Sanford, died Thursday at
( cnlral Florida Regional
Hospital. Sanford. Born
June 10. 1910. In Lake
City. Fla. she moved to
Sanford from Wabasso.
Fla. In Ju ly 1983. She was
a h o m e m a ke r and
m em ber of M l. Moriah
Primitive Baptist Church.
Survivors Include two
sisters. Flossie Zanders.
Sanford, and Sara Arline.
Rochester. N.Y.
W ils o n -E ie h e lb e r g e r
Mortuary Is In charge of
arrangements.

M IR IA M M . S A N T A S

M rs . M ir ia m M a lly
Santas. 56. of 149 Hidden
Lake Drive. Sanford, died
Tuesday at Florida Hospllal-Orlando. Born Oct. 24.
1927. In Chicago, she
moved to Sanford two
years ago from DeWilt,
N.Y She was a homemak­
er and a member of the
He W it l C o m m u n it y
Church and the Daughters
of the American Revolu­
tion.
Survivors Include her
husband. David R.; three
sons. David R. ,Jr.. Steven
S . both of Liverpool. N.Y..
Mark II. of Doyleslown.
Pa.: mother. Mrs. Joseph
B a r r y . H o lid a y . F la .:
brother. Arthur J . Mally
■Jr.. Wauconda. III.: sister.
Eunice Dorsey. Venice.
Fla.
Gramkow Funeral Home
Is In charge of arrange­
ments.

JESSIE MAE BOTTOM
Mrs. Jessie Mae Ikittom.

Funeral Notices
BURKE.MR.Gl ENNI.
— funeral w v i t i i tor Mr Glenn
Sleven Burke. N . of 147 Hidden
Lake Drive. Sanlord. Mho died
Sunday, will be held at J p m
Thursday at the Britton Funeral
Home with pallor E A Reutcher
officiating Burial in Oaklawn Me
morial Park Viewing hourt today
J4 p m Britton Funeral Home In
charge
SANTAS. MRS. M IR IAM M .
- F u n e r a l te rv lc e t tor M r t
Miriam Mally Santat. J4 ol lav
Hidden Lake Drive. Sanlord. will
be 10 TO a m
F rid a y al the
Gramkow Funeral Home Chapel
with the Rev Letlie Dientladl
officiating Friendt may call at the
luneral home Thurtday I 4 and 7 »
P m Burial In Oaklawn Memorial
Park Gramkow Funeral Home In
charge
BOTTOM . MRS. JESSIE MAE
-F u n e ra l tervlcet lor M rt Jettte
Mae Bottom. 71. ol li t Academy
Ave . Sanford, who died Thurtday.
will be held at I p m Saturday at
the Ml Moriah Primitive Baptitl
Church. HOI Locutt A ve. with
Elder M B Fernandei. pattor. in
charge Burial to follow In Re
lllewn Cemetery Calling hourt lor
Irlendt will be from noon until t
P m F r id a y at the chapel
Wilton Eiehelberger Morturary In
charge

ILO O D PRESSURE CLINIC
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AT
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r t Pa0kWAS2.ilI Re* H * (gray 7J at

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Hwy. 17-fl —Fora Part

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CLOTHES HANOIRt

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FAIRWAY PLAZA
7470 HWY. 17-92

SANFORD. FLA.

MINS' DMAS SOCKS

322-M22

DELTONA PLAZA
20 DELTONA PU2A

DELTONA FLA.

574-99M

�PEO PLE
Evening HtriM , Sanford. FI.

Cook Of The Week

Envious Co-Workers Cold
Over Woman's Face-Lift

Food, Music
A Relaxing
Combination

DEAR ABBY: My
husband died when my
son was 3. so I went to
w ork as an aide In a
hospital to support myself
and m y son. It wasn't
easy, but It was worth the
effort because he was Just
graduated from college.
My problem: About five months before my son was to
graduate. I looked In the mirror and thought. "You look
like an old lady. If you go to your son's graduation
looking 20 years older than the other mothers, your son
will be ashamed of you." So through the generosity of a
plastic surgeon I met at the hospital. I had a face-lift. It
cost me only 11.500. and it was worth it to make my son
proud of me.
He was very pleased when he saw me. but the women
I work with were cold and unfriendly. (One said. "Even
11.500 Is a lot of money to a woman In your
circumstances.") Abby. many of these women spend
120 and 130 at the beauty shop every week.
Please tell me I didn't do anything so terrible. O r do
you feel the way they do?

Dear

Abby

By Karen Warner
Herald Correspondent
In today's fast-paced world, m any people find
themselves so busy with various activities that the very
thought of a house full of dinner guests arriving can be
an unnerving ordeal.
Hut not to Lillian Megonegal.
She Is one of those rare people who has learned how to
balance her busy life outside the home with her life In
the home. Cooking to her Is a relaxing experience. "I
started experimenting with food preparation after I was
married, and found that I not only enjoyed It. but It was
fun and relaxing." she said.
In the Megonegal home. It's quite usual to find the
aronuf of good cooking filling the air. blended together
with the sounds of classical music. "I like to play
classical music when I cook. I will usually turn the
stereo on 'loud.' and play something like Pavarotti. It
relaxes m e." she said.
Lillian said that she likes to find a good recipe, then
experiment with It. "I like to try new and different
things when I cook. I'll add a little of this, change things
a bit. It makes It more Interesting."
She said that one of her greatest motivations to cook Is
her husband. Russell, a Lake Mary city commissioner.
"Russell has a tremendous sweet tooth. He especially
loves things with chocolate In lh?m. like the recipe for
Mocha Chocolate Chip Cookies.”
Lillian was a corporate executive secretary for 21
years in Philadelphia hcfoic moving to Florida. Although
she no longer works at a Job outside the home, she fills
her time by keeping busy with her hobbles —
homemaking and community Involvement.
She Is currently active In the Lake Mary Woman's
Club where she Is chairman of the club's Public AfTairs
Department. She Is also an active member of the Lake
Mary Chamber of Commerce, l-akc Mary Community
Improvement Association. United States Coast Guard
Auxiliary, the Lake Mary Historic Preservation Com­
mission and Holy Cross Episcopal Church.
Aside from being a great cook and a community
volunteer, she Is a gifted craftsman. Her handmade
wreath took third place honors last year In the craft
division of the Florida Federation of Women's Club's
annual convention. She enjoys sewing, knitting,
handcrafts and crocheting.

PORK CHOPS WITH MUSTARD SAUCE
6 Pork chops ( V thick)
Sail and freshly ground pepper
Flour
7 tablespoons of butter
2 tablespoons finely chopped shallots
to pound thinly sliced mushrooms
2 tablespoons warm cognac
2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
to cup heavy cream

$199
A

LA.

$159
A

LI.

CeeetryMyfa

SPARE
: RIBS....................
;

$159
. . . .

S t

IB.

im im

PORK
FRESH B U T T ..........
EXTRA LEAN
EROUND CHUCK . .

0

$159
. . . .

S

U.

$ 1 69
&gt; u .o .» n

A

u.

1 Nm m Had*

BULK
'
$139
JL LB.
| BREAKFAST SAUSAGE . . . .
FRENCH AVE.

2108 S.
(1 7 -9 2 )
H fv f va eOto
MUdyrM
MEAT TO mm. C m C M C U I

PHONE ORDER AHEAD 4 9 3
Ready J L O

i f . Ready Wbea Yee’re

m

DEAR OROUP: It's possible for a husband to deny It.
but In view of such overwhelming circumstantial
evidence. It would be Impossible to believe him.
DEAR ABBYt When you advised the young girl who
wanted to get married to go to college first because one
day she might have to support herself and a child. Well,
after five years of marriage and a darling little son. that's
exactly what happened. Her husband suddenly decided
that the responsibilities of marriage were not for him.
The responsibility, of course, became our daughter's,
so she and her son are now living with us. and she's
gone back to college to become a registered nurse.
It's difficult for all of us. but we arc glad we can give
her the assistance she needs to become self-supporting.
How much easier It would have been If she had finished
her training and then married and had a family.
Abby. If all the young girls out there who should have
taken that advice, but didn't, were laid end to end. they
would reach from U C L A to the University of Maine.
HOT SPRINGS MOM

Howard S. Buchoff,

m .d . , p .a .

R h e M M M to lM g ls t

NOOPE

A

MEDICAL CLINIC
ALL INSURANCE ASSIGNMENTS
ACCEPTED WITH

No

O

PHYSICAL
TMBAPY
MAYS A
BL000 TISTS
AVAILABLE

ut

Op

P

o cket

I

xpensi

FAMILY PRACTICE
PEMATR1CS
INTERNAL MEDICINE

323-5763

HOURS
M M -f
M SAT.

h

h m

h u i

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it

O f llK O U }

S&lt;l*fvul Offid
V w

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O f ...

ARTHRITIS &amp; RELATED CONDITIONS

819 East F irs t St.
S A N FO R D , F L
322-7378
ALSO LOCATED AT 695 DOUGLAS AVE.
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS, FL 788-5581

QnfflFEHEEfi)

MOCHA CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES

U fa ta d

. . . .

CUBTARD CORN PUDDINO
3 cups milk
3 tablespoons margarine
5 eggs
2 'A teaspoons salt
Pepper
to cup sugar
1-17 oz. can whole com kernels
Heat milk and butter until It bubbles. In 2 qt. casserole
whisk eggs. salt, sugar, pepper until mixed; stir In com.
Slowly add milk and egg mixture, beating constantly
with wire whisk.
Set casserole In 13x9" baking pan or dish. Pour hot
water In baking pan to halfway to casserole. Bake In
325* oven for one hour.
__

unless you do things to please yourself, you never will
be.
You had a face-lift for the wrong reason — to please
your son. (He may have been Just as proud of you the
way you were.) And now you're "unhappy" because the
women at work "th in k " you did something wrong.
You. m y friend, are the most Important person In the
world. Be good to yourself, and don't worry about what
others may think.

THE THURSDAY
GROUP

2 cups sifted dour
to cup sifted 10X sugar
1 cup butter (not margarine)
Lemon rind grated
Sift flour and sugar together. Cut In butter until
mixture clings together. Press In 9x13" baking pan.
Bake at 350°. 20-25 minutes (lightly browned)
P illin g :
4 beaten eggs
2 cups granulated sugar
to cup lemon Juice (may be bottled)
to cup flour
Vi teaspoon baking powder
Beat eggs, sugar. Juice. Sift In flour and baking
powder. Stir. Pour over crust. Bake at 350* for 25
minutes. Sprinkle with 10X sugar. Cool before cutting
Into squares.

WE W I L L NOW BE C L O S E D E V E R Y MONDAY

PORK
ROAST..................

1. Sprinkle the chops with salt and pepper and dredge
them lightly with flour.
2. Heat three tablespoons of butter In a large skillet
and brown the chops well on all sides. Sprinkle with the
shallots and mushrooms and cover. Cook five minutes:
turn the chops.
_
3. Sprinkle with cognac and Ignite It. When the flame
dies, stir the mustard and cream Into the skillet and
around the chops. Cover and aiuunci fui 30 iniiiulca or
until chops arc tender and thoroughly cooked.
4. Remove the chops to a heated platter. Add the
remaining butter to the skillet and swirl It around In the
sauce. Add more cognac If desired and pour the sauce
over the meat.
N O TE : You may substitute any brandy for the cognac.
You may substitute scallions or Just mundane old
onions for shallots. Serves 6.

UNHAPPY
DEAR UNHAPPY: You deserve to be happy. But

a9ky° U'

LEMON LOVE NOTES

ntICft GOOD
WtD.TNRUMT.

. . . .

Lillian Megonegal mixes cooking with classical
music for a perfect culinary blend.

DEAR ABBY: A group of us girls were gathered at our
weekly card club when a question was asked by one of
the members:
"Is It possible for a husband to come home, undress
a n d ; 't Into bed with his body reeking of someone elsc's
perfume, then deny that he was with another woman?"
The majority said It Is not possible, so we decided to

Crusti

IOWA
MEATS
CENTER CUT
PORK CHOPS ........................

Wednesday. Fab. I, 1W4-1B

j c o o

'H J L O

■

r

2 squares unsweetened chocolate
6 squares semi-sweet chocolate
2 tablespoon butter
to cup sifted dour
to teaspoon baking powder
to teaspoon salt
2 eggs
V« cup sugar
,
2 teaspoons Instant coffee powder
to teaspoon vanilla
I package (6 oz.) semi-sweet chocolate pieces
1 can (8 oz.) walnuts or pecans coarsely broken
(optional)
.
Adjust oven rack one-third down from top. Cut
aluminum foil to dt cookie sheets.
Melt the unsweetened and the semi-sweet chocolate
squares and the butter over low heat. SUr until smooth:
remove from heat; cool. Sift dour, baking powder and
salt Into a medium size bowl. Beat eggs, sugar, coffee
and vanilla In a small bowl with electric mixer at high
speed until thick and dufTy. about three minutes. Beat In
cooled chocolate. Beat mixture Into dry Ingredients until
smooth and blended. Stir in chocolate pieces and nuts.
Drop mixture by heaping teaspoonful 1 Inch apart on
the foil. (These barely spread at all).
Bake In preheated oven 350* for 10 minutes or until
tops are dry and crisp. Centers will remain soft and
chewy. Do not overbake. Lejt stand until cool.

Discover The World’s Finest Fashions
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SANFORD PAIN
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32*4192
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3 2 3 *&gt; 7 6 3

■■■Marty 1AM Rea 90
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Box of 100 toft 2*pty facial 6 oz. bar extra strength
ttttUM . Limit 4 bOKM.
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•#

-

ju -r * *

• » .- ■

413 L FIRST ST.
(f —fari 8 C y f f t s A m .)

�•2fl Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI
7 __________ ___________________

W ednesday. Feb

I , 1984

TONIGHT S TV
psychic healer at work
® O JOKER'S WILD
11 (35)TME JEFFERSON8
(D (10) AN EVENING WITH MARK
TWAIN Thu one-man show star,
ring Roger Durrett humorously
highlights the career ot the Ameri­
can literary genius
CD (8) POLICE WOMAN

WEDNESDAY
EVENING

6:00

.*» G T t ^ 0 . 7 ) 0 news
'* III |35|BJ/LOBO
(D |10) MACNEIL / LEMBEfl
NEWSMOUH
CD ID ONE DAY A T A TIME

7:05
'l l
CAROL
FRIENDS

AND

6:05

7:30

' } LITTLE MOUSE ON THE PHAlRIE

O &lt; ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
David Letter man talks about hi*
successful nightly talk show
WHEEL OF FORTUNE
( J l O FAMILY FEUO
It: (M IB A O N FY MILLER

$io

6:30
^

B U R N ETT

•=)
I t ) CBS NcWS
I ' O ABC NEWS Q
'I t (35) ALICE
CD (D O O O O TIMES

7:35
12 HOGAN'S HEROES

7:00

6:00

G U PEOPLE S COURT
( J ) O P M MAGAZINE A visit wlh
teievivori sene* vnent C M tltn t
T liton. An* Al.ci* and Donna Mills, a

Q 4 REAL PEOPLE Water sknng
Stunts Irom Cypress Garden.) Fla .
a lady who made her mark In histo­
ry as the star ot an anti-lreete com-

TURNER &amp; LEE
M E A TS
27th St. &amp; Hwy. 17-92

merciai and a husband-and-wit*
team who are members ot the Celltomu Highway Patrol
®
O
D O M E S T IC
LIFE
Depression is contagious when
Martin takes on the responsibility ot
understanding hi* denttit-tnend *
pronounced angst
® O THE FALL GUY Colt's *i*t*'
is the target ot kitleri when she
unknowingly photographs a kidnap­
ping in prog'eu
11 (35) HAWAII FIVE-0
tD (10) UVE FROM THE MET
Don Carlo" Thia performance ot
Verdi * tiagic opera teaturaa Mirella
Freni Grace Bumbry. Placido Dom­
ingo and Nicolai Ghiaurov, with
man On hr* way to Army Induction
meets a band of hippie* In Cantral
Pars who taka him on a yoytul musi­
cal odyssey
CD |10) WILD AMERICA Animal
Oddities"' Marty talk* about pramslone animals then takea a look at
some unusual modern-day ere*tu e*. auch a* the manatee and me
diving spider . g
CD (I ) MOVIE W W And The Oh te Oancekmgs" &lt;1975) Burt Rey­
nolds, Art Catoey A charming
rogue with a yen lor a country
mustc star travels through the
South robbing gas stations

ment so he can woo a pretty femin­
ist
CD (10) ALL NEW THIS OLD
HOUSE Bob Vila eiplama how an
array ot solar cans converts light
Irom the sun directly into electrical
current, and the installation of pho­
tovoltaic rool panels begins at the
site in Brooklyn g

9:00
Q ® CHEERS The patron* of
Cheers begin lo believe that an
antique scale it actually dispensing
accurate fortune!
1 5 O SIMON 4 SIMON A prlma
ballerina, moonlighting as a flashdancer hire* the Simons to protect
her Irom criminate
CD (10) THE HISTORY OF THE 8 8.
The development ol Hitler s S S .
ihe protection aquud." from its
beginning* to it* ultimate destruc­
tion. ii traced with archival footage
and interviews with former S B
men, historians and victim*

©

11:35

7:00

12:30
LETTERMAN Guests: comedian
Joel Hodgson and newt corre­
spondent Edwin Newman
® 0 MOVIE "The Froten Deed"
(1967) Dana Andrew*. Ann* Polk

1:00
IQ (M| TMICKE OF THE NIGHT
Guest* singer Marilyn McCoo.
critic Dob Osborne, impersonator
John Roark*. San Frandaco cotunv
mat Herb Caen

0 ( 4 ' HILL STREET BLUEB
( D O KNOTS LAN OfNO Mach loilows Laura and discovert her in the
midst of a clandestine hotel meet­
ing with Greg
rrio n n o

O t i ) FAMILY TIE9 Alei teigna hla
support ol the Equal Rights Amend­

&lt;Sl

OPEN MON.-THURS. 9 6
FRI. 9 7 SAT. 9 6
CASH &amp; CARRY WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS
PRICES GOOD THRU FEB. 7. 19S4

•j

£

_
1■

fl A I 1 I A

159

% LOINS lS 8 V , "
PORK SPARE RIBS$

SMALL

£

3 LBS. OR MORE LEAN

169
1 1 LB.

PORK S T E A K S $
BREAKFAST SAUSAGE *

FRESH LEAN-3 LBS. OR MORE

.

£

EXTRA LEAN BONELESS

£

PORK R O A S T

LB.

_

£
.

1

-

I

11

LB.

14 9
1

Tiger Shark" (1132)
Robinson. J. Carrol

4:30

*2.29

MORNING

5:00

8:00

LB.

8:30

6:35
9:00
____ t h e FACTS O f UFE (R)
( D O DONAHUE
MOVIE
(UD (34) THE WALTONS
0 ) ( 10) BEBAME STREET g
O (t) WOMAN TO WOMAN

1

9:05
9:30

1

^

m

9

l!

LB. PACKAGE SAVORY

SLICED BACO N

8

FRESH

£

•3

LBS. OR MORE

-

GROUND BEEF_ _ 5 1

LEAN

3 LBS. OR MORE

-

GROUND CHUCK

FRESH FL. PREMIUM

£

-

1 3 9
1

LB.

1 6 9

$ 11
T

LB.

C

FRYER LEG QTRS.
l
SIRLOIN STEAK
$3 \l
6

9

1

. .

PORTERHOUSE
And T BONE STEAK

• LUNCH BPf CIAI

i

F ish S a n d w ic h &amp;
! 16 o z . S o f t D rin k
WITH
•1.99 coupon
i l M

d .V c U u .M

.M

,

■
fillet on a bakery bun with
' shredded lettuce and special
dtettirtg
:
VhBd thru: Feb. 29, 1984
jj
Only a t 306 U.8. 17-92,
Longerood

.3

1 4 9
1

LB.

.

O ® BALE OF THE CENTURY
(D&lt; 10)3-2-1 CONTACT

12 CHILDREN'S FUNO (TUE)
11 AGRICULTURE U S A . (FRf)

a i n o c o c o u p u ____________

t r u r m m at (
tfehMl CNm , MN W»km

3 2 1 -3 6 0 0

la.

j

J* ■ «

LUNCH SPECIAL! ■ ■ ■

I Seafood Salad &amp;
S 16 oz. Soft Drink
n

7 Q

C.l J

*,i «

COUPON

of shrimp, crab meal 6
“ wtulrfiih served on shredded
■ lettuce with tomato wedges,
lemon and dressing
VbBd thru: Feb. 29. I9B4
Only at: 3 0 6 (1 8 . 17-92.
Longwood
• 2^" V &gt; - r

Long Ioiin Silvers
U V II.V IP V ,

1

UJNCH SPECIAL ! ■ ■

Sandwich &amp;
Clam Chowder
*2.59 COUPON
•Sandwich Include* your choke
of a crispy fish fillet or 2
5 Chicken Planks* on e bakery
* bun with shredded lettuce and

r

- ^

i

S

- S

3 0 6 a

Longu&gt;ood

S

s

k

*

.7 -9 7 .

.

■ D IN N E R S P E C IA L ■

3-Piece Fish
Dinner $2.99‘ ,,H
Dinner indudee 3 crltpy Rah
fillet* golden fry**, fresh
col* uaw Ei 2 crunchy
hush puppies
W4d thru: Feb. 29, 19B4

Only atr 306 a s. 17-92.
Longwood
,A,

JL.

Jk.

J*

Long Iohn Silvi ks
M A J 'M i 'ji i m

■ ■DINNER SPECIAL ■ ■

Fish &amp; M ore’
Dinner $2.49"'™

VbBd thru: Fab. 2 9 . 1 9 M

Only oti 306 U 8 . 17-92.
.

Long John Siiveks
M t U iM iv im s

■ ■ ■ DINNER SPECIAL ■ ■ o^j

Tw o Fish &amp;
Chicken Dinners
•4.99 CCKiPOn
Each dinner Includes a crispy
, fish flBet. 2 Chkken Planks.*
I golden fryes C fresh cote slaw.

special dressing

Vakd thru: Feb. 2 9 .1 9 6 4

Only at: 30b U S. 17-92.
■

Longwood

f+M.a*J «*f&lt; *- &gt;*u*^»« «MaK

j

VbBd thrui Fab. 29 . 19M
Onfy ati 306 a s . 17- 92 .

t»^

Long |ohn Silvery

A

Dinner Include* 2 crispy fish
mtets,L golden fryte. fresh
col*t slew Ei 2 crunchy

■ Salad Include* a combination

." " S ?

Radio

A-

( 1 ) 0 THREE'S COMPANY
NEWSCOPE

®o

1 1 9 S . M a g n o lia . S a n f o r d

kaawrWaUw
"ISC* D004 BLUES 444D"

Jk

5:00

L U N C H fO N t DINNER SPECIALS D A ILY

Sbewtba# 7:15 A 9

Ik.

O (4 LOVE BOAT

S upper C lu b 3 :3 0 ? Tue s .-S a t.

G O LD

flt Long John S f j ^ ^ r l s p y fish.

1:30

S ervin g lu n c h 19-3 M o n. Frl.

S f c liB y

n

lunch&amp;Dinner
Specials— *

4:35
© THE BRADY BUNCH

M USIC FOR YO UR D IN IN G &amp;
D A N C IN G PLEASURE

TACO b r a v o :

SOLID

W | Z

4:30
© (35) HE-MAN ANO MASTERS
OF THE UNIVERSE

I

SEMINOLE COUNTY’S ONLY RADIO STATION
CALL US 322 1400

4:05
© THE MUNSTER3

SUPPER CLUB Sr RESTAURAhT

6 to 11 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK

1400 AM

o i l l FANTASY ISLAND (MON,
WED-FRI)
Q 4 SPECIAL TREAT (TUE)
I J 1O STAR TREK
(T ) O MERV OR1FF1N
iff (15) SUPERFRIENDS
m (10) SESAME STREET g
( £ (I ) MOVIE

V X A S L IG H T

10:30

12 rra y o u r b u s in e s s &lt;m o n )

a

3:35
12 BATTLE OF THE PLANETS

1:05

(34) I LOVE LUCY

*

( f HUm.
I 'JtdulwA
\

® DAYS OF OUR LIVES
O ALL MY CHILDREN
(39) ANDY GRIFFITH
110) MOVIE (MON TUE. THU)
(10) FLORIDA HOME QROWN

O AS THE WORLD TURNS

O ® LOVE CONNECTION
® 0 HOUR MAGAZINE
11: (34) FAMILY
(D ( W) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
UM4) HEALTH FIELD

m1 6 9
LB.

3:30
(If (35) SCOOBY OOO
m (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

© M O VIE

MORK ANO MINOT
OM*) BOOT BUOOtES

CD (4) NEW ZOO REVUE (TUE-FIB)

11

3:05
© THE FLINTSTONES

01(4) HIGH CHAPARRAL

12 MOVIE

SLICED TO ORDER-3 LBS. OR MORE

B O IL E D H A M , B O L O G N A
$
O R S P IC E D L U N C H E O N L O A F

MATCH QAME / HOLLY­
WOOD SQUARES HOUR
(J1 O GUIDING LIGHT
C7! O GENERAL HOSPITAL
11T (15) THE FLINT8TONE8
m (10) POSTSCRIPTS
CS ( I ) IRONSIDE

1:00
O
(7
ffl
m
m

O d ) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
(TUE-FRI)
(1) O CBS EARLY MORNING
HEWS
® O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
I] 1) (34) 20 MINUTE WORKOUT
■12 NEWS
CD (I) MDTV (MON)

CASSELBERRY
4) N. Hwy. 17 92

SANFORD

12:30
O ® SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
(D O THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLE8S
® 0 RYAN S HOPE
© (35) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

© I LOVE LUCY

l* « l M

m

4:00

12:05
© PERRY MASON

(34) INSPECTOR OADOCT
(90) MISTER ROGERS (R)

6:00

NELSON AT

m

6:05

O
® ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK (MON)
O ® r a COUNTRY (t u e - fro
12 JIMMY SWAOGART

COUNTRY CHICKEN

1901 F r e n c h A v e . ( H w y . 17 « )

ANO

I T BEWITCHED

12 WORLD AT LARGE (WE0|

CAROLE

® O NEWS
1 1 (34) BEWITCHED
m (10) NATURE OF THINGS
(MON)
m (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
m (10) MYSTERYl (WED)
m i 10) NOVA (THU)
(10) NATURE (FRI)
a ) (•) HARRY-0

B ® BRACE SHUTTLE LAUNCH
(FRO

5:20

m to u s 'g m p e ;

®
□
NOON

10:00

THURSDAY

3 pieces ol golden brown Famous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and two Iresh, hoi biscuits.

O ® MIOOAY

7:59

12 OPEN UP

5) O CAPITOL
(11 (35) I DREAM O f JEANNIE
m (10) HEALTH MATTERS (TUE)
110) BRIDGE BASICS (WED)
m (10) JOY OF PAINTING (FRI)

3:00

12:00

(34) WOOOV WOOORECKER
(90) 4EBAME STREET g
7:35
U l DREAMOF JEANNIE

O®

&gt; O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
11 (35) GOMER PYLE
m (10) M A G C OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)
CD (I ) BONANZA

O ®

AFTERNOON

7:30

3:40
® G MOVIE " The Private Life Of
Henry VIII" (19331 Chert** Laugh­
ton. Elat Laneheal ar

4 9

14 9
11 LB.

. . * 1

12 MOVIE
Edward Q
Naith

2:00
O t ANOTHER WORLD

11:35
© TE X A S

&lt;Q) (34) BUOS BUNNY
FMEMOB
9 ( B ) J M BARKER

m (10) MATINEE A T TH E BUOU
(WED)
m
(10) ALL NEW THIS OLD
MOUSE (FRI)

2:30

© (15) INOEPENOENT NETWORK
NEWS
f f l( 10) POSTSCRIPTS
□ ) (I) TIC TAC DOUGH

ffi(W )A.M . WEATHER

5:30

-

-

2:50

3 PIECE DINNER

ASK A B O U T TH E B U TC H E R C LU B
FRESH-NEVER FROZEN WESTERN PORK

2:30
CD O CBB NEWS NPQMTWATCH

11:30
O ® DREAM HOUSE
7 Q L O V IN O

7:15

2:10

WEDNESDAY
FAMILY SPECIAL

S a n fo rd

o

® O MOVIE "Sam Whiskey"
(1969) Burl Reynolds. Cllnl Walker.

JE W E L T

PH. 323 0 1 8 0

1:10

12 THE CATUNS

O CBB MORNING NEWS
O OOOO MOANING AMERICA
(34) TOM ANO JERRY
(10) TO UFO
FUNTIME
(!) B4ZNCT NEWS

MOVIE ' OoMtt And The
Boiar" (1979) O J. Simpaon, Meltsaa Michael ten

P IN E C R E S T S H O P P IN G C E N T E R
N EX T TO

f f l LATE NIGHT WTTH DAVK)

O

t h e p r ic e is r ig h t

11:05

3 ) TODAY

12:05
12" MOVIE
"The Chapman
Report 11942) Efrem Zimbakat Jr.,
Jan* Fonda

s O

WHEEL OF FORTUNE

LAUGH-IN

6:45

12:00

11:00
O ®

® 0 BENSON
© (3 4 ) QOOO DAY
(D (90) MAGIC O f OIL PAJNT1NO
DD I I) ROWAN I M AR TINS

® O EYEWITHEBB DAYBREAK
ffi(10) AM . WEATHER

(lJ O POLICE STORY T wo police­
men go undercover to Infmrate a
so-caiied rthe dub (R)

10:00

6:30

S

11 THE CATUNS

O
(2) BUFFALO BILL Jo-Jo
make* the decision to abort her
pregnancy, unaware that Bui is
determined that he should be the
on* to decide the tat* ol the unborn
chad (Part 2)

©
C O LLEG E B ASK ETBALL
Mississippi Slata v* Vanderbilt

6:30
(3) NBC NEWS AT BUNRISE
O CBS EARLY MORNING

® Q ABC NEWS THIS MORNING
M (34) GREAT SPACE COASTER
(XI (4) MORNING STRETCH

9:30

8:05

(35) INOEPENOENT NETWORK

NEWS
CD (10) THE SABOTEURS OF
TELEMARK Nine commando*
risked everything lo destroy Ihe
Norwegian Hydro factory during the
German occupation of Norway.
CD (4) KOJAK
CD (4) MOVIE Deed Man On The
Run ' (19751 Peter Grave*. Kathe­
rine Justice

Long John Siiverjs

I*Mr P1

�Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Soup Base Of
Satisfying
Supper Dish
Discovering

ta s tv .
nourishing dishes which
can be prepared quickly is
a constant challenge. One
way to meet this Is by
using quality ready-toserve soups as a base and
adding some touches of
y o u r own to create a
satisfying meal.
A sp le n d id M e xica n
Meatball Soup can be
made from start to serve in
under a half-hour. Ground
beef plus seasonings are
shaped Into small balls
and quickly browned, then
sim m ered in a hearty
re a d y -to -s e rv e tom ato
soup which you've spiced
w ith c h ill an d g a rlic
powders. (The soup al­
ready contains chunks of
garden vegetables and
macaroni in a rich tomato
base.) Serve the Meatball
Soup with warm tortillas
or over steamed rice.
A n o th e r s a tis fy in g
supper begins with a can
of ready-to-serve green
split pea soup — a hearty.
"hom em ade" soup tex­
tured with split peas and
celery. We’ve created a
Curried Chicken-Pea Soup
by sautcclng onion with
curry powder, then drilling
the soup and some diced
apple and chicken chunks.
Crusty bread for dunking
and glasses ot cold beer or
white wine would pair
nicely.
These recipes wre devel­
oped In the kitchen of
Progresso Quality Poods.

MEXICAN MEATBALL
SOUP
8 ounces ground beef
teaspoon sail
Vi

te a s p o o n

o n to n

powder
1 Iti te a s p o o n s c h ili
powder, divided
2 tablespoons vegetable
oil
2 cans (19 oz. each)
eady-to-serve tomato soup
with vegetables and maca­
roni
'/« t e a s p o o n g a r l i c
powder
cup diced avocado
(optional)
In a medium bowl com­
bine beef. salt, onion
powder and
teaspoon of
the chill powder. Form
Into h -ln c h m eatballs
(makes about 20). In a
large saucepan heal oil
until hot. Add meatballs;
brown lightly on all sides.
Drain ofr drippings. Stir In
to m a to s o u p , g a r lic
powder and remaining 1
teaspoon chill powder.
Bring to a boil; reduce heal
and simmer covered until
m eatballs are cooked,
about 5 minutes. Serve
g a rn is h e d w ith d ice d
avocado. If desired.
Yield: 4 portions

The fe s tiv e lo o k in g
M e x ic a n M e a tb a ll
Soup Is m a d e by
a d d in g g ro u n d b e e f

V4 cup diced peeled appie
In a large saucepan heat
oil until hot. Add onion;
saute until transparent,
about 5 m in utes. Add
curry. Cook and stir until
browned, about 30 seeonds. Stir In green split
pea soup, garlic powder.
chicken and apple; slminercovered for 5 minutes,

a n d seasonings to
a b ase o f c a n n e d
soup

P L A T B \N TR Y P R ID E S BRA1ND N E W G A M E !

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★

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40 CASH PRIZES OF
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120 CASH PRIZES OF
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CURRIED CHICKEN-PEA
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'

1 tablespoon vegetable

oil

Vb cup chopped onion
2 te a s p o o n s c u r r y
powder
2 cans (19 oz. each)
ready-to-serve green split
pea soup
tb

te a s p o o n

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163)670PRIZES IN ALU

w e e k ly

powder
2 cups diced cooked
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r c O M F lD a iD A

Easy to follow rules on your
G am e Card!

KEEPYOUR
SKILL
UP TO DATE.
W hen equipm ent in ti
t r t h m l w change. the way you
pert, am your d ill change*
A great» J&gt; u&gt; kc«T
Will ftrth and up to dale it in
the Arm y Rnervc A n d earn
a g i* d part-tim e uxorne h *
im tante. an E-S vuth L&lt;ur
year* c»penente ta n cam
M V ” a Year Y ou w rveo nc
ueeliend a m iv iih ln « i ti-hour
da ytlan d ru u w e e lttu m m c f
m in in g per year
A n d keep up w ith ihe
Army C all your Arm v Rcx-rc c
rcprctrniam e. in the Yellow
Page' under "R ecruiting'

jm rasw

Eveiybody loves Bingo Bonanza,

it's so easy to play and so
easy
to
w
in
M
atch
yo
u
r
B
in
g
o
discs
to
the
num
bers
easv
win.
vo
q de cs
bei o n y o u r d ie cu t card and
slip th e m into their correct position. T o win, fill out an entire row horizontally,
vertically o r diagonally. O r you m a y get a “F R E E S W E E P S T A K E S E N T R Y ."
O r y o u m a y be an IN S T A N T W IN N E R
B u t be sure and play Pantry Pride B in g o Bonanza. G e t a F R E E
B in g o ticket each store visit Adults only. N o purchase necessary.

ODDSCHART
Odds stated are good tor thirty days after promotion begins Odds w&gt;(l be revised
Meekly tfiereafter to rndcato prizes sHl available and will be posted m participating
stores

ODDS Effective Feb. 1,1984
Prize
Value
$2000
$1000
$100
$10
$5 Instant
$1 Instant
Tolal

Number
of Prizes
40
120
1 000
7 500
15 000
140 000
163 660

Odds with
1 Ticket
1 511 625
1 170 542
1 20 465
1 2.729
1 1 364
1 146
1 125

Odds with
13 Tickets
1 39 356
1 13 119
1 1 574
1 210
1 105
1 11
1 96

Odds with
26 Tickets
1 19 678
1 6 559
1 787
1 105
1 53
16
1 48

Total Sweepstakes Prizes;
9 $5000 Cash Prizes • 1 $15 000 Grand Prize
Total Sweepstakes Entries 1 out ol every 5 tickets contains a
sweepstakes entry marker Odds of winning a sweepstakes prize
depend on the number ol entries submitted

, 1 ^

Wednesday, Feb. I, IM 4-1B

Brngo Bonanza is available at 96 Pantry Pnde Stores located in
Florida. 4 stores &gt;nSouthern Georgia and t9 stores in Eastern
Virginia Game &gt;sscheduled to begin February 1.1984 and end
May 1.1984 However, it officially ends upon distribution of all bmgo
tickets When the total number of approved winners of any of the
game prizes (as set forth .n the odds chart) is achieved, then that
specific prize category will be terminated without further nonce All
prizes must be claimed within 10 days after termination as an­
nounced m our advertisement or they will be forfeited This
promotion may be repeated
ODDS EFFECTIVE February 1 1984

STOUTS
WEDNESDAY
Feb. 1 st.
Get a FREE
Ticket everytime
you visit
the Pantry!

�«B — Ev«ning H trild, Sanlord, FI.

Wednesday. Feb I, 1984

The Incredible

Egg Teams Well With

Tills microwave version slices of ham one on top of
Egg* and ihc microwave cook for slicing arc Just a delicate combination of eggs.'chopped
3 0 % p o w e r 2 0 to 30 lig h tly buttered liquid
ol
an old favorite replaces .mother so Unit corners
oven are a great team! few of the unusual Ideas eggs and sour (ream re­
measures
or
small
bowls.
Remove outer wrapper minutes or until knife in­
There's hardly any food we've heard about. We're quires a reduced power Irotn package of spinach. serted halfway between Stir yolks with fork. Cover
the usual poached egg alternate. Break and slip
more convenient or easy to sure you'll create even setting for best results.
Place unopened carton In center and outer edge each container with plastic with a "baked " one which an egg Into each cup.
1 package 110 oz.l frozen dish and cook 5 minutes comes out clean. Let stand
fix than the Incredible more.
wrap. Cook separately on cooks right along with the Gently pierce yolks with
wooden pick. Place cups
Never cook eggs In their spinach
edible egg. and nothing
barn Make the Moll.in
50% or 30% power 2 to 3
on High. T u rn out into uncovered 10 minutes.
on
pie plate or platter.
2 eggs, beaten
cooks faster than the shell In the microwave —
dalse
and
toast
the
muf­
minutes
for
volks.
5
to
6
strainer and drain well, U u m o ld o n to s e r v in g
they will explode! Also,
P j cu p s d a iry sour p r e s s i n g o u t e x c e s s platter.
microwave.
minutes for whites, stir­ fins during the standing Place sheet of waxed paper
over the cups. Cook 5VY to
However, there arc also always use a wooden pick cream
ring once or twice. Re­ time.
• H A R D -C O O K E D EG G S
m oisture w ith back of
2 tablespoons Hour
H slices chopped, pre­ O ' 1 minutes on 50% or
few foods as sensitive to or Up of a knife to break
move when slightly un­
spoon. Set aside. Combine A L A M IC R O W A V E
30% power, rotating pie
heat as eggs. They require the membrane of the egg
2 tablespoons grilled all remaining Ingredients
derdone. Let stand, cov­ ssed cooked ham
When you need chopped
p la te ' i tu r n each 2
tender loving care and. In yolk Indore cooking.
Parmesan c heese
ered. 2 minutes. Cool long
except hardenoked eggs h a rd -c o o k e d eggs for
1 eggs
minutes Remove eggs Just
S P IN A C H R IN G
1 1 teaspoon salt
2 English muffins, split,
the microwave oven, some
and blend well. Stir in salads, sandwich fillings,
enough to handle comInfore they reach desired
(4 servings)
's t e a s p o o n o n io n
special h a n d lin g te ch­
reserved spinach. Fold In casseroles or garnishes,
lortably. then chop or chill toasted and buttered
dunencss. Let stand, cov­
Golden eggs and bright
jxtwder
I lollundulsc Sauce* •
niques.
until ready to chop.
chopped eggs. Pour Into the microwave is .he an­
'* tcits [sum pepper
T h e re are tw o m ain s p in a c h m a k e for I r ­
In each of 4 (fin ? . I ered, 1 to 2 minutes to
E G G S B E N E D IC T
well-greased 1-quart ring swer.
See E G G S . Page 5B
d mold Cook oti 50% or
resistible eye appeal! The
custard
cups arrange 2
6 h a r d ■e o o k
problems In microwave
(2
servings]
Separate 6 eggs into 2
egg cookery. Because the
yolk of an egg contains fat
and the white doesn't, the
yolk cooks faster. Also, an
egg may explode as It
rooks because Internal
pressure builds up very
quickly during the rapid
heating. Using half or one -th lrd p ow e r u s u a lly
solves both these pro­
blems. Covering the egg
with a cover, lid. plastic
wrap or waxed paper as It
cooks also encourages
more even cooking.
There arc three excep­
tions to the reduced power
rule: omelets, scrambled
eggs and poached eggs.
They cook well at Full
power or High. For almost
SAVE 30c PER LB
PRICES E FFEC TIV E WED., FEB.,
all other egg dishes the
1
TH
R
U
T
U
E
S
.,
FEB.
7,
1984.
energy produced on Full
jxrwcr Is simply too much
and we recommend a re­
J U IC Y
duced power setting.
Th e following recipes
use those power settings
most common to all ovens.
Full power or High and
either 50% power (Medi­
um ) or 30% power (Medi­
um-Low). More than 90%
72oz
of all ovens In the U.S.
BOX
have one or all of these
S A V E 58'
S A V E 40'
settings. Th e 50% power
or medium to 30% power
or Medium Low range Is
o h e n labeled D efrost.
FRESH
•Check yo u r oven's In ­
struction booklet to sec
w hat se ttin g p ro vid e s
YELLOW DARK C H O C B U T T E R YELLOW
what power.
C H O C M IN T. LEM O N C A R R O T. W HITE.
Th e following recipes
G E R M A N C H O C DEVIL FO O O
OR STR A W B ER R Y
were tested In ovens from
six different manufactur­
ers ranging In power from
625 to 675 walls. Because
■KIZkJM
■ a i
TR A Y
all microwave ovens differ
In their cooking patterns
1 8 .5 o z
S A V E 20
^
■
S A V E 20
you may find that your
S A V E 20'
_________
■
________
oven requires more, or
less, rotation than we have
CVCMVOAV
IV fM Y O A T
FVFRTDAV
prioDuct.
lo w
LOW
P H O IH J C E
LOW
tu r n e r rv
COMPARE
COMPARE
suggested. Of course. If
COMPARE
P * «c t
your oven has a turntable
JO A N O F ARC PINT O. G R E A T
you can Ignore the rotat­
JU IC Y
N O R TH ER N B E A N S OR
JU IC Y
ing steps.
At thr end of each reci­
F R E N C H OR REGULAR C U T - I Box
C AN A D IAN
FLORIDA
_ - * pe. you may wish to note
2 1 8 9 *
the exact times and tech­
ib 2 3 c
PLAIN OR SELF-RISING
niques you find best for
SU N S H IN E B O N U S P A C K
S W E E T JU IC Y
„
— ,
ALL P U R P O SE
your oven. When In doubt
$409
ICMUAM
.
L
b
9
9 C
Mow
I
&gt;
ICMUAMI
.
.
l
b
2
5
c
about timing or turning.
A L W A Y S consult the di­
S
W
E
E
T
FRENCHS
SO
5 LB
rections for yo u r own
* 1■ 1 0
lb3 9 c
f 7cm
microwave oven, because
BAG
SW EET
DRY R O A S TE D
_ .
O R A N G E. LEM ON. APPLE.
those Instructions are de­
FRUfT P U N C H O R OHAPE
LIM IT-1 W ITH AS7.SO
signed for your specific
OR MORE FOOD ORDER.
.
* 2 4 tt
brand and model.
Remember that many
factors may affect cooking
lime. The wattage output
of ovens varies from brand
G R E E N G IA N T
to brand and from model
to model of the same
brand. It can also vary,
you pay
with the time of day or1
(REGULAR O B C A f T E W Z FR ET).
'
from season to season
• r t m (REGULAR OR SUGAR
because of demands on
F U E L TA B . D O T CORE
m H E L L O VELLO
the local electrical supply.
2 LITER
W ITH
We suggest you set your

CASH SAVINGS

M r

POUND

S W E E T JU IC Y
N O R TH W E S TE R N

D’ANJOU
PEARS

GPride

PUNCH or R1NSO

FLORIDA
GRAPEFRUIT

$199

»8/$l

GENT

PILLS BURY PLUS

CAKE MIXES

SNO-WHITE
MUSHROOMS

FLORIDA
CARROTS

IBP $ 1 7 9

7 9 &lt; 2?59

G O LD M ED AL

FLOUR

c
79

Blackeye Peas . ,» .3/89*

Calif. Lemons . .1 2 1 9 9 °

Fla. Oranges . . . 8/*1

Green Beans

Rutabagas.............

Large Avocados

Vanilla Wafers . .

Yellow Onions

Nectarines

Idaho Spuds . . .

Acorn Squash . . .

Apple Cider . . . r

Large Pineapple u™ $1

Generic Peanuts

Capri Sun

SAVE 3 0 “ CASH

MONOGRAM
RICE

C O C A COLA ,

tim e r for the shortest
cooking time given In the
recipe. Check for doneness
then and add cooking lime
In 15 to 30 second bursts
as necessary. Undercook­
ing Is easily solved, but
overcooking Is Irreparable!
The temperature of the
hx)d to be cooked can also
Influence cooking time.
The following recipes were
tested and timed with In­
gredients at temperatures
o rd in a rily used in the
home — eggs, milk and
other refrigerated foods di­
rectly from the refrigera­
tor. other foods at room
temperature. All recipes
were tested with Large
eggs.
As you look over the
following recipes, you'll
note a favorite egg recipe
Is not Included — the
souffle. We recommend
conventional cooking for
tills airy dish because thr
finished product from a
microwave may be less
Ilian satisfactory. We also
re c o m m e n d p re p a rin g
puffy omelets only ir you
use a browning dish.
Aa you cook eggs In your
microwave oven, you're
sure to come up with nifty
tricks and Ideas that are
perfect for your family,
your favorite recipes and
y o u r oven. Scra m b ling
yggs In a styrofoam cup for
p w alk-aw ay breakfast,
hard-cooking egg or two
for a last minute garnish,
or breaking eggs Into a
plastic wrap-lined paper
towel cardboard center to

I

U M (T ■I C O U P O N PER ITEM
G O O O T H R U W ED . F E B 8. 1064.

ap

COUPON

NIBLETS
CORN

QC

3 LB

eSaK

12 o z
CAN

■
S A V E IO

30* OFF

ssE£3/$r 9

RICH G CREAMY

ICE
CREAM
U M T T-1 C O U P O N PER I T
G O O O T H R U W ED., FEB. B,

rn©

NATURAL LIGHT

m $179

6 PACK

$ 1 2 9

Childrens

OLNCK

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4 9 o z BOX

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COMPARE

s
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£3

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UMfT -1 CO UPON PER ITEM.
GOOO TH R U WED.. F E S 8 . 1BB4 .

2Cy O F F 803

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■

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PUFFED CHEESE
OR CRUNCHY

____
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Faygo Diet Sodas

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super ooor M u m

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P i e F i l l i n g ....................■

Lymol Cleaner

d jn tt m o o r e

Beef Stew

2

69*
_99*
*1"
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Johnson Pledge

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DOUBLE STUFF
UMTT -1 CO UPON
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fW rro A V

CHOC I HY

ASSO RTED FLAVORS

C O M S TO C K CHERRY

Illustrated in Full C o lo r...
Told in Easy- to-Understand
Language.

SAVEBO*
G O LD EN _
. 760 M L
C H A P E L ls J i » J 9 9

COMPARE

L H O C tM V

Wi

Ages...

4 "

UEBFR AUM 1LCH

VAN CAM PS

For Children of A I

3 L IT E R

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Kleenex

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F R A N Z IA
W IN E S „

18oz

B O U TIQ U E

2 (T

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CANS

30* O F F LABEL

12oz

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S A V E 10*

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HALF GALLON

1

BUSCH or

2 /n

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PORKS

*1

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OOOO THRU WED.. FEB. B, 1

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CYORADYS CHIPS
U M ff-l CO UP O N PER REM .
OOOO TH R U WED., FEB. a. IBB

!*■■■■■■■■•■

FOLGER’8
COFFEE

S
I

BO.OR A O £ .

LB CAN
I M T . I CO UPON PER REM .
OOOO TH R U W B X . FEB. a, 1

&gt;4 l» a n M a a ( « « 4

SA N FO RD -2 94 4 O R L A N D O ROAD. ZAYRE PLAZA AT THE C O R N E R O F 17-92 &amp; O R L A N D O RO AD

I

�...Eggs

(4 servings)

pep p er or hot pepper
sauce
Vt cup butter
In 2-cup liquid measure
or small bowl combine all
ingredients except butter.
Set aside. Cook butter on
High about I minute. Just
until melted. (If butter
hubbies, it is too hot.
Allow it to cool a bit.) Stir
yolks vigorou sly while
adding butler in a very
thin stream. Cook on High
45 seconds to 1 minute,
stirring vigorously every
15 seconds.
M USHROOM
SCRAM BLE

C o n t’d From Page 4B
finish cooking. Serve each
egg on 1 muffin half. Top
.each with alxmi 2 tablespoon*. I lollandulse Sauce.
* * H O L L A N D A IS E
SAUCE
(M akes about 1 cup)
Quick as a wink In the
microwave! Ik- sure the
butter is just melted — not
bubbly hot.
3 egg yolks
2 tablespoons lem on
Juice
1♦teaspoon salt
' » teaspoon paprika
D a s h g r o u n d red

w|i lid or plastic wrap.
C&lt;)k 3 minutes on High
l-'tig rubber spatula or
wpden spoon, break up
coked portions and push
toiard center. Cook 2 to 3
unities more, breaking
o| mixture once or twice.
u&lt;ll thickened hut before
r t f s reach desired donemis. St it again, r over and
Iceland 2 to 3 minutes to
fli(sli cooking.
LtMON M E R IN G U E PIE
(6 to 8 servings)
(h e m icro w a ve oven
r e e l s at p r o d u c i n g
o f It - 1n ■t It e •m o it t It
ntringues — snowy while
all oh. so tender! From
cpst tr&gt; to p p in g , this
Itrinus lemon beauty is a
rql energy stiver, ton —
bill fuel and human!

T h e m ic ro w a v e pro d u c e s v c r y t c n d c-r
scrambled eggs Save on
cleanup by cooking this
quick scramble right in its
serving dish. This main
dish Is surprisingly low tu
calorics, too — nniy about
200 per serving!
cup chopped celery
' « cup chopped onion
I cup chopped fresh
mushrooms
8 eggs
!« cup grated Parmesan
cheese
1a teaspoon salt
In 1W-quart dish mix
celery and onion. Cook 2
minutes on High Top with
mushrooms. Beat together
eggs, cheese and salt. Pour
over vegetables and covet

1 (9 -in c h ) baked pie
shell*
2 cups sugar, divided
•v cup cornstarch
•r teaspoon stilt
11 2 cups cold water
1a cup lemon juice
5 eggs, separated
2 tablespoons butter
I to 3 teaspoons grated
lemon peel
I I teaspoon cream of
tartar
1 teaspoon lemon juice
ill 2-quart bowl combine
11r cups of sugar, cornstareh and salt Add
water, b cup lemon Juice
and egg yolks Stir until
smooth. Add butler. Cook
on H igh u ntil m ixture
thickens and bolls. 7* a to
H minutes, stirring 2 or 3
times. Stir in lemon peel.

(.el stand, uncovered 15
m i n u t e s , s tirrin g n o ­
easionally.
In large m ixing ho w 1
beat egg w h ite s w 11 h
cream of tartar at h i g h
speed unlil foamv Add
remaining 1j cup sugar I
tablespoon at a tim e,
healing constantly until
sugar is dissolved* * and
w hites are glossy and
stand In soil peaks Br at in
1 teaspoon lemon Juice.
Pour lemon filling Into
baked pie shell Spread
m e rin g u e over fillin g ,
s t a r t i n g w i t h s m a ll
am ounts at edges and
sealing to crust all around
Cover pie with remaining
m e r in g u e . s p r e a d in g
evenly in attractive sw irls
Cook on High 3 to 3 'a

THE BEST SAVINGS!

E39

10 TO 14 LB AVG.

P LA N TA TIO N BRAN D

PORK
B U TTS

S L IC E D
BACON

PER
POUND
S A V E 30

GREAT
GROUND
B E E F P A T T I f M IX

P E R LB

BON ELESS
D IN N E R H A M

COUNTRY STYLE

$199

... Q Q .

PER
POUND

CHECK
TH E S E
P R IC ES

|

W E S T VWOINtA C E N T E R C U T S M O K E D

Rib Pork Chops . . ,* 1“
SM OKED

Pork Neck Bones

in
AVG

B R O W N L S E R V E P A TTIES O R LINKS

Swtfts Sausage.
C U M B E R LA N D G A P P O LB H OR

Fried Chicken

COMPARE

P E R LB

U .&amp; D A C H O C E
FAM X.Y SIZE PK Q -C H U C K

Cubed Steaks .

6 9 * Roll Sausage . .
M R FMf T T E H READY T O C O O K

• 4 ia

Breaded Patties

,* 1~

Short Ribs . . . .

. r

U M IT -3 P LEA S E

CHECK
TH E S E
PR IC ES

M EAT

CAROLINA P R K *

W E A V E R S - R O N O O U TTS OR M M D R U M S
H E A T 1 S ER V E

12 o z
PKG.

LB
SAVE 80

P E R LB

msm

_ rw

t a b l e t r e a t - s a n d w ic h s t e a k s

Steak Umms . .

COMPARE

CHECK
TH E!
PR»

A B B O R TE D FLAVOR S

S
u
m
iy
fa
n
dB
ologn
an9 9 * Y
op
lattY
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2/89 *

*27B
8 9 * GWaltney' sweatdoqe ~a 8 9
xs 9 9 * LykesPower Pak a ■
«... TurkeyBreast . ..ss 1
s *2“ Variety Pack SnS as *1“
C H IC K E N OR TUFVCEY

a

A

s

O E N E H C IM fTA TlON

A

C H IC K E N L U N C H M E A T S , S P IC E D L U N C H E O N .
SALAM I OR
MCKN
NTTO
O H PICKLE P 1
IM
O

P AN TR Y P R E X

«

M R. T U R K E Y SLICED O R S M O K E D

AXELRO D S

S JA Q

LB

SP IC E D L U N C H M E A T S

t

. aQ

K IN G SIZE
iflpa B R E A D
K n eiW

3

2 O 0 Z LOZ ZES

/

$

l 4 9

M O R TO N
D IN N E R S
Vf At i'AHMhiAN CHCMEN 'UllKf V
SAUSUUMV (HI
AT lOAf

BE8
t Ioz
t H O tE N

S A V E tl

79
S A V E 20

m

CottageChaos© •s? i
Ricotta Cheese . . as 1
BLUE B O N N E T U O H T T A S T Y

E ^ ik O

Vegetable Spread ^

1

I TXNQMT TOLIMIT OUANTTTVS.

K ITC H E N F R ES H

K O TEX
L I GMl (.tit
H AWTOHD
AYS
**| M

® $219

^

Cheese Singles . k8 9 *

PHCfSOOOOONiYMMMNOUICaJNTY DUS TOQUOUOW»
NOW* SOLDTO OSAUm. NOT I
P A N T H Y ( RIDE

CHECK
TH E S E
P R IC E S

D A IR Y

COMPARE

SLIC
U
U CED
tOM
M EMA Ti

LB

B A S IC F R E N C H (P L A IN )
OM ELET
(1 serving)
The secret of a tender,
easily rolled microwave
French omelet is a tightfitting cover. No stirring Is
needed sin c e tra p p e d
steam helps to c&lt;Kik l lie
omelet evenly.
1 teaspoon butler
2 to 3 eggs
2 to 3 tablespoons water
l » to &gt;« teaspoon sail
Dash pepper
In 9-inch pie plate melt
butter on High, about 45
seconds. Spread butter
over bottom of plate. Mix
remaining Ingredients u n ­
til blended and |&gt;our into
plate. Cover tightly with
plastic wrap and rook on
High 2 to 3 m inors, rolat*
trig U turn each 30 sec­
onds. Do not stir. When
renter is set but still moist,
till. If desired. (It is Ix'ltcr
to fill omelet when It Is
slightly underdone. Heat
retained in eggs completes
the rooking.) With pan­
cake turner, fold omelet In
half or roll and slide from
pie plate onto serving
plate.
T o prepare In browning
dish: Preheat browning
dish on High I minute.
Add butter and spread to
coat bottom of dish. Pour
in egg mixture and cover
with lid. Cook on High 1Vi
to 2 'i minutes, rotating
turn each 30 seconds. For
repeated use. wipe out
dish and preheat each
time about 30 seconds.
B A S IC P U F F Y
SO UFFLE O M ELET

(1 serving)

P E R LB

HYGRADE
H O T DOGS

P O R K R IBS
avg
PKG

99

SAVE 40

LEAN M E A T Y

COMPARE

5 LB
AVG
PKG.

S A V E 50

CUM BERLAND GAP

S A V E 50

msm

$ J4 9

LB
PKG

im l!igh 1 minute. Gently
press to til to plate, re*
erlmplng edges If neces­
sary. Cook as directed
above.
* ' H uh just a lilt Ol
meringue between thumb
and forefinger to lirl it
sugar has issolved.

PRICES EFFECTIV E WED., FEB.
1 TH R U TU E S ., FEB. 7, 1984.

LIMIT 1 PLEASE W ITH O TH E R P U R C H A S E S

FRESH

■119

minutes, rotating h turn
every minute Meringue is
done when point of knife
inserted horl/ontally into
side comes nut clean
*To bake pie shell Roll
pastry dough into 'v ln c li
thick circle ottoul 10 In­
ches in diameter. Fit loose­
ly into 9-Inch |&gt;ie plate.
Trim edge and flute as
desired Prick bottom and
s i d e s with fork Cook on
High 1 to 111 mimics,
rotating '« turn over I
minute and 3 minutes.
You may use a 9-inch
deep-dish frozen |&gt;ie shell.
To transfer front loll pan.
run knife between rim of
shell and pan to loosen
frozen shell. Place frozen
shell in pie plate and cook

cP lide

S A V E 20*
PER LB

■CSM

Wednesday, Feb. I, 1984—SB

t*r

U.S.D.A. GRADE A
N O N -B A S TE D

YOUNG
TURKEYS

Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI.

ROAST
BEEF
a
HALF
POUND
if. &gt;n| SCRVICI

$ -g &lt;

199
X tO W t S O N I

This recipe calls for a
browning dish because it
enhances the o m elet's
color and texture.
2 eggs, separated
I tablespoon water
h teaspoon cream ol
tartar
H» teaspoon sail
I teaspoon butler
In large m ixing howl
In at egg whites with water
and cream of tartar at high
s|M’ed unlit stiff hut not
dry. just until whites no
longer slip when Ixiwl Is
tilled. In small m ixing
bowl lieat egg yolks with
salt at high speed unlil
thick and lemon-colored.
Gently, hut thoroughly,
fold yolks Into whites.
Preheat browning dish on
High l 1i minutes. Add
butler and spread to coal
iMittom of disii. Pour in egg
m ix t u r e a n d g e n t ly
smooth surface. C&lt;Kik on
High I to I'.ti minutes or
until top is set. W illi pan­
cake turner, turn omelet
over In dish and let stand
I minute. Slide omelet
from browning dish onto
serving plate. Spoon or
sjirlnkle filling. If desired,
over lop. Serve immediate­
ly-

SUGGESTED OMELET
FILLINGS
it you wish, heat vegeta­
ble. meat or fruit fillings In
the microwave before you
make the omelets. Pul the
tilling Into a small bowl,
cover wltli plastic wrap
and cook on H ig h 45
seconds to \ Vi minutes or
until hot. Let stand, cov­
ered, until ready to use.
(There is no need lo beat
cheeses, nuts. Jelly or
Jam.)
For raeli omelet fill with
'A lo Vi cup of any of liie
following:
S h r e d d e d o r s lic e d
C heddar. Swiss,
mozzarella. Muenster or
other firm cheese
Collage, ricotta or cream
cheese
Cooked, drained and
crumbled sausage, baron
or ground beef
D r a in e d a n d fla k e d
canned or flaked rooked
fish
Sauteed sliced
mushrooms
Sauteed chopped onions
or green pepper
D r a in e d ., c o o k e d i
chopped, diced or sliced
vegetables

POACHEDEGG8

1

Kggs will poach nicely lii
a small container w llh Jusl
enough water to covert
Simply break and slip the1
eggs Inlo the water, prlrk
the yolks and cover Ih4
c o n ta in e r w ith p lastic
wrap. One egg in a 6ounce custard c u p ret
quires about ■/« cup water
Cook on High 45 second*
to 1 minute. T w o eggs In u
9M i-ounce c u s ta rd cup
require
cup water. Cook
on High m to 2 minutes.'
Lei stand 1 lo 2 minutes to
finish cooking.
1

a

�4B-Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Wednesday, Feb. I. l?B4

Creamy Rice Pudding
A Versatile Dessert

The following recipes have
been kitchen-tested by I he
RICC Council of America In
Houston. Texas.

OLD-FASHIONED
RICE PUDDING
(Baked Method)
W teas|Mxm salt
Mi cup sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla
I 'A teaspoons grated
lemon peel
3 cups milk
I 'A cups rooked rice
C o m b in e eggs. sa lt.
sugar, vanilla and lemon
peel In a buttered 2-quart
csscrole. Com bine milk
and rice. Stir Inlo egg
mixture. Set casserole In a
pan of hot water filled to
within 1 Inch of top of
casserole. Bake uncovered
at 300 degrees for 1V* to 2
h a u l 's . A f t e r f ir s t 3 0
minutes Insert spoon at
edgr of pudding and stir
from botlom. Near end of
baking time Insert silver
knife; If It comes out clean
pudding Is done. Serve hot
or cold. Makes 6 to 8
servings.

RICE PUDDING
(Top of the Range
Method)
3 cups cooked rice
3 cups milk
'A cup sugar
3 tablespoons butter or
margarine
I teaspoon vanilla
C o m b in e rie c . m ilk ,
sugar, and butter. Cook
over medium heat until
t h ic k e n e d , a b o u t 30
minutes, stirring often.
Add vanilla. Pour Inlo
serving dish. Serve hot or
cold. Makes 6 servings.

drained (reserve 8 slices),
•i teaspoon salt and 1
tablespoon lemon Juice.
S p r e a d t o p p in g o v e r
cooled or chilled pudding.
Garnish with the reserved
peach slices.

cooked stir In ‘A cup
chopped dates and 'A cup
chopped nut meats. Sene
with a vanilla or lemon
hard sauce.

VARIATIONS OF
CREAMY RICE
PUDDING
Date Rice Pudding:

Omit from the ingredients
of Creamy Rice Pudding W
cup sugar. Cook. Fold Into
cooked pudding 2
tablespons butter or mar­

Prepare recipe for Creamy

R ic e

P u d d in g .

W hen

Orange Rice Pudding:

g a rin e . M» cup orange
ma r m a l a d e , and 3
tablespoons cream. Pour
Into serving dishes. Add
orange topping.*
Orange Topping: Melt
cup orange m armalade
with V* cup cream sherry:
fold In Vi eup chopped
nuts. Serve marmalade
sauce over hot or cold
pudding.

Old-fashioned rice
pudding It an easy
r

•u «u

dessert chock full

pm

of nutrition. A n d It
Is delicious In any
variation.
Rice pudding has

V

always been a
popular dassarf

•i

Correct
Prices

teed

VARIATIONS OF
RICE PUDDING
B traw berry Sm oothie:
Follow directions above
until pudding Is slightly
thickened; to 3 beaten egg
yolks add enough pudding
mixture to blend. Stir egg
y o lk s In to r e m a in in g
pudding mixture. Cook I
minute or until pudding Is
thickened. Spoon Into In­
dividual dessert dishes.
Chill. Strawberry Top­
ping: Beat 3 egg whiles
until frothy. Add
cup
straw berry lor ch e rry,
p in e a p p le , ra s p b e rry )
preserves: continue beat­
ing unlll whites are stiff.
Top chilled Klee Pudding
w ith m e rin g u e w h ip :
spoon I teaspoon of pre­
serves on top of whip.
Mocha Rice Pudding: To
milk In recipe for Rice
Pudding blend 2 teaspoons
Instant coffee. Prepare
according to directions
given. Cool. Fold
cup
marshmallow cream Inlo
pudding. Spoon Into de­
ssert dishes. To p each
w i t h

a d d i t i o n a l

marshmallow cream and
chocolate svm p.
C arat..r l Klee P u d d in g:
Prepare recipe for Rice
Pudding. Into u loaf pan
pour ^ cup sugar. Cook
over very low heat, stirring
constantly u ntil sugar
melts and turns a golden
color. Tilt pan frequently
as sugar melts lu coal
sides thoroughly. Remove
from heat. Pour Rlec Pud­
ding Into loaf pan. Cover
and bake at 350° for 30
minutes. Cool. Unm old
onlo serving dish. Serve
plain or with whipped
cream.

Pantry Pride stores
are equipped with

1

y
/

t

rd i p '

[Computer
Scanning

\

for 2 reasons:

1. You get checked out faster thai
the old mechanical registers.
»

2 . You get correct prices every
time...Guaranteed.
O ur G uarantee

CREAMY RICE
PUDDING
(Double Boiler)
Mix W cup uncooked
rice. 2Vi cups milk. M« cup
sugar, und Mi teaspoon suit
lu the (op part of a double
boiler. Cook, covered, over
boiling water 1 hour, unlll
liquid Is absorbed and rice
Is tender. Stir often. Blend
In 1 teaspoon vanilla. Srve
Creamy Rice Pudding di­
rectly from the cooking
pan, If you like, or spoon
into dessert dishes and
chill before serving. Makes
6 servings.

.

On items that are not price marked, w e’re
sure of the accuracy of our system that If thi
price you are charged Is higher than the shel
price tag, you will receive the Item free*
•FREE MERCHANDISE IMITED
TO ONE PER IT B .

Peach-B rittle Topping)
Th is lopping is to be used
on c o o le d o r c h ille d
C rea m y Rice Pudding.
Whip Vi pint heavy cream.
Fold Into whipped cream 1
cup finely crushed peanut
brittle candy. 1 can (1 lb.
13 ozs.) sliced peaches.

We’re using tomorrow’s
technology to serve
you better today.

f tr
c p rid e

For those iashing to
mark tholr iMvn Items.
grease pens ire available
at tha triles.

United Why
l
I

.
I

�BLONDIE

Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI.

Wednesday, Feb. 1 ,19I4-7B

AC R O SS

44 E icU m it.on
of disgust
1 Hereditary fa c -47 Busy insect
tor
4 9 _____the
Great
5 Of stomach
52 Perform
12 Covers
Surgery
13 W rack
56 Useful
14 Helps
57 Card game
t5 leanest
56 Turn away
16 01 the teeth
59 Loudspeaker
18 Cut off
19 Compass
60 South Yemen
point
capital
20 Commercials
OOW N
22 Aroma
26 Dean Martin s
1 Scoffs
nickname
2 Paradises
28 Farewell
3 Made profit
29 Hockey
league (a b b r) 4 Former
weather
32 Hit the road
bureau
34 Convent
5 Promise
inmate
solemnly
35 Publisher
Graham
6 Bad things
7 Infamous
36 Intermediate
(lew)
Roman
emperor
37 Triton
38 Microorgan­
8 Three-legged
ism
stand
9 Repent
40 Isn't (si)
42 Small amount 10 Horse relative
11 Allow
43 Sandwich
12 Auxiliary verb
type (abbr I

by Chic Young

Ruth b a r r o w s 5 a id
SHE SAW YOU COMING
OUT OP THE

IP THERE'S ONE THING
I CAN'T STANO, IT'S
G O SSIP THAT'S ‘
TRUE •

B E E T L E BAI LEY

by M ort W alker

t

2

3

4

Answer to Previous Puisle

° . u^ T i L o

w

r K

° .!iP

17
21
23
24
25

lo n g spear
41
Tergal
Eat form ally
43
Egg (Fr)
Undersued an- 45
imal
46
27 Dogmata
48
28 Verily
50

O
A
s
M

T

0
O
D
E
S

Having
clumps
Actress Davis
Complam
Singer Reddy
Oirection
Brain part

13

14

15

(lit )

6

16

7

52 El9h* (P '« M
53 Cat s foot
54 Chemical
suffu
55 Pert of corn
plant

8

9

10

tl

22

23

24

25

■

34

„
19

■
21

■
26

■

27

■

33

33

30

11 ■

35

31
36

1
38

1
41

.0

39

■
42

l”
45

■
47

43

■
50

48

46

44
51

■
52

A R C H IE

by Bob Montana
( TH E G R E A T G A S O L IN E ^
PR IC E W A R . '

V

J

53

54

55

r

56

57

58

59

60

HOROSCOPE
W hat The Day W ill B rin g ...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
FEBRUARY 2. 1984

by Howie Schneider

E E K A M EEK

THERE. ARE TWOSE lUHo 5AV f I A3REE...E5UT (TCA/JT
HOLD A (AKJDLET) OUST
THAT T O MUH READING
lOAJClMG m k i FROM IT
ISAIO ATTEMPTTD ESCAPE
TO M REALITY
y ------------

T"

1

4
by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers

M R. M E N AND L IT T L E MISS

This coming year you
will experience strong de­
sires to put your personal
Im print on all of your
Involvements. Things will
work out well, provided
they arc not done at the
expense of others.

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20Feb. 19) You have an
effective way of managing
things today which Is U-st
for all conrcrncd. Don't lei
another muscle In and
take over where you can
do better. Major changes
arc In store for Aquarians
In the coming year. Send
for your year-ahead pre­
dictions loday. Mall S I to
A s tro -G ra p h , Box 489.
Radio City Station. N.Y.
10019.

W H A TS^

PISCES (Feb. 20 March
20) Follow your Instincts
as well as your logic today
In matters afTectlng your
reputation and status.
Your Inner voice will help
guide you properly.

W RONG
WITH TOUR
S K IN ?

rrc n o useA $
AAR.T A LL/
"
I'LL NEVER

.BE A AAALE
A^D EL/

ARIES (March 21-April
19) A little extra efTort on
your part today could do
much lo make a friend out
of someone who Is now
merely an acquaintance.
Extend yourself.
by Stoffal A Heimdahl

BUGS B U N N Y

OK. TiN HORN, LETS

S2£ YOU C&amp;NCS ■

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) T r y (0 complete as
m any steps as possible
today on projects afTectlng
yo u r career. To m o rro w
your frame of mind might
seek other outlets.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) Let your Ideas take
precedence over those of
your associates today. It
won't be an ego trip. Your
thoughts have greater clar­
ity than theirs.

CANCER (June 2 1-July
22) Do not let shifting
conditions disturb you
today. You tend to benefit
from changes, even those
which are not of your own
making.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
In order lo gain coopera­
tion today, try to pul
yourself In others' shoes.
Once you appreciate their
perspective, you'll make
the right moves.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) Th is could Ik- a very
productive day, provided
you are able to work at
your own pare. Schedule
events so that you retain
control.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.
2 3) A pleasant social
diversion could do you a
world of good today —
such as quiet dinner with
select friends where you
can relax and be walled
on.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
221 Don't attempt to do
things today which you
know In ad van ce you
might be unable lo finish.
Leaving things dangling
will affect your peace of
mind.
23-Dee. 21) This Is a good
day to try to get In touch
w ith persons you feel
yo u 've neglected a bit
lately. If a phone call won't
work, drop them u note.

C A P R I C O R N (D e c .
22-Jan. 19) Your financial
aspects continue to look
encouraging, but there Is a
c h a n c e y o u m a y he
extravagant In several sit­
uations where you should
be prudent.

by Bob Thavos

ive

alw ay /

N O T H IN *

TN F

Being overweight often
contributes to back pro­
blems. This Is particularly
true if being overweight Is
associated with a large
abdomen. The abdominal
muscles arc weak and the
strain on the back muscles
Is Increased. In fact. I had
a letter from a lady who
said she had back trouble
for years until she elimi­
nated her excess body
weight, and after that time
she had no more trouble.
I'd be happy to send you
the Health Letter 4-7.
Weight Losing Diet, as you
requested.
Exercise Is an Important
aid In controlling weight
loss, ll should be com­
bined w ith co n tro llin g
your calories. It's a slow
process. T o Illustrate the
p o in t, a p e rs o n w h o
weighs 150 pounds will
only use 60 more calories
walking one mile than he
would have used silting
during llie same period.
Bui If that same Individual
walks three miles a day for
a year, he will have used
the amount of calories In
almost 20 pounds of body
fal. And. of course, that
three miles doesn't have lo

be walked all al one time.
It could be a mllc-and-ahalf twice a day.
But If yo u follow a
sensible dlel and exercise
— and are patient — In the
course of lime you will be
able to elim inate yo u r
excess body fat. It's not
safe lo try lo lose fal loo
fast. If you are 50 pounds
overweight, you should
expect It lo be at least a
year's project. If you want
to do It safe and simply.
DEAR DR. LAM B - I'm
82 and blessed with good
health. Bui I have one
small problem. In (he past
eight months. I have de­
veloped dozens of lin y
moles on m y body, under
m y breasts and on my
stomach. They seem lo
start with liny red dots.
Can they develop Into any­
thing serious? The only
medication I lake Is a dally
dose of Brewer's yeast and
one vltumin ami mineral
pill.
DEAR READER - Your
"moles" need lo be seen
by a doctor. They may not
be moles at all.
Y o u r d e s c rip tio n of
dozens of liny moles may
m ean th e y a rc s m a ll
tum ors of nerve fibers
(n e u ro fib ro m a s ). T h e y
could be some type of
w a r l. s u c h as " s e e d
warts."
It's unlikely they will
cause you a n y health
problems, but I would be
much happier with you If
you would allow someone
to see (hem so a definite
diagnosis could be made.
Thai Is good advice for
a n y o n e w h o has a n y
lu m p s or h u m p s und
doesn't know for sure
what they are.
Send your questions lo
Dr. Limb. P.O. IIox 1551.
Radio City Station. New
York. N.Y.' 10019.

W IN AT BRIDGE
fl) R T I I
♦ 0 9764
♦ A44
♦ J1S
♦ 13

WEST
♦ A!
♦ 1073
♦ A 10 4 3
♦ q 1074

EAST
♦K
*952

♦ 9713
♦ K 9 I &amp;2

SOUTH
♦ J 10153
YKQJI

♦ KQ
♦ AJ

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Vk'rtl

North

East

I'a u

:♦

Paw

I’au

Pats
Pau

Sooth
!♦
&lt;♦

Opening lead: +4

By Oswald Jacoby
and Jam ea Jacoby
When declarer has two
chances (slim and none),
he had best try the slim
c h a n ce . S o m e tim e s It
works.
South found himself In a
rather normal four-spade
contract. Only a club lead

could hurt him. but West
opened Ihc four of that
suit. East's king fell to
South's ace. but South
was very unhappy. He was
lo o k in g at four quick
losers, or one more Ilian
he could afford.
South was accustomed
(o using tricks of the trade,
so at trick Iwo he promptly
led his eight of spades In
the faint hope that some­
how or other Ihc ace and
king would fall together.
No such luck. South was
one down.
If South had not been so
anxious lo gel his oppo­
nents to make a mistake,
he might have found a
way to make his contract.
It was a slim chance In­
deed. but It was there.
South should m erely
have led hearts. The suit
would go around three
limes. Suits do break 3-3
almost 36 percent of Ihc
time. They did this time,
and now South could lead
a fourth heart and discard
his losing club. It wouldn't
matter which opponent
ruffed. East-West would
get only one more trump,
and the slim chance would
have succeeded.

___________________ by Jim Davit

WHEN HE COMES AROUND. HE'LL
THANH ME FOR BREAKING UP
THE MONOTONY OF Mie&gt;

WANT*? .

0U T

DEAR R EADER - Some
authorities believe that
s ome p e o p l e are
overweight because they
arc nervous. They cat In
response to anxiety and
tension. Others evidently
eat because of boredom or
pressure. Then, of course,
the person who really gets
concerned about being
overweight might develop
some anxiety about his
health. So It really can
work both ways.

SAGITTARIUS (N ov.

G A R F IE L D
FRANK AND ER N E S T

DEAR DR. LAM B - I
was reading your column
about I he person who was
overweight. I'm 45. 50
pounds overweight and I
would Icve to lose It. I tried
working out on an exercise
bicycle, but it didn't seem
to do any good. Can being
overweight bother your
nerves? Would it cause
(rack problems? I really
would appreciate yo u r
health letter on losing
weight.

police

30 Tresses
31 Northern
constellation
33 Actress
Louise
39 Shadows

5

"
,0

Losing Excess Fat
Is A Slow Process

1

29 Russian secret 5 , M |)h symbol

12

29

D A
0 V
V E
V 1 S
c H
I s. A
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l* E
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s-, * * r A N N
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A N N IE
TU M BLEW EED S

M A f I ' ve g o t it o p en !
IF PUNJAB THINHSMCCV
KEPAELOCHEP
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WHO WTBflpP'TH W l U W m eVE?l\IT
A rT T H P K O ^ W E E P S ’

I

. by Leonard Starr

by T . K . tfyan

f

•

1

�• B — Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

W ednesday, Feb. 1, 1984

Anti-Crim e Bill
Vote Is Delayed
W A S H IN G TO N (UIMI — A proposal to pcnnil/c officials
like former President Richard Nixon and U.S. Informa­
tion Agency chief Charles W ick for secretly taping
telephone calls delayed a Senate vole on a major
anti-crime bill.
The proposal would outlaw taping of phone conversa­
tions by federal employees except in criminal investiga­
tions or Intelligence-gathering. Debate on the measure,
offered as an amendment to the crime bill, postponed a
filial vote on the entire package Tuesday.
Th e taping amendment was Introduced by several
Democratic senators Including Dale Dumpers of
Arkansas. Howard Metzenbaum of Ohio and Democratic
leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia.
"W e thought this kind of activity was behind us," said
Bumpers, mentioning the tapes that became Nixon's
downfall In the Watergate scandal. "W asn't once
enough?"
He said. "W ick Is not the Issue.” because the USIA
head apologized for Ills taping and said he will stop.
Wick, who Initially denied lie recorded calls, said he did
not realize such taping was against the law In a number
of stales.
A vote was pul off until today on the amendment,
which sponsors would like to attach to anti-crime
legislation narrowing the Insanity defense and abol­
ishing parole for federal crimes.
The crime bill would require defendants who plead
Insanity as a defense to prove with "clear and
convincing evidence" they did not know what they wendoing when the crime was committed. Th e burden now
Is on the prosecution to prove the defendant sane
beyond a reasonable doubt.
The proposal grew out of the furor that arose when
.John Hinckley J r. was acquitted by reason of Insanity In
June I9H2 on rbarges of trying to assassinate President
Reagan. He now Is In a federal mental hospital In
Washington.
Broad support was obtained for the overall crime bill
by omitting four controversial Issues. The death penally,
habeas corpus, the fcdci.il (uii claims an and tile
exclusionary rule were left out under an agreement
allowing each to be handled separately later.
House passage of the entire package Is uncertain
beeause of opposition to its sentencing and bail
provisions. But approval of parts of the anti-crime hill Is
expected. Iiecnuse pressure to pass such popular
legislation Intensifies in an election year.
S&lt;’n. Charles Mathias. R-Md.. tried without success to
change the bill with amendments that Included a
proposal to make the standardized sentencing
guidelines of a new commission less binding on Judges.
Th e commission would replace the federal parole
system. All Mathias' amendments were voted down.
The bill also would require a Jail term for anyone
convicted of using a firearm during a violent crime that
falls under federal Jurisdiction. It would Impose a
mandatory five-year term lor using any handgun loaded
with armor-piercing bullets — often called "cop killer”
bullets because they can penetrate bullet-proof vests.

Legal Notice
AGEN OA
S EM INO LE CO UN TY
BOARD OF A D JU S TM E N T
N O TIC E OF PUBLIC
H EAR IN G
F E B R U A R Y 20.UI4
1 CO P M
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCERN
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV EN that
the Seminote Count, Benin! ot Ad
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURTS
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
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY . FLO R ID A
CASE NO 14 0024 CA t] G
W A LTE R A LAUG M LIN.SR
end MAR ION E LAUG H LIN .
h a wile.
Plelnlllli.
vS.
Estate 01 JAM ES B RICKER,
deceased and tils heir*
devisees. grantee*, assign***,
lienor*, creditor* and trustees
and all other Individual* delmlng
by. through, under or again*!
*a dEttaleo! JAM ES B RICKER
Delendant*
N O TIC E OF ACTIO N
TO : Etiaieol JAM ES B RICKER,
deceased. and hi* heir*, devisee*,
grantee*, as.gnee* lienor*, creditor*
and Iruttee*. and all other individu
all claiming by. through, under or
agamtt said Ellale ol JAM ES B
RICKER
Y O U ARE N O T IF IE D that an
action to quiet title lo the following
p ro p e rly In Seminole County,
Florida
Lot 7). Glock A Sporltm an'l
Paradise Casselberry Florida ac
cording to Plat thereof a* recorded in
Plat Book a Page* 12 and 1] ol the
Public Record* ot Seminole County.
Florida
nat been tiled against you and you
are required to serve a copy ol your
written detente* It any, to It on
A L B E R T R CO OK. E S Q U IR E .
Plaintiff* attorney, whose address i*
Po*t Ottice Bov *95, Cattelberry.
Florida on or belore February I}.
19*4. and tile the original with the
Clerk ot this Court either belore
service on Plainlill* attorney or
Immediately thereafter, otherwise a
default will be entered against you
lor the relief demanded In the
complain! or petition
DATED onJanuary* 19*4
(S E A L)
AR TH U R H BECKW ITH . JR
C L E R K O F THE
r i o r i j i y COURT
By EveCrablree
Deputy Clerk
Publish Jan uary 11. II, JS &amp; Febru
ary 1. 19*4

D EP SO
LE G A L NOTICE
STOCK HOL 0 E RS' M E E T IN G
The regular annual meeting ol the
stockholder* ol The Clll/ent Bank ol
Oviedo, Oviedo. Florida will be held
al the bank located al ISO Geneva
Orlve. Oviedo Florida al 4 00 P M
on Wednesday February li. 1*14 for
the purpose ol considering and vot
mg upon the following mailers
III Amendment lo Article III ol the
Certificate ol Incorporation
Amend Article III lo authorize the
capital ol the bank be Increased Irom
720 000 DO to WO 000 00 by a 21 percent
sloe k dl v Idend
12) Election otDirecfor*
121 Any other business e* may
property come before the meeting
James W Abell
President
Publish February l.l. 19*4
D E Q 10

Reporters' Jailing Appealed
D A Y T O N A B E A C H HJIMI TinTanifhi Tribune and Hit- Brookttvlllcbawd Dully Sun-Journal h a w appruli-d

lluHsicilcr ordered J im Ttmslull, a
reporter for The Tribune, and William
Aubrey, a reporter lor the Dully SunJournal. Jailed for six months alter
bulling them in contempt.
He lotd the reporters lhey could lxreleased Irom Jail whenever they re­
vealed Ilu- source of i lu-lr Information.
T h e reporiers were released after
about !K&gt; minutes m |ml when attorneys
(tied notice ul appeal
They argued I lit- stale failed lo prove a
compelling need Ibr the Information
sought from the reporters, lliat pro­
secutors failed to show In court they had
exhausted all other sources Irom which
the Information could have Ix-rn ob­
tained. and that the information Is not
relevant to the Investigation

a circuit court order Jailing two reporiers
fur rt-funlng to reveal conftdciilia) news
•sources.
Th e reporters were found guilty ol
eonlempt of court Nov. It) hy Hernando
Circuit Judge L.K. Huffstctler J r . when
they refused to divulge ihc source ol
information In stories they wrote uhoul a
complaint liled wit It the Florida Elides
Commission agalnsl two county com­
missioners.
Florida law makes It a misdemeanor lo
reveal an ethics commission ease before
the Investigation Inlo the allegation has
been completed and lhe results made
public.

...Reagan's Budget
Continued from page 1A

plans. Neither proposal made It through
Congress Iasi year.
T o help close the "gentler gap."
Keagan lor the firsl lime proposed
creation of a tax-deduelIhlc "s|x»usul
Independent retirement account" lhal
would put housewives on a par with
working women in lh r amminl they can
tlf|x&gt;sli yearly Inward llielr retirement.
Th e cosl of-ltvlng increase for federal
employees would l&gt;c delayed from June
until January and federal retirees would
lx- asked lo contribute more lo their
pension fund.
Here are some other budget highlights

swollen budget defieds ih.it congressio­
nal leaders and prominent economies
have warned will force Interest rates to
rise and ufxtrl the economic recovery.
Martin Feldslcln, chairman of the
p re s id e n t's C o u n c il of E c o n o m ic
Advisers, hud recommended that Hupresident Include lax Increases of uhoul
$50 billion a year over I lie next three
years lo reduce the deficits.
Th e defiell In fiscal IfJHJ was a record
8195.4 billion. Ik-fore Kragan look office,
the deficit's previous high mark had
been Slid hllllou in 1976.
As In previous Kragan budgels. nondefense spending associated with na­
tional security, such as foreign aid.
nuclear research and the space program,
arc Increased and sllghl cuts are made In
eduraltun. legal services. Jobs programs,
mass Iratisli and economic development
grants to stales and cities.
Th e budget includes $150 million lo
tx-gln designing a permanent, manned
space station that Kragan hopes lo get
Into orbit by the early 1990s. and
provides $2.5 billion over lour years In
economic aid lo Central America based
on the Kissinger Commission's recom­
mendations.
The budget promises $305 billion for
tilt* military In spending authority, the
right lo enter .Into long-term contracts
and spend money over several years.
That Is an Increase of S46.K billion over
this year — or a 13 percent real Increase.
In addition. Keagan is seeking another
$7.8 billion for development and pro­
duction of nuclear weapons — raising
Ihc iiullunul defense loud to $313 billion
East year's nuclear inllllurv budget was
$6.7 billion.
On luxes. Keagan again proposed
providing tuition lax eredlls lo parents
who srnd their children lo private
schools and lo lax employees whose
employer-paid heallh Insurance pre­
m ium s are in excess of $70 a month for
single plans and $175 a month fur family

L

Defense
The record $313 billion budget In­
cludes money lor new helicopters and
M l tanks lor the army, the MX missile
and the B -IB manned txmibcr. The
program also calls lor developing the
steallIt bomber, modernizing warning
and strategic defense systems and devel­
oping and procuring command, control
and communication systems, h also
earmarks $1.77 billion for the "poten­
tially feasible" creation of a defensive
shield to proleel the United States Irom a
nuclear attack.

Social Services
Keagau's budget calls for a $21 billion
cut In Medicare and other social Insur­
ance bcncllt programs. z\ $1.1 billion cut
111 Medicaid for the |xx»r Is envisioned for
next year. Elderly patients on Medicare
would have to pay more of Ihch own
medical hilts.

Education
The hudgcl outlines $1.8 billion in
education cuts, the hulk of which. $1.1
billion, would come In aid lo higher
education.
F o re ig n A id
Keagan sought $15.2 billion in new
congressional authority for foreign aid —
$9 3 billion or 60 percent of It economic,
the resi military. Total aid outlays in
fiscal 1985 would lx- only $12.9 billion,
because some of tin- money would not be
spent Im m e d ia te ly

9

justment will conduct a public hear
Ing to consider Ih* following Item*
A VARIANCES
1 GUSTAVO f . SILVESTR I BAI2 20 I4I27V
R IA Residential
Zone - Rear Yard Variance Irom 30
II to 24 I! on Lot 49. Pelican Bay. PB
2* Pgs 21 22. in Section 2* 21 30. on
Ih* North side ol Old* Wharl Run.
1001! Irom Grand Road ( 01 ST. It
2 JA M E S A. M A Y E R B A I J 2 0 I 4I 14V — R ia Residential
Zone
Rear Yard Variance Irom 24
It ‘o I* II lor an addition on Lot 12,
Block A. Tanglewood. Section 3
Replat, PB 10. Pg 40. In Section
33 21 30, on the North side ol Linden
Road 200 It West o' Lake Howell
Road ID IST 11
3 R A Y M O N O S U T P H IN BAI2 20 I 4M I V - Planned Unit
Development Zone — Rear Yard
Variance Irom 25 II to II II lor an
additlonon Lot 192 Sunrise Unit Two
" C " PB2t. Pg 43. in Section 1*21 31.
on Ih* South side ol Madelena
Avenue. 75II East ol La Qulnla Court
and North ol Red Bug Lake Road
(DIST I)
4 W IL 0 A ZE A LLE Y —
BAI3 20 141 20V - A I Agriculture
Zone - lo t Wldlh Variance Irom ISO
II to 132 I! on Ih* W ' i ol T a t Parcel
JOA in Section 34 20 31. on the North
side ol Black Hammock Road. ’ *
mile North ol Howard Avenue
ID IST I)
5 R O B E R T A. W A G N E R BAIT 20 *4) 34V - A I Agriculture
Zone
Lot Width Variance Irom ISO
It lo 133 11 on the E ' i ol T a t Parcel
20A. in Section 34 20 31. on Ih* North
side ol Black Hammock Road. '*
mile North o! Howard Avenue.
ID IS T I)
« R O B E R T E. A L P A U G H BAI3 30141 21V — C l Commercial
Zone
Variance for size ol sign
Irom 220 *q It to 331 *q II and a Front
Setback Variance Irom 3S II to OH on
1h« following described properly
T a t Parcel *A and Ihe Southerly *0 II
ot Ta t Parcel SA at Indicated on
Property Appraiser * Map No 127. in
Section II 20 30. located 1000 II Soutti
ol Alrporl Boulevard, on Ih* East
tideol Highway 17 92 ID IST 2)
7 MIKE H ATTA W AY —
B AIT 20 *41 I I V - M l Industrial
Zone — Variance lor buller Irom ISO
II lo 0 II. abutting residential zoned
district (P U O l on property described
a* Beginning al the SE corner ol
Section 20 20 30; run S 19 deg* 35 33"
W. along ihe S line ol said Section 20
and Hie N i,ne oi Dig Ire* Crossing.
Phase One. PB 37. Pgs 20 21, a
distance ol 1700 *7 II lo the E R/W
line ol Seaboard System* Railroad,
thence run NEly along said R/W line
«nd a curve concave SEly having a
radius ol 311 *3II. a central angle ol
OS deg* 43' 17" a chord bearing ol N
7S deg* 0*' 27 E an arc distance ol
311 44 II. thence run S ** deg* 41' j
55” E. 729 44 It. Ihenc* run N 00 degs
00' OT W 190 00 II. Ihenc* run S 19
deg* 43’ 00" E. IS* SOU, Ihenc* run N
32 deg* 0*' 23" E. 313 10 II. Ihenc*
run S 19 degs 4T 5S" E. 350 0 II lo Ih*
E line ol said Section 20, thence S 00
degs II' OS" W. 132 00 II to Ih* POB
Containing 19 32 acres Further de
scribed at located *j mile north ol
421 and Longwood Lake Mary Road
interiacllon IDIST 21
I N IC H O LA S D IO R A V IN A B AIT 20 14125V - Planned Unit
Development Zone — Rear Yard
Variance Irom 10 II lo 7 It on Lot 21.
Wekivo Club Estate*. Section (. PB
24 Pg* 70 21. In Section S3I 29 on
Ihe West side ol Needle* Trail. MO II
Irom Eatl Weklva Trail on Ihe golf
course ID IST 31
9 E V E L IO N M A R TIN E Z BAIT 20141 10V - R IA Resident!*!
Zone Lot Width Variance Irom 75 It
10 74 5 II on Lol 32. For**1 Slopes. PB
11. Pg 52. in Section I 21 29, on Ihe
South side ol Virginia Drive, *00 II
Eatl ol West Lake Brantley Rd
ID IST 3)
10 M I C H A E L F E L D M A N BAIT 20 *41 22V - M l Industrial
Zone — Variance lo reduce Ihe
required number ol parking tpaces
Irom 44 (pace* lo 39 space*; and
Front Setback Variance Irom 50 II to
35 II and Variance for butler Irom 25
11 lo 10 II ad|acent lo S R 43* and
Orange, on Ih* S
ol Lol 72. Foret!
Clly Orange Park. PB 2. Pg M. lying
Southerly ot S R 43*. together with
•hat part ol vacated Pin* Street
Northerly ol Orange Avenue and
Southerly ol S R *3* Further de
scribed as located in Section It 31 29
or, Ihe South tide ol S R 43*. between
S R 434 end Orange Avenue, *00 II
Westolintersection (O IST 31
II EDM U ND C. LE V EN W O R TH
BAI2 30 (41 13V - Planned Unit
Development Zone - Side and Rear
Yard Variance Irom 5 It to 0 It lor
screen enclosure on Lol 14, Sable
Green *1 Saba I Point. PB 35. Pgs
41 43. In Sections 23 A 24 20 29. on
Thicket Ridge Court. South ol Beni
Hickory Circle IDIST. 3)
12 SELM ER CORPORATION BAIT 2014) 17V - R 1AAA Reslden
Hal Zone — Sid* Yard Variance Irom
10 II lo 7 II lor pool screen enclosure
on Lol 14. Block C. Sweetwater Oaks.
Section 13, In Section 33 20 29, PB 21,
P g *0, on the W est side ol
Thisllewood Circle. 200 11 North ol
Smoktrlv* Bouleverd ID IST 3)
13 JAM ES R WASHBURNS BA(2 20 *4) 19V R IAA Residential
Zone — Rear Yard Variance Irom 30
11 lo 25 II lor an addition on Lol 1*.
Block D. with the N 35 It ol Lot 15.
ih* N 22 7 tl ol Lol 13, Sanlando
Springs Tra d 7*. Second Rtpiet. PB
9 Pg 4. in Section 7 21 10. located two
lots North ol Frances Slreel on the
West side ol Elaine Avenue (O IST.
4)
14
EM ORY O R E E N BAI2 20141 12V - R I Residential
Zone
Side Street Variance Irom 25
It lo 22 If; Hear Yard Variance Irom
30 II lo 17 II. Lol Sue Variance Irom
*400 sq It lo MOO sq It. end 4 Lot
Wldlh Variance Irom 70 II to M II. on
Lol I Block B. Dili* Terrace. PB I.
Pg 53. In Section 32 19 31. on Ih* SE
corner ol Brnson Avenue end 21*1
Slreel ID IS T 5)
15 CUSHMAN E N TE R P R IS E S .
IN C . - BAI3 20 »4| 33V - A 1
Agriculture Zone — Front Yard
Variance Irom 50 It lo 25 It on Lot *4
Ra,en*brook. Second Addition. PB
25 Pgs 55 5*. In Section I ] 20 29. on
Slone Gate North ID IS T 51
U CUSHMAN E N TE R P R IS E S .
IN C . BA(3 20 141 34V - A I
Agriculture Zone — Front Verd
Variance Irom 50 II to 25 II on Lol *2,
Mevtnsbrook. Second Addition. PB
25. Pgs 55 5* in Section 13 20 29. on
SloneGel* Norlh ID IST 5)
11 K E N N E TH H. F L E M IN G BAI2 201*1 1 3 V - H IAA Residential
Zone - Lot Width Variance Irom 90
II lo X II on met part ol Lois 13 and
It. Block 7. Loch Arbor Country Club
Entrance Section. PB 5. Pgs 71 72.
described as Beginning el SE cor
ner ol Mid Lol I*, run N Ot degs 20'
20" E 17* 2 II (long E line ol M id lo l
I*, thence run N IS degs 07' W 50 00 II
along the N line ol Mid Lot It;
thence run S 31 degs 33' *0" W 1*410
ft; thence run 90 00 II Ely along the
arc ol Ih* curve ol Lake Blvd. having
a radius ol 9*3 90 It, a central angle
ol 5 degs 30' 39" and a chord Ol *9 97
II lhal bears $ *7 dags 51’ 22" E to
POB. containing II, 151 sq II more or
less, located on the N side ol Lak*
Blvd. E ol Ridge Or , in Sac *2010
ID IS T St
it OCI P R O P ER TIE S . INC. B A i i 2014) ItV - R I Residential
Zone - Side Street Variance Irom 25
II to 211 It an Lois 1 .1. 1 X Pial ot
Townstta of Geneva. PB 1. Pg II. and
N ‘ t el vacated alley adiacenl.

Legal Notice
Located a! m* SW comer ol Avenue
C and F irs l Slreel. in Section
31 20 33 (O IS T 51
19 W A L T E R J U D G E B A (2 20 *41 29V - OP Ollle* District
— Front Setback Variance Irom 23 It
to 20 to II on Ta r Parcel 3. as shown
on Properly Appraiser’s Map No
230. In Section 4 31 29. al Ih* corner
01 Weklva Springs Road and Lake
Brantley Road ID IST 31
B SPECIAL EXCEPTIONS/
M O B ILE HOME APPLICATIONS/
A I A G R IC U LTU R E ZONE
I SAM L. L E W I S —
BAI3 20 *41 23TE To park a
mobile home on Lol ». Norwood
Estates, in Section 35 21 31. located
' i mile West ol Lockwood Road on
NakNakRun (D IS T 1)
1 J E R R Y
B R O W N BAI3 20 *4) I7 TE To park a
mobile home 1Renewal! on Lot 13,
Woodland E state s, In Section
31 21 33. off Lockwood Road *1 Ih*
end of Red Ember Rd IDIST. It
3 BOBBY 0 B E N N E T T . SR. B A 12 20 (* ) I2 T E To park a
mobile home (RenewalI on appror
Imately 1 j acres ol S 555 II ol NW '&lt;
ot NE
ol Section 13 31 13. beg 200
II S ol NE corner ot above property.
Ihenc* S 100 II. Ihence W 1*0 II.
Ihence N 100 II. Ihence E *M II lo
POB. on the West side ol Lakevlew
Avenue. '&lt; mile South ol Lake Mills
Road ID IS T I)
4 AUSTIN N MALCOMB III BAI3 30 ( 4 ) l* TE To park a
mobile home (Renewal) on Tea
Parcel 30A. In Section 15 21 30. on Ih*
NW corner ol Center Drive *rxl
5un*el Drive (O IST. II
5 LOUIS G U O L I E L M E llO B A ( 2 30 •*) 22TE To park a
mobile home on Lol 1|A. Wells
Farms. PB t. Pg X . less Nly ( II
thereof lor R/W for Lake Drive,
located 400 It East ol Florida Road
on Center Slreel. in Section M2I 30
ID IST H
* ROBERT LIOHTNER
- B A I T 20 *4) I5TE To park a
mobile home on Ten Parcel 4B. as
shown on Appraiser * Map No 119. In
Section 31 30 30 on the West side of
Nolan Road, oil Highway 427 IDIST

11

7 R IC H A R D L. M A M E L E B A IT 30 141 I0TE To park a
mobile home on Tan Parcel 1 In
Section 25 20 30, as shown on Pro
perly Appraiser's Map No 141.
located al Ih* end ol Una Drive on
Ih* South side ID IST 5)
I C Y N T H IA D G L O V F R b a i t 20 I 4| I I T E To park a
mobile home on Ihe E 297 It ol N 147
It of Lot 19 and Ih* N 10 II ol Lot 1*.
Waites S/D. PB 3. Pg 47. In Section
2 20 29. located approulmelely 'k
mile South ol Markham Woods Road
on the West side of Carter Road
IDIST 31
9 DAVID W STEVEN S. JR. B A IT 20 (4 ) I9TE - To park a
mobile home on Lol 15. Osceola Bluff
South. In Section 1 20 32. on the South
sldeol Osceola Road (D IS T 3)
10 CHR ISTO PH ER R. ARNOLD
— BA(3 70 *41 31T£ - To park a
mobile home on Tract 3. Mullet Lake
Retreats. Phase 3. In Section 3 20 32.
Eeslol Mullet Lake Road IDIST 5)
II
H A Z E L J. V E R G E L I B A II 20 141 U T E To perk e
mobile home on Lol 32. Mullet Lake
Retreats, Unit 3, In Section 5 20 33,
oil Osceola Road on Retreat Road
ID IST 5)
12 J . M . P E T R E N C S I K B A IT 20 ( 4I I1 TE - To park 'a
mobile home (Renewal) on Tea
Parcel 9H In Section 1 20 32 as shown
on Assessor's Map No 194. located
on Mockingbird Lane. North ol S R
one mile East ol Mullet Lake
Park Road (D IS T )!
13 M. KO H LY - B AIT 20141 11TE
— To park a mobile home on Lot 1,
Osceola Acres. In Sec bon 9 20 12. oil
Osceola Rd IDIST. 51
4 MARY HEMSLEY BAI T 20 *4) TOTE To perk e
mobile home on Lol F I, Lake
Harney Eslefos. In Section 10 20 12.
located one mil* South of Old Osceola
Road on lha North side ol Saltiers
Loop (DIST_5J
C SPECIAL EXCEPTIONS!
O THER
1 AR DEX. L T D - BAIT 20 *41 3E
— A I Agriculture Zone — To
construct an Adult Congregate U v
ing Facility with attached nursing
home on T a i Parcel I9B as shown on
Appraiser’s Map No 215. in Section
24 21 n . located to mil* South ol Ih*
intersection ol Tuskewllle Road end
Red Bug Lake Road, on Ih* West
Sldeol Tuskewllle Road ID IST II
3
JOHN C L IN TO N FA LLS BAI2 20 *4) IE - A I Agriculture
Zone — To permit a landfill opera
lion on lha following property Tea
Parcel 2. In Sec I ion 22 20 30. as
shown on Appraiser’s Map No lJI;
Taa Parcel* 11A, 29. and 10. In
section 21 30 10. as shown on
Appraiser's Map No 119 Further
described as lying South ol S R 437
and County Horn# Road and Includ
Ing Ih* property 1000 ft East end
West of Inter section (O IST. 31
]. G E O R G E G. M A R T IN B AII 20 14) 7E - C l Commercial
Zone - To permit Ih* Ml* ol relait
liquor on Parcels lIB end ISC. In
Sacllon n n 39 as shown on
Appralsar's Map No 2** Further
d e s c rib e d *s lo ca te d on Ih*
Northeast corner ol Montgomery
RoedendS R *3* ID IST. 1)
* W ILLIA M A. K U Y K E N D A L L BAIT 20141 4E — C l Commerclel
Zone — To permit gasoline pumps as
an accessory us* lo a convenience
store on Ih* following properly Lol
50. Block A. and lol 1. Block B
Mobil* Manor. Second Section. PB
II. Pgs 4* 4*. and that portion ol Ih*
vacated right ol way lying North ol
Mid Lol I and 50 Also Taa Parcel 9G
according to Ih* Assessor s Map No
229 in Section 1 31 29, located on Ih*
South side ol Highway 434 lying
between Mobil* Avenue end Vag*
bond Way ID IST 2)
5 UPSALA P R E S B Y T E R I A N
CHURCH - BAIT 30 *4) *E A 31V R IA Residenlial Zone - Special
E x e p l i o n lo p e r m it c h u rc h
e■pension end e Rear Yard Variance
Irom 30 ll to 20 II on Taa Parcels 12
end 49A, in Section 13 1910. as shown
on Assessor's Map No. *0. Further
d e s c rib e d as lo c a te d on Ihe
Northeast Intersection ot County
Road **A and UpMla Road IDIST
5)

D APPROVAL OF MINUTES
I January I*. 19*4 — Regular
Meeting
This f ..iblic hearing will be held in
Room 3uu ol the Seminole County
Courthouse. Sanford. Florida, on
February 20. 19*4. al 7 00 P M . or as
soon thereafter a* possible
Written comments liled with th*
Land Management Manager will be
considered Persons appearing at Ih*
public h earing w ill ba heard
Haarings may be continued Irom
lime to lime a* found necessary
Further d*lei It available by calling
323 4330. Eat 139
Persons art advised that, if they
decide to appeal any decision made
al this hearing, they will na*d a
record ot th* proceedings, end. lor
such purpose, they may need to
iniurt lhal a verbatim record ol Ihe
proceedings Is made, which record
includes Ihe testimony and tvldtnct
upon which lha appeal is to be based,
per Section 21*0105. Florida Slat
Ul*4

SEM INOLE C O U N TY
B OAR DO F A D JU S TM E N T
BY ROGER PER R A.
CHAIRM AN
Publish February 1.19*4

3EQZ1

F IC T ITIO U S NAM E
Notice I* hereby given lhal I am
engaged In business a I 200 Borada
Rd , Sanford, Seminole County,
Florida under the fictitious name of
BAR P A IN TIN G A LANDSCAPING,
and that I intend lo register Mid
name with the Clerk ol the Circuit
Courl. Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with the provisions ol th*
Fictitious Name Statute*. lo W il;
Section **5 09 Florida Statutes 1937
/*/ Roger Lee Hamilton
Publish January 11,15 A February I.
(. 19*4
D E P *7
F IC T ITIO U S NAME
Notice Is hereby given lhal I am
engaged In business at (51 SR *34.
Suite 112. Longwood. F L 33750,
Seminole County, Florida under the
fic titio u s name ol K E L L I E ' S
K L O S E T , and that I Intend lo
register said name with Ihe Clerk ol
th* Circuit Courl. Seminole Counly,
Florida in accordance with Ihe pro
visions ol Ihe Fictitious Nam* Slat
utts. lo Wil Section **3 09 Florida
Statute* 1957
Isabel G. Brlslenn
B F Brlslenn
Publish January 23 A February I. (.
13.1914
O EP 122
F IC f ITIO U S NAM E
Notice Is hereby given that we ere
engaged in business al 117 N. 4th St.,
Lake M a ry . Seminole County.
Florida under Ih* ticfiliou* name ol
AAM C LE A N IN G SER VIC E, and
that we intend lo register M id name
with the Clerk ol the Circuit Court.
Semlnoie Counly. Florida in ac
cordance with the provisions ol Ih*
Fictitious Name Statutes, to Wit
Section M5 09 F lor ida Statute* 1957
m LoIsM Avant
/*/ April D McConnell
Publish February 1,*. 15,12,19*4
DEQ 31
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT FOR
SEM INO LE C O U N TY . FLO R ID A
P RO B ATE DIVISION
File Number *4 *11 CP
Division Probate
I NRE: E S TA TE O F
A N N A M R IC H TER .
Deceased
NO TICE OF ADM IN IS TR A TIO N
Th* administration ot Ih* estate ol
ANNA M R IC H TER , deceased. File
Number 14 011 CP. is pending In th*
Circuit Court tor Seminole Counly.
Flo rid a . Probate Division, th*
uwj.'Z ii pi wii.Ctl I* Sviniiiuiv Cuuiily
Courthouse. Norlh Fork Av* . Sen
lord, F L Th* name and address ol
Ire personal representative and ol
Ihc personal representative's al
lornny are set forth below
ALL CLAIMS AND O B JE C TIO N S
NO T SO F IL E D W ILL BE FO R EV
ERBARRED
All Interested person* are required
lo III* with Ih* court. W ITH IN
TH R E E MONTHS OF TH E FIRST
P UB LIC ATIO N O F TH IS NOTICE
11] all claims against ih* estate end
13) any ob|*dlon by an Interested
person lo whom notice was mailed
lhal challenges Ihe validity ol the
w ilt, the quantisations ol the
personal representative, venue, or
jurisdiction ol th* court
Dele ol th* tlrst publication ol this
notice ha* begun on January 25, 19*4
Personal Representative
/*/ Adelaide M Meretkl
Attorney for Personal
Representative
DOUGLAS STENSTROM ESQ ol
STENSTROM , M d N TO S H JU LIA N .
C O L B E R T A W HIGHAM. P A
P O Bom 1310
Sanford. F L 31772 1130
Telephone 305/323 1171
Publish January 23 &amp; February 1,
19*4
D EP 103__________________ __
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R TFO R
SEM INOLE C O U N TY . FLO R ID A
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number M M CP
I NR E : ESTA TEO F
EDW ARD BASH CAINES.
Deceased
NO TICE OF AD M IN IS TR A TIO N
Th* administration ol the estate ol
E D W A R D BAS I L C A IN E S , d*
ceased. File Number *4 0* CP. Is
pending in th* Circuit Court for
Seminole County. Florida. Probate
Division, th* address ol which Is
Seminole Counly Courthouse. San
lord. Florida 32771 Th* name* end
addresses el ihe personal rtpre
sentat Ive end ol th* personal reprt
tentative’* attorney are set forth
below
All interested persons art required
to tile with Ih* court. W ITH IN
TH R E E MONTHS OF TH E FIR ST
P U B LIC ATIO N OF THIS NO TICE
( 1) all claims against th* estate and
12) any obiectlon by an Interested
person to whom notice was mailed
that challenges Ihe validity ol tht
w ill, th t q u a lilica tio n t ol th*
personal representative, venue, or
jurisdiction ol th* court.
A LL CLAIM S AND O BJE C TIO N S
NOT SO F IL E D W ILL BE FO R EV
ERBAR RED
Publication ol this Notice he*
begun on January 23.19(4
Personal Representative
ELINOR H. CAINES
B A R N E TT B AN K S TR U S T
COMPANY. N A
By William F King. Jr
Sr Trust Oil
P O Bo&lt; 1000
Winter Park. F L 32190
Attorney lor Personal
Representative
HAROLD A WARD III. ol
Wlnderweedl*. Heines. Ward A
Woodmen. P A.
P O Bom M0
Winter Park. Florida 33790
Telephone (MSI *44 *313
Publish January 25 A February I.
19*4
DEP 111
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO UR T IN AND
FO R S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y ,
FLO R ID A
P R O B ATE NO M i l CP
IN R E : E staff ol
JO E L A R IA H FLA TO W .

CLASSIFIED ADS
O rlando - W inter Park

Seminole

031-9993

322-2611

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

RATES
1
3
7
ID

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

12—Legal Services

23— Lost &amp; Found

Bankruptcy 12)0 and Chapter 13
1410 Free conference Attorney

LOST I yr old while female Pit
Bull Name Diablo 70 lbs Re
ward 150 323 9159or 372 7*13

M Price For Appt 422 2V97

Pomeranian male dog. brown Ran
away Sal night Irom Ctder Ave
and 1st street Call owners.
377 0590________________________

21—Personals
Color comes lo Sanford Discover
your colors by a certified analyst
plus a Free Faciei Sal Feb 4.
*40 per person
Cell Mf MM lor eppl______________
MASTERCARD/VISA
Now you can gel Mastercard' Vise
Regardless ol credil history
Guaranteed! Very last and sim
pie Call Credllline al 1 *00 33)
lala Also open evenings

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO UR T OF TH E
EIG H TEEN TH JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT . S E M IN O LE C O U N TY ,
FLO R ID A.
C IV IL AC TIO N NO. I I U 4 CA 91 L
M A R G A R E T P H ALL, a Single
Women

25— Special Notices
Cara Far Senior Citlten*
2a hour loving professional care In
Private home on beautiful estate
lor sick or wheelchair pallenls
Also hourly care on deliy basis
A ll with gourm et meals A
eMcellenlcare *49 41*7________
CL EAN DR INKING W A TE R
FROM YO UR F A U C E TI
Water Purification Systems ol
Central Florida 343 *333________
Dog Obedience Training
Beginners class start* Feb alh 10
AM Ability Kennels Osteen
__________ 303 32)1220__________
New Oil Ice now opening
VORW ERK
1120 W 1st $lv

Plainlill.
vs
JAMES G
D O N A H U E and
M A D E L IN E B D O N A H U E . Hi*
Wilt.
Defendants
N O TIC E OF SALE
Noti ce Is hereby given lhal
pursuant to the Final Judgment ol
Foreclosure and Sal* entered in the
cause pending In th* Circuit Court on
I/IS *4 ot th* Eighteenth Judicial
Circuit. In and for Seminole Counly,
F l o r i d a , C i v i l A c t i o n No
(3 *** CA 09, Ihe undersigned Clerk
will sell th* property situated In said
County, described at
LO T 21. S U TTE R 'S M ILL U N IT
O NE. according to Ihe plat thereol,
as recorded In Piet Book 2a. Pages *
end 7, Public Records ot Seminole
Counly. Florida
at public sale, to Ih* highest end best
bidder lor cash at 11 00 o’clock A M
on Ihe 7lsl day ol February. 19(4, at
Ihe West Door ol th* Semlnol*
C o u n ty C o u rth o u s e , S e n lo rd .
Florida
IS EA LI
Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
Clerk
ot Ihe Circuit Court
By Jean Brlllanl
Deputy Clerk
JO H N M McCORMICK
501 East Church Street
Orlando. Florida 77*01
Attorney lor Plelnlitt
PiAllsh February 1,1 .19*4
D E Q 2*

IN TH E C IR C U IT CO UR T IN AND
FOR S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y .
FLO R ID A
CASE NO M d l l C A » K
IN R E: TH E A D O P TIO N OF
R ACH EL DAWN FYOCK
P E T IT IO N E R :
D O N A LD W A Y N E FYO CK
N O TIC E OF ADO P TIO N
PRO CEED IN G
TO
4
AARO NLEAND ER SELLER S
fit 1 B om 4*2

Cul 'n Shoot. Teias
77)03
You are hereby notified that a
Petition lor adoption ol your minor
child was liled In Ih* Circuit Court in
end lor Seminole Counly. Fiord* on
Ihe 37lh day ol Jen , 19*4, by
DO NALD W AYNE FYO CK. end you
art required to serve * copy ol your
written detente*. If any, lo II on
Pell I loner’s attorney whose name
and address are Ronald L Sims. I l l
Eesl Central Blvd . Orlando. Florida
32*01. end file Ih* original with Ih*
Clerk on or belore March 1. 19*4,
otherwise. a lodgment may be *n
•ered against you lor th* rttitl
demanded In th* Petition
Deled this 37th day ol Jen . 19*4
(S E A L ) ‘
A R TH U R H B E C K W ITH . JR
Clerk
ol th* Circuit Court
By Connie P Mascao
Deputy Clerk
Publish February 1. 1. 1). 22.19*4
D E Q 21

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 AND FOR S EM IN O LE C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A.
Cat* No I ) 3352 CA 09 K
M A N U F A C T U R E R S HANOVER
M O R TG A G E CORPORATION.
Plaintiff.

vt

N E L L I E M A E J O N E S and
C AR O LY N JO NES, tla l.
Defendants
N O TIC E OF AC TIO N
S TA TE OF FLO R ID A
TO
M A C H E K FARMS. IN C . a d.s
N O TIC E OF A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
solved corporation
Th* administration ol Ih* Estate at
Who** domicil*, principal place ol
JO E L AR IAH FLATO W . Deceased.
business and status is unknown
File Number M i l CP. I* pending In
You ar* hereby required to til*
the C ircuit Courl lor Semlnol*
your answer or written defenses. II
Counly. Florida. Probate division,
any, In th* above proceeding with th*
th* address ol which It Post Ofllct
Clark ol this Court, and to serve *
Drawer " C " . Sanford. Florid* 32721.
copy thereol upon ih* Plaintiff's
Th* names and addresses ot th*
attorney*, whose name and address
Personal Reprtsenletlv* and Ih*
appears hereon, on or belore th* day
Personal Representative's attorney
ot March 3. 1994. th* nature ol Ihit
are Mt lor th below
p r o c e e d i n g b e in g a s u it lor
All interested persons are required
foreclosure ol mortgage against the
to Hie with this Court, W ITH IN
lot lowing described property, to w it.
T H R E E MONTHS O F TH E FIR S T
Lot I*. Block " C ” , W ASHINGTON
P U B LIC A TIO N OF TH IS N O TIC E
OAKS. S ECTIO N TWO. according to
I I ) ell clelms against th* Estato. and
th* plat thereol at recorded in Plel
13) any ot)i*cllon by an Interesled Book ta. Pages M and (7. Public
person to whom nolle* was mailed
R ecords ol S em ino le C o unty,
that challenges Ih* validity Ol Ih*
Florida.
w ilt, Ih* qualification* ol Ih*
If you tall to tile your answer or
Parson*! Representative, venue, or
written defenses in the abort pro
|ur Isdic I Ion of th* court
cetding, on Plalnllif's attorney, *
default will be entered against you
A L L CLAIM S AN D O B JE C TIO N S
NO T SO F IL E D W ILL BE FO R EV
lor Ih* relict demanded In Ihe
ERBARRED
Complaint or Petition DONE ANO
Publication ol this Nolle* began on O R D E R E D A T Sanford. County el
February 1.19*4.
Semlnol*. Slat* ol Florida, this 17th
day ot January, 19*4
JO SEPH W E IS E N F E L D
Personal Representative
(S E A L )
lOiCrandon Blvd.
Arthur H. Beckwith. J r
Kay Bltcayna.FL 3314*
CLERK
G ARY E. SHADER
By:/*/ Eleanor F. Suratto
Attorney lor
Deputy Clerk
Personal Representative
JOHNSON. P A N IE L L O A H AYES
Shader A Stern. P A
Attorney* tor Plalntllt
Maitland. F L 32751 I7af
P O Bom 141*
(305)131 0000
Temp*, Florida 33*01
Publish February 1.1 .19(4
Publish February 1.1. IS. 23.19(4
D E O If
D E Q 27

Dtcmtd.

tim e ......................... 64C • line
consecutive tim es . 58C ■ line
consecutive tim es . 49C a fine
consecutive tim es . 44C a lin t
$ 2.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

Legal Notice
IN TH E C IR C UIT CO UR T EIGH
T E E N T H J UDI CI AL CIRCUIT
SEM INOLE CO UN TY, FLO R ID A
Civil Action Number I ) 1711 CA 99 E
FI RST A T L A N T A M O R TG A G E
C O R P O R ATIO N .ttc .

Plaintiff (si

vs

JO H N W E L A M .(te l,
D(ltndanl(sl
N O TIC E OF SALE
Notice Is hereby given that,
pursuant lo an order or a final
ludgmenl ol foreclosure entered In
Ih* above captioned action, I will sell
Ihe properly situated In Seminole
County. Florida, described as
Lot t. Block C. SKY LARK SUB
DIVISION, according to Ihe Piet
thereol. as recorded in Plel Book 17.
pages (4 end 15 ol the public record*
ol Semlnol*Counly. Florida
el public sale, to th* highest end best
bidder tor cash, at the West Front
Door entrance of Ih* Seminole
Counly Courthouse In Senlord.
Florida, el 11 00 a m , on February
21. 1914
( SEAL)
AR TH U R H B ECKW ITH , JR
C LER K C IR C U ITC O U R T
By Patricia Robinson
Deputy Clerk
J E R R Y A FUNK
F unk * Green
1020 Atlantic Bank
Building
Jacksonville. Florida 32202
904 3)4 10*1
Publish February 1.1 .19*4
D E Q 24*
1
IN TH E C IR C U IT CO UR T OF TH E
E IG H TEEN TH JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT. IN ANO FOR SEMINOLE
C O U N TY . FLO R ID A
CASE NO U *49 CA 09 O
FLO R ID A N ATIO N A L BANK A T
ORLANDO, a national banking cor
poralion.
Plainlill.
vt
W IL L IA M A H O LZ W O R TH and
JU D IT H A HOLZW ORTH. his wife,
tl al .
Delendantt
N O TIC E OF SALE
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV EN lhal
on Ih* 7th day ot March. 19*4, al
11 00 A M . at the West Front Door ol
the Semlnol* County Courthouse. *1
Senlord. Florida, th* undersigned
Clerk will otter lor Sal* th* following
described reel properly:
Lol «. Block B. TH E SPRINGS
SHAOOWOOD V IL L A G E . SECTION
2. according lo the plat thereof as
recorded in Piet Book 17, pages 71 to
72. Public Records of Seminole
Counly. Florid* AND that portion ol
Lot 3 In said Block B. which lies
South and West ol a line which
passes through th* following d*
scribed two point* designated as
Point A end Point B. to wit: Point A
being South 5] 00to " East 5a 2* leel
and Norlh 1*5904" East 0 2) leel
Iro m lha I nt er sect i on ol Ih*
Southwesterly fol tin* ol said Lot 1
and Weeping Elm Lane Point B
being South 53 oo 5*" East *0 2* feel
end North U 590a" East 0 33 feel
I r o m the I nt er sect i on ol tho
Southwesterly lot line of said Lot
end Weeping Elm Lena
Th* aforesaid sat* will be mad*
pursuant to a Final Judgment *n
ered In Civil No
CA 09 G in
th# Circuit Courl Ol tha Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit, In and lor Seminole
Counly. Florida
O A TE O this 30th day ot January,

5

'

13eat

19*4

(S E A L)
Arthur H Beckwith. Jr.
Clerk
ol th* Circuit Court
/*/By Cheryl R Franklin
Deputy Clerk
L E H N E . ABRAMS, ot
A R N O L O .M A T H E N Y A
EAGAN, P A
Attorney* lor Plainlill
Post Ottice Boa 29*7
Orlando. Florida 32002
Ttlephon* (J05) ( 4t 1550
Publish February I, |. &lt;9*4
D E Q 35

O W N YO U R O W N
M tlO N IR J IA N AND
S P O tT IW tA I STORI
National Company offon
utoquo opportunity sailing
notionolly
o dvoitliod
brand* ol auM anhal savIng* to your cuttom oa This
k* for th# tatNon mlndod
P ffton quattlod to own
and oporato M * high profit

buNnost.

120,000 00 Invodmont In-

ctoda* boginntna mnntary.

IbduiM. tuppRo*. Raining.
Ofand opomng and ok tara
H I P«tw n ta corporal*
RaMng cantor
ro t

s io c h u m a n d
in p o m u t io n

CA U TO U N N I
M O O -1II-A4M

I

�r

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
B A B Y S ITTIN G my home Hidden
lake *r«a Fenced yard. 2 S
yean and alter school kids Call
H I 30T7 Have reference!
Will keep children In my home
day* A night; Fenced yard tea
rate; Local Ret H I S015

3 3 - Rea I Estate
Courses
BALL School ol Real Etlatt
LOCAL R E B A TE S H I 4111.
M ASTER CHARGE OR VISA

55— Business
Opportunities
EO U C A TIO N A L PRODUCT CO.
Home typo operation. S2T.OOO
Terms. Orlando I 475 tTX _______
Lose 10 2? Ibt per month » day
IOON guaranteed Curb appetite.
Increase energy All natural.
Incredible health and business
opportunity Meeting Thurs
W I 4 M 0 P . M Cavalier Motel

63-Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
It you collect payments from a first
or second mortgage on property
you to ld , we w ill buy the
mortgage you are now holding
1HHW

71/-Help Wanted

71—Help Wanted

71-Help Wanted

Administrative Assistant t&lt; K
Permanent position Etecullve
office Top skills college pre
tarred Never e Fee
TE M P /P E R M 7M m i .

Full or Pari time Management
Trainees Water Purification
Systems of Central Florida
MS 1133
Pari lime person needed to work
boot h at F l e a Ma r k e t on
weekends Write Smart Fash
Ions. &lt;2 W aller S I.. G rand
Rapids. Mich WS0«____________

Advertising person, print layout,
and paste up eiperlence Degree
needed, permanent position
Never a Fee
TE M P /P E R M ??4 1X4,
Babysitter In my home, reliable
wllh own transportation Part
time. Call H I (XSI______________

Phone Operators needed !m
mediate openings Good pay and
hours Bonus plan, no eaperl
ence Call alter 13 noon 373 e160

B A R TE N D E R
Eapenenced preferred Friendly,
neat, personable Apply In person
M F T 11noon, Deltona Inn______

Pitta Cook Part lime, prefer
eaperlenced retiree Goudio's
Fish Fry Call 331 &lt;994

Bookkeeper Grocery company
hat Immediate opening tor a lull
charge bookkeeper M utt be
knowledgeable. In payroll re
turns, and accrual entries tor
general ledger Computer eipe
rlence preferred Send resume to
P 0 Boa 2SOO Santoed Fla
slating qualifications, and tala
ry requirements_______________
CARVER
To serve customers at buffet table
Apply 7 to 4 P M Holiday House
Restaurant. &lt;700 Orlando Ave
Hwy 17 97. south ot Lake Mary
cutoff
Church In the Midway area needs a
piano player lor 1st and 3rd
Sunday 773 500)_______________
" COOK
Eaperlenced In home style food
Apply 2 to &lt; P M Holiday House
Restaurant. &lt;700 Orlando Ave
Hwy 17 97, south ol Lake Mary
cutott_________________________

DISHWASHER
Mature Apply In person M F / T S
P M Deltona Inn______________

AAA EMPLOYMENT

EM PLOVERS WANTED

HAS

Lake Mary Productive Employ
men! Program Full A Part time
positions needed tor students in
special programs Employer In
cenlive monies, training monies,
work study money tor eligible
sites Contact Mr Dimitry
IMS) H I 2110 Eat 71*
Federal. Slate 1 Civil Service Jobs
available Call M41T) Sal 1304
For Inter. 24hrs_______________

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS!

CALL 323-5176
ANSW ERING SERVICE
Flealble hours some eiperlence
helpS will train II good on phone
Call now!
C LER IC A L
Best spot in lown/typing and 10 key
needed-lots ot people contact
here I
COOK
Short order ta p /lunch lim e
hri./caterlng a plus plush al
mosphere!
M AC H IN E O PERATOR
Company willing to traln/learn a
new trade benefits!
D E L IV E R Y
E upending local company, needs
good dependable workers'tome
warehousing'quick raises

Lew U.M Registration Fee

AAA EMPLOYMENT_____
Accounting Clerk &lt;)) permanent
position C R T eaperience 2 lull
time. I part lime Never a Fee
TE M P /P E R M 274 1241

Girl Fflday Eiperlence required
Typing and general office pro
cedures H I STOP
IM M E D IA TE L Y W A N TE D
1100 52.000 mo Plus Need SO
Overweight people to lose weight
and share In company profits
____________ 131 U « _____________
LIV E IN: Mature woman to care
for young man in wheel chair.
Good home and salary, 1 day olt
Must have own transportation,
references and non smoking or
drinking H3 3999_______________

NEED
HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOM AT
_________ CALL7W1&lt;&lt;&lt;_________
Pari time attendant. Alert. In
lelllgeni individual needed lo
look alter amusement center In
Sanf or d Pl a t a ni ght s and
weekends Musi be mature, neat
In appearance and bondable
Phone lor appointment H I W07

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS
OKN SATURDAY
* Adult A Family
Sections
• W/D Connections
• Coble TV, Pool
* Short Term Leases
Avoiloble

1. 2, 1 Br. Apts., 2 II. IJL
Trent

n

1505 W . 25th S t
i i M

m

9

£
&amp;
‘Y
r*‘
L\

*1 9 0

ledreeei DepNa A fl.Ji
tree,

»340°°
v*3r

323-2920

L

O R D IN A R IL Y

TR U C K IN G No eiperlence neces
sary For information call:
1 T it 777 &lt;110; H I T 327 &lt;111 or
1 TIT 777 DIM. I M AM 7:M PM
Monday thru Thursday_________

2 -/

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent
D E L U X 2 Bdrm, 2balh. I level.
W/W/C.C/H/A
__________ Ph 373 71TI __________

WANTED
BOYS AND GIRLS

Furnished I bdrm apt tingles only,
no kids or pets all utllllits
included t!21 a mo SI7S dam
age 323 077T alter 1 thru the

W A N TE D Computer saletper ton to
m a r k e t s o l t w e a r a n d or
hardware to medium and large
site contractors. In the Orlando
and T ampa/ SI
Pele area
Computer tales eiperlence re
quired Eiperlence with con
t r act or and or cont r act or
software very helpful One ol the
top software products In the US
with over 1500 Installations Only
carter and goal nrienfed nanpln
need apply 110 000 plus poten
Hal Send Resumes lo Attention
ol Salts Manager. P O Boa K M
Panama City. Fla H&lt;07________
W AITRESS
P M shllt, tap only Flna dining
Apply T 1 Deltona Inn
W IN A N A V O N C A R It
S TA R T SELLIN G TO D A Y It
_______ H l l l l l e r I l l W H _______
Work Irom home on new telephone
program. Earn up lo U 0 0 an
hour 711 1«7__________________
You don't have to baa
D E T E C T IV E lo Find a Good Buy I
Just read our Clatsilltd Pagat

73—Employment
Wanted

Drive by 7113 Grove Drive Only
135 TOO New paint, new carpet,
fenced yard w/frult trees Callus
losee

CALL BART
REALESTATE
R E A L T O R __ ______

317 7491

BRICK HOME. 3 Bdrm . 3 bath,
large lot w.'oak trees Many
eatras H7 4574________________

Debary Deltona
Listing Salts
Appraisals Full Service Realty
e C ORRY R E A L T Y M M TtTo
E X T RA large 2 Story Colonial on I
acre ol Oak trees All the ameni
ties plus guest apt Best locale
1700.000 WM. M ALICZOW SKI
R E A L T OR 173 7TI3
_

Furn. Apts, tar Senior Cltitent
711 Palmetto Ave
J Cowan No Phone Calls

AGES 1318

BESTBUY

By Owner, 3 Br , l'$ Bath, spill
Bdrm plan CHA 145,TOO
1004 Scott Ave Call 333 7534

Want to drive a new Mercedes with
large monthly Income by tnd ot
Ml year, maybe sooner? Inter
ested? H I K M
_____________

Alter School and weekends
Earn tatra money
Call TO N Y 727 3*11
_______ Between &lt; A 7 PM________

141—Homes For Sale

I W O U L D N 'T

TENNEC0 OIL COMPANY

SANFORD Fvmlehed rooms by the
week Reasonable rates Maid
ttrvlce catering to working peo
pie H ) &lt;107 H I Magnolia Ave
SANFORD. Reas weekly A Mon
thly rotas Util Inc ell MO Oak
Adults I M l TU3

4270 S. ORLANDO DRIVE
SANTORO

.
J A vaE . 1'\ E P U T H
AS1PE A FEW BUCKS!
BY WAVING CUR, P R E J U D G E
HOW A B O U T GETT iN
NERO REACKIN
M E IN TO T H E
M 0N EV IN
FRONT 0 F RIM. FOR HI6 FlPPLE,
TIM E-.S H A R E
IF JAKE 0ITEB, B U T BUSTER
BUSIN E S S y
7 r— - - ^ N O T H I N
IT* AIL OVER! SHOULD'VE
v/r
DOIN'.'
WORN
N OBO DY
LEATHER
OUOHTA IN V ES T
&lt;5LOYE&amp;:
V WHO C A N 'T
AFFORD T O
LOSE /

BU5TER 11&gt;
TESTING JAKE

It now accepting applications lor
P/T cashiers with potential lor
Assoc late Manager
Eiperlence Is a plus Apply In
person 1K0 French Ave
Equal Opportunity Employer.
This Page Beams With
Rial Opportunities For
_________All who Read It

93—Rooms tor Rent

• ISMILIII TRICON!
• o u u n c ro o t
• ru icT o u n o
• CLI7I H0USI

wilh Major Hoople *

PROCESS M A IL A T H OM e T i TJ M
per hundred! No eiperlence
Part or lull lime Start Immedl
at el y Det ai l s send sel l
addressed stamped envelope to
C. R I M0 P. O. &lt;S. Stuart Fla
H4W__________________________

P AR T TIM E Ralirad legal sacra
tary, wllh raal etlatt eiperlence
Includ in g do sin gs, 10 key,
calculator, mag card, willing lo
learn word proctltor and/or
computer X T ITT I

SHENANDOAH j
VILLAGE
^

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Lovely 7 Bdrm with bath screened
porch Complete privacy »T0
week plus $700 security cTeposlt
Also I Bdrm apt new carpeting,
private entrance. $7$. week plus
1200security deposit
Call 123 32&lt;Tor 323 1401
Nicely decorated I Bdrm . quiet,
walk to downtown No pels M0
week $700 deposit 313 &lt;M7
________H i Magnolia Ave________
I Bdrm. I person
Call alter &lt;
X T 1T5T

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
BAM BOOCOVE APTS
300 E Airport Blvd Ph 111M30
Efficiency. Irom $231 Mo S %
discount tor Senior Cltitent
Large I Bdrm , upstairs, llth and
Park. $171 Plus security
Hl&lt;&lt;7&lt; Adults only
LU X U R Y A P A R TM EN TS
Family A Adults section Poolside
1 Bdrmt. Master Cove Apts
H3 7T00
_______ Open on weekends________
Mariner's Village on Lake Ada. I
bdrm from t i l l . 2 bdrm Irom
1X0 Located 17 T1 just south ot
Airport Blvd In Sanlord All
Adults M l 1470________________
NEW I A 1 Bedrooms Adjacent lo
Lake Monroe Health Club.
Racquetball and Morel
Sanlord Landing 5 R M i l l &lt;770
R ID G EW O O D AR M S AP TS
7110 Ridgewood Ave Ph J31M20
1,21.3 Bdrmt Irom $300
• Sanford Court Apt. *
Studioi, t bdrm,, k I bdrm , turn
3 bdrm , apts Senior Clttien Du
count Flealble leases
____________ H I 1701
I Bdrm., clean, quiet, walk to
downtown No pets $7$ Wk $700
deposit Call between 17 P M
H I &lt;507 H I Magnolia Ave

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
5 rooms Full ki t . kids, no tease
$370 Mo Fee Ph 339 7700
Sav On Rental Inc. Realtor

INLAND
REALTY,
in c . CB

REALTY WORLD.

WE HAVE BUYERS1I
WE N E E D L IS TIN C S II

DE B ARY 2bdrm, air, kids,
pets ok SHS
Sav On Rentals Inc Realtor

Km?

3 Bdrm . t bath, dining room, very
clean, 1500 Security. t&lt;00 month
With separate I Bdrm apt $550
month Call 5$ PM H I &lt;757
3 Bdrm . appl kids. pets, lence
$&lt;00 Fee Ph 11T 7700
___5&lt;i On Rental Inc. Realtor
5 ', n u t , epp&gt;. wit, putili, kids
1350 Fee Ph 1JT 7700
Sav On Rental Inc. Realtor

105—DuplexTriplex / Rent
Lake Mary 2 Bdrm . air, kids, no
lease $315 Mo, Fee Ph H T 7100
Sav-On Rental Inc. Realtor
Sanlord 2 Bdrm . 3 bath, appll
ances $115 per mo 1st latt and
sacurlty. ITT &lt;$07______________
Sanlord 1 Bdrm . air, all appll
ancei. water Included. 2&lt;J0 A
Lake Ave $350 H I 9151
1*y rms appl. air. $250 Mo
Fee Ph H T 7700
Sav On Rental Inc Realtor

119— Pasture for Rent
W A N TE D TO RE NT between 70
end 40 acres ol pasture land
w,-option H I 7405

121—Condominium
Rentals
NEW SMYRNA 5&gt; down, no clos
Ing cost, direct oceanlroht. Mcdi
terranean style Condos and
Townhouses Call anytime Open
7 days a week Beachside Realty
Realtor T04 427 1117

For Sate by owner 3 Bdrm . liy
bath. Cent heat and air, land
scaped, in ground pool with large

FOR ALL YOUR
R EAL E S T A T E NEEDS

323-3200
D R IFTW O O O V ILLA G E
ON LAKE MA RY BLVD

KISH REAL ESTATE
2517 FR EN CH AVE

REALTOR

321 0041

r a w
* Saturday and Sunday *
Feb.&lt;th and 1th total PM.
M l Marta Rd Debary
Eaecutlve hideway. large 2 bdrm ,
wi t h f or mal di ni ng r oom,
liteplaco. treed double lot.
enclosed garage, lovely panel I
Ing, huge kitchen with cherry
cabinets CORRY R E A L TY .
444 47TT 444 39)3 441 4179
SACRIFICE Approi 514 500down
Assume mtg al low inl. rate
Bal ance a p p ro i $31,000 1
B d rm ,. large L R / D R a rta ,
kitchen dinette, 3 full baths, just
painted inside and out. Ilk* new
CO, CH. eitra Ige yard Prime
location In Sanlord Approi 1700
sq It under root Total prlca
111.TOO This oiler limited lime
only Owner H I 5207 H I 0052
SANFORD R E A L T Y
REALTO R
1315H4
All Mrs 371 49X 323 4)45

STEMPER AGENCY INC.
OWNER 5AYS
R ED U C E D
This could be the opportunity you
have been walling lor This 3
Bdrm , 7 bath home has a
G R E A T room tor family lun
Located on a beautiful lot on a
quiet cut de sac Was 145 000 now
only $59 000 Don-1 wall lo see
this
G E N E V A ST. JOHNS
Riverfront 1 homes. Cent M/A,
fenced, lacutli, boat dock, much
more IKS.TOO
Newly licensed A taper, lull lime
real estate salesmen needed.

REALTOR 7H-4TT1

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2671 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
Additions A RemodeIInf
Ntw Custom Homes, by Bill Strlpp
Licensed, Insured and Bonded

MS-7411

* COCA* SXYUGHTS *
An Affordable Addition
To any Home Call today.
For A Frte Estimate

Home Improvement

Lawn Service

Photography

Additions, Cestoid Kitchens, tiding
A Trim, Gutters. Eiterler FaintIng A Raeltnf, f k MT-13dA

Randys Quality Lawn Service
Complete lawn maintenance.

Wallpaper and Interlar Painting
Minor Repairs 3$ yrs. E aperlence

COMPLETE CONSTRUCTION
No |ob to small. Minor A ma|or
repairs Licensed A bonded
____________ 373 1131____________

PAINTING REMODELING
TREE TRIMMING

landscaping,cleanups H I0 7 K
Taylor Brothers Lawn and Garden
Service. Residential and Com
mercial work Hauling, garden
preparation and all lawn Mrvice.
FraeEst U I T T I l

H 1U17

Masonry

Fireplace and Addition Specialist
"We will save you money"

Home Repairs

B E A L Concrete I man quality
aparailon. Pallas, drlvawayi
Days H I 71H Eves H7 IH I

H T H7&lt;

Austin's Maintenance
Plumbing, carpentry, electrical.
painting, remodeling I3t X K
Carpentry alterations, gutter work,
painting, siding, porches, patios.
•Ic. Ask ter Art Hubble.

321-0342

Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating
eOIL HEATER a
CLEANING ANO SERVICING
Cell Ralph 3314711
3t% Oitcevnl On All Repairs
Far Wlndaw Air Candlfleasers
One Day Service. FIs 177-1411.

Cleaning Service

____________ H7I7S3.____________

Maintenance el all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
Artec trie H I &lt;031

Janitorial Services
" ^ O ^ s H a n in S a rta rE E y te a ^

We do complete doors, carpels,
and general cleaning 014317.

Electrical

S WI F T C O N C R E T E
Foolers,
driveways, pads, doors, pools.
C h a lM to n ^ r e ^ tl^ T ^ IR S

Moving A Hauling
Mavlngf Call Rant a Man with
Van. LicenM. and Insured. Bast
a r k e ^ n tw n ^ lM * * ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

Nursing Care
OUR R ATES AR E LOWER
Lakevtew Nursing Canter
fits Second St., Sanlord

___________ 3334707

Painting
CENTRAL FLORIDA

Quality Electrical Service
Fpns. timers, security lilts, add!
Hans, new services. Insured.
Matter E tactrlclen James Paul.
3H7S5T.

General Services
T V. and Mobile Home, clean A
waa, roof coating, all rrpein ate.
F A L Maintenance
H lO M io rH IITO t
RAINBOW PAINTINO EXTVIN T.
Driveway Mating, ctmen! work.
Daniel Dekmar, H I OUT
Senior Discount

Landclearing
Construction, trash wood hautod
olfandrakad. Fraa estimates.
________777 Ml? 749 5777
LANDCLEARING. FILL DIRT,
BUSHOGING CLAY A SHALE.
____________333 X H ____________
Spring cleaning early, senior cltitens 10% discount, pick up at
doer. Veterans also l#% dis
count. 227 Ml? 74T STM

Lawn Service
COMPLETE LAWN SERVICE
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

Health 4 Beauty

_____________P l t t H ____________

TOWER'S B E A U TY SALON
FO R M ER LY HarrleIt i Beauty
Nook. SITE 1st St. 333 J7&lt;1

JOHN'S LAWN CARE
LandKapIng A Main I Dependable
Sanior Discount HIRM T

Home Improvement

KINO A SONS LAWN SERVICE
Early Felt Ctoea Up. $M Spaclal
Far Any Averago Yard. 341-1974.

Additions. Custom Kitchens. Siding
A Trim, Gutters. Eaterfar Faint
tng A Reeling. PH.MTS2M.

s

T E L L US WHAT YOU WANTI WE
HAVE IN'S OF HOMES FOR
S A L E TH R U M U L T IP L E
LISTINGS

L A M Lawn Car* Sary ka
Mow. edge, trim and haul Contact
Lee or Mark HI1347 or H3 T im

li

Painting. Carpentry.
Small Repairs
13 Years Esparteaca. 333-3ATT.
Cunningham and Wilt painting.
Interior and ealerter Quality
brush and rail work. 0344Id
e eFR E E ESTIM ATES e
Rhodes Fainting All Types
ISYrs Eap 14 Hr. Phone H34T3I,

Paving
Asphalt, driveways, parking lots.
tic. Vtry reasonable
Guaranteed. Free estimates.
Control F la C o ncreteH lllll.
HUOCONCRETE AND
PAVEMENT MARKINGS IN C
Specloll tt In driveways, patios,
sidewalks curbs and gutters,
retaining w a ll), Licensed,

R e a ^ M b te JH H O T A td ^ ^ ^

Plastering/Dry Wall
A L L Ph otos al P la s te rin g
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
cate, simulated brick. H I 5TT1

Rooting
tlROOFINOII
Hll I'm Arl Hubble
I do beautiful work I do now roofs,
root teaks I replace or repair
valleys rools vents, etc. I will
save you money 1377 1711

Screon A Glasswork
eO A H ENTER PRISES e
Replace A re p a ir screens,
fiberglass A aluminum
a (301) H I &lt;451 e

Sowing
Cwilem Elegance. Fancies In
Fabric by Mia Dressmaking,
alteration, etc. Byappl H X O M
Eaperlenced Seamstress will *
alterations A custom sawing ol
any kind No |ob too big or loo
small. Ro m . rates. 3H NOT.

Sprinklers/ irrigation
Irrigation control repairs Home
and commercial. Guaranteed I
year, monthly service rate
H3 3417 749 573)

Tree Service
AA FIREWOOD
Split Slacked Seasoned
Root. Traosdown.74hrt.13l &lt;573
FIREWOOD
Eapart Tree Servke
Call Evas, and Saturday I P 1X3
level Credit e* Good Weedl
JACKSON TR E E SERVICE
M Yrt-EkpartahtaTlM lII.

b o n d a ^ H M i l^ r i ^ s l lm a t e s

Upholstery

Photography

LORENE'S UPHOLSTERY
Fraa Pick Up A Delivery
HOME BOAT-AUTO MI IQb
eO P IN IN G SALE e
Quality upholstering. 15% oil
fabric thru February. H I S7H

™ 7 iw ! a I u t e e t e m ! 3 ! w a 3 f Y ^ '

W eddings-PorIralts Commer|
u l/lnd. Wedding Special you
keep the negatives. 034171.

SOUTHERN CHARMER. 2 story. &lt;
bdrm., 31$ balk an earner tel,
family ream. Iireplec* Zoned
GC3.S4S.IM.
INVESTERS DREAM. I Bdrm. 11$
bath, C/H/A, w /Fla . rm „
garage, easy le r m il Only
$41. TM.

4 17 ACRE COUNTRY ESTATE! S
Bdrm. 1 story heme In Markham
Woods Areal Priced to Mil and
many eilras! Bring your horses
IIIT.TM.
ALMOST NEW. 3 Bdrm, 3 hath
ham# w/garagt, C/H/A, paddle
Ians, ktlequlptl 1M Ventura
Drive, IX.TOO

EXQUISITE 1 Bdrm.. 3 belli,
Mayfair homo an hvfo let,
w/Jacuni all master bdrm! In
daar B ota n ica l O a rd o m l
Flropiacat A steal al IT?,TOT.
REVENNA PARK. Wfwl Hugo
lonctd yardl 3 bdrm.. plvsh
carpal. C/H/A, many custom
features. Very easy assumption,
owner enitovsl $55,TOO
M AGNIFICENT. HUOE 3 STORY.
4 Bdrm., heme an largo corner
tel. w/ln ground pool, dotetchod
gtrago. so much moral SOT,TOO.
MIDDEN LAKE ESTATES. 1/3.
C/H/A. kll equip), lanced, land
oca podl Pool and Iannis
prlvllodgost A iiu m o l Only
S43.5M.
IMMACULATE. I Bdrm . 3 hath
home w/tm., rm , beautiful aak
shaded yard. 304 let luma Drive,

STENSTROM
REALTY • REALTORS
Sanford's Sales Leader
WE LI ST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEM INIOLE CO UN TY

WHAT A BUVI 3 Bdrm., 3 bath
home In lanlanta, with Cent. HA,
WWC, paddla Ians, built ins and
larqe- scr. palwl Immacvlatel
114,TM.

JUST LISTED 4 Bdrm , IK balh 3
story hame, wllh lals ol eilras I
Formal dininq room, don. family
room, oal In kilchon. utility with
washar/dryor, F P L lonctd yard,
ctnl. haat. and your awn POOL!
144,TM.
R IOUCEO 3 Bdrm., 3 hath, elder
Spanish homo, an a large land­
scaped tot Nawly decorated, caiy
fireplace, dining ruem. family
roam, lovely eat la kitchen, and
haavtttvl area. Now |utl 144,TM.
REDUCED 4 Bdrm., 3 balh 3 story
homo with tote tl charm on a
levely aak shaded toll Spacious
living room, dining room, study
wllh llropleco, master bedroom
suite, and sitting roam. Elfc. apt.
above garagel Needs same TLC.
only Sdl.Mt.
• SANFORD 1-4 B 44*
31$ Acre Country ham# silts.
Oak. pint seme cleared A paved.
11% dawn. It yrs. at 13%.
• OENEVA OSCEOLA RD. d
S Acre Country tracts.
Well Iwed an paved Rd.
. Dekm.
IIYYrs. el I t V
n. II
1*%I

Bond MoneyAvailable
E Y E D E A L 1a Acre surrounds this
unique 3 bdrm., w/lam. rm.,
lirepiocol ) workshops) Sparkl­
ing private pooll All ter only
$13,504

SUPER DUPER DUPLEXES!
HURRY JUST O N I L E F TI
Investors don't miss these two &gt;
Bdrm., 3 Balh unit with all the
eitrdsl Buy naw-and cheese

TOWERING OAKS and part Ilka
Mtting surround this lovoly 3
bdrm , 3 bath home with C/H/A.
M il l Fle/rm„ H im ., and much
merol Call us quick)

lien eiceltent financing, FHA,
and V At Starting at IM.TM.
Call Rad er Undo Morgan.
R/Assaclotos.
Al 371 7470 or HJ 51Ml

CA LL U S TO D A Y
•

323-5774
74MHWYI7 91

217-Garage Sales

B ATEM AN R E A L T Y

Rummage Sale Friday T 5 Satur
day T 3 Feb 3rd and 41h First
Christian Church 1M7 S Sanlord
Ave

Lie Real Estate Broker
34M Sou lord Ave

321 0759 Eve 322-7643
3 Bdrm , t ’ s bath, fenced yard
Almost new Owner wilt deal
SO 500 Low CTM
e Petiel Realty 421 2414 e

153—Lots-Acreage/Sale
Longwood Lake Myrtle Hills Rd
wooded lot. 10 It XI2S tt 14000
down . balance to suit Owner
331 1 4 9 5 _________ __
OSCEOLA RD S Acres Mobiles
OK High and dry. perk tested
Assumable mortgage
Wallace Cress Realty Inc.
Realtor 31) soil

155—Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

219—Wanted lo Buy
Baby Beds. Strollers. Cartealt.
Pl ay pens. Et c. Paper back
Beokt. 323 4377 172 9544
BUY I NG U S SI LVER COINS
Pre IM&lt; paying 1350 OOcesh
lor each s too 00 in silver
____________ 7714445_____________
GOLD DIGGERS. TWO
Now buying scrap gold and sliver
and precious gems Also Estates
and antiques We make house
calls Call 47B17X or come to
booth 7&lt; Sanlord Flea World
Paying CASH tor Aluminum. Cant.
Copper. Brass. Lead. Newtpa
per, Glass. Gold. Silver,
Kokomo Tool. T i l W 1st
1 100 Sat T 1373 HOO
WE BUY A N TIQ UES
F U R N ITU R E k APPLIANCES
313 7X0

223-Miscellaneous
A 'C 74 000 B TU . heat A cool 1130
M in electric range $7$
Call H3 1147___________
Mattress and Boi Springs, lull

323-3145
Alter Hours H I 1121
H I 4731 or 3111407

e e e IN D E LTO N A e e e
e e HOMES FOR R EN T e e
_____
e e 574 K i t e e_____ _
1T8&lt; Maybe your last chance lo buy
a house I have several available,
rent wllh option lo buy Call tor
list voa 719 3X7 Owner Broker

Wednesday, Fab. 1, 1*B4— fB

141—Homes For Sale

SANFORD SANDALWOOD
I A 1 Bdrm available
Realtor Call M l &lt;72 M74

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

141—Homes For Sale

CONSULT OUR

For Sate by Owner. 3 Bdrm 1 bath
lenetd yard, good location,
X I TOO Alter 4 H3 ?&lt;TT

Evening Herdld. Sanford, FI.

C A L L A N Y T IM E
3S45S. Parh

322-2420

DOUBLE W IDE on a Corner Lat.
3/7. CHA Family room, fenced,
shed Assume mortgage
Close to 17 T? X I . 750

BOBM. BALL JR. PA.
Rei l t o r _______________ 131-4111
Femlty Section ol Carrlege Cove
For sale by owner 1T7T, t7al7
11100 323 tM )__________________
GR EG O R Y M OBILE HOMES INC
AREAS LAR GEST EXCLU S IVE
S K Y LIN E D E A L E R
FEATURI NG
Palm Beach Villa
Greentoal
Palm Springs
Palm Manor
Siesta Key
VA FHA Financing M l H ) 5700
Large sgl In adull park 1 bdr, 2
bath den large screened porch
and utility room Low rent in
eludes sewer, water, rubbish and
mowing 111,TOO I T0&lt; 771 2790

Siit.deluae tatra firm $50
___
Call H I 5041___________
Portable dishwasher, like new.
Whirlpool. $73 Electric type
writer w/lnstant eraser, S12S
Heavy gauge steel fireproof sale
wicembinatlon lock, 1100 H I
0 1 0 ) _________________
Used Work Shoes S lTTP r
AR M Y. NA V Y SURPLUS
310 Sanlord Ave___________ 373 5791
Wedding Gown rulflTt and lace
includes veil and slip, si I New
XOO. nowS2M 331 3151 alt 7
You Can Slay At Home and Go lo
Town with Evening Herald Want
Ads Pl ace your Low cost
Claisllled Ad between I 00 5 M
327 741)

231-Cars

New Homes starting at U T T1 Easy
credit and low down Uncle Roys.
Leesburg US 441 904 717 0374
1979 Broadmore 14il0 2 Bdrm . 2
bath. C/H/A $1,500 down lake
over payments Days H 3M SI
eve H I 0147

Bad Credit?
NoCredit’
WE FIN AN C E
NoCredllCheck Easy Terms
N ATIO N AL A U T O SALES
MIPS Sanlord Ave
H I 4073
Debary Auto A Marine Salts
across the river lop ot hill 174
Hwy 17 97 Debary AM &gt;344

159— Real Estate
Wanted

WANTED GOOD USED CARS

IIB D R M H O U S E
OROUPLEXI
373 4441.

163—Waterfront
Property / Sale
NEW SMYRNA BEACH 5 \ Down
No closing costs 1/7 plus den
Oceanlronl Brokers Invited
Beachside Really Realtor
__________- T0&lt; &lt;77 1717

181—Appliances
/ Furniture
APPL I ANCES . REPOSSESSED,
reconditioned, freight damaged
E rom ITT Up Guaranteed
Nrerir New 117 E 1st SI 373 74S0

« Call Jack Martin HlTTOOe
WE FINANCE It
77 Toyota
OK Corral Used Cart H I 1971
1971 Ford F 150 4i&lt; Pick up Short
bed Needs body work Runt real
strong SUM Cash
Hurry! Hurryl Hurryl
1)4 4403 Or H T TIM
ITIO Toyota Corolla 3 speed,
manual A M -FM AC Good con
dltlon 14300 Firm Call 333 M42
’70 Mercury Station Wagon.
Runt good X M
Gene 373 M7T__________
74Chevy pickup V|/)50.
FS. PB. auto Runt A drives well
1400__________ 377 W S
____
'75 Chevy Monte Carlo PS PB? air
conditioning. A T, new paint. Call
377 1219 alter &lt; p m _____________
'79 PONTIAC SUNAIRO. 1500 00
down takas over payments at
SI27 It or $3,500 cash 373 1333

Cash lor good used turnlture
Larry's New A Used Furniture
Mart 215 Sanlord Ave 323 &lt;133
For Sale Refrig avacado green.
Hotpolnt Ea Cond *I3S Dish
washer, white, t ic . cond MS
4T5X57alter 5 P M _____________

‘M Velkswagon Rabbit, fuel Injec
lion. air. radio, eacallent condi
lion 17.500 firm Ask for Bill or
Barb, day or night 32) 5379
17 Toyota &lt;W O Pickup w/camper
AC. AM/FM. stereo w/lape deck
Tinted windows 127 7474

Kenmoreparts, sarvlce.
used washers H I 0497
__ m o o n E V A P P U A N C E S
WILSON M A IE R FU R N ITU R E
311 315 E. FI RST ST.
377 54)3

235-Trucks/
Buses/Vans

183—Television/
Radio/Stereo
COLOR T E L E VI SI ON
Z E N ITH ' Console Color Television
In walnut cabinet Original p rk t
over $700. balance due SITS or
payments SIT a month
NO M O N E Y DOWN. With war
ranfy. Free Home Trial
no

obiigaiion M l sirs____________
Good Usad Televisions US And Up
M ILLE R S
H ITO rlan doD r H I (O il

193— Lawn A Garden
FILL D IR T A TO P S O IL
YELLOW SAND
Clark A Hlrt 373 7500, 373 7133

Truck ITU CMC 14 tt. aluminum
boa. good tor produce Runt
qreat H I 3504_________________
1949 C 10 Pickup Chevy Very nice.
4 cyl straight slick, trailer hllch,
topper, asking U . ITS 7711T0S.
1917 O M C S- I S P ick u p w llh
libarglatt camper lop. 4 cyl.
auto. air. P/B. P/S. AM/FM.
sharpS7,b00 H ) TM lor H I SIX

237—Tractors/Trallers
239— Motorcycles/Bikes
Kawasaka 10 KZ 5)0 barker
header. 1)00 and lake over
payments Mark 7H OH)

281— Recreational
Vehicles/Campers

195— Machinery/Tools

WANTED TRAVEL TRAILER!
I N Ford Tractor, wllh 3 point
hitch, bushhog type mower, boa
blade lor m oving di rt A ll
eacellenl condition O l 4790 and
111 ITT!

■ Call Jack Marlin 373 7900 a
11 CLEAN USED R.V.'S
R.V. SALES
HWY 44
NEW SMYRNA

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

243-Junk Cers

Dog Obedience Training
Bagmntrs clan steels Feb 4lh 10
AM Ability Kennels Osteen
__________MS H ) 7170__________
Free lo good home. (Moving, no
pels allowed I S year old rad
mate Oachshownd Naeds fenced
In yard Pretociadulto H I 4170

BUY JUNK CARSA TRUCKS
F rom 1)0 to 130or more
Call 3H 1414777 4311
TOP Dollar Paid lor Junk A Usad
cars, trucks A heavy equipment.

201— Horses
EIPEIIEHCED HOOF TRIMMING
Call Attar S P.M,__________W -U I I
HORSES A O A R D E O . Deluae
itells, partial board US mo Ph

14119171

____________ 1H 3TTO_____________

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JUNK CARS ANO TRUCKS
CBS AUTO PARTS 79)4301

•VDt H

CAM

ISTJDatSM
207— Swap Corner
TRADE
U Ft Motor Home conversion wllh
diesel Paid SITJIOO In Oct lake
Rial Estate, boat. car.
Call Gent 777 1471

211— Antiques/
Collectables
Furniture and repair, stripping and
refin 1thing, staining, antiques a
speciality. H i OtTl.

213— Auctions
FOR E S JA TE Commercial ar
Residential Auctions A Apprait
ate Call Pelf s Auction H ) USB

215— Boats/ Accessories
Aluminum 14 Ft Semi V 75 HP
Johnson Gatvanlied frailer.
1500 H I 0444

1 to ____

*1 8 0

1975 Fn S F/U Track

M ix

*191

1979 DU|4 kspw
4 *r.

'1 1 * 1

IW B itM K k e M

n*u

'U N

SANFORD
M O T O R CO
A MC

JEEP

�10B— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. Wednesday, Feb. 1,1914

Per C a p i t a

Illegal Food Sales Probed
By United Preas International

Other sources said refugees In San
Vicente complain they have not
received any U.S. food donations
since October.

The U.S. Embassy In El Salvador
Is Investigating reports that Am eri­
can wheal, oil and other food
Intended for free distribution to
refugees under a program run by
the army Is being sold Illegally at
Salvadoran markets, officials said.
"W e arc looking Into It.” a U.S.
Embassy spokesman said Tuesday.

The food distribution plan, based
on pacification programs used bv
the U.S. military In Vietnam, was
designed to help resettle abandoned
v illa g e s and farm s w ith p ro ­
governm ent peasants in rebeldominated areas.

Officials ol the U.S. Agency for
International Development said the
food was supposedly to be distrib­
uted for free to refugees In San
Vicente, 28 miles cast of San
Salvador, under a government pro­
gram run by the army.

The program was created by U.S.
military and civilian advisers and
began with much fanfare last Ju ly
but Western observers say it has
produced only mixed results at best.

Hut Journalists visiting the area
reported vendors In San Vicente's
market were selling Am ericandonated food such as wheat and
cooking oil.

Observers, who asked to remain
anonymous, complained that guer­
rillas continue to o|M-rate freely In
the region and are teaching Maixist
principles in schools reconstructed
with U.S. government funds.

Reporters said they saw 50-pound
hags of bulgar. a type of wheat,
clearly marked “ Furnished by the
people of the United Slates, not to
Ik- sold or exchanged.” on sale
Sunday In the San Vicente market.

T o b a cco Sales

Secretary of State George Shultz is
holding high-level talks with leaders
in El Salvador, focusing on human
rights and the possibilities of in­
creasing U.S. aid.

The National Commission for Res­
toration of Areas. (C O N A R A ). a
Salvadoran arm y-run relief agency,
is In charge of distributing the A ll)
f « K « l to refugees.

V

The charges come at a lime when

Total (

Public U tilitie s
Sales
M o tor V ehicle
License

In San Jose. Costa Rica, a gov­
ernment official said Nicaraguan
rebels will not find a haven In Costa
Rica, which refuses to sacrifice Its
neutrality in face of the guerillas.
The Costa Rica Security Council
was strongly critical Tuesday of the
rebels in response to 400 unarmed
Nicaraguans entering the country
last Saturday.
In Managua, a Nicaraguan leader
blasted President Reagan Monday
as the “ major cause of destabiliza­
tion" in Central America and said
his decision to run for a second term
will only mean more turmoil in the
region.

M o tor Fuel

$ 4 3 $ 9 .7

C o rp o ra tio n Net
Incom e
Ind ivid u al Incom e
(44 S tates)
G eneral Sales and
G ross R eceipts

$63

$14.
$ 4 0 .9

$181

$ 4 5 .4

$205

The State Tax Take

“ We cannot expcc' any change in
Ills a gg re ssiv e p o lic y to w a rd
Nicaragua.” said Rafael Solis, secre­
tary of the leftist government's
appointed Council of Slate Monday.

Taxes, the m ajor single source of revenues, yield for the year in both gross totals (In billions of
poured a total of $149.7 billion into state treasuries dollars) and per capita breakdowns. The per
In 1982. Shown are the m ajor tax categories with capita amount for all taxes was $633.

Arab Donations To Jesse Jackson's PUSH Called 'Perfectly Legal'
W AS H IN G TO N (UIM) - The Arab League has made
two $100,000 donations to units of the widespreadPUSH operation founded by Jesse Jackson, but the
presidential candidate's lawyer says they were 'perfectly
legal.
One of the donations, first reported by the A'ew York
Times, was to the PUSH Foundation, an organization
Jackson never has had any official ties with, according

to John II. Bustamante. Jackson's lawyer and general
counsel to the foundation.
The other $100,000 grant, however, was to PUSHExcel, an educational group that Jackson has headed as
president.
Reports of the grant to the Foundation have renewed
controversy over Jackson's ties with the Arab world,
controversies that arc almost as old as the civil rights

Students:
G rading Is
'Too Easy'

leader's public life.
The grants also have raised questions about the
finaneing of the various units of the far-flung PUSH
network, which Jackson first formed in Chicago in the
early 1970s as "People United to Save Hum anity."
At a briefing called to clear up the controversy.
Bustamante said suggestions of Improper handling of
finances by the PUSH Foundation or other PUSH

organizations detained the groups and the Arab League
donors.
He said the foundation has been audited annually
“ and has as of the end of the year 1989 received clear,
unqualified opinions.
"T h e effort to defame the Arab League as a donor is
unfair." Bustamante said. “ These gifts were perfectly
legal."

r------------- i

Liauor for Less

LOS A N G E LE S |UPI) High school teachers arc
too lenient and should
force teenagers to abide by
more rigorous academic
standards, a majority of
college freshmen told a
nationwide survey.

LIQUOR W IN E 1

CHAMPAGNE

SNACKS

ICE

MIXERS

GLASSW ARE

AMERICA’S LARGEST WINE &amp;
SPIRIT MERCHANT HAS THE
LOWER EVERYDAY PRICE
CORKSCREWS

BEER

DAY
SALE
THHU

FEBHUARY^

BAR T O O L S

0U&gt;CMW

Itn m in u ra

Hut the survey's director
suggested the finding,
which seems to contradict
y e a r s

of

d e c l i n i n g

scholastic tests scores,
may result from the kinds
of classes students are
taking.
“ What students have
been doing over the last
dozen or so years is taking
m o re a n d m ore n o n ­
academic subjects, such as
driver's education, where
it's easy to get an A. rather
than math and English."
U C L A professor Alexander
Aslln said.
The survey, conducted
for the 18th year by UCLA
and the American Council
on Education, was based
on a statistically adjusted
sa m p le of m ore than
254.(XX) freshmen enter­
ing 489 two- and four-year
colleges and universities In
the fall of 1983.
Asked If high school
grading was too easy. 58
percent of the respondents
said It was. compared to
54.5 percent In the fall of
1982.
"1 think they feel the
standards ought to be
more stringent. It's too
e a s y . ”

A s l l n

EARLY
TIMES

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CASE OF 12 - 59.M

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CASE OF 12 - 127.0S

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O tT 2 B o n u s
s

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BUY 10 B O n U S

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M O U L IN R 0 U 0 I

SUITCASE
24-12 OZ CANS

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IU
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19

i.s tn r

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IMS M i .

WOO WT . H I 4

said.

“ They're asking for more
rigorous standards."
lie said students seem to
believe "It's really not
required to work very hard
to get grades, and so the
meaning of the grades has
been compromised."
Twenty-three percent of
the rcs|K&gt;ndcnts said they
maintained at least an
A-mlnus average In high
sch(K)l. down for the third
straight year. The number
of st udent s wi t h C
averages increased.
Aslln said the trend In­
dicates that "grade Infla­
tion" evident during most
of the 1970s Is being
reversed.
He noted, however, that
grades of 1983 freshmen
were still far higher than
those of 1969 freshmen,
when C students o u t­
numbered A students by a
better than 2-1 margin.
The survey also found:
— Students of the 1980s
are more materialistic and
less idealistic than those of
the 1960s. with a record
high 69.3 percent saying
they want to be well off
and a record low 44.1
percent saying they want
a meaningful life philoso­
phy.
— Most of the students
c o n s id e r t h e m s e lv e s
"middle of the road" polit­
ically. although the per­
centage choosing "liberal
or far left" grew slightly,
reversing a recent trend.
— Support for busing to
achleve/school Integration
was 50.7 percent, the first
lime a majority favored it.

l

S T 8"12"l2"7"1f I"11*r 11"

TI\m\ 8.797
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5.55 BET
7.25 H I I 4 ; M m 10.99U T E *
CIGARETTES
95*

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PK. l Oo n t U. KJ 1V0 * PttiCt
C A R TO N

QUART

■ E r ? B 3 S n !S 5 IS ? i R

HAPPY HOUR

BK

5 0 ' DRINKS

�* * * * *

Take 4

Evening Herald - Wednesday, Feb. I, 1984

Herald Advertiser - Thursday, Feb. 2, 1984

Sanlord, FI.— 1C

Four Delicious Desserts, That Is
Take 4! Four delirious desserts. ih;u is. and set an
Oscar-winning tattle. Shimmering with color and full of
Iruil flavor, these delicious rlesscris will star at your next
Uet together.
Perfect any time of the year, they capture the flavor of
fruit In scasonless style. Canned peaches lavishly fill
rrisp pastry rounds A gcmllke sauce made from frozen
strawberries adds sparkle when tossed with light angel
lood t ake. Citrus-flavored frosting and raspberry Jam top
od moist lemon layer cake with a glistening crown of
color and flavor. And Juicy frozen blueberries fill chewy
granola bars with berry goodness.
Serve one to the family as a special treat or. for a
star-studded occasion, serve several In a dessert buffet
P E A C H E S 'N C R E A M P A S T R IE S
1 package 111 ounces) pie crust mix or sticks
'A cup dairy sour cream
Cinnamon-Sugar Glaze |Im-Io w )
I can f IS ounces) sliced peaches, well drained
1 cup chilled whipping cream
2 tablespoons powdered sugar
Mix pie crust mix or 2 pie crust sticks and sour cream
with lork until pastry holds together: divide Into halves.
Wrap each half, refrlgerteal least 8 hours.
Heat oven to 350°. Roll each half of pastry Into circle
Inch thick on floured cloth-covered Ixrard with floured
« loth covered rolling pin. Cut each circle Into four 4-Inch
rounds Place rounds on ungreased cookie sheet: brush
with Cinnamon-Sugar Glaze. Hake until light brown,
about 15 minutes. Remove front cookie sheet: cool.
Reserve 4 peach slices. Coarsely chop remaining
pvarh slices Just before serving, beat whipping cream
and iMiwdercd sugar In chilled Itowl until soft peaks
form. Fold In chopped peaches. For each serving, pul 2
rounds together, spreading about '« cup whipped cream
mixture between each. Top desserts with remaining
whipped cream mixture: garnish with reserved peach
slices. Refrigerate any remaining desserts. 4 servings.
Cinnam on-Sugar Glaze: Mix 3 tablcs|&gt;oons sugar
and 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon; stir In 1 tablespoon
water.
High Altitude Directions |3.r&gt;t&gt;0 to 6500 feel): Heat
oven to 375“ .

make a layer. Spread hall of the remaining Strawberry
sauce (about l'/« cups) over layer in dish. Repeat with
half or the remaining cake mixture. Top with remaining
Strawberry Sauce. Spoon remaining cake mixture over
sauce. Cover and refrigerate at least 8 hours. Just before
serving, drizzle reserved Strawberry Sauce over top. 12
to 16 servings.
S tra w b e rry Sauce: Mix 2 packages (16 ounces each)
frozen sliced strawberries, thawed, and I tablespoon
cornstarch In saucepan. Cook over medium heat,
stirring frequently, until mixture thickens and blls. Holl
and stir I minute.
High Altitude Directions (3500 to 6500 feet): Prepare
cake mix and bake as directed In high altitude directions
on package (do not use orange Juice). Continue as
directed in recipe.
R A S P B E R R Y -F IL L E D L E M O N C A K E
I package (18.5 ounces) supemtolst lemon cake mix
1 package (3 ounces) cream cheese, softened
1 )ar 110 ounces) red raspberry jam
Lemon-Cream Cheese Frosting (below)
Heat oven to 350“ . Grease and flour 2 round pans.
O x l'.fi Inches. Prepare cake mix as directed on package
except — omit oil: mix In cream cheese with the water
and eggs Pour Into pans. Hake as directed; cool 10
minutes. Remove from pans: cool completely.
Prejwrc Lemon-Cream Cheese Frosting. Spread 1 cake
layer with ■« cup Jam. '/i cup frosting and another W cup
Jam. lo p with remaining layer; spread with remaining
|am to within 1i Inch of edge. Spread remaining frosting
on side of cake. Refrigerate at least I hour. Refrigerate
any remaining cake.
Lem on-Cream Cheese Fro sting
1 cup chilled whipping cream
1 package (3 ounces) cream cheese, softened
1 cup powdered sugar
I teaspoon grated lemon peel
Heal whipping cream In chilled bowl until stiff. Mix
cream cheese, powdered sugar and lemon peel. Fold
cream cheese mixture into whipped cream.
High Altitude Directions (3500 to 6500 feet): Prepare
cake mix as directed in high altitude directions on
package except — omit oil mix In cream cheese with
water and eggs.

O R A N G E -S T R A W B E R R Y A N G E L P A R F A IT
I package (16 ounces) one-step while angel food cake
mix
I I i cups cold orange Juice
Strawberru Sauce (below)
I package (8 ounces) cream cheese, softened
1cup sugar
2 teaspoons grated orange peel
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 cups chilled whipping cream
I cup miniature marshmallows
Heal oven to 325°. Prepare cake mix as directed on
package except — substitute orange Juice lor the water
Hake until lop crust Is golden brown and cracks feel dry.
about I hour. Cool as directed on package.
Prepare Strawberry Sauce; cool Tear cake Into about
I Inch pieces. Heat cream cheese, sugar, orange peel and
vanilla In large Ixiwl on medium speed, scraping bowl
occasionally, until smooth and creamy. Heat whipping
cream In chilled bowl u n til stiff. G e n tly fold
marshmallows and cream cheese mixture Into wliIpjM'd
cream. Toss wltii cuke pieces.
Reserve W cup of the Strawberry Sauce: cover and
refrigerate. Lightly spoon bout '/a ol the cake mixture
lulu 3-quart glass souflle dish or tx&gt;wl: gcnily spread to

B L U E B E R R Y -F IL L E D G R A N O L A B A R S
Blueberry Filling (below)
I package chewy granola bar mix (any flavor)
I j cup flaked coconut
I I cup parked brown sugar
'« cup plus 2 tablespoons margarine or butter.
softened
1 1 teaspoon baking soda
Heat oven to 400°. Prepare Blueberry Filling. Mix
granola bar mix (dry), coconut, brown sugar, margarine
and baking soda in large bowl. Press half of the crumbly
mixture in ungreased rectangular pan. 13x9x2 Inches.
Hake 5 minutes; spread with filling. Top with remaining
crumbly mixture, pressing lightly. Hake until lop is
golden brown. 20 to 25 minutes. Cool: cut into bars,
about 3x 11 1 Inches. 24 bars.
B lu e b e rry F illin g
I package (16 ounces) frozen unsweetened blueberries

Vi cupaugar_

Give the fam ily or guests a star studded treat by
serving the following desserts shimmering with
color and fruit flayer, clockwise from left,

Raspberry-Filled Lemon Cake, Orange Strawber­
ry Angel Parfalt, Peaches 'n Cream Pastries and
Blueberry-Filled Granola Bars.

■/« cup water
2 tablespoons cornstarch
Mix all Ingredients in 2-quart saucepan. Couk over
m edium Ileal, stirring constantly, until m ixture
thickens and bolls. Holl and stir I minute.
R a s p b e r r y - F ill e d O r a n o la B a ra : S u tm iliu lc 1 p ac k a g e

(12 ounces) frozen unsweetened raspberries tor the
hlucbcrlcs.
High Altitude Directions (3500 to 6500 feel): For
Blueberry-Filled Granola Bars, not recommended for
use-. For RaspIx-rry-Flllcd Granola bars, no adjustments

urc tierrMary.

VISIT
■ IIF -U i]

DEPARTMENT.
: LARGEST Dl
FRESHEST
PRODUCE IN CENTRAL
VINE RIPE TOMATOES
(GREENS)

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ii

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COM E TO WHERE THE BUYING PUBLIC
IS • NOT BROWSERS OR LOOKERS! TABLE
RENTALS 4 'x 8 ' TABLES SATURDAY AND
SUNDAY * 6 .0 0 PER DAY. WEDNESDAY
AND FRIDAY ’ 3.0 0 PER DAY

M | ^ B

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1500 S FRENCH AVE
IN SANFORD. FLA
13051 323 5454

H

DEALERS”

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E A S Y E N T R A N C E AND E XIT

CUSTOM
CUT

FRESH
MEAT

MEAT DEPARTMENT OPEN EVERY DAY EXCEPT MONDAY 8 A .M . • 5 P.M . REAR OF MARKET
p
PRICES GOOD WED., FEB. 1 THRU TUES., FEB. 7
COMPLETE LINE
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U.S.D.A. Choice, Guaranteed Naturally Tender
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1500 FRENCH AVENUE IN SANFORD, FLA.
SEAFOODS
PORK
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VEAL

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BIG EYE

Boiled Ham

Rock Shrimp . . . 9 1 49

SLICED TO OmCR
d Q

FRESH MEDIUM

Ground Chuck. . . * 1 *

Spiced Lunch Meat * lT ?

Shrimp

KHAN’S NO SUGAR ADDED

GENOA
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LOCAL, FRESH DRESSED

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£ q

&lt; *q

Sliced Bacon___ * 1
WEST BRAND

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SW IFT'S PREMIUM

Salami

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SUCtO TO OMCR

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$ 1 49

Pork Roast........... $ l l 9

BY THE CHUNK

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FRESH OYSTERS, FISH, STONE CRAB CLAWS, CRAB STICKS,SHREDDED CRAB MEAT, KING CRAB LEGS, COCKTAIL SHRIMP

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�1 C - Evening H«r«Id - Wsdagday, Ftb. t, 1H4

Hrrild Advertlitr -

Thursday, Feb. ?, 1984

Sanlord, FI.

Lemony Asparagus

Elegant
For Any
Occasion

Souffle uses a new
streamlined
preparation
method and Is
filled with
nutrition. Guests
will thing they're
dining on a cloud

What dish represents the ultimate In elegance? Many
people would answer. " A souffle!" Now. what elegant
dish Is also easy to make and economical to serve?
Believe It or not. "a souffle" could be the answer to this
question, too.
Th is Lemony Asparagus Souffle recipe uses a new
streamlined preparation method. Th e only part you
need to be careful about Is beating the egg whites Just
until they won t slip In a tilted bowl. Th e rest of the
recipe Is a simple matter of making a basic cheese sauce,
adding a refreshing whisper of lemon and luscious green
asparagus and gently folding them all Into the whites.
Though your guests may think they're dining on a
cloud, this souffle supplies a substantial amount of good
nutrition. And. since eggs are the main protein source.
It's an economical dish. too. For brunch, a ladles' lunch
or an Intimate candlelit dinner, break out the eggs for an
easy, economical, elegant souffle.

LBMOfVT ASPARAOU8 SOUFFLE

(4 servings)
Butter
Crated Parmesan cheese
M cup butter
W cup flour
W teaspoon salt
M cup milk
1 cup |4 oz.) shredded Monterey Jack cheese
4 eggs, separated
1 teaspoon grated lemon peel
2 tablespoons lemon Juice, divided
1 pound fresh asparagus, cleaned and trimmed OR I
package (10 os.) frozen asparagus spears: cooked,
well-drained and cut In 14-Inch lengths
Butter a 1-quart souffle dish or straight-sided casserole
and dust with Parmesan cheese. Prepare a collar by
making a 4-Inch wide band of triple-thickness aluminum
foil long enough to go around dish and overlap 2 Inches.
Butter band and dust lightly with Parmesan cheese,
wrap band around dish with dusted side In and fasten
with straight pins, paper clips or string. Collar should
stand at least 2 Inches above rim of dish. Set aside.
* In medium saucepan over medium-high heat, melt VI
cup butter. Blend In (lour and salt. Cook, stirring
constantly, until mixture Is smooth and bubbly. Stir In
milk all at once. Cook and stir until mixture bolls and Is
smooth and thickened. Remove from heat and stir In
cheese until melted. Set aside.
In large mixing bowl, beat egg whites with 1 teaspoon
of the lemon Juice at high speed until stiff but not dry.
Just until whites no longer slip when bowl Is tilted.
Thoroughly blend egg yolks, asparagus, lemon peel and
remaining lemon Juice Into reserved sauce. Oently. but
thoroughly, fold yolk mixture Into whites. Carefully
pour Into prepared souffle dish.
For a "lop hat." hold spoon upright and circle mixture
to make ring about 1 Inch from side of dish and 1 Inch
deep. Bake In preheated 350*F. oven until puffy,
delicately browned and souffle shakes slightly when
oven rack Is moved gently back and forth, about 35 to
45 minutes. Quickly, but gently, remove collar. Serve
Immediately.

N e w T w is t T o
S t ir - F r y in g
Meals requiring a m inim um of preparation time help
control calorie Intake. Nibbling while waiting for meals
to cook often contributes unwanted calories. A delicious
Stir-fry dinner takes less than 20 minutes to prepare. Be
sure that all Ingredients are sliced and chopped before
you start cooking.
Th e success of this highly versatile entree relies on the
selection of fresh, crisp Ingredients. For contrasting
color and texture, select different vegetables and
compatible seasonings for an endless, nutritious medley
of vegetables and beef.

ublix Teller

Publix is open
7 days a week.

FOR 24 HOUR CONVENIENCE
YOU CAN BANK ON.)

Celebrate Publix’
.C ?

PCibllx

LEMON BEST SALAD
V4 cup lemon Juice
2 tablespoons water
2 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon poppy seeds
V4 teaspoon salt
1 pound cooked roast beef, cut Into strips (about 2
cups)
4 ounces fresh mushrooms, sliced (about 1 cup)
% cup sour cream or yogurt
1 teaspoon DIJon-style mustard
•; 1 head red leaf lettuce
. 1 tomato, cut Into wedges
4 small artichokes, halved, cooked
In saucepan, mix lemon Juice, water, sugar, poppy
seeds and salt. Heat to boiling; reduce heat and cover.
Sim m er 15 minutes and cool. In large bowl, m ix lemon
mixture, beef and mushrooms; cover. Refrigerate at
least 3 hours, no longer than 24 hours. Drain beef
mixture; reserve 3 tablespoons marinade. Stir reserved
marinade Into sour cream or yogurt; stir In mustard.
Arrange beef, mushrooms, tomato and artichokes on
bed of lettuce. Serve dressing on the side. Serves 4.

Cottage
Cheese
2-lb. cup

$179
Pillsbury White or Wheat

Step right in for Grand Savings.
ASSORTED FLAVORS

Pipin’ Hot Loaf....89'
100°o Corn Oil Regular Margarine

Jo«n m the festivities* Fetyuary
in Florida shines with festivals and
what better way to celebrate than
with great values from P ubin'

• S .

fW r\

Publix Premium
Ice Cream

Fresh Start.......... *Vh,‘«299

This week s feature:

(75c-Off Label) Heavy Duty
Laundry

12-Inch Au Gratin
Just $5.99

Dynamo
Detergent............ tti?i *2"
half gal.
REG. OR LIGHT

Pabst Blue
iRibbon Beer|
six-pack, 12-oz. cans

*

*****

(50e-0ff Label) Concentrated
Laundry Detergent

(**t&gt; a ft 10 purr tat*)

Hauler If ftft 99 (without pwrchAtt)

l

(20c-0ll Label)

».•

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Palmolive Liquid..
ALL GRINDS

PETER PAN
&amp; ICR EAM Y o r c r u n c h y

Folger’s'
Coffee

Peanut
Butter

1-lb. can

(limit 1 Please, With Other
Purchases ef S7.50 or Mere,
■xcludinf AII Tobacco Items)

Dow Ziploc

FblgerS

Crystal Light Lemon-Lime,
Lemonade, Orange, Fruit Punch
or Iced Tea with Natural
Lemon Flavor

Sandwich Bags.... ?&lt;.V *109 Drink Mix............. V&amp;9299
Dow Ziploc Heavy Duty Regular

Fraaxer Bags......&amp; 91”
Scott Family Economy Pack

Papor Napkins....^ M 99
Soft *n' Pretty Decorated,
Assorted or White

Bathroom
Tissue.................. 99'

Betty Crocker Assorted Flavors
Ready-to-Spread

Croamy
Frosting......... ’•,0^

, $1i$

5-oz. Baked Cheez Balls, 6Vz-oz.
Fried Cheez Curls, 7-oz. Pretzel
Twists or 7W-oz. Corn Chips

Planters Snacks ..

Fleischmann’s
Margarine............ !S •I09
Blue Bonnet Regular

Margarine
Quarters.............. !.« 49c
Rondele’ Spiced with Garlic &amp;
Herbs or French Onion

$ 2 3 9

89'

88°

Stokely Cut or Sliced

Beets................... ’Sr- 39'
Stokely 164&gt;oz. Cream Style or
17-oz. Whole Kernel

Golden Corn..... 2 CWI 88'
Stokely

Fruit Cocktail...... ’£* 89'
Bartlett Peart..... 69'

i

49-0Z. box
tM

ANTISEPTIC

Stokely Shellie, Cut
or French Style

Stokely Halved

Giant
Fab

(limit 1 Please, With Other
Purchases ef 17.10 er Mere,
■xcludlnf All Toheeee Hems).

Cufffcu I

Green Beane.... 2

309-OFF LABEL,
LAUNDRY DETERGENT1

|

Breakfast Club

Hamburger or
Hot Dog Buns.... 2 PV,', 89°

100ao Corn Oil Twin-Pack
or Bowl Soft

$459

28-oz. jar
(UmH 4 Please, With Other
Purchases el IT.M or Mere,
■xeludinv All Teheeso Heme)

Fleischmann’s
Quarters.............. «*: 89°

Cheese Spread ...3U?*M*9

OINOBR-ORANOB BKBF
1 pound beef top round steak
tt cup soy sauce
1V4 teaspoons cornstarch
1 tablespoon freshly grated ginger OR 1V4 teaspoons
ground ginger
1 teaspoon cinnamon
2 teaspoons vegetable oil
1 carrot, sliced
1 green bell pepper, sliced
1 red bell pepper, sliced
M pound snow peas, trimmed
V4 cup sliced water chestnuts
1 head Iceberg lettuce, shredded
T rim outside layer of fat from steak. Slice steak Into
thin strips. Mix soy sauce, cornstarch, orange peel,
ginger and cinnamon; pour over steak. Heat 1 teaspoon
oil In large non stick surface skillet until hot. Add beef;
stir-fry over high heat until browned, about 3 minutes.
Remove beef to plate. Add remaining teaspoon of oil;
add all vegetables except lettuce. Stir-fry vegetables
until crisp-tender. 3 to 4 minutes. Return beef to skillet.
Cook, stirring constantly, until beef Is hot. Place lettuce
on serving plate: top with beef mixture. Serves 4.

THIS AD
EFFECTIVE:
TKURS.,
FEB. 2
THRU
WED.,
FEB. B,
1084. . .

DAIRI-FRESH
ASSORTED FLAVORS

Listerine
Mouthwash
32-oz. bot.

�Herald Advertiser — Thursday, Feb. 2, 1

Evening Herald - Wednesday, Feb. I, 1M4
Oriental food Is fun. easy to prepare, and not too
expensive. The vegetables and the basics are easily
found In most grocery or speciality stores. Special
equipment, such as a wok. Is not needed when
using the microwave oven. A simple Oriental meal
can become a festive affair by adding chopsticks,
warm, moist towels and fortune cookies. T r y some
of these recipes and when the occasion calls for It.
you will be prepared to have a complete Oriental
dinnerparty.

Microwave Magic

Oriental
Food Fun
And Easy

Midge
Mycoff
Home Economist
Seminole Community College

1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 can (8 oz.) pineapple chunks (reserve Juice)
V4 cup sliced bamboo shoots
1 large green pepper, cut Into 1 Inch pieces

EG O DROP SOUP
1. Bring to boll In batter bowl 8 cups of water.
2. Add 8 chicken bouillon cubes or 8 teaspoons
of Instant. Stir until dissolved.
3. Bring to boll.
4. Beat well two eggs.
5. Pour In a thin steady stream of egg. Stirring In
a circular pattern. This will cook the egg.
6. Add chopped green onion and 1 tablespoon of
soy sauce. Serve hot.
This stock may be used for wonton soup also.
Omit the beaten egg.
Chicken, pork, or beef may be used for this
entree. All of these recipes accompanied by rice
and/or fried noodles provide the basts for a quick,
nutritious change of taste for your family.

Sauce:
1 tablespoon cornstarch
2 tablespoons elder vinegar
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 tablespoon catsup
cup packed brown sugar
Reserved pineapple Juice
Combine pork, sherry and soy sauce In plastic
bag Marinate for 30 minutes at room temperature,
turning bag onre lo coat meal. F’lacc pork and
vegetables In 10 x G baking glass dish. Cover with
plastic wrap Microwave at 100% |x&gt;wcr for 5-6
minutes or until pork is no longer pink, stirring
once. Drain and set aside.
For sauce, drain pineapple Juice Into 4 cup glass
measure. Add water to make 1 cup. Blend In

SWEET AND SOUR PORK
2 cups cubed lean pork (1 •1Vi lbs.)
1 tablespoon dry sherry

PUBLIX ASSORTED
FLAVORS REG.
OR DIET

B E TTY C
ASSORTED

Cake
Mixes
reg. box

Soft
Drinks

32-oz. bot.

Flour

4U 2-liter bot.

e ^ s S -lb .

Sanford, F I .-lC

cornstarch. Stir In vinegar, soy sauce, catsup and
brown sugar. Microwave at 100% power for 4-5
minutes or until heated through, stirring twice.
Serve over rice or chow mein noodles. Serves.4.
H IN T : The thickening agent used for Oriental food
preparation Is cornstarch or a rice starch. There Is
available a low sodium soy sauce which for those
needing to limit salt Intake will find helpful. Cut
vegetables thin and diagonally, or across the grain.
Th e mushrooms used for this recipe are the type
purchased In the Oriental speciality store; howev­
er. I have used fresh mushrooms found In the
produce department and the dish was quite good
but perhaps not as authentic.

KUNG BOW CHICKEN
Vi cup dried mushrooms
1 large whole chicken breast, skinned, spilt and
boned
2 tablespoons cold water
1 teaspoon cornstarch
2 tablespoons soy sauce
•1 clove garlic, minced
1 large green pepper, cut In W in c h pieces
V4 cup bamboo shoots
2 tablespoons chopped peanuts
V4 teaspoon crushed red pepper
1 tablespoon cooking oil
Soak mushrooms In enough warm water to cover
for 30 minutes: squeeze to drain well. Chop
mushrooms discarding stem. Cut chicken Into bite
size pieces. Blend cold water into cornstarch: stir
In soy sauce. Set aside.
In an 8x8x2-lnch baking dish, combine garlic,
green pepper, bamboo shoots, peanuts, red pepper,
and oil. Cook, covered, at 100% power for 4-6
minutes, or until tender. Stir once. Remove
vegetables from baking dish. Add chicken. Cook,
covered, at 50% power for 2-3 minutes or until
done, stirring once. Drain off liquid. Stir In soy
mixture; stir Into chicken. Cook at 100% power for
1-2 minutes or until thickened and bubbly, stirring
twice. Stir In vegetables and mushrooms. Cook,
covered, at 100% power for 1-2 minutes or until
mixture Is heated through. Makes 2 servings.

PEPPER STEAK

29

r

*uiu*
Rt SERVES
THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES
SOLO

Palm River

Sliced Bacon....... *5 M 39
Meat or Beef

Lykes Wieners.... ft* 99'
Lykes Sliced American

Cooked Ham....... ’£V *2«»

WINTER GARDEN
FROZEN CALIFORNIA,
ORIENTAL OR ITALIAN

U.S.D.A.
CHOICE BEEF

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS BEEF
FULL CUT

Vegetable
Mixes
,16-oz. poly bag i

Round
Steak

Lower Salt - No Sugar Added
Olde Smithfield

Sliced Bacon....... f t »149
Olde Smithfield Mild or Hot

Microwaved
izers

Pork Sausage..... ft #1”
Olde Smithfield

Meat Franks........ ft: &gt;1"
Lykes Meat or Beef

U.S.D.A.
CHOICE BEEF

Sliced Bologna .... ft: » 1 »
Hormel Cure 81 or Curemaster

Boneless Ham..... 7 *34*
Sliced Cooked, Red Peppered
or Glazed

Hormel Ham.... .

•11&gt;

Hormel Smoked Franks

Wranglers........... ft: 9219
YOUNG’N TENDER
GOV’T.-INSPECTED
SHIPPED DAD,
FRESH NOT FROZEN
PREMIUM GRADE

Whole
Fryers

Beef

^Cube Steak....... 7

Standing
Rib Roast

*

All Purpose

White
Potatoes......... 10 ft M 79

$979

For Snacks or Salads, Crisp, Juicy

Red Delicious
Apples............. 3

per lb.

b .g

Florida Sweet
Seafood Treat, Fresh

Flounder Fillets.

Juice Oranges .. 5 ft *1"
per

lb

sees

Fresh

Ocean Perch
Fillets................

139s

Seafood Treatl 60-70 count

Medium
Rock Shrimp.......

7

Ripe, Juicy, Tasty Northwest

#21B

With Thlt Coupon 0NLV

Pillsbury
Brownies

(Jumbo •90 Size)........... f t * 1 "
(Large - 120 Size).......... f t 9 1 "
(Medium-1 5 0 Size).. 1 0 t« * 1 29
Flavorful Northwest

$103

29-01. can

Comice Pears..... f t 99'
For Snacks or Salads,
California Red

______
per lb,
9

Emperor Grapes..

7

( L M I I R .r Eamtl, R l.a u , With
Oth*f R u .c K .u i .1 I T . J 0 1 Mm . ,
B ic lv .ift. AM T . b . . . . M a n .)
( I N . . U . . R .k . »•«, 11«4) (C )

79'

For Pies, Sauce or Tarts, Crisp

Deli pi Deli

York Apples..... 3 ft 79'
Perfect for Salads,
Florida (Medium Size)

7

RedFRoast Roast Beef,
Corned Beef or

Tasty Tomatoes..

Pastrami...................... 99*
Pepperoni Pizza... f t 19249
Deluxe Pizza....... ft* *399

Cucumbers or
Bell Peppers.... 3 •&lt;* 89'

r

99'

Mushrooms.......

Corn Dogs........... f t “ M 99
Flavorful

Macaroni Salad.... »" 89'
Fresh-Baked Dutch Apple or

Apple Pie.....................M 79
Fresh

Onion Rolls......... f t 99'
Ready-to-take-out, Southern

Fried Chicken..... f t *2**

7

*2”

7

»1”

[3 Frozen Food's
11 Va - o z . Beef Stroganoff, 10H-OZ.

Beef Burgundy, 11-oz. Sirloin
Tips or 10-oz. Teriyakl Steak

Armour Dinner
Classics............... f t *2”
Chicken, Turkey or Beef

Brussels Sprouts

7

$349
79'

(LM 1 1 Par R•«*•!, Rlaata, With
OthM Ru.c K . u . H IT .JO m Hw c,
■ itia S u if AM Tataaaa Hm m )
ian.«u*. r.h. fa, tsea) &lt;c )

Top Your Salad with
“ Marjon" Brand

Alfalfa Sprouts.... f t 89'
Assorted Colors, Blooming

African Vlolata.... 7S"*199

SO* OFF

[3 Health &amp; Beauty

Mrs. Smith’s Pie .. f t *1**

Aluminum Foil
75-sq. ft roll

89'

O na-A-Day.......... "SfH"
Effervescent Pain Raliavar
and Antacid

6 tablespoons butter or margarine
V4 cup finely chopped onion

(U m H

Extra Str.ngth D .n tu r. C la in M r
JO c t

Hi

m

■ •thtStaf AM T O

(■lt4.Ua. Fat. H

m m

Nh

n

I

ia#4) CD

$ 1 SB

Thta ad aflactr.. in lha loaovmg counttat:
Sravard. CJtarMta. Coawr, Hlehlanda. HWaboro.
Laka. Laa, Uanataa. Oranga, OacaoU. Foe.
Sarasota and Banwote

SANFORD PLAZA, SANFORD
L0NGW00D VILLAGE CTR.,
LONGWOOD

1 (Bounce) can medium ahrip
Vi pound large fresh mushrooms
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
V4 cup finely chopped onion
2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
14 cup seasoned dry breadcrumbs
Prepare shrimp according to label directions: finely
chop, and set aside.
Clean mushrooms with damp paper towels. Remove
mushroom stems, and finely chop. Set mushroom caps
aside.
Place butter In a 1-quart casserole. Microwave at HIGH
for 25 to 45 seconds or until melted. Add onion and
chopped mushroom stems; cover with heavy-duty
plastic wrap. Microwave at HIG H for 3 to 4 minutes or
until onion Is transparent. S tir In parsley and
breadcrumbs. Spoon mixture Into mushroom caps.
Place on s glass pizza plate or mlcrowave-safe platter
cover and chill.
T o serve, remove cover and microwave at HIGH for 2
to 4 minutes or until appetizers are hot. giving platter
one half-turn. Yield: about 1 dozen.
Note: T o microwave without chilling, reduce time to
1Vi to 3 minutes.

CREAMY CRAB DIF

t Mot Rm M , R u h , With
Othw Fmfcasss ot SI JO m K m ,

Alka-Saltxar........
Iffardent
Tablat.

~ \

With Thta Coupon ONLY
Publli 12-tnch

Maximum Formula Vitamins
and Minerals

‘•'Any hostess will Ifcll you that servlng hot appetizers to
a crowd takes lota of advance planning and preparation'.
But with the help of a microwave oven. It'a easier thari
you might think. The appetizers can be made ahead,
refrigerated on mlcrowave-safe serving platters, and
microwaved aa needed.
When preparing these appetizers, remember that the
cooking times will vary because wattage of microwave
ovens varies. A time range Is given In our recipes to
allow for Ihe difference. T o prevent overcooking, always
check for donencss at the lower end of the range. Here
are some other pointers.
t
— Before refrigerating appetizers prepared in
Rdvance, place them' on serving platters that art
microwave safe. Th is will eliminate the need to transfer
them after microwaving.
— Arrange Individual appetizers about 14 Inch apart
In a doughnut pattern on the microwave dish. That way:
microwaves will enter on every side of the appetizers,
allowing more even heating.
— W hen covering w ith plastic wrap during
microwaving, use only the heavy-duty type. Lighter
weight plastic wraps may melt in the microwave. T u rn
back one comer of the wrap to allow excess steam to
escape.
— Follow recipe Instructions for stirring, turning, and
covering. These techniques promote even cooking.
— Th e amount of food being microwaved affects the
cooking time. O ur recipes recommend cooking a dozen
appetizers at a time.

SHRIMP-STUFFED MUSHROOMS

each for

Morton Pot P io ..3 £ £ ’ 10&gt;
26-oz. Dutch Apple Crumb or
Apple or 25-oz. Coconut Custard

*2 OFF
Saute Pan

Top Your Roasts or Steaks
with Florida Fresh Sliced
Fresh Tender

Js3

With This Coupon ONLV
10-inch Mirro

Salad Perfect, Crisp Green

State Fair Original or Cheese

Hot From The Deli!

509 OFF"

Anjou Pears
(Jumbo - 90 Size)........... f t 9 1 ™
( L a r g e - 1 2 0 Size).......... f t 9 1 "
(M edium -150Size).. 10 to. M ”
Ripe, Juicy Delicious Northwest

Bose Pears

ll

Beef S te w ...........
Potatoes
AuGratin.............

THIS AD EFFIC TIV I:
THURS., FEB. 2 THRU
WED., FEB. 8, 1984 . . .

89'

2 tablespoons water
2 tablespoons soy sauce
V« teaspoon Kitchen Bouquet
1 tablespoon cornstarch
V4 tranpnon ginger
4 small green onions, sliced diagonally
Vi teaspoon garlic powder
1 pound of flank steak, sliced thin across grain of
meat
1 medium green pepper, cut Into thin strips
1 tomato, cut Into wedges
In a 2-quart caserole blend water, soy sauce.
Kitchen Bouquet, cornstarch, ginger, and garlic
powder. Add flank steak, stirring to coat. Stir In
green pepper and onion. Microwave at 100% power
for 8-10 minutes or until meat and green pepper
are tender, stirring 2 or 3 times. Stir In tomatoes.
Microwave at 100% power for 1-2 minutes or until
tomatoes are heated through. Serves 6.
H IN T : The secret to slicing the steak wafer thin
Is to have the meat frozen. Just beginning to thaw.

Publlx

1 clove garlic, minced
2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
2 (3-ounce) packages cream cheeae. cut into cubes
1 to 2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
V4teaspoon hot sauce
Vi teaspoon salt
2 (6-ounce) packages frozen crabmeat. thawed
drained, and flaked
Place butter In a 2-quart casserole. Microwave at HIGH
for 45 seconds or until butter melts. Add onion, garlic
and parsley; cover with heavy-duty plastic wrap*
Microwave at HIGH for 2Vt to 3V4 minutes or until onion
crcam cheeae; cover and microwave at
HIGH for V4to 1 minute, stirring once.
Stir In Worcestershire sauce, hot sauce, and salt: mix
well. Gently stir In crabmeat. Microwave at HIGH for lVk
to 2Vi minutes or until throughly heated. Serve with
crackers. Yield 2V4 cups.
Note: Dip may be made ahead and chilled. Serve cold
or microwave on HIGH about 2 to 3 minutes or until hot.

�*C— Evening Herald — Wednesday, Feb. 1, 1984

•

Herald Advertiser — Thursday, Feb. J, ItM

Sanford, FI.

PRICES GOOD
FEBRUARY 2-4, 1984

ALL VARIETIES

HAWAIIAN
ALL VARIETIES

CRISCO

SAUCE
'

so-«i.
size

■» m

ratio sum lows cmeioui
wow itu w ii i i iw

win om

V05
ALL VARIETIES

SUPERBRANO COTTAGE
REGULAR, STA-FIT

SHAMPOO
t-is.

— ■

B IZI

w

w

I

•* V i '. '- «•

O FF IC IA L R U LE S

SAVE 50

SAVE 30

SAVE 3 0

k

USDA CHOICE UNTRIMMED

PINKY P IG
FRESH PORH

&lt; FRYER
LtGw WATERS

GROUND CHUCK
POT ROAST
STEW BEEF
CHUCK STEAKS
CUBED STEAKS

U g q u a rto rs

SAVE 30

SAVE 24
Maxw ell
&lt;7h o u s e

Ma s t e r
BLEND

SAVE 50

Minute
Maid

ORANGE
JUICE

}

MASTERBLEND
COFFEE

SAVE 40

m

WHITE
VAPOTATOES

orange
J JUICE

H

I

�</text>
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                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, February 01, 1984; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
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                    <text>Rains Douse Fires, But Quick Drying Forseen
By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff W rite r
The rains came Monday afternoon — and none
loo *x&gt;n for Seminole County firefighters and
those around the stale. The thunderstorms
dumped 2.6 Inches on Sanford tx-lwrrn 4 p m
Monday and 8 a.m. today.
"For today we're In real good shape, but when
the sun comes out and the breezes blow II will be
dry again." Assistant Seminole County Fire Chief
fllil Klnley said. "Hopefully the rain took care of
smoldering fires In the Weklva River area."
He said prior to the rain, there were several
small fires Monday In the county, but they were
quickly extinguished

Six brush fires consumed about 10 acres In
Sanford over the weekend, but there were no
Injuries or damage to any buildings, according to
Sanford fire prevenilon officer Mike Hoenlng
Four of the six fires occurred In the 24th Place
area on Friday and Saturday. Hoenlng said the
cause of the blazes were not determined. He said
with conditions as dry as they are. they could
have easily been started by a cigarette thrown
from a passing car by a motorist.
The two other fires were at separate locations:
First Street and Park Avenue and Wylly and
Depot avenues. Friday and Saturday consecu­
tively. Hoenlng said the cause of those fires were
not determined either.

Sanford firefighters assisted the county In
battling a muck fire at Loch Lowe Preparatory
School Road Just outside of the city on Friday.
There were no Injuries or damages, acccordlng io
the fire report
Meanwhile, elsewhere In the stale, a provident
wind shift ended a tense five hours for occupants
of a mental hospital and shop owners south of
Fort Myers by blowing a raging 500-acre grass
fire away from the city.
Before the wind shift, flames approached
Commercial Boulevard Monday afternoon and
authorities ordered the 60 p a t i e n t s of the Charier
Glades Hospital evacuated
Stores In the path of the flames closed their

doors and employees scurried home State and
local police blocked off portions of Interstate 75
and State Road 82 as flames licked close to the
roadways and filled the sky above them with
noxious smoke.
The wildfire was only one of dozens that have
raged aeross the stale for days and destroyed
about 200 homes. Including 131 In Palm Coast, a
Flagler County subdivision where 400 homes
wrre damaged.
Forestry officials said two fires were blazing
Monday night In rural areas of Flagler County
despite a rain earlier In the day. Forestry Division
See FIRES, page 8A

Geneva Man
Dies After
Trucks Hit
Head-On

To Hike City's Tax Base

Faison Says
Sell Land
On Lakefront
B y Rick B ru n s o n
H e ra ld S t a f f W r ite r

Sanford should sell some Its
property along the lakefront on
Seminole Boulevard lo develop­
ers lo Increase Its tax base, City
Manager Frunk Faison told the
city commission Monday.
Saying Ihr bcuuly and attrac­
tion of the lakefront Is ‘‘what
made the city great.” Faison
recommended that the com ­
mission convert Ihr property
"Into economic development.”
Faison did not say which
parrrls should be sold, saying
the Idea Is merely In Its concep­
tual stage, but Commissioner
David Farr praised the pro(x&gt;*al
ns thr "moat Innovative Idea I've
heard In a long lime." Farr sold
about 15 to 20 acres could Ire
considered.
Farr said the public works
b u ild in g , located near th r
lakefront. could be moved, and
the city's Poplnr Avenue sewer

plant, also on thr lakefront.
could Ire lorn ditwn. moved or
converted to a smaller pump
station.
Faison also said the city could
consider entering a "Joint ven­
ture” with Seminole County to
build a sewage plunt on the lake
The city owns about 88 acres
along the lake, according to the
S e m in o le C o u n ty P ro p e rty
Appraisers Office Thai property
Includes city hall. Mellonvllle
Park, the m arina, a public
parking area, thr civic center
a n d th e la n d th e P o lic e
Benevolent Association building
Ison.
Farr said Faison's proposal
would “ take a problem and turn
II Into nn asset.” He said con­
verting the "u g ly" area around
the sewer plant, public works

Convert tho property
'into economic
development.'
- Frank Faison
The other commissioners also
endorsed the Idea
"Of course we would have to
be careful with lfir kind of
development that goes In there,
tiul I think It's a grrat Idea that
should be pursued." Commis­
sioner John Mercer said today.
Jack Homer, president of the
Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce, said "top grade dev­
elopment" on the lake would
iMMMit thr city's economy,

Im lld ln g a n d P H A b u ild in g In to

“ I’m sure neither Fran k nor

some type of development would
Increase the tux base and make
the lakefront more attractive.

thr commission will do anything
to hurt the lakefront." Horner
said.

A Geneva man W drad follow­
ing a two truck accident on state
Road 426 In west Oviedo.
Harold "B ud d y" lamg Jr.. 40.
of Geneva, died .it 10 45 a m
Monday after being air-lifted by
helicopter lo thr Orlando Re­
gional Medical Center. The ac­
cident occurred ut about 9:30
a.m.
Driver of the second vehicle.
Dr W Judson King. Oviedo,
received a hand Injury. King was
wearing a seat bell. Long was
Faison says the c ity 's tax base could be Increased If
not. according to |&gt;ol!rr.
King said hr was westbound
property, such as the vacant lots on Seminole Boulevard and
on Ihr road about one mile wrsl
French Avenue pictured above, w ere developed.
of Oviedo when an oncoming
truck drifted Into his lane.
vote
on
an
ordinance
stipulating
He said a hotel, office contplrx
Following the accident, which
or a theater would enhance (lie such.
blocked
traffic In Ixith directions.
The
ordinance
calls
for
the
city
lakefront. as well Increase the
tax tiasc and bring tax-juiylng m a na ge r to handle m o stly Iiaramrdlrs worked furiously at
professional people to the com­ l&gt;ersonnrl duties, such as ap­ Ihe scene to save tamg's life. He
proving payrolls and raises, reportedly suffered severe chest
munity.
maintaining files and records Injuries from the steering wheel
In other business Monday and handling Insurance claims
plus head Injuries
com m issioners unanim ously Tlie city manager would have no
One officer said Long's Injuries
Indicated their support for Mayor control over the departments' were so severr. "you could see
Bettye Smith s proposal that the tuetlcul operations.
Ihr Impact, head to toe."
c ity m anager ru n the a d ­
1hr ordinance would make
L o n g , w h o w o r k e d fo r
ministrative uffatrs of the police official what has f»een occurring Sr.itxurd System Railroad, was
a n d d e p a rtm e n ts
for years, former city manager a well known figure In Boy Scout
Faison could have those duties Warren "Fete" Knowles told the mtivlrs in Central Florida and
by May 28. the day the commis­ commission In March when It was Scoutmaster for the Geneva
sioners are to lake an official
B e e FA ISO N , page 8A
area Troop »837.
Hr was the 15th traffic (alullty
In Seminole County this year
— D ean e J o r d a n

Jones: SCA Didn't Misuse Funds
"A prophet is uol honored In fils own
country, the Rev. Amos Jones, long­
time executive director of Seminole
Com m unity Action. Inc., and native of
l.ongwood told the Longwood City
Commission Monday night as hr de­
fended the nll-bul defunct untl-povrrty
agency agulnst statements previously
made by Mayor Harvry Smertlson
Smerllson. at a May 7 work session,
had urged the commission to wlthdruw
Its support and representative on thr
SCA Ixtard, because of pressure from
olflclals of other cities. H r Justified Ihe
action by saying there had been an
''o v e r w h e l m i n g e v id e n c e of
misappropriation of funds" and SCA hud
allowed butler and cheese to spoil while
It was In ehurgr of surplus food distribu­
tion.
Although four of Ihe live commission­
ers supported the withdrawal. I'erry
Faulkner, who was ap|io!ntrd lo repre­

sent the city on the SCA board, said he
would continue to serve on the board as
a businessman and private citizen.
Faulkner said Monday night that he Is
working toward restructuring the agency
In order to lie eligible for funding for
S£A 's Head Start program
"I'm not here to ask you to change
your mind about pulling out of the
agency, but because I'm troubled about
the libelous and serious statements."
Jones told the commission
SCA has no |»ald employees and no
programs, but Is still chartered und the
txuird of directors Is still trying to keep
the Independent $500,000 federally
funded Head Sturt program Ihul It
formerly administered, alive. SCA has
Inst funding for Its other programs such
as weathertzatlon. surplus f&lt;x&gt;d distribu­
tion. and Meals nn Wheels
William Sadler, chief of the Head Start
Division of Ihr U.S Department of HHS.

Region IV In Atlunta has told thr Herald.
"As far us the state of Florida and we ure
concerned Community Action doesn't
exist. It has no programs and no staff."
H r said unless the hoard of the defunct
agency comes up with u budget and u
plan for the federally funded Head Start
prngrum by May 31. that program will be
shlftrd to some other group to ad­
minister.
Iktrn In Longwood. Jones pointed out
he Is u former resident and a property
owner and his mother and brother still
live there. “ I've got nothing where there
wus misuse or mlsallocatlon of funds."
Jones said. "I perceived Ihe city of
Longwood to be fulr and Just with
human concerns — I am dlaapjxrlnted
with my city. Jesus said, ‘A prophet Is
not honored In his own country’ and
l&gt;crhupa there was some manifestation of
this In the city's action.”
S e e JO N E S , page 8A

Circuit Judges
At Conference

Rev. Am os Jones speaks
Longwood com m ission.

to

the

FBI Nabs Ex-Navy Officer As Spy;
Suspect He Worked With Sailor Son
W ASHINGTON |UFI| - A retired Navy
officer dropped a paper bag below a "No
Hunting" sign on a tree. T h r FBI watched,
then nabbed him on suspicion of trying to
slip Ihr Soviets secrets that may have
come from his sailor son on an aircraft
carrier
FBI agents a rrrs trd John Anthony
Wulkrr. 47. of Norfolk. Va . before dawn
Monday at a motel outside Washington
and charged him In an arraignment later
In Baltimore with obtaining "national
defense Information for passage to Ihe
Soviet Union.”
An FBI official said the Investigation did

not end with Walker's arrest because
"we're concerned there may huve been
others Involved ." He said Walker hud
passed Information to Ihe Soviets pre­
viously but gave no details
An FBI oflldal said Walker, a native of
Scranton. Fa., who Joined thr Nuvy In
l (J55 and retired In 1076 with a top-secret
clearance, had been Involved In espionage
lor some time
"This Is long-term." Ihe official said.
'Walker has been Involved with thr
Soviets for a long time."
Conviction on Monday's charge could
S e e S P Y . page 8A

Sheriff's Secrecy Fight Wins Round

Off And Running
Chris Alt, with hat, a Sanford Crime Lab employee, visits with Special
Olympians at SWOP (Seminole Work Opportunity Program) in Sanford
before she travels to Tallahassee Monday to participate In a 1300 mile
charity run for Florida Special Olympics. The games begin Wednesday In
Pensacola and end May 31 In Tampa. Meeting with Chris are, from left,
O ly m p ia n s K e n O a v ls . C la y G o od m o nd and Shan T e r r y .

Seminole County Sheriff John Polk and
other lawmen lobbying In Tallahassee
have won a round In their fight for a law to
shroud in secrecy probes of Florida sheriffs
until after the facts are In and charges are
Bird or until the official Is rlrured.
The proposal passed a Senate commute
Monday with an amendment that would
make available Information on rases al­
ready public.
Rank-and-file lawmen are already pro­
tected by state law in a way similar to the
proposal that would protect sheriffs from
disclosure of on going InvestIgatIons Into
the tr activity.
"If I have an allegation against you.”
Folk said, "we don't give out that to the
news media until an arrest is made, so why
shouldn't we In law enforcement have the

same right as criminals — that It remain
confidential, except In the case of deadly
force?
"W hy shouldn't It remain confidential
also until probable cause Is found or thr
Investigation Is complete? At that time It
all becomes public record.” Folk said.
In promoting House bill 278 and Senate
bill 603. Polk said probes Into lop
law'mrn’s activities are often politically
motivated. And once allegations are made,
even If the lawman Is eventually cleared,
thr results of thr Investigation are not
widely publicized
" I ’ve been Investigated four limes." Polk
said ” 1 was wrong onre. according to Ihe
law." a reference to being fined $50 for
gambling at a Volusia County social event

No sentences will be handed
down In circuit court this week
until Thursday because all five
circuit Judges are In Tampa
attending a Judges' conference.
The conference began Sunday
and will end Wednesday.
Attending are Judges Kenneth
M Leffler. S. Joseph Davis Jr..
C. Vernon Mize Jr.. Robert B.
McGregor, and Dominick J .
Salfl
During the week the Judges
will attend lectures on children
In the c o u r tr o o m , la w y e r
misconduct, how to formally
handle a disruptive lawyer,
.lomestlc violence, family luw
and extradition pnxeedlngs

TO D AY
Action Reports............... 2A
Calendar......................... 3B
Classified*.................... 4.5B
Comic*.......... ................AB
Dear Abtoy.........................IB

Death*.............................8A
Editorial......................... 4A
Florida............................2A
Hospital............................. JA

Nation............................. JA
People ........................... IB
Sport*.......................... $-7A
Television....................... |B
Weather...........................ha
World............................. 8A

Rlaht Sidq
Or Tha Law
H A R D IN S D U K G . K y.
IUPII — A convicted felon
who shot and killed his
girlfriend In 1959 doesn't
think that should prevent
him from being elected
sheriff.
Although Kentucky law
bars convicted felons from
seeking office and bars
th e m fro m v o t in g .
Lawrence Dugan Is running
fo* the sheriffs post In
w e s te rn K e n t u c k y 's
B re c k in rid g e C o u n ty
because he was pardoned
two years ago by Gov. John
Y Brown Jr.
Dugan, now 61, was a
stale trooper when hr killed
his girlfriend

S e e S H E R IF F , p ag s 8 A

••

$ # «.1

�I

2A— Evening Htrald, Sanford, FI

Tu*idsy, May 31, m s

NATION
IN BRIEF
Police Blame Gangs
For Chinatown Shootings
NEW YORK I UPI) — A fend between youthful Oriental
street gangs erupted Into gunfire on a crowded Chinatown
street. Injuring seven people, Including a 4-year-old boy.
police said today.
Police believe the shooting by at least one gunman
Monday night was an escalation of hostilities between the
gangs who have controlled gambling and protection
rackets In the Chinatown area for years, officials said
It was not known If more than one person was shooting,
and no weapons were recovered, police said.
The gangs were not Identified, but the Dally News
re|x»rted Ihe area of the shooting Is controlled by the White
Tigers, a fK)*mrmbrr gang reportedly made up of Chinese,
Vietnamese and Korean members, The Plying Tigers gang
also has Inleresls In the area
The While Tigers, seeking lo gain a hold on more of the
area's gambling and prolecllon rackets, was allegedly
created by Ihe former lender of the Infamous Ghost
Shadows.

Doctors Go For Septuplets 'Strike'
ORANGE. Calif. (UPII — Patti Frualnrl'a septupletn air
"lined up like bowling pins," and doctors are prepared lo
deliver the babies two months premature In what would be
a record multiple birth If all seven survive.
The record for multiple births In which all the babies
lived Is six.
More,than 100 medical personnel at two hospitals were
prepared to help the 30-year-old English teacher from
Riverside. Calif. Equipment for Ihe deliveries, much of
which was donated, was lugged and color-coded for
Idenllflcutlon purposes
The Caesarean section was plunned today ul SI. Joseph
Hospital, Afler delivery, the babies, conceived 28 weeks
ago. were to be trundled the few yards to a special neonatal
Intensive care unit al Ihe adjacent Childrens Hospital.
Prustacl was taking the fertility drug Perganol when she
bet aine pregnant The couple, who have a l-year-old son.
bad hoped for triplets to round out the family they wanted.

Gay Judge Appointed To Bench
NEW YORK (UPI&gt; — The city's first openly homosexual
Judge appointed to u full crlmlmul court term says his new
Job shows homosexual men I bey "can aspire to anything
any man can aspire to."
Al his swrarlng In ceremony Monday. Richard Pallia. 44,
thanked his parents and "life partner" Richard Gross "for
giving me the courage to stand up and !&gt;e Who la m ."
Al the conclusion of Ills speech. Pallia kissed his mother,
shook hands with his father and kissed Gross on the cheek
us the audience rose In a standing ovation.
Pallia Is the first o|&gt;enly homosexual Judge to be named
to a full term on Ihe criminal court bench. The mayor twice
apiailutrd William Thorn, also an avowed homosexual, to
llll unexplred terms on the dvll court. Thom was defeated
In a hid lor a full IO-year term.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
U.S. Radio Programs Jammed;
Angry Castro Cancels Pact
MIAMI (Ill’ll — Thirty minutes Into Kudlo Mortis
Inaugural broadcast of Amerlcun news, commentary and
entertainment to Cuba, an angry Pldel Castro turned up
the volume on Ihe cold war with thr United Stales.
He ordered lhr broadcast Jammed.
Castro said the broadcasts were "subversive" and
Intended "In create tensions atid conflicts" and promptly
cancelled a December 1984 immigration ugrrrmrnt with
the United Stales amt threatened to quit punishing
all plane hijackers.
Radio Matll went oil the air ut 5 30 a m Monday with
five minutes of world news, part of the U.S. governmentfuudrd station's planned formal of 60 percent news and
news trialed material and 40 |ierrent music und enterlulnmetil. It was Jammed by mid-afternoon.
The agreement Castro cuncrllrd would have allowed
3.000 former |Mdltlcu! prisoners and Ihelr lainlllrs to return
lo the United Slates and up to 20.000 other Cubans to
emigrate lo Oils country each year
In return, the United Stales was lo t&gt;r allowed to deport
2,740 "excludable" Cuban relugres — most of them
lalirlrd criminals or Insane — who came lo this country In
Ihe I 981) Mat lei sea lilt.

Cats, Dog Rescued From Home
TAM PA (til’ll — Alton! SO cuts und u blind und lame
H year-old |ioodle were rescued over the weekend from the
home of an riderly woman where they wrre living like wild
animals.
Tile plight of Ihe animals surfaced Prlday when the
woman, unldcntlfed because no charges have been filed,
entered a hospital for non emergency medlcul care
I he woman said she had been raising cals for the past 24
years amt she asked a friend, who bad never been to her
home, to baik ulter thr animals The friend said when she
arrived ul the home In u quirt nclghtrorhood. she wus
sbiH'krd at thr condition id the animals und the feces-fllled
house.
The friend convinced the elderly woman to sign over the
cure and disposition of Ihe animals to her She then
contacted the Animal Protection League and Adopt A Pet
Inc., and gave them control of the animals.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Contra) Fist Ms a*tw «* l N t i s l i l

Hm O f

A D M I1 U 0 N 1

UrUwd

Nancy M C avion. Dalton*

la t W Crwl.OaUana
Frank H k.** Or*n**Clty
Ll«d* l Bowden Ganata

tie* toil Fr**m *n

Doll* I G * iio »«r
J*m #*W Slkh*y
V n ,rl* yC thr**hoc

V n h M l A V«l&lt;o)
Ir m s J W» &lt;ghl
holly 1 Sy*n Altsmenly l e » S &gt;
ioho C *ror*%*n. DaOona

DISC H A B O I t
Arihi* Har&gt; all Van lor 4
Charts* I nsman* DsBary
HokiflU HiStard. DsUana
• IB T H t
Ran*las ana Carat Bsnaniu**. a Safe? tin .
laniard

'P a r t s O f B o d ie s W e r e E v e r y w h e r e '
Nine Die In Explosion At Illegal Firew orks Plant
YOUNGSTOW N. Ohio (UPI) To his
family. Edward Malysa was a double victim
— first of Ihe area's depressed economy, and
then of the blast that leveled an Illegal
fireworks fartorv. killing him and right
other people.
Malysa s family looked on as federal
agents poked through the rubble at the
unlicensed factory Monday, trying to find
mil what set off I he explosion.
The blast left two gaping craters, one 10
feel wide by 5 leet deep and another 8 leet
wide by 3 feet deep. Beaver Township Police
Chief Joe Klnko said
Investigators from the Bureau of Alcohol.
Tobacco and Firearms were called In lo
search for possible causes, said loc al A T F
agent Wayne Lovan Sr.
"We ran speculate by walking through
Ihe scene, but w r won’t speculate." Lovan
said, lie said a cause may be determined
today.
Malysa. 23. of suburban Poland, bad
started working at the factory about a
month ago. alter a futile* search for work In
other statrs.

The Identities of the other victims have
not been released.
"There's no Jolts around here." said
Malysa s mother. Betty. "It's hard for young
kid* It’s so hard. He took the Job because he
couldn't find work.
Youngstown's unemployment rate of
about 12 percent Is one of Ihe highest In
Ohio and well above the national Jobless
rate, which was 7,3 percent In April.
"H e wanted lo come hark hom e,"
Malysa‘s brother. Steve, said afler Identify­
ing his remains. "A guy's got to live. All I
understand Is that they were making
fireworks."
The Malysa family worried about Edward
w o rk in g at the factory, despite his
assurances that It was safe. "I told him he
shouldn't be here." bis brother said
The operation apparently had gone un­
noticed aad neighbors did not realize
fireworks were In thr building.
"I'm certain It was unlicensed,” said Jim
Schmidt, assistant Beaver Township flrr
chief. "W e can t believe this type of
operation could have Itecti going on."
Mahoning County Sheriff Ed N rm rih

noted the building had not been marked as
a business.
"But If » was. he said. "It should say
Murder Inc."
The building was being rented and the
owners, who lived next door and shared the
same driveway, said they thought It was
being used to paint cars
"Th e y (the family) denied knowing about
It.*’ Rtnko said.
Windows were blown out of nearby homes
and twisted pleers of metal fell throughout
the area
"It's a disaster area Inside these homes."
Rtnko said "But nobody got hurt."
"t heard this big concussion and saw all
this black smoke." said Larry Leedy. 46.
who lives nearby "I ran over as soon as I
saw It. I knew there were no survivors."
"Parts of bodies were everywhere. 1 was
hoping somebody was alive but there
wasn’t." •wild Ken Leskoskv. another wttncss.
Anothcr witness. To m Madeline, de­
scribed the area as a "real mess. 1Just came
across bodies and parts. There was nothing
alive."

House Passes Child Care, Malpractice Reforms
TA LLA H A S S E E (UPI) — The House has
passed hills to reform child day care centers
and the medical malpractice system — the
Iasi of the mujor Initiatives scheduled for
consideration by Ihe lower chamber this
year.
The hills now will go to conference
commuters, where differences between
House and Senate versions will Itc resolved.
'Th e House malpractice bill (MB 1352)
seeks lo contain health care costs by reining
In escalating malpractice Insurance crisis.
The hill evoked biller controversy between
doctors, Insurance companies anil I rial
lawyers.
Two separate bills emerged, One. passed

last week, would abolish the legal doctrine
joint and several liability, under which
negligence victims may collect full damages
from any persons Judged to have contrib­
uted to an Injury — even If tie or she played
a small role In the wrongdoing
The other, passed Monday, would attempt
lo reduce ll\r Incidence of medlcul
malpractice by rrqulrlng hospitals lo hire
salety experts and to otherwise assume
greater responsibility for the professional
conduct of siaff doctors.
It would also require doctors to carry
nialpracilce Insurance but would create a
Joint underwriting Insurance system for
high-risk eases The bill would also en­
III

coura ge oul*of-ctiurt settlem ents In
malpractice cases.
The major difference between thr two
chambers on the child care hill ICS-SB 489)
will Ik - over corporal punishment In day­
care renters The House narrowly voted last
week to allow day care workers lo spunk
children subject lo prior written approval by
parents: the Senate would outlaw spanking
by day rare workers
The bill would Increase stale oversight of
day rare centers and Impose minimum
qualifications fur day cure workrrs. Ii would
also require those workers lo undergo
background checks — Including a check of
their fingerprints

M isse d Bus L e a d s To N e a r-R a p e O f W o m a n , 31
A 3 1-year-old Orlando woman
who missed her bus front the
Altamonte Mall at about 2 p.m
Monday, told Seminole County
sheriff's d eputies she was
(mulled and almost raped by a
man who gave her a ride.
The woman accepted n ride
Irnm Ihe mall on state Road 436.
Altamonte Springs Irnm a man
d riv in g a p ic k u p tru ck , a
sheriffs report said As they rode
along SR 436 t•&gt; U s Highway
17-92 the man fondled her
breasts He also fondled htmseli
und told her she was sexy before
parking on u private drive oil
Valentine Bond to ihe Five
Points area south ol Sanford, thr
rr|M&gt;rt said.
The woman followed the man
Into woods In llu- area where hr
rrm ovrd Ills pants and tindershnrts He pushed aside sona­
nt her clothing and ns he at*
teplrd lo rape her site pushed
him away. The man Red and the
woniuti went to thr David M
Company. 201 Valentine Road,
locail for hrlp. llu- re|Mirt said.
Sherlff's spokesman John
S|ki|hM said the woman (old
Investigators the man did not
have a weu|Min and made no
threats.

A ctio n R ep o rts
* Fire t
★ Court t
★ Police

the man Ignored his slgnuls to
slop until hr reached Lake Jesnp
Park There, when Tjornstol
approached the suspect re(MHtrdly said. "You'll have to kill
me lo get me out." a sheriffs
report said
The man's ear sped from the
park on S Sanford Avenue and
was stopped by other deputies
who hlockrd fils exit, the rrjtort
said, Hr continued lo resist and
a crowd of his friends gathered
and tried lo Intrrferr with his
arrest, thr report said
He was pulled from his ear and
am-sled at about 10:50 p m.
Sunday, Ihr report said
Alan Scolt Nelson. 24. of 511
Burton Lane. Sanford, has been
&lt;barged with aggravated assault
on a (Milirr officer, driving under
thr Influence, driving with a
suspended license, failure to
maintain a single lane and
r ip o f f
fleeing and attempting to elude a
Seminole C o u n ty sheriff's (toller officer He was being held
deputies huve the name of a In lieu of $5,000 bond.
suspect, whom Arthur Robert
COUPLE W ITH D RU G S
Rlppey, 19, of 1340 Boyer St.,
T h r drlvrr of a car. slopped by
lamgwood. claims, ripped u gold (roller because the vehicle was
drain from his neck
weaving on stale Road 430,
Rlppey told deputies the Altamonte Springs, was charged
woman, u form er girlfriend along with Ills female companion
gruhtred Ihe chain Irnm his neck In c o n n e c t i o n w i t h th e
as he worked al Ihe Mobile possession of marijuana and
gasoline station al stale Road Quuuludrs
The man was also charged
434 al Intrralatr 4 ul about
wllh driving wllh a suspended
10 30 p m. Friday.
lie retrieved a $1,000 gold license, (allure to maintain a
nugget that fell from Ihe $125 single lam- and on a Volusia
chain, a sheriffs report said. As County warrant (or failure lo
the woman fled with the chain appear In court
Police noted Hie woman »p
she rrjwrtrdly yelled "This Is
partial paym ent." the report pearrd to be hiding somelhlng 111
her hand when Ihe car was
said
The woman lied wllh unolhrr stopped The car was searched
woman In a waiting car, the amt a plastic bag of marijuana, a
partially smoked pot cigarette
rrport said.
und nine Uuaalodrs were found
In Die cur. Ihe rrport said.
DUI F L E E S * A SSA U LTS
Anthony Altlert HI. 30. and
An uppurrnt drunk driver who
allrgrdly tried lo nrn down a Amand Lisa Prescott. 21. were
Seminole County sheriffs depu­ arrested ul about 1:15 a m.
ty who wus trying lo keep him Monday They were being held
Irom driving away In hts car In lieu of $8,000 bond each.
KICK rH CHARGED
which had been parked on S.
A 4 1-year-old Sanford man has
S.iiilon! Avenue and Airport
Boulevard. Sanford, was cap­ been charged with disorderly
tured alter a chase to Lake Intoxication, resisting arrest
Jesup.
wlrh violence and battery to a
Sanford policeman alter refusing
S h e r if f 's d e p u t y D a re n
Tjomstul reported Jumping out repeated requests by the ofllcer
of the way of the man’s rar to culm down and stop cursing, s
which nearly hit him and sped (roller rrport said
Ofllcer G.I). Harrell reported
away, weaving on S'. Sanford
Avenue Tjomslol pursued and Ihe man kicked him In the

stomach after he was arrested on
Ihe d iso rd e rly Intoxication
charge. The man also struggled
with other officers as he was
being arrested, a poller report
said.
Jam es A Pierce, of 1407
lax-ust A vr . was Jailed al 9 p.m
Saturday. He was released on
$5,000 bond and Is scheduled to
ap|&gt;eur In court June 3.
DUI A R R E S T S

Michael Lee Klndrlvk, 35. of
200 Pern Park Hlvd . Pern Park,
was arrested at 2 08 a.m. Sun­
day at C ree kw ood V illa g e
Apartments. 850 Orlrnta Ave.,
Altamonte Springs, after Robert
E. Imhoff J r. of that address
reported to deputies Ihe suspect
had run over his foot while
llering from his home where hr
allegedly stole Imhoffs wallet.
$15. and a $180 watch. Klndrlvk
was also charged with petty
theft.
— Michael Martin Gallrnkamp.
22. of Deland, was arrested at
2 55 a.m . Saturday, ufter a
Sanford policeman, alerted to a
possible drunk driver In the
urea, spotted his car on U.S.
Highw ay 17-92 al Seminole
Boulevard. Sanford. ,
— Craig Stephen Rosenberg. 32.
of 305 Sunland Drtve, Sanford,
wus arrested al 2:12 a.m. Friday
ufter hts car fulled to maintain a
single lane on Park Avenue,
Sanford. He was also charged
wllh driving with u suspended
license.
— Howard Houston Harrison. 61,
of 3507 I’ark Ave.. Sanford, at
4 45 p.m. Friday after hts car.
which was clocked al 15 mph.
ran on to the shoulder of South
Park Avenue. Sanlord.
-D a v id C. Williams. 26. of 939
Villa Lane. Apopka, at 4 20 a m.
Sunday on state Road 436,
Altamonte Springs, alter hts car
crossed the centerline and
almost hit a police car at an
in te rs e c tio n . He was also
charged wllh possession of less
than 20 grams ol marijuana
uRer a small quantly of mari­
juana was reportedly found In
his possession
— Kevin Ray Demplon. 28. of
205 Flamingo Drive. Sanford, al
3 10 a m. Monday on state Road
434, Longwood. after he was
spotted driving by a Longwood
(Millceman who had seen him
earlier and warned him not to
drtve. He was also charged with
d r iv in g w llh a suspended
license.
-R o b e rt Lee Reed, 31. of 1010
S. Olive Ave.. Sanford, was Jailed
ul 3:30 a.m. Sunday after he was
found asleep behind the wheel of
his car parked on 25lh Street In
Sanford.
—Jo h n Patrick Ford. 22. of 230

Nude St. Johns Swimmers Shot At
Nude St. Johns River bathers on the Volusia
County side of the river told Seminole County
sheriffs deputies they were shot at Irom Ihe
Seminole County side of Ihe river on Sunday
I he gunmen reportedly used a loudspeaker lo
trll Ihe three Orlando victims. "Th e y knew they
were doing wrung bathing In Ihe river without
clothes," a Seminole County sheriff* rrport said
That was the u-sponse Terr)' Jean Hewitt. 30.
gut alter the first two of four shots were tired Into
a lire above ihe heads of Gregory F Brunch. 23.
and Howard A. Kuauf, 25. while they were In Ihe
water ut uhout 6 p m Sunday.

Afler the first two shots were llred. Ms Hewitt
told deputies she shouted lo suspects at a green
two-story house across (he river and asked what
the problem was. She ulso told them she owned
Ihe property they were firing at and that the men
in the water were her friends.
The gunmen responded by tiring two more
shots and making their statement over Ihe loud
s|K-akrr.
The victims rr(&gt;ortcd the Incident first to
Volusia County deputies and then to Seminole
County sheriffs deputies, the report said No
Injuries wert rejioned and the suspects were not
found

Plncswtnds Drive, banlord. at
1:43 a m. Sunday after his car
hit construction barriers on state
R tad 436. Altamonte Springs.
Ho was also charged w ith
[rosscsslon of less than 20 grams
of marijuana
— Jim m y Lowe Jr., 40. of Sor­
rento. al 1:06 a.m. Sunday afler
Ills car was seen swerving on
25th Street In Sanford
— Franklin K Haldree Jr.. 27. of
906 Santa Barbara Drive, San­
ford. at 10:22 p.m. Saturday on
Seminole Boulevard. Sanford,
after hts pickup truck was seen
weaving on U.S Hlghwuy 17-92.
Sanford.
STA BBED O V ER
G IR L F R IE N D

A 48-year-old Sanford man
was stabbed by hts wife prlday
d u r in g a d is p u te about a
girlfriend, according to a Sanford
police report.
Thom as Je n k in s , of 1305
Elllol Ave.. was In satisfactory
condition today al Central
Florida Regional Hospital after
lielng treated for a slab wound In
his side.
Jenkins told police he was
stubbed with "a large kitchen
knife" at about 10 p.m. during
an argument with his wife over a
girlfriend. Jenkins wife. Sadie,
lold police Jenkins till her with
his flsl before she slabbed him.
No charges were filed because
Jenkins did not want to pro­
secute. the reporl said.
B U R G LA R IES * TH EFTS

In two unrelated events, two
antiques valued together at
$1,850 were stolen Sunday from
two homes In Sanford
A $1,500 antique woodbumIng stove wus stolen Sunday
from Ihe porch of 2625 S.
French Ave., Sanford police re­
ported A black cauldron worth
about $350 was stolen from the
front porch of 1308 Forest Drive.
Robert Wayne Hicks. 31, of
1014 Oak Lane, Apopka, re­
ported to deoutles that $1,375
worth of Reins Including fishing
gear, life jackets aiuk tools were
stolen from a shed al his home
between May 14 and 17.
About $3,400 worth of Rems
Including an air compressor, an
air drill and other toots were
stolen from a storage shed renled by Ezekiel Dingle. 44. of
2098 E. 21st St.. Sanford. The
Items were stolen from 224
Hickman Drtve. building B. units
8 and 9. west of Sanford, be­
tween May 10 and 17. a sheriffs
report said.

E ve n in g H erald
m m wi im i
Tu«ddy. May 21. IK )
Vdl 71. No 2)7
PvSli*h*d (telly end S u n d ir. eecept
tetwrdey S* Th* lontord H *r«M .
I s c . &gt;M N French Ay* , tenterd.

fu

nrn

W a n d C l i u P * tt«* « Paid s i Van lord
Ftond* urn
H*m* Delivery W**k, »t I I , Month.
M lit 1 Man'll*. 114 U l * Month*
nr M l V**r. H I M » y M ail W r.k
I t H r Month. U K
I Month*.
I l l M t 4 Month* 111 I I , Y »* r ,
M M
Phono ( M l ) m a i l

�From Jail To Yale:

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI

Tuesday, May 11, IH 1 — JA

Ex-con Medical Student Has Bootstrap Dream Of Dignity
B y K e n F r a n k k lin f
U PI F e a tu r e W rite r

BOSTON (UPI) - Vale medical
student Jo n Parker know s
first-hand that people on the
skids have to hit rock-bottom
before they can latch onto a
dream and better themselves.
Parker has been there, having
spent 2 Vi years In prison for
breaking Into pharmacies to feed
a teenage heroin habit. Now he
wants to put his street sense to
work to help others reach out for
a better life.
If all goes well, the fifth-year
medical student and a band of
volunteer helpers will open a
storefront health promotion
clinic this summer In a poor
neighborhood of New Haven.
Conn.. — across the street from
the Yale-New Haven Medical
Center.
As Parker envisions It. the
center would olfer physical ex­
aminations and blood pressure
testing, and counseling pro­
grams for alcohol and drtig
abusers and to deal with child
abuse, rape, battered women
and abuse of the elderly.
It also would disseminate
street-level Information about
the transmission of AIDS, such
as warning about the risks of
addicts using each other's dirty
hypodermic needles. V'olunteers
would ulso refer people to
appropriate agencies for both
medical or legal assistance.
He sees the clinic as a model
for a network of facilities across
the country. It fits with his
(M-rsonal goal of practicing medldne among the downtrodden In
the South ikiston neighborhood
where he grew up
"In short, we hope to raise
America's dignity." Parker said
He Is optimistic that once
open, the storefront will catch on
with other medical and taw
students at Yale, und also draw
some university financial sup­
port.
“ New Haven Is the seventhpoorest city In America over
|(K).(KX) (Mipulatlon and It has

BUILDING
PERMITS
The Sanford Building De­
partment Issued the following
permits.
— Allan Cleaner*. M u Orlando Orlra. tor a
modi la »&gt;gn
Mar |ona Alum bough. JH0 M*r«rr*ll O rlra.
tor a acraan room. 1110 0
-C u r t Slordahl. M l Mi (Man Lata Orlra. lor a
dot Lada lane* M U
- J i m Shular. 10* Claar Lata Clrcla. tor a
Kraan anc lotura. M M
-Ja m a * Noblot root S Moll* A«a . tor an
inground » trimming pool, t i 100
— Noll * Furnltur*. M l S Frarxh A«a . lor a
mobiia tign
-Cranny'* Donut*. MOl Orlando Orlra. lor a
mob i la »ign

REALTY
TRANSFERS
Sabrina Bonne A Antomafta to Cordon A
la r i Lorana Un a] A Dattlny Spring*.
141.100
Aibon Day to Donald R Chilton. Un 141
L t Lotus Club IV. Cond . M 4.M0
Tar Mortal Inc to Ralph D Vaarman A Wt
Nancy A . L I 11 Sabal Point at Saba I Pt
U M .000
Edward T Dar&gt;d*on A Rtf Pamala to
Rebar1 A McCormact A Wt JoyCO L I H
Taboron Coro. SIM 000
Fran* J Mom#* to Linda J Wattaca. Un
111 n Royal Arm* Cond tad 000
Dal Prop ate to Sam G Florlto. Anthony M
A Wt Carman L Florlto. Un 41 B&gt; 4 Middan
Spring*Cond . U 1 *00
South Country Corp to Cantai Momat. L it
10 41 Alataya Wod* Ph I. Un B 1M 000
Howard C Gabbard* A Wt EManor to
Garald R SattM A Wt Irono. Un 111 Bl M0
Aitamonta Viliogo I AO 000
Kensington Pork Ltd to Jam#* R Sim* A
Wt Barbara L . Un 111 Kantmglan Park Ph
l l . t l l f too
Hobart M Ktith A Wt Lillian la Jannilar L
Brum lay Un S B M SandMwoad C ond,
i l l 000
Lk Homo ■I Arm* Cond to Phillip Cartar A
Wt Lauraan. Un 11a Lk MorraH Arm* Cond .
*41000
Dal Prop to Jama* J Barton Un M. Bl 1
Middan Spg Cond . I l l M0
Dal Prop ate to Candy L Barti Un I I Bl
t Middan Spg* Cond. IS ! M0
Prop otc to Grace Portman. A Rotor* P
LOOP Jr . Un 11 Bl SB Middan Spring* Cond .
U t . M0
EguitobW Ratoc M G M Carp to Wm T
TMem Jr A Sandna J
Un *0 E Dattlny
Spring* Cond. 141 000
Da.id Attaway A Wt Lari I* A Payton
Hodgat Jr DO* I . Wt Jaan A Aitort P
Hodgai. Ill A Wt Jadtn* S Un S 1 Lk Kathryn
VIII .111 «00
Joyco Yarbrough A Hb Wm C to Lout* R
Maubnor J r A Wt JunM. Un C Bl U Wok Ira
F airway Townhoutao. Cand . i n 000
Allc* Mon taro. A Anthony M Fiortto A Wt
Carman to Larry J WhirtM Un I I Bl 1
Middan Spring* Cond . tW M0
Gonorot Homo* to Chart** J Chadwick A
Wt Katharine 0 . I t IS O own wood Lota* Un

L M JB
Alton Oo» » Wm 0 Pott A Wt Boa*. Un
AM Lk LOtwt ChM V. cond . MO 100
Alton Dor M Beniamin W BMMngim A
Wt Laon*. Un 444 Lk Lotus Club V. Cond

majbb
Alton Dor to Resound L ■ I nit. Un 441
LkLstutC lub V. cand M l *00

the third-richest university." he
said. "There's so much guilt
their, with this ring of urban
decay around Yale Medical
School."
Parker said hr also plans to
use other ex-cons and ex-addlcts
as volunteers
"A t the medical school, they
can't speak the street language.
You have to takr someone from
the streets, educate them, and
pul them back there.A he said.
Parker. 31. Is three academic
years away from completing his
studies at Yale, where he Is

pursuing an M.D. and a postgraduate degree In public health
administration.
It has been a 12-year trip from
his ow n rock bottom , and
teenage years In which he lived
In South Boston's tough D Street
Housing Project and In East
Boston, where drugs got him
Into trouble.
At 17 he was sent to Boston's
Deer Island House of Correction
for d ru g -re la te d p h a rm a c y
break-ins. He managed to earn
bis high school diploma during
those years behind bars.

residents and It only needs
tapping.
" T h e y 're more motivated
They're so hungry that when
they reach their goal, they want
to give something back." he
said. "We're going to create a
ladder, a mechanism for kids
who are hungry for careers."
Parker Is also writing a book
about hts continuing transfor­
mation. He plans to call ll "From
.tall to Yule."
Hr also Is an outspoken leader
of the Boston Bass Brigade, a
group formed to help ensure the

future of the striped bass fishery
through creation of new fresh­
water spawning sites In the
Northeast
One look in his eyes, and you
sense the sincerity of a man who
pulled himself up from a trou­
bled past, drove cabs In Boston
on weekends to help pay college
lull Ion. and now wants to help
others make belter lives for
themselves.
"If you have confidence, you
can do It." Parker said. "I've
Item working on that for nine
years."

T he1980k
Bank ShakeUp:
How’sIt Going
lb Shake O ut?
In five years of deregulation,
we’ve seen more changes in the
American financial system than in
all the other years put together.
Today, banks of fer discounts
o n c o m m issio n s w h e n yo u

trade stocks and bonds. Stock
brokers offer services that
seem like bank accounts.
S&amp;Cs no longer have their
legaT W edge”in interest rates.
On the other hand, they can offer
more kinds of loans.
Even department stores and
insurance companies can get in
the act. Now, most places are going
to“wait and see”before they make
a move; but,at NCNB,we’re not.
Well keep working to deliver
the best possible service. It may
not always mean the lowest price,
but well work to see that it means
the best value. For example:

M ore For Less.
Lots of places offeryoi
money market rates, but
only one offers them along f
with other bank se rv ice s"
at special rates or no charg
VVfecall it Deluxe Banking?
and we’ve made it easier to get.
Now you can qualify by depositing
just $1000; keep a $15,000 balance
and there’s no charge.

High Rates ForM ore People.
Maybe you've thought about
investing in Certificates, but you
haven’t wanted to commit a $2500
lump sum. Now you can invest in
any certificate we offer with a
minimum deposit of only $100Q
Until this year, you've had to
deposit $2500 in an account to
earn money market rates Now, on
personal accounts, we've cut our
minimum deposit to just $100Q

M ore IRA Flexibility
A lot of people like the IKA
idea,but would like more control

United Wfcy

Hr was out of Jail one month
when hr was arrested again, hut
was allowed to seek drug re­
habilitation as an alternative to
more Imprlvinmcni
"When I learned how to deal
with myself. I was able lo kick It.
The only way to kick II Is to hit
rock b o tto m and w ant to
change." Parker said. "I fell so
good, so satisfied working with
(x-ople on a one-to-one basis and
decided that's wli.it I want lo do
with the rest of my life."
Parker said that same spirit Is
alive within other Inner city

LL4J

over their investmei it situation.
That’s what our new Investor
Option IRA Is all about. It lets you
com bine fixed-rate certificates,a
money market account,stocks, and
bonds-whatever works for you. So
com e in and let’s talk it over.

that we know of offers allof them.

A Changing Neighborhood.

What you see here Lsjust the
beginning. vVfe’ll keep working on
better ways to handle your money.
S q if you’re not sure where
your bank,broker or S&amp;L is shaking
M ore Retirem ent Benefits. out.com eseeus.
This year, next year, and long
If you’re retired with pension
after the dust has settled in the
and/or Social Security payments,
have them deposited direct with us shakeup of 1985, we’ll still be here
Wfe’li give you free regular checking, working harder than ever to b e the
free personalized wallet checks, a
best bank in the neighborhood
free 24-hour banki ng card and a free
2x5 safe deposit box for a year.
NCNB Extra Checkingfsome
places offer som e of these things,
som e offer others,but noplace

National B a n k

All UcfXJtJbni Itisunxl In SMXIpUUby hDIC

�E v e n in g H e ra ld
(USPS «*l 7*0)
300 N. FRENCH AVE . SANFORD. FLA 32771
Area Code 305 322-201 l or 631-0993
Tuesday, May 31, J98S— 4A
Warn# 0. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins. Advertising Director
Home Delivery: Week 61 10. Month. SI 75: 't Mont ha.
*14 23; 0 Month*. *27 00: Year. *51 fX) Hy Mall Week,
•I 50; Month. *flOO 3Monih* »1MOO « Months. *32 50
.Year. *«ooo.

Lemon Law
A Bitter Twist?
T h r new federal law req u irin g used car
d ra lrr* to attach a " b u y rr 'ii guide'* on the
w indow of their used cars linn Sanford auto
dealer* confused, pleased, fum ing, and u n ­
concerned.
T h e law designed to protect the consum er
from "le m o n s ’* has been In the works for a
decade: on M ay 9 it went Into effect and the
Im m ediate result Is the large black and white
form on the w indows of used cars across the
nation.
Th e re are two boxes on the form. One
reads, " A s Is. no w a rra n ty." Below It In small
print the form reads: "Y o u will pay all costs
for a n y repairs. Th e dealer assumes no
responsibility lor any repairs regardless of
any oral statements about the vehicle.1'
T h e other box says "w a rra n ty ." Below It In
small print the form reads: the dealer will pay
a certain percent (to be filled In by the dealer)
of the parts and Inbor for the covered systems
that fall d u rin g the w arranty period."
T h e next sentence on the form Is what the
co ntro versy Is about: " U n d e r stale law.
'Im plied w arranties' m ay give you even more
rights."
No dealer know s quite w hat that means.
■Four S anford dealers Interpreted It four
different w ays.
R ichard K a gun t, used car manager at
Sem inole Ford, said the law is too vague and
It will end up h u rtin g consum ers more than ll
w ill help. He said, before the law. II someone
bought a used car and It broke down a few
days later the dealership w ould llx It al no
charge. N o w if it breaks dow n and It is noi
under w a rru n ty. the dealership can't touch It
w ithout being responsible for the whole car.
So now the cars on Ills lot urc sold without a
w arran ty: "a s la" according lo the buyers
guide.
B ut E r n ie Ja c k s o n , w h o o w n s E rn ie
•Jackson's auto sales, said he llkrs the law
because the custom er can see exactly what he
Is getting. " I can stick to m y g u n s ," Jackson
said. He said he Is not the least bit bothered
by the law . " I put a w arranty on everything l
sell. I check m y cars out before they go o n th r
lot.
Steve hash of Blue Hook C n rs said the law Is
too vague. " T h e explanations of what we're
supposed to do are not co m p le te ," he Mild.
He called the Federal Tra d e Com m ission and
asked It to clarify the law for him . T h e reply:
"W e 'll huve to see wind happens when a test
case goes to c o u rt."
l-ash said the law could be u good one
because there arc m any bad cur dealers
around selling Junk.
laiah, w h o used to w o rk on a Chrysler
assembly line, suld there are no |&gt;rrfrct cars
— not even new ones. Lash said dealers are
the ones w ho will lie hurt b y the law because
they will have to foot the repair bills If a car
breuks d o w n under w arranty. II a car Is not
warranted, then people m ig h t think there is
som ething w ro n g with It.
bash said that instead of the new law.
mileage ought to be put on titles because
m any jteoplc turn the odom eters back and
dealers can not gel a clear Indication o( what
shaoe a car is In.
Not only (hat. but some |&gt;cnplc Jusl plain lie
about w hat condition their cars are In "H o w
ubout u custom er com ing in w ith a w arranty.
It should lie fair all the w ay a ro u n d ." Lash
said.
Bud A d k in s of Courtesy Pontiac said It Is a
good law. It suys e x u d ly what you get.
"E v e ry th in g Is In the open. It s|&gt;eoiflrs what
the deulers has to do," A d k in s said. "W e let
people take the curs to their o w n m echanic."
tie said.
But Bill Hicks, owner of Bill Hicks Auto
Sales In Sanford, said the law has no teeth "I
don't see a purpose In It." H ick s said. He said
the law w ould frighten the dealers Into
checking the "a s Is" box and that wouldn't lie
good for the consum er he said.
Kagunt suld It would t&gt;c foolish to take a car
to a m echanic to have It checked out because
the m echanic will always tell you something
Is w rong w ith It so he can huve a chance to fix
It und m ake some money. A |miIi U Hicks also
brought out.
In uny case the new law Is here and now
more than ever the m axim ot caveat em ptor
— Irl the purchaser beware — rings all the
more true.

u r r y i w o u ld

"Theyve got a great AGRI-BUSINESSMAN'S
lunch here. Zeke&gt;"

DICK WEST

History Depends On Your Point Of View
W ASHINGTON (UPH - William Bennett, who
apparently Is the only education secretary we
have at the moment, appear* to be unenthuslastlc about (he way history Is being taught
In public schools
I rouldn'l agree more .that unless we le&amp;rn
enough about the past to profit from our
forefathers' experience, or mistakes. In. say.
Southeast Asia, we will be unable to apply the
lessons of history to our present situation, or
dilemma. In. say. Central America.
Hui what really happened back then?
History, we nre told. Is a set of lies, agreed
upon. Olher terms that have bern applied to the
word Include ‘false," "fable." “ bunk'* and
"gossip.**
Tills may explain why there have been so
many history book covering what are essentially
the same old events.
Historians are fine us long as they stick to
names, places and dales. It is when they start
developing historical [terspectlvrs that they gel
Into trouble.
Barbara Tuchm an and other modern histori­

WASHINGTON WORLD

Shades Of
George
Aiken

B y Sieve Oeretel
W ASHINGTON (UPI) - Shortly
before returning to the United
Stales from his trip abroad. Presi­
dent Reagan exulted. "How sweet It
Is to return with a 50-49 Senate
victory for spending restraint and
no tax Increase."
No matter that Rragan s budget
was clobbered In the Senate, forcing
him to endorse:
— Military spending at a level that
he earlier termed "Irresponsible.”
— A one-year freeze on Social
Security cost-of-living Incrrascs that
may or may not have been a
betrayal of htscampaign promises
— A new lease for a number of
programs that Reagan had slatrd for
extinction and additional money for
other domestic projects.
Shades of the late Sen. George
Aiken. R-Vl.. who at the height of
the Vietnam War suggested that the
United Stales declare victory and
withdraw.
T h r major lesson In the bailie of
itie hndgrl, vintage 19H5. is that the
OOP's majority In the Senate Is
smalt (53-471 und that, without
tVmiK-riitlr help, may no4 even h e a
majority.
T h r lone defector among Demo­
crats was Sen. Edwurd Zorlnsky.
R N e li. a former Republican, lie felt
I tinl the budget drafters had
puin|M'd enough (arm goodies Into
lhr package to make It acceptable lo
I■&gt;Ml
More w orrisom e for the ad­
ministration. however, was the drfecUott of four Republicans — Sens.
Charles Mathias of Maryland. Aden
Specter ol Pennsylvania. Al loose
I) Amato of New York and Paula
Hawkins of Florida.
Mathias Is a Republican liberal, a
descendant of thr Rockefeller wing
of ihr party, and therefore Inher­
ently unreliable tor a Reagan ad­
ministration.
That does not hold for Specter, a
middle of-the roader. and certainly
not for D ’Amulo and Hnwktns,
full-time conservatives
Hut D'Amato and Hawkins, up for
re-election In states with large
IMipulatlons ol thr elderly, could not
afford to rrnege on Social Security,
even ll the president could.
Going deeper, there were a large
num ber ol srnalors who were
brought Into ru m p w ith con ­
cessions.
The budget vole Indicates that,
unlike )9H 1 when be first came to
office, Reagan does not have a solid
stronghold In the Senate on which
he can count with any confidence.

ans have been having fun with ‘ foibles" that
ancient historians revered as wisdom and valor
w hen I was In school.
Writes historian Charles Mackay: "Every age
has Its peculiar folly; some scheme, project, or
fantasy Into which It plunges, spurred on either
by the love of gain, the necessity of excitement
or the mere force of imitation."
Even so. I was not prepared to see the
Crusades pul down as "madness **
Mackay tells us "the Crusaders were but
Ignorant and savage men" and lhal “ their
motives were those of bigotry unmmltlgated.*
That certainly Is a different interpretation, or
theory, than 1 learned In school Back then,
(extbook authors ranked the Crusades right up
there with the Alamo as one of mankind's most
valiant and ennobling quests.
Maybe the history classes Bennett attended
had better textbooks than I studied. I certainly
hope so. for I have spent many of my adult years
learning that thr history 1 was taught In Merkel.
Texas, ain't necessarily so.
For Instance. It ain't necessarily true that
Texas rebels won the Civil War (read "W ar

soG fiesnoM S f t *

p r o p e r , a t t i r e 'f t *
S U B M IT T E D B Y ...

Between the States") single-handedly while
their valorous Confederate companions were
losing valiant battles to the hated Yankees.
And the Alamo' Those poor Yankees attacking
the Alamo never had a chance.
Maybe none of the history textbooks actually
cltrd either struggle as victorious for Texans,
but that certainly was the Impression I formed.
baler. I learned from the Southern belle I
married that she carried from public schools In
Georgia the distinct Impression that Georgia
rebels won the Ctvtl War single-handedly.
Obviously, she was taught a lot of nonsense.
But what can you expect from students whose
textbooks bore labels like: “ An Unbiased
Account of thr Civil War from the Southern
Point of View?" i
I never tried to apply the history lessons I
learned about thr Civil War to. say. the Vietnam
War. This much I do know, however:
If the Alamo had been In Saigon instead of San
Antonio, those Yankees who were attacking
South Vietnam would never have gotten out
alive.

s c h o o ltea c h er s ,

----------- t t

EDWARD J. WALSH

Strategic Difference

Th e current uproar over the
Rrugun administration’s pollry on
Central America features warnings
of the (Militlrul la-ft that, even as we
ohservr thr Irnlh anniversary of our
defeat In Vietnam, we arc careening
to w a r d s one Ju s t like ll In
Nicaragua "Another Vietnam" Is
Ihe rallying cry of those- of the
President's enemies who once op­
posed U S. efforts to defend democ­
racy In Southeast Asia They have
llttlr to say about thr consequences
ol democracy's defeat and commu­
nism's victory, which of course have
liecn genocide, starvation, and mil
lions of refugees.
Hut Central Aittcrlcu Is not
Vietnam, Just as communism Is not
d e m o c ra c y . F o r those m oral
equtvocators who see Ihe two as
one. tt helps to look quic kly al the
two Central American countries
which are the focus of U S. policy
today, El Salvador and Nicaragua.
Both are pathetically poor nations.
For many years they were ruled
more or less con tin uou sly by
authoritarian m ilitary or quaslmllltary regimes In (tie Latin tradi­
tion. with traders wtio controlled
large shares of the economies In
Itolh places a few were rich, and
very many were poor.
In 1979, tiowever, cataclysmic
re v o lu tio n s o c c u rre d In both
countries Jusl lltrre months apart.
In Ju ly, thr Cuban-hacked. Marx­
ist-led rHtndlnlsla Front for thr
libcrtlnn of Nicaragua seized power
from Anastaslo Somo/a The Sandlnlstas promptly cemented their
friendship with the Soviet Union.
N orth Korea and every other
country of thr Soviet bloc. The
Nicaraguan regime Indulged Itself In
fanatical ruvlngs that the United
States Is racist. Imperialistic, etc. In
January 19H0. Nicaragua was the
only country In the Western Hemi­
sphere In abstuln on a United
Nations resolution condemlng the
Soviet Union for Its Invasion of
Alghantstan.
They have to lace the voters In
In October, a cadre of young
1986. Reagan does not.
Salvadoran military otllccrs ushered

El Salvador's reigning head ol state.
Gen. Carlos Humberto Romero out
of power. and established a gov­
ernment that, while nnl an Idyllic
Jefrrrsoitlan democracy, was de­
terminedly pro-American and an­
il-c o m m u n is t Jo s e Napoleon
Duarte, a Christian Democrat once
exiled by the military, was brought
In us president lo lead Ihe nation In
a bloody counterinsurgency war
against Marxist guerrillas.
In December 19H0. the leadership
ot th r Marxist front a n n o u n rrd that

i h r y w o u ld p re s e n t n e w ly inaugurated President Ronald
Reagan with a "fall accompli"- l hr
v ic to ry of c o m m u n is m tn El
Salvador Bui the Salvadoran people
rejected I lx- rebels' call to arms
Even In their vast and miserable
(Miverty, they recognized thr Marx­
ist promise as u lie.
In Mareli 1982. hundreds ol
thousands of Salvadorans turnrd
out to vote In elections of a
conslllullonal assem bly, under
guerrilla gunfire. But vote they
did slowly. El Salvador was Inching
towards democracy, wit It U S. eco­
nomic and military assistance
Ntraragua. meanwhile, lurched
toward total dejtendence on Ihe
Soviet bloc
A n "election" held In November 1964 anointed Daniel Ortega,
a devout communist, as "presi­
dent." alter two non-communist
candidates withdrew under Sandlnlstu pressure
The United States supports the
Infant, growing democracy tn El
Salvador, and condemns the rabid
Marxist dictatorship of Nicaragua
Tha t Is as It should tie. Tw o
countries, close to each olher in
miles, In history, and in the charac­
ter of th e ir p r o p t e s --re m a in
nonetheless tar apart, across (tie
chasm that lies between powerful,
conllletlng political Ideas- fortu­
nately for El Salvador, tragically for
Its neighbor

SCIENCE WORLD

Elderly
And
Alcohol
By Shari Scales
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - Alcohol Is
recognized as a deadly force when
c o m b in e d w ith d r iv in g , but
specialists say ll Is also thr silent
killer of an often "Ignored" sector of
American society.
Death among the elderly Is often
a ttrib u te d to " o ld a g e ." but
statistics show alcoholism Is the
third leading cause of death In that
age group, says a spokeswoman for
the Visiting Nurses Service In Indi­
anapolis.
T h e N a t io n a l C o u n c i l on
Alcoholism estimates more than 20
percent of the nation's more than 2
million senior citizens — 81 and
older — are alcoholics
A large number of senior citizens
turn to alcohol late In life as an
escape from problems associated
with growing old.
"There are tremendous levels of
psychosocial stress among the el­
derly." says Jane Meier, nursing
director at Fairbanks Hospital In
Indianapolis
Th e elderly are more prone to
"physical problems, lower mobility,
loss of friends, a sense of Isolation
and a feeling of usetrssness." she
says "Our Identity Is tied up In
what we can do."
"It's something that has been
Ignored." says Professor Roger P.
Malckcl of Ihe School of Pharmacy
and Pharmacal Sciences at Purdue
University In West Lafayette.
"Th e media and the science field
have spent most of their time
addressing other Issues," he added.
“ People may Just shrug tt ofT.”
They say "It's Just another elderly
person reaching the end of hts life,"
Malckel said.
M a rce n e H la k e y -R o y s t c r .
coordinator of social services at the
V isiting Nurses Services, says
alcoholism among the elderly often
goes Ignored because It becomes
manifested In thr physical condi­
tion.
Among other reasons the elderly
alcoholic often goes untreated Is
that he Is not perceived as a threat
to society.
The societal roles that torce us to
seek treatment are missing among
the elderly. The senior citizen Is
usually "allowed" to continue hts
habit, says Anne Plnnlck. executive
director of thr Greater Indianapolis
Council on Alcoholism
Many of the elderly are not
p re ssu re d to seek tre a tm e n t
because they do not drive, do not
work and no longer have family
responsibilities. Also, family mem­
ber* and physicians often Ignore the
obvious symptoms.

JACK ANDERSON

Congress Enjoys Lobbyists' Pampering
By Jack Anderson
and Joseph Spear
W ASHINGTON - T o borrow u
Wushluginn lobbyist's apt word,
mem tars ol Congress are routinely
"puniprrcd" by tlutse whose de­
stinies they ullrct.
Here arr two recent examples of
the today's art — one committed by
a government ugcncy. the other
planned by a business group. Both
obviously hoped to win friends and
Influence people an Capitol Hill:
- Saratoga Sotrre: On May 3. the
Navy Hew Rep. Charles Wilson.
D Texas, two aides and a woman
Wilson described as "a girl friend"
to Jacksonville. Fla There they
were Joined by two friends from
Texas Then the entire party was
flown to the currier Saratoga 75
miles ullshorr. where they spent the
night as ihe Navy's guests.
The uvcrnlght Junket cost the
Navy 64,050 for the (lights between
W ashington and Ja c k so n ville ,
calculated ut 61.157 an hour.
Wilson said he will reimburse the
N a vy 6650 fur hts frie n d , a

Washington lobbyist named Annrllse tlschcnko
On the day of the flight, our
reporter Asghar Nowrouz tried to
reach Wilson for comment, then
tried again ihe following Tuesday.
Late on Monday, uccordlng to
Cntdr. Mike Cherry. Wilson railed to
say he would pay Ms llsrhrnko's
airfare.
Thrre was no estimate of how
much It coat to shuttle the con­
g r e s s m a n 's p u r t y b e tw e e n
Jacksonville und the Sarutoga In a
C-21 "on-board delivery" plane, or
lo provide overnight accommoda­
tions for the six visitors. The Navy
apparently wtU pick up the tab for
that The Justification W lU m was
on an official "orientation" trip.
As for Ms. Ilschrnko. Cherry said
the Nuvy “ was under the assump­
tion that she was a member" of the
congressman's staff. Wilson said. "I
brought her along because Molly
Hamilton |un aide) was by herself."
The other member* of the party
weie Jack Wheeler, another aide.

and the congressman » two Irtends
from Texas.
The Navy lavished Wilson and his
party with hospitality throughout —
from (lie pickup on Capitol Hill In a
Mercury sedan lor the ride to
Andrews Air Force Base to the crab
salad, assorted cheeses, beef sticks,
white wine and soft drinks served
by a rrew member on the (lights to
Florida and back.
On board the carrier, the three
unofficial guests were charged 610
uptece for dinner ol seafood casse­
role with rice und broccoli, plus
choice of eggs for breakfast the next
morning
Attempts to rrarh Ms llschcnko
for comment were unsuccessful, lit
ihe presence of our reporter, Wilson
called her und asked if she wanted
to talk with our representative. She
declined
— Pampering and Politics "A
little pampering at Saks Ftfth
A vrnue" Is on the itinerary for
political guests of the Tobacco
institute. It has offered a weekend
Junket to the big Apple for staff

1

members of congressional commit­
tees that deal with health and tax
Issues of concern to the cigarette
Industry.
The weekend wtlt apparently be
exclusive. The tobacco jreople have
reserved just 12 seats on A M TK A K s
train 288. leaving Washington at
noon Friday. June 7. and 12 single
rooms In the Regency Hotel at 6195
a night, according to the Itinerary
Alter a "legislative seminar." de­
scribed as a "short. Informal dis­
cu s s io n re co n g re s s io n a l r e ­
sponsibilities of participants." the
staffers will attend a Broadway
show
Big River") followed by a
late-night dinner at 21.
The "Utile pampering" at Saks
will come on Saturday, and on
Sunday the congressional stafTers
will discus* legislative mutters over
brunch at the Tavem-on-the-Grren
In Central Park.
Footnote: A Tobacco Institute
spokesman could not say exactly
what was meant by "a little pam­
p erin g" at the exclusive Fifth
Avenue store.

�• •

SPO R TS

Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI.

Tuesday, May 11, 1W3— JA

Upgraded Lions Face Tough Challenge
Oviedo football coach Jack Hlanton thinks
he might be throwing his Linns to the
Wolves this fall, but at least he's keeping his
good sense of humor about the upgrading In
schedule.
Hlanton and Oviedo. 5*5 Iasi year against
2As and 3As and 4As. step Into the
Seminole Athletic Conference (SAC) when
football begins in the fall. As the lone 3A
school In Seminole County (he pasl few
years, the Lions Just don't have the
numbers of the other schools.
Hu I that Is going to change Oviedo
Principal Charlie Webb said the projected
enrollment for the Lions Is 2.200 In a couple
of years, which should give Oviedo the
numbers necessary to compete with the rest
of the county.
Here are some Blanlnnistm:
* "We ll probably line up In Ihc 44
defense but It might become a 45. We're so

Unfortunately, the schedule Is no Joking
matter. It's loaded Easily the toughest In
the school's history. "We're not used to
doing that." Hlanton said about the cn*
counters with all of the county schools plus
Seabreeze, New Smyrna Beach, Cocoa.
Cocoa Beach and Titusville.
"We're used to playing five real good
teams and being able to win about half
them In the last two years, we had some of
the Bishop Moores and Cocoa Heachs that
wc knew we'd win.
small nobody will be able to tell we have 12
players oul I here."
• T h e heal hits got us It's so hoi we re
going to shrink We can't gel loo much
smaller, though."
• "What am 1 doing this spring? Oh.
mostly sending out resumes lo other
schools. I'm going lo need a Job alter the
schedule we have lo play."

Riggins Powers
Savages To Title
B y C h ris F itte r
Herald Sports W rite r
The Seminole Savages return
much of the firepower that
carried them to the ASA Na­
tional 15 and Under Tourna­
ment last summer. Add to that
some outstanding players from
last years 13-14 team, the
Seminole Eagles, and of one
particular young lady Irom
Sanford anil you've the Ingre­
dients ol a cham p io n sh ip
calibre hallrlub.
Vcrterans Sharon Bonavenlure. Jaudon Jonas and Bridget
Jenerettr were at their consis­
tent best this past weekend,
with the pitching ol Niki Burke
loff of Eagles last year! offset*
ting a strong offensive attack.
Then there's Aretha Klgglns
The Sanford spccstrr. who does
lot* In 'th e 100 yard dash
(without b lo c k s ) adds another
dimension to an already strong
team Klgglns was 19 for 33
(.575 average), scored 23 runs
and smackrd four homers this

S o ftb all
hitter, was 10 (nr 21 | 476) with
four round trippers.
Tht* Savages opened the
lourmiment Saturday with a
19 4 thrashing of the Conway
Uivehugs. Burke was the win­
ning pitcher lor Seminole while
Klgglns rapped out four hits
In game two Saturday, the
Savages outgunned the West
Orange Bandits. 7-1 Jacklr
S u g g s , a S e m in o le H ig h
Irishm an, pitched a four hitter
with no walks to pave the way
The Savaged provided Suggs
with all she needed In thr
h u t urn of the first with three
runs
T h e Savages came back
S u i mlay morning lo lose their
llrst and only game of thr
tourney. 8-5. to the Satellite
Beach Mels The game was tied
at d-4 In the second but Ihc
Mots scored one In Itir fifth and

past w e e k e n d u s th e S a v a g e s ,

Ic t d It w t i b t w o U i t h r

Khiglns slammed a home run
In th r bottom of sixth but It
wasn't enough
Seminole then had to come
b u c k th ro u g h the loser's
bracket and It started Its quest
w ith a 10-8 victory over thr
laivrbtlga. The Savages broke
open a close gamr with two
runs In both the fourth and
f t If t h f r a m e s , w it h ke y
huscninnlng by Klgglns and

G r e y h o u n d s
P i c k

U p

s ix t h .

B rid g e t J e n e r e tte
...4 h o m e rs

S h a ro n B o n a v e n tu re
...C lu t c h trip le

Jonas leading Hie way. and
held off a late Conw ay charge
The Savages then went on to
rout W est O ra n g e . 16-1
Seminole pumped out 15 hits
in that game with Bonaven­
ture. Klgglns and Jenerette
each clouting a home run and
b m iliii Whlluhrr contributed
a triple Burke was again the
winning pitcher
T h r win ov^-r West Orange
moved the Savages Into the
loser’s bracket I Inals against
the Sem inole Eagles. Th e
Eagles hail won their llrst two
games before being knocked off
by Satellite. The Savages rolled
to u 15 0 win over the Eagles lo
move Into the Duals Jonas and
Whitaker had two hits and
Je n e re tte blasted another
homer for the Savages. Another
key for the Savages was hold­
ing dangerous Corey laiwson to
our hit.
Tile Savages came hark for a
rematch with the Mets and It
was the la st defensive game t&gt;l
the tournament Neither team
scored through the llrst six

Innings and Seminole kept the
Mels scoreless In the lop half of
the seventh In the bottom of
the seventh. Klgglns led off
with a single and, with our oul,
Bonaventure ripped a line drive
to lelt tenter The ball hit the
ground In Irunt ol the outfielder
and houneed over her head for
a ga m e -w in n in g triple lor
Bonaventure
That set up a second, winner
lake all, game between the
Mi ls and Savages and tills lime
the Savagrs lelt no doubt us
they claimed an 8 3 victory and
tin- tournament tide. The Mets
scored three in ihc top hall id
Ihr llrst to tnkr the early lead
hui tlo- Savages Itouiiccd right
(Nick with three In thetr half of
tlie first. In the second. Klgglns
stroked a single, moved up to
third on a pair of grounders
and, on a grander to the second
baseman. Klgglns scored as Ihr
llelder hesitated lo break thr
He. The Savages went on to
score live In the sixth lo pul It
away.

O v ie d o c o a ch J a c k B la n to n and a p a ir
contemplate the Lions' move to 4A In 1985.

By C h rla F itte r
H c rtld Sports W rite r
Ta le n t In the Sem inole
SofltMlI Club lias, excuse the
expression, spread like wildlltc
ovrr the pasl few years.
T h r big step for Ihr club
came last year when the 15 and
under tournament team, the
Seminole Savages, made II lo
the ASA National Tournament,
the first time for a Seminole
team. The 13-14 All-Star team,
thr Seminole Eagles, became
thr first every tram of all 13
and 14 year olds In go to thr
regtoiials.
W h ile lh e S a va ge s and
Eagles have strong teams again
this season, the younger age
groups are also starling to
blossom. Case In point — the
Seminole Haw ks.
T h r softball club's 12 ami
u n d e r t o u r n a m e n t leant
Journeyed to Winter Garden
tills past weekend for (be West
Orange T o u rn a m e n t. Four
games later, there was no
doubt who the best team was.
The Huwks used tremendous
defensive piny and consistent
timing rn route to four straight
wins and the West Orange
Tournament title
"Thls Is a super defensive
team." Hawks' conch Larry
Ktssc said. "W e turned six
double plays lit lour games and
threw out seven runners on the
basepaths trying to stretch Into
doubles or score. This may la­
the team that could qualify lor

F o o tb a ll

L y m a n 's Greyhounds hope Ihe result a lte r
the huddles aren't (he same in 1985. L y m a n
hasn't been out her very long
bul we expect hint lo lie prclty
good."
Philpolt shocked Ihe track
world last Saturday by winning
Ihr state high Jump The 6-4
Junior hadn't Jumped better than

suffered through

III* height before last week bul
proceeded lo go 6-10 for the
stale tide.
Baker said he likes Ihe looks ol
Mlkr Simians at running back
along with frrahmun Ira Mellon,
who Is the brother ol Melvin

an 0 10 season In 1984.

Melton, one of the top football
players lo come oul of Lyman
Chuck Schrrlc. Chad Bemirlt
and Lake Brantley transfer Der­
rick Gulnyard are vying for
liar kfleld positions

Hawthorne Leaves Stock Field In Shambles
New Smyrna Beach. (May 18) — With
dense smoke from nearby forest fires
lending an eerie ambience lo Ihe sur­
roundings. Casey H aw thorne made
shambles of the rest of the street slock
Held as he drove the Car Suppllrs/AA
Auto Kecyellng Mustang to victory In Ihe
second annual Armed Foirces 50 Street
Stork Championship on Saturday night
at New Smyrna Speedway.
Bill Klnley was a distant second
lollowed by Lance Smith. Doug Howard
and Ted Mltchrrn After thr rare, a
protest was lodged against Casey and Ihe
351 cu. In. engine, bulll at Gerald and
Charlie's Machine Shop In Sanford, was
taken apart. The carburetor and Intake
manifold were also checkrd and every­
thing was found to be »tr*?* and legal as

p la y e rs

S o ftb a ll
Keglotials and NatInnals."
Middle Inflelders Michelle
Davis, shortstop, and Christa
Schrnrffcl. second base, along
with rlghl fielder Tonya Lewis
were the defensive leaders lor
the H u w k s . A n d p itc h e r
Christine Klsse w-as outstand­
ing. often unhltliible
S e m i n o l e o p e n e d th e
tournament with an H I rout ol
Conway with Heather Golden’s
tw o-run hornet leading the
way. Gulden rattle back to blast
a three run shot In game two us
tile Hawks ousted Kissimmee
72
The Hawks then went on lo
knock of! Kix'klcdgc. 5-3, ami It
w a s a n o t h e r S r in 1n o I e •
Koekledge m eeting In the
finals.
It was In the championship
game lhal Seminole's defense,
combined with K isses Im ­
pressive pitching, played Its
iw-st game. K ls s e and the detense behind her allowrd Just
one hit and one bnscrunnrr In
the game. Ami that runner. In
tfie third liming, was erased on
a double play
The Hawks scored all they
needed In I lie hist Inning
The next tournament lor the
Hawks Is in Kissimmee this
weekend

Benton,
Averill
On Way
To Korea

L o o k i n g

Overstreet, who was the No. 2
pitcher on L ym a n 's district
baseball championship Irani,
suffered from several nagging
Injuries last year Along with his
work on the offensive line, he
w ill play linebacker,
Leach Is the third link to what
Scott hopes will be a good
ground attack. T h r Junior guard
w as one of L y m a n b etter
blocker* last year, according to
Seolt. and hr will also see lime
at defensive tackle.
Along with the blocking trio,
the Greyhounds return sopho­
m o re q u a r te r b a c k D a rre n
Hoyrsen and wldeout Kalph
Philpolt. Hoyrsen spill lime with
senior Tony Johnson last year.
Offensive baekflrtd roach Larry
Baker said he Is In a four-way
battle for the No. 1 spot with Gib
Lundqulst. Klckey Sheets and
freshman Scott Kaddlff.
"Darren has stood out the
most of the quarterbacks." said
Baker. "O f course. Philpolt

ol

Defense Propels
Seminole Hawks

P i e c e s

B y B am Cook
H e ra ld S p o r t s E d ito r

LONGW OGU — Lyman conch
Bill Scott Is picking up the pieces
after an 0-10 season and he
thinks he's found three grxxl
ones leftover from an Injuryriddled offensive line
“ That has to be our strongest
area re tu rn in g ." said Seolt
Thursday whllt assessing Ihe
s p rlttg p r a c tic e (b u s far
"There's still not a whole lot of
size there but all three have
gotten bigger and stronger.
They've been very Impressive
with (heir leadership and hus­
tle."
T h e three — ce n te r I’at
Perkins, guard Byron Overstreet
and guard David Leach — a rr
proven performers.
Perkins, who honed his tenaci­
ty us a region wrestling cham pi­
on at 224 pounds lust winter,
will anchor the line and play
defensive tackle He Is the last of
a line of quality Perkins' athletes
to pass through Lyman. Brother
Wlule Is playing football at U C F
and brother To m Is playing
ttaseball at Stetson.

See LIO N S . Page 6A

S o f tb a ll S u c c e s s

Seminole Softball Club's 15
and under A ll-S ta r Tea m ,
opened the tournament season
by winning the West Orange
Tournament title.
Klgglns was named the Most
Valuable Player of the tourney
as ttie Savages won seven and
lost one. Bonaventure turned In
an 11-36 performance that In­
cluded two homers and a triple
w hile Jm erettr. the designated

T o

"Now . we aren't guaranteed anything. Wc
Just got to hang In we'll be all right "
The Lions return a quality running back
In A n d re w S m ith and a p ro m is in g
quarterback In John Morrow. The 6*1.
IKO-pound Morrow received a rude In­
troduction to varsity ball last year when

A u to R acin g
per Ihe speedway rule bonk, allowing
Hawthorne to score his tenth win of ihe
eurtenl season.
David Kogrra won Ihr late model
feature, besting LeKoy Porter, fastest
qualifier Lee Faulk. Greg Frocmmlng,
Frank Wood and Bill Oremovlch. Making
It a perfect score for the night, after
turning fast time and winning Ihe fast
heal. Kenny Copley, handling hltnsell
much better In heavy (raffle, look the
thunderrar main Second lo filth were
Ben Booth. John Cochran. Eddie Perry
and Howard Bragg
Bobby Sears won the four-cylinder

lea lure, with Will Sitter nk making It Iwo
wins In a row In roadrunner competition
T h r end of the Month Championship
events for ull divisions ure slated for this
Saturday night, with Ihr sujter late
models going for 50 lap* around Ihe
brlghtly-lli paved, high-hanked half mile
oval
L A T E MODELS
Fastest Qualifier Lee Faulk. Orlando.
18 888 see
First heat (10 laps)-1. David Rogers.
Orlando
Serond heat I lO laps)-1. Bill Orrmovlch. New Smyrna Beach
Feature |25 laps)-!. David Rogers.
Orlando: 2 LeKoy Porter. Orlando; 3.
Lee Faulk. Orlando. 4. Greg Frocmmlng.
Orlando; 5. Frank Wood. Orlando: 6. Bill

:« 'A I

Oremovlch. New Smyrna Beach. 7. John
Massey. Pori Orange; 8 Harold "Fat
Kat" Johnson. Sanford: 9 Arnold Hovul.
Fort Pierce; 10. Phil Welpert. Edgrwalrr.
TH U N D E K C A K S
Fastest Qualifier: Kenny Copley.
Apopka. 20.14 see
First heal (8 laps|-l. Copley
S e c o n d heal |8 l a p s ) -!
Je rry
Burbaugh. New Smyran Bead)
Feature |20 laps)-1. Kenny Copley.
Apopka: 2. Ben Booth. Deland: 3. John
Cochran. Oak Hill; 4. Eddie Perry.
Titusville: 5. Howard Bragg. Orlando: 6
Jeff Blehr. Deltona: 7. Curl Towers.
Orlando; 8. Hal Perry. Mims; 9. John
Klrkgard. Sanford; 10 To m m y Patleraon. Srniumoor.

» * * »

Sunford'n Monu Benton, a
Sem inole H ig h settlor, and
Lnngwnod's Klin Averill. a Lake
Mary High settlor, have been
selected to p la y for T r a m
Florida, the state's AAIJ Junior
Olympic tram which will be
touring Korea over ihe summer.
Florida AAU Junior Olympics
Girls Haakrthull Chairman. Ken
P a t r ic k , a n n o u n c e d th a t
A A U / U S A a n d A 11A / U S A
s e le c t e d th e F l o r i d a to
participate in a basketball com­
petition In Korea, the site of the
1988 Olympics.
"W e applied lor Ibis several
months ago, and we certainly
are exi lied lo have hern granted
permission lo go," Patrick said.
"Th is Is a once In u lifetime
opportunity and quite un honor
to be chosen to represent Florida
and the United Slates."
T h r funding for the trip to
Korru. which Includes stops In
Seoul. Pusan. Matson and the
southern provinces, Is being
provided by a grunt from Barnett
H a n k s a nd C o n q u e s t E n ­
terprises. both of Jacksonville.
In udditlon. local communities of
the uthlrtra are bring askrd tu
contribute toward the expenses
uf the trip.
Benton, who will play fur
F lo r id a J u n i o r C o lle g e In
1985 80. has been twice named
Ihr Evening Herald'm Seminole
County Player of the Year. In
U182 83 and '84-85. Benton has
hern a First Team All County
and All Five Slur Confrrcncs
selection for three straight
seasons.
Averill. who has signed on
w ith M ercer U n iv e r s it y Iq
Georgia, was a four year starter
for Lake Mary where she played
In 113 straight games.

�*A — Evading Herald, Sanford, FI.

Carlton

Tuosday, May I I . i»*S

BASEBALL RO UN D UP
\

•

Vu__ Vi:\tt

STANDINGS

A M I BICAN LC A O U C
f a il
w

n a t io n a l l e a g u e

(M t
New York
Chicago
Mrtn1rr»l
U Louil
PMIkdtlpNlk
Pltfiburgh

W
n
it
It
17
M
II

L
n
i)
14
tt
n
&gt;4

&gt;1
»
TO
IS
14
11

14
17
17
»
JO
77

os
—
ill
ns
5*§ i
471 tw
m
♦&gt;s
114 II

H *.
Mf

Wn I
San Owgo
MoultO"
Cincinnati
Los Angoioi
A tlantt
San f root m o

'

400 —
1
Ml
Sot 1
474
4tS
444 n s
Mt n s

M n A i r 'i S rtu lti
Mortroil t. Lot Angoiot I
Chkagoa. Cincinnati I

SanDWOOl. NtwVorkS

PiltitiAgA S. Houtlai I

Philadelphia ]. San FitfKlKO I
Si Lawi* 14. Atlanta 0
T w i A t y i Qomet
I All Tima* K O T l
Cincinnati (Stupor t i l
Al Chicago
Ifonlanol f II, 4 01 p m
Houston IROutchol OOI al Pit*tbu»9h
IDaLaanOAl, 7 l i p m
San Franeitco (Hammaker O JI al
Phllodalphla (Boerloy ] 11. 7 li p m
San Diego (Thurmond I Jl al New
York (Aguilera 001. 7 l i p m
Lot
Angelai
(Honeycutt
J II
al
Montreal (Giilllckton a cl. I U p m
Allanla (Barker I Jl al SI Louil ICsa

1 11,1 U p m

Toronto
Boltimoro
Detroit
No* York
Bolton
WMnaukoo
Ct»v«land

71
V
70

II
?4
U
14

&gt; m r (It arB C m ia a w ak I n
B-Aaartjr I M l l - l Sai'ta (1 11
H t r -v ta n HkCm III. YarVWe 11

RESULTS
L Pet. 0*
t4 a ll —
14 400
w
IS 571 Its
14 l i t 1
30 444 a
30 411 7
33 MY 1

W nI
its —
71
CaMornik
11 ■4 M t 1
Winnatott
If IS W
ns
Chicago
19 11 voo its
Kantat City
1? If 477 4'S
Oakland
U 30 444 Jts
Saattla
11 3S » 4 w w
T ix a t
MonAar’t RataNt
Toronto a, Chicago 1
Milwaukee at Gevelend.pprf .ram
Mlnnatola I. Botlon I
T a ia t l. Kam el City 7
Calilprnia 7. Cairo' I 7
luatdar • Oamat
(AtITImaa I D TI
Chicago (Bannltlar J a) #1 Toronto
ll t a i ) 1), 7 U p m
Milwaukee (Hlguara I 11 al Clavaland
(C ra e tS tl.7 M p m
Kantat City (Black &gt;11 al Tarat
ITa n a n a O A l.l 15pm
Botlon
(Alton
001
at
Mlnnatola
IS chrom l l l . i l i p m
Detroit lAAorrli
1 A) at California
(AAcCatkill0 II, 1 0 D p m,
Baltlmara IBoddickar a il at Oakland
(Sutton 1 a), 10 li p m
N a « York (Guidry 111 al Saatlla
I Langston 1 11,10 11 p m

•toafer i « m » UafM irami
tflM W h n U ra m r
■ A r a u i i f taut
In AaptM
m m m - l 11
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W taiprtta
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II*
l - CaBmt IIH
« H -l a i Inarm bar m i c tte*w
W M riU
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Oop

AMIIICAHLIAMI
ouy
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LEADERS
■Arm. i » f LaaPwi
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terthrw teipewai
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p e w . ' aap* - ( UP’ IY H
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riw nap LAB Im O ata
tnarrar irate - ( M l kan N
■art kai II Mona 'jet |i aannwwr Or
B tetanm* T r r e "npr Taa a

Notches
No. 314

P H I L A D E L P H I A (UP 1) Philadelphia's Steve Carlton has
recorded hts first victory of Ihe
f • **
v e t o
season — thanks to rookie Steve
v e t o 1
Jeltz" first major league game­
v eto '
winning RBI — and moved Into a
* « n*
n e pi
tie In the 10th spot on the
4 e m
all-time win list.
4 a m
n a m
The shortstops strategic hit
a e m
lined
Carlton. 1-3. and the
* m m
Phillies to a 2-1 victory Monday
Paranai Lapp* - Burn, At II
over Ihe San Francisco Giants.
Cart Ul &gt; «mv# CAMtartar Cat &gt;
lam
Kent Tekulve recorded his first
M r Mr Grot 10 am IwraOany
Prrnm Large - Gaavapa 10 &lt;•
kra
save
for Ihe Phillies
U « Ctr t Irarpr Url M V W IP I
ana*car largo - Sent Qaa 1
For Carlton, the 20 year veter­
•am* Cat
Ocuiarm* Mmn it *c*n la am
Awaraar . rap. a - Ham* Cat.
Praam w i t npaaa 0a am hgw
an left hander. It was his 314th
Hawamai On Ware r m t y r * » '
a W&gt;
career victory, tying him for
t Cam' I r i r p i CM am aaar*
Chat
W W largo - kkrtan All la
10th with Gaylord Perry on the
Clark lh P karta Or 1» m t VI V
all-time list. Carlton worked
• w ru n
T ID B IT S
Anarepi larpa - Dart 0a am
( •»« Pnr*Ht k * w t jp ;Mfn i seven Innings. Tekulve two
•carat* Pan B. kpan lan ■
onUM
Carlton's lopsided win-loss re­
“•tea MnnamklrnPBrt p ra
M Nr T -f M ir d
N
cord Is deceptive — In his last 29
Van Aaan
■ *■ ^1
tadVWf |
»7l W f
Pa-anar largo - Cornea Ml ■
Innings of work, he has allowed
•
kMB M tp*d M Tifi H » l p
&gt; .r
CAi am B&gt;w
pr 11.
(fylrvaM * * h f * i n l
18 hits and three runs.
G-man I* M l imPCM &lt;1
f M* iW+t ^
i *&gt; tM.•« to-'f
Anar car . Mp* - M l Cal 0
Je ltz delivered the game■ * * * ' + ‘'+1 N " W - i « t w i w ' l ID
CaPnt Oar 11 k a l i Tar It. Carr a to
winner off veteran left hander
PTB
■*1
Vida Blue. 2-1. following a on­
e-out double to left by Glenn
Wilson In the seventh with the
score tied 1-1.
The Giants appeared to have a
run In ihe fourth Inning, but
umpire Dick Stello ruled JefT
Leonard s drive to deep center
did not clear the fence. Leonard
wound up at second with a
double, and Carlton retired the
next three batters to end the
Inning
"Th e ball hit the top of the
of Ihe Milwaukee Brewer-Cleveland Indian game
fence
and bounced straight up.”
at Cleveland. *he first rainout In ihls season after
Stello said.
455 games.

AiMPXa* U#fa$
« to
§t anwiiy
pm
D*.* 0m
R »
-at«k &gt;*
S ’ll
• RR U ’
* ’R
Cm p t m
n os
*$•* V#
RC
n
m
‘N M FW 1*4
►a m v to
• P
TlM*
U - n O*
n to

Romanick Remebers, Seven-Hits Detroit

Cleveland-Milwaukee: 1st Rainout Of '85
A N A H EIM . Calif. (U I'll Ron Romanick
remembers.
Romanick. who was clobbered In his only
appearance as a rookie lost year against Detroit,
hurled a seven-hitter Monday night to pace the
California Angels (on 7-2 victory over the Tigers.
"I kind of owe the Tigers one for Iasi year."
Romanlrk said. "They kind of beat me up. Last
year, 1 only pitched I 2-3 innings (allowing four
runs) agalnsl (hern and I was kind of fruslrated.
"Jl was my only start last year where I dld’t
have my head In the game. I want to establish
myself with them and earn their respect."
Rob lit Mine and Hobby Grlch each drove In two
runs for the Angels.
Romanick, 5-1, shut out Ihe Tigers for fl 2*3
Innings unlll yielding a two run homer to Mike
Jjiga.
The Angels grablied a 2*0 lead In the third oil
slarler Wall Terrell. 4*1. Grleh led tiff with a wnlk,
was sacrificed lo second by Boone, and scored on
a single by Dick Schofield A llrr taking second on
a groundnut, Schofield scored when Ilelroll first
baseman Darrell Evans committed a throwing
error on an Infield single by Rob Wllfong.
Callforla added a run In Ihe fourth when Jack
Howell walked with one out and scored after
consecutive singles by Grlch and Boone.
The Angels broke It open with four runs In ihe
lllth. Kup|&gt;rrt Jones drove In a run on a llrlder s
c h o i c e w i t h t h e I m a s t s lo w t lr t l a n d G r l c h b r o u g h t
in i w n m o r e o n it h n s e s h m d e r t s i n g l e ihm c h a s e d

California's Bobby G rlch drove In two runs M onday to help
fhe Angels to a 7 ? victo ry over Ihe Detroit Tigers. California
maintained a one gam e lead over Minnesota In the A m e ric a n
League West w ith Iho win.

Terrell. Boone made It 7 0 as he greeted Juan
Berenguer wltfi an RBI single toeenter.
The loss was Terrell's first In the American
League.
M IL W A U K E E C LE V E L A N D , PPD . RAIN

The major leagues' slx-werk dry run has ended
in a soggy slareallty.
Heavy ruins Monday forced (he posl|M&gt;nemrtil

A .L . B a s e b a ll

The previous record fur an unlnlerrupcticdule
was HHR) when 44 games were played Indore a
Pittsburgh ’Philadelphia contest drew Ihe wrath of
ihe rainmakers
"It figures It would happen In Cleveland."
Milwaukee manager George Bamberger said
"W rll, I don't really rneanhal way Being Ihe first
plarg lo have a rainout doesn't help anytaidy’s
reputation, though."
B lu e J a y s 6 . W h ite S o x 1

At Toronto. Jesse Barfield cracked a two-nin
homer and a sacrifice fly to sup|M&gt;rt Jim m y Key's
four-hltlcr, leading Ihe Blue Jays tiefnre a Bat (lay
crowd of 44,715 Key, 3-2, pitched his. llrsl
major league complete game. Tom Seaver, 4*2,
lulled In his attempt for Ills 293rd career victory.
T w in a 5 , R ed B o x 2

Al Minneapolis. John Butcher overcame a case
of ihe flu to scatter eight hits over 7 1-3 Innings
and lilt ihe Twins Butcher. 4-2. struck out two
ami walked none. Curt Wurdle pitched the ninth
lo earn his first save The loser was Al Nipper,
1-3.
R a n g e r s 8 , R o y a ls 7

Al Arlington. Texas. Joe Beckwith. 1-2. un*
corkrd a bases*loaded wild pitch allowing Curtis
Wllkerson lo score the winning run In the bortom
of the ninth amt capping a Texas comeback Irom
a 7 0 deficit. The comeback equaled a Rangers'
record lor the largest comc-from-behlnd victory
ami made a winner of new manager Bobby
Valentine In his houir debut.

P a d re s 3 . M eta 0

At New- York. Lamarr Hoyt
threw a four-hitter for his first
National League shutout and
second complete game of the
season Hoyt. 3-4. drove In San
Diego's second run with hts first
m a j o r -l r a g u r hit D w ig h t
Gooden, 6-2. went eight Innings,
giving up nine hits, walking
none and striking out nine
Cube 6 , R e d a 1

At Chicago. Davey Lopes of
(he Cubs had two hits and two
RBI lo brick the flve-hlt pitching
of S c o tt S a n d e r s o n . 3 -1 .
Cincinnati's Pete Rose belted his
llrst homer since Sept. 18. 1982,
tying Hank Aaron for the alltime NL lead wllh 2.107 career
runs. He Is 63 hits shy of T y
Cobb's all time hit record
P ir a te s 3 , A s tro s 1

Al Pittsburgh. Steve Kemp
walked wllh the bases loaded
and Jason Thompson delivered
a sacrifice fly In the fifth,
allowing the Pirates lo snap a
three-game losing streak. Rick
Rhoden. 3-4, and Al Holland,
with his third save, teamed on a
seven-hitter. Joe Nlrkro. 2-5,
took the loss
C a rd in a ls 1 4 , B ra v e s 0

Players Not Swinging At Owners' Contract Pitch
NEW YORK (U I’ll — Baseball owners
luivr made their first real pitch In the
(i-mnnlh old major league contract talks,
but the players arc not swinging
In iliclr llrst concerted attempt to
strlkf an agreement with the players, the
owners Monday made "a n all or
nothing ' proposal which Includes a plan
lor uui|or league clubs lo i&gt;i»-ratc under
sidary caps
Th e Mujor League Baseball Players
Assocluiltin Issued a stinging lelmff to
i he proposal.
! “ T h r basis oT On- proposal Is a
cilslrullon of Ihe free agency system,"
said Don Fehr. acting executive director

Baseball
of the Players Association.
"!l would put us back In a position I
thought we bad gotten past In the lultcr
part of the 20th century, where they run
drtrrm lur value of services This con­
cept will not sit very well with the
playrrs."
Also Included In (hr rlght |M)lnl pro
|&gt;nsal were Ihe aliolltlon of Ihe free agent
limit and (tie frrr agent compensation
pool and an Increase in the minimum
salary from »4().(MM) lo SttO.OOO.

The elimination of the free-agent draft
would allow free agents to negotiate with
any club; however, the proposed salary
cap would limit how much the trains
could spend and whether Ihey could hire
a tree agent.
Lee MacPhall. president of the Player
Relations Committee and the owners'
chief negotiator, announced the plan ut a
negotiating session with the Playrrs
Association In New York. The owners
and players have been trying to reach a
new laIn k agreement with III I Ir- progress
since Novem ber. The old contract
expired Dee. 31. I9H4
For Ihe owners, who are projecting

Sports tanjatlcjs
d o in g lo i p o d l n g eve n t* still la
on e o l A ng e lica 's favorite
pastim e* D u rin g th e 1903 84
regu lar season , 30 0 m illio n
peo p la attended p ro fe s s io n a l
b a se b a ll g a m e s , a n d 13 4
m illio n w arm ed b e n c h e s al pro
lo o ib a ll g a m e s

BASE BALI
?0B

ATTENDANCE
A T REGULAR
SIA S0N PRO
GAMES
In m illio n i

FOOTBALL
13 4

* 1042 1943 season hgurwi

aouset tnenWuel
(•**»
C *■&gt;■*■ .gMn l « 4 l

4

« «

«

i

OeMi e*«—f

...Lions
Continued from BA
starling
y li
Kevin
Thompson went down with a
knee Injury and hr had in lake
control.
C o r u r ll Green re tu rn s al
winghack along with Gordon
King King, unr u( (hr heel
soccer goalies In Ihr area, is a
hulking 6-3 und 234 pounds.
Tony Collie returtia al rlghi
tackle unit Wllllc Gainey is ihe
Lions' liesi recclver.
"W e had 50 kids come out for
varsity and 35 lor J V ," said
Blanlon. " T h a i’s ihe biggest
lurnmit we've had "
O n e ul Blanton's biggest Itmls
has been fre s h m a n A n d y
Palmer. The 6 1. 250-pounder
was a decent ballplayer on Ihe
(rmhman team last year but
Blanton said he's amazed ut Ihe
Improvement Palmer hus made.
"A n d y just went Into ih r
wrlghtt(M&gt;m und made hlmoelt
good." said Blanlon about bis
offensive lineman who benrlqirrsors close lo 300 pounds
"It mlghl have lukrn him until
the second or third game to get
his confidence next year. Bui
utter the way he Improved, tic
knows he's good right now."
Defensively, Ihe Lions return
live Bet nell Simmons In tuck at
Sum ItnclMckrr. James Walkrr
returns at defensive end while
Jeff Joyce. Jeoe Hartman und

Fred Hill return al the other
ll u t - backing s|M&gt;ls
"I llilnk Ihe SAC will be
great." said Blanton. "I Just wish
I had 500 more kids Bui In two
more years, we'll be able to play
with them. W r just have to be
IMttrnt.
"We buve the 220- and 230poundcni around here but our
ullrnslve line has In Improve.
T h e y h a v e to go to th e
w rtghtrooin and pass their
courses. Then, they'll be decent.
"Still, most of them haven't
taken u vurnlly snap yet. so you
never know."
At least, not until the lull.
LIO N S' R O AR - Oviedo will
play Delamd In thr Seminole
Spring Jum horrr Thurday. May
30 al 7:30 p in.
K e v in Y c n t z , O v i e d o 's
hardnosed grtddrr of two years
ago. wus a member of the
three-man team which won a
weightlifting cuntesl ut Sterling
IKansua) College. Yentz ulso
played fiMXbull for Sterling's 6-3
squad.
O T H E R A C T IO N
In other spring football action
this week, Lyman will have Its
Blur-Gold game Thursday night
al 7:30 while Luke Mary will
hold Us Red-Gray game Friday
night at 7:30.
In other Jamboree action next
week, coach Fred Alnion makes
hts d e b u t w h e n his Lake
Brantley Patriots host their
Spring Jamboree Friday night at
Lake Brantley High.

combined losses of $155 million per yeur
by 198H. the key point In Ihe proposal
asks that the playrrs agree lo a salarycap. The National Basketball Association
has been operating under a salary cap
for the past two seasons
"This prn|M&gt;sul la our best effort ut
reconciling our differences and dealing
with our problems," said MacPhall, "It Is
crrtalnly not an attempt to roll hack
salaries or to freeze Individual salaries
We hope Ihe players, whose average
salary Is currently $3(13.000 will givr 11
most serious attention and will recognize
that our economic problems arr real and
require Immediate solution

At St. Louis. Willie McGee
drove In five runs lo power
Joaquin Andujar. 7-1. The Car­
dinals roughed up rookie Zane
Smith, 2-3. for five hits and five
runs In 2 1-3 Innings and
reliever Craig McMurtry for six
runs on five hits In I 1-3. St.
la&gt;uls' 14 runs and 16 hits tied
season highs In both categories.
E x p o s 9 , D od gers 1

At Montreal. Huble Brooks hit
a three-run double, and pitcher
Dan Schatzeder had a two-run
homer to go wllh his seven-hit
pitching as Montreal pounded
Ixm Angeles.
Sanford's Tim Raines waa 2
for 3 In Ihe game and scored
twice.

'Cruuuuuuzzz' Keeps
Good Natured Attitude
H OUSTON (UPI) - Fans have
culled him Hector and Victor,
und despite being umong the
National League's lop perform­
ers over his 13-year career, he’s
only tw-en to one All Star game
— and he didn’t play
Yet. Houston Asiros rightBeider Jose Cruz, better known
as "Cruuuuuuzzz" to funs In Ihe
A s tro d o m e , keeps a good
natured attitude.
"People reully don’t know
me." he says. "I grt a lot of
publicity ami people say Cruz Is
a good ballplayer, but they never
vote for me for the All-Star
game. Hut that's OK I don't
have uny complaints, especially
now,
"Four limes I've been Ihe team
MVP. You check m y stats and
th e y 'll surprise everybody.
They're as good as anybodyrise's. I'm off to m y best start,
maybe ever, a n d I'm h e lp in g Ihe
team w in T h a t Is what m a t ­
te rs ."

Cruz crrtalnly Is doing his
share In that department He
Currently leads the Astros regu­
lars with a .345 dip. He's driven
In a team high 23 runs, three of
those game winners, and says,
ut ugc 37. he's far from nearing
the end of his career

B a s e b a ll
"Gelling old?" he asks. "No
way. I'm gelling younger I feel
stronger and I still love this
game.
"Happy? You betler believe
I'm happy,"
liul superstitious? Cruz ad­
mits lie Is a little superstitious.
He says he chooses between
black and white batting gloves
dr|&gt;rndltig on how he feels that
day.
But It comes us a sm all
surprise to C ruz, who Is a
favorite of Ians In Houston, that
hr Is off to a good start. He says
in previous years, hr, like the
Astro*, hud gotten off to a slow
start.
Hts lowest season batting
average was 227 In 1973 when
he was still wllh the St. Louis
Cardinals. Hts best Rnlsh waa
1983. when he till .318 and was
third In thr Iruguc In hitting.
Uisl season. Cruz hit .312.
Bnlshed lied for fifth In hitting In
ihr league and ranked third in
triples wuh 13.
"I'm not doing anything dif­
ferent." says the left-handed
hitter whose trademark Is a

J o m C ru x
...M r . C z m a U tc n t
high step kick while batting. "1
still pAay the whole year round
and keep in good shape. I'm still
thr i z m t kind of hllter I always
was."
Astros manager Bob Lillis
won't argue.
"He nas been our clutch hitter
year after year." Lillis says.
"He's always been a great hit­
ler."
Cruz, who was a member of
Itie NL All-Star team In 1980.
says he never tires of the game.
After I he season Is over, he takes
u month off. then plays winter
huseba II In Puerto Rico up
Ih ro u f jh spring training.

�Evtning Htrald. Sanford. FI*

S P O R TS
IN BRIEF
Woes Continue For Rotary,
Kiwants Rolls Up 22-11 Win
Scoring runs hasn't been a problem for Rotary this
season, but preventing opponents from scoring, well, that's
another story.
Rotary scored Us usual 10-plus runs Monday night but
they couldn't hold down the hot bats of Klwants which
rapped mil 13 hits en route to a 22-11 victory In Sanford
Junior League action at Chase Park.
Klwants moved to 2-3 In the second half with the win
while Rotary fell to 0-5 and O -15 overall.
Klwanls built up a big lead early with nine runs on six
hits In the bottom of the first inning. Bernard Mitchell had
two hits, a double and triple, and drove In three runs In the
Inning. Saminle Edwards added a two-run single while
Leonard Richardson. Adrian Rouse and Rubin,Blake drove
in one run each.
Klwanls Iced the victory with four runs In the third and
seven more In the fifth, Mitchell was 4 for 4 with a pair of
triples to lead the way while Oscar Edwards had three hits.
Sammle Edwards and Richardson contributed two hits
each.
For Rotary, which had six hits In the game. Earl Williams
was 4 for 4 with two singles, a double, a triple and four
HBls. Gerald Morris and Vernon Miller added RBI singles.
Monday night's second game, a big one between Ball
Motor Line and Moose, was called off due to heavy rain.

13-Day Catamaran Race Begins
VIRGINIA BEACH. Va. IUPI1 — Nine two-man American
teams and three foreign teams are set to begin the 1985
Worrell 1000 today, embarking on a grueling 13-day
catamaran race along the East Coast.
Some of the world's best sailors. Including U.S. Olympic
sliver medalists Randy Smyth and Ja y Glaser, are
competitors In the 13-leg even! that Is scheduled to begin
at Fort Lauderdale, race officials said Monday.
The 1.000 mile race to Virginia Beach, created by
Vliglnlu Beach restauranteur Michael Worrel. has grown In
prestige and popularity each year, said Mike Rasntck. a
race spokesman.
For the first time, sailing crafl other than Hoble IBs —
twtn-pontooned sailboats with taut canvas decks — could
t&gt;e entered. Worrell expanded the rules to allow any
sailboat that falls within a 20-by-8 maximum measure­
ment.
The new roles spawned design creativity and Ingenuity
among catamaran builders and could unleash the
"strongest, lightest and fastest off-thc-beach sailboat on the
market." said Worrell.
Some of the race trams are sponsored by companies that
manufacture catamarans, said Rasntck It costs each team
$20.000-to-$-10.000 to design and prepare l heir boats, race
officials said
"Th e y're fighting for their bragging rights," said
Rasntck "They've modified these boats so they'll go
considerably faster If they get some wind, you're going to
see some unbelievable speeds and record times this year."
The team will) the shortrst cumulative sailing time wins
Team Rudre's. a Virginia Beach team that won the 1984
race, finished the course In rerord time — 10125 8 0 This
year, trams from Virginia Beach and nearby Poquoson will
be competing
Tw o sailors are on the boat al all times with an alternate
traveling with u road crew.
The boats are likely to encounter everything from
gale-force winds and treacherous surf to flat culms as they
slay 5-to-10 miles offshore In the Atlantic Ocean.
In 1981. a South African team was forced to withdraw
from the race when a midnight collision with a giant sea
luitle left Its boat damaged beyond repair.
The team's entered In the 1985 race are: Team
Adventure Specialists. Miami. Fla; Team African Trader.
South Africa; Team Australia. Australia; Team Burlington
Versatech, New York. N.Y.; Team Domino's Plzza-CocaCola U.S.A.. Virginia Beach. Vu ; Tram G-Cat. Seminole,
Fla.; Team Holland. Ihe Netherlands; Team LeCaln.
Poquoson. Va.; Team Nacra. Woodland Hills, Calif.

N CAA Baseball Tourney Set
MISSION. Kan. |UPI| — Arkansas. Miami. Mississippi
Slate. Oklahoma State and Stanford drew the top seeds III
the 39th annual NCAA Division I Baseball Championship,
the association announced Monday.
Th e N C A A 's Division I Baseball Committee also
announced the final 11 at large teams and the first-round
pairings for Ihe championships
Added to the at-large field were Arizona. 44-20;
California, 44-22. Florida. 40-16; Houston, 43-15;
Louisiana Stale, 41-16. Michigan. 52-8; Nebraska. 44-22;
New Orleans. 42-20. Oklahoma. 53-12. South Carolina.
43-20; and Virginia. 37-14. Miami (Fla I. 56 14. and Texas.
56-12. were chosen at large last week. Defending champion
Cal Stale Fullerton did not make the 38-team field.
Oklahoma Slulr and Fresno Stale will host reglonats by
virtue of winning their conference championships The
committee awarded the remaining the two rrglonals to
Miami and South Caroltna.

First Federal Remains Unbeaten
Draplle control problems by pitchers Joe Wiggins and
Alonzo Brondldge. and a bad day at the plate for Its
standards. First Federal still managed to remain unbeaten
In the Sanford Little National League with a 9-4 victory
over the Railroaders Monday at Weslslde Field.
First Federal further extended Its lead In the league as It
Improved to 13-0 for the season.
Wiggins and Brondldge combined gave up just two hits
In the game, but walked 10. The Railroaders could have
made It much closer had they cashed In on some of those
free passes Vince Mathews' RUI double and Jim m y
Caraway’s run scoring single In Ihe third enabled the
Railroaders to stay within two runs. 6-4.
First Federal scored twice In the fourth then Alton Dixon
added some Insurance with a solo homer In the fifth that
made It 9-4.
First Federal was held to six hits by a pair of pitchers
with Andrea Williams and Mike Billion leading the way
with two hits each.

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Bloodied Holmes
Retains IBF Title

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R E N O . Nev. (U P !) The
winner departed quickly Into the
night. On his 35year-old luce
was an lec park On his mind
were doubts u Iniii I Ills future
Th e loser stayed. On fils
25-yeur-otd (are was a small
bandage Ami a big smile.
Larry Holmes retained his
International Boxing Federation
heuvyw-elghl Mile Monday night
and Inched closer lo Rocky
Marciano's ull lime 49 0 record
with a unanimous 15-round de­
cision over Carl "T h e T ru lh "
Williams, hut Ihe champion took
a beating
He ran his record In 48-0, Jusl
one shy of Ihr mark field hy Ihe
legendary Marciano. Bui l-arry
Holmes may never gel any
closer.
"I want lo wait and see what
happens before I decide on Ihe
record." Holmes suld before
scurrying from the arena. "1 Just
want to go home and lie with my
family."
But first, he was hrudrd lo Ills
hotel room. To lie with Ills
doctor.
"Thut's the most punishment
La ny's taken In a light since t've
bern with him ." said Eddie
Futch. who became Holmes'
trainer four years and 11 I kmis
ago.
Holmes did win Ihe light By u
fairly large margin Bui hr gave
and hr took for 15 rounds. And
the efrrrl of what hr look was far
greater than Ihe efrret of what he
g*‘vr
In other words, his was a
loser's face. Williams' was a
winner's
"We respect him and we love
him ." Williams said "B ui 1don't
think he did enough lo get a
unanimous decision
“ He did a good Job Bui I Mill
feel that hr should pack It In It's

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Trailing 3-0 to the Boston
Celtics In Ihe Eastern Confer­
ence final, the Philadelphia
76ers rebounded lo capture
Game 4 Sunday. Llterully.
"We did a better Job on the
Ixiards. even though the stats
may not show It." 76era coach
Billy Cunningham said of hts
clubs 115-104 triumph. "W c
didn’t allow many easy second
shots."
T h r teams each grabbed 52
rebounds but Philadelphia held
a 21-10 advantage after one
quarter, when It rolled to a 31-16
lead Forward Charles Barkley,
outplayed early In the series,
grabbed 20 rebounds to key the
early surge
Game 5 Is Wednesday night at
Boston Garden
In the Western Conference
tlnal, ihe Lakers lead the Denver
Nuggets 3-1 with Game 5 at Los
Angeles Wednesday night.
According to Cunningham .
Philadelphia’s rebounding has
pul ihe 76ers twek In Ihe series.
"If we go up and get the next
one. which we have the ability to
do, we are talking about a
seven-game series," hr said.
T h e o n ly a b ilit y B oston
showed Sunday In Philadelphia
was Its capacity for clowning.
"W e were messing nround loo
much before the game." Celtic
forward latrry Bird wild. "It's all
right to Joke and kid around but
once you go on the court you've
got |o be a little serious. W r
talked ubout II.”
Bird, hampered by bone chips
In his tight cll)ow and a sprained
rig h t Index lin g e r, m issed
11-of-15 shots and committed 8
turnovers. He claimed most of
the credit for his had afternoon
should go to 76er forward Julius
Ervlng.
"lie was determined." Bird
said "I carried him around with
me Ihe first quarter on my back.

llF G o o d ric h
3 Y EA R B A T T E R Y

B o x in g

22 F

In ihe 14lh and 15th rounds,
bleeding Irom Ihe mouth and
lighting In see thmugh a nearly
closed left eye. Holmes rocked
the ■hailrnger with rights He
had him reeling along Ihe ropes
In ImtiIi rounds
Judge .Jerry R‘»lh scored thr
tight 143-142 whllr fudges Paul
Glhbs and Al RoihrulM-rg had
Holmes winning by a 146-139
margin UPI scored the bout
147-140 lor Holmes.
Williams's besi showing came
In Ihr llrst six rounds when hr
used his Incredible 85-Inch reach
lo pcp|&gt;rr Ihe champion's face
will* stinging Jabs. Those jabs
slarled Ihe swelling that even­
tually left Holmes' face full of
lumps.
In the sixth, Williams shook
Ihr champion up with a right
lollowrd by a leli-rtght that had
him on the ropes
LBARN TO

SCUBA O IV I
SANFORD
C U I U I B O W fO N M IN O
c a c t i c o m s o c io s t s o s * n i n i
N S W SM VM N* M U M

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21

time lor the young lions in take
over from the old lions."
Williams talked in Holmes lot
much of ilie* fight laughing and
seemingly taunting him.
"! kepi telling him. Larry. I
have In take your lltle I have to
cal I'm a hungry lion."'
And II was probably only
Holmes' pride I hat kepi ihe
voting lion from taking over

2I F

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Lyman Cheerleaders Selected
Lym an High recently selected Its cheerleading squad for
the 198586 school year. The 1985-86 Greyhound
Cheerleaders are as follows
V arsity — Scarlet Harwell. Captain: Lari Becker.
Co-captaln; Tam l Drllveau. Laurie Blanchfleld. Holly
Grinned. Carrie Haines. Kim Mitchell. Chandra Roberta.
Michelle Selber and Lauren Sigman.
J u n io r varsity — Cyndl Walls. Co-captaln; Dlone Clary.
Co-captaln: Wendy Bennett. Karen Chance. Julie Jones.
Demetrtc Richardson. Trayce Scranton and Krysla Vltello.
F re s h m a n — Renee Laurendlne. C aptain; Am y
Whitworth. Co-captaln. Karen Blertnan. Shannon Carlson.
Debby Nanus. Christ I Phelps. Deldre Saunders and Staae
Walker.

CelticLaker
Rematch
Imminent

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Twosdoy, May il, IW5

Israeli POW s Com e Home; More Terrorism Feared
JE R U S A LE M |UP1| - Three Israeli pris­
oners of war captured In 1982 came home at
dawn today to an emotional reunion with
their families, completing a swap that
resulted In the release of 1.150 prsoners
held by Israel.
Looking healthy. First Sgt. Hezi Shal and
Pvta. Nlsslm Salem and Joseph Groff,
captured during the 1982 Israeli Invasion of
Lebanon, walked down the gangplank of a
white unmarked Boeing 707. which landed
at an Israeli air base.
The prisoner exchange drew strong pro­
tests from some Israelis, who contended the
decision will lead to Increased terrorist
attacks on Israel

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Moslem, Palestinian Fighting
Worsens; A t Least 79 Killed
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — Sporadic clashes between
Shtlte Moalem militiamen and Palestinian fighters
mushroomed Into all-out street battle* with grenades and
morlar* In Beirut today, shattering a brief cease-fire. police
sources said.
Chrtstlan-Moslem militia fighting also continued for the
24th day along the Green Line dividing the capital Into
Christian east and Moslem west sectors.
The second day of Moslem Palestinian fighting came as
police and hospital sources reported at least 79 people were
hilled and 478 were wounded, many of them women and
children, In 20 hours of heavy combat that began Sunday
night.
Civil defense and Red Cross teams that entered
Palestinian refugee camps during a lull In the fighting late
Monday reported removing "m any casualties."
The dashes Monday subsided after units of the mainly
Shllle 6lh Brigade of the Lebanese army wrre deployed
Monday night to enforce a cease-fire. But new battles broke
out when Shiite Amal militias followed troops Into the
Habra and Hhallla camps to re-establish positions lost in
earlier combat, police said

...S p y
Continued form page 1A
mean life In prison.
Wnlker. who was carrying a
pistol when apprehended, was
arresled after he allegedly left
129 documents marked "secret"
and "confidential" stuffed In a
brown shopping hag under a
crumpled pile of Irash. the FBI
said.
The hag was deposited beside
a Irrr hearing a "No Hunting"
sign It: a wooded area of
W ashington’s Maryland sub­
urbs, said the FBI
A Soviet citizen attached to
th e S o v i e t E m b a s s y t n
Washington was seen In the urea
during the FBI surveillance of
Walker, said a lliter page FBI
affidavit, written hy a bureau
c o u n t e r s p y a n d file d for
Walker's arraignment.
The secret pa|&gt;ers were copies

Police Charge 18 Cents A Spit
PEKING (UPI) — Roving antl-spll squads slapped fines on
some 10,000 expecloralors Monday and forced them to
mop up after themselves on the first day of a campaign to
rid Peking of the traditional but “ uncivilized" habit.
More than 147,000 uniformed sanitation police spilled
Into the streets, tracking down hapless hackers and
charglnglhrm IHcenlsa hawk.
Sanitary workers In white coats and bonnets manned
sidewalk "Health Propaganda Stations," using micro­
scopes to give bypassers a scientific glimpse at what lives
In liielr sputum.
A daylong barrage of untl spitting propaganda rained
down on Peking's 9 million residents. Including warnings
that poured from loudspeakers along the city's thorough­
fares.
The campaign Includes the positioning of more spltoons
In strategic public places
For centuries, millions of Chinese have cleared their
throats by spilling, a habit traced back lo a belief such
sounds would frighten the "throat demons'* that cause
disease.

In 1984.
In 1974 whrn he and Ills depart merit
w rrr under Investigation for Ihc allegedly

...Fires
Continued from page 1A

BANGKOK, Thulium! (UPI) — Cambodian officials in
Phnom Penh laid wreaths Monday ul u former torture
chamber — still displaying Instruments for extracting
fingernails — on the second annual "Day of Hatred "
against Ihc toppled Khmer Rouge regime.
More Ihun 4.000 Cambodians watched the ceremonies at
the Tuol Sleug Museum of Genocide, once used try Pol
Pot's Khmer Rouge to torture prisoners during Its brutal
four-year reign In which ul least I S million people were
killed.
Com m unist Khmer Rouge guerrillas defeated thr
U .S .-backed government In Camltodlu und captured
Phnom Penh on April 19. 1975. launching a reign of terror
portrayed III the Academy Award winning film. "Th e
Killing Fields."
The Peking-backed Khmer Rouge regime wus ousted
Jun. II. 1979, by a Vietnamese Invasion that Inslalled a
pro Hanoi reglmr In Phnom Penh

sjHikcaman Al Simmons said firelighters were still
trying lo contain the tila/rs and expected lo bring
I* till under control today or Wednesday.
The Fort Myers fire, pushed by a southwest
wind. I&gt;egan to threaten the south end or the city
nlsitil 2 p m und about 1CK) firefighters from
across Lee County rushed to the scene By 8 p hi
the wind had shifted to the northeast and
lliellghters later brought the blaze tinder control
In at: urea where It jtosrd no threat to any
buildings.
Ryan Beaty, administrator ol Charter Glades,
said the hospital's 60 patients, many undergoing
treatment for alcohol or drug abuse, were being
returned to the facility.
"The fire's over for us," he said, "It burned by
Ihe property on all side* li was dose but never
touched the building."
Ik-niy said thr fire, which he estimates came tn
within 30 yurds of Ihr hospital, did no damage
The hulldlng sits tn u rlearrd urea with jMrklng
lots und two pond*, hr said.

WEATHER

Partly
cloudy with a chance of mainly
afternoon showers und thun­
derstorms. High In Ihe upper HO*
to near 90. Low near 70. Winds
from the south at 10 mph Parity
cloudy Wednesday.
AREA

FO RECAST)

St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — W ind mostly south
around 10 knots through Wed­
nesday. Sea 3 feel or less.
Scattered showers and thun­
derstorms north |wrt tapering ofl
BO ATtN O

FO RECAST)

today, otherwise a tew shown*
or th u n d e rs to rm s th ro u g h
Wednesday.
EXTEN D ED

FREM O NT C.LONO

Mr Fremont C. Long. 72. of
102 Third St.. Enterprise, died
Saturday al Ihe Veterans Hospi­
tal In G ainesville. Born In
Philadelphia on Sept 23. 1912.
he moved to Enterprise In 1945
He was a retired school teacher
and u U S . Arm y veteran of
World War II He was a member
of Ihe Burnett Memorial United
Methodist Church. Enterprise.
Ihe Sanford Masonic Lodge 62
FAAM. the Bahia Temple, the
Sanford Shrine Club, the Royal
Order of Moose Lodge 1173 of
Sellngrove. Pa., a life member of
the VFW Post 2380. DeLand.
and the Disabled American Vet­
erans Seminole Chapter 30.
He is survived by his wife,
Ruth; daughter. Mrs. Linda
Smith, Sanford; thrre sisters.
Mr*. Florence Marks. Mr*. Groce
Wontack. both of Ocala, and Mrs.
H ulh Keller. DeLand; three
grandchildren.
Allen Suittmerhlll Orange City

A R E A READINGS (9 a.m.)s

temperature; 76, overnight low;
7 0 . M o n d a y 's h i g h : 9 2 ;
barometric pressure: 30.07; rela­
tive h u m id ity : 97 percent;
winds; southwest at 7 mph; ruin:
.03 Inch; sunrise 6:32 a m .
sunset H: 12 pin.
WEDNESDAY TIDES:
D a y to n s B each : highs. 10:33

a.m , 10:50 p til.; lows. 4:IB
a m ., 4 :0 2 p . m . i P o r t
C a n a v e ra l: highs. 10:25 a m..
10 42 p.m.i lows. 4 09 a m.. 3:53
p in . B a y p o rt: highs. 4 02 a m .
2 34 p m .I lows. 9:10 a m.. 10:14
pm .

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slate attorneys or the governor. Polk said
Th e proposed law would give the
governor Ihe power lo give details of
allegations already made public by those
m aking accusations against sheriffs.
Otherwise all that could Is- released Is
confirmation that there Is an ongoing
Investigation.
— Susan Loden

slhllltv to authorize another
agency. Th e Department of
Health and Human Services Is
the funding agency and they are
very well pleased with our
operation."
— Jane Casselberry

...Faison

agreed with the ordinance but
questioned the need for It. say­
ing. "If It's not broken don't fix
It."
"But it might Ik- broken some
day." Mayor Smith countered,
saying the Informal arrangement
may not work In Ihe future with
different chiefs or city managers
Commissioner Robert Th o m ­
as. who al first disagreed with
thr proposal, said he was for It as
long as the city charter Is not
violated. The charter states that
Ihe two departments shall be
directed by the city commission.
City attorney William Colbert
said the ordinance would not
violate ihr ehartrr since It only
gives the city manager ad­
ministrative powers over the
departments.
Sanlord voters defeated 3-to-l
a referendum In 1982 railing for
the two departments to be run
by the city manager. Commis­
sioner Milton Smith said Monday
that the ordinance should not
give Sanford residents the Idea
that the city manager would be
over the departments
"We Just don't want the people
lo g e l th e Id e a w c a re
circumventing their vote.” he
said. Smith also said the city
manager should not be named
public safety administrator," as
the ordinance says. He said It
was enough lo give ihe city
manager the duties without
creating another position. The
other commissioner* agreed

Continued from page 1A
was discussing the matter. Fire
chief Thomas Hickson and act­
ing Police Chief Steve Harriett
agree with Ihe pmfiosal.
Faison told the commission
Monday, "I see no reason why
we shouldn't confirm that by the
pro|N&gt;sed ordinance."
Com m issioner D avid Farr

Simmons said ol ihr 43 blazes covering mnrr
than 1oo.ooo acres in Florida Monday night,
most were contained anc was threatening
buildings or towns.
"Most ol tile damage was Friday and Satur­
day." he said. "Sunday was a hardworking day of
keeping things under control W r'rc getting
thing* under control now."
Tw o nreflgliwrre klllrd and seven (Ireflghters
and longer* were Injured since the lire* began
erupting Thursday
Most of the lire* wrre started by lightning or by
spontaneous combustion, brought on by a
lengthy drought and record high lemperalurrs.
A 5.200 acre lire Monday In Collier County west
nl Naples threatened lo Jump It* ttor tiers near
Atllguior Alley, the main thoroughlarr through
the Everglades, said Division of Forestry
*|M&gt;krswotnan Pat Toll. That lire did not threaten
residential arras.
The stale's largest blaze, a 22.000-acre fire in
Tnmoka near thr central Atlantic coast, was
declared ellgthle lor federal lands to aid firelight"»K

"It has a jxitrnU.il for a major dlsaslrr." said
lair a spokesman for the Federal Emergency
Management Agency In Washington.

Chapel Is In charge of arrange
menls.
C A R R O LL B . P IE R C Y J R .

Mr. Carroll B. Pterry Jr.. 54, of
1093 H ow e ll Creek D rive .
Casselberry, died Monday at
Flo rida H ospital A l tuition te
Springs Born Jan. 19. 1931 hi
Jasper. Tenn.. he moved to
CasaelberTy Iron: Omaha. Neb
In 1970. He was a retired master
sergeant with the U S. Air Force
and a member of Ihe Church of
the New Covenant. He was a
member of the Masonic York
Rile Bodies and the Masonic
Blue Lodge
Survivors Include his wife.
Joanne E.; three sons. Charles
A., of St. Louis. J . Michael of
Winter Park. James D. of Rota.
Spain; three daughters. Carolyn
J .. Nashville. Tenn., Nancy A.
Spivey. Lakeland. Victoria E .
Casselberry; m other, Nina.
M u rfc e s b o ro , T e n n . ; fo ur
brothers. Sammy and Rex. both
of Chicago. Bart of Nashville.

and Carter of Smyrna. Tenn.:
two sisters. Nan, Nashsvllle. and
J o A n n Maynard, Oklahoma;
seven grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Funeral
Home. Goldenrod, Is In c h - je of
arrangements.

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C it y , S .D .; siste r, S h ir le y
Esmann. Deerfield Beach; three
grandchildren
Stephen Haldauff Fun eral
Home, Deltona. Is In charge of
arrangements.

MILTON E. H A V EL

Mr Milton E. Havel. 60. of
Sherbrooke Drive. Deltona, died
Sunday at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Sanford. Born
August 10. 1924 In Detroit, he
moved to Deltona tn 1972 from
Farmington Hills. Mich. He was
vice president of business man­
agement for W ES H -TV Channel
2 He was a U.S. A ir Force World
War II veteran and a Lutheran.
Survivors Include his wife.
M a ry; two sons, C h ris E ..
Casselberry, and Gary E.. Rapid

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son . w ho a p p a re n tly had
supplied documents to his father
on earlier occasions.
This delivery consists of ma­
terial from 'S' and Is similar to
the previously supplied materi­
al." the letter said. "The quan­
tity is limited, unfortunately,
due to his operating schedule
and the Increased security prior
to deployment. His ship de­
parted In early March and they
operated extensively Just prior to
deployment."
The Nlmltz departed tn March
and completed exercises In the
Mediterranean shortly before
docking In Haifa.
Walker retired as a chief nt
officer In 1976 after 20 years as a
communications specialist on
missile subm arines, surface
ships and on (he staffs of various
Atlantic Fleet commands where
he had access to top secret codes
and other classified material, thr
Navy said.

Ihe state."
Jones also took exception to a
previous statement hy Smrrllson
that Seminole County was In the
process of forming an agency to
take over Head Start.
"It's not the county's respon-

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ttufhne twsptf

Bitter opposition to the exchange surfaced
among 25.000 Jewish settlers who live
among 750.000 Arabs on the West Bank.
Israel radio said settlers at Klryat Arba
broke windshields and fired shots to dis­
perse a crowd gathering In Hebron to
welcome back three freed Arab terrorists.

AREA DEATHS

FO REC A ST:

Partly cloudy with a chance of
mainly afternoon und evening
ihundrrstorm* except becoming
mostly fair north Saturday.
Lows in 60s north and 70s
south. Illgha upper HOs to lower
90s

STOCKS
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m, H+Itmnst Amw wwi o4IstwriSM On W i

Florida sheriffs are subject lo probes by

...Jones

the Israeli government. The Popular Front
for the Liberation of Palestine flew the three
Israelis from Damascus. Syria, to Geneva.
Switzerland, while Israel flew 394 manacled
Palestinians to Geneva for flights to Tripoli.
Libya, and released 150 Shiites at the
Syrian border town of Kuneltra and the
remaining 606 on the occupied West Bank.

drive from his home tn Norfolk.
Va.. to a secluded Maryland
wood.
The wood Is within the 25-mlle
radius of Washington In which
Soviet officials are permitted
w i l l : o u t s e e k in g s p e c ia l
permission.
Inside the bag. the affidavit
said, was trash and a sealed
envelope that held documents
containing Information about
the d e p lo y m e n t of S ovie t
warships In the Mediterranean
Sea and movements of Soviet
merchant marine vessels."
Such Information would Ire
known lo Ihr Soviets, but not
how It was gathered. Recon­
naissance planes aboard aircraft
carriers collect Intelligence on
the w hereabouts of Soviet
warship*.
Also In the envelope was a
Irtter that thr FBI said Indicated
Walker was working with his

Improper transfer of Ihe title to a depart­
ment vehicle, I’olk said Gov. Reubln
Askew refused lo Issue a statement
clearing him or his men even though slate
Investigators found insufficient evidence to
tiring charges.

racism."
C ity C o m m issio n e r L a rry
Goldberg lold Jones Ihe city's
decision to withdraw was not
Continued from page 1A
based on Smerllson's statement
"I was appalled and grieved to or racism, but the mayor didn’t
read of a man I have a great deal respond to Jones' remarks
of respect for (Smrrllson) and
"I have a master's degree from
one who formerly represented Yale." Jones said. " I didn't need
the c ity on m y hoard and to come back to Sem inole
statements attributed lo him In County to work for a poverty
th r p u p r r s that S C A had
program. I have had a lot ul'
tnlsnused or misappropriated other offers and have turned
funds.” Jones said, "t categori­ them down I have been execu­
cally deny this and t want tn tive director for 17 years
know where the evidence la."
" I ' m not c o n c e rn e d lo r
" I don't think anything hap- myself." he w hl. "I'm concerned
pened In the agency, which was lor those kids who Ijenefll Irani
not honorable." Jones said, but
Itir Head Start program The
somethings happened In the Head Start program (oprratrd by
agency that w rrr |ml!!lcal and SCAI In Seminole County was
there might havr been some died as one of the better ones In

'Day Of Hatred' Observed

WEATHKRi

There was no Immediate In­
dication whether the younger
Widker was arrested or whether
he will be questioned In Haifa or
rrl timed to the United States.
In Norfolk, FBI assistant
special agent Lee Quick said
Walker's home, houseboat and
business — a detective agency In
Norfolk — were searched late
Monday afternoon. Quick would
not reveal what was found In the
searches.
T h e affidavit said agents
followed Walker on the 250-mllr

Continued from page 1A

PEKING (UPI) — Peking officials pledged to severely
punish soccer funs arrrslcd after a weekend riot In which
30 policemen were beulen ami four seriously wounded, the
China Dully newspaper said loday.
The officials said the angry rampage by Peking soccer
fans Sunday night following China's 2-1 loss to Hong Kong
In a World Cup qualifying match was the capital's worst
riot In 30 years.
Peking public security officials said they will use the
Incident as u "negative example," hinting the 127 people
detained lor doting will receive extremely harsh aenlencea
for bringing "shame in the nation “
During the riot, molts of Chlnrse surged out of Peking's
80,000-seat Workers' Stadium attacking foreigners,
smashing windows and overturning car*. The China Dally
said 30 policemen were beatrn and four werr seriously
wounded as they attempted lo control a frenzied gang of
youths who were surrounding buses, smashing In their
windows and forcing passengers to flee In panic.

NATIONAL

nl rlasslllcd doc uments "which
appear to come fro m " the
aircraft carrier Nlmltz. the af­
fidavit said
The Navy said Walker's son.
Michael l-ance Walker. 22. of
Vallejo, Calif., was aboard the
Nlmltz. the 98.000 ton flagship
of the Navy's nuclear powered
carrier force, which was In Haifa.
Israel.

...Sheriff

Rioters Face Harsh Punishment

Showers and thunderstorm ,
some with hall, were scattered
from the Rockies lo the southern
Plains and across the Great
l^tkes and Southeast. Pulchy low
clouds and coastal fog reduced
visibility In nortwest California
loday. In Alaska an Ice Jam flood
watch was posted for Circle City
on the Yukon River. The Ice Jam
funned Sunday. flooding part of
an airstrip and campgrounds.

Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin, on hand
for the soldiers' return, defended the
government's action, saying "we have done
what we should have done."
"It is my responsibility to bring back
borne every soldier who was sent to war by
this government, even though the price Is
high." Rabin said.
The complex secret agreement was
reached In April after three years of
Austrian-mediated negotiations between
Israel and the Syrian-backed Popular Front
for the Liberation of Palestine-General
Command, headed by Ahmed Jlbrtl
The swap was supervised by the Interna­
tional Red Cross under tight censorship by

-u
Croat

d u tn

You Won't Walk Away Empty
Handed If You Don’t Like
Our Price We Will Negotiate.

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Sun. 10 *

ATCHLEY
SERVICE
r e n d e r l o v in g

CARE
.831-3101
.1 0 * 0 * 0 0 0

1 D A Y
S E R V IC E
FREE Estim ate
SEMINOLE
SEW &amp; VAC

322 9411
C0O M I0 1100 A

LAX! o u r

slvo.

�PEOPLE
Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Tuesday. May I I , 1 M J -1 B

Obscure Condolences Create
Added Burden For Bereaved
leading up to National Secre­
tary's Day. one would have to be
deaf, dumb and blind nol to
D e a r know about this occasion of
recognition.
I work for a woman executive
A b b y who
was so Insensitive that she
called me and wtshed me a
"Happy Secretary's Day" over
the telephone! No flowers, no
outside, but every evening
lunch, no nothing! She might as
someone drops by lo visit That
well have slapped me In the face!
means we have to stop what
I have put up with rude, In­
we're doing and s|&gt;end anywhere
sensitive and bllchv behavior
Imm half an hour to two hours
from this woman, anti this Is the
with the chatty neighbors, The recognition I get.
only way to gel away Is to make
AH ol those bosses who chose '
some excuse to go back In the to Ignore their secretaries this
house — then we get nothing week, simply because Ihry are
done.
too cheap, should take a long,
I get (he pickling stories, and
hard look In Ihr mirror. Are you
my husband gels lo hear about worth working for? Would you
somebody's carburetor. Every like lo work for someone like
time we show ourselves outside, yourself? Is the price of a lunch
we get company.
or u few flowers worth losing
Please advise us We don't your "right bund"? When you
want to make any enemies — consider all of the work that n
|ust distant friend*.
secretary does In the course of
REA D T TO SC R E A M IN IOWA
one day. It Is a small price
Indeed.
H IS G RIEV IN G P A R E N T S
DEAR R E A D Y : People who
Happy Secretary's Day to you.
write wiih this kind of problem to o . Boss! I'm looking for a belter
D EA R P A R E N T S: Your letter usually do so because they're too
place to work.
will get lop hilling In this UinUl to do what they know they
F R U S T R A T E D IN PH O EN IX
column
have to do In order to keep
D E A R A B B Y : lit recommen­
Headers, please sign your others from lrn|Mislngon then)
cards with your llrsi and last
He assertive! When friendly ding that a small town newspa­
n a m e s , and in c lu d e y o u r neighbors wander over to visit per editor leave bad alone, you
addresses
while you're working, al the risk quoted his disastrous attempts
And florists, il the senders of appearing Inhospitable, do not to correct a tyimgraphlcal error
On my side of the Atlantic, we
don’t Include this Information, give them the big hello, Instead,
please suggest tt when (lowers keep right on working, and have a pit liter example of the
are ordered. What a help It without looking up. say. "I wish same problem:
A n e d ito r a p o lo g iz e s lo
would Ik* to the tiereaved fami­ 1 had time to visit, but I'm
lies who want to express their determined lo finish this. Let's readers "We very much regret
gratitude promptly.
make It another time. OK?" And our error In yesterday’s edition
In which wc most unfortunately
keep working.
D EA R A B B Y : Our neighbors
P S. You prolHibly won't follow referred to the defective branch
of the police force. We meant, of
.ire lovely people, hut we work this advice — but you asked
course, the detective branch of
all day. and are the youngest
D EA R A B B Y : With all ol the the police farce."
people In our area. This time of
A B R IT IN PA SA D EN A
year we have a lot of things lo do advertising and prom otions

Terentiy
suffereti the loss of u teen-aged
son — a dearly loved, popular
boy. Hi* entire school went Into
mourning, and numerous floral
arrangements from his friends
were sent. Many were from
people known to us. but some
were nol.
This outpouring of love and
affection did. however, present a
minor problem We had land are
still having! a difficult time
trying lo thank the proper peo­
ple. (W e d o n 't know w ho
"Johnnie and Sue" are. And
" J i m m y a n d H a y " a re
mysteries, as are "The Three
Muskalrers.")
Abby, please ask your readers
to include their full names and
addresses with their loving
messages when they send flow­
ers. It would make It so much
caster for us lo thank them.
There are so many details that
must be attended to at a time
like this. It would help so much.
Thank you.Abby
D EA R

Edna Scott and William I
White were married April 20 at
the Greater Ml. Zion MKxIonary
Baptist Church. Sanlord The
Rev. James Lynn performed the
double ring ceremony.
The bride Is the daughter of
Mrs Eula Mae Scott. Sanford
The bridegroom Is the son of
Mrs, Ruby White. Sanford, and
the grandson ol Mrs. James
Simmons.
Given In marriage by her
brother. Kardell V. Scott, the
bride chose for her vows a sheer
.p o ly e s te r gow n w ith lace
flounces. The fitted bodice, fash
toned with a modified Queen
Anne neckline, was accented
with simulated pearls and se­
quins. The Chantilly lace klrt
cascaded Into a graceful sweep­
ing train Her headpiece was a
classic lace bridal hat accented
with a veil of Imported Illusion,
pearls and sequins She carried a
bouquet of whltr carnations and
pink sweetheart roses with while
satin streamers
Earthu S Joseph attended her
sister as matron of honor She
wore a soft pink sheer formal
length gown enhanced with
schtffll embroidery, an Illusion
net front, long sheer sleeves and
a flared skirt with flounced back

Mr. ond Mrs. W illiam I. Whit*

that featured a bustle-effect. She
curried a bouquet of white
carnations with baby's breath
a n d p in k a n d b u r g u n d y
si reamers.
Th e b rid esm aids. Eva S.
Phillips and Thelma S Rivas,
sisters ol the bride, were gowned
Identically to the honor atten­
dant.
■test man was Warren Boston
Sr . brother-in-law ol the groom.
Groomsmen were Larry White,
brother ot the groom, and Uunvon Voting
The f)"wer girl was Darnlsha

McIntyre, niece of the bride
S o lo is ts were Willie J . While,
brother ol the groom, and Royer
Graham. Ear! E Mlnolt was the
organist.
The reception w-as held al
C astle lire wet C o m m u n ity
Center
The newlyweds are making
their home In Sanlord where the
bride Is receptionist lor the
Seminole County School Board
administrative otllce The groom
Is employed as a supervisor by
Cardinal Industries Inc

TONIGHT'S TV
TUESDAY
FVfMMQ
6:00
B H 'i j i p t p f
tD*
/ lihrer
ncwshour
(D id lavish!

« swsirr
60S
12 SCVfSLY Htu.suucs
6 30
Q T nsc news
(X O CM NIWS
0 O ASCNcwaq
If (Ml aljcc
annoooo times
6:35
12 DOMES RYLE
700
O f u n or the cimtusy
III a PM MAQADNC furor
P
i • crOM &lt;Ourlry br­
evet***from Fkrst. Mich

’ OJC0PAS0Y
U imi too close ros com­
post ANw «r omotw) cw camp*,
ny go** an link* J*ckH I totcwl 10
l*k* ham* 1100.000 Nan IFn b(n*
»n*&gt;* M M it i

CDt*0|NATURE OPTHINOS
® |«|HAPPY DAYJ ADAH
7:05
11 SANTOSOAMOSON
7:30
0 CDIHTIRTAJNMIHT tomdht
atilt Joann* WooOawd.
HoPtacod HantniM of Macti
If) O WHEEL OPFORTLNI
(7? O I MO.OOO NAME that
TUNE
If (Mj SCNSOH
(Sid AU WTHEfAMA.T
7:35
12 FORTRA/T or AWESKA OK­
LAHOMA
600
0 CD a-teaaj
(]) o YEARBOOK CLASS or
1MT CWMxMw* Id* AU*do Pa­
ine* OaPy and Bally Tltoma*
totrad b, racotdmg at tala Naiatw
Cot*. fr* r»* van and 1** Four
Saaaora ts* (out t o d and Judy
Coats tooan avat-atg of m a c and
comady racasng tr* pao«M paoa*
and O ta-n isai wmm poptAai I I
)B irt ago
(7) O ONE TOO MANY Ti****^.
acrool *t*nda p * Ka cad to tattwta
tom* a l fftaa pnonia* aran a *Wtoa daaamai* yvat aaman am a
tanou* drtnavtg ptootam maait a
ttag&lt; and AMo Mart U &lt; t * t
PiatSat Mar* WmngAam and
lancaOwaal g
I IM ) DALLAS
m ' (Nil NOVA Snarl ••pvt Dr

Jam McCoaaar of San Franoacot

WMMattormalion and *w lad
Action, tarotatdatg no graa
mat aWaal wadaior of no
l«IQ

0 IS) JAMAICA Ml at iWr cantu
ry England Mary tMan (Jane Itt
mouil goat U h tP H r our-r and
aid* I 0atout* coatto amana*
and a caattaa* of nwroa and
madawt Nat Vuaal Pwnd t *a&gt;
undo a rogntn but ckwwng
broiaar Coatara Patrick
McOooRan Saw ArMnaa (Pari t
MB
8:35
a baseball abam* Srama at
Si lota*Caonaa
MO
0 J PMTCf
(J o MOW Do You Romampa
Lor* tPiamatol Joann* Woodaad. FMAaid *aty Aliranagrld
. 0 M-ytO-fH cofWga
’OMNof of ha

'7 O WHOS THE BOSSY Tory
rahKlantty admtlt t-at rut to
daugMar Swnanth* it becoming *
aoman and b* turn* la Mona and
Angara lor adne* iR)g
It (IS)QUINCY
fD (10) WOSLDAT WAS
030

C71O HAIL TO THE CHIEF WN»*
m* Praardanl a tooul lo throa oul
in* hrtl Ot* on bataOa*I oparmg
day I cHotor p'tparat lo af»ta
Oarar aa*y ma turn* to be daftrarad lo HOB hoadguartart at Mat
cot* g
1000
© 4 HEMINOTOH STEEL*
(7; O OOU OILUiSE AND
FRIENDS Guatlt Own VnMt R,.
cordo Uonlaiban Bo Data*. Ann
jaaan CharWt Oummg and Manan
Macat iaat coma),anDorn Dalai*
lor an avanatg ol rtwllt and manmanl g
It (MlINDEPENDENT NEWS
0 (101 TOOAV IN THE LEOlSLATVJSf
d) (•) THE DOOBlE BROTHERS
FAREWELL CONCEST Tit*poowla
group paTorm a attaclton of tsar
Mi atdudtng Wital A Foot Bo•wroa at mu cental lapad al in*
Onrraaty of CaMani* al Bat*
lay i Oraaa Thaali*
10:30

11 (IS) BOB MEWHART

11:00

OCfHJ O 7 ) 0 NEWS
11 (M) BENNY HILL
(£1(19) DAVE ALLENAT LAROE
0) III NIOMT QALLERY
11:20
92 MOVIE 'Sprat Dayt In May
(IMFI Burt Lantaala Ka* Doug
lo* A Iranting US ganaa
pfoft a ntaiary coup at oppoariton
lo Itt* proaidont t ptopoaad dtaamarttanl agtaamanl «d" 1M Souwt
11:30
U i T0NNJHT Mott Jofmty Car­
ton SdwduWd SyNatla Slaton*
oamtl HaactoQuiarral
7 O ABC NEWSMOHTUNC
ft (Ml SANFORD ANOION
(S 111TWHIOMT TONE
(flOTAJO

11:40

1200
q a the sa.nt
It (MIRHOOA
d) (S) KOJAX
12:10
(1; O fau out
12:30

0 &lt;1 LATE NlOHT WITH DAVIO
IETTERMAN ScNaMad Sonal
Pomador Elya Sottn Jack Hanno
of no CoNatOtrk Orm loo. taro
pnonat CWrancoCwmona
91 (Ml ILOVE LUCY
100
CD o MOW Mr Lucay (i»FJi
Cay Gram LaanaDay
It (Ml LEAVS (T TOEEAVCR
0 Id THE AVENGERS
1:20
(D o MCCLOUD
130
(It(M)SCTV
1:55

12 MOW Goodbyo. Cnana
1 Its*| Tony Curka
200
If (Ml BIZARRE
2:30
dtPSlGUMSMOrl
2:40
(i) O CBENEWS MOhTWATCh
3:00
(D O MOW A TcmJ&gt;Of Una
IWMi Sandy Oonnw. tanMcnaRat
3:30
91 (MIFAMS.Y affair
4:00
9) OSI PATTY OUU
4:25
12 GET SMART
4:30
« OSI OORMOAT

A B B Y : We

Stress Management Seminar
WfONfVOAY
MOSN1NQ
4:55
U BEVERLY HILLBILLIES (WED)

8:00
1] (M) NEWS
ITS YOUS BUSINESS(MON)
3 AORCULTUR* USA.(PW)

U CATUNS

11:05
11:30

0 4 SCRABBLE
•J o RYANSHORE
0 (T9IFLORIOASTYLE
11:35

11 LUCY SHOW(MON-WED, FFB1
11 WOMANWATCH(THU)
AFTERNOON

5:05

11 WORLDAT LAAQE(TUf)
5:20

11 WORIDAT lASQI (THU)
5:25
f7 U HOLLYWOOO AND THE
STARS (MON WCD-ESl)
5:30

0

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11 JIMMY SWAOOAST
600

0 f NSCNEWS AT SUNRISE
I O MOSNtNO STRETCH
ll O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
1) (M|0000 DAYT
II NEWS
CD Id AM BARKER
6:30

Q I NEWS
1 a CSS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
a O ABC NEWS TM* MORNING
f(M|POPEYI
11 FUNTIMI (MON-THU)
635
11 FUNTIMI (FW)
6:45
(7 O nrwuHESs daybreak
dl (101AU WEATHER
7:00
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If Q CSS MORNMO NEWS
X O 0000 MORNING AMERICA
fr (Mi flints tones
ES110) FARMDAT
dl 1*1SUP*AT(VINOS
7:15
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7:30
1! (Ml TOMANDJERRY
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d&gt; (d INSPECTOR QADQET
7.35
12 IDREAMOF JCANNIf
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It (M| WOUOY wOOl *.CKER
0 (d HEAThCUFF
6 05
11 BEWITCHED
630
9t (Ml PM FANTMIR
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835
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OdOIVORC* COURT
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tt (MlWALTON*
0 1191SESAME STREETg
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0 (C LOVE CONNECTION
a td HERTS LUCY
1000
0 FACTSOF urt(R)
HOURMAGAZINE
SALLYJESSY RAPHAEL
It (MlI (Ml SKI VALLEY
0 110) ILiCTMC COMPANY (R)
0 Id MAYBERRY APD
10:30
0 (f! BALE OP THE CENTURY
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a (SI RIAL MCCOYS
1100
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1101W( RECOOIUNO NOW
id faakly

8

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8

12:00

0 4 UIOOAY
1 O (C O NEWS
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0 |l«) NATURE OF THINGS
|M0N)
0 (101 MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
0 (10) MYSTERY1(WED)
0 ( TO) NOVA(THU)
0 (10) THE HEART OF THE ORA
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1205

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12:30
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J O YOUNG AND THE RESTLEU
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1:00
0 4 DAYSOFOURLfVtl
7 O AU MYCHIL0RCN
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(10) MOVIE(MON, TUE. THU)
0 (10) GREAT RAHWAY JOUR­
NEYSor the world rwtoi
0 1101 riORtOA HOME GROWN
F6B
a |(l MOVIE

2

105

12 MOW*(MON. TUB. THU. FRO
11 THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL
(YflOl
130

1 O AS THE WORLD TURNS
ft (M)OOMER FYl*
0 110) MAGfC OF FABfONQ
KtEFSAKES |FRf|
1:35
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2:00
4 ANOTHER WORLD
ONE UF* TO LIVE
11(Ml ANOY QfBFFTTH
0(191 ALOHA CHINA(WED!
|101UNDERFAX. (THU)
(KWJOT OF FAJNTMQ(FRO
2:30
j a cafttol
1( (Ml GREAT BRACE COASTER
0 (10) MAOC OF OR PAINTMQ

S

0 1101 MAGIC OR WATERCOLORE(THU)
0 110) MAOC OR DECORATIVE
FAJNTINQ(FRO
3 00
0 '4 SANTA BARBARA
) OauRNNQUOMT
7 O GENERAL HOSTTTAL
11 (U&gt; BUGS
0 1*01FLORfQASTYlE
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3.05
12 BUGS BUNNY ANO FANNO*
(MON. TUE. TNU, FRI)
3:30
0 110) MMTER ROOCHS(Rj
0 ill WSTECTOR QAO0ET
335
12 HECKLE ANO JBCXLt (MON
nil. Tug, run
4:00
O 3 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
J o STAR TREK
S O MERVGRWrVf
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IL1()0|SESAME STREET Q
0 III IL#CRmiM06
4 05
12 FUNTITONES (MON. TUI.
tnu. run
4:20
a HECKLE ANOJEQUE (Wtot

Th e J r Woman's Club of
Sanford. Inc. Is s|Miusorlng a
stress management seminar May
2\ .it 7:110 p.tn.. at the Sanford
Woman's Club. 30!) B Oak Avr.,
Sanford. Topics such us coping

This seminar, aimed at help
log each to deal with life's
Increasing pressures. Is ollered
-is a public service free to bolh
men umt women. For more
inlomiutJon call 323-fHi24.

w ith stress, m a rita l c o m ­
munications and childhood de­
pression and suicide will be
discussed by Dr Penny Lukin.
Dr. Gall Gam ut and Dr Jose
Unmoors-

ITJ R o y d T h w a t r a a l

Quitters Guild To M eet
The Central Florida Quitters
Guild will meet al f5:30 p.m
Thursday, May 23, at the First
Baptist Church. 3 ID S Park Avr

Q;

Sanlord, There will hr u pot luck
dinner meeting followed by In­
stall. tl Ion of officers

“

LADY W ftJQ fY
HAWKE
Mnyit iANO tin

Search /s On For
Outstanding Dad
June I li is Father's Day,
We. at The Herald, urr
searching for the annual
"Outstanding Dad" In (he
community, but we need the
help of readers lo (Iml this
special mail
T h r Outstanding Dad and
runnersup will la* selected
from letters of nomination
T o make surr your favorite
dad gets the proper recogni­
tion. follow Ihr simple In­
structions: FlrBt. write your
lull name, full uddress, In­
cluding city and stale, and
your telephone number at
the lop of the page. U n ­

V ili

177 I7tb

T tu s T L tR J-

; IlIV V N j

'HAP50DY;

BARBS1

i
P hil P a s to re t

derneath. udd the name, full
a d d re s s a n d te le p h o n e
number of the dad you are
nom inating T h e n , begin
your letter telling us In your
own words why I Ills dad Is so
outstanding. Please type or
clearly print your letter.
Submit letters ol nomina­
tion lo PKOPt.K Kdlior Doris
Dietrich. I' O Box IH57 (300
N French Avc ). Sanford
32771, no later than noon,
T h u r s d a y . M ay 30. the
dradllnr for Judging
Winners will tie announced
In The Herald on Father's
Day.

The Juicy, ripe, ready-to-eat can­
taloupe Is the one the person ahead of
you plucks from the pile In the iupermarket
When thr new taleiman and the
prrItieil secretary begin to Ignore
rack other. It's lime lo start saving
lor the wrddlog-present rollrrllon.

They call 'em "draft proposals"
because such position papers leave
Ihe Hi Kir open for politician* to feel
from whlrh direction the wind's blowmg

FAMOUS RECIPE
WEEKLY SPECIALS
WEDNESDAY
FAMILY SPECIAL
Three Piece Chicken
Dinner

ICOUPON

Eight Piece
Thrift Pack
!

I f MXll
■MH fW
|*K IMH *f
hj m

*-* *1*wf 1

•(“ " • M »■(« ■» k m I w m S u m * Cn .**y PMckxv

« »Rff NSS* *&gt;M
*M IrttS kWnN

HH*) M l l H M I

$ 6 9&gt;

$949

S jf o n o u s

coiNTr oeCKiN
cowtbtcwcxw

SANFORO
- ISOS FroncR At*

(Hwy. tJ 91)
123 MW

CAtSELBERRT

SANFORO
ISOS Frsnth Ais

CASSELBERRY

41 N Hwy 170
0I4I1II

(Hwy IT El)
MB MW

41 N. Hwy. 170
014111

•H V % 4. V. k V.

I

�m

2B— Evtnmg H trild , Sanford, Ft.

TutSday, M l f 11&lt; 1HS

A LA N ’S
FABRICS a n d RUGS

&amp; U A t iO H 4 ,

Cutlom Mod*

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

1200 Sanford Ave.
Sanford
Month of May’i Special*

D RA PES

Evening Herald
Herald A d vertiser

C U R L S S3S and S38

toll

m
m

1♦Lm F y '

I

W

*

v*
l

f

*

R E L A X E R 174 JO
R E L A X E R R E TO U C H til.* }
EAR P IE R C IN G 110
WIGS 170.00

• Cu»'o« »Kod*»
!

Business
Review

( ^taucU itc &amp;

• Mmi blmdi
• Vertical*.

CoCC 322-2611 H«u!
PUT TOUR BUSIUISS OH THl MOVl •

AOVFRTISING

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

€ 1« w#»ft* Ptmpt M*r

%

?

’

J*Ct*§ Jmhmmn OfMiFCt«*

»

STO CK R ED U C TIO N SALE •VALUES TO S.SS
FABRIC - STO R E STO C K
Q Q C
LIMITED Q U A N T IT Y
w **
VD'

ACE AUTO

RADIATOR

VOLKSHOP

lADTATM J

Speeiatlilng In Service A Parti For
V.W.’i, Toyota and Datsun
(Cornar Ind

^

A

Ptlmcffa)

214 S. Polmetto Ave.
SA N FO RD
PHONE

321-0120
\

NO W OPEN AT OUR
NEW LO CATIO N

W k

•

■

I

SEMINOLE VETERINARY
HOSPITAL
no MUHCWN DVM 0» A C V I M

•CoenpW

Vetednory tervtce*

• V n o * Antmatl

LARRY’S

■ DtognoWk: preventfv* mertlcln*.
denlWry A .urgery
• tpoctotty tn Intwnol modtelo*

N EW J. U S ED M A R T
215 Sanford A**

Sanlord

3 2 2*5 465

322-4132

ilia w. ia«h it
u . aaa

Wa Buy And Soil Top Quality

Jessie Harrelson and Jim Coffin of Alan's Fabrics and Rugs coordinate samples of carpel
and fabric to match art work.

Furnlturo, Antlquoa, Appliance*
And Tools
WE PAT TOP CASH DOLLAR FOR
USED FURNITURE A APPLIANCES

BEAT THE HEAT!
CALL

C h r i s t i a n B r o s , i1
FO R CO M PLETE
LAWN CARE
CUTTING - TRIMMING — EOQINQ
AVERAGE LOT 170110 ..FREE ESTIMATES

Christian Bros. Lamm Service
m u im t mm

3 2 3 *4 4 0 1

• AUTO

* COHHItCUt

•HOME OWItftS •BUSIN1SS

tuutmr

• NOHU MONIS

Vacation Fashions
At Reasonable
Prices...With
Money Left Over
For Your Vacation

•CHUICN

BUD BAKER
Insurance Agency

.Jim Coffin, owner of Alan * Fabrics ami Hugs.
2551) I’mk Drive. Sanford, welcomes Jessie
Hurrelstm In Ids stall. Jcaait* lias Iteen servicing
many area homes ami businesses with cusiont
designed line art and accessories
Now In addlllon in these services, she will be
pleased In assist yon in rhooslng your wall and
flnorenvcrlngB. custom window treatments,
spreads mid accessories, as well as rcupholslrrlng
and slipcovers.
Alan's now offers a new' line nl Sanford-Htgelow
carpeting. As an Introductory special, you ran
enjoy discounts of up to 84 25 (w*r yard on
Sanford -Bigelow Carpets through .June I F&gt;

You ran have confidence tn these two name*
thiii have tteen around tor years— I Harlow and
Alan’s.
Alan's ran glvr complete Interior design
services and provides tree estimates For shop al
home service, please call 322-57H3 .Jim. Jessie or
Alice Gldzlnskl. another Interior decorator wilh
Alan's, will bring samplrs to your home or
business |with no obligation, of course |
Alice has 22 years etqterlcncc In ihr field
Alan's Fabrics is open Monday through Friday,
ft :t«u .m . to 5:30 p m . and Saturday U:30 a.m to
nrsm and other hours try appointment

TELtPHOHL
QUOTES WELCOME

NEW LOCATION
tot i ut ei. a«n. t n
Atlantic la nk B it*
Sanlord FL M fF t

cond I mage

Com plete Interior Design
At A lan's Fabrics &amp; Rugs

call

3 2 2 *0 5 0 1

NT CLOTHMC
JMfi SI, A Hwy u *7

SANFORD

323 9421
mooi^

s

AND

TO P Q U A D

ill

DRAPERIES
WALLPAPER

i

i

r

FLOOR
COVERINGS I
i

I! K - J

'l l !

H

]||

|;i

HI

ljfc

-i®

SHOT AT HOME SERVICE!

T iim t M iii.i. i v i

iik io h s

, m

]

.

2927 8. Hwy. 17-92. Suit* H 0
&lt;rt fN# &lt;tpm#F Hs-it AfrtMt Prnrti let re

GLASS
A PAINT CO
2IR MAGNOLIA AVt.
DOWNTOWN SAHrORO

AmTILE

•*bms a. i-1 lift at ft
IMH% %
AI 10A90
•Hi* * tat »

321-8579

- - - - - - -

322-4622

a

CERAMIC TILE SALES
A IN STALLATIO N

- PLAYSMARTTOYS
EDUCATIONAL TOYS 6 MATERIALS
FOR r AJMMTS, TEAOBRS A STUOCMTS

“We Sell Education:
The Toys Just Make It Fun."

• W A L L &amp; F L O O R TILES
• ACCESSORIES G RO U TS &amp; C LEA N ER S
• W ELCO M E " D O IT YOURSELF CUSTOMERS"
• LOTS O F C O LO R S SIZES PATTERNS

851 E. S.R. 434

8 3 4 -T O Y S

S Q U A "I P IA 2 A

•

LONOWOOD. FL

H

l l

IftT IM A T Ift

SUMMER
DAY CAMP

Licensed • Insured ■ Bonded
207 f o il 25th St. (A c e H ardw are Bldg.)

(323-2504)

trouts

zzgai
7

MON THURS. Fll. SAt 10 S
TUtS HfU ujn IPPt ONLY

m o o

'

, „

*«* -

John A Nohle I ’oikrr

C tttU *

WE
BUY
M O R T G A G ES

r ; : r r 1• 323-2005
WEEKLY Activities Include:
Swimming
Bowling
Picnic*

Skating
Motl.a
Sport*

GREEN'SRouse. 4 Beauty
C U R LS A LL T YP ES
S O O
STARTING AT $55 NOW O O
CARE FREE CURLS • ELASTA CURLS
PERM S
*25 u p
R E L A X E R S ‘ 2 5 up
ACCENT COLORING

6 9 5 -6 6 9 9

Fa m ily Ciodll Sorvlcos, Inc

1§J

K I M M R w t **■**'■■ CV

Fi »rte

*, I

CAU
MARtIN SCOn. NCR

831-3400

&gt; f

Aria A Crafta
Computer Skill*

Tiro l Vmir Clilltl Tu An Action Cocked
Summer CM Kim Am i Holly Klrltl Trlpa

We also mAh# HI end 2nd mortgage loam
on Realdentlel or Commercial Real Etlate
up to 1100.000.
Per tonal loam are available Including
Revolving Credit Line.

o m * &lt; H Nl»« &gt;r M

Universal Satellite TV
Sells, Services Systems

SPECIAL PROGRAM FOR ~
6 THROUGH 12 YEAR OLDS

Tile ('antmcUna

* p • * *

1015 Hwy. 17-92
Longwood

*&gt; *

Bob Leavitt, owner ol Universal Satellite TV , with one type of satellite TV reflector.

A whole new World of entertainment U» waiting
lor you In outer s|&gt;aec With a satellite system
from Universal Satellite TV . you can have at your
finger tips ISO channels from IS different
satellites with no extra charges
You can have 24 hours of uncut movtra, sport*
tlroadwuy plays, l.umlv entertainment, news,
wruther. music, art and educational and religious
program*.
Universal Satellite T V oilers sales. Installation
and service Bob Leavitt, owner, has 20 yrurs
cx|&gt;crtr»cr In electronics In the U S Arm y. In
New Hampshire, and for the past 11 years. In
Longwood
He sure ol what you are getting. Hob will
demonstrate on your television in your home any
place In Seminole County. Call H31-5744 today
lor a free site survey

PAC
N’ SEND
304 East UwaiercUl St.
(305)323-1137

Senlerd

PACKAGING
CUSTOM I 0 U S
FOAM MOLD
SYSTEM

ctn

H O U RS:
Mon.-Fri. 9 -5 :30
Saturday 9-12 Moon
Tntlevuutul f'aekagmg And

WRAPPING
SNIPPING
PACKAGING
SUPPLIES
FRUIT ORDERS

5/tipprng Service
Utfcttta Im W TV* C*n«r

Ir m

I

Hob oilers various system packages to choose
from, depending on your own wants and nreds.
and will be more than happy to give you free
estimate on several choices available Universal
sell* only the llnest satellite T V equipment and
components and guarantees all of li* brand name
ploduds. Complete systems start as low as
SI.3HH
Equipment Includes a satellite T V reflector
lusually called an "antenna"): a low noise
amplifier: a feedhorn assembly to gather the
signal focused at the center of the reflector: a
downconverter to lower the frequency of the
signal; satellite receiver; pntarUIng unit to allow
you satellite system to receive both horizontal
and vcrtlcul signal*, and an actuator to allow you
to sw itch from one satellite to another
automatically.

NOW O P EN
WATCH &amp; JEWELRY REPAIR
and ftrt
PAWN
SHOP
I HUH 8m
PH. 323-1327

2109 S. FRENCH A V I.. SANFORD
Sprrlal Drsign e Custom Work
e Kr»iu«r Antique Jewelry • Hole* Hrpalr
e flue k e Welch Repair
B King Suing - Slone Selling
B Avurm uU
e Flnr Jewelry Sale*
I f «VT ML* g M F D •AITMCR ttOCMS $ V J U E F *M B

�Evening Herald, Santprd. Ft.

Business
Review

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

Evening Heiakl
Herald Advertiser

COMPLETE SYSTEM
INSTALLED * 0 % . * %
TON AS
^ ^ 1
V "
LITTLE AS
V I 3 Ha.

Call 322-2611 Kotu!

1 0 0 H FINA NC IN G A V A IL A B L E
TO Q U A LIFIED BU YER S

PUT TOUK BUSINESS ON THE MOV! •

2* n u ts

Madame Katherine Gives
Advice In Life's Problems
Madame Katherine,
voted "best psychic (or
1984" by readers of
Central Florida Scene
Magazine, has 50 years
experience In advising
people on affairs of life,
love, m a rria g e and
business

831-5744

J im
L a s h ’s
B lu e B o o k C a rs
★ SERVICE: " " I ™ *
★ RENTALS: i* " * " ’

.Mowers For Every
Occasion And Budget
ROW 2 LOCATIONS TO URVI TOO
L* **
l SAMFOR* AW.
LAM MARY
SARFOkTO

She will read your
past, present or future
In your palm, cards, or
crystal ball "I do not
ask you any questions
almut your rntlre life,*'
sai d M a d a m e
Katherine. "I can read
your life the minute
you w a lk In to m y
door "

Phone 322-5066

furniture house
NON T H OF H IG H W A Y « M ACROSS F R O M M A N O V W A V

NEW -USED FURNITURE
ANTIQUES
N&gt;
' *

Madame Katherine with crystal ball

HEARING TESTS
SET FOR SANFORD/
CASSELBERRY
AREA

OMIT MSTAUIMt IN
i i v o n orta tua nknt
Mbm TV* TV*%
t I M *• t p m

9n 14 Heart
Ut AW«

li m If

off a rti a

II p m A i m
u ? mow wa

IATI KlCNT 10 pm 4 I m

MARKET

DAY &amp; NIGHT GRILLI
J U N E A T IN A l-O H / U . &lt;&gt;viw-r«

I M S freeck

lekfkN

P h . '3 2 3 0 7 2 8

" S a y It W ith B a llo o n s ’*

|

Halloon Mtigic *

"Don't mistake any­
body else lor me. there
urr others around who
are claiming to lie me,
who are not. Cull for an
appointment at 6957(05 If you want to
talk to the rral Madame
Katherine "

-

C A L L A N Y T IM E -

305/323-0400
We Deliver Bouquets ot Balloon*
“ Seven Day* * Week"
For E ve ry Reason end E ve ry Season
P O BOX 174 S A N F O R D . F L 11777 i

FRCf S P I N A L E V A L U A T I O N

The strategic

WAtMNC SIGNALS Of HNCtUD MlKYIS
Frequent H eadache*
lo w Back o&gt; H ip Pam
D i//m *«a o i t o n ot Bleep
N u m l K u n ot Mend* or Feat
N arvo utn aas
Neck Pam or Stltln***
A rm *n&lt;j S houlder Pam

move is to tell
it in the

llettiomc bearing tests eill be
|sen trie it the Orarge Hcirm|
Ad Ctn 2/01 S OrlindoDi San
lord (Monday only) and UO S
Hey 17 92 Casselberry Mondiy
Friday this • « ' W Chnstenson
and B Irshat cartited by lh« It*
tonal Humi Ad Society will bo
*t these oil teas to peilorm the
Anyone who hat trouble hoann|
or undarsiandmi is ealcomo to
hew a test *sm| the latest alec
bone equipment to determine his
or her pertKuler loss
fwryone should hew a heanng
test at least once a year it there
n my trouble it ell heerm| clear
ly teen people now neenn| e
hrannj aid or thosa who hare
been told nothmf could bo done
tor them can find out about the
latest methods ot heatrni
corrections
the bee hearm| test will be (xen
Monday thru Friday this week
at the Casselberry offee and Mon
day at the Sanford location Call
the number below end emote tor
an appointment, or drop in at your
consentence

Z f’ A

Mia* tnt tkert t*| tat tkart tre Tap
M t* RNk Oscar
— — •i *-»t'k v uirflw' -oktal *o

Herald Business
•«4 »*‘1V MOM'

tMKIt M'MN'
ntu • a M ’W*' • • sn&lt; 0 'H » *•««! i •nssa
IM iN lM 'O f MB# •'■&lt;* t| n MR 00 NIP' S
fal A0»|I*1M»*’ » a 1*4 *•••*«nl |ISUM’IN « M|I'M»'

LRANGE

HEARING AID CENTERS
120 L Mwy 17 92
Cmdharry
134 B776

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
OF CHIROPRACTIC. INC.

MEDCO DISCOUNT
DRUGS

B A M TO I f M 7 0 *js A W ..k 365 Oar* A Year

2701 V Oilando Or
Saatord
1239702

1411 I AlftPOAT 1LV0 - SANTORO
lAMORn WHffJ 'l i ot#* Vh
OAlANOO $4t0)69

MADAME KATH ERIN E
PALM C A R D -C R Y S TA L B ALL RC A D I8 0

C R A FT C LA S S E S
MON. THRU THORS.

FaSWt • P r e w e a l a t a l are-

HELPFUL ADVICE ON ALL
AFFAIRS

7 p .m . • 9 p .m .
rrow M AKIN G H A TS
AMO S O F T S C U L P TU R E

• UF1 • U 8 I • iAJHBABK • B M M U

HEN m BUSINESS I N 50 YlAffS
m PRIVACY Of MY NOME
HOURS 8 AM 9 PM 7 Oeyt A WMk

A &amp;$
ZA YR E PLAZA

tj 323-4569

ION8WOOO
Sanford

(305)

(95-7005
~Wtat V • 0
MtaNta*

Serving

Daily

RESTAURANT &amp; COUNTRY STORK
A LL THK FISH YOU CAN HAT

With flinch Fns*. Real Mashed * A
Or Baked Potato. Cote Slaw 0.
Vegatable Tattit Sauce

Q C

$6 . 9 5

*U tw U
„ ,.p r .,

Deltona Plaza

574-4600
M O N . S A T . 8 -8 :3 0 S U N . 8 :3 0 -8

CUSTOM DRAPERIES •BEDSPREADS
WOVEN WOODS • MINI RLINDS - VERTICALS
CARPET •VINYL •WALL COVERINGS

FREE ESTIMATE
NO OBLIGATION

322-3315
322-7642

P h ilip s

DtCOAAtINC
DEN
In Hum m si taut 11*61
n s n . i lia i t . tAMfoas

D A V E ’S U P H O L S TE R Y
• FU RN ITU RE • BOATS • C A R S
NOW IS tN l UM ( to ■ HIGH (IN YOUR M ill OOOO FURNITURE
•IAR0E U llC TIO N Of MATIRIAlt •0UAUTY WOMMANSHI*
Era* I l l l f l u l a t

fre e 8 c k a * A I*a DaSvacy

490 N. 17-92
Nail lo Sotoks Sub SHop

* * '“ -T -A7&gt;xVf-

LO N G W O O D , FLA.
(305) 8 6 2 - 1 0 0 0
Mon

h i 400 AW

-I-------

6 00 PM

- -

CALL US!!

We’ll Hilnfl Out Rolling Htpalt SNop To Vaut
Horn* Ot Butlntat f. fit li On Ttw Spot.
4
Cats t&gt; Tiuckt Dotnatlk ot Imports
AH Work Guarantee*
COSTS 8 0 MORE FOR US TO COME TO YOU

C A L L 3 2 1-2 3 9 1 or 3 2 1-2 14 S

ERW IN M O TO RS
0 * » * *0ff****t
B i l i A A A A ii A AAi

HAIR NOW
U N IS E X H A IR S T Y L IN G

Tel. 322-8711
607 W 2Slh Si.

Sanford

ami*i ; ; r i i i ; i r r r T T T r r r r * r r » * i
m

IL L *

l/ lk lP rrt
S T

syvn j.'v

WTWM4M
■KMatt V m n Cm I
IkMnWmtJU

1447» us urn
(lmt 6 W«m W i Co I
^ Mta NaWjnajrin.il Rd

8 A 2 -S 4 M

WMWI

BLAIR A G E N C Y
SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
SR 22's FILED
&lt; rE * * E * * * (r* * * S F * * * * *

ALSO INSURE MOBILE
HOMES. MOTORCYCLES
HOMES. REC-VEES

* SPRING SPECIALS
P e tk a q a S p a d e )

Regulator
Octopus
Combo Gauge
BC Jacket

S w ing Ssnlofd lot 27 Ytirt
O P E N M O N . TH R U FRI. 9 5

“CALL BLAIR AND COMPARE"

3 2 3 *7 7 1 0 or 3 2 3 *3 8 6 6
Comer ot 8 Part A»e A Oak

(&gt; «a r Spar U U
Dry Bo« *¥*
D k tt T StUru »V*
SAk o m Tmm&gt; Maa

Wttghli

^

t n v i M AR.

*

&gt;iX"

C lear P im r t Fla* •!$*•
Pocket D b tB * M •14—
SdMone V r n le J Saotkel M r *
PneumaiM Sprareua H V

$ 3 4 9 ° ° : E r* a^ ‘-

2510A OAK AVE. SANFORD

W ASH IN GTON (U l’ll — The federal government
Monday announced settlement by Indfana state
and local authorities and Westinghouse Electric
Corp thut could cost the firm as m urh as SIOO
million to clean up toxic RCB waste from landllll
areas near tlloomtnglnn. I ml
Resolution of this enforcement case represents
the largest hazardous waste settlement In the
history of the agency." ERA Administrator Lee
Thomas said In announcing the settlement.
"It Is a comprehensive agreement, which
provides lor the ultimate destruction of the FCB
wastes, rather than for long term landfilling "
I’UBs or polychlorinated biphenyls are cancer
agents often fount! In abandoned electrical
transformers.
The settlement reached with the state of
Indiana. Monroe County. Ind.. and Bloomington.
Involves Itie cleaning up of PClls at six sites,
w h ic h th e E l ’ A e s tim a te s c o u ld cost
Westinghouse between $75 million and 9100
million
The six sites art- known as Neal's Landfill.
Neal's Dump. Lemon Lane Landfill. Bennett's
Dump. Winston Thomns Sewage Treatment Plant
and Anderson Road Landfill. The first four sites
arc listed on EPA's Supcrhmd National Priorities
List, requiring priority attention.
The sites an* all located In central Indiana, four
ol them near Bloomington lit Monroe County and
one along the White River In Owen County. The
sixth site is in Monroe County, northrast ot
Bloomington.
Assistant Attorney General F. Henry llablcht
said die six sties are covered under a consent
decree. He called It one of the largrst — and likely
the most costly — cleanup ever undertaken In a
h.i/.minus waste case developed hv the federal
government
Hahleht said Wrstlnghnusc lias agreed to a
consent decree that will require excavation of
hazardous wastes Irom the sites and their
Incineration In a special Incinerator to hr
constructed hv Wcstlughuusr for die cleanup.
Tlic consent decree was tiled In ledrral district
court In Indianapolis.
EPA said Westinghouse has agrred to reim­
burse the federal government 91 million lor
enforcement and cleanup costs already Incurred
Tile EPA estimated Westinghouse would Ikrequired to spend about 925 million lo construct
the Incinerator and between 930 million and 950
million its remove, excavate, transport and
Ineinerale die wasle

T U E SD A Y , MAT 2 1

KrtMm Club A A. noon and 5 50 p.m . elixsed. H
p m . step. 130 Normandy Hoad. Cuiweltierry
( Iran Atr Helton Club. noon, closed.
Sunford AA . 5 30. cloned dlta unnlon. and H
p.m.. open discussion. 1201 W. Find St.
2 4 -llo u r A A group beginners open discussion. H
|i m . Second sm t Hsy S l r t r u , Sanford.
1 7 -0 2 Group A A . H p .m ., close d. MrsaUlt
Lutheran Chun h. 17-92 and tXigtruck Hoad.
Overraters Anonymous, open, 7:30 p.m..
Florida Power A Light. 301 S. Myrtle Ave..
Sanford.

W ED N ESD A Y. M AY 2 2

Full Gos|iel Buntnrsn Men’s Fellowship In­
ternational hrrakfusi meeting, 6 30 a.in.. Holiday
Inn. State Hoad 436 and Wymote Hoad. Altamontr Springs. For details rail 656-4255.
Cenlral Florida HIcmhI Ifank Seminole County
liranrh, 1302 K Second Si., Sanford. 9 a m. lo 5
p m Florida Hnxpllal-Allamontr liranrh. I I a m
lo 7 p.m
Sanford Klwanlx Club. noon. Sanford Clvlr
Crnler.
Casselberry Hotary brrukfust, 7:30 a m.,
CiitHeltterry Senior Center. 200 N. l-akr Triplet
Fret- photographs with fingerprinting ot
children ollrred Ity Adam Walsh Child Hesourre
Center al Chris Yales Photographers studlon,
11:30 a m. lo 7 p h i ., 1726 S. Humhy Ave.. south
ol Curry Ford Hoad, Orlando. Adult must
accompany children
Flnam tat advisory service for senior citizens
available by appointment, 1 p m . Casselberry
Senior Center. 2(M) N faikr Triplet Drive. Call
831 3551. exl. 264
Medicare help lor seniors. 10 a.m. until noon.
Cassell)erry Senior Center 200 N. Triplet Drive.
Casselberry.
"I Can Cope” program for cancer patients and
families, 2 4 p.m . Cenlral Florida Keglonal
Hospital dining room. Call 321-4500. ext. 761 tor
register Series ends June 26.
T H U R S D A Y .M A T 2 3

Redkan Shampoo
A Conditioner With
Every Perm
P E R M S ................ * 3 5 uf

M M A i t n lla w d U

V O T E D B E S T P S YC H IC fO H 1*04 BY
C E N TR A L P IO R IO A S C E N E M AG AZINE
•M 4 n a .* Par *1 W in Tim M

Westinghouse
Settlement Largest
In EPA History

Drive

AUTO AIR CONDITIONING
PROBLEMS?

►

It, l**J — JB

CALENDAR

I IIOCAS ROOTM OF B00TBACA IB.

Eetry Wednesday And Fratay* Strved I t AM 8 30 P M

Golden F'ried Or Broiled Cod F'ilet

W e’ll Bring The
Best In Decorating
Right To Your Hom e

a ft

I n k K * l « M s f s k n W r * » In

Airport Blvd. A 17

W R Y L IT T L E M A R K U P LO W H N C t S
L A Y A W A Y IW DCLfYER
COteSIC W K T l W ELC O M E

O P E N 7 D A Y S A W E E K H I }•*] C L j ^ ,

M adam e K u th e rln e
says. " I can ulso give
advice on b u sin ess a f­
fairs. I have m any peo­
ple com ing to m e about
Investm ents and bu si­
n ess advice. No pro­
blem Is loo sm all nr too
big I can advise |&gt;eoplr
on where to find lost
articles.”

'

uaa n o r t h h i o h w a y u ei
SOUTH OF FLEA WORLD
F IR M TRAFFIC LIOHT

a -1

"W h y be unhappy
and sad It I can help
you In all problems of
Die concerning m arrlage and home?" she
asks "I reunite the
separated and advise
parents on problems
with children. I have
many mothers am) fa­
thers coming to me
alioul their loved ones
who are iq&gt;srt and on
drugs."

CALL 322-2611

321-0741
830-6(48
HWT. 17 92
SANFORD

-A SALES: SSrTauos

For 16 years she has
been doing readings In
the p riv a c y of her
Longwood home on
U S . Highw ay 17 92
(between Dog Track
Hoad and state Road
434|. S h e lo c a te d
ucross the highw ay
(rom the AHC Liquor
Store.

Review

u r t n a c t ■ t u meases

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

UNIVERSAL S A T ELLIT E TV

Tuesday. May

754/IB.

»i“

lutMia(tuele

. UnJeneelrtF
rI

ITU4.A i k x j x v A iTA M n rrrt m n&gt; toe F a t so v a n m
LONG WOOD M F M I tor 44 tom 144

*7 *
i* s

Seminole County League of Women Voters
Food (or Thought luncheon, noon. Quincy's
Hesiauranl. Douglas Avenue near Stale Hoad
434 Library update by Jean Kheln and Sandy
Gallagher.
International Training In Com m unication
G r e a t e r S e m in o le C lu b (p r e v io u s l y
Touatmltlreas). 7:30 p.m,. Altamonte Chapel
Fdncailun Building on Stale Hoad 436, second
and (mirth Thursdays.
Sanlord Jaycer*. 7 30 p.m,, Jaycee building.
5th and French, Sanford
Sanford AA . 1201 W First St.. 5:30. closed
discussion, and H p.m.. open, speaker.
Oviedo A A . H p.m ., closed, First United
Methodist Church,
Overealers Anonymous, open. 7 30 p.m. Com ­
munity United Methodist Church. Highway
17-92. Casselberry.
FR ID A Y , MAY 2 4

Central Florida Klwanls Club. 7:30 a.m..
Florida Federal Savings and Loan. State Hoad
436 al 434. Altamonte Springs.
Seminole Sunrise Klwanls Club. 7 a m . Airport
Restaurant. Sanfoid.
Optimist Club ol South Seminole. 7:30 a.m .
Holiday Inn. Wymore Hoad. Altamonte Springs
Central Florida Blood Bank Florida HospitalAltamonte Branch. 601 E. Altamonte Ave.. 9a.n&gt;.
to 5 p.m.
Gentle Exercise for seniors. 10:30 a m .,
Casaelbrrry Senior Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry.
Wrklva AA (no smoking). H p m. Wcklva
I’resbyterlan Church. SH 434. at Wcklva Springs
Hoad. Closed
Longwood AA. H p m , Rolling Hills Moravian
Church. SK 434. l-ongwood. Alanon. same time
and place.
Sanlord AA Slep. 8 p m., 1201 W. First St..
Sanford

�• •

fB-Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.__

Tim day, May II, IH»

Court Upholds Master
Teacher, School Programs
T A L L A H A S S E E (UPI) - K i t i n g
a teacher union's lawsuit, a circuit
court Judge has affirmed the constitu­
tionality of the controversial merll
school and master teacher programs.
Leon County Circuit Judge Charles
Miner Monday declared that neither
program represents an “ unlawful
delegation” of authority by the
Legislature to the Department of
Education, ns the union charged.
He also rejected a claim that the
master teacher program distributes
public funds In an "unreasonable and
arbitrary" fashion.
Despite the favorable court ruling,
both programs ore In Jeopardy. The
House and the Senate each have
passed legislation that would freeze
the programs pending further study.
Critics contend the merit schools
program rrllrs too much on student
Icsl stores In deciding what schools
are “ meritorious" and ussert that the
merit teachers program, under which
selected teachers get $3,000 annual
bonuses, has been administered un­
fairly.
Miner Issued his ruling on a suit
filed by Florida Te a ch in g Prolesslon-NEA. one of the stale's iwo
m ajor teacher unions, and the
Pinellas (County) Classroom Teach­
ers Association.
“ In concept, the master leather

program, like the master schools
program, represents a bold Initiative
— one that seeks to reward superior
experience, knowledge and teaching
performance.” Miner wrote.
The Judge acknowledged the dif­
ficulties with both programs but said
he believed "Department of Educa­
tion officials responsible for fleshing
nut these programs have achieved
rather remarkable success In carry­
ing out expressed legislative Intent In
a short period of time.”
Earlier this year. Miner rejected a
claim by United Teachers of Dade
County that the master teacher
p ro g ra m a b r id g e d c o lle c tiv e
bargaining rights In conflict with the
slate Constitution.
The Legislature moved to freeze the
programs after a coalition of teacher
unions, school board groups and
school administrators criticized the
way the programs were being run.
Last week, the department an­
nounced that of 35.000 teachers who
had applied. 6 .I9 H had passed
fx-rnonnrl evaluations, a key step In
itecomlng master teachers This was
135 fewer than what the legislature
envisioned In creating the program.
The number qualifying will fall
further after the candidates are
graded In their areas of specially.

Group Claim s South A frica,
Israel Conducted Nuke Test
W ASHINGTON (UPI) - A lobbying
group said declassified documents
show South Africa and Israel con­
ducted a nuclear test In 1070 and the
Carter White House suppressed the
informal Ion because It was |X )llllrn lly
Inconvenient.
The Washington Office on Africa
today released Its report Oil the
alleged lest and claimed the report
was based on published Information
and nearly 500 pages of previously
secret documents from the U.S. Naval
Kesearch Laboratory.
Th e laboratory concluded that
there had been a nuclear test In Ihr
South Atlantic Sept. 22. 1970. the
group said.
The lobbying group suld other
documents reveal that the CIA "reimrted that the nuclear Imoth was
exploder! In a Joint South AfricanIsraeli test."
Despite that Information, a scientif­
ic panel appointed by the Carter
administration sutnmurtly dismissed
th e
e v id e n c e
o f a n u c le a r te s t,
tx M M d b ly t x -r s u M * it w o u l d h a v e b e e n
a n e m b a r r a s s m e n t t n l l . t l . p o lic y .

The report said Ihe nuclear fuel and
technology was made available In
large part by the United Stales
Under U.S. law. Ihe administration
would be required to cut ofr military
aid to Israel If there were conclusive
evidence that Israel hud a nuclear
weapon.

The United Slates has no military
aid program with South Africa but It
has ccxxiperated In Pretoria's nuclear
energy program
One Slate Department official was
quoted In the report us saying. “ It
would lx- a major turning point In our
relations with South Africa and Israel
If we determined conclusively that
either had tested a nuclear bomb."
The report said. "Proof of a nuclear
wcn|xms test would huve shown the
gaping holes In U.S. nuclear non­
proliferation policy und would have
cx|M&gt;scd several decades of Western
complicity In providing South Africa
und Isrurl with the goods and
technology to m uke their own
nuclear weapons."
In releasing Ihe Information, the
Washington Olflce on Africa culled for
a public re examination of Ihe evi­
dence by Congress und by Indepen­
dent scientific organizations.
The report's finding brings together
different kinds of evidence, some of It
circumstantial, but n i l contributing to
t h e c o n c l u s i o n t h a t a nuclear device,
o f 1 t o It k t lo t o u s . w a s e x p l o d e d I n t h e

atmosphere near Marlon Isjand In Ihe
South Atlantic on the night of Sept.
22. 1979.
U.S. monitoring planes, possibly
Upped off In advance that a test was
tx-lng prepared, were driven away
from the area by South African
ulrcraft Just before the lest took place.

Push On In House For
Minimum Corporate Tax
W ASHINGTON (UPI) - Hackers of u minim um
lax on wealthy coriMirullons und Individuals are
pushing to get their wuy In Ihls week's budget
debate, but House S|M-aker Thomas O'Neill Is
op|M&gt;sed to such a lax to cut the deficit.
House Democrats scheduled a private meeting
later toduy to discuss the divisive Issue but no
vote was scheduled. The sentiment of the
meeting Is likely, however, to carry over to Ihe
budget debate, set for Wednesday.
The budget approved lust werk by the House
lludget Committee would cut *36 billion from an
expected deficit of more than $220 billion In fiscal
I9H0. It contains no new tuxes.
Several top Democrats. Including House party
leader Jlnt Wright of Texas, ure considering an
amendment to Include a minimum lux on
wealthy corporations und Individuals as part of
the budget.
House lludget Committee Chairman William
Gray, I) I'a . would not rule out the minimum tux
but refused lo Immediately acrept II
"I'm certainly not op|x&gt;sed to It (the lax)." Gray
said "At Ihls point I Just want to see what Ihe
amendments are going lodo.”
Some moderate Demo* rats announced Monduy
they would oiler an alternative budget Ihut would
raise $15 billion In luxes, mostly from u
m inim um levy nn wealthy Individuals and
corporations whose Income now legally esca|x-s
taxes
Their a|&gt;prouch ulso would freeze ull spending,
including Social Security, and would cut the
deficit by $75 billion
Rep Hlchard Gephardt, D-Mo., head of Ihe
Democratic caucus and one backer ol the
alternative, said freezing all spending and making
i Iiihk- who now uvold taxes pay Is un approach
"that a consensus in the country can lx- built
around."

Lega^ Notice
n o t ic t o r s h e r i f f s t a i l
N O TIC E IS ME HE B V G IV E N
that b , virtue of that certain
Writ al E i N v II oii Ii i u X out of
and u n it' the M SI Of the County
Court ol Sem inole County.
E lor Mo. uyon o tlnol judgement
rendered In INo aforesaid court
on tho lorn day of More tv A 0
UBS. In that cortoln c o m on
titled. Southeast Appraisal
A tt o c lo t o t. Inc . P la in tiff,
- v s — Freedom Oovolepmsnt.
Inc . Dotondont. » h n h otorotoid
Writ ol ■ locution wot dollvorod
to mo 01 Shout! ot Somlnoto
County. Florida, and I how
i t , tod upon tho tallowing do
scribed p rope rty owned by
freedom Development. Inc .
told property being located In
Semmeto County. Ftorlde. more
p e r ll c u lo r ly d e tc rlb e d i t
tollowt
Bogin on S B L V R O W el
Church Street end E L Y R O W
el Lekevlew Avenue being In
Block I. W IL D M E R E . accord
ing to the plot thereat et re
corded In Somlnoto County. Flo
F lit Book I Page III Proceed
N I T t S I l » k I P . f II.
to P O B
S MO. E d l ' . N
o* E lot i r , s tt* w tso to
POB
end Ihe wndertignod et Shorltt
et Seminole County. Plarldi.
will i t II 00 A M on the tth day
et June. A D l«Bl. otter tor tola
end M il to Ihe highett bidder,
tor ceth. tubiecl to any end ell
•■liting lelnt. i t Ihe Front
I Weti I Door i t tho Hoot et the
Somlnoto County CeurthouM In
Sonlord Fiertde. the above do
K rtbed real property
That told tele It being mod*
to totltty the term t ot Mid Writ
ol E locution
JohnE Polk. Sheriff
Somlnoto County. Florlde
T » be odvertitod May Id II. M.
Juno i. with the Mle on June i
INS
D EF Id

Legal Notice

nett*#.sjocr Mt./U/ar

Seminole

okay I U
so m th

$:30 A.M. •5:30 MR
MONDAY tk ra FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9•Noon

POSITION
6000LOCK
^ --------- J

7 consetirtivi times 52C • l
10 cettsecethre times 4$c a I
Contrict Rates Avatlsfcle

3 Lines

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

33— Rtal Estate
Courses

21—Personals
H ER P ES
Sew Information on remise ton
control Cell fSQ OOf

A D M IN IS TR A TIV E
ASSISTANT
t ) K Wb ♦ Be the general men
s right erml Large firm
el

Te IKO wk Tour chance' Light

Employment
323-5176
MM Freweb Ave
A ir Conditioning Mechanics
Service 1 Installation Salary
based an e,parlance plus
JO) TO *141
A ircra ft Mechanics, e le ctri­
cians. helpers. A cleanert tor
T r on sport Ty p e A i r c r a f t
M a in t e n a n c e P r o g r a m
Apply Building 414). Sanford
Airport, t ) to I PM only, or
Million A ir. Bee M D . Sanford
Fla am ______________
A L L T Y P E S JOBS
S TA R T WORN NOW I

F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice It hereby given that I
im engaged In business t l 40f
N Hey
If t ) . to n y wood
Somlnoto County. Ftorlde U fM
under the fictitious nemo ot
A C C U B A TE CAB FI. end the! I
Intend to register said name
with the Clerk et me Ctrcull
Court. Semineto County Ftorlde
In accordance with Ihe pro
visions ot Ihe Fictitious Nemo
Statutes T o w ll Section M l 0*
Florida Stalutoslttf
M O V IN SOUND INC
/»/Craig Osborne
Publish M ar 7. U . ) l M IM1
DEF N
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice le hereby given Ihe! I
am engaged m business ft I lf A
Spring m d Circle Lang wood
Semmoto Lounty Ftorlde under
•he tictittoue noma et E X E C U
F IV E C L E A N IN G S E B V IC I.
end that I intend to register eeto
neme with the Clerk et the
Circuit Court. Semineto County.
Ftondo in actor demo with the
provisions at the Fictitious
Noma Statutes To wit Section
M l PS Florlde Statutes IMf
/*/ Unde Sonienbechec
Publish May f. 14. ) l . M. I M l
O E F If

23— Lost ft Found
Last Siemoso cat Sec
Culler end teg found vicinity
of Remtrul Leno Cot not
found House pet Reward
Ceti m e s s ;

23— Special Notices
Earn greet gifts In May Have e
Tu p p a rw e re F o rty
C a ll
Berber I H I iO S otter 4 00__
. M A R T R AY CO SM ETIC S e
SAM core and color flax
C O N N IE .............. .........- t t ) r r u

I
Can Dick er V k b l tor detaMt

•ft IM)

..TO DM . Eva ffsisse

Keyes et Fiertde . toe
If Years Eapertewcel

S3— Business
Opportunities
Would you stuff 1.000 onvotopet
tor MOOT It to. ruth toll

i t — M o n e y to L e n d

Summer day Camp For 4 I ] yr
olds Each week Includes
Swimming, bowling, skating,
movies, sport* arts A crafts
•nd computer skills C oll
TO 44)4 tor Information
TLC tor your child to m y heme
starling Juno 10 Colt TO 1714.
•ttor t PM

31-Private
Instructions
LH io n t All Agmt. end
All I t v t l t
“ Pro"
btltfrouw dl O l 4U4_________
Ltttont Begin AAjy
t m s jtcfc*
Ceoto C m
m iu i

Legal Notice
S E M IN O LE C O U N T T
AOARDOF
C O U N TY COM M ISSIONERS
N O TIC E OF
F U B L IC H E A R IN O
JU N E It. IM ).
f M PM
tho Board ot County Commit
Honors ot Seminole County.
Florida, will hold e public
hearing to consider the follow
t"g i
I
B R U C E S H A P IN —
BAI4 ISSSI MV R I AAA Rosl
Oenlial t o n e -

Thinking et gotttag e
Reel Estate Licenser
We otter Free Tvttten

tor details to: N R Young.
P O B o. 111. Ocoee FI M ftl

27—Nursery A
Child Care

A p p e a l agetnat

Iho Board ol Adlustmanl In
danying a Setback Veuanca
from J) ft to • ft on side street
lor stock ode fence on Lot 40
Amber wood Unit I. PB If, Pg
If. in Section M i l JO. on the
Northwest corner et Sugar wood
Circle end Woodgiede Ceve.
North ot Dike Road (O IS T I)
t MlCHARO N H O A JA B A U D 111 41V R tAAA Resl
dontial Zone Appeal against the
Board ol Ad|ustmenl In denying
e SetbecS Variance tram M N to
• tt tram side street to allow
•once to remain as presently
installed on Lot If. Amber wood
Unit I. on the West side of
Sugar wood Circle (O IS T II
This public hearing will be
held In Room W I N ol the
Semmoto County Services Build
ng 1101 E First Street. Son toed
f lor &gt;de an June tl, IM ). el f 00
P M . or et toon thereafter et
possible
Written comments tiled with
Ihe L end Monogement Manager
will be considered Persons ap
peering et the public hearing
will be heard Hearings may be
continued Irons lime to time as
lound necessary Further details
available by calling ) ) l IIK .
Eat 441
Persons ere advised that. It
they decide to appeal any de
11 sron mode at this hearing they
will need e record ot tho pro
readings, end tor such purpose,
they may need to Insure that e
verbatim record et the proceed
Ingt It mode which record
includes the testimony end evl
donee upon which the appeal it
•e be based per Section M i 0WS.
F tor ida Statutes
BOA RO OF
C O U N TY COM M ISSIONERS
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A
BY R O B E R T S TU R M
CHAIR M AN
ATTEST
O A V IO N B E R R IE N
Cl e r k
Publish May tl. tag)
D E F 1)4

Am erkea Financial Consultants
1st mortgage et tow at f D \
Jnd mortgage as tow et t 1/4
% Small commercial loans,
vacant land, mobile homes
with lend Good credit, bed
credit We do It ell TO i l l )
IKO F Altamonte Or . Alta
monte
Behind With year mortgage
payments) Protort your cred
It rating Cell ue ter help
A m e ric a n F u n d in g C arp
M l MBS______________________
Business C apital 1)0.000 fe
I I 000 000 end ever P 0 Bee
)4 I) Winter Pk Fie MftO

7 1 -H tlp Wanted
A C C O U N TIN G C L iR K S
E eper lance In accounts payable,
r e c e iv a b le s , or p a y r o ll
Computer eaperlence pro
tarred Permanent positions
Never a teal

IIUP n n _____774-1341
Acrylic Applicators noodod to
apply protective cooling on
cars, bools end planes SI to
I I I per hour We train For
work In Senlord area call
Tempo I I ) OBA f i l l
A C T It now hiring M l A pert
time positions Direct sales
em t^va e n $■&lt;&lt;» $$&lt; tr$Mw$
program f o r (0$fl$d$fttl|l
h H irvlto ,
m 4X3_______

A ID IS All Him* la p A~/ar
earn Bod Good atmoap+wrt L
benefits EO E Apply el De
Bery Manor. 00 N Mwy I f f )

legal Notice
A F F ID A V IT U N D E R
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E S T A T U T E
S TA TE OF FL O R ID A
C O U N TY O F O R AN G E
Tha undersignod. under oath,
says
I This Instrument Is bamg
eaecutfd tor tha purpose at
complying with Section Oil Of
F lor Ida Statutes
) It Is Ihe intention ot the
undersigned to engage In a
business enSerprise under Ihe
tkllttoue name et BLACK GO LD
S E A LC O TE C O . located et i f )
Traiiw ood D rive . Altamonte
S prin gs. Sem lnolg County,
Ftorlde
) Attached hereto end made a
pert hereof Ik Iho newspaper
Proof ot Pubtketton as required
by se&lt;d Statute
4 those interested In said
business enterprise, end the
e,ient ot the Interest et each. Is
es follows
NAM E OF OWNS B
Timothy J VenAlstlne
IN T I B E IT
MX
S IG N A TU R E
/ V Timothy J VenAlsttne
A O D R IS I OF OW NER
Of) Treitwood Drive
Altamonte Springe. F L
NAM E OF OW NER
Kerens VanAlaline
IN T E R E S T
MX
S IG N A TU R E
I f Keren S VenAlstlne
A O O R IS S O F OW NER
afITrellwood Drive
Allemenle Springe. F L
tare me at Apopka. Orange
County. Florida. Nils ism day et
April. DBS
/a Raymond A McLeod
Notary Public
My Cemmieeton E spires
March If. IMS
As referred to In Paragraph I
above Proof et Pubtketton et
mis intention to register It filed
herewith pursuant to the pro
, iSiena et Section ae) Iff f tor Ida
Statutes
A T T A C H P B O O F OF
P U B LIC A TIO N
Publish May f. IA I t . M IMS
OEF M

Shopping For A
New Or Used Carl

w x x jk s o s

(XT OUTHUH.

leana

m o * 4*-r \ roses
seel mas

X

P F

p a in t

Deity Work D e ll, Pay
IN O F E B I
Report reedy tar work et f AM
W fW 1 st St
Sentord

t i e (a n ateaya find tbe
beat duals In I be Z is n ia f
N e re id • C to as! fiad aeclfen.
Read F rfd e y ’a (s e e in g Naretd
for I be beef sefec fiena.

Evening Herald
A M Xwetb I r v a r k l i n e r
henfw rd . ffw rtd n
$ $ $ -M t l

.A,

71— Help Wanted

A

F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice It hereby given met I
am engaged In butinett ft tel
N Slate Rood 4)f. Long wood
Somlnoto County. Ftorlde under
the lie tit lows neme et U L
T IM A T E A D V E R TIS IN G , end
that I intend to register told
name with tho Clerk et the
Circuit Court. Somlnoto County.
Florida m accordance with the
p re v ltle n t el the Flctltleuk
Nome Statutes. To wit Section
M l Ot Ftorlde Statutes let;
U L T IM A T E M OTOR
WORKS. INC
By t/ Peter J Cohen
Publish M e , 14. ) l . M A June 4.
IM l
DEF M

NSU.lBemA6ST 6000CLA
ttA tn AND XXI
K H A tn
0U6HT7O jHt£T U
OMourr
6AOOM SffOAt US
su m .

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 tim e .......................... « 7 C • l
HOURS
3 consettrlivt times 61C ■ I

BY GARRY TRUDEAU
at&amp; fiynccAtstn iM C M M tn e
AtO a&amp; O i STABS
NtAAneOONUT

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

S E M IN O LE C O U N TY
BOABDOF
C O U N TV COM M ISSIONERS
N O TIC E OF
F U B L IC H E A B IN G
JU N E II. ltd*,
til M A M .
The Board et County Com m it
Honors of Somlnoto County,
F i o n d i. w ill held i public
h e ir ing to consider tho follow
Ing
I C M A R IIS A C R A M P TO N
- BP U S - A I Agrlcuttvrt
Zone — Rogues! tor e Borrow
Pit Permit on Ihe following
described property From tho
NW corner et Government Let J
Mt Section 1)1 n . thence S •»
degt If ta E. fOO ft along Ihe
Norm Imo ol told Lot ) . thorn# S
0) digs to ) !
E. 1)1 so ft
parallel to the West line ot te d
Lot ) tor e POB. thorn# continue
S n degt 10* W
E ) J ! ft.
thence S M dogs V 4 f E. t i t I )
It to the Northerly r/w line ol
S R OS theme N 4) degt IS*
If" E 1)1 ft ilong t i d r/w.
theme N 4} degt 44 40 E.
t&gt;• I ) ft along M d r/w. thence
N 4) dogs 44’ 0 )" W. I l l f 10 ft to
the POB Containing 1 0 ) acres
more or lets Further described
at located Northerly et S R 4)0.
two miles East et Van Artdele
(O IS T SI
This public hearing will be
held in Room Wl&gt;0 et Ihe
Seminole County Services B u ld
Ing 1101 E First Street. Sanford.
Florlde. on June tl. IMS. ft
10 00 A M . or as soon thereafter
•S possible
Written comments tiled with
the Lord Monogement Manager
wilt be considered Persons ep
peering of the public hearing
will be heard Hearings may be
continued Irom time to time et
found necessary Further details
available by celling S)• U K .
E el 441
Persons ore advised met. It
they decide to appeal any de
cltion mode ft mishearing, they
wilt need a record el the pro
leadings end. tor such purpose
they may need to Insure that a
verbatim record ot mo proceed
mgs le mode, which record
Includes Mo testimony end evl
demo upon which the appeal to
M be heeed. per keetlen SO# 1 let.
Florida Statutes
HOAR D Of
C O U N T Y COMMISSIONERS
S E M IN O LE C O U N TV .
F L O R ID A
B Y R O B E R T STURM .
C H A IR M A N
ATTEST
O A V IO N B E R R IE N
CLERK
Publish M e , &gt;1 I N I
DE F IIS

D o o n e s b u ry
I CAtflGLTOn*. LASTI HtARQ
im &gt; ycum ac - s t v u * &amp;
r iM u y n m
poycuuwr

CLASSIFIED ADS

N O TIC E
U N D E R F IC T ITIO U S
NAM E S TA TU TE
T O WHOA* IT M A Y C O N CER N
Notice it hereby given that tho
wndertignod. purtudnt to the
" F ic t it io u s Nome S ta tu te "
Chapter M l Of Florida Statute,
will regular with the Clerk et
the Circuit Court In end lor
SominoW County, florlde upon
receipt ot proof ot thtt publico
•ion ot thli notice, the ficitinout
nemo to wit
JIM B O S P lZ Z A
under which I am engaged m
butinett or under which I u p o n
to engage In butinett et Sfi
Dougiet Avenue In Altamonte
Sprmgt. Florlde Ml the City et
Allem enle Sprmgt. Stale at
Florlde
Thai the party interested In
t o d butmett It et lot lews
J N E W TO N IN V E S T M E N T
CO R P O R ATIO N
By Je m e tN M c E lro y .il
Freedom
Dated et Orlande. Orange
County. Florida, thtt Jim day i t
April. IMS
Publith April M. May f, Id. &gt;1.
IMS
D E E 1ST

71— Help Wanted

321 1390
Appikettonk now being accepted
tar full time cashtor Apply in
poreer el Lithe Feed Town
Steve*. MO Lake Mary Sivd
EOC

Appointment Softer Needed 1
Calteeeketo ... oak tar Cindy
AS S EM BLER S
A T T I N T ION men l 4 B k r . b r
modern menutecturing plant
to tbe. strong, reliable, own
transportation Equal Oppor
tunlty Employer Permanent
potman* Never a tee I

TEMP flW ______774-134$
* U T O F F IC E GAL
S4 Trem l Start your career I So
eesyl

Employment
323-5176
M l) Freeck Ave
Auto Setoe Mgr goad volume
Used Car Lot In Sentord with
financing Eep e mu*f Salary
ptui cemmieeton Ron TO ta ll
BE A B IO W H E E L IN TO U R
F A M IL V I S E LL AVOftl
TO I t I te r TO ISIS
Cepe Canaveral F irm needs
people who want to be their
own boat Will train U K pert
lime S410 tull time TO UOf
Carpenter’s Helper Wealed
Must have eepenence Call
otter t p m TO TOO
Carpenters end labors Five
needed See Steve et Flee
World between t &gt;PM Came
with tools end reedy to wort
C L S R IC A L / T T F IS T
Good typing, general office ei
parlance Large co Perm*
non! positions Never a tee I

G AL F R ID A Y
payroll Lets of variety I

«■

Employment

fc V d

323-5176
M il Freach Ave

Fultftme Cooks A Pert Tim e
Waitresses Needed O T 0*1)
AektarReee_________________
Maintenance Person detirod
F a m ille rlitttd n air cendi
tle n ln g A r e f r i g e r a t i o n
equipment Dlsherweshers
wanted Apply In perten
Peye Inn. 1/4 A St Rd 44
AVON EAR N IN O S W O W IIt
O P E N T E R R IT O R IE S N O W tll
n i m l er TO eas e _____
Ntghtirwe Weekend Mecheex
Bowl A m e ric a F u lltim e
m n a ______________________
Parean Far Rallal Duty er
Fu lltim e C hristian Vaults
Ranch tor abueed A troubled
children S itM t t_____________
P ER S O N N EL T R A IN E E
W ill train In ell a spec ft et
personnel Requires ) years
office eiperlence. typt"*. Ns
tetllgont. end desire tor e
TOtSud
Phone Workers WenSed No ee
pertonco nee Bod 14 00 per
hour, plus bonus if* 1141
P S YC H IA TR IC TE C H
Pari time Must be eiperlenced
tor crisis unit In Sominot*

County

ass;____________

to

Receptionist with good toto
phone voice needed tor Sen
ford B ra n ch et N atio nal
Company Cell between 0 A A
104 fS4 7001______
R eliable women es live In
house/kesper ter re tire d
couple Longwood ref re
qulred.prater nan smokers
m u s t d r lv a
R e a m .beard
w'salary negotiable H I oof)
REPS N E E D E D
tor business accounts Full time
140 000 to saoooo Pert time
t i l COO to I I I 000 No sell
Ing Repeat business Set your
own hours Training provided
Cell I i l l FKOEM Mon F rl I
A M lQ lF M C S T
Reetdiet Manager Far lamer
Adult Community Individual
no*did with supev personality,
activities coordination skills,
strong sense ot responsibility
idea: for recent retire e
Apartment A meals provided
Resume to Personnel XK W
Airport B lvd. Suite It). Son
lord Fie TO T I

NOTICE

■moo

TEMP PEW______774-134$
C O N S TR U C TIO N H E L P E R
l i t Learn here I Co rennoveles
cam mere lal but Idlngs I

Employment
ftV d

323-5176

* * *
M U French Ave
Counter Person nesded Must be
neat A mature Will train
Sewing a piuei *o#l , Car
nege Cleaners. *M Shopping
Center. Li
D e t lv e r y D r I v o r / K I Ic hen
Melee, Good pay Pert end
M l time Carlo’s Helton Res
teurent toot ! French Ave
Sentord TO f S M __________
Delivery Collector 14 hr Musi
have valid Fie drivers license
end good driving record Cell
T O fBSS______________________

K N IG H TS O F
C O LU M B U S
n e t eaa o n . saweae
THURSDAY 7 P K .
SUROAT 7 P.M.
GAMES U S M A I M
. JACKPOT U M

TTM FLf SHALOM

D&lt;RECTOR $
ASST M RECTOR
tor a Child Day Cere Center
Prefer I yrs eiperlence In
child related Held Must hove
toeder ship
and
ergenlie
ttonal shills Salary based on
eiperlence Apply toi i Mm
SI before May lath__________
■ X P . PN 0 N B R O O M
M A N A O E R . wen eeteblished
Ce needs aggressive manager
In Sentord O ffice D rew ,
commission plus bonus Far
app* T O 401 f. pel n ________
E X P E R IE N C E D P R E IS E R
C O U N TE R PERSON
Escelient salary A cenditens
SB) SMB______________________
Fe ll A P erl Tim e Peslttooe
A,enable in M l service child
c e re cen ter M a tu rity A
common sons# a mutt E ep A
training a plus Apply In
peraon. tot E ISth Street.
O U A B A N T E B 0 1NCOME
ter educational sales pres
emotions Leaking tor seme
one who dees net normally
arts eds Call Downing IS04I
•Bf SlfS E O E_______________
M A IB S T Y L IS T W A N T E O E s
penanced In chemical wars
tor Coretree A Batoeers Cell
TO S M f. or T O i l l f ___________
H a le W e a le d P a r F le la b
Carpentry Sterling pay S4 00
hr I KB) SBEdSBZ_____________
L A B O B B R S Strang reliable
9*nerel laborers needed Mss
mediately Ol ttor enl leeat ton*
Phene end traneperletion a
must Never a toe Apply

beterBej 1.43 P.M.
WedeesBir 4 4S P.M.

$25 $35 $50
Censes

2 $250 Jockpets
1 I t S (b e a m BhB
:Career Frsvtisste Eted-I

Doltone, FL

■ IN O O

KIWANIS CLUB
O f C A S S ELB ER R Y
rWRET RMRT 7 PM.
STS IS * SI BE
(1) U S B JACBP0TS
Ctsumt Center
t Lei
•BA B U I

IE11V SERVICES
•$$■2331
Lendtcraeer eepertonced pro
tarred Muel have valid Pie
drivers liseenee end be If
years er elder Apply in
person )4B0 W » t h sheet
* 4P M

story

Legal Secr
/Ra&lt;aptlenlal
needed Experience required
Local General Practice Lew
F K m Phene T O f i l l

Me Btbn| cat

E «e t]i

I Irvu ld

CLASSI FI ED
D EP A R TM EN T
171 1411

�71 — H e lp W a n te d
Boding
Company Km
opening* for 10 m
erperl
*l*o
with no erpertenp* m
Mott be at teolt t l
and Hava own tra
to Mop To apply call. »

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

Rentals

L4.XU

loc« i

M in
M AIO - LI
week U tv . own
tten m « I M

a. I

F a n . A**! tor tenter Clttiem
I I I Palmetto Ava
1 Cowan No Phong Callt

LUSH UKDEN SITTING
1 E d rm ..„.........Fur rutted Apt*
I Rdrrn............. Energy Efttctant
SINGLE STORY
B U IL T IN BOOKCASES
A E U N O A N TS TO R A G E

SANFORD CT. APTS.

RN-OB

3253304

Eipertented In later and do
l i v e r y . f am il y oriented
birthing 111 or l i t M in
Apply Mi Vefuel* Manorial
Hospital, M l Ml Plymouth
Ava . Da Land. Fig___________
•o o f a f l o o p t i u i i
S I T UPPERSON
E cperience n*cee*ary. aacallant
banaliti with competitive pay
L o w e * Truaa P lant. 7**1
Aileron Circle
tpntard
Airport Industrial Perk. Van
lord. Fla_____________________
Salat Help Wanted Wa need
goad, hardworking people tor
eetermlnetwg bwtineea Mete
uooa to U K O per me E .par,
ence preterred but willing to
train with aalet background
Car elteyronc*, highett cam
m l talon paid vacation plut
bonutat. etc Call tet teta
Today and ae* ter CMdy
Tired at Job Herding t
C a l l F u t u r e * - t hey h a v e
hundreda at |ob opaningt tor
thote who want to work
ttt AM
O E L I V E R V H E L P E R S no at
parlance necetaary Full t i n t
Good ttarttng pay I T OOO
O l N I I A L O F F I C E
TRAINEE!
Great Harllng
Iob Saner el opening! Good
pay I I I l&lt; *
F A C T O R Y A l l t M I L V aad
P R O D U C TIO N WORK Mori
ihittt open Good pay tcalet
I I I IDO
IM M E D IA TE OPENINGS
Gwnarel Centtrucllen labor
Good pay i l l OOO
TR U C K D R I V E R ! Long haul
Immadlattl Good drlrlng re
cord Over n t n i n
LOCAL D R IV ER !
Itra lg h l
truckt Good pay Start right
away a ll a n
RECEPTIONIST, OFFICE
H E L P E R ! . C L E R K ! . CRT
OPERATOR!
Im m adlata
opaningt Good pay tee let
Call ate a n HOW i
W E L D E R ! Certified Eicetient
pay tcalet Call today *7E

P A IN T E R ! i P A IN T E R
H ELPER !
I m m e d ia t e
opaningt good tlerting pay
Call today art a n
O R T W A L L With o r without
n p tr lin c e
Im m a d la t a
opaningt Good pay Call to
1 day t r t a m _________________
TRUSS A t lB M E L E R I
Cipariancad prttarrad but will
train EecadOnt benefit! with
competitive par Apply at
Lowe • T r u t t Plant. JtOt
A i e r on C ir c le , le n t o r d
Airport Indutlrlol pork_______
TRUSS SAW O P E R A TO R S
Clery taw uporlonco nocot
ta r y E acal i«n • bant h ie .
plenty at hourt Apply at
L o a n T r u t t P la n t, TtO 1
A ile r o n C ir c le . S a n lo rd
Airport Induttrlal Pork_______
V E T IR IN A R T
R E C E P T IO N IS T
To IS on hr Groat Hxjt tor an
animal lover'

Empiofmtnt

323-5176

H t l FraacA Are
W e 'ire u needed M l A pari
time Mature A e.perlerxed
with Italian Food Carla's
Italian Rattauranl. loot S
F ranch Ava . Santprd SO TtSi
W AR EH O USE
A T T E N T I O N man Shipping.
Hectoring Abie lo lilt M Iba
own trantportatipn St an hr
Permanent poll lion* Haver a

n'iif ptm _____774-H4I
W AR EH O USE
St »S No experience neededl
E etallwnt M u ra l

Emptopntnt

323-5176

ISIS French Ave

♦1—Apartments/
House fo Shore
Roommate, lemelo only to there
country attete on lake U ®
month m i n t

93— Rooms for Rent
Chrttttaa Apt! A Hemet
TV . kitchen, lettedry. mold. AM
wk up Or I d S S d S / W R R
Clean room with kitchenette
Private both STS weak m
cludet utlllllee IWB tecurity
depoait a i a W e r U t f A i a
Clean CamterteMa Ream sad
weak, include! whittle! A meld
tarvice Coll » l ettj or 177

tan______________________
Longwood Lovely Edrm . kltch
on prlv . homey otmotphoro,
Sat wk All a tn ______________
Ream For Rewt Lake Mary
araa SSR wk . kitchen prtvl
moot m srst. n i «n o
Room in pri&gt; home tar re

Nicely turn I bdrm apt .bay
window! Irg ter porch, all
uttiifiot pd J bikt to town, no
patt n i O T , leave maaapge
Nicety turn ubt'atrt t bdrm
Apt . coupN no patt MOvvk
t H Paimarto Ava Sanlord
Santard I bdrm Adultt. no
patt Air. quiet ratldtntial
SETS me A up M W I t _______
i bdrm efficiency. par tact lor t
porton A ll ak plut SIM
tecurity dopeatt Call 771 n o t
• room Apt In town I child' A
pa* OK I Ttt me t m depotit
n t«u i

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

u u

Rant New and Eeleyf
Tb it Limited Spec tat;
Energy E the tent
1 Adrm 1 Rath Apartment!

ONLY
V F lf c ■ M M i t i i t t n i t iJ
t tU
^ l 14
A tie
1 barm , I hath elte ireliable
w Oeeecetrw Wall Cavartngt.
Relit la RaaAcaaa. Plenty
at Star age. K u K n D r . t r
He .0 up and Carport
Water kadi Accepted

321 1911
OtUft* M tree 345^411
RAMROO COVE A PTS .
M E AtrpartRM I
p h o n e nsaaM . n s aaat
Etttclancy tram IMS me
Ottcaant tar Santar Cltltant
a C O U N TR T S E T T IN G •
Large I A I Bdrm Apartment!
Adatt Lek.vtawFamily Paalttd*
A va lU k t. New Open Waakandt

MAST! IS COIL__ 323-7100

t »0 1 30
Saturday from
10 fo )

Spec tout Apartment! mlnutet
tram Hwy M Ji Lakatront.
pool lennlt. adultt. no patt
laundry Starting at U 7 t a mo
Call MS OUT to tea
I and I bdrm Alto M n lth ad
efficiency tram STS weak use
depot I' Ha peft Call m a tO T
I T P M i l l Pa Imatto_____
I Bdrm , large living room, new
appl lancet, A In good condi
ttan MTS mo afPRMI_________
1 B d rm .. carpet, alr/haat,
b a lc o n y
C o n v a n la n t Ip
downtown SIT A E Ird St
U l l m o ptuadapoilt 171 ISIS
s m SP EC IA L
I A 1 bdrm from S1I0 Lake
Ada Ftailbta laata 7711*70

101 — Houses
Furnished / Renl

2 Bdrm

house 1325 mo

with HSRdapaait Call H I **kB
I or J bdrm nawly ramodatdd
l i l t Laura* Avanua S i lt
month plut apcurlty Rater
to ta l requited m ' too
I b d rm . I bath on beautiful
Lake Mary
In Lake Mery
H S attendance lone IK K
mo plut IWO u c m i n i
1 bdrm , I &gt;t bath, lamily room
Shaded y a rd , cen ve nle nt
location Ha patt SAW me a
eat dap Weal day! Pa. 47*
OOAS E vat XV lOt t o r » 7
7 bdrm &gt; bath available J -me
t l MOO par month UOO twcu
rlty dapotll Call 777 77*0,
aher « p m waatdeyi
4 E D R M I B ATH M M par mo
MTS depoait No ratngarator
Taking application!
S TE M P E R A G E N C Y
XU teal

H is U R J l o W d liH C s H IT

4cMf*s a so* ars.

Vi -y*Y A.SS‘T «*&amp;*!»' M
V A 4hltt&amp;uAf ■ ■S-TY *
Uo UT TWf mil*
*Md Is Tb AT uAf

,i W PiktUR**•iff*

215— Boats and
Accessories

I7TH STIEET FUINITUIE

BOAT A A U T O REPAIRS
LCNEO-tt pric»t 'for brgNatf quai&lt;
fy Call 272 4a’i for rtf
Uoiqia Au*o A Mann# R#pa&lt;r
Factory Oiract i* h Cancwi
Ha^d laid fibargiatt 622)
Unigv# Marin# Diltribufori
\2\ 4R2A______
'• ' &gt; ■ ; m
tad • * •&lt;
Marc SO1
, magic tiff CNtnad by
Mart mechanic 62 710 111
404 aft#r |

IP IW JTThSt................... S71 1*11
Applincet Far Sate all in
eicetient cenditlen A tally
guaranteed....
771 47**
Set Solid mapl* twin
bedt d r e w deth
771 1777
Early American love tael
and tola |7S
Call 771 ]c*r
* I I t r t P M
Freerer U p rig h t
it &lt;u rt
EtceHent candilion S 7 » or
bail otter Me tear

219— Wanted to Buy
Baby Bads Stratton Ctotfctv
P lavpanv if e
P it « tb 4 (k

i —fit m u n niDH _

Naad Crtbt. Fiat pent Baby
Vurnkfurff ctotfiing Good
t A*'«" 7 PM
121 ) ’*)
Paying CASH fo*
Aluminum CanrCopp**
B r i n load
Glayt Gold 5itv#r
KoAomoTotM f!|W t|f
I ) 00 SaI ♦ 1 m i 100
Sac#nd Image
naad* c w N fra
Idattfry H I f i l l

111teat

Set* 4 Swtvtl Pecker Plaid
Good condition s i l l Call

NOW LEASING
CALL 322-1051

151— Investmenl
Property / Sale

141— Homes For Sale
L O N G W O O D ] bdrm 1 bath
roof Low* down
O w h ir financing t i L i W

51 mi

NEW SMYRNA REACH
ACLF R»flr»m#fsf Mom#
E &gt;(«fk*nf Irscom#

C0UNTIT WIDC RULtY

RMfty

R E A LTO R S

U1t...te....Opm 7djytl

Rag. R . t Erpber...........JW -tn S

NEW HOME

DoubleOffice for rtnl
Available June let 171 rooo
Winter Sprlngt Protetttonel
Ortice Space
AM SM tg ft.
reatonabta rant Phone
137 0731 or 74S4A3S
_______
1400 tq ft ViOC per mo plut tat.
i calling Iant, Brick A Cedar
In te rio r w a ll!
Bob M
Ball.Jr., P A . Realtor 111
illl
*71 W Lake M ary Boulevard
Suit* *, S700 month Im
mediate occupancy 177 770*

141— Homes For Sale
All Signal Are Got 7 bdrm 1
batht dan, tow equity, walk
mg dittanca to ichooi central
air i teat St7 too Call Nowi
177 1**4

Lavelf 3 Bdrm

PH0NC 3733443

Will StiMt Cfl... -...371 5005
ilitio a i

5TEMPER
IN V E S T M E N T ] unify m S
Son ford Only 6)7 000 Ig
down or re fiPiAnce 'Owner
will attitf
I LO TI
•Arts
H UO E I S TO R Y ) « Bdrm «
hath. M cauntryl Oakt. palmt
end trait treatl Hew e&lt;t lea
central teel/elr with heel
pvmpt New Solar hat water
healer t Oeubi* ttdad krtch
tlreplece 7* X Ik' icreea
parch I Beautiful View I Un
believable tat log
S T O R Y TO W N H O U S E In
eiceltenl lacattsal 1 bdrm l ‘i
bath » large ait m klttchent
Cammvatfy peel I Priced tar
eeiypvrrtete 171404
C O O L S P A R K L IN O POOL
w tancvd 4 acre and large I
bdrm heme I Huge matter
bdrm
PlraRlacal Central
h e e t / e lrt &gt; w e r h t b e p t l
A nam e na qwaltlylng m l law
I U4 OOO

IN O IL T O N A

S AN FO R O 3 bdrm
t bam
Fenced yard F«a room i « c
com! 64) 000

ItM H W Y I? t l

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

G re g o ry
MOOltEfr Y1HHOMES
QM
L si(n t N*« .1 .Ustd Mobil*
Horn* Dtsltt in this Air e .
Famtltas
A
Adults
M0) Hwy f 7 f I
12) 1200
•2 Shy iin# Obf W id a l bdrmo 2
ba1H|. 2 tnciowd pore ha %
•OOdly locafton Adulf »a&lt;
' All 131 3014____________
04 S&lt;«lfa Kay
7 bdrm
| bain Split Call
JTI Idflu Sun Thyfi

159— Real Estate
Wanted
2 ) acr#t of paifyr# Sanford or
Lab# Mary art* Will pay
tath CaH Hob fta'i Jr *1
222 7144 * .i )1J 1190

161-Country
Property / Sale
CHta#n ) bdrm 1 pluth acras.
pool, fane ad for N x w t Ra
dux Del M l 000 H% H U

143—Waterfront
P r o p e r ly / S a le

U ltA

Ml TOOIU0
tOIRON
IE KM (SlKt

Me &gt;b .
Sanford

223— M is c e lla n e o u s

L IS T W ITH U lt

323*5774
A L U M O W t f fbVNNNOUSC
L *rga 2 ttory ] bdrm JVt batti
m G ik land Vlllag# Vupar
convert karst Aitumafci* FH A
PeesL/v# to See* Prued to Sail
At 6)7.100

COLOR TE L E V IS IO N
R C A
| )‘* color (onto**
**l«vitkon Origin#! prlcv ovo*
6A0P boianct duo 6344 Cain
or tik i ovtf payment* Df 625
monffi NO M O N E Y DOWN
StMl In
anty Fffhn hpm«
frtal. no o-bhgallon Call
H I 'SJVddfly or night

O T H E R MOM 11 L O T I.
A C R E A G E . IN V E S TM E N T
P R O P E R TY
C A L L A N Y TIM E
R E A L T O R M l Iff)

U Pick Groan Raant
Sbawbarriat
*b
Ava m 17*7

m i* T 7

12000 &lt;fwn 6J47 mo 6 ocrot JJ0
ff p i v f d rd
fro n to g t
bom«tifo(no metelk#*) 273 *040

|4 JOC

4 NORM C O U N TR Y HOME IN
O I T E E N wifPt 2 llte p in g
cobtnt 13)000

221— Good Things
to Eat

WILSON MAIEit FURNITURE
li t Ilf E. ttt ST

183— Television/
Radio / Stereo

k t t c h e n , d i n i n g ro o m
booutifgi Mtiodvd lo* 1^1 iOQ
For ftuotity crtHm onihip And
(ompAtitiy* p# icoi kot ui pr»t*
Out your r&gt;#t« hom»
Sanford N m 1 bedroom horn#
with IIvmg room, dining room
ipeirwiAd family room lAundry
room wortsUsop Call lor In
tor mot son m 11Oe or BTi 4U?
MJ POC or twst offer
lAnferd Pool Horn* 3 bdrm
f i t In Nll chtn w»th br l i h
fleort Ftrtel acti A potso
O M r r t d bf l ow A p p r e f i i L
tllU M

ni rue
S ta ck a b le W e t h e r / D r y e r .
French Provincial dining tat
•etcher t d*th 777 17*7 or
171 7*17
Ut*d W itte r I Per It A Service
toe Kenmeret
111 Sa*7
MOONEY A P P LIA N C E S

153— AcreageLots/Sale

:j both with

g»ta* room, ffreplace re*»n

231-Cars

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

Recanditionad Appliance!
from 14! W A R R A N TY
B A R N E TTS
C A S S E LB E R R Y
IM I1 1 J
IM M I]
* R EN T T O O W N*
Color TV t
tlaraot waiter*
dryers refrigerator treatert
furniture, video recorder!
Special lit weak t rent is oc
Alternative TV A Appl Rental*
Ziyrei Stepping Center

€ ' « l|t|4lR

CALL BART
R EA L E S T A T E
r ea lto r

its

7we

Lie t ill Citift 6ribf
I t * Ve«»*rtj A rt

By Owner 1 bdrm 1 bath. I tar
garage elec ttova A oven &gt;1
It tetrig, treater ditpotai
radar range, large dithwath
pr. cafltral air .-heat, many
otter a■lr at S47 too In Sanora
near Sanford Ava A Airport
Blvd Eva 111 t I M
dayt
TTT O Ui or 777 SMI
C o a a try L lv la g / C lly
Caavantaaca Loch Arbor S
bdrm , l i t bath rancher, halt
acta head lot. S big tert
petee. SW.SRB 777 swr
Da Aery ) bdrm
&gt; bath. 1
tlory. A trama. on 1 a heavily
wooded acret *S% complete
IASADO MR *7*1______________
Duplet Far Sale Two I bdrm
unlit, attached gevege newly
renovated U7 M0 171 Ji«*
Far Sale Ry Owner 7iXa«
mobile home with lot H X t l
utility ream. 13*** relied,
tn clo te d tcreen ed perch
R*uad permanent thlngle
ro o t
F u lly c a rp e te d
Ovorlooaing St John t River
Covered boat Hip Ute af pool
A club houeo Coll lor app 1
tea toe I or 1*4 s ilt

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent

turn Vary
pa "a turn G all. A
at back tear Adultt
Rant by weaA. or tall
SM* par mo

S A N F O R O . Raaa weeety *
Monthly re tat Util me o ft
MB Oak
Adult! I All TRA)

roam, oa tais
2 RV Spaces Amlsble

^sm auM M

IT UUE HONtOC
1mi 2 K MOONS
LAKEFR ON T
LUXURY AD ULT
C O M M U N ITY

321-0739 Eve 372-7443
. . . IN D E L TO N A t e a
* a H O M IS F O R H I N T a a
a a STSISIt a a
Santard Sbdrm
Site month Call AM TiSI.
attar S_____

Metd te rvka Call m e »7
S T P M its Palmetto Ava

323-2920

C € C ltS t&gt; 1 b v e m

has

m tm l

BATEMAN REALTY
103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

107—Mobile
Homes / Rent

R e n ta l Office

of waxsviue, cmio

T u e s d a y - M a y 21, I H S ^ S I

SAN FO R D 1t ir e llo tt
M l 000
W Mallcrowtkl
R E A L TO R
177 7*R7

Bttefil Plant Sale i or ter ot
F a il 7&gt;rd Si A P»irrteHo (XII
E 7)id Sf 1 S«lurdey lflh
bajinriwg a' I AM ___________
C trim ic Kiln I Motih fw u k
ft# Ml#
Vat#Hit# TV Systems
Comp*#!# All you naad I00\
Financing No monay down
tl
00 Udivorvat 6)1 ))44
Small c im p ir top t v short bad
truck 6)0 5 htitans to a good
Noma I wki &gt;id )77 57)0
AL*L'«l#n dlapiay 13
' M
•a&lt; b '610' (loffilngi rack 63)

199— Pels &amp; Supplies
Cacfcfftalt W hlta A gray
Young Juft starting lo lay All
birds mutt go 1710121 or
212 79*0
Fra# to gotvi homa an biach
Labrador., mala 7 mot all
sno»s I va«
i; &gt; *4. *
Praffy Pupp4#t f or Val*
cockapao 6125
121 637)

m *4ji

1# Magna vox color TV t#0,
atio 10 epaad RlcyCf# |)0 1)0)
iNyrsnawoud Ava U bib aast
of Mallonyilla i Aft#v a
10 &lt;n Snappar Comat • Ml*
riding m o w n
Sta rt Roto
Tlllar powar fwd r#y . ) HP
Both a a c tlla n f condition
127 4047

701— Horses
1) M ‘•orrtl/wMtt ipamf mart. S
y rt with 1 mo old filly
sc#*#! t*ffiii» Cal* Tar I J|1
»M3

231— Cers

203— Livestock and
Poultry

B * d C r»d iU
m

No Credit?
FINANCE

NATIONAL AUTO SALES

Ratk*«i Far %at«
P»fI, im goati min la rto i
Wile# 5#i#« Hwy 44W 11)4470

1 120 S. Sefflwd 321 4015

* DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION ★

213— Auctions

H w y#)
........ Da ytanj fttach
a a a a a Hakdt a a a a a a
fU E L IC AUTO AUCTION
I v u r W H H I M .I f iM P M

A U C TIO N E V E R Y FR I NIG H T

L &amp; E AUCTION
IM lantovd Ava
C O N 1IO N M EN T6 W E L C O M E !

FOR E S TA TE

* Where Anybody *
* Can Buy or Sellt *

C o m m trc ia l or R aiid anfiai
Auction* A Appeal ta li Call
Dali •Auction 92) U20

Far mara dafailt
I **4 Iff 6)11

3234513

STENSTROM

Ov A*/y Aa*e 4 Mertne Seta*
Acre*! The rtvar. tag at Mlt
tl* Hwy IT *1 PeEafy MARSM
Feud Felrtarw it i d
t c ri.
#ir ihockt m »g i man» new
t e 'i i 777 na* 7 to 1 P M ____

O

D ISCO UN T
A U TO
SALES

WE FINANCE
IM ! Francis A##......... tl&gt; I MS
1#7f OWi 442 C#mr#r#tt*a orim
35.000 miias Naads rapair
from fvst 392 436 ! wwaftdayt
1#7l Cbavy Impala Tor tat# by
emmar Runs good 34)0 Call
121 0#3)______________________
ItT i Honda' Civc n#w paint.,
ciaan, good condition 62110
n » 0571 ittar 4 PM
IfTf Lincoln Town Car toadad
Valour intartor E «c#Hc#«if
Conditton U &gt;50 )7)4M7
It7i Magmyn XE G T T Top.
Bvxkaft 316. Air. aicaflant
condition 12.750 Call 391 4157
1*61 C h t T O t l • 1 C • p r I c #
E:iC#t»#nl condition' 71..'000 mi
64400 Pbona MS 4636 or
397 6931______ ______________
*74 Op
PH few* Runt par fact,
naw paint, 61010 or maK#
ottar ^ 9 7 2 #
___________
79 Morula PrfiwM
Blackt
Auto tr im .Sunroof
69##)
Caurfvtf Panfiac ......... 97) lif t
60 DocNf# Omni
4 dr Sadan
An tons§ He
ftl'ftS
Caurtasy Ppafiaa............ 393-1111
ID Grand P fU
No monay down
62##l
Caurtviy Panflac .......... 99)91)1

•0Mustang
69##)
. 32) l i l t

(aurtasy Pantiic

61 Bwlch V/6
F ulfy agu^p
Raducad
Cavrtaiy Pan Hac ....... . I l l - H i t
61 Cadillac f i#aiw«kd
Raducad
6t#75
Caurfasy PaaHac ............ I t l - t H l
•1 Da ttan Ilf - Tin tad window#,
air Wail malntalnad 62 600 or
bast offar 305 66# 7047________
#2 Mafda474
Raducad
6S7SO
Cawrfaif Panti#&lt;.... --)9)1111
•7 Mart ary Ifpftyr 06 Sattllng
aatata Lib* naw cond 31 000
mi |4 400 331 64#5
64 Pontiac Flaro
Sport# Coupa Raducad IP##)
Caarl f y Bw N n ...........3 I » I H
i4 Pontiac Sunbird
No morwy down
64*#)
Caurtaiy Pant lac...........J it 1111

235-Trucks/
Buses/V»ns
l#7) CM C ) 4 ton Van The a#
spaad r*aads motor A4)0 Call
32) **44
1976 Far#
F 100 Shoe ttwd
311 3105
'fa Rt hand! dr 'Mall Jaap 'Good
working condition 6©m# bBdy
damaga f ICO 11) 6*17 attar «

243-Junk Cars
AMY JU N K CARE A TR U C K S
! h * M T v rk iie t n l t e .
Cell mill*
......... m kill
TOP boiler Peld lor Junk A
U rte ceM.tr utkt A heavy
^ equipment 777 f**0
W E P AY TO P DOLLAR FOR
JU N K C A R S A N O TR U C K S
CBS A U T O PARTS 7*1 *»4*

C O N S U L T OUR

REALTY-REALTOR
Sinlotd’s Sslts Itidct

Oattana 1 bdrm L/R. dining
araa. kltch. ter porch tit
plut t)00 tec No patt Avail
now S P t mo I P »*dc I'M
IQS IT4 toeo

***•!« RRfTERCR
Call
S ANFO R D Furnlthad ream, by

•315 !

©its. eofjwie

123— For Lease

•t pit F Irtt Month. Rant
TWO Ridgewood Ava
Sanlord Fla
C A LL
&gt;2) 44)«
1)3 #461
Morvdey thru Fndey

1 t€ MlftC
VlEJUAO-y
I6N*S&gt; CATS, BUT-tUfS SiTUATcM MAf

Farmhouaa or other rural area
tpr married protvitidnal COU
p ie w it h 1 d e g t
H ava
aacallant reference! Prater
Seminote County, but will can
Ildar nearby location Price
negotiable Call I KM I 731 H it

RIDGfWOOO AIMS Af TS.
Limited T irir Otifj

a ria Kitchen Prlv STS w*
Includaa all uttmiaa a t ASM

FROM

123— Wanted to Rent

127— Office Rentals

A V A IL A B L E 1 bdrm I bath
carpar. appliance, t e am ed
potte. laundry STM/Ml B U
Deplea &gt; b d rm . c a rp o rt,
p riv a te patla. fan. law n
tarytea MRS w a . US Mi7

[SHENANDOAH1
VILLAGE
APTS.

7 bdrm . } bath, all appliance!,
w aiter R dryer, tcreened
perch, many bund*. drapet.
pool, water R garbage M il
m o , 717 4713 E v o i l t H l t e

) bdrm I bath, cant heol/elr.
Nnca. wall to wan carpet,
appi utility thed no pelt
Si7&gt; mo MOO tec 773 *0*0

SAVE u u

E v e n in g H e ra ld . S a n fo rd . F I.

K P T *N* C A R L Y L E * b y L a r r y W r i f l h l

121— Condominium

Park Ava MobltaPark

777 TAtl

KISH REAL ESTATE
iO Y L lW IL D E Tb it tpoctawt
hame It recent aad ready tar
year le m ily t! 4 bdrm , I
batht. family ream, large
game ream Owner will at till
m financing 1*1*04
NSW LIS TIN G S bdrm., S
balbt Oak heart, tcreened
fo o l
tr a p . G reealteete
Lavaly earner tot w ith large
eok treat Sit tea
COWOO Newly fade car tied
ead t ilt rh im e* I bdrm t
tier y Wan t let* at Ml.see
O B I N SUNDAYS 1 PMka t RM

113— Storage Rentals

(305) 321-0041
I U W o rb Street
Santard. FI &gt;1771

I A Up

-jaew*

117—Commercial
Rentals
• eta,i A Office Space MR u* to
1.0DR tq It otte iter age i
able 777 **17

REA LTO R
Large 4 b * m
1 bath brick
home M Highland Park. USD
tq rt with dbta cor garage
plue 14X71 paTtd. large let m l
nice landaceptng Aaaumobia
1*0% mortgage with poetifcie
owner linancing S '7t MO
XXX 477*

WE LIS T A N D t I L L
M O R I HOM ES THAH
A N T O N I IN NORTH
S I M I N O l t CO UN TY

A N D LET AN E X P E R T DO T H E JOB

D O LL H O U S I I kdrm 1 bath
heme in quwt araa Perfect
tor |*tt tlerting evil Owner
will tele with eapentet ter
e k ta la la g Ike m ertgage

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

si*.tee
M O V I R IG H T IN I kdrm I
bath heme with with eat In
kitchen, large ellllTy build
ingt, centre! air/heal Virtual
pnredite tea the drier iminjte
gerdanarf M l *4#
W HY N O T ) bdrm I bath heme
with ant In kitchen, lirapieie
parch, central ak/haal SIN
an tuner nca lot Stl.aao
OW NER M O M V A T I D Sbdrm
7 bath Name with eat in hitch
an. central alr/haal, rear
lanced yard SSI t*R
SPACIOUS L IV IN G I bdrm )
baht Name with paddle tarn.
•p ill b d rm plea, central
«ir/haar braahlatl bar Oraat
attumpiian tar the inverter!

Additions 4
Remodeling
t ree E itirw.fe* A Consulting

LH

Bondte
Iniured
We Spw lei Ire In Quel If» I
Siege BulMeri
M » WC7

F menclng Aveiiehte

It m u era leaking tea * tec
te tc M career m Real Iilata.
Slanttram Realty It leaking
tar yau Call Lae Albright
today at ITI 74M Ivemngt

Lowest p rx at ter higtelt quell
r » Cell XT} t / &gt; t lo r M l
l u * * A tU rry l^ U ■

Appliance Repair

Automotive
a u t o r ip a ir s

Bookkeeping

SISM41

Carpentry

sn«*R»______________

‘ C O M M E R C IA L S P EC IA LIS T
L A K E MAR Y R E A L T Y
BOR B A L L . JR
&gt;11 MM
S A N F O R D 41 X MR lanced let
Wall A taptic Good Tprme
Weteca Crate Realty, lac
r ea lto r
m te n

Regafr t R e f U n • Remodel
e Free litlm e le ! e m eeee e

Handy Man

LAWNS M O R ID 4 TRIMMED

TO W ER ! B E A U T Y SALON
FO R M E R LY Harriett I Beauty
Note ll* E Ut St 77)17*7

Air Conditioning

AA r r i AggkMKR S * fiK i
M fu Servtco Ho I if r e Charge
17 ff &lt;■» KM M*l II* M i l

• y Owner IJI7 tq ft dwelling to
S I S II W Watt Airport
Bled Sanlord Toted GC 1
Suitable lor pr plat Hotel pffica
convert ion Principle! pnty

ACE LAW N SERVICE
Memtenanr* Sodding Pruning
(leaning Thatching I .tinning
t i n I ilin u t e t
tel &gt;711

Health 4 Beauty

122 7021

P G IN IV A O S C IO L A R O P
tO W I D FOR MORI L is t
S Acre Caontry tracti
Well Need ae paved Rd
1 * \ Oawe Id Y rt a l l l X I
M rU N J W

149— Commercial
Proptrty / Sa I*

Anythieg Ite rttk e l Sine* 1*7*1
tillmete* 7* Mr S o n ic . C*lll
Tere’e Iterhle S e rv k . i n 177*

I . E. LINK CONST.

Wether'i Heefing A A h
Conditioning Sew Ire
Work on window unit* A H V ’I
&gt;71 **07

tses PAR K A V E Santard
*41 Lh Mary Aivd Lk Mary

Plumbing

l i p Meteymen. Met Reiledi*
Free E*1 moil eny |eh Beil
Rite* &gt;71 *1)1 Cell Anytime

W ILL B U I I O TO SUIT! YOUR
LO T OR OURSI IX C L U 1 I V I
A O I N T F O R W IH S O N O
D E V C O E P . A C IN T R A L
F L O R ID A L E A D L R I MORE
H O M I FU R LR IS M O W IY I
C A L L TO D A Y I

322-2420

Lawn Service

A tU O O E L IN C SPECIALIST
We H ew li.
The Whole Belt Of We •

4 H e a tin g

C A L L A N Y T IM E

Electrical

A G R E A T G IP T I Hove Her
Kitchen RemeAeledi AMTygeee*
m e e it x i*
Very Rehntee ..
All frpee el cerpentry A re
modeling 77 y rt eap Cell
R itte r* Groei J7I **&gt;*

Cleaning Service
Corge* Cleentng
Hewn A Hell II* M .
S**e A Chew. U* i n M R

MAIDS- Tr Oi Wf
O w U m u ll m&gt;1 Te O te lite ti
Ceil K H teM ert)
fete Serrks Lew Rite*

CAU NOW 3350800
Soe'.ieuf few in teioee A
Llcenete
E tl
Pieaie Cell
i A L Cleaning Seryicq
TT7M07

Spring Yard Cteae up*

m m i

Semi Retire* Contractor went*
imall remodeling late He*
tenable 777 MS)
TH OM AS A T H O M A S Meat*
repair. ■Hating, lawn tare
Call 7)1 MM

Nursing Care
OUft R A T H A B 6 LO W K•
Labavhaw N w iM f CawHf
•1# 8 le ce M 6# . UM ar4
3914169

Painting
A Wey Te tevoi Beil War*
te ll H u n to r wtllpeparing,
pointing * m art Rel Very
RelloM* U I ra il I K

Home Repairs
p a in t in q

CA N PEN TER
Repair* and
remodeling No |oh tea smell
Call m * M l
Maintenance a* all type*
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
tnd elec Irk 117*0■

Landclearing
G E N E VA LA M O C LE A R IH G
Let Lendcteorlng .... PHI dirt
Topsail Pond* Oreln dllchet
Site Pregaranon Coll So* WTO
THORNE L A N O C L C A R IN O
FILL DIR T # C LA Y A
S H A L IH A U L IH G
D IM S )

Lawn Service
Lawn Maintenence
L o r f t t opmg But*. Meg Mewing
To* W»&gt;
B E A T TH E H E A T I

t

Call Chnstiin Bios ' J
^CompiKi Lw* Cat
\ f o

Hi*sonelite i n n
3 2 3 4401

% -* *e *■ *% ‘X

Tl '

u N iy

* ***,C'*N°*^

W.G. TRIBBY
O VIEDO F l A

A L L TyRteg. Secretenel A
W u * Pr evening Service*
.............
MN

«1

Masonry
REAL Concrete 7 Mon Qualify
Operation Pella! Drivewoyi
Day! U I 7711. Eve* 7)7 1171
M AY S P EC IA L
Year Own A rk k Bor B Q
O N LY
SMI
COMF1 E T 1 1
III 0 704............................. 171 *17*

Horn* Improvement
Callter'i Svrttemg A Remodeling
Mr tee Tee Smell
111 Burton Lena, tenter*
n i *47&gt;
Plyr?it)tn9 Patnf tr^p, Elm trie
Car pantry Dan t 6aa if 7 A#a ia t

Secretarial Service

M S 7**1

Metre* PalMIng A Well Rrprtr
Yew bvr ncaiertell
Wr luppty leter T* SAVE SM
m in i
IN S TA LL 1C LL A 61 PAIR

ItsVII
Painting Inter ter f r ie r lor S r
tenor Spec i« l
Prei Wom
Water proof. Seel, Prop A
Polrrl Soft F r«g E » l Contact
Jerk ees HOP. R KeJi*
R nponiteli Mon end Iwipor will
peml ygur Hem* or Butm ttt
etc Give yeur probtemi to u*
WE C A R E Quality work. K
yrt tap 777 Me’ Lit tent

Sewing
Altere'leni A Clothing Regel'e
Q uLk Service E &gt;p Seemiiret*
Cell enyilme
771 teeo

Sewing Medlines/
Vacuum Cleaners
Sewing Machine Rage1'* ell
mekee » yrt tvgerience In

^wneMJIRteredniTMJ
Sprinklers/Irrigation

A B O U T T IM E IR R IG A TIO N
New Inttellellant
Free E lf
E ■peci Regain el Complete
Sprinkler Syltem i
Timer*
Pum p!
EH
I4 IR M

Tile
A M T IL S Cersm k file u 'e t A
in ite iie tia n Eeth. n o o n
romodeiing, repair* La** Ot
•l i t * . R a iig n e , R A lte r n i,
greule. te llin g m alerlRI*.
cleenar*. te m enl, m ettle.
Ihintaf inileMefien* Show
roam. 7R7 I llfh S I , Venter*
John Parker. TIM Contractor
m IfBA o r m o t t o
____
Ceramic T i lt glue • » er mud
m .m od F teen, wen* an* etc
Free Ellem ate 777 l» H . efter
hr* P I MS* Jeme* I Lae Inc
Sraffntenn TUa Carem k. Vinyl
Aitettee etc Intieited A rg
paired (&lt; • . re*. Ik Free
* t ii m e t e ! 7 7 J e 7 4 1 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ _

Tree Service
Tree Sere.*.
« P M

CaR Alter
______ _______

ECH O LS TR E E I E R V I C I
Free Iiiie te te tl Law Prkgel
Lie.. Ine Slump Or Hiding. Teal

Plastering

mtmdeyernMg

• A LL Pheeu M neMerlog •
Repair. Shtcca. Mood Coe*.
S tm .H ie d lr K k &gt;H l«*1

JOMM A L L E N ! LAWM A T R E E
Deed free removal L k Ain*.
Free eel 7)1 STM

t

�• i t :

i B - E v n l n g H « r ild . Sanlord. FI.

BLONDIE

Tuotday, M a y I I , m i

BEETLE BAILEY

THE BORN LOSER

muoow
6EE,

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yifflCMfORK*

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ARCHIE

f M S C O E S N 'T LOOK- LIKE
M U C H - REFUSES 7 a
L E T AN VO N E B A T H E
H IM - LOVES T O p l a y

E P W IM G S
P C G . A RCH-

B U T T H E R E MASW'T i q
SEEN A B U R G L A R NEAC
T H E IR H O U S E S IN C E
T H E Y G O T H IM '

EEK A MEEK

WHAT PC. M3U G0IU6 X )
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boy booze .

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by Chic Young

Iron Pills Best Way
To Overcome Deficiency

D EA R DR. G O T T After
having a blood test recently. I
was told that I had low iron
count and should take tron pills.
The pills make me nauseated
and lightheaded Would It be
sufficient for me to Just eat more
foods rich In Iron so I can stop
taking the pills?
DEAR READER - The iron In
by Mort Walkor
food Is basically the same type
as that In pills The problem Is
amount. You would have to eat
enormous amounts of red meat,
a good natural source of Iron, to
equal the quantity of Iron In one
or two pills. Therefore. If you are
Iron-deficient, the pills are a
quicker and more effective way
to build up your Iron stores. I
advise you to take Iron pills If
Iron Is what you need. In the
event that one kind of pill gives
you an unpleasant symptom,
ask you r doctor to suggest
another type. Keep trying until
by Arl Sanaom you find one that suits you.
DEAR DR. G O T T - A year ago
I hud a rash on my ieg that
Increased In size. developing In a
circular pattern. My doctor told
me that It was a fungus and gave
me medication that made the
rash go away. Now It seems to be
starting again What causes
this?
D EA R R EA D ER Fungus
Infections of the skin can be very
r e s i s t a n t to t r e a t m e n t ,
particularly In a diabetic. Even
In non-dlabetlcs. a fungus rash
can come and go. depending on
the skin's ability to fight the
yeast. Some people seem to be
more susceptible to superficial
fungus Yo(ir story Is a common
one. Your best bet Is to use the
medicine your doctor has given
you wherever the rash appears.
Athlete’s foot Is a similar yeast
Infection, and Its resistance is
legendary. Fortunatrly for most
(wtlents with your kind of rash,
the Infection Is seldom serious. It
ts. rather, a bother that usually
can be controlled by topical
preparations like Tlnactln and
Mycostatln.
by Howl# Schneider
If you ure being driven crazy
by the rash on your leg. ask your
MX) CAW EXPECT A £A(C
doctor to refer you to a de­
FECM'SIXTY MlkXJTES*fOUUH0JfM rmatologist for another opinion.
DEAR DR. G O T T - Although I
have normal blood pressure and
no known ullergles. my faoe and

I*

e

:

ears frequently turn bright red
— particularly after rating fats or
turkey.
DEAR R E A D E R I don't
Besides being stored In flesh,
know, but I'll make a guess. hormones are concentrated In
Commercially bred turkeys and
fatty tlvsue. Therefore, your red
chickens are often fed hormones
face and ears may be due to an
to make them fatter and to cause
a d d itiv e that y o u are I n ­
them to retain water so they'll
advertently consuming.
weigh more when butchered.
Likewise, beef cattle are com fed
Send your questions to Dr.
hormones for growth and antibi­ Gott at P.O. Box 91428. Cleveotics to prevent bovine diseases
•land. Ohio 44101

ACROSS
1 Swindla
S livw fluid
9 CoHignphor •
11 U _____ Ur
P&lt;t*
13 Equal |Fr)
M G»n&lt;
offirmottvo
IS Urban arss
IS ~Au!d Lang
17 Intact ogg
18 Incaptian
20 Nautical
command
22 Actratt Novak
23 Noun tuffn
24 "I liks_____ r
27 Apartment (tl)
29 Acrobatic faat
(comp, wd |
33 Subtraction
farm
35 Wttar bird
36 Atkaw
37 Sports figure
40 Covarad with
velvety growth
42 Second person
43 Kind of mutic
44 Oreek deity
46 Time tone
(abbrj
48 Itakan volcano
50 Light tan
53 Those in office
54 Rum (2 wdtel)
56 Tarry
58 Actratt Claire
59 Within (comb,
form|
60 Pub beverage
61 Wrinen tvowel
of e debt
62 Relax
63 Actor Montand

2
3
4
5

Camera part
Latvian
iakimo boat
Wedding party
member (2
wdt|
6 1957 ecience
event(abbr|
7 Hawaiian porch
8 Football team
9 Charged
panic let
10 Night (Fr.J
11 Outfit
19 Mellow
21 Shaketpearean
tpnte
24 Motlem pnett
25 Metric unit
26 Adam's
grandson
28 Normandy
invasion day
(comp, wd )
30 Study (tl.)

e

c

i

Answer ts Previous Puttie

31 Biblical
preposition
32 Lex* sfyty
34 Coup

38 Crest of hair
39 Lull
41 Over there
45 River in France

47 Name for a cat
4 6 _____ Domini
49 Jacob’s twin
51 Russian city
52 Concept (Fr.)
53 3. Roman
55 Possessive
67 Vetch

DOWN
1 English

broadcasters

K i i t t t t&gt;, m a iAc

WIN AT BRIDGE
By J a m e s Ja c o b y

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

by Hargr«av«s A Sellars

BUGS BUNNY

by Warnar Brolhara

1 W ANT A
Y^P&amp;'PCC UZABD

COWSON

BOOTS

" nJ WMAT5 T ^ g V "
" A P E CO3 ? I

} DOC

-------

^

'

HOTDCAMrr!
1+BSECarrrees ACg
AL/i/E.'

AN £NQ»NS£0ED^

SPSCbS doc .

"H rldgei Th e Mind of the
Expert." by H.W. Kelsey (Falter
A Faber), does a nice Job of
analyzing the expert's thought
processes in bridge situations.
As you can see from the bidding
sequence. In today's example
South ends up In three hearts
doubled.
After ace of spades and a heart
shift. It Is lulrly apparent that
East, the opening bidder, must
hold the A -K of diam onds.
Should he hold another heart,
there would be no hope at all.
but the double by West suggests
that the remaining hearts arc
with that player. It Is crucial that
declarer be able to ru ff a
diamond without letting West
get the lead to play another

heart. So South must lead the
queen of diamonds right out of
his hand at trick three. East can
do no better than win the king
and play a spade. Declarer wins
In dummy, plays the A-K of
clubs on w h ich he throws
diamonds, ruffs a club, ruffs a
diamond and then ruffs one
more club with his last little
heart He must now make two
more heart tricks wlih his A-Q-J
and that Is enough for the
doubled contract.
Had declarer carelessly played
u spade to the king In order to
lead toward the diamond queen,
he would have failed In the
contract. Now East would punch
a spade through, preventing
declarer from scoring both his
little hearts.

NORTH
i l l it
♦Kill
▼11
♦ 10
♦ A K » 1 41
WKST
EAST
♦ A7
♦qjioti
▼ K7* j
»»
•J «
♦ A K 952
*010*74
*J3
SOUTH
♦ 12
v AW J 10 5 4
4 Q 1 713
♦ --Vulnerable North-South
Dealer: Exit
Wnt

North

Knl
!♦
7*
J*
Pm .
I'iU
lY
I’oti
DM
P »u
P iu
Opening lead + A

South
2Y
30
I'i u
I’ou

HOROSCOPE
j

What The Day
Will Bring...

\

x l

FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thavaa

Y O U R B IR T H D A Y
M a y 3 3 . 1 908

There will be financial changes
In store for you In the year
ahead. Your earnings will be
substantially enhanced, pro­
vided you are an Industrious
worker.

QARFIELO

Miy/mjCAE'6 THE WAITRESS

tSflsjsrca&amp;wsK*.

G E M IN I (May 21 June 20|
Your financial prospects look
encouraging today but there la
one exception: Don't get In­
volved with a person who has
taken advantage of you In the
by Jim Davl6 past. T ry in g to patch up a
romance? The Matchmaker set
can help you understand what It
might take to makr the rela­
tionship work. To get yours,
mall 92 to Astro^iraph. Box
489. Radio City Station. New
York. NY 10019.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Regardless of how hard you try.
you will not be able to pleaae
everyone today. So don t get

ANNIE

upset If you can't score points aspect respectfully.
with one who always makes
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
waves
T o d a y you could be more
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Perform sensitive than usual In your
difficult tasks as early In the day relationships with friends. You
as possible. You'll be Industrious may end up with hurt feelings
In the a m., but by afternoon you when no slights were Intended.
could lose steam.
AQ UARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
V 1RO O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Major objectives can be achieved
When socializing with friends today. But don't expect a free
today, don't partake in gossip ride or other people to do things
about a mutual friend who lan't for you that you're capable of
present. Word will get out.
doing for yourself.
L I B R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
P ISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) In
M
a
j
o
r
friendly competitive Involve­
achievements are possible today ments today, don't take the
but they will require maximum activity or yourself too seriously.
effort. Y o u r prospects will No one will think less of you If
diminish considerably if you you're nol the winner.
begin to slough off.
A R IE S (March 2 1-April 19) In
BCO RRIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) your financial dealings with
Promises you make to others others today, be e xtrem ely
today may lack your usual c a r e f u l how yo u c o n d u c t
sincerity. It's best not to say yourself. Do nothing that could
you'll do something tf your heart cast doubts on your reputation.
Isn't In It.
TA U R U S (April 20-May 20)
SA G ITTA RIU S (Nov. 23-Dec. Normally when you make a
21| This can be a profitable day decision, you abide by It. but
for you. provided you take today you may forgo your better
nothing for granted In your Judgm ent and listen to the
business dealings Treat every advice of one who Is Ill-Informed.

by Leonard Starr
:
&gt;

u

I*

• I t

f

* f • ♦ r #

I

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                    <text>77th Y ear. No. 255 Monday. June 17. 1985-Sanford. Florida

Evening

Herald

—

(U S P S

4*1 2W)

P rice

25 Cents

Massive Federal Sting Nets 3,400 Fugitives
From S ta ff and W ire R eports
A federal operation which led to the arrests of
more than 3.000 fugitives wanted on felony
warrants In Florida — the U.S. Marshals Service's
largest roundup ever — was a "huge success."
sources said.
The nearly 3.400 people arrested In the Florida
operation, surpassed even the 3.309 fugitives
arrested by the marshals service last year In eight
Northeast states, the sources said Sunday,
Tw o Seminole County sheriffs deputies were
assigned to work with the marshals through out
Central Florida. Chief Deputy Duane Harrell said.
Seminole officials are waiting until U.S. Marshals
reuse more Information on the operation on
Wednesday, before commenting on Ihe arrests,
some of which were made In Seminole County, he
said.

"T h e operation has been a huge success." one
source told United Press International. "W e
plckrd up more fugitives than we ever dreamed
possible. It's winding down now. but It's a
success by any measure."
The marshals were aided by the Florida
Department o f Law Enforcement and local police
and shertfT s departments.
A Marshals Service spokesman declined to
comment on the roundup, but Attorney General
Edwin Meese has scheduled a news conference
for Wednesday morning In Miami to discuss It.
The marshals operated throughout Florida as
part o f the Fugitive Investigative Strike Team,
which the agents called "Operation FIST."
Marshals offered promises of free trips, dinners
at exclusive restaurants, screen tests for movie
extras, and other prizes to flush out the fugitives
and fool them Into Identfying themselves. They

were then arrested.
One woman was so surprised by a Miami scam
that she asked agents after her arrest. "Can't we
take care of this next week? I've won a free trip
and I want to take that first "
One man called agents from jail, asking if hr
could reschrdute his free trip at a later date
Doth bogus trips had been arranged by the
Marshals Service In letters to the unsuspecting
fugitives that began: "Congratulations! You are
the winner of a weekend retreat In the Bahamas
Enclosed please find your Champagne-flight
boarding pass."
Sources said the 11-week operation began April
1 and netted more than 30 murder suspects and
hundreds of others sought on felony warrants for
rape, robbery and aggravated assault. In all. more
than 3.000 of the arrests were made on felony
warrants, with the rest citing misdemeanor

Infract ions or trafTU \» arrant*.
Th e Marshals Service operated Irom temporary
quarters set up In Miami. Orlando Tallahassee.
Jacksonville and Tampa.
Many o f those arrested were sought In other
states, the sources said, but most were wanted on
Florida warrants
Last Nov. 21. federal agents announced the
arrest of 3.309 fugitives In a two-month sweep o f
eight states from Maryland to Massachusetts.
About 30 murder suspects also were arrested In
that crackdown
Then-Attorney General William French Smith
described that $2 5 million operation as "th e
largest and most successful manhunt In law
enforcement history." Sources said Florida's
sweep was more successful than the earlier
operation.

Hostages
Removed
From
Airliner
Location Unknown

Flight To Freedom

IW M

BEIRUT. Lebanon IUIM) —
Shiite Amal militiamen today
removed the hostages from the
hijacked TW A Hoeing 727 and
took them to an undisclosed
location In Beirut for security
reasons. Am al militia leader
Natilh Berrl said
"I have personally ordered
their evacuation because we
werr afraid of an operation or a
battle In which all of them would
have been killed." Berrl told a
news conference
In Washington, the State D e­
partment confirmed the passen­
gers had been taken off the

HrTi

‘Seminole." a JVi month old orphaned Great Horned Owl, resting on the
a rm of Resee Collins, curator at Florida Audobon Society's Birds of Prey

Related stories, 2A

Center, prepares to take off on its maiden flight to freedom. At right, the
bird bounds Into the air, wings and talons flapping. The bird was released
Saturday after the 10th race at Seminole Greyhound Park In Casselberr^"
He was found there earlier this year by workers who were renovating the
p a rk . Race proceeds were donated to the Birds of Prey Center.

Sanford Misusing ‘Treasury Of Trees,' Board Says
By Rick B ranson
H erald S ta ff W r ite r
Second In a aeries
Evidence of Ihe need for a
change in ihe way the city of
Sanford munlcures Itself could
not have been clearer than at the
city commission's last meeting
•June 10. City Manager Frank
Faison requested that a private
tree company tie hired to remove
I.'VO deud trees around town.
Some o f the trees were ordered
cut down In 1983 but are still
teetering dangerously . Why did
the city have to turn to a private
tree linn lo do the job? Because,
as the Scenic Im provem ent
Hoard says, the few members of
file Parks and Recreation De-

'Sanford cannot compata
with south Samlnola's
modernity and n s w n s ii
unless we accentuate
our uniqueness...
Sanford's marketable
charm and distinction
rests In its historic
Integrity.'
part merit who do ground mulntenance are already overloaded
with work.
Faison said the workers were
busy on a project at Ihe marina
and after they finish there they

are scheduled to remove tree
stumps at Chase Bark on Celery
Avenue.
They just don't huve Ihe time.
In Its 16-page Master Plan for
Visual Improvements, the Scenic
Im p rovem en t Board re c o m ­
mends a solution to this — add
more maintenance workers. In­
cluding a tree trimmer, to the
parks departm ent and don't
plant anymore trees until the old
ones are pruned or the dead ones
removed.
The recommendations are part
of the 13-polnt plan the board
recommended to the city com ­
mission June 3. The commission
will be discussing the report at
Its June 24 meeting

Polk Gets OK For 8 N ew Staff
Sheriff John Polk got preliminary
approval from county commission
era this morning for nine out of 31
requested new em ployees as com­
missioners kicked off budget work
sessions for the 1985-86 flscsl yesr.
Commissioners Bob Sturm. Fred
B tr e e im in . an d B arb ara
Christensen told Polk they will
consider hla request for the other
23 new employees later this week.
Com m issioners S a n d 's Glenn
and BUI KlrchhofT were absent.

ing o f federal prisoners at Ihe
county Jail.
Streelman urged Ihe sheriff to
c o n s id e r Inclu din g m on ey for
school crossing guards In his list of
top priorities. Polk said he will
su bm it a proposed bu dget of
• 15 0.000 for s c h o o l crossin g
guards latrr today.
C ou nty Com m issioners began
budget workshops this morning
with the rholce o f slashing de­
partment requests or raising taxes.
Base budgets hold on capital
Approved by the commission
w ith th e r e c o m m e n d a tio n o f Improvement, according to a report
County Administrator Ken Hooper lo the commissioners from Its Office
are four new corrections officers, a o f Management and Budget. But
communications officer, thnx clerk the salaries and fringe benefits are
typists, and life and health Insur­ up 18 percent from •IB . I million to
m illion
ance clerk for total salaries of • 18.0 m illion, a 2.8
Increase.
• 160.000.
The Increased costa Include more
In his budget requests. Polk Is
than $1 m illion fo r o vertim e
asking for four new corrections
salaries because o f the Supreme
o ffic e r s , and a c o o k for the
Court decision requiring overtime
overcrowded county Jail. He sold
payments for county employees,
increasing the number of correc­
especially In emergency services
tions officers Is absolutely neces­
such as police and fire At the same
sary to show the state " a good faith
time the cost of state retirement
e ffo r t" to bring supervision of
and social security are also going
inmates up to standard.
up.
Polk requested an $11.5 million
Some 8419.000 Is set aside for 20
budget the year up 7.3 percent
new employees. $212,340 for merit
Irom over last year's • 10.07 mil­ pay raises and 8972.000 for other
lion. Polk reported to the com­ salary Increases. In addition the
mission lluil he will return to the coot of life and health insurance Is
county mote than $1 million tn up by 28 percent to 8219.000.
revenues from a variety o f sources
While the total o f the county
including $620,000 from the hous­
8 « a BUDGET, paga 8 A

r :

In this, the second In a series
ol reports on the plun. more ol
Ihe board's recommendations to
get Sanford sparkling again are
detailed.
T rss P lan
Sanford's majestic "treasury"
o f 100-yearold oak and other
trees are treated In a way that's
certain to kill I hem. Ihe report
said. Some o f the trees are
diseased and som e are limb
heavy. In desperate need of
trimming, the board reported
The old and largr palms around
town receive no fertilizer and
some died during the freeze,
"leaving ugly dead trunks or a
blank spot In an otherwise

geom etric row of trees." the
report said
T o change this situation, the
board recom m ends w o rk in g
with the Seminole County Urban
Forester to devise a tree survey.
The purpose of the survey would
be to:
• Identify arras where there
are tree problems or no trres
• Identity diseased trees
• Determine appropriate ac­
tion.
• Present to the commission
an organized long-term plan ol
action. Including Inform ation
about pruning, fertilizing and
watering
The board also recommends
S ee SCENIC, page 8 A

Sugar Substitute NutraSweet
Linked To Infant Brain Damage
W A S H IN G T O N ( U P I ) Two
pediatric and genetic researchers say
many pregnant women who consume
aspartame. Ihe popular sugar sub­
stitute sold as NutraSwret In soft
drinks and other products, may have
babies with permanent brain dam­
age.
In a c o n te n tio n r e je c t e d by
N u tra S w eet's m an u factu rer, Dr.
Louis Elsas of Emory University tn
Atlanta also said he believes a key
aspartame component can cause sim­
ilar damage to Infanta If they Ingest It
In the six months following birth
"T h e re 's no reason w hy the preg­
nant fe m a le sh ou ld be taking
aspartame." Elsas sold, "an d there's
no reason why s child less than six
m o n th s o ld s h o u ld be ta k in g
aspartame." He said the damage may
not show up for years.
Meanwhile, lawyers for a 5-year-old
boy w h o a research team aald
became “ unconoolably and wildly
e m o t i o n a l '* a f t e r d r in k in g
NutraSweet products have filed a $2
m illion damage ault against the
product’s manufacturer. G.D. Seorlc
Co. of Skokie. III.
The ault. filed three weeks ago In
Washington, charges that aspartame
Is on "unreasonably dangerous and
harmful food additive" that cs
causes
permanent e(Tecta w h e n combined
_________
with glucose and given lo children
under six years old.
It was dlacloord lost month the
G eneral Accounting O ffice Is Invratlgatlng the manner tn
hlch

Commissioner Arthur Hull Hayes of
the Food and Drug Administration
approved aspartame In 1981 over the
objections o f several agency scientists
who challenged brain tumor studies.
Officials of G.D. Searle. which Iasi
year sold more than $600 million tn
NutraSweet for diet soft drinks and
other products, dismiss the allega­
tions and criticisms o f aspartame.
They say the product has undergone
the most extensive testing o f any food
additive ever approved by the FDA.
*'l think quite clearly the data on
aspartame does support the safety of
the product." Roger Thles. Searle'*
associate general counsel, said In a
recent Interview.
Dr. Lewis Stegtnk. a professor of
pediatrics and biochemistry at the
University of Iowa who. with funding
from Seane. performed some of the
pivotal studies lhal supported FDA
approval, aald. "A m I concerned
about the aafety? The answer la no.
Would I like lo are additional studies
done? O f course. That's what science
Is all about."
Dr. Richard Gaull. vice president
for nutrition and medical ofTalrs of
S e a rle 's NutraSweet grou p, said
aspartame "has no adverse effects on
the behavior of children" with Ihe
exception o f a select group who are
alerted lo the contents tn warning
labels.
Elsas, director of medical genetics
at Emory, and Dr. Reuben Matalon,
professor o f pediatrics and genetics al

Boa SWEET, paga BA

plane, hljucked four days ago by
Shiite Moslem gunmen w ho
d e m a n d e d th e r e le a s e o f
hundreds o f fellow Shiites from
Israeli Jails.
Assistant presidential prrss
secretary Robert Sims said the
White House received a report
that the hostages — about 30
and all Americans — had been
taken off the plane and were In
the Joint custody of Berrl and the
Shiite mtlttla
Sims suld It was understood
Berrl had taken responsibility for
I hr hostages.
Berrl said Ihe passengers were
taken off the plane after m id ­
night but gave no specific time
and would not say where they
were lukt-n
He said only the hostages were
"s o m e w h e re outside B eiru t
airport".
Berrl said somr of the hi­
jackers were still aboard the
com m andeered Trans W orld
Airlines Jet
Security sources said the pas­
sengers were taken off early
today, w hen reporters w ere
See H IJ A C K , page SA

TODAY

Deaths.

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Not The Real Thing
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Waving signs
reading "New Coke? The gods must be
cra zy !" protester* In Union Square Saturday
urged the public lo give Ihe soft drink's new
flavor a resounding raspberry.
" I t ' » n oi C o k e !" c o m p la in e d K en
I’asaamcneck. 48, life-long Coke drinker —
until recently.
The protest, organized by
the Seattle-based Old Cola Drinkers o f
America, followed a suit filed Friday by Ihe
group lo pressure AHanta-baaed Coca-Cola
Co. to return to Its nearly century-old flavor.
Th e suit filed In U.S. District Court In
Seattle seeks a temporary restraining order
against the company and asks lhal Ihe new
formula Coke no longer be packaged like Ihe
old Coca-Cola.
The group died violations of Ihe Federal
Trade Commission Act. Ihe Fair Packaging
and Labeling Act. the Washington State
Consumer Protection Act and common law
principles relating lo fraud and misrepre­
sentation.

�JA — Evsnlrtf HaraM, ta n f f d , FI.

Msoday, Juris 17, 1W5

Terror Aboard TWA 847

NATION

. -h -

Spain Won't Bow To Hijacker’s Demands; Israel Mum

IN BRIEF

JERUSALEM (UPI) - Israel will study any
U.S. request to consider demands by
hijackers of a TW A Jet for the release of
about 760 Shiite prisoners, a key govern­
ment official said today.
The official, who declined to be Identified,
said no such request — formal or Informal —
has been received from Ihe United States.
Spain, however, said It will reject de­
mands by the hijackers for the release o f two
Lebanese Shiite Moslems Jailed In Spain.
"T h e government can hardly agree to this
request." said Foreign Ministry spokesman
Fernando Schwartz Sunday night.
“ The situation Is very delicate." he said.
" I f we give In now. tomorrow they will do
the same, multiplied by ten."
Schwartz said Foreign Minister Fernando
Moran talked with American officials several
times Sunday.
Among the demands made by the hi­
jackers holding about 30 Americans In
Beirut was a call for the relrase of Mnhamrd
Rahal and Mustafa Jalll. who are Jailed ut
the Alcala Meco maximum security prison,
19 miles west o f Madrid.
The two were arrested Sept 12. 1984.
hours after shooting and wounding a Libyan
embassy employer In downtown Madrid.
Police said Ihe gunmen attacked Mohatned
Idris. 45, to retaliate for the disappearance
o f Shiite leader Irriun Mussa Sadr In Libya In
September 1978
Israel May 20 exchanged 1.150 Arab
prisoners for three Israeli POWs — perhaps
setting a precedent for a release of the

Mayors Ready For Battle
Against Reagan Tax Proposal
ANCHORAGE. Alaska |UPI) — The nation's mayors
marshaled forces to battle President Reagan's plans to
eliminate federal revenue sharing with cities and to wipe
out lh*» federal Income tax deduction for state and local
taxes.
Committees of the 53rd U.S. Conference of Mayors
Sunday approved resolutions attacking Reagan's effort to
cut revenue sharing after fiscal year 1988 and condemning
his plan to drop the state and local tax deduction.
Representing about two-thirds of the nation's larger
municipalities. 180 mayors are attending the five-day
conference but absent were chief executives of Ihe largest
cities — New York, 1-os Angeles and Chicago.
Th e committees also adopted resolutions opposing
education vouchers, setting July 19 as POW-MIA Recogni­
tion Day, noting 2,477 Americans still arc unaccounted for
In Vietnam, and urging help for growing numbers of
homeless.

Strike Over , But Issues Remain
CHICAGO (UPII — United Alrllnra pilots and flight
attendants are returning to work, but bitterness over Ihe
monthlong strike and several unsettled Issues still cloud
the friendly skies.
Court proceedings on the unresolved issues begin today.
The Issues concern about 570 newly trained pilots who
refused to cross picket lines during the strike and a charge
by the flight attendants' union of attempted Intimidation
by United.
Union spokesmen said U.S. District Judge Nicholas J.
Hua will decide whether United must hire the trainees who
were called up from Ihelr school In Denver the day after the
pilots walked out.
United President James Hartlgan said the airline will
restore Its schedule to 33 percent rapacity by June 20, 40
percent by June 25 and “ virtually all o f the schedule will
be back In operation" sometime In July.

LOS ANGELES |UPI) — The city's trendy Westwood
district, home to UCLA and everything else upscale,
evicted all unescorted teens who wandered past curfew In a
weekend crackdown.
Police arrested 21 juveniles, Including u 7-year-old boy
who was out for a night on the town with his older brother.
In the two-nlght sweep that netted a total o f 33 suspects.
Sgt. Cun Hussey said.
Merchants In the area adjoining the UCLA campus — the
c ity ’s busiest nightlife district, with a dozen first-run movie
theaters, upscale shops and nearly 100 trendy clubs and
• restaurants — have complained that crowds o f wandrrtng
youthk were creating a "curnlval like" atmosphere that
drove Hway adults and helped boost crime.

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Retaliation Promised
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A caller claiming
to represent the militant Jewish Defense
League threatened "very heavy retaliation"
against Shiite Moslems In the United States
If Jewish people aboard a hijacked Jetliner
were Injured.
"W e promise very, very heavy retaliation
against Shiite Moslems In Washington, and
In Pennsylvania. New York and T exas." said
the woman caller In a telephone call Sunday
to United Press International.
The caller said the JDL Is awaiting word If
reports are true that some passengers with
Jewish surnames were taken off the hijarked TW A Jetliner in Beirut Friday nlghl
and taken to an undisclosed location. The
State Department has said It was checking
the report.
"W e are only waiting to see If the
negotiations work." the caller said "W e
would like to know If the eight people taken
off the plane In Beirut are o f Jewish
religion." the caller said. "We have singled
out a number of Moslem groups at various
campuses and colleges and other places,”
the call said.

Israel postponed the scheduled release of
about 300 prisoners last week because of
Shiite attacks against Israel In the security
zone.

Shiites now.
The Israeli government has ordered a
news blackout on the hijacking
"Our views concerning terrorist acta are
well known." a Foreign Ministry spokesman

Israel says It Intends to free the Shiite
detainees and to date has released more
than 300 of them. Including 121 In the May
exchange, but Defense Ministry spokesman
Nachman Shal said Israel had no plans to
speed up the release.

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BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) - A
freed American hostage, whose
son remained In the custody of
hijackers, says he was glvrn
only hot water to drink during
Ills three-day ordeal, and that
the inside of the hijacked TWA
Jetliner was "a real pig pen."
But Bob Peel Sr.. 59, of
Hutchinson. Kan . who was re­
leased Sunday because o f illness,
emphasized lhat the message
from the hostages to President
Reagun urging that he not resort
to a military solution to the crisis
"w as not written under duress.”
" I( Is dirty, filthy, a real pig
pen." Peel said of the planr,
“ T h e r e Is fo n d , c l o t h e s ,
checkbook* and money lying all
over the Inside of the plane.
" I have not had a meal for
three days and only hot water to
drink. No one liked what we
were living through." said Peel,
who was on hi* way hack to ihe
United Slates with his family
when their flight was hijacked
Friday.
He said his son. Bob Peel Jr..
33. was still being held captive
but was "O K " the Iasi time he
saw him.

'I hava not hod a maal
for thrns days and only
hot w atnr to drink. No
on* liked what we w ere
living through.'
-freed hostage Sob Peel

Peel's wife. Esther L. "L o u "
Perl. 59, was relrased In Beirut
Friday. Released later In Algiers
was the couple's daughter-inlaw. Kristi Peel. 33.
The hijackers, who seized the
plane Friday shortly after It took
off from Athens. Greece, en route
to Rome, had ordered airport
authorities to bring an a m ­
bulance to the plane to pick up
Peel.
"H e ’s old. dizzy und very tired
We have no medicine hrre. let
(Ihe ambulanrri come n ow ,"
said a hijacker by radio. "Don't
think that we want to release
thin man, but because he's tired
and sick lie's being sent aw ay."

State Says Milk Linked To 28 Cheese Deaths
Properly Pasteurized; Other Causes Sought
IX&gt;S ANGELES (UPI) - Milk
suspected o f con ta m in a tin g
cheese linked to the drath* o f ut
least 28 people was properly
pasteurized, officials InvestIgat
Ing the deadliest episode of food
imlsonlng In California history
say.
"The Ural und must critical
thing lhat could have gone
w ro n g ’ w as p a s te u riza tio n ."
Hans Vun Nes, deputy director of
the state Department of Food
and Agriculture. Mild Sunday.
“ Hut they llnvrsilgatora ut the
cheese fuctory) told me lhat they
fell that pasteurization was
excellent." Van Nr* said. "T h e
temperatures and all of the
records were In order."
A breakdown In the pasteur­
ization process, which kills dis­
ease-producing bacteria In milk,
was among the llkrllral can ­
didates as a source of the
contumlnutlon of Jalisco M ex­
ican Products Inc.'s queso fresco
and collju cheese, Van Nes said.
A 15-member team of In ­
vestigators from (hr state and
lederul Centers for Disease Con­
trol spent the weekend scouring
the suburban Artrslu plant to
find out how the Jalisco cheese
became contumluutrd with the
b a c t e r i a
L i s t e r i a

monocytogenes.
Van Nes suld the Investigators

said. “ It must be clear, in the case ot me
hijacking of Ihe TW A airliner, that lives arc
at stake and we refrain at this point from
making commenls lhat might make the
situation more difficult to resolve.
Asked to restate Israel s position, the
spokesman said his country s view .was
"never to give in to terrorist demands.
At Atilt Prison, where the Shiite prisoners
have been held since April 2. there was no
sign today that anv release was Imminent.
Israel radio said "tens o f thousands" ol
persons, shouting "Death to the terrorists."
gathered In Tel A viv’s King of Israel Square
Sunday night to protest the hijackers
demands.
A Defense Ministry spokesman told Unit­
ed Press International Sunday that Israel
has planned to release the Shiite prisoners
on a schedule determined by security
considerations and the withdrawal of Israeli
troops from Lebanon.

Freed Hostage Describes Ordeal

Curfew Cramps Teens' Style

rtw M quotation! p r a v k ttd S r i w n W i of

- * - * •*—”

would turn today to examining
other Ingredients and handling
processes both before und after
production. In addition, records
of previous sanitation Inspec­
tion* will be checked, he said
"There are some uspects of
sanitation that are very critical
— cleansing of equipment, han­
dling of the product und cool­
ing. " hr said.
I.lslerla In fection is being
blum ed for 28 death s and
Hilllhlrths und 59 Illnesses —
mostly Hlspunlc women und
children — In Ihe I-o* Angeles
area since March

Listeria can produce Illnesses
that range from mild nausea and
flu like symptoms to futul Infec­
tions of the brain. Mosl vulnera­
ble are people with Immune
deficiencies, such as nrwtxirn
Infants and Ihelr mothers, und
the very old.
County health officials suld 15
of the drud were newborn and
xtllllmrn Infunls. Three Infected
Infants are still hospitalized ut
thr University o f California.
Irvine.
A hospital spokeswotnun said
thr three babies, wtiose mother*
had ratrn Jalisco product* tie

lore giving birth, are "doing
flue" and taking antibiotics,
Jalisco markets 28 varieties of
cheese under Ihe brand names
Jalisco, Jlmlncc. La Vuquttuund
1'm.i&lt;t.it.i|,ini
The company voluntarily re­
culled Its entirr line of dairy
product* Friday.
Although Jalisco cheeses are
mostly sold In California and
Arizona, they are also marketed
In C olorado. Idaho, Illinois.
Michigan. New Mexico, New
York. Ohio, Oregon. Tennessee,
Texas. Utah and Washington,.

Deputies Have No Clues In Drowning Death
An uutopsy on a 13 year old Orlando boy who
drowned Friday In a swimming pool at an
Altamonte Springs home showed Ills lungs wrrr
full of water, but Seminole County sheriff*
deputies have no clues to the events surrounding
thr death.
Sheriff* Investigator Sgt. John Thorpe said
Tony Madison showed no sign of having hit his
hrud on Ihe pool beforr drowning Ills body was
recovered from the deep end of the pool and
efforts by neighbors fulled to revive him.
The buy, who apparently couldn't swim, had
asked Marla Torrugrosa. of 104 Vulencla Loop, If
he could go Into the pool ufter he finished pulling
weeds at her home around noon Friday She said
no. but he apparently wrnt Into Ihe pool with his
shoes oil but clolhlng on. sheriffs spokesman

John Hpolsklsald
Ms Torrugrosa heard Ihe boy In dlstresa and
went to n neighbor for help. But the woman, Vicki
Kontoglorls. of 1044 Vulencla lamp who grabbed a
notation device, wild she couldn't swim und when
she saw the body at thr bottom of thr pool she
called police.
Other neighbors pulled the boy from the pool,
but hr was dead at thr scene. Spolxkl said
The boy usually did yard work with his father.
Ernest. Spolskl said, but hi* father wasn't at the
scene.
The autopsy was perform ed Saturday at
Central Florida Regional Hospital. Sanford.
Thorpe said deputies have no clues as to exactly
why the boy drowned
—Susan Loden

Looking disheveled and tired
as he was put In an ambulance.
Peel's shirt was unbuttoned and
revealed a large blue bruise
across his abdomen.
Peel said the bruise and sus­
pected broken ribs were suffered
In a boating accident and were
nol connected to a beating that
the hijackers inflicted on some of
their captors.
Peel Sr. owns Peel's Friendly
Beauty Supply Co., a beauty
shop wholesale firm that has
been run In Hutchinson by the
family for more than 45 years
His wife also has a business. Lou
Peel Institute, where she is a
makeup and fashion consultant.
The family had been on a trip
with a group of customers of
Krdken Laboratories of Canoga
Park. Calif., a beauty products
manufacturer. Th e Peels left
Wichita. Kan., June 7. and were
on their way home,
Glen Gulllart, general manager
of Peel's firm, said the Peels
originally w ere to be on a
different flight, but were diverted
to this (light because their first
plane had mechanical trouble.

Pentagon.
House Arm ed Services Investigations
subcommittee Chairman Bill Nichols. DA la., and procurem ent su bcom m ittee
Chairman Sam Stratton. D N.Y.. said Sun­
day Ihe linn's records were a mess when
subcommittee and Pentagon Investigators
look a look at hillings for overhead from
197910 1983
The helicopter operation, which was
purchased last year by aviation giant
McDonnell Douglas, could nol provide data
to bark up 40 percent of Ita hillings, said
Nichols, and Ihe records " w e r r In a

t

d e p lo ra b le state. H u gh es' accounting
system Is neither accountable nor systemat­
ic."
S tratton said he plans to offer an
amendment to the defense authorization
bill, due before the House Tuesday, "to
prohibit any payment to Hughes until It
establishes an accounting system that can
produce the backup data essential for
governm ent auditors to check the a c­
counts."
Jerry Meyer, McDonnell Douglas com ­
munications vice president In St. Louts, said
Ihe firm believes there Is no need for
punitive action because Hughes has devel­
oped a plan for correcting thr bookkeeping
problems
"W e think w ell be ablr to demonstrate
quite rapidly lhat Hughes Helicopter has In

J

tact come up to snulT." suld Meyer, saying
thr firm "realized almost since the purchase
of Hughrs" their were problrms on Ihe
years In question
He said the corrective plan was coordi­
nated with thr Arm y and the Defense
Contract Auditing Agency, which had re­
viewed thr records, "and we're now In the
process of taking steps to makr sure (the
plant Is fully Implemented."
Nichols said the auditing agency had to
suspend a review o f Hughes' overhead
billings tn February because Hughrs could
nut (mulsh basic records und supporting
documentation to back up Its billings
He aaid the review also found Hughes had
twice recorded the coat of 1 1.7 million In
incentive bonuses paid to executives before
the purchase by McDonnell Douglas.

ST. LOUIS (U PI) The
elderly father o f the hijacked
T W A Jetliner’s flight engineer,
fearing his son would be killed,
suffered a heart attack and
died mtnutes before Father's
Day without word an his son's
fate.
"H e went right downhill as
soon as he heard." Dr. Fred
Morlensen said o f the Rev.
Elmer Zlmmcrmann. 88.
The family first learned from
television reports that Ben­
ja m in Z lm m e r m a n n . 45,
w orking his first overseas
flight as an engineer, was
aboard the plane hijacked
Friday by Shiite Moslems,
Zlmmermann. hospitalized
last week for a heart ailment,
had a heart attack Saturday
and died lair that night.
Mortenaen said he believed
Zlmmermann would have died
earlier Saturday, except for hts
will to see Ills son freed safely.

WEATHER
AREA FO REC AST: Today
mostly sunny and rather hot
with a 20 percent chance of
afternoon thunderstorms High
In mid 90s. South to southwest
wind 5 to 10 mph. Rain chance
20 percent. Tonight fair except
fo r a fe w e v e n i n g t h u n ­
derstorms. Low near 70 to mid
70s. Light wind. Rain chance 20
percent. Tuesday mostly sunny
and continued rather hot. 20
percent chance o f afternoon
thunderstorms. High In mid 90s.
NATIONAL REPORT: Violent
thunderstorms raked Ihe na­
tion's midsection Sunday and
today with more than a half
dozen tornadoes. Including one
that Inflicted an estimated $1
million in damage to cars, planes
and . buildings at a Missouri
airport. Eastern storms that
h u rled t w is te r s Sunday at
Adams County, Pa.. and Hilton
Head Island. S.C.. scattered rain
today from New England to
North Carolina. The storms In
th e P la in s a n d the u pper
Mississippi V a lley destroyed
crops and damaged cars with
hail as large as grapefruit in
Kansas, while pouring up to 3
Inches of ratn In a hour on
Missouri, the National Weather
S e r v ic e s a id . A t lea st six
tornadoes struck late Sunday tn
Wisconsin. Iowa and Minnesota,
the NWS reported. Early today,
another tornado plowed Into the
northern end o f the Columbia.

Ban On Payments To Defense Contractor Sought HOSPITAL
WASHINGTON (Ul'l) — Tw o congressmen
say they w ill ask the House to bar
payments, at least temporarily, to Hughes
Helicopter because it could not back up
millions ul dollars In bills It sent to the

Hostage's
Father Dies

NOTES
Caatval t S r M l tty m l HsasNil
A D M IS S IO N !
VanSard
Lynn K Groan
G ls d ys la t
Amanda L la*atta
Hobart McCray
Anthony

a UscSvrcS

lOnilU MAlSdlS!
C -toon C Comor DoSary
SlarOay Vatuwkl
Jama* • l a w n . Genova
ADM ISSIO NS
Letaer • MaSiawx. Laka Manraa
OaranryT Monies. Lang— ad
01 SC M A S S I S
Dorotsy M Heater. laniard
Syren A W1liar O rangt O ty

Mn„ Regional Airport. Officials
said between eigh t and 10
parked cars, about a dozen
prtvair planes and the terminal
building were dam aged The
airport was closed at the time
the twister hit and no Injuries
w ere reported. O ne of four
tornadoes In Minnesota Sunday
damaged large buildings at five
farm* and wiped out 20 acres of
trees In Mllle Lacs County.

AREA READINGS (0 a.mj:
temperature: 79; overnight low:
7 0 : S u n d a y ’ s h ig h : 9 1 :
barometric pressure 30 18; rela­
tiv e h u m id ity: 79 p ercen t;
winds: south at 7 mph: rain: .02
Inch: sunrise: 6 46 a m., sunset
8:04 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
m i l e s — W i n d s o u t h to
southwest 5 to lO knots through
Tuesday except easterly sea
breeze near 10 knots during the
afternoons. Sea 1 to 3 feet.
W idely scattered thunderstorms.

MONDAY TIDES: Daytona
Bosch: highs. 8:13 a m., 6:30
p in .: lows. 11:54 a.m., 12:18
p m .; Fort Canaveral: hlgha.
5:53 a.m.. 6 22 p.m.; Iowa. 11:45
a .m .. 12:16 p.m .; Bayporti
highs. 11:05 a.m . 11:11 p m.:
tows, 5 09 a m . 5 51 p m.
Mo.

EXTENDED FORECAST: Chance of afternoon and evening
thunderstorms becoming more
likely north part Thursday and
north and central Friday. Hlgha
In the low to mid 90s and lows In
the 70a.

�Evtning Herald. Sanlord. FI.

Canada Finally Gets
A Bill Of Rights

Pyramid
Scheme

y

i

Sanford summer recreation
program aides Howard Long,
left, and Lance Abney, at
b a c k , h e l p a g r o u p of
youngsters build a human
pyramid at the Salvation
Arm y gym . The Salvation
Army, 700 W. 24th Street,
opened Its facility for the
program, as did the Sanford
Civic Center and West Side
Recreation Center. The pro­
gram runs through July 26.
Further Information may be
obtained by calling fhe San­
ford or parks and recreation
department.

MwaM Pfcata t y

Monday. June 17. l*tJ— JA

y
U

By Lea W h ittin g to n
Editor's note. W hittington cov­
ers current affairs In Canada for
Southam News, a C anadian
newspaper group.
TORONTO — Nobodv has ever
doubted for an Instant that
Canada was committed to de­
mocracy. perhaps even more so
than the United States. Until
recenty. however, that com ­
mitment had been In practice
rather than on paper.
Uut now. for the first time
since Its creation ns a nation 118
years ago. Canada hus a bill of
rights (hat guarantees basic
liberties. And the new document
could disrupt (he country’s legal
system.
E sta b lish ed In A p r il, the
wide ranging Charter of Rights
and Freedoms assures Canadi­
ans protection against all forms
of age, sex. race, religious or
ethnic discrimination, and even
provides equality for the mental
and physically hundlcapped.
So It may by that Canadian
civil rights activists, who have
long looked at the United Stutes
with envy, will now find Canada
more liberal than America — at
least In Its statutes.
Under the new charter, for
example. Canadian women are
going to be far uhead o f their
American sisters, who have been
struggling for years In their
campaign for an Equal Rights
Amendment to the Constitu­
tion.
The Canadian document will
certainly prompt thousands of
suits that challenge existing
laws, from workers demanding
compensation for Injury, prison
Inmates denied the right to vote,
and minorities claim ing that
they are being unfairly treated.
The minister o f Justice. Joun
Crosble. views the Innovation
with a mtxturr of pride and
concern. Hailing the "new era,"
he warns that "every law Is In
danger" of being tested.

k j;

m f i M1♦* /I

Vlacaaf

Tax-Plan Bandwagon Rolling Again
WASHINGTON fUPII - The
loiter In the week, the pit­
Reagan tax reform bandwagon chman-president Is on the road
plays before new but familiar again, selling his tux plan Wed­
audiences again this week, nesday to the national conven­
picking up a head of steam as tion of the U.S. Jaycees In
the Initial reaction In Congress Indianapolis and members of the
turns from measured Interest to Lions Club International Friday
skepticism.
In Dallas
The White House has urranged
The day trips will bring to 10
a full slate o f events that will the number of states Reagan has
enable President Reagan to hit since unveiling his proposal
mount his soapbox and preach May 28 for redesigning the lax
overhaul o f a tax code he c o d e by lo w e r in g r a le s In
denounced last week as "Inher­ exchange for eliminating many
ently unjust" and "ready for the popular deductions, exemptions
ash heap of history."
and credits.
Today, the forum was a meet­
Hy the Fourth of July. Reagan
ing with small business leaders will have taken his crusade Into
at the While House. Tuesday. the West, exhorting Americans
Reagun probably will raise the to Join his modern-day rebellion
Issue during his first prime-time — the top domrstlc priority of
n r w s c o n fe r e n c e In th re e his second term — against the
months
present tux system and Its

special-interest protectors.
Reagan resumes his hard sell
as Congress opens a new round
o f ta x h e a r in g s f o l l o w i n g
sessions last week that saw the
president’s proposals come un­
der the strongest attacks yet —
not only from the special Inter­
ests he has ridiculed as "sharks"
but also from lawmakers of both
parties.
Democrats called for changes
to muke the proposal more
equitable for thr middle class
and poor. The administration,
kn ow in g o f the tough fight
uhead. vo w ed to figh t any
further shift of thr tax burden
from Individuals to corporations.
One new entrant to the fray Is
organized labor, which attacked
the plan with vigor lust week,
alleging Its provisions would

retain m any tax breaks for
business but offer middle class
Americans little relief.
House Speaker Thomas O'Neill
contended the Reugan plan
would be "anothrr windfall" for
the wealthy.
Hut Reagan and his strategists
lielleve the best bet for building
pressure on C ongress Is to
portray his pnqxjsals ns profam ily and providing bigger
personal exemptions
Reagan bolsters his argumenl
fo r th e a b o lit io n o l su ch
longstanding Kents us the d e­
duction for state and local luxes
— p e rh a p s th e m ost c o n ­
troversial element ol his plan —
by arguing most Americans do
not even file Itemized returns
and. therefore, do not Iteneflt in
(he first place.

FBI Official:

'People Just Love To Holler'
SPIVEY S CORNER. N.C. (UPIJ out u lew hollers ol thrlr own.
"People Just love to holler, und
— The newly crowned winner of
I Just love to listen." said Claude
th e 17th A n n u a l N a tio n a l
Hollerin' Contest says letting Green of Roseboro. N.C..
Though some hollerin’ entries
ItKMM- with ear-splitting screams
drew chuckles from the crowd.
la u relaxing hobby.
1 9 7 0 h o l l e r i n ' c h a m p io n
"W henever I feel bud. I haul off
Herman Oliver said he did not
nml holler and It makes me feel
think Ills lulcnl should be re­
good." suld James Gruslle Jr. of
garded as a Joke.
Fayetteville. N.C.
"Burk on the farm. It wus used
Clad In bib overalls, a worn fell
as u I i k i I . " be suld. "You 'd holler
hat and nunglunses. Grastle
to your neighbor If he needed
clutched the microphone and
h elp ."
em itte d sounds like a wild
unlmul Saturday to win Ihe
hollerin' title.
Ginger MeLamb o f Linden.
N .C ., sw ept h on ors In th r
wom en's hollerin' rom|&gt;etltlnn
with a loud rendition of "D ix ie"
F R E E Estimate
und Ihe names of her four
children, screamed Just ns she
a lw a y s d o rs w hen she a n ­
nounces dinner lim e on the
family tobacco farm
M o re th an 5 .0 0 0 p r o file
(ORNIR If ft A
gathered for Ihe contest and
LAN I M A A V ALVO
other festivities, and somr oc­
WWi Dun Cfwtar
casionally were Inspired to let

Friendly Persuasion Used To Recruit Spies
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Soviets trying to
recruit Americans as spies generally apply
friendly persuasion, often over lunch or
dinner. Instrad of blackmail to draw (hem
In. the FBI's chief of Intelligence says.
Assistant FBI Director Edward O'Malley
also says the spy game Is not the adventur­
ous stuff of novels and movies; rather. It Is
tedious work done by people with concerns
other than Ideology.
O'Malley, In a wide-ranging Interview last
week In his office at FBI headquarters,
declined to discuss the recently uncovered
famlly-und friend spy case but spoke In
general ubout esplonuge In the United
Stales.
John Walker, his brother Arthur, his son
Michael and Jerry Whitworth, who all
served In the Navy, are accused ol tunneling
Nuvy secrets to the Soviets for as long as 20
years.
T h r case, w h ich broke w ith John
Walker’s arrest May 20 and still Is under
Investigation, has been called the biggest
rsjHnnagc ring In 30 years.
The case Is prom pting m em bers o f
Congress and thr Intelligence community to

cull for limiting security clearances, using
polygraph tests to screen people with
security clearances and enacting the death
penally for peacetime espionage.
There are now 13 spy cases pending In
the courts, thr most ever, but O'Malley says.
"It's very dangerous to try to come up with
u profile o f a spy. and once having done
thut. to use that |&gt;rofllr to Identify spies.
"It's not the way we do business. There
are certain things that are fairly obvious ... a
lark of patriotism, a lack of loyulty to
Institutions." he said.
In recent years. O'Mulley says, the FBI has
Identified the methtxl of operation used
moat often by the KGB. the Soviet In­
telligence service, and other East-bloc
agents to make contact with Americans who
might pass secrets.
"What they (the KGB) stress when trying
to recruit a target Is friendship." O'Malley
says. "Coerslon and blackmail are not used.
The approach Is one o f friendly persuasion
lo encourage loyally on the part of the
target."
In many cases, a KGB agent will meet u
jxnrntlal target at a scientific convention, a

university or a singles bar In northern
Virginia, where the CIA Is based. O'Malley
said.
T h e HUB Is very patient. O'M alley said.
An agent will spend tim e cu ltivating the

friendship and looking for the target's
weaknesses
"M ainly, as I've said many times before ...
the motivation thut transcends nil others
that we see In this country Is m oney." he
said.
" I can assure you. It's anything but
glamorous Most of what an agent does will
not Involve James Bond-type scenerlos. It's
humdrum, tedious and dangerous "

1 DAY
S E R V IC E

In the last six years, the FBI has started a
sjtrclul uwurrness program for civilian
defense contractors The program has been
In touch with 9.000 defense contractors lo
educate them about espionage.

SEMINOLE
SEW I VAC
322-9411

"Soviet officials here don't have much
money lo sjx-nd on things." O'Malley suld
“ The cxlds are that If a Soviet purchases
lunch or dinner for someone, (but Is an
Intelligence officer — not always, but the
raids are there."

SAVE ENERGY
ALL YEAR ’ROUND

Man Suspect For Foiling Burglar Alarm, Stealing
A man who helped a bartender
clo se a L o n g w o o d bar and
claimed to have set the burglar
alarm has been charged with
burglary and grand theft after
allegedly returning to the bar
and taking cash from a hiding
place.
The suspect reportedly heljred
A n i t a M o n t g o m e r y c lo s e
Wnogles at the 434 Center, at
a b o u t 2 a .m . W e d n e s d a y .
Longwood police alleged he re­
turned lo the bar. en tered
through a door he had unlocked
earlier and took about $235 from
a hiding place.
The suspect bad reportedly
told Ms Montgomery he had set
the burglar alarm when she was
closing the bar earlier that
evening and It didn't go o(T when
the business was burglarized, a
police report said.
Arthur Robert Rlppey. 18. of
1340 Boyer St.. Longwood. was
arrested at the Longwood police
station at 3:39 p.m Friday. Hr
was being held In lieu of $5,000
bond.

OU1TAMMAN
An 18-year-old Lon gw ood
man. had been charged with
burglary and grand thefl In
connection with the theft of an
electric guitar and amplifier
from a Winter Springs church.
Winter Springs police reported
the Items were stolen from the
Winter Springs Baptist Church,
after a window of the church was
broken.
Jon Scott Ulankenshop. 18. of
1405 Harriot Way. waa charged
In the rase at 8 40 p.m. Friday.
He waa being held In lieu of
$8,000 bond.

■UBOLAAlKa $t THEFTS
Mary J. Whitaker. 38. of 105
Exeter Ave.. Longwood. gave

The enormous legal complica­
tions that lie ahead Include the
question of the status o f citizens
In Quebec, the French-speaking
province, whose regime refused
to subscribe to thr national
constitution.
Such Issues could tie up thr
courts for years ahead. Imposing
what Claude Thomson, .presi­
d en t o f the C a n a d ia n Bar
Association, calls an "onerous
burden" on the Judiciary If It Is
forced to re-examine the nation's
legal texts In detail.
The bill of rights Is likely to
change the role o f Canada's
courts, and give them the kind of
authority Judges have In the
United States. Formerly, power
was mainly vested In the federal
and provincial legislatures, a
legacy of the British colonial
heritage.
The slow process of change
tx-gan In 1082. when Queen
Elizabeth signed a new Canadi­
an constitution Its civil rights
provisions were delayed for three
years, however, until the federal
and provin cia l govern m en ts
could review their statutes — a
task (hut Is far from completed.
After looking at more than
1.000 federal laws, u purltamrntary committee has estimated
that considerable sums will be
needed to underwrite the various
groups and Individuals who will
almost certainly request funds to
launch legal actions under the
new charter.
D a v id B a k e r , w h o s e orgunlzalon Is concerned with the
handicapped, reckons that a
single ense would ccsl as much
us $50,000, or one-seventh of his
total annual budget
I’ redlclubly. some left-w ing
tactions have reservations ubout
the charter, contending thut It Is
tille d w ith lo o p h o le s . T h r
argument Is not without merit,
since much will depend on how
the courts Interpret and enforce
the document.

Acfion Reports
★ FIret
* Courts
★ Police
sheriff's deputies the name of a
suspect who may have taken
$75 cash, a $15 rom putrr tape
and seven magazines from her
home on Friday or Saturday.
T w o shotguns, a necklace and
a $350 stereo are missing from
the home of Bruce McGontgal.
22. or 1097 Black Acre Trail.
Caaarlbrrry. He gave deputies
the name o f a suspect and
reported thr Items, with a total
value o f $1,263. stolen on Fri­
day.
A s t e r e o and 36 r e c o r d
albums, valued together at $150,
were stolen from 619 Palmetto
Ave., Sanford, a police report
said. Mark Najanlck. 18. discov­
ered the Items missing when he
returned home Tuesday, the
report said.
T w o radios, together worth
$150. were stolen from a 1983
Jeep parked at the Auto Train.
600 Persimmon Ave.. Sanford.
The radios and vrhlcle belong to
William Thompson. 66. of San­
ford. The theft occurred between
Tuesday night and Wednesday
morning, a police report said.
About $1,000 worth o f televi­
sion sets and stereo equipment
was stolen from Faye Cashe s
home at 410 Bay Ave.. Sanford,
on Wednesday, police reported.

S o m e o n e b ro k e In to th e
Dunan Brick Co . 702 S French
Ave.. Sanford, between Tuesday
night and Wednesday morning
und stole a $44 radio and a cash
box containing $50. police re-

ported.
WANTED CLOTHES
A 2 8 -y e a r -o ld A lta m o n te
Springs woman who said she
wanted her clothing has been
charged with trespassing, bur­
glary and battery after allegedly
breaking Into the apartment
where her clothese were sup­
posed to be and assaulting the
male occupant.
Police were called twice to the
home of Daniel R Kupfer. 101 E.
Altamonte Drive. *1331. Altam u n le S p r in g s , w h ich the
w o m a n a ls o lis te d as h er
address, a police report said.
Kupfer told police the woman
broke a window about 2:30 p.m.
Sunday, entered hla home and
demanded her clothing. He told
her he had given her belongings
to friends of hers. She allegedly
attacked him and he forced her
from the home, the report said.
The woman was at the scene,
outside the apartment, when
police arrived. Kupfer refused lo
press charges but police, at the
request of the apartment com ­
plex manager. Issued a trespass
warning lo the woman.
The woman walked away, but
In about 10 minutes police were
called back to thr apartment.
She waa spotted outside the
home with a small steel pipe In
her hand ai.d broken glass from
a window around her feet. Her
feet and hands had been cut by
thr glass, the report said.

i

7 JM W ’
TRAM'S Ntzlhtditfl

K u p fer d e c id e d lo p re ss
charges and Curmon Elaine
Crnmody. 28. was being held In
lieu of $8,000 bond.

Bob’s Aatlgaes A
Used Farsltare
AM O MFMIAOB ■M l ATM
M STOCK

Hast Pump - An Conditional

(ilitllfxitsl Climate
Csstig F« AH Senem

DU1 ARRESTS
The following persons have
been a rre s te d In S e m in o le
County on a charge o f driving
under (he Influence
-D an iel P. Pursell. 31. of 1086
S county Road 427. (.ongwood,
was a rrrsled at 10:30 p.m.
Friday at his home after a
motorist stopped a Longwood
policeman and told him hta car
had been Involved In an accident
with Pursell’s vehicle. Pursed
had allegedly left the scene and
the other driver tracked him to
his home and then led police
there to make thr arrest, a police
report said. He was also charged
with leaving thr scene o f an
urrldent with Injuries and care­
less driving. Hr was being held
In lieu of $5,000 bond.
—Roliert George Yales. 50. of
231 S. Short St.. Longwood, at
6:57 p.m. Friday on Crystal Lake
A v e n u e . L a k e M a ry , a fte r
motorist told poller they had
seen his pickup truck run off the
roadway.
—Zackrtr Taylor Dunn. 30. of
Dade City, at 2:50 a.m. Saturday
after his vehicle failed lo m ain­
tain a single lane on stale Road
434. Oviedo.
—Johnny Melvin Ragsdale. 23.
of Orange City, at 1:15 a.m.
Saturday on First Street. San­
ford. after driving on the wrong
side of ihe road.
—Raul Landin Villarreal. 25. of
852 Church Ave.. Longwood. at
2 16 a.m. Saturday after driving
erratically on U.S. H ighw ay
17-92 from Caaarlbrrry to Fern
Park

i

w a l l SaaSiii.
M . &gt;11.49*1
IM f I n l e t i s . I n t e l

You Won't Walk Away Empty
Handed. If You Don't Like
Our Price We Will Negotiate.

3 2 3 -2 1SO
I T * J So.
Stnlocd. Fla.

Hn M S 10S
tu n . 1 0 1

Homeowners Insimmcc?
( ) lit* l U l l l l l ’ M i l s It l l t ' S l .

T TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
It

Ph. 322-0285
1 2 5 7 S S. F re n c h A v e ., S a n fo rd
Ks4 u to - O w n e rs in s u ra n c e
I ifr. Home, i or. Hu^inrw. One nomr %«%%II all.

�Evening Herald
(USPS 411114)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322 2611 or 8 3 1 9993

Monday, June 17, 19*5— 4A
WayiM D. Ooyls, Pvbliilwr
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Malvtn Adkint. Advertising Director

Home Drllvery Week, 41 10 Monih. 84 75. 3 Month*.
• 14 25. 6 Month*. »27 00 Year. $31 OO lly M*ll Wrrk.
• I 50. Month. 86 00. 3 Month*. 8IH 00:6 Month*. *32 30.
Yrar. 800 00

Just Wait
Him O u t . . .
The good news la that thr conservative New
Democracy Party gained ground In the Greek
parliamentary elections on June 2. The bad
n ew s It that Prim e M inister A n d reas
Papandrrou's Socialist Party retained Its slim
majority.
Ever since Mr. Papandreou carte to power
In 1981, he has posed a problem for the
Western alliance In general and the United
States In particular. He has pledged to pull
Greece out of NA T O and the European
Common Market. Slmlllarly. he has threat*
ened to close the four major U.S. military
bases In Greece. Although he has done
neither, the Greek leader has boycotted
NATO military maneuvers In thr Aegean Sea
— Mr. Papandreou worries more about
Turkey than the W arsaw Pact — and opposed
the deployment of Pershlng-2 and cruise
missiles In Western Europe.
At the same time. Mr. Papandreou has gone
out of Ills way to side with the West's
enemies. He refused to support economic
sanctions against Poland for smashing Soil*
darlty. Worse, he went to Warsaw, con*
drm nrd the beleaguered tradr union and
praised Polish strongman Gen. Wojrlerh
Jnruzelskl as a "patriot." And. although Mr,
Papandrrou's visit coincided with thr murder
of Polish priest Jerzy Poplrlu/aku. he said
nary a word about It.
The Greek prime minister excuses the
Soviet Union's shooting down of KAL 007,
charging that thr Korean airliner was on a
CIA-sponsored spy mission. He downplays
the Soviet Invuslon of Afghanistan, suggest*
lug that Moscow has a right to secure Its
bo rd ers. He la u d s Libyan leader Col.
Moammar Khadafy and allows his "death
squads" to march In Athens under police
protection. Hr also embraces Yaslr Arafat and
the Palestinian Liberation Organization.
Mr. Papandreou defends Ills fractious
foreign policy by suggesting that It makes
good sense for small countries to send
"uncertain signals" to their allies. Still,
Greece's erratic behuvlor during these lust
four years has )&gt;crn an eiuburassinent to
otherseinl-nrutrullsts In NATO.
T h e same fu z z in ess of p u rp o se has
pervaded Mr. Papandrrou's domestic eco­
nomic (Millclrs. Beginning with a burst of
nationalization and reflation, he has been
forerd by economic realities — more than 18
|&gt;ercrnt Inflation, two years of fulling real
Income und n staggering foreign debt — to
rein In some or his profligate progrums.
Nevertheless, the bloated public sector Is still
squandering money und thr private sector Is
paralyzed. Unemployment hovers at u Immi! 10
percent und the Inllutlon rate Is three times
that of any other Western Europeun country.
These daunting domestic problems explain
In purt why Mr. Pupundreou dwells on
denouncing America und thr West. He tells
many Greeks wliut they wunt to hear, namely
thut their country's problems urr caused by
outsiders. Ills demagoguery Includes de­
nouncing the United States as "the metropo­
lis of Imperialism" bent on the "|&gt;rrpetuul
accumulation of capital." which supposedly
smothers the aspirations of smaller nations
such us Greece.
This and other untl-Amrrlcan diatribes
h ave d am aged G re e c e 's c re d ib ility In
Washington. Accordingly, there Is u move
afoot In Congress to send Pa|umdreou u
message by cutting oil ull U.S. uld to Greece
und canceling thr military base ugreeinent
that Is scheduled to expire In 1988.
However tempting, this response would be
shortsighted for severul reasons. Denying
Greece economic uld would prompt Mr.
PujMindrrou to seek help from Moscow. Worse
still, the ubsence of U.S. nuval bases In Greece
could ulter thr strategic balunce In the
Mediterranean.
T h r R eagan a d m in istra tio n sh o u ld ,
therefore, resist any congressional uttempls
to pull the plug on Greece. Insteud. the
president must bldr his time and wult for the
Papandreou government to self-drstruct.
Once that hupprns, perhups Grrrre will once
again become a reliable ally.

BERRY'S WORiD

BEN WATTENBERG

Functional Illiteracy Current Fashionable Crisis
Prepare for another crisis: functional Illiteracy.
It's on “ Nlghtllne." It's on newspaper op-ed
pages. Jonathan Kozol has written a book about
It titled Illiterate America. Kozol's alarmist tract
Is best summed up on the volume's Jacket: "O ne
out o f every three adult Americans cannot read
this book." I urge that the remaining two out o f
three — don't bother.
It's not that thr lark of reading skills among
some adults Isn't a problem In America: Indeed
It Is. Hut Kozol's analysis Is so exaggerated.
Illogical and politicized that It Is useless. (Hr
s a y s we p u rp o s efu lly m al-edu cated the
oppressed, and they must now be mobilized to
express their rage.)
Unfortunately. KozoMa tv l n.' rely one radical
educator. In an overb low ^ ^ d y he cchoe* Lome
seminal silliness In the broader education
establishment. Including. In some respects, the
conservative partsof It.
Thus. Kozol attacks Census Bureau data that
maintain that 99 percent of adult Americans
ran read and write Using a variety of studies, he

says 60 million adults are either "functional
Illiterates" or "m arginal Illiterates.” Much o f hts
data come from government studies. Including
ones from the Department o f Education and the
National Institute o f Education. These days,
conservatives like to trumpet such crisis
numbers to prove education Is In bad shape
because of prior liberal policies.

we need greater literacy these days, learning to
program a computer requires more reading skill
than learning to plow a field. Secondly, some of
our children are not gettin g as good an
education as they shouid. Why?
Because
schools followed advice offered earlier by Kozol
and others — less discipline, relaxed curriculum
standards.

The thing Is preposterous — left and right. We
are being victimized, not for the first time, by
"definition Inflation.'* What Is a "functional" or
"marginal” Illiterate, anyway? Kozol says that
functional Illiterates can't read a menu, can't
read traffic signs, can't use a phone book. How
many such 15-year-olds do you know who can’t
read "french fries" on a menu? Elsewhere Kozol
says that If you can't understand an Insurance
policy or a tax form, even you may be an
Illiterate. (Me. too.) In short, the numbers ate
vastly over-inflated.

What's the solution? Surely not the revolu­
tionary one Kozol suggests. He wants a 810
bllllon-a-year program whose goal Is "civil
disobedience" to denounce "Imperial Injustice"
Imposed by "dynastic power." (That 's us.)

Is there a problem ? Yes. Actually, two
problems. Kozol and others correctly note that

Isn't there a more sensible posture? Let's
ackn ow ledge that w e've m ade some real
h e a d w a y : that w e 'v e m ad e som e dum b
mistakes: that we've got to set up tough
standards In our schools: that w r ought to help
re-educate adults who want help: that this Is a
problem where governments can help And let a
d o It w ith o u t b r e a s t - b e a tIn g . w ith o u t
Amertca-bashlng

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

ROBERT WALTERS

Drying
Up The
Pork

Change
Is Not
Reform
John Randolph of Roanoke, the
great Virginia stalrsman of the early
republic, was fond of reminding Ills
countrymen that "change is not
reform." It’s loo bad that he Isn't
around today to rrmlnd contempo­
rary Americans of that In connec­
tion with the Reagan administra­
tion's tax proposal
This proposal, or series of pro­
posals. Is being sold to the public as
conservative populism. However,
columnist George Will ha* rightly
said that conservative populism Is
an oxym oron, a combination of
words us meaningless us "honest
thief." I'opullsm, In the event any­
o n e Is u n clear. Is o l d - s t y l e •
grassroots lllieralism built around
cheup greenbacks. Inflation and
lurgr helpings ol political hombust.
I'opullsm never helped unyone
The plot lo murder the pope has
unywhrre.
frequently been called, with much
Justification, the crime of the centu­
Unquestionably, the goal o f tax
ry. The puzzling thing uboul It from
reform und IRS code simplification
the start has been the reluctance of
Is un Importunt one. And us the
the Western media to recognize
Congress and the public study the
what was staring them In the face,
line print In the many features of
and the entire failure of the U.S.
the administration proposal. worthy
government to exploit the crime for
things undoubtedly turn up. Realis­
p u rp o s es o f p o litic a l w a r fa r e
tic otmrrvrr*. however, would do
throughout the Catholic world.
well to focus uttcntloii on specific
With u few honorable exceptions.
features of the proposal which ure
Western m rdla downplayed the
d a m a g in g and should not be
crime and Ihe accumulating evi­
enacted Into law.
dence that pointed to Its political
Our of the sharpest unulyor* of
und International character. The
the "ta x reform " comes from Allen
New York Times first assured Its
Sinai, chief economist lor Shearson
readers that Mehmet Agra appeared
Lehm an Brothers. In a recent
to have acted alone. Then, when the
bulletin. Mr. Slnul delineates the
B ulgarian connection surfaced,
principal charucierlstlcs of the tax
opined editorially thut some looseprogram, which he describe* us "a
cannon zealots In the Bulgarian
radical change from curent law."
secret service were probably acting
One ol these characteristics Is
on their own — a proposition that
"higher business taxes" with the
unyone fam iliar with the rela ­
elimination of the Investment tax
tionship o f the Bulgarian secret
credit and limitation of depreciation
service to the KGB would find
write-offs for Investment In plant
stupefylngly ridiculous. Clare Ster­
and equipment
ling. Bernard Kalb. John Wallach.
and a few others laid out the facts
To Impose new taxes on buslnes
and their meaning to the public.
may be thr essence ol populism, but
Nevertheless, a peculiar silence
It also Is likely lo lead to a loss of Job
continued
to surround Ihe story.
opporlunities as business becomes
From the start, our diplomats and
reluctant to Invrsl In new plunt and
CIA people have discounted the Idea
machinery. The United States al­
of u conspiracy — even os Judge
ready hud u severe problem In that
Murtrlla. u universally adm ired
area Business already had difficulty
I t a lia n J u ris t, m e t i c u l o u s l y
retaining earnings
assembled Ihe evidence. I m yself
was told directly by a high CIA
There's no question but thut thr
official that the agency had no
tax proposal represents what Mr
reason to believe that there had
Slnul calls "u stroke of political
been a conspiracy.
acumen." On thr other hand, thr
And. certainly, we have not used
plan seems lo contain heavy bor­
the plot ugulnsl the pope to damage
rowings from thr ('resident's liberal
thr communists In Latin America,
opposition. It's yet to lie proved that
for example. The Impact there of a
this particular "tux reform " plan
widely circulated documentary film
will generate thr cupllul essential
for the creation of Industrial Job* on the matter would be politically
devastating lo the Soviets and their
and u p r o s p e ro u s fu tu r e for
local allies, but we have done
America. This tneuns that Congrrss
nothing of the kind. The explana­
has un obligation to grt down to the
nitty-gritty und determine' the Im­ tion remains mysterious.
My colleague and friend William
pact o f this plan on Ihr productive,
Saflre writes In his column that the
wealth creating Industries of the
m rdla hu ng back as lo n g as
country.

JEFFREY HART

Murder In Essence
Andropov was the Soviet leader. He
reasons that the Implications of the
plot were Just too horrifying. Any
scheme that momentous would
have had the approval o f the
I'olltburo. which means Brezhnev.
Andropov and the others; and
Andropov, at the time of the murder
attempt hrad of the KGB. would
have been the m in who ran the
show directly. Saflre thinks the
media Ignored, or mostly Ignored
the story because, with the eleva­
tion of Andropov. Ihe need to do
business with the chief hit mun
himself was just too horrifying Now
that Andropov Is gone, everything
ha*&gt; changed. Gorbachev can say
Not Me. The media people are
flocking to the trial
There may be something to that
analysis, but It does not seem to me
to go far enough Now that the trial
Is receiving media utlentiun. the
crime of the century ts still not
being seen as a spectacular revela­
tion of the Soviet mentality and the
Soviet system Itself. The assassina­
tion attempt Is of a piece with the
sh ootin g dow n o f thr K orean
A irliner 007. w ith the regu lar
murders at the Berlin Wall, with the
Gulag. The shooting of the pope wus
yet another revelation about a
system that is based upon the
normalization of sheer brutality, a
system that knows no restraint
upon such brutality.
Perhaps that recognition Is also
too painful for thr U.S. government
Itself to face, and hence Its failure tu
exploit the assassination attempt us
a weapon of political warfare
To a certain extent one sym pa­
thizes with them. Looking directly
at It Is Indeed unpleasant, and It
makes It repellent to do business
with the Soviets.
But It would be much healthier In
the long run If we faced the double
truths: that on some questions our
self-interest requires that we do
business with the Soviets, but.
equally true, that Ihe very system
we are dealing with Is murderous In
Its essence.

WASHINGTON INEA) - When
the House o f Representatives re­
cently refused to appropriate any
money for 31 water development
projects. It perpetuated Ihe congres­
sional tradition o f doing the right
thing for the wrong reason.
Water projects, although often
e c o n o m ic a lly u n so u n d and
environmentally destructive, long
have been treated with exceptional
reverence and respect on Capitol
Hill
That's because they offer a unique
opportunity for members of Con­
gress to demonstrate their ability to
produce federal largess. In Ihe form
o f multl-mllllon-dnllar government
contracts, for their state* und dis­
tricts.
Thus, the House acted out of
character In early June when It
voted, by 203-202 margin, to strip
from u supplemental appropriations
b ill w uter p r o je c ts that w ere
expected to cost almost 8100 m il­
lion this year and approximately
8 1 5 hllllon when completed
Thut surprising House vole was.
In great measure, the product of
pique on the part of legislators
resentful of the disproportionate
share o f "pork burrel" projects In
districts represented by members of
I lie House Appropriations Commit­
tee.
The House, having taken the
extraordinary action of rejecting (at
least temporarily) so many tradl
tlonally sacred pork barrel Initia­
tives. ought to consider doing the
right thing for the right ret
Among the logical candioates for
termination are these projects, each
of which will cost In excess of 81
hllllon Incomplete
— The Garrison Diversion Plan In
Nnrih Dakota, designed to benefit
•108 farmers by Irrigating 130.000
acres ut a cost o f 81 3 billion. At Ihe
same time, the project would de­
stroy thousands ol other acres of
farmland und waterfowl habitat.
— The Red River Waterway In
Louisiana, conceived to provide a
navigable link between Shreveport.
La.. and the Mississippi River at u
cost of 81.6 billion.
— The Bonneville Unit of the
Central Utah Project, an elaborate
system of of reservoirs, tunnels and
aqueduct* to carry wuter over Ihe
Continental Divide Into the Salt
Lake City urea at a cost of 81 6
hllllon
Efforts now are underway In
Congress to Induce an unprecedent­
ed degree of rationality In the
process of approving water projects
and allocating scarce federal funds
for their construction
As long a* Individual legislators
l&gt;rr*lxt In selfishly promoting un­
warranted public works projects for
their states and districts, however,
those attempts to produce needed
reform will continue to be un­
dermined

JACK ANDERSON

It's 'Buyer Beware' On All F-16s
By Jack Anderson
and Joseph Spear
W ASHINGTON - What would
you think if the Justice Department
announced that It was doing away
with Its subpoenas and grand Juries
und was going after underworld
traders by "begging" them to tell
what they know, by promising to
keep their testimony secret and by
paying them for their Information?
You’d think the Justice Depart­
ment had gone bonkers, wouldn't
you?
Well, believe It or not. the Justice
D epartm ent supports the P e n ­
tagon's Identical handling of de­
fense contractors who are asked to
help with military Investigations
Into fatal accidents, design errors
and mechanical malfunctions In­
volving weapons the contractors sell
to the armed services.
We know, because our associates

Donald Goldberg and Indy Badhwar
filed a lawsuit under the Freedom of
Information Act to get Air Force files
on accidents, particularly the fatal
crash of an F-16. That crash led the
Air Force to ground all 269 o f the
816 m illion O eneral D ynam ics
aircraft, citing problems with the
lllghtcontrol system.
Our associates hadn't even asked
for details on thr Air Force-General
Dynamics contract for a total of
more than 1.300 F-16*. It never
occurred to them that the company
wouldn't help the Air Force find out
what went wrong with the planes
that were coming off the General
Dynamics assembly line. After ail.
even the cheapest new car on the
market lias some kind of warranty.%
But here's how the situation was
explained In a sworn statement by
Lt. Col. Alex J. Ranclgllo. legal

adviser to the Air Force Inspection
and Safety Center:
"T h e contractor shall be reim ­
bursed costs Incurred In connection
with mishap Investigation and re­
lated tests or analysis. Nothing I
have found In Ihe contract, how ev­
er. specifically requires General
Dynamics Corp to provide evalua­
tions and analyses after an aircraft
mishap.
"Further, there Is no penalty
provision In the contract governing
the refusal of a contractor to provide
such technical assistance "
Why protect any embarrassing
Information General Dynamics may
have provided to the Air Force In
the F-16 Investigation? A Justice
Department attorney explained In
another sworn statement:
"It U important to the military
branches that when Investigating
an accident, they have access to

repoits provided by the manufac­
turers without regard lo possible
adverse reflections" — an apparent
reference to public outrage over a
816 million plane that won't fly.
"Further." the statement added,
"the candor of Information supplied
voluntarily In confidence may be
substantially greater than that of
Information compelled to be pro­
duced with the knowledge that It
will be made public."
Ranclgllo made It clear that pro­
tection o f defense contractors' em ­
barrassing secrets Is nothing new.
nor Is It confined to General Dynam­
ics. It "has been the longstanding
practice of the Air Force." he said,
adding: "T h e defense contractors.
Including General Dynamics, are
briefed on the confidentiality of the
Information ... approximately every
18 months."

�SPORTS

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Monday, June 17, IMS—$A

Barnett Hurdles Timpson
ELMHURST — He had to go 1.200 miles to do It
but Frank Barnett finally whipped Michael
Timpson for the first time Saturday In the
International Prep Invitational at Elmhurst York
High School.
Seminole High School's Barnett, who had lost
to Timpson on four previous occasions, hurdled
to an early lead and then held off Tlmpaon's
closing rush to win the 120-yard hurdles in 13.5
Miami Hialeah Lakes' Tlinpsor was closed In
13.6. Tony Brooks o f Rockdale. Texas was third
’n 13.9.
The IP1 Invites the top eight high school
urdlers to Elmhurst, a suburb of Chicago. "It
•as one of their typical races." said Seminole
Igh coach Ken Brauman about the duel. "Frank
&gt;t out fast and this lime Timpson didn't catch

m."
H tfiM P M U fM rn rr

Frank Barnett, left, finally whipped his
two year nemesis Michael Tlnpson in the

120-yard hurdles at the International Prep
Invitational at Elmhurst York.

Timpson topped Barnett In the 1984 state meet
and bested him three limes this year — at the Bob
Hayes Invitational, the state meei and the Golden
South Classic. All three were close races where

Track/Field
Barnett led early but Tlmpaon's surge midway
through the race always made the difference.
"I ran m y own race." said Burnett about the
win. " I got a good start and made It through the
llrsl three hurdles In real good shape. Timpson
didn't com e back on me like he usually d o e s "
Barnett, who Is headed to Arizona on a track
scholarship, will compete In the Junior Nationals
this weekend at Elmhurst. This meet will draw
the top 19-year-old and under alhletes. according
to Brauman. who said the U.S. Junior National
team, which competes against Canada, will be
selected from this Held.
Seminole girls' coach Emory Blake will also
lake national-class half mller Shownda Martin to
the meet along with his mile relay learn of Glenda
Bass. Trlna Walker. Dorchelle Webster and
Martin.
— Sam Cook

M a jo r G a m e: Tigers,
O viedo Play Tonight
By C hris P la ter
H erald S p orts W rite r
This one should be worth the
trip to Euntls The Oviedo Angels
and Altamonte American Tigers
go head to head tonight at 7:30
at the Euntls L illie League
C om plex In the T o p Team
Tournament District 14 Major
Division winner's bracket final.
The Angels go Into tonight's
game with a 22-1 record which
Includes 22 straight wins. After
two victories In Top Team play,
the Tigers stand at 20-2.
T h e w in n e r o f t o n ig h t 's
sh ow dow n a d va n ces to the
division finals while the loser
will have to cumc hack through
the loser’s bracket.
Behind the no hit pitching of
David Blanton on Saturday and
opportunistic baserunning on
Sunday. Oviedo advanced In the
winner's bracket finals.
Saturday, at Orungc City.
Blanton was untouchable os he
llrrd a no-hltter and was backed
by an 11-Kit offensive attack as
Ihe Angels burled Southwest
Volusia. 19-0.
Illanton struck out 14 of the
It) hatters he faced and walked
Just one. Blanton had a perfect
gam e through three Innings
when he walked the leadoff
hitter In the fourth. Blanton
went on to strike out the next
three hitlers and set down the
side In order In the fifth and
sixth frames.
Blanlon helped his own cause
with Ihree singles and Marvin
"Bubba" Fort continued (o sw­
ing a hot but for Oviedo with
three base hits. Jody Spencer
contributed a singled a triple
while Morris Jacobs. Dana Allen
and Bryan Hart added tw o
singles apiece.
Sunday, at Eastmonte Field In
A lta m o n te S p rin g s . O vied o
managed |ust five hits but took

North
Wins
Open

Baseball
advantage of five errors and ran
ihe bases with reckless abandon
en route to an 11-4 victory over
Maltlando.
The Angels erupted for four
runs In Ihe top of the first with
the first two coming on a double
off Ihe bat of Fore and the
second two on Spencer's single.
Maitland came back with four
runs on three hits In the bottom
of the first to even the score.
Ross McDrydr brought two runs
In with u double off Fore while
C harles W eddm an rapped a
two-run homer to center lo tie
i he score.
Fore settled down to pitch
shutout ball the rest of the way,'
allowing only three more hits.
Fore struck out three In the
game and walked four. Reyes
Daunlc had a double and two
singles to lead Mullland at the
plate.
Oviedo took the leud for good
with two runs In (he second.
B lanton w alked and scored
when Jacobs reached on an
error and Jacobs eventu ally
scored on Allen's groudnout.
The Angels picked up one
more run In ihe third on no hits.
Terry Smith was hit by pitch,
stole second and third and
scored on Chester Tulp's suicide
squeeze bunt.
Oviedo made It 8-4 In the
fourth when Allen reached on a
three-base e m u and scored
when Fore reached on another
error.
The Angels pulled away with
two runs In the fifth Spencer
doubled and scored on Hart's
single and Hart, who stole sec­
ond and third, scored when

8«e MAJORS, Page 7A

BIRMINGHAM. Mich. (Ul&gt;l| Andy North now has a ready
answrr when asked what he has
done lately: "W o n my second
U.S. Open."
North added the 1985 0}&gt;eii lo
his 1978 crown with u 4-over pur
74 Sunday that let (he veteran
escape Oakland Hills with a 281
and a one shot victory over T C.
Chen. Dave Barr und Denis
Watson.
It was. as usual, un Open that
one survived, not won.
Chen, who lost a four-stroke
lead, shot a 7 -over 77 In the last
round. Barr txigted the last two
holes to finish with u 72 and
Watson, after taking a twostroke penalty In the first round,
shot a 70 on Sunday.
"Maybe It'll get some of these
guys off my track uboul What
huve you done lately?'-", said
North. 35. has won three PGA
Tour events but none since the
1978 U.S. Open ut Cherry Hills
In Colorado.
After three rounds In which
golfers uppeured to have lamed
ihe tough Oakland Hills Course,
H)I|U rs*t* »r Twins i VhMSSt
Harr put Ihe final round In
perspective.
"T h e 'M onster.'" mild the Ca­
Derrick Taylor, Sun Bank's pitcher and game of the Sanford Little Major League
nadian, noting the nickname
slugger, watches a triple sail into the City Championship Series. Both teams
B e n H o g a n h u n g on Ih e
outlfleld before taking off for first base. posted 180 records during the regular
6.996-yard course, "b it bark.
Taylor will turn his attention to the season. They will play a best 2 out of 3
Chen took what the Taiwan
pitching mound tonight at 6 when Sun Bank series tonight, Tuesday and Thursday, If
golfer called a "dou ble par"
eight on the 457-yurd. par-4 fifth
squares of with First Federal In the first necessary, to determine the champion.
hole. That obliterated a lead of
four shots over North that once
looked like money In the bank
"T.C , opened the door for a lot
of us." North agreed. "It was a
freaky thing that has happened
lo all of us — unfortunately."
A double hit on a chip from l hr
made the catch but fell down, struck two und walkrd five. The
allowing Mersey lo tag and score. lwo WOH runs were unearned rough, giving Chen a penally
But the Inning ended on Ihe play and cumr In Ihe fifth when the stroke, plus a missed putt con­
when Derr was thrown out Irudofr hitler blooped a single tributed to the eight. He bogled
the next three holes, hut North
rundown and Turner to scored trying lo advance lo third
which fell between Ihe center
helped Chen come from three
Ihe tying run on a wild throw lo COUSINS CARRIES A WB
fielder and the second baseman
shots
down with a his own
the plate. Rape, who took second
ORLANDO — Skip Cousins A walk and bunl single loaded
on the play, then stole third and pitched no-hll ball for four In­ Ihe liases but Cousins fanned the three hole run of bogles
"It was all No. 5 ." the weakly
scored when the ball gol away nings before finishing with a next hitler and Induced a popup
Iw o -h ltte r as A p op k a Weal for ihe second out, An error by smiling Chen explained. " I really
for the third baseman
Winter Garden bounced back S em in o le top p rd W est Oak third ba sem an Mike S m ith not complain. I Just played hud.
pitiful golf. But I finished second,
lo take a 6-4 lead Into the sixth. R id g e . 4-2. In B ig L ea g u e allowed both runs to score.
(that's) not too bad for Iplaylng
Sheffield was robbed o f a single base-ball Sunday. The game was
Apopka West Seminole used a
to renter but Herscy reached on stopped after five Innings due to dutch single by Tim Bruehl and my| first U.S. Open. I make a lot
un error. Heraey then stole rain und Ihe second hamr of the un error along with two Infield of friends."
North, whose closing 74 was
second and took third on a wild double-header was cancelled
hits and a groundoul lo push
pilch. Consecutive walks lo Derr
M anager R ich a rd C o ffe y 's across all of Its runs In Ihe top of Ihe second-worst finishing score
In Open history to the 75s Cary
and Tracy Turner loaded the tram Improved to 14-1 for the the fifth.
Mlddlecoff and Hale Irwtn shot In
bases. Troy Turner then lofted a year AW S plays at Ocoee Wed­
Cousins reached on an error lo
1949 and 1979 respectively,
fly ball to shallow center In nesday night at 7:30.
became the 15th U.S. Open
Cousins, a slim left-hander.
which th e second baseman
Baa BIO LEAGUE, Pag* 7 A
double winner.

City Series Opens

Sheffield, Derr Propel Seminotes To Split
Brian Sheffield tossed a fourhitter and Gary Derr drilled a
two run homer In the fourth as
the Oviedo Semlnoles trimmed
Winter Garden. 2-1, In the first
game of a double-header Sunday
In Big League District 14 play at
Winter Garden
In the nlghtrap. the Semlnoles
came bark from u 3-0 deficit but
couldn't hold on as they dropped
a 6-5 dec talon.
The Semlnoles return lo action
Wednesday at 7:30 when they
host I’ lne/Kolllng Hills at the
Oviedo Little League complex.
In Sunday's first game. Shef­
field allowed Just four hits,
struck out nine and walked four
as ihe Sem lnoles won their
fourth game.

Winter Garden took a 1-0 lead
Into the fourth Inning but the
lea d e v a p o ra te d w h en J e f f
Grrtslng singled and Derr lined a
two-out, opposite-field homer for
what turned out to be the
game-winning hit.
In the second game. Winter
Garden built a 3-0 lead but the
Semlnoles bounced back to take
a 4-3 lead In the third. James
Hrraey got the rally started with
a double down the right field line
und Derr followed by blasting a
two-run homer to left center.
Tracy Turner the walked, stole
second and movrd to third on
David Rape's bunt single.
W ith tw o outs and Larry
Thomas up, the Semlnoles tried
a double steal and Rape got In a

Baseball

Savages Are Stuck On 3rd
Smith, Chavis, Frey Swing Torrid Bats In Invitational
■ y Chile Pieter

H arold S p o rts W rite r

Sunday's Stars
Sunday'* *tar* were (from left) C «ry Derr, Brlsn
Sheffield end Vel Smith. Derr hit two homer* end
Sheffield supplied the pitching prowess a» the Oviedo
Seminole* split a double-heeder. Smith betted .800 es the
Seminole Savages finished third In their softball Invita­
tional.

The Seminole Savages teem to
be stuck on third place. After
winning their opening tourna­
ment, the Sem inole Softball
Club'a 15 and under Ail-Star
team hat finished third the past
three weeks.
But. while the Savages have
struggled tn past weeks, they
played impressively this past
weekend tn winning five and
losing one tn the Seminole Sav­
ages Invitational at the Seminole
Softball Club complex.
After going 4-0 In found robin
play, the Savages advanced to
the sem ifinals o f the single
elimination round before drop-

*4 W

Softball
p in g a 4-3 d ecision to the
Jacksonville River City Rebels.
Th e Rebels went on to defeat
Tam pa Magic for the tourna­
ment title.
In Its opening game. Caroline
Chavis drove In three runs and
VaJ Smith knocked tn the winn­
ing run aa the Savages trimmed
W e « Orange. 4-3.
West Orange took a 3-0 lead
after three Innings but the Sav­
ages got on the board with two
runs In the fourth. Bridgetie
Gene retie singled and Lomlcta
Whitaker reached on an error lo

put runners on second and third.
Chavis then smacked a single to
drive tn both runsThe Savages came back to
toke the lead In the sixth.
Heather Meyer single and Laurie
Lelffer hit back to back mingles
and Chavis singled In Meyer to
tie the score at 3-3. Smith then
singled In LelfTer with the w in­
ning run.
Nlkl Burke pitched a five-hitter
and was backed by a solid
'defense that shut West Orange
out the last five frames. Smith
was 3 for 3 lo lead the offense
while Mamie Frey. Chavis and
Meyer had two hits each.

See SOFTBALL, Fags 7A

The 8103,000 first prize was
considerably more than North
won last year (822.1311 when hr
came back from elbow surgery.
But despite only three victories
N o r th has a c u m u la t iv e
81.039.206 In w innings that
makes him the 52nd player to
e a rn 81 m illio n fr o m g o lf
tournaments.
Once North got the lead from
Chen he lost It briefly during the
th ree-b o g ey s tr e tc h , before
shooting back Into
He with
Barr and Chen via a 10-fool
birdie putt on the 172-yard
par-3 13lh.
" I hit a 3-Iron (to within) about
10 feet." he said "It was realty
the shot I needed at that point."
North said there were simi­
larities Sundsy to his 1978 win.
when he also closed with a 74.
"1 played poorly In the middle,
then got my act together In
1978."

�*A— Evtnlng Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Juno 17, IMS

Boston

BASEBALL ROUNDUP
A M IIIIC A N
Cast

8 T A N D IN O S
N A T IO N A L
Catl

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74 7*7 7
747 IV*
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HoupAon
71 77 717 I U
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Son Otago I, tan FronclacoO
PMiadaipMa II. Pitttourgti 1
W ortfial J, N r * Yorli 1
Atlanta 7, Cincinnati 0
lender's I n u l t t
PhlladelpMa 1. Pllttb'rrgh 1
Montreal J. N»«* York 1
Cincinnati t. Atlanta 1,10 inning*
SI Lautt I. Chicago t
lan Francltca 7, San Otago 1 1H I)
San Francisco S. San Oiaga 4. I I
Innings dntf)
Las Angalst 7, Houston 0
Mender's Games
Cincinnati ITlbO t * 71 at San Francisco
IH a m m a ltt 14), 4 OSp m
Pittsburgh |Winn | 1) *t Montreal
(Palmer I D , 7 l i p m
HawtMn &lt;l»ren 7 11 at Atlanta (Shield*
i oi. r d p i *
Chicago (Svtclitte a l l at Now Yarn
(Darling H ) , l 70pm
San Diego (She* eel el Las Angeles

(Honercult 4II, 1 :1b p m

Teetdar't Oemas
Cincinnatial San Francisco
Pittsburgh at Montreal, night
Chicago at Nam York, night
Philadelphia at SI Louis, night
Houston at Atlanta, night
San Diego at Lot Angolas,

night

Toronto
Detroit
Botfan
(Ultimo**
No** York
Milwoukoo
Clorolond

11

R E S U L T S

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Baltimore 7, MileauSao 1
Oak land I. Cleveland t
Boston 7, Toronto S
Detroit 10. Mew York I
Chicago 1. California I
Teeat 11, Minnesota 7
Seattle 1. Kansas City I
Sunday * Resell*
Oak land 7. Cleveland 1 ,1III I
Oakland I (.Cleveland*. (Tnd)
Mow York 7. Detroit I
Baltimore 7. Milwaukee t
Boston 7, Toronto*
Seattle!. Kansas City t
California 1. Chicago I
Minnesota 4. Tares I
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Boston &lt;Nipper 111 el Detroit I Petr y *
41, 7 l i p m
Mew York (Guidry * 71 at Baltimore
I McGregor 5 II. t li p m
Toronto (Stleto a el at Milwaukee (Haas
H I . I lip m
Minnesota (Viol* 7 I I al Kansas City
I Saber hegen * J ) , I IS p m
Tuesday'* Game*
Toronto at Milwaukee, night
Boston at Detroit, night
New York at Batttmora. night
California at Cleveland, night
Minnesota at Kansas City- night
Seam* at Teea*. night
Oakland at Chicago, night

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Expos Fight To Top Of East Rumble
U nited Preoa In tern a tion al
Wind wan niipiMXTed tci lx- a two-train duel tprlwrrn
(hr Chicago Cub* and (h r Nrw York Mrtn In (he NL
East Ius** lurned Into an all out rumble.
The Culm dropped their filth straight Hume Sunday,
it 5-2 decision to St. Louis. With Motilrrid defeating
New York, file Expos t&lt;H&gt;k sole possession o f flrnt place
it (id lend the Cube by one game. St. Louis In Iwo down
and (hr Mein are it V! buck.
Cardinal manager W hliey Hrr/og In not nurprlned bin
leutn In a conlcndrr,
"W e knew it Iteiorr Ihln rood trip,'1he wild "W e were
playing himid We Junl nlarled oil (Ihr nennonl making
errorn and couldn‘1pilch urnund I hem.
" A l onr lime, we hud iVO games und 31 unearned
runs We're a hetlrr defennlve teuin than that."
Kurt Kepnhlrr. 3-5. earned Ihr Irlumph scattering nix
hits over eight Innings, Hill Cninptiell nolched hln third
nave, The Cubs' Dennis Eekersley, 7-4. yletded neven
till mind struck out nix.
Chicago niunugcr Jim Frey, who In preparing lor »
four-game meeting against the MHn. known It In nttll
only June.

N.L. Baseball
sour for UR," Mrtn manager Dave Johnson suld,
"There has been no llmely bitting, but our pltehern urr
keeping un close. If we don't get the pitching, w e’re out
of the game early.”
The victory, combined with the Chicago Cubs' 5 2
loss In St. Louis, leaven the Expos In first place with a
one-game lead
"T h e team In marling in do the Job," ex-Mel Hublr
llrnokn. who drove In two runs, wild "I um doing my
share but everybody Is pulling together an a unit. We
won two out of four from Chicago und could have woo
all four. Taking three from the Mrtn wan the Icing on
the cake."
Hill Gullieknon, 7 5. worked live Innings for the
victory, yielding three hits and four walks, Mickey
Mahler ullowrd two hits over four Innings to gain tils
Itmt nave. Aguilera. 1-1. took the Inna.
It.dues singled twice und stole hln 20th bane.
P h illie s 3. P l a t e * 2

At Pittsburgh, Char ten Hudson, 3-ti. scattered (our
Expon 7, Meta 2
MONTREAL (Ill’ll — The Montreal Expo* chunked
(heir pattern of titlark against the Nrw York Mem
Sunday but got the name result.
The Expos uned ninth Inning rulllrn to produce
victories Friday and Saturday. Sunday Montreal
lumped on Mein' rookie Kick Aguilera for three rnnn In
the (Irm Inning and went on to a 7-2 victory and a
nwerp of their three game series
"W e have lost nine of 11 gamrn, everything ban gone

flitis over ti 2-3 Innings and also singled to start a
three-run sixth, leading Philadelphia Kent Trkulvr
pin lied the ninth for hln fifth save, Hlek Heunchrl. 3-1.
look the loss and stole a base In the third Inning, hln
llrst steal since 197H.

Hedn 0 , B a r e * S
Al Atlanta. Nick Eausky belted u 3-2 two-out pitch
from Hruce Suitei lor a home run In the loth Inning to
lilt Cincinnati. Esasky's fifth homer of the year
drnp|K-d Suiter to 3-2 and made a winner of Ted Power.
1-2. Ihr Krds’ fourth pitcher. John Franco got the last

Stars Blast Renegades
Bandits Make Playoff

Bob Horner
...swings hot bat

Huble Brooks
...E*pos together

two outs for his third save. Boh Homer had a pair of
doubles and a single for the Braves while driving In two
runs.
D odgara B, A stros O

Al Houston. Frrnnmln Vstpiiiurla flrrit s six-bit
shutout and Pedro Guerrero continued his torrid (Mice
with a homer, a double und three KOI to lead Los
Angeles to a sweep of Its three-game series Valenzuela.
6-7. struck out five In pitching his league-leading third
shutout and seventh complete game.
G iants 7-B, Padres 3-4
At San Francisco. Chris Brown's two-out single
■cored Jeff Leonard from second In the 13th Inning to
give San Francisco and a sweep of their double header.
In the opener, Brown rollecteel four hits and four RBI lo
Ignite the Giants.

SCOREBOARD
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T V / R A D IO

Hurdling over two Orlando
turklcni at the endzone. Kelvin
Bryuni put the Stars ahead 7-3
H.25 lulu the second quarter
with an H-yard hurst up the
m id d le . Th e run ca p p ed a
seven-play. 77-yard drive.
Fuslnu lilt C aver from 23
yards out with 42 seconds left In
the hull, ending a 59 second
drive that spanned HO-yards lo
give the Stans a 14-3 lead.
Fuslnu. using u short passing
attack, connected un 13-&lt;g-18
Ural-half a It rm pis.
T h e S t a n scored 17 un&lt;
answered points In the third
q u s r le r .
J rlf linsckhsus kicked u 39yard second-quarter field goal
und Cunla lilcdtue ran B yards
fur a fourth quaricr touchdown
to account fur Orlando'a points.

IM *| I fV b A i kfidi

Football
T E A R S F LO W IN T A M P A
TAM PA IUPII - Tears flowed
frrely In the lam pa Bay tocker
room Saturday night lolhiwlug
ihr most emotional triumph in
Ihr Bundlin' three year history.
Strong safety Uwuynr A n ­
derson, wandering about like a
daxrtl street drifter, soaked up
the superlatives billowing an
Inspired defensive effort that
keyed u playoll clinching 17-14
victory over Birmingham.
Anderson had two ol Tampa
Bay's four Interceptions oil (Till
Hlnudt and the Bandits picked
off five pannes overall against a
tram that enterrd with the best
turnover differential — plus Iti
— In the league.
“ This was u team effort." said
Anderson, "bu t It look one
person to Ignite the spark I
guess It wan m e."
The Bandits. 10-7. who ended
a lour game losing streak In
(runt ol mi rsthnalrd crowd ol
24.(XX). would have quullfled for
the poni-aeuMm anyway Satur­
d a y b e c a u s e J a c k s o n v ille
dropped a 31-0 decision In
M r in p h 1n . S n a p p I n g t h e
Stallions' live-gam e winning
nkrln despite u dismal offensive
showing made the victory quite
special for Tumpa Buy Coach
Steve Spurrier.
"For (he first time In three
years we heat a good team when
we rrully didn't play well on
of tense." said Spurrier after the
Bandits were outgulned 4 Iti 253,
"Our defenne kept bulling us out.
I told Ihr guyn that If we can
play defense like that from here
on out. w e’ve gul a good chance
of making a serious thrrut at the
championship "
The Stallions, 12 5. will play at
New Jersey Sunday tn Ihr regulur sra*on finale with the IJSFL's
Eastern Conference crown at
slake against the I I 6 Generals

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U nited P ress In tern ation al
T h e T o r o n t o Blue J a y s '
bullpen, which had been Im­
pregnable lately, collapsed this
weekend In Boston.
The Red Sox Inflicted • some
seiious dam age to Toronto's
relief corps and Sunday used a
four-run eighth inning to beat
Gary Lavrlle and complete a
sweep o f their four-game series
with the first-place Blue Jays.
Dwight Evans' sacrifice fly
rapped the rally In Boston's 7-6
victory, which marked the sec­
ond day In a row which the
Toronto bullpen blew a game.
"W e 're pretty happy to be
g e ttin g ou t o f h e r e ." said
Toronto catcher Ernie Whitt.
"It's a nice city and everything,
but we're happy to leave."
Despite getting swept, the Blue
Jays still hold a 3 14 game lead
In I he American League East.
"W e gave them three gam es."
said Toronto manager Bobby
Cox. "T h e y 're a great club, but
you can 't give them games.
We're still In first place. A lot of
other clubs would like to be In
our position."
The Red Sox. who moved Into
a tie for second place, have now
won five straight and 13 o f thetr
last 14 games. They have also
come from behind to win nine of
their last IB games.
O rioles 9, B rew ers 1
At Baltimore, Wayne Gross
slammed a pair of home runs
and Jim Dwyer. Fred Lynn and
John S h e lb y each added a
homer to back the six-hit pit­
ching o f Mike Hoddlcker, 7-6.
The Orioles completed a fourgame sweep o f the Brewers.

Yaakeea 2 .Tigers 1

—

COLLEGE PARK, Md. |UPI| C h u ck Fuslnu th rew three
touchdowns passes Saturday,
two to backup split end James
C aver, to help im prove the
Baltimore Stars’ playoff chances
with a 41-10 rout id the Orlando
Rrnegadrs
With 11,000 no-shown, a re­
cord low crowd of 8,908 watched
In the rain ut Byrd Stadium as
Baltimore Improved to 9-7-1. A
loss by Jacksonville to Memphis
Suturduy night would clinch a
third straight playoll spot for the
Stars Orlundnfeli to 4-13.
The 41 points were the most
the defending Irugue chumplons
liave scored this season. The
Stars' offense has played cr
rallcully with Its previous high of
34 |Milnts also coming agulnst
Orlando May 17.
Fusion com p lclcd Hf-of 2ti
passes for 203 yards before
yielding lo luickup Tim Klordan
in the fourth quarter. Ills three
(OUChdOWn |w**e* fled his high
lor the season.
The Stars sucked Renegades
quarterback Reggie Collier four
times lor 40 yards In I o m t s .
Increasing their league-leading
suck total lo 50.

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Elliott Gambles, Wins M iller 400
BROOKLYN. Mich. (DIMI - Bill Elliott took u
(told gamble Sunday and It paid oil with a victory
In (hr Michigan Miller 400 Grand National stock
car rare before a record crowd at Michigan
IntrmalUmal Speedway.
Elliott gumhlrd on the lust round of pit stops
with about 50 miles to go when he declined to
change Urea while second-place Darrell Waltrlp
took on right side tires.
Elliott spent 8.2 seconds In the pits while
Waltrlp languished for 13.5 seconds.
When the checkered flag fell, Elliott had beulcn
Wultrtp by 13.5 seconds at an average speed of
144 724 miles an hour.
We didn't need to change tires." Elliott said.
The car fell good an I said 'l e f t leave 'em on.' I
thought at the end of the race I pulled away
tires use 1 was working the corner* better than
Darrell, lie's a very hard man to brut at MIS."
Elliott said he almost ran out of furl. "It was
close, awfully close." he said The team later
llgurrd Elliott had a hall-gallon left tn the lank.
Ellkill led four limes for 66 o f the 200 lap* und
was In front the final 50 circuits.
Waltrlp. in a Chevy, was one of only four other
drivers on the same Isp with the leader.

NASCAR
"W e were leaking oil but we ran good all d a y,"
Waltrlp said.
Calc Yarborough was third. Tltn Richmond
fourth and Dole Earnhardt fifth.
The victory was the seventh of the season for
Elliott ln the 14 races on the NASCAR circuit so
far und the l lt h o f his career. He successfully
defended the title he won here In June lost
season.
The race had 1H lead changes among eight
drivers and was slowed only twice by caution
(periods (or blown engines.
Speedway officials estimated the crowd at more
than 70.000.
Elliott had started on the pole after lim e trials
on Saturday were rained out. The field started In
the order o f driver point standings and with the
victory Elliott Sm reused hla lead tn the race for
the national title. Waltrlp had started In fourth
place.
Elliot t now has 2.126 points with Waltrlp In
second at 2.040.

At New York. Dave Winfield
singled home Rickey Henderson
with In the bottom of the ninth
and lk&gt;b Shirley. 2-1, hurled u
four-hitler to help the Yankees
snap th eir four-gam e losing
streak and Detroit's six-game
winning string. Kandy O'Neal
fell to 1-1. Kirk Gtbson o f the
Tigers and Mike Pagliurulo of the
Yankees each hit homers,
M ariners 2, R o ya ls I
At Seattle. Jim Presley singled
to renter In the bottom o f the
ninth to score Bairy Bonnell and
lift the Mariner* Karl Best. 2-1,
was the winner ln relief. Joe
Beckwith. 1-3. was the loser.

A’r 3-11, Indiana 2-6
At C le v e la n d . C a r n e y
l^inslord's solo homer sparked a
srvrn-nin fifth Inning In the
nightcap and Dwayne Murphy
crocked a one-out, two-run
homer In the ninth Inning o f the
opener to curry the A ’s to a
double-header sweep of the Indi­
ans.
Angels 3, W h ite Box 1
Al A n ah eim . Calif., rookie
UrlMno Lugo fired a four-hitter
over eight Innings for his first
major-league victory and Reggie
Jackson delivered his 511th
career homer to leud the Angels.
Lugo struck out nine and walked
one to even his record at 1-1.
Donnie Moore notched hta 14th
save.

Twins 4, Rangers 1
At A rlin gton . Texas. G ary
Gaelll hit a two-run homer and
rookie Greg Gagne added a solo
shot to back the seven-hit pit*
t hing o f Ken Schrom. 5-5. and
lead the Twins. Texas starter
Charlie Hough, 5-7. lost to the
Twtna for the first lime In 11
career decisions

Thomas Belts
Weaver In 8th
LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UPII - The
alphabet soup world that la
boxing these days had a wild
weekend. The developments In­
cluded:
— The World Boxing Council
heavyweight champion. Ptnklon
Thomas, defended hts title by
knocking out the former World
Boxing Association champion.
Mike W eaver. In the eighth
round.
— The North American Boxing
Federation heavyweight chomp.
Ttm Witherspoon, retained hta
title with an eaoy 12-round
d e c is io n o v e r J a m es
"llonecruaher” Smith.
— Trevor Bcrbick captured the
United States Boxing Associa­
tion heavyweight title by stop­
ping rhamplon David Bey.
And after Saturday nlght'a
fights, there were these devel­
opments:
— The WBC champion said he
would like to fight either the
NABF champion or the USBA
rhamplon. but he'd really like to
light Larry Holmes, the Interna­
tional Boxing Federation JIBF)
champion.
— The NABF champion sold
h e 'd fig h t a n y o n e , e x c e p t
Holmes, the IBF cham pion,
because Holmes Is too old. The
1UF champion, however, has
already beaten the NABF cham­
pion.

�1
Evening Herald, Sentord, FI.

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
Mike Smith, the baseball coach at Orlando Bishop Moore
High School the past six years, has been named the new
baseball coach at Lake Brantley High School Principal
Darvln Boothe announced today.
“ Mike has all we need to get the program going In the
right direction." said Boothe about the 34-year-old former
Ohio native. We're real thrilled lo have him."
Smith succeeds Gary Smith who resigned In May after
two years as head coach. The new Smith posted an
Impressive 121-63 record during his six years as Hornets’
roach. His teams won three district, two Orange Belt
Conference and two sectional championships.
Smith had 14 players returning from this year’s district
championship team but said the challenge to coach at the
4A level and better retirement benefits from the public
school situation were the reasons he left behind a
successful program
Sm ith played (ootball. basketball and baseball at
Wheelersburg. Ohio He started college at Ohio University
but was drafted Into the Navy, After completing his Navy
duty, he attended several tryout camps where he drew the
Interest of the New York Mets.
He was drafted following the June 1970 draft He spent
two years In the New York organization before a serious
eye Injury — Incurred when he was hit by a line drive —
ended his career.
Smith taught Business Education at Bishop Moore but
will teach math at Lake Brantley. He and his wife. Maria,
have a 3-year-old son. Bryan

Banks Sets Triple Jump Record
INDIANAI*OLIS (UPII — Wtllle Banks, who finished out of
contention at the 1984 Olympics, redeemed himself
Sunday smashing the world record In the triple Jump at the
U S. Outdoor Track and Field Championships.
Banks set the record o f 58 feet-11 V5, bettering the
previous world mark of 58-8 W sci by Brazilian Joao
Oliveira In Mexico City In 1975. [Links also bettered his
own U S record of 57-7 V4.
"T h is Is like the greatest moment of my life," Banks said
"I missed the (Olympic) gold medal. It wasn't until I
decided to go for the world record that I could look at
myself In the mirror."
Banks. 29. from Santa Monica. Calif., leaped Into the air
Jowmsly and sprinted across the Infield of I he Indiana
University Track Stadium as officials confirmed his record
leap.
"I think I can go for 60 feet now. I'm greedy.” he said
Michael Conley, who was second In the triple Jump, won
the long Jump with a wind-aided leap of 28-0
Former Seminole High and SCC track star Ocky Clark
llnlshrd eighth In the 800 meters Clark, running for the
Bud Light track team, ran a l 46 8.

Bradley Perserves A t Rochester
PITTSFORD. N.Y. (UPI) — Neither rain nor Nancy Lopez
could stop Pat Bradley from winning her first LIKJA
tournament In 18 months.
Bradley, who endured two rain delays Sunday including
one that lasted nearly tw o hours, registered a two shot
triumph In the $255,000 Rochester International.
Struggling to an even par 72 on the 6.162-yard Locust
Hill Country Club course. Bradley sank a 15-foot birdie
putt on the 18th to finish with an 8-under-par 280
Imprz. who sizzled with a final round of 68. also blrdled
the 18th to finish at 282.
"Thunk God It's over w ith," said Bradley, who last won
al the 1983 Japan Classic. " I don't know how It came from
within me to hang on. making par from everywhere when I
needed them "

...Big League
Continued from 5A
start the rally. Brown, who led
AWS with two singles, follwrd
w i t h a b a s e h it
B ru ce
Bonavrnture then dropped a
bunt single lo load the buses.
Bruce Carslmi then legged out
an Infield hit to push across the
first run. " I t was a perfect
swinging b u n t." said Coffey,

I

...Majors
Continued from 8A
Jacobs reached on un error.
In the sixth, Allen reached on
a three-base error and scored on
Tommy St Ikleal her's double.
Altamonte's Tigers rode the
clutch httttng o f John Jump on
Saturday and the no-hll pitching
of Chris Jackson on Sunday.
Satu rday at Orange C ity .
Jump drove In thrre of the five
runs tn the game for the Tigers
to back the four-hit pitching of
K evin M o rro as A lta m o n te
claimed a 5-1 victory over De­
ltona.
Morro struck out 10 In the
game and walked four. Jump
drove In three runt with a
double and single while Doug
Harris added an RBI single
Sunday at DrLand. Jackson
fired a no-hltter and waa backed
by a 14-hlt offensive barrage os
the T ig e r s tro u n c e d W e s t
Volusia Sherwood A's. 14-0,
Jackson struck out 12 In the
game and walked Just three.
"D owntow n" Terry Brown led
the Altamonte assault with four
hits and H arris contributed
Ihree.
"W e got performance from the
whole team on offense and
defense," Tfgers manager Mike
Morro said. "W e have a good
fielding team that knows how to
make cutoffs and relays and
bark up plays. We don't really
have one strong aspect. Just a
well-balanced team.”
Mono said Chuck Lamb, who
had a 1 86 earned run average

Altamonte Seniors Disqualified
8am Cook
H era ld S p o r ts E d ito r

Boothe: Smith Replaces Smith
As N ew Patriot Baseball Coach

"Bruce hit It Just to the right
spot,"
Hr u&lt;-111 then slapped a base hi I
to right cenler to score Brown
and Ikmaventurr for a 3-0 lead
A groundnut to second base by
Tony Johnson chase home the
(Inal tally.
"Cousins pitched the best
game hr has all season for us."
said Coffey "B o lh hits were
lucky. One Just fell In because
the two players pulled up and

this season, w ill be on the
mound tonight for the Tigers,
"H e has a good fastball and
curveball." Morro suld. "And he
has experience and a lot of
confidence."

ASTROS FALL TO MAITLAND
Andy Spolskl tossed a nohltter but control problems and
so m e key e r r o r s w e re the
downfall of the Altamonte Na­
tional Astros as they dropped a
6 4 decision to Maitland Satur­
day at Orange CUv.
Spolskl struck out seven tn the
game but walked right and hit
one batter. “ T h ey IMaltlandl
only hll one ball out of Ihe Infield
and that was a little bloop fly
hall to left the fielder.” Astros
manager Duke Plelcones said
Altamonte had six hits and
had the lead. 3-2. through three
tunings but couldn't hold on
Maitland took the lead for good
by scoring three times tn the
fourth frame.
" If Andy (Spolskl) could have
gol the ball across the plate and
we wouldn’t have made a couple
key errors we would have won."
Plelcones said. " W e hll Ihe ball
really well."
Chris Plelcones was 2 for 3
with two doubles to lead the
Astros but both of his doubles
came with the bases empty. Kyle
Eshtlmsn hit a double off the
ccn irrflrld fence w hile Dave
Robison and Rich Schau each
had singles.
Altamonte will look to get bark
on track tonight when It takes on
Pierson at 5:30 at Maitland.
Plelcones w ill pitch lor the
Astros.

Monday, JitM 17, l $ 5 - f *

A year ago. the Altamonte Springs Little
League program could do no wrong. It sent
tw o teams to the World Series, a feat never
accomplished In Little League Baseballs
storied history.
One o f those team s, manager Gene
Letterio's Senior All-Stars, won the World
Championship In Gary. Ind. The other,
manager Jerrey Thurston's National Major
League All-Stars, finished second before a
n a t i o n a l t e l e v i s i o n a u d i e n c e at
Williamsport. Pa
A World Champion and a United States
Champion — that's a pretty good year In
any program.
It seems that everything that went right
last year, however, has had the opposite
effect so far In 1985. The Senior program
was nearly decimated In May when over 20
players decided they would play American
Legion with the high school trams Instead of
Little League.
Little League Baseball has a rule that once
a player participates In another organized
program, he Is no longer eligible for Little
le a g u e Baseball.
Altamonte's woes with Ineligibility con­
tinued Saturday in the District 14 Top Team
Tournament Two teams — manager Terry
H a g e n ’ s A n g e ls a n d m a n a g e r J oe
Cotroneo's Yankees — each posted open­
ing-round wins bill (hen had to forfeit their
games because they used players who had
participated In American Legion baseball
H a g e n 's Angels w h ip p ed Southwest

Baseball
Volusia. 10-J. They forfeited because Jeff
Hagen. Wes Weger. Zack Maddox and
Jim m y Waring were Inelglbte. Hagen said
Hagen and Weger had tried oul with Lake
Man- and played with Trinity Prep Maddox
and Waring played for Lake Brantley's
Legion.
Cotroneo's Yankees blanked Oviedo. 2-0.
Randy Green, a m em ber of the Lake
Brantley Legion team, and Rusty Swain,
who played for Trinity's team, were the
Ineligible players, according to Cotroneo
Green blanked Oviedo the last four Innings
After the games, which were moved to
Eustls from Lake Brantley High School
because of the tmienu-nt weather a protest
was filed with Don Crawford. District 14's
administrator. Crawford ruled that since the
boys had committed or played American
Legion, they were therefore Ineligible for
any further Little League competition. Th e
games were forfeited and Altamonte was
disqualified from the tournament
Crawford and Jim Hovts. president of the
Altamonte Little League, both said there
was a misunderstanding which led lo the
participation of the players
Hovts said Crawford told him In mid May
that the players could not participate In the
All-Star Tournament competition but could
play In ihe Top Team Tournament because
It was under District 14's Jurisdiction and
some other teams were experiencing the

same problems.
"1 would have never sent two teams o ff to
play this tournament If I thought we would
be ruled ineligible." said Hovts Sunday
night. "And I never would have gone to the
expense of getting Lake Brantley's field had
1known we were going lo be disqualified.
“ It's a big disappointment Bless the
parents for being so understanding through
this whole thing."
Crawford said Sunday that he couldn't
remember any such conversation with
Hovls. "Jim swears up and down that I told
him they (the Legion players) could p la y ."
said Crawford. "A fte r the problems last
year, there Isn't no way I'd let that situation
happy again. "
Last year. Altamonte had seven players
ruled in e lig ib le fo r Am erican L e g io n
participation. Th e "Altamonte 7" was later
reinstated and all played pivotal roles for the
World Champion Seniors
Coironco said he didn't plan on using
Green tiul then found out Friday night from
Hovls that he could. "I feel sorry for ihe
other boys," said Cotroneo Sunday night.
"T h is Is really u shame after all the
problems w e've already had."
Hagen said be had told his players after
ihe regular season to turn In their uniforms
because they didn’ t have enough to field a
top team. Later, hr was advised that he
could have a team.
"T o tie told that wc couldn’t then lx* told
we could and then be disqualified really
licks me off.” said Hugrn. "It's been that
kind of a year."

Mullins W ins
Hot Rod Race

Sheiman Responds,
Expos Take Opener
By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
O R LA N IX ) — Ricky Sheiman
responded with a four-hitler and
Danny Hendricks ripped three
hits as the Altnmnntr Junior
Angels slugged Rolling Hills, 7 1,
In

D is tr ic t

I -I

To p

Te a m

Tournament baseball at Rolling
Hills Sunday.
"W e held back Curt Prom for
Apopku." said Altamonte man­
ager Kelly Walnseott about bis
choice of pitcher. "W e knew we
had to get a win from Ricky or
Kent Brubaker and Ricky really
responded to the challenge."
A llu m o n tr |l-0) w ill play
Apopka lonlghl al 8 at Rolling
H ills. "A p o p k a has a great
Iran i." said Walnseott. whose
own E x |k »s were 17-3 during Ihe
regular reason. "Curt will have
lx* at his best.”

Baseball
Wc didn't m ake any errors
either That helped. The kids
really played good ."
Altamonte made use of the
burn In most o f Its outbursts. In
ihe first. Hendricks ripped a
Iwn-oul single lo renter, stole
second and scored when the
c e n t e r f i e l d e r m is ju d g e d
Shrlman's fly ball fur an error.
In the second, Davkl Hamilton
walked, stoic second and moved
In third on a bunt by Mike
l.orke. One out later. Pat Battle
singled home the go-ahead run
Kent Brubaker followed with a
single which moved Battle to
third as Brubaker look second
on the throw
Kevin W aln seott then stroked

Al his tx-sl Is what Sheiman
was Sunday. The tournament
w as m oved back a d ay by
F r id a y 's rain. R o llin g H ills
struck for Us run In the first
Inning but Stuiman shut the
door thrrealter. outdurllng pre­
viously unbeaten Billy Duncan.
"T h a t's the beat he pitched ull
y e a r ." said Walnseott. " T h e
mound was |ust right for him.

,i liner to right center lo score
both ru n s fo r a 4-1 lea d .
Walnseott was thrown out trying
lo strrtch his hit Into a double
Altumunlr picked up two more
In Ihe sixth and one more In the
seventh. Prom walked and stole
second to lend off the slxlh.
Hamilton dropped a bunt single
lo move Prom lo third. Alex
Slssrr follow ed with another

the other was un Infield hit."

Tom Boucher drew a walk and
ev en tu a lly got to third on
Damon Marlene's sacrifice hum
Boucher then scored on a passed
ball.

OOLDENRODTAKES16TH
Chris Davis tossed a tbrrehltlrr Sunday as ihe Goldenrod
Elks ran their record lo 16-0
with a 4-2 victory ovrr Kissim ­
mee In District 3 Big League
action at Azalea Park.
Davis, wtio struck out six and
walked Just one. ran his record
lo 4-0 lor Ihe Elks with u 0.55
earned run average
Goldenrd broke a scoreless tie
with one run In the third frumr

...Softball
Continued from BA
T tw Savages had little trouble
with their second opponent as
they crushed Clrarwater. 22-7.
Lelffer and Meyer led the o f­
fensive assault with three hits
each. Genrrettr slugged a pair of
doubles, Chavis. Sm ith and
Whltakrr added two singles each
and Aretha Riggins drilled u
home run
In gam e three. Ihe Savages
m ade th r best of their op ­
portunities In an 8-1 win over
the T a m p a M ustangs. T h r
Mustangs left 12 runners on
base In that game.
C h a v is . W h it a k e r a n d .
Generette kept their bats going
with two hits each and Jaudon
Jonas contributed a double.

Kissimmee, which now siantis
al 12-2. took a 2 1 lead In Ihe
lourtlj w hen S ie v e Miranda
cracked a two-run homer. Davis
pitched shutout twill ihe rest of
the way.

Kelly Walnseott received a
strong etlort from Ricky
Sheiman as the Altamonte
Expos won their Top Team
Tournament opening game
Sunday.
hunt to score Hamilton.
"It we got u guy on we put It
on the ground (buntedl to move
h im ." said Walnseott. “ I don't
know if we'll be able to do Ihal
against Apopku. though."
In the seventh. Walnseott
walked, stole second and scored
on Hendricks' third hit of the
game for tlie 7-1 final
Along with Hendricks' trio of
singles. BuUlc. I he Expos' Nn 9
hlltrr, rupped a pair of lills.
Bruhakrr. Walnseott. Hamilton
and Lockr each added a base hit.

sew up (hr win Ed Taubensre
smacked thr llrst pilch of (he
Inning over the ccnirrflrld fem e
lo tic the score at 2-2 Scott
" T h u r m a n " M u n s o n then
reached on an error. Kevin
L le n a r d w a lk e d a n d Dave
Marlelle singled home Munson
with what turned out to tie the
winning run Llenard scored the
third run of the Inning on a
passed twill.

Goldenrod came through with
three runs In the sixth Inning lo

The

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"W e 'v e gol six games Ir ll,"
said manager Jim Boggs. "I
think we can do It. The lough
ones will he Kissimmee. Pine
Castle and Winter Park. If we gel
by them. Taft Isn't real strong.

stick for Ihe Eagles In the
Savages Invitational with u .647
a v e r a g e . S a n fo rd 's K a trin a
Shuler, who had hit over .MX) In
every prior tournament, hll al an
even .5 0 0 clip.
H ru v y rain s on S a tu rd a y
morning made playing condi­
tions tou gh but the Eagles
sloshed through Ihe mud for u
12-2 victory over Palm Bay In
their opening game.
Lawson waa 3 for 4 In that
game as was Leticia Strickland
who also drove In two runs
Jodie Sw itzer waa 2 for 3 with
two RBIa and the Oviedo High
lefty also pitched a five hitter.
In gam e two, nine errors coal
Ihe Eaglra the game as they lost
to Tam pa Magic, 9-8. Robin
Whlthead waa the hitting leader
as she went 2 for 3 with an RBI
and Shuler was 2 for 4 with an
RBI.

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straight Tuesday against Pine
Castle 112-4) at Azalea Park
Todd H icks will he un thr
mound for Goldenrod which has
u chance to lx- the first team to
go u nbeaten In Big League
Dlslrlcl 3 play.

Char Nra

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M u llin s

Sprlngnatlonals champion In Ihe
now defunct Top Gas class and
w as a lo p alcohol d ra gster
champion at the 1981 NHRA
Cajun Nationals.
Mullins, now In bin 30th year
of racing, begun driving tn the
Top Fuel division only this year.
K en n y Bernstein w on the
Funny Car division with urt
elapsed lime of 5.81 seconds,
251 mph. defeating Billy Meyer
o f Waco. Tex. It was the 9th
NHRA career victory for Berns­
tein, o f Dallas. Tex.
He was
runnerup on eight other oc­
casions.
Warren Johnson of Duluth,
Gu,. won the Pro Slock division
wlih a time of 7,68 seconds.
18094 mph. over Hmre Allen of
Lapeer. Mich

Designed and engineered lor a
smooth ride and long mileage
Lilesaver XLM* whitewall

m

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Elegant Dining in our Chlat Osctola Tsrracs Clubhout#
For Dinner Rassrvatlons Call: $99-4510
k nersasm
r o M m a x f t ia

Elks go for their

Rurkr was Ihe winning pitcher and drove In two runs while.
again and Sharon Bonavrnlurr Frey. Lelffer and Meyer were
made the defensive play of the each 1 for 2.
*
game when she made a fine
Sm ith, a Lake Mary High
running catch In rtghtflrld and freshman this past school year,
doubled the runner off first.
was Seminole's leading hitter for
Burke tossed a four-hitter and the tournamrnt. Smith was 9 for
the Savages played another out­ 15 for u 600 average Frey, also
standing d efen sive game en u Lukr Mary High frosh In
route lo a 4-1 victory over the 1984 85. was 6 for 12 for a .500
Orlando Lll Sluggers In the last average and Chavla. an Oviedo
round robin game Burke also High sophomore, was 7 for 15
went 2 for 2 lo lead the offense.
forn .457 clip
Bonaventure unloaded a home
run. drove In two of the four
EAOLE8 HAVE ROUOH TIME
runs and scored twice.
After winning six straight be­
In Its first game of the single
elimination round on Sunday. fore bowing out a week ago. the
Seminole cam e through with a Seminole Eagle*, the Seminole
4-2 victory over the Satellite Softball Club's other All-Star
Beach Meta on a six hlltrr by tram made up of only 13-14 year
olds, had their problems over thr
Burke.
Sm ith c o n tin u e d her hot wrekrnd. winning two and los­
streak at the plate with two hits ing three.
Corey Lawson carried the big
and one RBI. Chavla waa 1 for 2

GENERAL
ADMISSION
O
y

/

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII — Bill
Mullins of Pelham. Ala . won his
first National Hot Rod Associa­
tion T o p Fuel race Sunday and
hr says It was Just like driving a
luxury automobile.
Mullins, who now has won one
national NHRA event In three
different dragster classes, had an
elapsed time of 5,62 seconds.
257 miles per hour, over the
quarter-mile course at National
Troll Raceway, tn defeating de­
fen d in g Top Fuel cham pion
Gary Beck of Hemet. Calif.

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Monday. J im t 1&gt;&lt; 1 W

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Papal Murder Plot Trial
Resumes With Shooting Film
ROME (UP!) — The Judge at the trial of three Bulgarians
and four Turks accused In the 1981 papal assassination
attempt has ordered film footage o f the shooting be shown
today to determine whether Mcimet All Agca acted alone.
The film o f Agca. the Turkish terrorist who shot Pope
John Paul II. was taken by a tourist who was at St. Peter's
Square at the lim e o f the shooting and handed over to
Italy's DIGOS anti-terrorist police squad.
Judge Severlno Sant tuple 111 gave the orders to show the
film today In a bid to determine whether Agca acted alone.
Agca. 27. who has already been convicted and sentenced
to life Imprisonment for the papal shooting that seriously
wounded the pontiff. Is the prosecution's star witness.
He has testified that the Soviet Union ordered the attack
and that Bulgarian agents helped carry It out. but has also
repeatedly disrupted the hearings and damaged Ills own
credibility with outbursts In which he claimed to lie Jesus
Christ.

Discovery To Return June 24

International Shuttle Crew Launched
CAPE CANAVERAL |UPI| - Five Ameri­
cans. a Frenchman and an Arab prince
blasted off in the shuttle Discovery at 7:33
a m, today for blastoff on an International
flight that Includes the first space test of a
"Star W ars" laser experiment.
Tucked tn Discovery's payload bay were
communications satellites owned by Mex­
ico, the 2 1-nation Arab Satellite Comrmmicallons Organization and American
Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co.
Commander Daniel Brandensteln. co-pllot
John Creighton and crewmates Shannon
Lucid. Steven Nagel. John Fabian. Patrick
Baudry of France and Prince Sultan Salman
Al-Saud of Saudi Arabia boarded the giant
spare freighter about 5:30 a.m.
The crew plans to spend u week In orbit
before returning to Earth June 2-1 at
Edwards Air Force Base. Caltf.
Discovery stood bathed In searchlights at
Un oceanstde pad when workers began
loading Its half million gallon supply of
s rip rrc o ld liq u id o x y g e n and liq u id
hydrogen fuel at 11:37 p.m. Sunday —
about 30 minutes late — under heavy cloud
cover.
Dismal weather has marked Discovery's
countdown and Sunday night, a thun­

derstorm swept over the Kennedy Space
Center and a lightning bolt hit the launch
pad but work proceeded toward blastoff.
Early today, the skv cleared and the launch
was given the green light.
NASA was paid about $30 million to ferry
thr International cargo of satellites Into orbit
but the overall cost o f the shuttle (light Is
almut $ 150 million,
Mexico’s Morelos satellite, that nation’s
first space communications station, was
scheduled to be deployed about 3:38 p.m.
today to kick off three days o f hectic launch
activity in orbit.
Saud. a nephew of Saudi King Fahd and
the first Arab to fly In space, will monitor
the launch o f the Arabsat relay station, but
he has little else to do and his assignment Is
viewed primarily as a gesture of Interna­
tional good will.
Baudry. an accomplished test pilot, plans
to carry out a series of sophisticated French
m rdlcal experiments to determine the
physiological effects of weightlessness.
On Wednesday, the crew plans to Install
an H-inch-wlde mirror assembly In Discov­
ery's side hatch window that will serve as a
target for a low-power laser In Maul. Hawaii,
to test a Strategic Defense Initiative — "Star

W ars" — laser tracking system.
The research one day could be applied to
an exotic weapons system In which power­
ful blasts from ground lasers could be
bounced off giant orbital mirrors to hit
enem y missiles before they could reach the
United Stales.
The International nature of Discovery s
flight has generated widespread Interest tn
France. Mexico and the Middle East, and
hundreds of foreign Journalists and dignitar­
ies converged on the Kennedy Space Cfnter
to witness the blastoff.
The first Arabsat satellite, launched atop
an unmanned French Artane booster In
February, was to be used to help broadcast
the shuttle launch live to member states o f
the Arab Satellite Communications Organi­
zation. a consortium that includes the
Palestine Liberation Organization.
Th e broadcast was expected to be avail­
able to some 150 million Arabs In all 21
Arab league nations — the first time such a
coordinated broadcast has been attempted.
Discovery's rrrw also plans to launch and
retrieve a small X-ray observatory that w ill
study the heart o f the Milky Way and a
cluster o f galaxies to learn more about the
evolution of the universe.

Namibia Gets Limited Self-Rule
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa (UP!) - South Africa,
defying world condemnation for the second time in four
days, today granted limited self-rule to South West Africa
— also known as Namibia — while retaining control o f Its
foreign affairs and defense.
Western governments and the United Nations alrrady
have rejected the new administration, the second attempt
by South Africa to give Namibia llm ilrd self-rule. The first
government collapsed after four years In January 1983.
The new government excludes the South West Africa
Peoples Organization, SWAPO, which Is recognized by the
United Nations as the sole legitimate representative of
Namibia's 12 million Inhabitants.
Members o f the moderate Multi-Party Conference. MI*C.
un alliance o f six white und multi-racial parties Including a
branch of South Africa's ruling w hile National Party, make
up the new admlnstrulion.

...Scenic
C ontinu ed from page 1A
that a tree trimmer be added to
the parks department staff and
that trees In troublesome spots
l»e transplanted to sites where
there are no trees. Tills could be
cheaper than buying new trees,
which stand only five or six feel
tall, the report said. Plus,
transplanting the trees would
create "beau ty In a m inute."
according to the report.

Moratorium on New Planting
and Construction
million from last year's $34 2
million.
New revenues expected this
year arc slightly over $1 million
because of an Increase hi the
tuxable property values of the

...Budget
Continued from page 1A
budget Is 1113 million, up $10
million from last year's $103
million, all of those funds except
$37 million reflect transfers from
budgets to budgets and Income
and expenditures from selfsupporting operations such as
water and sewer utilities und the
garbage disposal program.
General fund progrums under
the control of the county com ­
mission — public works, ad­
ministration. management and
budget, public services, public
d evelop m en t, p erson n el d e­
partment. public safety — total
$30.7 million for the upcoming
1985-86 fiscal year, up $2.5

...Hijack
Continued from page 1A
cleared from tilt- alr|&gt;ort und I hr
u lrporf* lights switched off for
Irur of an Israeli attack.
The trunsfer of the hostuges
cam e after Bob Brel Sr., a
Kunsus man (reed by the hi­
jackers Sunday, was allowed to
le a v e L eb a n o n fo r C y p ru s
ubourd a Middle East Airlines Jr I,
Between six ami 12 Americans
w ith Jew lsh’soim dlng nurnrs
were believed
taken off the
plane Friday — thr day the plane
was selzrd on a flight to Knmr
from Athens. Greece — und
hustled uwuy to the Shiite sub­
urbs around llelrut airport.
G re e k pop s in g e r D em is
Kuussos and Ills A m erica n
girlfriend, Pamrlu Smith, were
also taken off thr plane and held
some where In Beirut. Greek dip­
lomats said Sunday.
Robert McFurlunc, President
R e a g a n 's n a tio n a l s e c u rity
adviser, said In Washington to
duy the United Stales would nol
ask Israel to free between 700
and 800 Arab prison ers —
mostly Lebanese Shiites — held
near the Israeli port of Haifa, us
the hljuckrs hud demanded.
"We don’t make concessions."
McFurluur told reporters. "W e're
not going to make others do so."
Asked specifically If the U.S
would uak Israel to release the
prisoners Its forces rounded up
d u rin g th rlr o c c u p a tio n o f
southern Lebanon. McFarlunr
said: “ No. We would not consid­
er It."
In Isruel. news reports said
officials In Jerusalem would
consider freeing the prisoners
only If Israel received a highlevel U.S. request
Me Far lane said he spoke by
telephone with Hrrrl to win
release of the hostages
" W r have had lots of contact
d u rin g

th e

n ig h t.* *

s a id

MrFarlanr, the first U.S. official

to c o n t a c t

Hrrrl

f r om

Washington, lie called the hi­
jackers' demands "unlortunate"
and said the prisoners stood a
belter chance of freedom without
a hostage connection
H r r r l, L e b a n o n 's ju s t ic e
minister and leader of the Atnal
militia, made no comment on his
d iscu ssion s w ith McFarlunr
when he announced the transfer

$ t»f

t

I t

county.
This still leaves a proposed
deflcll of $1.5 million und gives
the commissioners the choice of
raising property taxes or cutting
rxpensrs.
C o m m is s io n e rs a lso have
some control over the budgets o(
the constitutional officers — the
sheriff, clerk of the circuit court,
supervisor of elections, property
appraiser and lax collector.
H ow ever, the ronsUtutlnnal
officers have I he right of uppeallng to the governor and the
cabinet any culs which the
commissioners might make In
Ihelr budgets.
—Donna Estes

B ecau se o f past n e g le c t,
almost all nf thr planted arrus In
the city arc In "dire nred" o f
trimming, weeding and pruning,
the report said Parks workers
arc overloaded and have no time
lo catch up because they are
constantly given new assign

menu.
Rrcreatlon equipment In the
parks Is "halt palnlrd, half gone
or half broken" as are many of
the city’s Irrigation systems, the
rrjMirt said
The board recommends lhr
city put a moratorium on new
planting und construction pro­
jects In the parks until the old
ones can be completed.

...Sweet
Continued from page LA

of the hostages.
The Beirut airport Is controlled
hy Itcrrl's Shiite militiamen.
Hcagun administration sources
said members of the *'l)elta
Force" — a crack anil-terrorist
rescue unit busrd In North
Carolina — flew to the Mldtllr
East Friday, Inti the Defense
Deportment did not confirm It.

University o f Illinois Medical
School, have yet lo publish uny
findings Ihat specifically reler lo
aspartame.
But th e y said they h a ve
extensively studlrd a key com ­
ponent o f the sweetener —
phcnylulhdnr — and they con­
sider It a hazard for let uses and
Infants.

Navy officials lit Washington
Hold a four ship tusk force, led hy
the nuclear powered carrier USS
Nlmttz. Is off the Lebanese coast
and a three ship amphibious
force, with 1,500 Marines, has
left Gibraltar for (lie Middle East.

The sc -nllsts said thut they
approached Searle In thr 1970s
atrout thetr concerns and they
b e llc v r co m p a n y -s p o n s o re d
studies of uspurlumr have not
adequately tested thr substuncr
for Its effects on the human
Irtus.

S u n d a y n ig h t. P r e s id e n t
R e a g a n , w h o cu t s h o r t a
weekend stay at Camp David,
warned the hijackers: "F o r their
own safety, they'd heller turn
ttiese people loose."
Dul a letter scribbled on a
yellow pad und rr|&gt;ortrdly signed
by 32 American hostages ahourd
the plane begged Reagan lo
avoid military Intervention und
urged him tn prrsaurc Isruel to
inert the hijackers' demands
"W e Implore you not to take
any direct military action on our
hr hull Plrasr negotiate quickly
our Immediate release hy con­
vincing the Israelis lo release the
800 Lebanese prisoners as requrstrd now.” the letter said,
a d d in g that It was w ritten
"freely, nol under duress
T W A officials said from 27 lo
29 p a s s e n g e rs and th ree
crewmen — the pilot, drat officer
und lllght rnglncrr — were still
held hostage. The rest uf the
estimated 150 people on the
plane when It was artzed were
released during earlier stops In
Beirut and Algiers. Algeria.
" A l l thr Americans aboard
that plane have Just ubout had
H." released hostage Peel, 59.
said from a stretcher at Am eri­
can U n iv e rs ity H o s p ita l In
mainly Moslem wrst Beirut.
" A ll thetr money. Jewelry and
tra v e le rs checks h a v e been
taken. They have no IdenUlUution." said IVrl. u Hutchinson.
Kan., man who the hijackers
Irred because they said he was
"old. dlzxy and tired."
" I t Is dirty, tilth ), a real
pigpen." Peel said of the Hoeing
727. "It's Just purr hell nn there
right now."
A m ain ten an ce cre w was
allowed lo board the plane today
toclean It.

"Th ey don't want to listen."
Elsas said. "T h e people ut Sear Itwould like to have you think Ihat
nothing happens as long us the
phrnylallnlnr level Is below the
tenfold elevation level" thut Is
the FDA's safety standard,
Elsas also noted that women
who consum e the substuncr
while nursing could present a
sim ilar risk lo Ihelr babies
b ecau se the extent of
phenylullnlne In mother's milk
has yet to be Investigated.
Elsas and Mu talon said con­
suming even moderate amounts
of NutraSweet rulses the con­
cern rul Ion or phenylallnlne In
the blood. Mu |m Ioii said he was
"not loo concerned" about older
children consuming aspartame
because the effects on them
should be "reversible" through
dletury changes,
Mutalon. who begun a study
April 1 with a grunt from the
National Institutes of Health,
said one In SO women are
particularly sensitive to high
phenylallnlne consumption and
If they Ingest uapuriumr during
pregnancy "it may cause birth
defects" such as mild retarda­
tion.
He said thr defects would be a
matter of concern because 8 to
10 million American women are
b elieved to be sen sitive to
phenylallnlne.
The affected women, Mutalon
said, are known as "carriers" of
PKU — phenylketonuria — a
disease resulting tn reduced IQa
In babies. If nut put on a special
diet, PKU Infants will suffer
severe m ental retardation as
they grow, he said
Although the FDA requires all
aspartame products to carry a
warning lor PKU victims, no
warning la required for carriers

Work With School Board
Part of the reason nrwromrrs
are choosing to live In south
Seminole C ounty Instead of
Sanford Is because the schools
arr nicer there, the report said.
Sanford's schools, except for
Hamilton Elementary, are old
and worn.
Th r board recommends the
city work wtlh thr Seminole
County School Hoard lo Improve
the schools' appearance. Sanford
Middle School would be a good
place to start, the report said
Some o f the schools' ball fields
and playgrounds could Ire used
by the community after school
hours If the school board agreed,
thr hoard said.
Th r two governing entitles
should also see what surplus
properties they could trade. The
school board has already offered
the lO-acrr vacant lot across
Irom Sanford Middle School as a
jtoaslhle park site lor t tie rlly.

Continue Clean-Up Campaign
The city needs to convert Its
clean-lip fervor displayed In a
March campaign Into an ongoing
pervasive attitude, where public
servants and citizens are con­
stantly on the ulert for trash and
Junk.
The board ulso recommends
that the city use the Code
Enforcement Hoard more to

— those who do not have the
disease hut have one PKU gene
a n d a rr s u s c e p t i b l e lo
phenylallnlne.
The problem Is compllculrd
because carriers generally arc
not Identified unless they have
I’KU offspring "W e don’t know
them and th ey d on 't know
Ihrmselvrs." Mutalon said
Mutalon, head o f the I’ KU
clinic al l lie University o f Illinois,
said he was concerned about
studies showing that uny rises 111
p h e n y la ltn in e l e v e l s from
aspartame consumption would
s iill he w ith in sa fe lim its
Mutalon said those studies arr
"lint based on a lot o f r Xpert•
mcnls.*’
lie said Senrtr did not ade­
quately test thr levels and cflrcts
ol breakdown products — known
as m e t a b o l i t e s — of
phenylallnlne In thr body.
Gaull and Sfrglnk. however,
defended Searle's testing and
said II shows that even at "abuse
le v e ls ” — e x tr e m e ly heavy
consumption o f aspartame — the
phenylallnlne levels In the blood
do not rise significantly.
Gaull also said the levels of
phenylallnlne quickly drop. He
said that while PKU carriers
"have less ability to metabolize"
than those with the disease. "It
Is not limiting tn thrlr ability to
fully mrtaboll/e" the substance.
Consumption o f ospartamr. hr
argued, results In Increases In
blood phenylallnlne levels "no
greater than the Increase In
concentration after a meal ...
consisting of a hamburger and a
milkshake."
E ls a s , w h o a l r r a d y has
published one study on humans,
said he believes thr potential
danger extends to all pregnant
women who regularly consume
aspartame and possibly to young
children who may experience
behavioral and neurological
disorders If they drink or eat
aspartame
Elsas said u w om an who
drinks one cun o f a soft drink
sweetened with aspartame may
experience u fourfold increase tn
her blood phenylallnlne level.
As a result, he said. Ihc
concentration found In the fetus
run reach h level four times as
high as the prospective mother's
because the c h e m ic a l con ­
centrates on the fetal side.
"N o w the fetu s's brain Is
growing, and that phenylallnlne
Interferes at critical movements
of brain cells and that child
could come out with severe
mental retardation that's un­
related to anything you could
messurr after birth." Elaasaald

ensure maintenance rules are
fo llo w e d . The b o a r d 's p r o ­
cedures need lo be simplified so
It will be more efficient and be
able to handle thr anticipated
flood o f complaints that will
c o m e as t he p l a n Is I m ­
plemented.
T h r hoard said the CEB should
be gettin g a w eekly list o f
infractions to review and pursue.
T o Investigate the expected delluge o f complaints, the city will
need to hire two code Inspectors
Th e bourd ulso volunteered to
spend time weekly reporting
eyesores.
T h e public also needs to be
encouraged to use the CEB to
' ' s o l v e p r o b l e m s of
neighborhood blight." the report
said.

Lawn sod Garden Counseling

and History.
To keep the historic areas
historic, the board recommends
the city draw up an ordinance
establishing a Historic District
Council. T h e council w ould
control the type o f buildings that
go up in the district, ensuring
that Its historic quality remains
Intact.

Sign Ordinance
Signs In Sanford are "popping
up m ost re c k le s s ly : If th e
messages on the signs were
made with voices instead o f
letters, they would make an
ungodly sound." the report said
The board recommended that
an ordinance regulating the type
of signs that go up In the rlly be
adopted. City Manager Frank
Faison Is considering Introduc­
ing such an ordinance for the
commission to take action on,
the report said

Som e of Sanford's residential
and commercial areas that were
once attractive are now showing
ihelr age. Freezes, overgrowth.
Upgrade City's Professional
Inserts and general neglect have
Image
blighted some of these areas, the
The board ventured Into one
txmrd said. Since most people area not connected with plants
are unaware of proper tech­ or trees, but what It considers
niques for m aintaining their Just as Important — the altitude
lawns and gardens, or cannot of City Hall.
afford technical assistance, the
"It Is Important that City Hall
city needs to provide the In- appear warm , congenial and
formation without charge, the professional In appearance." the
report said.
report said. City employees ant
T h e c ity could a lso o ffe r volunteers representing the city
awards for thr most Improved should be given training In
site each month at a commission public relations, office, telephone
m eeting, the board suggested.
und counter diplomary and posi­
tive thinking.
Historic District Council
" T h e S cen ic Im provem ent
"Sanford cannot compete with B o a r d f e e l s It w o u l d b e
south Seminole's modernity and appropriate und within the scope
newness unless we accentuate of the city commission and the
uur uniqueness." the report said city manager lo deal with the
"S a n fo rd 's marketable charm Issue. Please accept this point
and distinction rests In Its histor­ with our best Intentions and be
ic Integrity."
brave enough to deal with It."
S a n fo rd 's central business the report said
district Is listed In the National
fn Tuesday's coni lulling reRegister of Historic Places, the ;x&gt;/1 , a p rio rity fist of where the
report said, and m any of the city of Sanford needs lo dean up
city's homes are mentioned In Hit own property, according to
the stair Department of Archives lh r Scenic Improvement Hoard.

AREA DEATH
LEON "BAHNIB" BURKETT

taut.

Mr. Leon Burnett. 67. of 290
H a c i e n d a Village. W i nt e r
Springs, died Friday at South
Seminole Community Hospital.
Longwood. Bom May 12. 1918
In Knoxville, Tenn.. he m oved lo
Florida from Akron. Ohio In
1978 He was a retired telephone
company worker and a l*rotes-

Survivors Include his wife.
Helen; son. James, of Akron:
daughter. Margaret Grosakopf,
Barberton. O hio; six g ra n d ­
children.
Funeral arrangements are be­
in g h a n d l e d by B u l d w l n Fairchild Funerul Home. Goldrnrod.

^ ^ n o w e rT T ir^ lT o c c a M lo n a *

O A K LA W N
nmMAL uom ctMriun
------- AM■---- 1M
aaads
Lh X Snarl*nr tmf
MA At
tart M
Itnttt AS CMSal thrMi IU42U
SarfsrWUh* Han
M t a l ia

(Eullina

gvar.

323-120*

CAREFUL COUNSELING WITH HIM CAN AVOID
UNWISE PLANNING WITH A SALES PERSON

fORAM KOW 7(JN ER a L“ 0 * 7

f ** •••*-■». *§

�PEOPLE

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Monday, June 17, I t U — IB

In And Around Longwood

Scouts To Perform With Youth Band A t Jamboree
Boy Scout Troop 237 of Altamonte Spring In
honored that two of Its members. Eagle Scout
Jeffry Barnhart and Life Scout David Hutchinson
have been selected to perform with the Youth
Hand at the Boy Scouts o f America National
Jamboree, The two scouts will travel to Fort A.P.
Hill In Virginia for the event.
Both young men are Brantley High students
und both will play percussion Instruments with
Ihr hand Jeffry Is the son of Mr and Mrs Willard
Barnhart while David's parents are Mr and Mrs.
Art Hutchinson.
The Vietnam Veterans of Central Florida and
Nosle O G ra d y 's of Orlundo will hold a Street
Party on Saturday. June 22 at Church Street
Slallon in Orlando s Festive downtown
The fun begins at 5 p in. and will continue until
?? Music will be by Gary Puckett and The Union
Gap. Miss Linda B. Jordan, and Orlando's Navy
Band. Food and libation will be plentiful
Proceeds from the event are to aid the Vietnam
veterans' group Advance tickets are *4 00 per
person and may be obtained by railing Peter
I’attersall at 629 12!K&gt; .... so: veterans, friends
and supporters "com e on down!"

mi ni mum of 12 sem ester hours of study.
Attaining the list from Altamonte Springs Is
Susan Gore, a senior psychology major, daughter
of Mr. A Mrs Frank Gore of Hilltop Place.

N ancy
Fry©
Longwood

Southern College of Collcgcd.de. Trim , has
announced that Kimberly Shearer, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shearer of Longwood has
received an Associate o f Science In Business
Administration Dcgrrc at the school's recent
graduation ceremonies

C o rre s p o n d e n t

323-8803

An advanced lifesaving course will be held at
the Westmonte Park pool In Altamonte Springs
from June 25 to July 30 on Tuesday and
Thursday nights from 7-10p m.
The classes are geared to general lifesaving
skills, Candy Goebel of the recreallon department
will be Instmctlng.
The Altamonte park also has adult swim
classes scheduled front 7 pm to 8:30 pin,
Mondays A Wednesdays June 24 - July 10.
Mars Hill College has announced that 243
students have been named to the Dean's List at
the Baptist related college In North Carolina.
T o be named to this honor, a student must
maintain a grade-point ratio of 3.5 or betier on a

Casselberry's Community United Methodist
Church will hold Vacation Church School for
community youth the week o f June 24 through
28. Children 2 years old through the 4th grade
will meet for activities at the church, while
youngsters of the 5th A 6th grade levels will
attend a camp at a residence on north Lake
Triplett Drive.
A special program closing the week's activities
Is planned at the church for Friday. June 28 at
7:30 p.m.

A class In greenhouse and nursery practices In
horticulture In living olfered lor the summer
session at Seminole Community College from
June 26 ■August 14
For Infonnatlon concerning class hours or
questions, please call Sam Brashear at 323-1450
ext 355
The (Inal production ol the season by the drama
department at Seminole Community Collrgr Is to
t*e Elan Gamtulk'n "Scenes and Hevalallon" with
Haitian PlofTdlrectlng
The play will Ik* presented al the SCC Fine Arts
Theatre at 8 p m . June 19-23 with a matinee
performance on Sunday afternoon at 2 p m.
General admission Is $4, with $3 per ticket for
senior citizens und students. Ticket reservations
may be made at the theatre box-office by calling
323 1450 or 843 7001

Second Lt. Hlchard Murdock, formerly of
Longwood. has completed special Air Force
courses In communications at Keesler Air Force
Base In Mississippi.
Lt. Murdock, son of Marvin and Doris Murdock,
will serve with the 5th Combat Information
Systems Group al Robins Air Force Base In
central Georgia

Just To Be Eggzact, The Egg Came Before Chicken
theory that the chicken came
before the egg Wrong!
Abby. birds did not show up
unlll about 150 million years
“ go- Egg* have been used as a
form of reproduction for a much
longer period — cvrn counting
Ihe eggs with shells hard enough
to survive out of water. The first
eggs were laid by reptiles morr
you want an answer lo a scientif­ limn 100 million years before
ic question, consult The Hook ul Ihe first bird existed.
Knowledge, Darwin was right.
I'm reminded of Ihe "news"
The liook you referred lo has no Iasi year, when ihe Vatican
answers, only questions
finally decided lhat Galileo was
C.O.. MCPHERSON. KAN. right about Ihe Earth revolving
around the sun. Il seems hard lo
DEAR C.G.: Read on for more believe that once upon a time
letters on the chicken and the- people actually lbought that the
egg subject:
lalth would be w eakened If
DEAR A B B Y t Y o u ci t ed anyone thought the Earth was
Genesis 1:20 lo support the nut the renter of the universe.

DEAR ABBT: I don’l have a
problem, but you seem lo have
one. The answer you gave to "I
Am S e r io u s .“ who a s k e d .
“ Which cam e first, the chicken
or ihe egg?" was ridiculous!
Didn't you learn anything In
school? I knew the answer to
that 50 years ago while I was
sllll In grade school.
The fa d s ure. The chicken Is a
bird, and alt birds evolved from
the reptile fam ily approximately
100 million years ago, Reptiles
have been laying eggs for m il­
lions of years before that time,
and the chicken evolved from
the reptiles
Of course, the egg you laid In
your column whrn you cited Ihe
Bible as your source ol Informa­
tion Is another mailer Next time

Dear
Abby

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SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
Y0UNQ ANO THE REST­

LESS
(7) a 10 VWQ
[ IJSISEVCRLY feU D LLIES

It may take anolher 200 years
before we adinll lhat Ihe Earth is
4 billion years old — not 6.000
years.

A SECULAR HUMANIST
IN N. J.
DEAR ABBT: "I Am Serious''
wanted un Intelligent answer to
which cam r first, the chicken or
the egg O f course the fun
danientallsis will not accept the
facts, which are as follows
The reptile evolved from the
egg of a fish The bird evolved
from the egg of a reptile. And
with man's help, the chicken
evolved from the egg of a bird.
The correct answer Is: The egg
preceded I be chicken by several
hundred million years

i

Abby. It's silly to say “ the
theory of evolution." Evolution
Is not a theorv: It's a proven fad
I M. SERIOUS II

D E A R A B n Y : I a in a
23-year-old male ntudent nurse
Recently I met representatives
from several h ospitals and
learned lhat iny chances lor
employment nre excellent — hut
my chances for Ihe Jobs of my
choice range from poor lo non­
existent. Why? Ik-rause I am a
man.
Some hospitals will not hire a
male R.N. for general medical3 D EGGZACT
su rgery dut y because m ale
DEAR ABBY: Reliance on nurses arc not a l l owe d to
Scriptures as uuthurtty for fuels j&gt;erfonn routine rare of female
Is not always valid Since all patients without u female nurse
forms of life begin as a seed or an prcsenl. Obviously this Is not
egg (even us). It's obvious Ihnl cost-effective It two nurses must
ihr emi bad la b f Ihe pre­ be in the room while only one Is
decessor of what evolved Into the necessary.
On an obstetrics-gynecology
chicken.
Ilel you gel a ton of vitupera­ service, the mule R.N. Is simply
not allowed In most hospitals
tion on this one.
D.B., LAHAINA, HAWAII because "Intim ate cure" is re­

quited At least that's how it was
explained to me,
Abby. female nurses take care
o f ma l e pat i ent s ( e v e n on
u rological services), und no
chuperonesurc required
Is t h i s d i s c r i m i n a t i o n
practiced all over ihe country?
Or Is New England behind the
times? I would also be Interested
hi knowing how your female
readers feel about having a male
U N care (or them In Ihe hospi
tal,

M.B.E.

DEAR M.B.E.i Discrimination
against male nurses Is news to
m e, and 1 have no way ol
knowing how widespread II Is
unlll I hear (mm readers,
I personally feel Ihe sex of a
nurse is unimportant us long as
t ha t n u r s e Is c o m p e t e n t .
Headers?
| fjR o y d T T v tr p «iH

E a r*

"V ,

L?1

€

It was fowl. Head on:
DEAR ABBYi The theory of
evolution Is logical. Originally,
all life cam e from the ocean.
Millions o f years later It made Its
way to the land, then some
reptilian forms returned to Ihe
sea and became air-breathing
mammals Other reptiles evolved
Into birds and Iramrd to fly.
Most fish lay eggs The dlno-

f t

IN
bon root)

BOND 007*"'^r
a v ie w

1®

A bio city cep
A (mall counlir boy

'" A R I E L

DEAR D.B.: I did And most of

W ITN ESS

M

SECRET
ADM IR ER

call toll race
i a** m i in i

SMALL
A FF A IR

QUALITY FABRICS
AND UPHOLSTERING, INC.

Kotkoski
Marries
Williams

Barbara Ann Kotkoski and
David Gene Williams, both of
100
Sanford, were married May 26.
JO AYt OP OUR LIVES
.il 4.3 p.m.. In a garden setting
ALL MY CHILDREN
on the patio ai Quality Inn
VJ: (M| 0CK VAN DYKE
® (101 MOVTI (MON. THU)
North, Longw ood . Gyle
tD (101 GREAT RAAWAY JOUR­
Wo r kma n, notary public,
NEYS OP THE WORLD (WED)
(Nirforined ihe double ring cere­
(D (M l FIOROA HOME GROWN
tPDt
mony.
CD ill m o v e
The bride Is Ihe daughter o f
1:05
Mr and Mrs. Albert Kotkoski.
MOV* |MON. WEO-ERII
I’axlnos. |*a. The bridegroom Is
NBA DRAFT (TUE)
Ihe son o f Mr. and Mrs Eugene
1:30
Williams, l o t Club (toad. San­
a i a *4 THE WORLD TURNS
(MIOOMERPYLE
ford.
_
KOI MAGIC OP PRINTING
Given In marriage by Eugene
KEEPSAKES (F Ri)
Williams, the bride chose for hr
200
vows a mauve colored gown,
O ® ANOTHER WORLD
I o ONE LIFE TO LIVE
fashioned along the slim silhou­
B (M l AN0Y OfeFFITH
ette with an accordlan pleated
tP ( W) ALOHA CHMA (W IDI
s ki r l a n d r o u n d n e c k l i n e
llllW UW OERSJULfTHUI
tD 1101 JOY OF PAMONG (PRI)
(inhunerd with wide lace. She
carried an arm bouquet of roses,
2:30
O CAPITOL
mums and baby's breath.
(M l GREAT SPACE COASTER
Martha Williams of Longwood,
(WIBPFOVATKM (MON)
sister-in-law of the bridegroom,
|MX CAUJORAPHY WITH KEN
attended the bride aa matron of
BROWN (TUE)
honor. She wore a deep rose(D K0| MAGIC O f OR. PAJNTMO
colored gown. Bridesmaids were
(WED)
(D (10) MAOC OP W ATERCO lIhe b rid eg ro o m 's daughters,
OR* (THU)
Melissa W illiam s and Sandra
• (I D MAOC OP DECORATIVE
Williams. Sanford. They wore
PAJNTMO [FRf|
pastel pink gowns and each
235
carried a long-stemmed red rose.
Q WOMANWATCH (THU)
C arl D ie tr ic h o f S a n ford ,
3:00
I 4 SANTABARBARA
served the bridegroom as best
|OLAOPyQlcmt
man. U sh ers w ere R ich ard
J GENERAL HOSPITAL
W illiam s and David Eugene
(Ml SUOB BUNNY ANO
Williams, sons o f the bride­
ERCN0S
® |MR FVOROASTYLE
groom. Sanford.
3(D H E A TH C U P P
The reception followed In a
3:05
private dining room at Quality
Q BUOSSLNNY ANOFRWNOS
Inn.
3:30
Following a wedding trip to
|1 D U * TIR ROGERS (D
ID BtBPECTOR GADGET Ormond Beach, the newlyweda
are making their home at 2017
4:00
Cedar Ave.. Sanford Both are
K A U T T U HOUSE ON THE
X D STAR TREK
employed at Quality Inn

8

saurs, which were reptiles lhat
lived millions o f years ago. laid
eggs We even have fossil evi­
dence (ihelr bones and petrified

SUPER SPECIAL Brt

URS

VS
0
kV
0

ALL IN-STOCK
FABRIC
PER YD.
AND LESS

S 9 .9 9
3441 fA R K A V I
SANFORD
121 1711

FREE ESTIMATES
ON UPHOLSTERINQ

CORNER OF
PARK A 25th ST.

r1
i

[

PLAZA TWIN ]]

------- SANFORD:------ *
Hwy 17-92 S. • 322-7502

S

EVERY TUESDAY
I
I

I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

L

Ji»E MADDEN
IB

&amp;

HIS MAGIC LAMP
WITH THIS
EVENING HERALD
HERALD ADVERTISER
COUPON •*' WITHOUT COUPON
S IO N UR FOB A F R E E B IC Y L C K PROM
■ I C Y C L I C O N N E C T IO N

�7B

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Juno 17, IMS

Youngsters Plan Space Futures
v i e w i n g t he l i f t o f f
because his grandfa­
ther was a pilot and he
has "grown up In a
spare en viron m en t."
That I ncl udes a
passion for launching
model rockets.
" I ' l l take a n y I n­
f ormati on t he y can
give me." he said o f the
people he meets on the
trip "I'll store It and
use It when I grow up."
Sixth grader Doug
Swlnk wants to be a
spare urchrologlst to

weightlessness.
W hen Sam Stoller.
10, found out he had
been selected to view
the liftoff, he went to
his library al Maplrton
El e me n t a r y and
checked out (he space
shuttle operator's
manual

M O U L D E R , Col o.
(UPt) — Kristin HoUlIng has no doubt there
eventually will be colo­
nies o f people living In
space, pets and all. and
she Intends to design
l heir houses.
Kristin, 12. ran be
excused If her mind Is
filled with thoughts of
outer space these days.
S h e Is o n e o f six
children wl&gt;o was lo
gel a VIP view of the
l i f t of f o f the space
sh u t tle Discovery
Monday.
" I think they'll tie a
lot more creative." she
said o f her generation
o f sp ace architects.
"T h e houses will look
like bubbles and have
different wlerd shapes
and colors,"
The Elsenhower El­
em entary School sixth
g r a d e r wa s chosen
f r o m a m o n g 100
applicants to make a
Hirer-day Florida trip
sponsored by Boulder's
Ball Corp. Sunday, she
lou red the Kennedy
Space Center.
Holallng knows that
t h e r e a r e practi cal
problem s which must
lie solved before life In
space will lie comfort­
able. like training her
|iet dog lo behave In

Stoller said he wants
lo he a space engineer.
" I'd like lo work with
constructing a space
colony. I think we'll
have astronauts living
up there, for like years
at a tim e," he said.

’ check out the
p lan ets" and see if
there's evidence there
once was life on any of
them
Hr said the nation's
space program Is " d o ­
ing good W e're not
really behind anyone,
but we're not too far
ahead either."
But fourth g r ader
Krl stof f rr Knap p, a
f ut ure a e r o n a u t i c a l
e n g i n e e r a nd
astronaut, said space Is
bei ng used fo r the
wrong reasons toduy.
"W e ’re putting space
weapons Inin space,
an d t h e r e ' s a g u y
wt i n' s p u l l i n g t h r

Brian Koprowskl. 10.
said he wants to be an
a s t r o n a u t , and he
knows what his Job will
tie like.
" I ' m pr et t y s ur e
a s t r o n a u t s wi l l be
building (space co lo­
nies!. They'll tie doing
almost everything we ll
fie doing down here..."
He envisions space
stations as ‘‘like a tube,
going around In circles.
I he n In the c e nt e r
they'll have u docking
liay, and some solar
punels and some other
panels pointing
s t r a i g ht Into bl ack
space, where It Is really
cool. That will tie their
cooling system."
Koprowskl said hr
wus looking forward to

a s h e s o f 1 0 .0 0 0 p e o p le

Into space. I d o n' t
think we need that
orbi t i ng a r o und up
there.” hr said.

Legal Notice

CALENDAR

IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U S T

IN AN D F O R
S IM IN 0 L E C O U N T V .
F L O S ID A
CIVIL AC TIO N
CASK NO SI I M C A M K
IN B F TM f M A R R IA G E O F
H E L E N M A E C O N G ES .
Wito/Palltloner.
and
B O S E B T H CONGER
Husband' Maspondan*
NO TIC E OE A C TIO N
TO R O B E R T H C O N G ER
Address Unknown
City and Mat* Unknown
YO U ARE H I R E I T
N O T IF IE D that • (Million lor
dissolution ol m*rr l*g# not boon
tllw&lt;S « g l nil you In IN# abort
captioned court, and Ihof you
or* rtquirtd lo m r t a copy ol
your written datontat or other
pleadings. II m y lo in# cold
polillon on Joseph A Hoalor.
Esq , tho altar nor lor tho Pall
lionar wtwta addraaa It P O
Bor 1441 Long wood. Florid*
t i l l 0. on or boloro ine rtti d a , ol
July. INS « nd lo III# tho
original Ihorool wllh Iho Clark ol
I N I Court timer bolero sac vice
on Its* attorney tor the Po'i
Honor, or Immodlotoly Ihorool

MONDAT, JUNE 17
Two-week summer program for youngsters
10-14. on theme "Wonders o f Japan “ featuring
Japanese exercise, matlal arts demonstration,
tilku Kabukl and Noh Theatre, and mask making
at Loch Haven Art Center. Call 896-4231 for
further Information
Central Florida Blood fbink Seminole County
Brunch. 1302 E. Second St., Sunford. 0 u rn. to 5
p m.; Florida HospItnl Altamonte Branch. 001 E.
Altam onte A ve..0a.m. lo 5 p.m.
The second annual Double Reed Workshop al
Stetson University will kick-off with a free concert
June 17 al N p.m. In the Elizabeth Hull
Audi t or i um. Works by Beethoven, Britten.
Vlvuldl. Telernun. Mattel. Munzurek, and Artlevol
will tie performed by the workshop Inslnictors al
the opening concert. The concert Is open lo the
public,
Grace United Methodist Church Is sponsoring u
vacation bltile school. Classes are for all uges and
run from 6:30 pm . to 8:30 p.m. Classes are from
June 17 lo June 21.

WEDNESDAY. JUNK 10
COPE Support Group o f Seminole Area. 7:30
p.tn.. S em in ole Communi t y Mental Health
Center. Cranes Roost Office Park. Suite 377,
Pelican Building. Allumonte Springs First and
third Wednesdays for fumllles und caregivers of
lon gterm mentally disabled. Free o f charge

THURSDAY.JUNE 20
South Semlnolr Senior Citizens covrred dish
luncheon. 12:30 p.m.. Casselberry Woman's
Club, Overtirook Drive, ('assellierry. Musclul
program by Earl Benge und Bill Knwulskl. retired
professional musicians Those unending should
bring their own table service.
National Action fur Former Military Wives. 0.30
pi n. For Informulton on meeting place, call

628.2001.

FRIDAY, JUNE 21

Central Florida Klwanls Club inerting ut 7:30
a.in. at the Holiday Inn S.R. 430 at Wymore Road
In Altam onte Springs.

MONDAY. JUNE 24
Adult swlnt lessons, 7-8:30 p.m.. Mondays and
Wednesdays, through July 10. Westmonte Pool.
500 Spring Oaks lllvd., Altam onte Springs. All
levels o f skills. Call Instructor Cluudla Harris.
802-0000.
T h e S em in ole county 4-H club und the
Seminole County Master Uurdencra are sponsor­
ing a youth workshop titled “ Mowing for Money."
The workshop explains thr basics ol managing a
summer lawn business. Topics to tie covered
Include basic lawn niower care, how to set your
prices for mowing, Identifying different types of
grasses.und how to care for them. How to mow.
edge and Him a yard properly will be demon­
strated. The seminar Is open In any youth 8-IH
years old and la free. To make reservations, for
the workshop or for more Information contact:
Shelda Wllkrns. 4 11 agent., ut 323 2500 Ext.
I HO.
The Seminole County Public Library's Summer
Reading Program kicks o ff Monday. June 17.
with "T h e Little Prince" at 2 p.m. at the
Casselberry branch. On Tuesday. June 18. Suru
Van Arsdel from Fort Christmas will present u
slide and artifact show about the Seminole Indian
Wars In Central Florida This Is at the Casselberry
Branch at 2 n m,

SUNDAY, JUNE SO
The Maitland Art Center la Joining the city ol
Maltland'a Centennial Celebration with an exhibit
of Andre Smith and the Bok Fellows. This exhibit
Is free o f charge and will run from June 30 to July

21 .

It you toll to do ko a doloull
moy bo onlorod og*mtl you on
Motion ol Iho Potltlonor. and
ludgm ent moy bo o n lo ro d
ogomtl you lor Iho rollol do
mandod l" mo Prill Km
W ITNESS my hand and to*l
ol Ihlt Court on Iho 10th day ol
May. IN I
IS E A L I
D A V IO N B E R R IE N
Clark ot Iho Circuit Court
By ChoryIR Franklin
A t Deputy Clark
Publlth Juno 1. 10. IT. 14. I N I
D E G &gt;1
NO TICE OF A
PUBLIC H E A R IN O
TO CON SID ER TH E
A D O P TIO N O F AN
OROINANCE BV
TH E C IT Y OF
SANFORD. F L O R ID A
Nolle* It hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be hold ol
the Commlttian Room In the
City Moll In th* City ot San lord
Florida. *• » 00 • dock P M on
June 14. INS. to conttder Iho
adoption ol an ordinance by the
City el Sen lord Florida, m i* ol
which It at toliowt
ORDINANCE NO W4J
AN ORDINANCE O F TH E
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D ,
F L O R ID A . C L O S IN G
V A C A TIN G AND A B A N D O N
ING A PORTION OF R A N O
A V E N U E (R A N D S M A L L )
L Y IN G B E TW E E N E A S T
F IR S T S TR E E T A N D E A S T
C O M M ER CIAL S T R E E T A N D
B E T W E E N N O R TH P A R K
A V E N U E AND N O R TH
P A L M E T T O A V E N U E . HE
TA IN IN G E A S EM EN TS FO R
P U B LIC U T IL IT IE S A N D PE
D E S TR IA N TR A F F IC
PRO
V ID IN G FOR S C V E R A B IL IT V .
C O N F L IC TS AND E F F E C T I V E
O A TS
All peril*! in mtorott and
Cllliont lhall h*«t en upper tun,
ty to b# hoard ol taid hoar mg
By order ot Ih* City Com
m utton ol Ih* City ol Seniord
Fiend*
ADVICE TO TH E P U B L IC II
a per ten deodtt to appeal a
dadilon mad* with rotpacl to
any mailer conildorod al Ih*
abet* meeting or hearing ha
may nood a verbatim record *4
the proceeding! Including the
’etlimony and evident*, which
record It no! provided by the
City ol Sontord (FS 7*4 0101)
H N Tim m . Jr
Cily Clerk
Publlth Juno IT. IH I
DEG**

PUZZLES
CELEBRITY CIPHER

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legal Notice
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y
B O AR D OF
C O U N TY CO M M ISSIO NER S
N O T IC E O F
P U E LIC H E A R IN G
J U S Y f . I0SS.
T 00 P M
Tho Board ol County Com m it
te n o n ot Seminole County.
Florid*, w ill hold * public
hearing to consider th# follow
mg
I C H A R L E S O IV E N S BA( 1 10 IS) JJE — R IA A Rt«i
dtntiol Zeno — Appeal ogomtl
in* Board el Adlutlmont In
denying o Special Exception to
permit e church on Lott I 4. and
Lett SOI). Block D. Sonlondo
Springs PBS Pg IT. In Section
I J l I f *1 th o c o rn e r ol
Boymond Aversua and Carlton
Slroat tOIST 41
1 P A TR IC IA A M A R TW IQ —
B A I S IS I S I H E
— A I
Agriculture Z on* — Appool
ogomtl m# Board of Adlutlmont
in approving a Special Etcap
•io n l o r
L O U I S E
l* P E TE R S 'B E C K Y HOPKINS
to op*'*** * Day Car* Cantor on
Tor Porcol AJE at thown on
Assessors Map No IT, In Sec
lion K I 4 M . *1 iho Nor meat!
corrtar ol intortectlon of Or*ngt
Boulevard and Waytld* Drlr*
101 ST SI
1 M IK E H A T T A W A Y BAISSSISI ISV - R IA A Rati
donllal Ion* — Appeal ogaintl
th* Board of Adjustment In
denying a Lot Sl|* VOrinoco
from II.TOO tq tl to I ISO to ft
and a lot Width Variance from
W tl to 41 It on Lot 11. Block A.
Writ Aliomonto Heighlt. Sec
lion I. PB IS. Pg ot. m Section
II Tl It. on Iho Norm tide ol
H igh la nd S lr o o l, W a ll ol
Virginia Shoot ID IS T 41
Ih lt public hearing will bo
hold in Room WIJO ot th*
Sominol* County Sorylcot Build
mg 1101 E F irtt Slrool. San
loro E lor Ida. cn July t. IMS. *1
I 00 P M . or a* toon thoroohor
ot postal*
Written commonti (Hod wllh
m* Land Management Manager
will ba considered Portent op
poarmg *1 Iho public hearing
will b* hoard Haarlngt may b*
continued Horn lim a to lima at
•ound nacottary Further dotallt
available by calling 111 U K .
E rl 441
Poriont *'* a d ,itad that, ll
they doc id* to appeal any do
c Ition mad* *1 thlt hoar mg. may
will nood 0 record of th* pro
coodmgt and. lor luch purpot*.
they moy nood to Intur* mol a
verbatim record el Iho proceed
mgt It mad*, which locord
include! the lotlimony and 0 ,1
done* upon which the appeal It
lo D* bated par Section 744 OIOS.
Florid* S'olutot
BOARD OF
CO UNTY COAAMISSIONERS
SEMINOLE C O U N T Y .
FLORIDA
BY R O BER T S TU R M
CHAIRMAN
A TTE S T
D A V IO N B E R R IE N .
C LER K
Publlth June IT. IN S
DEG 100
IN T H E C IR C U IT
COURT O F TH E
E IG H T E E N T H
JU O IC IAL C IR C U IT IN AND
FOR S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
CASE NO 04 M U CAOO P
ROBERT M IS T IN A i JU L IU S
M IITIN A .
PUmlllft.
VI
WAR RF N W
W OFFORD A
A N N E TTE W O O FO R D
Oeltndontt
A M IN O E D N O TIC E
OF SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that purtoeni lo a Final Judg
manl ol Foratlotura deled May
11
l * I S . C a t * No
M TrH CA oo P ol the Circuit
Court ol mo f ightoonlh Judicial
Dillricl In and lor Sominol*
County. Florida In which ROB
E R t M IS TIN A and JU L IU S
MISTINA aro tha P lam llllt and
WARREN W W O F F O R D and
AN N C TTC W O F F O R D *r* Ih*
Detondenti I will tall to Ih*
h.ghatI and bell bidder tor cath
In Iho lobby *• Ih* W ail Freni
Doer ol Ih* Courlhout* In San
lord Seminole County. Florida
*1 II 00 A M on the n th day ol
Juno IH I Ih* tol lowing d t
tubed properly tel lor th In Ih#
Order ol m* Final Judgment *1
Forotlotur*
Th* I t t t 00 loot ol Lot 141.
Q U E E N S M IR R O R S O U TH
A O D IT IO N lo C a ito lb o rry .
Florida Attordlng to Ih* Plal
lharool *4 recorded In Plat
Hoot t Paget 41 and 44. ol Ih*
Public Nocordt ol Sominol*
County. Florida
O A TE D rnit urn day ol May
IMS
IS EA LI
David N Barr ion
Clark ol Ih* Circuit Court
By rp Cheryl R Franklin
Deputy Clark
Publlth Jun* ). 10. IT and 14.
IH I
D EG I I

IN THE C IR C U IT C O U R T
FOR SEM IN O LE C O U N T Y .
F L O R IO A
PRO BATE D IV IS IO N
File Number 44 144 CP
IN B B i E S TA TE O F
E LM E R W A LTE R BOR N 4 'k '4
E L M E R W BORN
Dec** ted
N O T IC f OF
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
Th* adm im itrallon of Ih*
*ti*i* el E L M E R W A L T E R
BORN decka ted File Number
41 114 C P II ponding In Ih*
C ircuit Court lor Somlnal*
C o u n ty . F lo r id * . P ro b a te
Division. th# addron el which li
Sominol* County Courlhout*
Sontord. Florida, t i l l I Th*
nem*t and oddrottat *1 th#
perianal roprotonlaliv* and m*
perianal r*pr*t*ntallv*'i *1
tor"*y or* k*t Iwtti below
All Intorottod portent or*
required to til* w llh Ih lt court.
W ITH IN TH R E E M O N TH S OF
THE FIRST P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS F40TICE I I I all clelmt
ogomtl Ih# otloto and I I ) any
obitction by an Inlo ro tlo d
Parian an atom m u nolle* wot
tervod mol Cheilongot me valid
Ity *1 th# will ib* gual IIleal ton*
ol Ih# per tonal roprotonialive.
,*nu* or luritdtclton ol th*
court
ALL CLAIM S A N O O B JE C
TiONS NOT SO F I L E D W ILL
• E FO R EVER B A R R E D
Publication ol m u None* hat
begun on June 10. I H I
P trtonal Roprotonialive
E J G IIR A C H
P O BOX * « f
Oriando FL HOOT
Attorney tor
Pertanel Roprotonialive
E J GIER ACH
P O BaatAU
Orlando FL 11*0]
Tolephon* [M il 4*4 0*41
Publlth Juno I*. IF. 1*41
D E G 44

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
OF T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R IO A
CASE 440 44 177* CA 17 K
JU D G E
S JO S E P H DAVIS. JR
IN RE
F O R F E IT U R E OF A
I4T4 C H E V R O L E T BLAZER
A U T O M O B IL E . V E H IC L E
I D E N T I F I C A T I O N NUM BER
CKLI44F I14J11
N O TIC E OF
F O R F E IT U R E
P R O C E E D IN G S
TO Homer B Comer
*40* Weti 14m Street
Sontord. Florida 1JTTI
and all other! who claim on
•ntorat* In Ih* billowing pro
party
a ) On* 1*74 Chovrctof Bit I or
Automobile Vehicle Idonllfko
lion Number CKLI44FI74111
S TE V E O H A R R IE T T . Chief
ot Police of Sanford. Sominol*
County. F lor Ida through t*'t duly
iworn Police Officort. toned the
deter bed property on Ih* lom
day ot M arch. I H I at or near
Thirteenth Street end Lourol
Avenue. Sonford. Seminole
County. Florida It profanity
holding teid property, and will
appear before th* Honorable S
JO SEPH D A V IS . JR Judg* ol
m* Circuit Court. Eighteenth
Judicial C ircuit. Room 1T4.
Sam mol# County Courlhout#
Sontord Florida, on m* loth day
ot July. IMS at f 44 A M tor Ih*
pur pete ot requeuing and filing
* Rule to Show Ceute why th*
described property thou I d not b*
•ortoiled *o th* ut* ol. or totd by
th# Chlol ol Police upon pro
due mg duo proof thei tamo wot
being used In violation ol
Florid* L e w t dealing with con
Irabend all purtuonl to Section*
*11 Ft I TO* Florid* Slolulot
I IMS I
N O R M A N R W O LFIN G ER
STA TE A TTO R N E Y
By
ANNE
E
R IC H A R D S
R U TB E R G
Attlttonl Slot* Attorney
Otllc* of th# Slot* Attorney
Pot*Office Bor 1114
Sen lord Florida 117711114
I MSI 177 7S44
Publlth Jun* 17.14. IMS
D E G 01
I N T H E C IR C U IT COURT
OF T H E E I O H T E I N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R IO A
CASE NO 44 1411 CA IF F
JU D O S
S JO S E P H OAVIS. JR
IN R E F O R F E IT U R E OF A
IHfc H O M E M A D E
CHO PPER M O TO R C Y C L E .
V E H IC LE ID E N T IF IC A T IO N
NU M B ER OU74T47
N O T IC E OF
F O R F E IT U R E
P R O C E E O IN O S
TO L*rry B Pool#
41*4 Sandy Lon*
Sontord. Florida 11771
and *11 ottiort who claim an
mtorotl in the following pro
parly
* I On* 11*0
Homemade
Chopper’ Motorcycle. Vehicle
identification Number DU74147
S TE V E O H A R R IE T T . Chlol
ol Police ot Sontord. Sominol*
County Florida through hit duly
tworn Police Officort. teijod Ih*
detenbed property on th* 4th
day ol April. IMS. *1 or near Th*
Born in Ih* vicinity ot Wotl
Thirteenth Slrool and Elm
Avonw*. la n ia r d . Sominol*
County. Florida It protean,
holding laid property and will
appear boloro th* Honorobi* S
JOSEPH O A V IS . JR . Judg* of
ih* Circuit Court. Eighteenth
Judicial C ircu it. Room 170.
Sominol* County Courlhout*
Sontord. F lor Ida. on Iho 7*m day
ot July. IMS ol » K A M tor Ih*
purpot* ol roquotlmg and tiling
a Rule to Show Couto why tho
deter ibed properly thou Id not be
lor toiled lo Ih* ut* ol. or told by
ih* Chlol ot Police upon pro
due mg duo proof the* tom* wot
being used in violation ol
Florida Law* dealing with con
If abend *11 purtuonl to Sacliant
t i l 701 104 Florida SMtutot
[I H I I
NORM AN H W O LFIN G ER
S TA TE A T T O R N E V
By A N N E E
R IC H A R O S R U TB E R G
Aaiitlant Slot* Attorney
Office ol the Slot* Attorney
Mat'Otllc* Doe 1 IU
Sontord. F tor Ido l l l f l 1114

mu m ilia

Publlth Jun# II. 14. I H I
D I G 01
N O T IC E OF A
P U B L IC H E A R IN O
T O C O N S IO IR T N I
A D O P T IO N O F AN
O R O IN A N C E B T
T H E C IT V O F
1A N FO R O . FLO R ID A
T4otlc# 1% hereby given mat a
Public Hearing will be held *1
th* Cem m ltllon Room in the
City Hell In th* City el Sanford.
Florida, at 7 00 e'ctoc* P M on
Jim* 14 IMS. to contidor th*
adoption o4 an ordinance by m*
City of Sontord. Florida, till* ol
which 11 *4 toliowt
O R D IN A N C E NO 1711
AN O R O IN A N C E OF THE
CITY OF
SANFORO.
FLO R IO A P R O V ID IN G FOR
TH E C I T Y M A N A G E R TO
SERVE T H E P O LIC E AND
FIRE D E P A R T M E N T S INAN
A D M IN IS T R A T IV E CAPACI
TV : P R E S C R IB E D TH E
D U T I E S
A N D
RE
S P O N SIB IL I T I f S OF SUCH
POSITION P R O V ID IN G FOR
S E V E R A B IL IT Y . C O N FLICTS
A N O E F F E C T I V E O A TE
All par i i*t in mtorotl end
cllliont than hare an apparluni
ty to bo heard at to id hoar ing
By order el th* City Com
mittion ot me City ot Sontord.
Florida
ADVICE T O T H E P U B LIC II
a porter doc Mot to appeal a
decision mad* wim rotpacl to
any manor conudarod ot me
abor* mooting or hearing ha
may nood a verbatim record ot
tha proceed m gt Including me
lettimany and evidence, whkh
record It net provided by m#
C ity#4Sontord (F S M 0 4 IM I
H N Tam m Jr
City Clark
Publlth Jun* IF. IMS

OIGM
F IC T IT IO U S NAJMI
Notice It hereby given Riot we
art tngtgod In business ol 4M
Pino Drive. Alternant* Springs.
Semmelt County. Florid* K i l l
under m# Iktttteut noma *4
K I L G AN IN C . d / V * Dure Seal
*4 Sam melt County and met we
intend to regular told earn*
wtm me Ctorb e4 me Circuit
Court. Stminele County. Florid*
vittont o4 me Fktltieu* Nome
Sit'utot To wil lection 44144
Florida Slatutot 1*17
/*' Terete A O'too*!
President
/*. Oennit P O Neal
Publish May t l b June L to. IF.

it
O I F IM

7 1 —Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park
831-9993

322-2611

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

Auto Sato* People wantod tor
u*od car tot In Sontord E &gt;P
not nacottary. will Train Ron
111 4»7S______________________
Avon Beauty Company
Put; *r part tlm* Call immod)

RATES

1 tim e................ 67C t I

HOURS
1:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru TODAY
SATURDAY 5 • keen

3 cdnsecw tivt lim es 6 1 C a I
7 consecutive tim et 5 2 C a I
1 0 co R s a o rtiv t U m p s 4 « C a
C on tra ct R ita s A ts iU b le
3 Linas M inim um

I

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

21—Personals
W A N T E D : Women to help drlvv
A # ■pentet Leave June 10.
return July II To M kh stole
line Call 771 74*1

23— Los! I Found
Lott Ottoo* A re t
moto
pd bull Family
Block
%po&lt; on foco A toil Roword

13—Real Estate
Courses
* * * *
* Thin king *4 getting * *

* Real Eilat* Llcemaf *
Wt *ttor Free Tuition
and ceatmwaei Training I
Call Dick or V khl N r datailt
t u ik*t n i n M
Ev# m itt*
K»y*t *4 Florida . Inc
It Years Eip*rl*«c*f

m

25— Special Notices
* M A R Y KA V COSM ETICS *
Skm cor* end refer TUtr
C O N N IE .............. ...... _... 777 7714

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Nullc* It hereby given that we
are engagad In kutmett *1 1111
Laurel Ave . Sontord. Sominol*
C e u n ly , F le rld a under Ih*
llc llllo u t name *1 G IN G E R
B R E A O MOUSE ANNEX, and
the! we intend to regiitor told
name wllh me Clerk o4 the
C ircuit Court. Seminot# County.
F lor Ida In accordance with tha
p re v lk le n t ot Ih* FlcU U e ut
Noma Statutes Tew ll Section
SOS »* Florid* SJalutot 1*17
/*/ E a rl M Ptluk*
/*/ Barbara J Ptluk*
Publlkh May 17 A Jun* 1. 10. 17.
ms
D E F 14*
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
N jtlc* It Twroby given that I
•m *ngog*d In business *1 1*41
Mwy 44. S*nlord. S*mlnol*
C o u n ty , F l* r ld t under Ih*
llcllllout name ol SEM ITtOLE
M A T A D IS T C O . end that I
intend to r*gnl*r said name
w im th* Clerk at Ih* Circuit
Court. Seminole Comfy. Florid*
In accordance wim Ih* pro
vittont ol Ih* F k lltU u t Nem*
.Statute*. Te w it Section *44 17*
Florida Slatutot its/
/ t ' R ich ardL B*lti*H
Publish Jun* 1. 10.17.14. 1*04
DEG X
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
F4oflc* It h*r*by given that I
am engagad In hullnen at P O
Boa *44 Geneva. Saminel*
County. Florid* U r n under the
llc llllo u t name *4 R IM O T B
O F F IC E M A N A G E M E N T
(R O M ). INC and that I Intend
'o regiitor laid name wim th*
C lerk ol ih* Circuit Court.
Sominol* County, Florida In
accordance wim m* prevlklent
ol Ih* Fictitious Nome Statute*.
To wit
Section 44S0* Florid*
Statute* 1*47
/• Mar the E Wtn
Publish Jun* 17. 14 A July I. I.
IMS
D E G 101
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Notice It hereby given mat I
am engaged In business at 7IS
SanLonda Sprmgt Drive. Suit*
O Lung wood. Semina** County.
F lor id* 11710 unitor th* llcllllout
n a m e el A R T I S T I C
S P E C IA L T IE S A IN TE R IO R S
and that I intend to regiitor und
nem* wim th* Clark *4 th*
Circuit Court Sominol* County.
Florida In *c cor done* wim Ih*
p ro v lk lo m •• Ih* F lc lllle u t
Nam* SUluto*. Tow ll Sac I ion
44* 0* F lor Ida Slatutot 1*47
P R O F IL E SPORTS. INC
/*/Je rry H In to
Publish June II. 14 A July I. 4.
1404
P E G 101
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Nolle* I* h*r*by glv*n mol I
km *&lt;.gaged In bmmeti *1 M l
Dalton* Boul*v*rd. Dolton*.
Vofuti* County. F lor Ida under
in* llc llllo u t n*m* *1 O E
L T O N A R E A L T Y , end Ihal I
intend to regittor laid noma
with th* Clerk *4 m* Circuit
Court. Seminal* County. Florid*
In accordance wim m# pro
vieion* *4 the Fklittou* Nome
Slatutot. Tp wll Section IAS 04
F tor id* Slatutot IM I
O E L T O N A CO RPO RATIO N
R E A L T Y COM PANY
/*' Micholto R Garku
Corporal* Secretory
Publlth June IF. 14 A July I. 0.
IMS
O E O 101
N O T IC E O F SH ER IFF S TA LE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
ihal by virtu* *1 mat carteln
W rit o l Elocution limed out ol
and under the seal *f Its* County
C o u r t o l O ra n g * C o u n t y .
Florid*, upon * final lodgement
rendered m m* * tores*Id court
an m# Tvsd day o l August. A O
•*44, In mat certain case an
title d . Sun B e n t. N allenel
Association. Plaintiff. — v s —
G « li D Bills Defendant which
aforesaid Writ *1 Eaecutlen was
delivered t o r n * * * Sheriff el
leeninela Ceunly Florida, and I

55—Business
Opportunities
D E A L E R S W A N TE D Now and
unique proven energy product
Company (und toad program
Lew prk*. Large profit! Not a
franchise Local astlslanc* tor
training Small Investment tor
Inventory Serious calls only I
Call Mr Veil H 4T4J 7*10
I mas* over SIOOOO a month
w:m my telephone you con
toe Part'Fullllme 117 4101.
or 444 *441
No telling, ne inventory, collet
lion only S*rvlc* established
High Nettle location Will net
appro, SJJS per week. 1 hour*
per week Will Ikk* I D 000
Writ* Mr BUI Bectan 1/00
Slone SI Ovndo FI 11/1* or
call (M il 44*41*4
Work trom horn* too pr 100
iniarting snaveiopes For in
formation land stamp lo K S
Entorprita* P O Bo. IM I MZ
Bloomfield N J 0/001

61—Money to Lend
Businass Capital lio o o o ••
11.000 000 and 0v*r P O Bo&gt;

71—Help Wanted
JLcryiic Applicators needed to
apply protoctlv* coaling on
cars boats and plane* 44 to
t i l per hour W* train For
work In Sontord arsa call
Tampa 111 4*4 /111
A ID E S All Ihlftl E ip A or
ctrtlltod Good *lmesph*r* A
benelil* EOC Apply al Oe
Bory Manor, 40 N H w y 17 *7
A LL TY P ES JOBS
STA R TW O R K NOWI

-ft
LABO n ^ * T - V FO R C E
•m i m m

'

P

r

A C. Mechanic* A Sarvlc*
imtallattoe- Salary bated en
*«p ♦ b*n*tltt m ASil

tea, ri.

I NO
^
FEE I
Report ready Tor work al t AM
407 W 111 St
Sanford

321 1590
Auto farts Countif Parson
F a il growing orgeniielien E&gt;
pertonced only needed Apply
In person S am to 4 pm
Automotive I Paris Servic*.
&lt;00 S P irrtm or* Ave.. Or

giri, m Ttioer m ioia
AVON E A R N IN G S WOWI11
O PEN T E R R IT O R IE S N O W III
111 ) l l l * r 111 4451

BANK CUSTOMER
SERVICE REF
Position * callable tor Sontord
branch Strang to I tor rip e n
vn&lt;* and sales oriented per
tenant, r*quir*d Submit re
mm*’ with salary require
menIs to Jerry Robertson
Em plr* *1 A m e ric a . MS
Wvsiv* Springs Rd . Suita 704.
lengwood
FI*
n r r t . or
apply In parson. Monday thru
f r day t am to 4 pm E O E
C A B IN E T M A K E R S
BUILDERS. L A M IN A TO R S .
SAW M EN
Oay and night shift Full tlm*
banatifts. Call U r aMT_______
C o n ti
C le a n in g L a b o r
Mato- F*mato. lull or p« llm*.
days Wmtor Springs Area
177 N il. * N f 1pm
Con* tipanding Child Car*
Cantor nerds part llm* cook J
day weak, mm 4 hr* par day
Phonalll *4U lor interview
CRT O P T R A T O R

Data *ntry arpertonca or good
t,pmg P rrm anenl position
wim growth potential Never a
Fa*

TEMP PERM774-1141
D A Y C A R E COOK
t i l P a rt t lm * d a y s
No
weekendi Great tor grandma
mat laves kids I

Employment
fc V d

323-5176

M i l French Ave
DESK C LER K S no experience
m e rtu ry
Eacellenl oppor
lunity to work w im klal* ot
•he *rt computer tyktom
F rfn d iy
ne»i perienabto
Apply in per ion Deltona Inn.
Orirtr/Wkrehauiaman
Kncwladg* ot C *ntr*l FI*
Chauttour i lic*n*a *nd poly
graph f»qulr»d Call 177 0*1)
Fedvrtl. Slat*. A Civil Jabs I
a.aiiobto In your *r*a Call
I 41* MS 1177 lor Into 74 h o
FUN S U R V E Y W O RK
C ol'tg* student* pr*l*rr*d
E»rn 4700 per week part llm#
Advancement opportunities
Fee intor view call Jim Coe*.
114 MM
O A S A TTEN D EN T
Tap salary, hotpiiaiiiaiion I
eves peid vocation every S
month!,
other
benefit*
apply
1CJ N
Laur*l Ave .
• M AM t X )P M
HAIR DRESSER to lak* over
small dtontol* In Deltona
Call S74 4157
Henast. deaendakto people I*
work In convenience stores
Paid vocations Group Insur
one* avaitabl*
Polygraph
r*quir*d Apply In parson al
littto Champ Food Star*. I*70
French Ave . Sanford
Housaparonls couple or matur*
adul* Christian shaltor far
•bused end troubled teens
LABO R ERS
Strong r*ll*bl*
gsnerai laborers needed Im
mediately OUterenl locations
Phone and transportation a
must Never • to* Apply

KELLY SERVICES
860 2339
Lends,ape Laborer must her*
Iran sport alien A good driving
record 14* 4700
Live in House Seeper wantod
Own room Lak* M ary Ar*a
177 *TN
M I C* N ttd s D ra ltifi
Trsusa* Sand r*kwm* to
C o . M00 Slat* Road
Sontord FI* 17771

Triedman’s
IMMEDIATE OPENING
E x p e r ie n c e d Bo o k k e e p e r
FRIEDMAN'S JEWELERS Ihe South's leading
And most tMrrttivr fciiil Kwrlcr has an opening for
• hookkrrprr Eincnctwr preferred but not mandttory Individual must he friendly, outgoing and
el Ik icnl Friedman's offers its employees an e»(clleni lompentaiion ptcKagr including Maior
Medial hospiialudtion, life insurance, paid voc­
ations, paid holidays, tick leave, retirement program
and other benefits Apply in Person
AN EQUAL OPPO RTUNITY EMPLOYER

T r ie d m a n 's
........... JIWIURB

Sanford Plaza
Apply In Person

Triedmaifs
IMMEDIATE OPENING

O ell O Bills, said pr sporty
b e in g lo ca te d In Sem lnel*
C e u n l y . F l e r l d a . n s e ra
p a r t i c u l a r l y d e scrib e d a t
lei lews
L E G SEC H T w F ItS R O E
1IE S tA F T e l N 111 F T e l W to
*♦ SW 1* *1 SW to ef NE to t! SE

Vt

P h y s i c a l A d d re s s : 1441
Church Street. Sontord. Florida
and th# undersigned at Shari ft
*4 Seminar* Count, Florid*,
still at I I M A M an Rie 14th
day ol Jun*. A D I M . *ftor N r
bidder. M r cash. subset! N any
and *11 ousting tome, el the
Front (W eell Dear ol the stop*
el the 1 1 mineto Casosty Court
That sard sot* It bamg
to satisfy ns* toms* t! said W rit
elBaacuSton
Joh n B P*4A. Shorin
Samineto Count, F tor id*
T* be advert 1k*d Jun* A It. II.
IA w im the s o n *n J u e U . IMS
OSDs

EXPERIENCED SALESPERSON
FRIEDMAN S JEWELERS, one of the fastest
rowing retad chains in the Southeast is sacking
rtrndly and outgoing individuals with sales Ability.
Eipcrtcncc in retail sales preferred hut not manda­
tory Friedman's oilers 11s employers an eicelknt
compensation package mdluding Maior Medical
hospitalization, life insurance, paid vacations, paid
holidays, tick leave, retuement program and other
benefits Apply m Person

f

AN EQUAL O PPO RTUNITY EMPLOYER

Sanford Plaza
Apply In Person

�71—Help Wanted

M A ID S E ■per tone*d preferred
Apply In person M thru F , 10
A M to Noon Mo phone cells I
Pollen* Inn, Dolton*________

T E A C H E R S A ID E
Child Caro Facility, S day
weak, t krt per day Call
a t «4Utor Inter-.lew
Tired at Jea Huntmgt
C a ll F u t u r e t - th e y h a v e
hundred! of lob epenir gt tor
thote who want lo
k to 4)00

M A IN TA IN E N C E MAN
» ’ per hour 'Jack of Ml Hades
no nt«d' Largo management
company needs rou to help
keep their apartment complei
running smoothly I

ytffc.Em ploym ent

f c \ \ j 323-5176
f t w c t Ays
Mature Salesperson with retail
**p tor i*dwt fashion shoo
Apply at 8 ‘gger and Better
Fatm oni I t ) E UtStroet
M E D IC A L R E C E P TIO N IS T
DOC per week M edial back
ground a plwt but not needed1
Buoy office Set appotntmenta
Greet patient!

Employment
323-5176
t i l l French Aye.
M y.
IS. in downtown Sanford
Positions available in Orlando
A Sanford t'oret Hiring A it t
M g r , C redit Mgr . Salat
pertonnel Retail t ip helpful,
but not noc Call I F44 &gt;101

NEWSPAPER CAItKICN
NEEDED
Ciwluote. Oviedo arte Mutt be
bondable. nave dependable
Itantporlaiion. tia&gt;e telephone
and be retpontible To work
between 1 00 PM i I OO PM
For more Info, call Tony.
J77 7411. between II 00 AM
and a 00 PM_________________
NURSE S A ID E S : All thiflt
E aperlenced or certified pre
•erred Apply In pet ton at
lakevtew Hurting Center. 010
E 2nd SI . Sanlord
O F F IC E COORDINATOR
T R A IN E E
1 1 00 hr Like figures) This one't
lor you I Very llte typing
Company will pay school lor
your lu lu re adrancemenl

A

t

Employment
323-5176

W * * w
I I I ) f react! Ave
Pari Tim e Catering Help Re
tpontlble aduilt. male or
lemale Some lood prepere
lion end tervlce Veiled deyt
end evening hourt. Including
weekends
C a ll 111 000)
B u c h 'l Catering, fer ep
petwtmewl__________________
Perl lime/ Full lime Earn )S%
o r m o r e c o m m lo o lo n o
Supervltor potlllant aveil
a b le
C a ll M r
M o o re
i ooo a )) toga. E&gt;t FL)o
Part lime LP N needed lor ) 11
tr.lft Good atmptphere EOE
Apply el Debar/ Manor to N
Hwy 1)01, Oebery___________
P H O N E W O R K E R S M otlly
fulltime but will contldtr perl
lime 04 00 hr., pluk good
bonuoet Male or lemale
Good tummer work lor tfu
den it Call ooo )M 7 _________
POOL A T T E N D E N T Appro.
K hourt pe' week, potllblllly
lor more. Include! weekendt.
soma evenings 171 &gt;111_______
P R E F E R S X P E R I E NC ( D
B L A C K H A IR S T Y L IS T !
E ip e r lanced In Caretree Curlt
4 Releaort I lls par weak
guereniewd plut comm it non
Mutt have I icante Call 211
h i t , or m a i i T ______________
R E C E P TIO N IS T
O F F IC E ASST
To S27J wk Pluth mortgage
firm opant the door lor you!
Great cuttomert Handle buty
phonat Delail minded wtntI

Employment
323-5176
i l l ) Franck Ave.
Randent M anager/Actlvltlti
Dirac tar tor Santer Advil Apt
C o m m u n ity . R etpontible.
creallve individual to live on
pre m lte t and plan recta
eitonel end tocial activltlet
Mutt enioy people end be
energetic Lovely apt , meelt
end other emenltiet provided
JII 1440. M F. Sen torn______
R O U TE TR A IN E E
1000 per mortlfi plut com
m illion Average 11/00 n w i
inly I Super liable company
will train yout Etlablithad
route Company truck 1 Full
benefit! Definite career op
port unity here'

/ O t y Employment
f t l U
323-5176
® t i l l

Franck Ave

SALES H E L P W A N TE D
E apenenced In quality family
thoet 177 0204. tor eppf
SA LES REP
U t Money waiting to be made
here I Call on contractort. tall
bunding mater tail tor leading
dutrlbutor

Employment
323-5176
t i l ) Franck Ay*
S E C R E T A R Y far fin a n ce
company
E.ceHenl typing
Mllla and knowledge o&lt; book
k e e p in g n e c e io a r y
Diver til wo office dutlet Good
opportcmify tor metwro. at
tractive per Km that en|eyt
working with pubtic Call
Mi »s o
_________
I f M l TR A IL E R M ECHANIC
Minimum 1 yeart eiparience
with good work record M ull
have hand tool! *J par hour
plut excellent benelut In
duding company paid health
inturanco Apply m per ton
Tra m p e d Archer *g*.Inc
U N I FrewckAre
I Stole Far m art Market)
11vdentt/ R aU rie l/ Housewives
Part time er full time B IG S4.
tong term automatic residu
els M7 7771. er 44**441
S W ITC H B O A R D O P E R A TO R
P a n lim e , SPM * P M
wad Sun L g h l typing. Ill mg
Mutt be dependable Apply to
parson at Semlneto Ferd.lnt
17*4 S Or lands Or tetoerd

S H EN A N D O A H !
V ILLA G E
A P TS .

FROM *315
Rental Office
323-3920
A22BK
U ET0H

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI

KIT N’ CARLYLE ' by Larry Wright

71—HBlp Wanted

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

D E L IV E R Y H E LP E R S - no e&gt;
penance necettary Full lima
Good ttortmg pay *to 006
G E N E R A L O F F I C E
TR A IN E E S
Great starting
lab Several opening! Good
pay «to 4XO
F A C T O R Y A S S E M B L Y and
P RO DU CTIO N WORK Mott
thilft open Good pay acatot
Oto 4X0
IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G S
General Centtructton labor
Goodpay i to 4X0
TR U C K D R IV E R S Long haul
Immediate! Good driving re
cord Over 11 47* 4X0
L O C A L D R IV E R S
Straight
trucks Good pay Start right
away Oto 4X0
R E C E P T IO N IS T . O F F IC E
H E L P E R S . C LER K S . C R T
O P E R A TO R S
Im m ed ia te
opening! Good pay tcalei
Call Oto 4X0 NOW!
W E L O E R V Certified Excellent
pay tceiet Call today 470
4X0
P A I H T E *1 4 P A I N T E R
H E L P E R S - I m m e d ia t e
opening!, good storting pay
Call today oto 4X0
D A T W A L L With or without
e .p e r la n c *
Im m e d ia te
openings Good pay Call to
»■-»*»&lt;&gt;._______________
Wanted Grandmother type to
care tor 11 month twins and or
) ' i year old In my home I or )
dayt a week References re
quired Please call H I 401)
) people needed Immediately tor
menegement trainee post
tiont 4)01 * week everege
Call* I). Tuesday 11■ S440

t3—Rooms (or Rent
Christian Apts. 4 Hemet
T V . kitchen, laundry maid. 010
wk up Or I m s a o t 0)0110
F urnimad Room for rant Sea at
to ll Gala Pi 1 block* oil tofh
j f 4 Sanlord A v e ____________
Lengweed Furnished room
Houte privileges Lakelronl
p t saw______________________
Room with kitchen privileges to
non drinking person 1)0 per
week
Lek ve ne m e and
number 111 T i l l
____
SA N FO R D Furnished rooms by
Ihe week Reasonable relet
Maid tervlce C a llM lh M T
17 PM 41) Peimetio A ,e
1 A N F O R O Furnished room
House 4 pool privileges Call
_M) t j t l alter ) PM
TH E FLO R ID A HOT I L
too Oek Avenue
M l 4)04
Heetonable Weekly Relet

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

SANFORD CT. APTS.
11)1301
Bdrm . adults, no pot*, air.
quiet residential. S171 par
month plus daposll Call
in h i * _________________
*71
•Sear Ta
it
S IX security
M l 07*4, Eves_______

f t —Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
B A M B O O C O V I A PTS .
MS I Airport Btvd
PHONE Ml Ml*, m e a t I
Elitewwey Nam U H m a
Discaant tor Sawier CfMiena

0 COUNTRY 1ITTINO P
Large I A I Bdrm Apartments
Adult LekiviewFamily PsMside

m mtscotn— 123-7400
t
a n t e s , s c re e n e d p a t io ,
laundry 0X 0 me M l M l)

uoawooouMSAm.
Limtttd Tim Oatj
&lt;1 eft First Monlh* Rsnl

1X0Ridgewood Ave

TTiaaqi

Monday thru Friday
* to l X

1400 00 p»r
4 Bedroom
Ml 0041
menfti
# e e IN D E L T O N A e e e
* • HOM ES FOR R E N T e e
_______. e 174 14)4 . . ________
Sentord was' of 1/4, 1 bdrm )
both, central air heal, lenced
yard, dbi garage, lake access
U X e mo First. Iasi, tecuri
ly Ml 474*___________________
S UN LAN O E S T A T E S ) Bdrm
7 bam carpal, kids ok OX)
per monlh ♦ security Avell
able 4/11 Call to* w**______
) Bdrm . I bam. lanced N i l par
month . 14)1 security deposit
references required Call
0)4 704_____________________
1 B d rm . lit bam E.ceHenl
condition S400 per month plus
1X0 security deposit Call
M ) 4414 or M l 2X4 _________

105—DuplexTriplex / Rent

1 and t bdrm Also
sflicwncy Orem P I week o l d
deposit Ne pats Call M l *X7
17 PM 411Palmetto_________

37TMSTItFT FUlNITUtC
tw w iTih i t ........... —

mi

M IN I B IK E
Good condition Asking * t »
Can tw v i m
RE POSSE H E D
Must sail 2 quern*t style steel
buildings Brand new never
erected One it 40 X40 Will
tell tar balance owed Call
Adam I *00 U t 4044

m i

113—Storage Rentals
Mini W itth o u M i
.)!) M X
tie a Up
I car ga/aga tor rant Saminoi*
H S 4.44 ISO per month
M l 771* leave message

S IN G L E S T O R Y
L IV IN G
Loom Toimito Fit
Your Nogdt!
Furnishod ot Unlurmshod.
Carports
Private Pellet
Lush Landscaping Pets Children
W A TE R B E O S A C C E P T E O I
....3 2 1 -1 9 1 1

1 ft— Pets k Supplies

141—Homes For Sale
A T T E N T IO N
HOM E B U Y E R S !
Buy d»r#&lt;t »nd M v t 15 000 &lt;
bdfm
| b4»h
roorn and l i r y i living roem
C e m p ifttir rtm w Jtifd and
cww’wd m tklt *rxI ou*
Centrally located clot# to
uhool. «Nopp&gt;rkg #»c N*c«
yard and many
twtrM
I H fOO
C A LL FON A f r T t

Cendemintvmt 2
bdrm . 2 bath All appliances
washer d ry e r
P ric t He
ducedt *11*00 R E A L T Y
S TO R E. Renters *71 l*u

STENSTROM

•V 0 * N tR

AT LANE MONROE
1 tnd 2 BEDROOMS

LAKEFRONT
LUXURY ADULT
COMMUNITY
NOW LEASING
CALL 322-1051
137—Office Rentals
Longwood Professional Ofltc*
Specs located 4)4 A 1/4 K0
700 so tt Modern utlractive
building Call Malta C a rp .
Orlando X ) Oto 0444

Oflicei to Ront
Reasonable and convenient
W IN Maple Sentord
M ) *0*0
471 W lake Mary Bevlevard.
Suite 4. 0)70 monlh Im
med14le occupancy M ) TIPS
Ott.ce lor rent 10 to *00 sq 11
available Receptionist avail
a b la
L a k e M a r y a re a
X1M M X0
Woo sq. It office space avail
able, second floor of ad
minitlretlv* building Sanlord
Airport 04 X par sq tl In
etudes elr, haat. lanttorial and
parking Call Sentord Airport
Authority tor details 122 7771

141—Homes For Salt
A F F O A O A R L II Can you raise
*7.00*7 If yau have reasonable
c.edit that’s all you need
Owner financing will gal you
into mis lovely ) b d rm . I
bam. o/ tamlly r m . cant
heal A air. nest to Pmecrett
school M l 1*44

H A LL
NLAff M(
#1 At'0
It *1••&gt; 1IKY M •( I

COOL 1 P A H K U N O POOL
I
w toneed &lt;1 K i t *4&lt;d
I
bdrei P irs p la c s l Caetrat
b a a l/ d i r l I w o rk s h o p * !
Astern* R* geaMfyteg w/ tow
I
AFFO R DABLE!
0 M
frg s«reseed perch,
yard FH A er V A tinaacMgt
I X . 0*0 CaMesgetckt
M tO O IN L A K E l I bdrm I beto
spirt sta« w/ astro lrg lemtly
reees. Sparkling post! Privacy

Sanford's Solos leodot

af TJ \ wifti JON down U i *00

w e l is t a n d i e l l

Can 121 34*

COUNTRY RIDE REALTY
Reg R E. Breker
1M01M
O U T RE 11 SALE
Investors 1)400 negotiable )
Bdrm I bath Country Club
area Call 174 7 * »
•Sous* tor sale by ewner Nredt
work Reasonably priced In
Sanlord Call M ) 1*44

TH IS IS TH E ONE 1 1 bdrm
bafh

Horn# wild

1

ip h f bdrm

p l a n , « § ( In k i t c h e n ,
m e lh e r in law g w a r la r i,
fireplace game ream I t
deced to IM,*M
C O IY 1 b d rm . 3 bkfh home
with lu n k tn IfiHnrif room.
1'fr»pl#cf, ctnf ht«f A air.
•at Iff iilc h t n
tom m um ff
pool A Ititnii cBuffi IFY.tid
HAWK ft f T Y I N G I bdrm . 3
bafh Noma with aat tn klfcNtfi.

ftM000000
1 Bdrm , | bflfl.

mtfhor m low quartert ctnf

POOL
©Iftct
bf*+h1«t1 nook, family fooriv
on 1M F« * tot
ftft« *00 00
LA K E M A R Y N k * gnd c ‘tan )
bd*m 1 both M tw n room,
CH/A, attic tart fvnc*^ hath
yard

U* *00 00
POOL Large Mk I f H i |h«3g
ttiift 1 Bdrm . 1 both homo
horOwood floor % knotty pin#
kitchen

cebm ett

breeitruey

tog«rag«. quarr y tile floor
u t m oo
LOOM el m u 1 Bdrm

1 batt

on fenced corner lot Walk to

dow n to«rn Very
and VA appr aieed

c&amp;nvefiient

(303) 331-0041
41) W Ifth llrset
Sentord. F IM T II

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

W hile AKC Toy
months old Hot
S IX Call 17) IM4
d u rin g w eek,
weekend!

A D U L T PARK
L I F E T IM E R E N T !
11*0*11*
In c lu d e s w a fe r
g a rb a g e
pick up. yard malnt Im
mediate occupancy
Qrsgsry Mototo H em es.M l))00

haat A air Ilf tM

T ff l N A T U R A L 1 bdrm

3 bath

ham* with aat in bitehan.
mother tn law quartan, can!
haat A air. tcraanad m I m with
pool paddia tana fttft Ml
W ILL B U IL D TO ftU lTl YOUR
LOT OB O U R It K X C LU ftIV l
A G I N T F O R W tN ftO N G
D IV
C O R f* A C E N TR A L
F L O R ID A L C A O IR t M O R I
HOM E FOR Lftftl M O N E Y I
C A L L TO O A Y I
• G E N E V A O ftC EO LAR O a
Z O N E D FOR M O B ILE SI
I Acre Gauntry tractl
X N Down )* Y rt 0) I7VI
Fram t l« ftlOf
If yau art looking for a Hie
catiful caraor tn Real E tfilt,
ftlantfram Raatty H looking
for you Call Lao Albright
today af 331 343d Evanlngt
333 JBA3

LAKE MONROE
St John t
rirer canal front 1 Bdrm 3
Bath almoet new
qualify
built potable mater naytgai
Lie water
ckue in Owner
financing

C A LLA N YTIM E

322-2420
114) PAR K AVE
M l Lk M ery Blvd

Sentord
Lk Me, y

W* Hev* s Limited Number t4
Rape’s tor at Lowes tie* Dow* I

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1120 S, SaRfBTA....r 3^1 A 0 7 S

* DAYTONA AUTO-A
* AUCTION Jr
Hwy 12................ Day tone Beach
* * * * * M om * * * * * *

runic AUTO AUCTION

Poodle 4
all short
attar 4 PM
a n y tlm o

Every Wed Nits at 7: X PM

Fer mere detent
I to* M S U It
D*B*ry Avto A Marine Seles
Acreti the river, top e&lt; hill
111 ftory )7 1) DeBery 4*00144

* * LIMOUSINE* *
iff* Cadillac lima Dark blue
with partition. *2*00 « X 17«f

211—Antiques/
Collectablat

N«*...4...Um 4 Mobil*
Horn* Otilti in (hi* A/ti.

Fam ilies............A
Adults
M M Hwy 1) « _____
i n iroc
PURC HALING
A M O B IL E H O M E !
Free consultation on homes
parks, land. Imancing toning
* l» to. Ron-701 M ) 1X0
R E P O I R EP O I ) bdrm . &gt; bath
mobile homes. t l » f mo Somt
etsumobi* Call A atk lor M '
O r. 104 li t 7)24

W A N T E D BY C O L L E C T O R )
Top prices paid lor baseball,
football cards coins, stamps,
and comic books Call M l
T T IO a n y tlm ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

213—Auctions
A U C TIO N E V E R Y F R I N IG H T

L &amp; E AUCTION

F R E E C R E O IT CHECK BY
P H O N E t F s iy qu4llfylng
Call A atk lor Mr O rr.
*04 Ml 71)4
WOW! ] bdrm
)
d o u b le w id e
ih ln g le d rool.
SI) tcM Call A ask
•04 Ml U N

FOR E S TA TE
C o n m u c U l or R a t i da n f I a I
Aucttoni L Appmiikaii Call
Pall t Auction 333 M3C

bath new
m e s o n ll*
flreploco
tor Mf O rr

215-Boats and
Accessories
11 f taafwing with trallar I I
John ton ft1100
Call ty tftm

319—Wanted to Buy
Beky Aedi. Sfrottor*. Ciettvsl.
Playpens. Bt*. P sp arbsih
11) *177 17) to**
treed Cribs. Playpens. Beby
fg rn llu r* . clo th in g
Good
Prices Alter 7 PM
M l 17U
Paying CASH tor
Aluminum, Cent. Copper.
Brass. Lead Newspaper.
Glass, Gold. Sliver
K o tom o Taoi.tM W 111
I ) 00 Set » 1)7) 1100

P i.m t River Frewf Preperty On
SI iehn’s River, end of Os
leola Road Geneva Seminole
County X ) 14* 47*1

181—Appliances
/ Furniture
la la

alt

tw

239—Motorcycle!
a n d B ik e s

3234513

143—Waterlronl
Property / Sale

Far

WE FINANCE
IM I French Ave...............0 )1 1
P ON TIAC P H O E N IX
Like
new Has everything UOO
miles Asking * )l t f
Call
777 7414
1*71 FO R D O R A N A O A
Needs work Asking UOO
Call M ) 4742
**0) C H I V Y C N E V E T T E
Eacallent working condition
Escelient body Asking S1700
Ckll 22T t*)7 before )P M
N Mustang 4 cyt p t A M FM
caiiatl* E str a Die* 1400
d w n jg m c s lo p a y ^ w e ^

too Sentord Ava
C O NSIG NM EN TS W E LC O M E I

U 1 ED I Mob.l* Homes starting
el *)X0 Call A ask tor Mr
O rr V04 Ml 2 IX

Apngli meat

D ISC O U N T
AUTO
SALES

A

Betoes Fer Sato
P*gk. km feels min burros
Wltce Setot. Hwy stW. W UTS
L* i(* it

in

o — * ...................... m 4 m

221—Good Things
to Eat

WILSON MAIER FUANITUNE
m i l l I lit S T............ 717 *4)1
Ruendittoned Apptlancet
Ir e m U l W A R R A N TY
B AR N ETTS
C A S S ELB E R R Y
s w i l l ) ....................
MB B ID

(

* Where Anybody *
* Can Buy or Sell I *

303—Livestock and
Poultry

• ■callant cancftthan A fwlly

REA LTO R

LIVE BLLIF CRABS
121 *2X

STOP1
•I ftvivbl m

Adult bwrwd i

milnlRlnMl Gra*f cond , vary
claan Mat many anfrai
monay now. mutt M ill i n f . or
bat I offar 137 M44 or JO f i n

341—Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
FOR SALE 1* RV Park Modal
trallar Fine condition, tully
turn Ished. Maat/Alr. screen
ream. paTIa i u r n l l u r * .
carpeted storage shed, *H
Included U.000 firm Prlnci
pies only Call *T7 4TIT
1*7* Haney r toill contained.
A7C. J way
end*
furnace,
retrlgerator.
holding tank. like new (7 000
Call M2 1 X 2

243—Junk C ar!
ANY JU N K CARS A TR UC KS
Bought From It* Si* A mars
Cat) C T 1 U 4 ...................... r o - u u
TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk A
Used car* trucks A heavy
__ etjulpmsnt 121 )**0__
WE PAY TO P D O LLA R FOR
JU N K C A R S AN D TR UCK*
CBS A U TO P A R TS m U M

Wallace Creel Realty,inc
R E A L T O R )| t pfM______

CONSULT OUR

LAR GE HOM E
LA R G E LOT
Oyiet itreet F ib up L taye btgt
) bdrm 3 bam at 34Jt Yale
Priced t^»el. I d *00

CALL BART
R EAL E S TA TE
R E A L T OR
M l 74*0
LONGW OOD ) bdrm . 1 both
New root Low down payment
Owner financing *47 1*4
M i e**7
LONGW OOD I bdrm I *4to
w i t h ) b d rm
i b l t k
mother in lew (e rental apt t
pi vs acre*, peal with strde, I
l l r t p la c a i . m an y s s lra t
Mart hem Weed* Read A#**
Walt I*. Cpswpowy-------

21) *«P*

toe DOWN rMMFNT
Lovely ) Bdrm couni,y home
w ilh yard and big garden
area A llo rd s b l* monthly
payments Call **1 HR*______

NEW HOM E
Lovely ) Bdrm 2 bam with
great room fireplace, eat In
k i t c h e n , d i n i n g ro o m
beautiful wooded to! IT* &gt;00

RHONE 323-1443
Far quality crattmantnip and
compel,live prices let us p i u
Out yeur new home___________
Ne qualifying flaw ) Bdrm I
bath, garage M .X 0
l l &gt; t \ 10 year mortgage
Move right In Call SM40S0
alter 4 PM________________ _ _
Me Oust*tying New ) bdrm I
bath in ) acres Horses ea
Owner financing prim* area
*7* SOB le* 1)17______________
Sentord NIC# 1 bedroom home
with living room dining roam,
family ream, laundry
workshop Call tor in
formation M ) 1to* or tie 41)7
*4) to* or bast Mtor
N | 4i M I N I

STe m p e r
D U P LE X Positive cash ttow
Owner will I'nonet S4l KX
w im * i) 000 down
G E N * V A Like new double
Wide 1 bdrm 1 bam m o t- to I
acres ctoared. fenced Storage
shed, pony stall M l.M O
Terms

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993
Special Notice
WE N A V I M A N Y O P E N
LIS TIN G S
JU S T FOR YOU
CALL TO D A Y
12) 1*11
a o e a a a a a *

Law n Service

P la ile rln g

Anything Electrical U n ci l*7»i
Estimates ...14 Nr. Service Cells
Tool's Electric Seryke MI-TM*
C O N TE M P O R A R Y ( L I C T R I C
Cumpleto Etoctrkal Service*
T V 4 Telephones
1)1)177

ACE LA W N S E R V IC E
7V\jinfamnet
Piuninft
(leaning Thatch.ng FertiliiUvg
Proa bs Nr u Sps...............M* * m

a ALL Phams *4 Plastering P
Repair, U n ci# Hard Coal.
Simula tod Reich *11 W )

Additions A
Remodeling
REM00CLING SPECIALIST

Fence

W* Hindis

The Whole Ball Of Wsi

B E. U N I CONS!

322 7029
^ ^ ^ F m a m ^ ^ v a U a b t^ ^ ^ ^

Appliance Repair

IN S T A L L ...S IL L A R EP A IR
Cypress
Cham L M
Fane* IT) 1711
s a s s s s s s s s t s s a *
Build a Bigger Business I
Ut* The Herald ciattiliadt
C A L L TO O A Y
T2T M U

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

AJIgm AppkMC* Some*
*4hr. Savvies Ht latra Charge

Heal th g Beauty

^ jT ^ y r^ e tjja b s a e M T a A U ^

C a rp e n try
A G R EA T O IF T I Hava Her
Kitchen Kernels tod I All typeset
Keasenehto Prices

Veer Relishis.
af carpentry 4 rq
med*ling 27 yre ssp Ceil
R tc h # r^ rp * ^ M M f2 ^ ^ ^ ^

Cleaning Service
Carpet

Roam 4 Hall 12* M
lata a O u s t . s x .O T u u

HOUSE NEED HELP?
Ta i toon up your problams

Call
1210*74
Low rstos. white gieve work

C A LL A N Y T IM E
R E A L TO R m m i

Cleanliness is not) Te Godliness
Call His helpers I
Guaranteed Service Low Ratos

11000 da w n . Assum ab le
Bdrm . 2 bath. D BL garage
large lanced yard Cali I f )
tn *

Electrical

0 4 ) Electric
M) X X
New 4 remodeling edd.lioni,
tent, security lights, timers
plus *H elec Mfvitss Quality
Service Licensed 4 4*«dad

O TH E R HOM ES. LOTS.
A C R E A G E IN V E S T M E N T
P R O P E R TY

H I T W IT H USI_______

14*4HWY 111)

IM M A C U L A TE ) bdrm I bath
home wttti cent beat A air,
fenced yard, tp rinkier lyitem.
dining ream MY.fH

ftsdCudit?
No Crtdilf
Wt FI NANCE

Ability Kanwtls
P O Bai 1*1 127 222*
Osteon, Fla M T * 4 ___
F R E E TO G O O D N O M E
O N L Y I Cock* poo female
shots A spayed M l JOBS
K ITTE N S
Fre* to good home Beautiful A
■eelthy Ml M il

M O R E H O M 1 1 TH A N
A N Y O N E IN NORTH
S E M IN O LE CO U N TY

KISH REAL ESTATE

freest

323*5774

R E A L T Y *R E A L T O R

I bdrm
I ba»*
or attumo J ‘d \ tftt
morfgAg* Owner wilt Nqid 7«xJ

O PEN SUN DAYS I le I PM

SAILPOINTE

lenith 2) color television Ovig
inal price over UOO Balance
due U44 00 cash or take over
payments *21 month Still in
w a rra n ty
NO M O N E Y
DOWN Free home trial, no
Ob'igalion Call 102 12*4. day

153—Condominiums
Co Op / Sale

|S|(lM«41lH"BMt- 41*sWtlilif*

131—Condominium
Rentals

4 4COLOR TEL E V IS IO N • *

12000 dwn *247 mo 5 acres 170
It
p a v e d rd
fro n ta g e
homesitoinomobiietl M ) *0X
4 acres partly cleared wafer A
electric M l 000 By
17) OOP*

m

117—Commercial
Rentals
O P E N TH EO TO R R E N T to
small contractor
m i u rn ________________________
Retail A Office Space XX up to
2.300 so ft also storage avail
able 12) 140)

113—Television /
Radio/Stereo

153—AcreageLots/Safe

m M«4or jn w i

D U P LE X FOR K E N T Cedar
Ave } Bdrm . ) Bam. ms.de
Utilities, carport 0400 per
month ♦ *200 security Call
17* 7444
10*1 B Mellonyilto 7 Bdrm
I
bom. air. app1lances 1)1) per
month plus *M1 security de
posit Call M l X41___________

X fa 1

adults, ne pats.
Starting i*4 0X0 * me
IpwM ry. Otartmg
CqO R H K K sw

C A S S E LB E R R Y I acre
PR l SA) 000 W Maliclowski.
R E A L TO R
j ?7 reej

Decal Machines ) T shirt. I hat.
A t patch machine Assorted
decals R oach la ttic in g ,
assorted *to&gt; ctl* *1000 or boil
offer m ) a

331-Cars

Saturday from

_
to rent a beautiful I
Bdrm apt to Oetond 17*0 per
month ptut security Senior
cllloqns discount
Call X O lM ta n anytime
tower Downtown ] bdrm 1 bam
c a r p e l , i p p 11 • n c a a .
Downstairs apt No pet* U »
a me . 0X0 security J U l l l T .
or MIOMO_____________ ___
IX
I bath
177) mo I 7*1 7Ha
M mutes
L Matrons
tram Hwy

151 —Investment
Property / Sale

C E N TU R Y II
KISH H E A L E S T A T E

133—For Lease

FOR R E N T I Bdrm . apart
man! furnished 1X0 00 par
m o n t h _____ ______ I I ) 0041
Furn Apis tor Samar Cltlient
)i I Palmetto Ave
J Cowan No Phone Calls
Hugh ) bdrm apartmsnI Me* )
(M ldrsn Complete privacy
1100 par week plus S IX tecur I
ly deposit Call M l m »
Lake M ary Furn Apt lor
Single working man. no kids
or pats C ellsfte r) m W X
Furnished Ms Bdrm
near town S4) wk , S IX sac
M ) 0)04. svet________________
Lavsly I kdrm. Efficiency
Partoc! tor l parson Complete
privacy 040 wk Includes util
s i x sec dsp i n no*_________

e R E N T TO O W N *
Color TV4
dryers, retrlgtrelor. treaieri
turnlfur*. video recorders
Special tit week's rant i l 00
Altornettve TV A Appl. Renttli
teyres l hipylng Center
___________ M Y WOO____________
Used Washers gs rfl A Service
ter Kewmare*--------- 111*4*7
MO O N E Y A P P LIA N C E S

C O M M E R C IA L 1P E C IA LIS T
L A K E M AR Y R E A L T Y
BOB B A L L .iN .....
512 7144

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

Call.

C E N TU R Y )l
KI1H R IA L E S TA TE

Sanlord. Fla
C A LL
D H 4 N ...... .................

bdrm . large living
kitchen Wilt! appliances U d
deposit H i X X
) Bdrm . I bath, wall to wall
carpel yard. IN K par weak,
includes all utilities Deposit
O X Ceil M ) *4M or M l 0*47
1 bdrm . 1 bath, Detox* Apt.O X security deposit U t o per
monlh Call O T 4 1 U

333 — M iscellaneous

1SI —Appliances
/ Furnitur*

149—Commercial
Properly / Sale

I

Monday. June 17, tWS— 3&gt;

M A ID S -Te -OfBe*

C A U N O W 3390840
Base Ctoan.ng, laundry, wits
dews cabmotA iUo.*4c
Oend Work Lew Kales m a re *

TO W E R 'S B E A U T Y U L O N
F O R M E R L Y Her Metis Baoufy
SI* E Itt Si W))742

H om e Im pro vem ent
Collier-i ■ eliding B
Ne Jab Too Shull
I I I Burton Lane.
___________ » i 4 i n
THOM AS 4 THOMAS
repair, (leaning, lawn ,

Cad H I turn.

H om e R epair!

CARPENTER

Repairs and
remodeling No lob too small
Caii m to u ________________ _
AA*,ntononc* of *11 lypas
Carpentry painting, plumbing
end electric m an

Landclearing
G E N E V A L A N C X H A R IN G
Lot- Landclearing
Fill dtrt
topsail Pends Dtain dflchot
Srto Preparation Call Sea IPX
TH O R N E L A N 0 C L IA R IN 4

FILLDIRT r CLAY •
SHALE a MAULING 07 MM

t * e

B E A T TH E HE A TI

P lu m b in g

n

Call Ctimtiin Bret,
j
^Compltti La *n Can
Rgasanabli Rilts

3234401
Lawn Maintenance
landscaping Bush Hog Mowing

________ Ut X*) ________
LAWNS MOWED I TRIM MED
*prK*f Yard Ctoao opO— M U t o l

Quality Law it Cars

a llB fU c t • I
• f ee I ilim a lii | I1 IM M a

Secretarial Service
Sewing M a c h in e !/
V a cu um C le a n e r!
M a c h u C T e p a J r T ” all
makes ]S y rt * .per ierve* in
hemal Rallied all 4/ti____

S p rin k le r!/ Irrig a tio n

Af After debt# Prices M l **7&gt;

Masonry
E E A L C a m rsto JM a n Qualify
Oparafton Psfiot Drlvowayt
D ijij)M U )H v * i^ n a i

ABO UT T IM E IR R IG A T IO N
New Installation*
Proa I I I .
1 1 part Repairs of Complete
Sprinkler Systems
... Timor*
Pumps
Etc
tto X U

Tile

H urtin g C are
OUR R ATES AR E LO W E R
LaAavlaw Horsing CooAsr
FIFE Second SI .
IT) 47*7

Painting
A Way T* Sevsl Eos
4esf Prices tor wellpagering.
♦ more Ref Very

HaatiTXM

F ka#iA i fiftolril A JWU'Nftaw
IS y rt Csp
Fra* E lf
Bonded
Insured
W G T R IB B Y
X I ME)
News* Painting 4 Wall Repair
Yen hey me tor 1*11
tor T* S A V E MS
&gt;1) 1711
P O LAN D PAI N T I N G Spraying
Pstihing
Gsrftorwor*
Fra* Itlimoto*
17) 744*
patof your Horn* er Businoes
e*t Giro to w prtotomt to UA
w e CARE Quality war*. M
yre e.p W tto’ Lie cant

A M TIL E C orom k III* sal** 4
Installation
B * lh . floors,
remodeling, repairs Left af
S lld l. design*, p s lt s r n t .
grout*, salting m aterials,
clsanars. c*m *nt. m a n ic ,
ih in u t installations Show
room. M7 E TV h SI . Sanlord
John Parhor. Tito Contractor
M2 TX C *r SOS tops
Sc* « mean Tito Ceramic. Vinyl
Asbestos, ate Installed 4 re
poirod E*p . ref , |i&lt; Fro*
estimates M ) 4 141

Tree Service
Ail Tree Serv e .
c PM
ECHOLS T R E E S E R V IC E
Free I if ms* tot I Low PrScosI
Ins Slump Grinding.Tool
M* M Tt day er Mto
'Let Ww P vs to iiU M lc d e l
JOHN A L L E N * LA W N 4 T R I E
Dead he* removal L k 4 Inc
Free eel M l U U

Lie

�* f •t *

0

9

*B — Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Mender- June 17. I N I

by Chic Young

by Mori Walktr

BEETLE BAILEY
O n .Y E A H T/W H A Tfe

TrfAT FLOAT I MS
C M TOP O F YOUR
C O F F E E ?’

THE BORN LOSER

by An Sansom
' u j0/S h v '

by Bob Montana

ARCHIE
WOW" G«GAT T
FIU C P OUT AN
APPLICATION ANP (3 0 T
C B EPTT C A R P *
&gt;

PO NT THINK S O '
GOT A POUAR-FIPTy
C R E P IT L IN E ,'

v\T^

by Howls Schneider

eek a m eek

THE VWtSA* I'M A\MW FTOM
HOMLSD MUCH THEFT'S MO
COMMUfJICATlCfJ eCTMOJ US

OUST CAkfT READ

ear sHts

wrdkjg theros
LOTS OF GDMMUfJICATICAJ

HER HAAJDWRfTlMG

e£.TVj«&gt;j us..

~y~

Vitamin B Helps Some
People Fight Depression
DEAR DR G O TT - I have
heard that B-complex vitamins
may act as antidepressants. Is
this true?
DEAR READER — I. too. have
heard this, but I've yel to see It
scientifically confirmed.
A vitamin deficiency can cer­
tainly cause depression, so Bcomplex therapy could reverse
that stale — If the person were
vttamln-deflclent to begin with.
If you are depressed (and not
nutritionally deprived), there are
more appropriate methods o f
t r e a t me n t . O c c a s i o n a l d e ­
pression Is a normal human
experience. Persistent or severe
depression Is more effectively
treated medically than by diet.
Also, "m egadoses'' of some U
vitamins can cause nerve dam­
age.
DEAR DR G O TT — Is vliamln
C of anv value In fighting a cold?
DEAR READER - No studies
have shown that vitamin C
affects the virus that causes
colds. In one experiment, how­
ever. Investigators concluded
(hat cold sufferers who look
vliamln C felt belter than those
who did not. There may be some
j u s t i f i c a t i o n In t a k i ng the
v i t a m i n If It w i l l r e d uc e
symptoms But. vitamin C or
not. Ibe cold will run Its course.
DEAR DR. G O T T - Will
vliamln E help to prevent heart
attacks?
DEAR READER - I am un­
aware of any valid evidence that
vitamin E helps to prevent heart
attacks. Although research Is
tiring carried out because the
effects o f vi tami n E are In­
completely understood. It has
n o t b e e n s h o w n to e x e r t
cardiovascular protection.
DEAR DR. G O TT - Whal
causes ulcers?
DEAR READER Nobody
knows for sure. However, we do
know that two situations exist In
ulcer sufferers.
Glands In the stomach lining
produce acid lor digestion. This
lining Is protected by a coaling
o f mucus that prevents (he
gastric add from digesting the
st omach Itself. Nonetheless,
given enough acid, the mucus
l&gt;arrler can be breached and a
sore — an ulcer — can form on
Ihc part of the stomach' that Is

unprotected.
The stomach's contents empty
Into the duodenum, a portion of
the small Intestine This first
section of the small bowel Is the
place where alkaline digestive
Juices continue the process that
started In the mouth and stom­
ach. Although the duodenum
releases digestive compounds.
Its lining Is not protected by an
acid-resistant mantle. Ordinari­
ly. stomach food neutralizes

ACROSS

stomach acid, but tf enough
un-neutrallzed acid gets Into the
duodenum. It can bum a hole tn
the Intestinal wall An ulcer can
result.
Send fo u r questions to Dr.
C olt at P .O Box 91428. Cleve­
land. O h io 4 4 101.
Answar to Previous Putrla

Eight
Not opon
Sunhowar Stats

I Diamonds 1st)
6 _____Sr* rtd

(abbr)

I I Doaswl pastry

Thus (Lot I
Rand
Madicai sutfn

13 Nun's
hssddrtss
14 Immsdiatsly (3
Froths
wdsl
Datactivs
15 Should* (Fr.)
Quaon
16 Gorman srtid# 10 Shabby
17 Mrs, w Madrid 12 Musical symbol
labbrl
13 Arms
19 Of Soiling
IB Not cooksd
Isb6r|
21 Apannmo
20 Actor Montand
inhabitant
22 Knock
23 Mora narvous
23 MyStSnouS
25 Basaball glova
24 Dutch choaso
27 Traa kinds
26 Forsatad
29 Europaan
28 Groat
nation
30 Raquoat
33 CNans
rspoatodly
31 No*r auttn

43 Unpleasant

34 Saaport of tha
Philippines
35 Actor Brynnar
37 Seasoning
38 Plunging
39 Soapwead
41 Horae
directives

48 Far (prif |
49 Openings
51 Terms hit
52 Highsat nota

32 Glida on snow
33 Brttarty cold
36 Dispatch
39 Ivy Laagua
mambar
40 Stain
42 Oamsgo
44 Enttrtainmsnt
*group |abbr |
45 Frothy brow
46 Now Daat
product (abbr |
47 Shaittiah
50 Roama
53 Stalk vagataMa
64 Spithaad
55 Italian
communa
56 Loosa

DOWN

I1

n

14

&gt;1
44
4?

41

,J
41

•1
It

t Ava-lablo

&lt; c )isa s b , H I A l«c

WIN AT BRIDGE

SLJIt
by Hargroavaa I Sellers

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

3

GIRAFFE’S
' CAN £EE
EX'EKYTW NG'

Tty Jam es Jacoby
Ask some o f your bridge
|&gt;artnent (o make six hearts on
the opening lead of a spade The
smart ones will say. "Sure."
Whal will be their line of play?
I’lay the spade king, ruff after
East goes up with the ace. and
Irad a club toward the queen.
It West ducks the ace. win the
queen, shed the king of clubs on
(he spade queen, draw trumps
and give up a diamond If West
rises Immediately with the club
ace. you'll have two diamond
discards on the black queens.
So bet

th ey're

w rong

On

by Warnar Brothara d ecla rer's play of dummy ' s
ttV T

G\&gt;'

A V?

a s a l OCT w o u ld
: o C

2

. ^

spade king, have East refuse to
lake the ace. Now declarer has to
take his discard loo soon, before
he has led up to the club queen.
Finally, when you're being

congratulated on being clever
and cute, bet that you can make
the hand after ull How do you do
It? Simple. On the lead of a low
spade, play low from dummy.
Now you can ruff and lead a low
club to the queen once aguln.
If West ducks, you win the
queen, rulf out the spade ace by
Icudlng the king from dummy,
and get back to dummy with u
trump to discard the club king. II
West takes the club ace right
away, you can still ruff out the
spade ace and get two diamond
discards as before.
How could East know to duck
If declarer plays the spade king
at trick one? If the bidding Is as
shown, the five-spade cue-bid by
South shows a spade void, and
so playing the ace at once really
gains nothing

NonTM

*111*

♦ K Q«
y q ii

♦ KM

♦ QI 7 2
WEST

EAST

♦ V7 2

♦AJI0I5C

W ftS
♦ QI091

♦ J I

♦ U l l

♦104*
SOI'Til
♦ -..

♦ AKJ 10 7 4 2

♦ A7J 2
♦ K«

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer East
Weal
Sooth
North Eaal
«Y
)♦
SY
Fan
l’ a&gt;» *♦
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Pan
Pass
Pan
Pai*
Opening lead 42

HOROSCOPE

i i
by Bob Thavaa

What The Day
Will Bring...
YOUR B IR T H D A Y
JUNE 1 8 .1 0 8 8
In Ihc year ahead you will take
oni greater re*|x&gt;nalbllltles In
vour chosen field. Although you
will be working harder, you will
also receive greater compensa
tlon.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)
Even though your Intentions will
lx- sincere when dealing wtlh
friends today, you might slight
s o m e o n e
t h r o u g h
thoughtlessness. T ryin g to patch
up a romance? The Matchmaker
set ran help you understand
what It might take to make the
relationship work T o get yours,
mail 82 to Astro-Graph. Box
4B9. Radio City Station. New
York. NY 10019
CANCER (June 2I Oul y 221 In
your mind's eye today you may
see things as completed when. In
reality, they arc only half done.
Don't quit belore the whistle

ANNIE

n r

•e »

1Y r

w *

♦ r

»♦ r

▼ r

-f c '

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 Jan
LEO (July 23 Aug. 221 Im­ 10| One way to rapture the boss'

blows.

portant matters should be at­
tended to as early as possible
today. If you let things drag on.
It'll considerably lessen your
chances for success.
VIRQO ( Aug 23-Sept. 22)
Major career objectives can be
achieved today, provided you’re
umbltluus and bold enough to go
after whal you want. Be forceful,
not wishful.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
You'll be able to handle weighty
measures with relative ease to­
day. but this may not be true of
your companions Make allow ­
ance for their frailties.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
An opportunity to profit through
the auspices of another may
present Itself today. Don't be
fearful tf the project la larger
than ones you normally handle.
• A O IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23 Dec.
21) Your initial assessment of
situations today wtU be quite
accurate. However, tf you begin
to over-analyse th in gs, u n ­
real 1stIc doubts may arise.

attention and approval today Is
lo treat the assignments he or
she gives you as conscientiously
asyuu know how.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 Feb 19) ,
You'll be reasonably fortunate
when taking chances on things
today that are well thought out.
but blind gambles should d e fi­
nitely be avoided.
PIBCE8 (Feb 20 March 20) Do
not let e v e nt s dictate your
courses o f action today. Instead,
t ukr c h a r g e o f m a t t e r s
personally and head them to
serve your needs.
ARIES (Marrh 21-Aprtl 19)
Others will be more cooperative
toward you today tf you present
y o u r p r o p o s a l s In a
straightforward fashion Keep It
simple and eliminate all the
frills
TAURUS (April 2GMay 20)
Your possibilities for personal
gain arr still strong. Don't let an
undeserving onlooker make you
feel guilty because he or she Isn't
Included.

by Loonard Starr

tc

6% Sf r

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