<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/items/browse?collection=78&amp;output=omeka-xml&amp;page=25" accessDate="2026-05-20T11:46:01+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>25</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>316</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="15248" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="14862">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/a16b102e266eeb62a15acc15d4c82c1c.pdf</src>
        <authentication>f28bfc1fdd6da0ee33a05c22f724c843</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="152147">
                    <text>77th Year, No. 193 Friday, April 5, 1985— Sanford, Florida

S a n fo rd
By Deane Jordan
H erald Stafr W riter
In an unexpected move today.
Sanford Police Chief Ben Butler
announced he will retire at the
end of this month.
His retirement on April 30 will
end 34 years of police work with
the Sanford Police Department.
17 of them as chief of the second
largest police department In the
county.
Butler. 55. who had said he
wanted to stay on as chief until
at least May. 1987, said his
derlson to retire was based
solely on discussions with his

P o lic e

mayor, city commissioners and
the city manager.
It read: "I hereby tender my
letter of retirement from services
as the police chief for the city of
Sanford My retirement shall be
effective at midnight. April 30.
1985."
Butler was promoted to traffic
sergeant In 1956. lieutenant In
October. 1962. captain In 1965
and chief November. 1967.

*HU «. i$$t
I w l o t l C lt f C o a a iiiiM

fr$$i

'It’s o u r o a s is
in th e ju n g le
of c iv iliz a tio n .'

I
e o lic * C h i . t

CM*
M e $ of r* g M &gt; $ t » c « i v $ 4 $ l a t t e r o f i t t i t a M s i
a U » Ik a H I m I I h 4 a la c f
at

| ro a

tmm S l l . r

I i t l « l
a c t to n e .
t| H l
•(

T»a I M IIM

&gt; »• C l t f C « H | « l a a i . l t l , — . i
}0 t h 1 1 a *•» ? a b o r t | | a a a a a j.
S lit

I , i m

«

l.

I .

n w ih ,

• &lt; 1 .1 1 n „ | H

l,ll“
• * • »» *•■*•*»••• I n
, K « C l t f Cm i . i I m l a t a c a l . a a
t i l l at
r».a C l t f Cm i i i i m
M a i I . f«r&gt; a &gt; t C M .
• * " f , — e m l f ta f v la g .
M . a , t l u i &gt; « . ta a la a ta c , i « . . . .
■ • f a c ia l t a i . i a I t u , i
T k a ,, f i K a a n . i a f . u a . l a - t a . . .
• f . a , t , i l •• a a l a . a a a t u l a a 4 * a r l l i l a f .
kl

la k a x ia .

im

aa|y • r r llc a a l a lt k

IN a r k f a l M k a a i a aa t k a k i y k a . t

*•••*. *•
*&gt;•••
• * « » • H l t l l ' i la y r a a la C l l k l M l
f a l l le a f l a k l l a k I I I
a . . la x ,a ,4 r a llt a U lr ic a , .. 4
I t l f a a l k a . I k . a l l l a l a a i c , a a ..a t a ,
k l l i c k a l la a r a y ,
tk a a , m a . a ..a a l f l a a c i l i a , l a l a , a y a l l c a a k l a l .
k o la ,|
lk « « lia a a c a lla f . a , a a i.a ia llf | ia f c a llM II ,.a , a . , , . ,
aak
M a n a a a i n a a r a ,la a a a i m M i b i a . r a , - l a l a a a M a ^ i . i a l r a l la a .
«l

Ta a v a i l t . r a a l l a ll k la i k . la a a r la a a t . |
la M la ta
a c l l a a a . tk a C l l f r a a i i a l a a l a t a t aa l k k i a i k . a l l a t a t k a
' • * * " " * ' ►» * * " l • * !» t a a * i l v l l k C k l a l k a t l a , l a , ik a
•a a a l a U a l l l t a a . I l l , « a r a .

kl

H a v a S a il t a i l
tk a a a a a ila a a a i
la a a a , l a
a la .
a la i m a a l l a l a

&gt;a Ik a M l , r a t a a a a l t k ik a a l l r a l a l a k « a a l | | l a a t la a a ,
Ik a a k a l a l a l i a t I v . a k l l l l f i ik a . . i . m m ! a u | n &gt; ,
i . . . a tv a i k a t a a l a i k r a l l c a a a « M l a i m ik a
a ll,

|
*» • c i l f ( w a a i M
iM k i.i.l, a ^ i . i
a a t l a * f a l l a a c k l a l , l a a l i a f Ik a l l a a l a , I k a c i v i l l a , v i v a k a a ,4 l a
l a a c t la I k a l , a a ia a l , ' x M . i a a
O a ca Ik a C i v i l l a , v i a . k a a ik kaa
I k . a v a ll a f c la a . l t a . u . I t la .......................... ....
C ltf ( M a l a
a r r a i.t
■ • r r r a u Ik e p o itc o c * i« r

B a t n .il
i
aaa

m

a i...

W«/**4
I

m

CC«

loow t

C i v i l i e r v t o e lv e t $

Above, the memo Knowles sent to commissioners
recommending appointment of Steve Harriett as
acting police chief, then permanent chief.

o

Taking Stock: Faison's First Days
drive In morning or out In the evening past
Lake Monroe. Thut's better than two
aspirins." he said.
lie and outgoing City Manager Warren
"P ete" Knowles will work together until
Kriowlrs retires April 30 after 32 years of
service to the city.
On Thursday he attended a brown bag
luncheon with department managers at city
hall. He said he plans to spend the next two
weeks getting to know more of the staff and
planning for the city's budget proceedings
which start at Ihe end of the month.
In the meantime, he is looking for a home
In Sanford. Ills wife. Lyn. und (heir
19 year old daughter. Pulrtctu. will move

U n e m p lo y m e n t S te a d y
WASHINGTON (U l’l) — The unemployment
rate remained at 7.3 percent In March. Ihe
Labor Department reported today, the same
ngure aa In February. Civilian joba were the
highest on record but some 8.4 million
Americana w ere still out of work.
“ Employment roac markedly in March, and
unemployment waa unchanged." the Labor
Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics re­
ported. The reason. It said, was because the
iubor market continued to expand In March.
Th e unem ploym ent rate has remained
essentially unchanged since last fall although
It remains high by historical standards.
Civilian employment rose by 430.000 people
during Ihe month and “ the proportion of the
civilian population with Jobs was the highest
ever recorded.” the Labor Department said.

(USPS

481 280)

—

Price

Cents

from the FBI. He also received a
distinguished service award
In August. 1974. Butler was
appointed to be criminal Justice
a dvisor lo the East Central
F lo r id a R e g io n a l P la n n in g
Counsel which was at ihe time
developing programs to reduce
crim e In the Central Florida
area.

See FAISON, page 5A

'Therapeutic* Faison calls his office
view of Lake Monroe.

Drug Raids Put 3 Behind Bars
By Susan Loden
H erald S ta ff W r lts r
In predawn rulds on two Sanford
h om es to d a y S a n fo rd p o lic e und
Seminole County SW AT team members
nabbed three suspected drug dealers and
confiscated quantities of LSD. cocaine
und marijuana.
S a n fo rd p o lle r spokesm an Keith
Wright said one of the homes, at 1010
Mcllonvtllc Avc., was still being searched
at I I a.m. today following a 6:15 a m.
raid. He said lawmen were pleased with
their success at that address where Oscur
Krdden. 39. was charged with possession
of coralne.
Krdden Is a former Semlnolr County
sheriffs sergeant who was convicted In

Frburary on a charge o f possession of
cocaine, lie was scheduled to be sen­
tenced on that charge March 19. but
sentencing was postponed.
Wright did not know Ihe quantity or
value of the drugs seized today. He said
Iwo fire arms were reportedly found In
the other home raided.
T w o men were arrested at that second
house, which was the first hit by the
officers at about 6 a.m.. Wright said. At
2801 Knudsen Drive. Roy I’llngr was
charged wtlh possession of less than 20
grams of a controlled substance and
Claude Robertson was charged with
possesson of LSD and quaaludes. Wright
said.
Bee RAIDS, page SA

By Rick Brunson
H erald S ta ff W r ite r
All of Sanford s city commis­
sioners as well as the mayor said
they were surprised today over
Police Chief Ben Butler's an­
nounced retirement, but they're
almost evenly divided over l hr
city manager's recommendation
that Assistant City Manager
Sieve Harriett be appointed lo
Ihe (tost.
Muller hand-delivered the an­
nouncement of his retirement
effective April 30 lo each of the
commissioners today.
Mayor Bettye Smith said she
knew Butler was going to retire
year "b u t

I d u l n 'i

know

It

was going lo he so soon ”
Commissioner Milton Smith
said. “ This was n surprise to me
... bul after talking with him. hr
Steve Harriett
feels good about II and s o | feel
good about II ... He's been a good
who Is qualified for the Job
chief and hr deserves some lim e
Harriett hus a master's degrrr In
for some real living.”
criminal Justice and was a San­
Com m issioner Bob Thom as ford poller offk-er for five years,
said be was su rprised and three o f which he was assistant
“ saddened" by word of Butler's police chief. Knowles suld.
eurly retirement
“ I was hoping I could work
lint Commissioners Thomas
with him for another one or Iwo and John Mercer wrrr lllfrd al
years." Thomas said. “ It kind of Ihr recommendation and salt)
strikes a sad note with me. I M's up lo Ihr commission to
would have liked lo see him decide whom lo hire
grow — especially In bis dealings
Thomas said Knowles Is " tr y ­
with black people" However. ing lo pull a squeeze play" and
Thomas said he resents Ihe city ramrod Harriett Inin Ihr Job
m a n a g e r p u ttin g w h a l hr without considering Ihe com
termed "pressure" on commls
mission.
sinners to name Harriett (Hiller
"I really resent this I really do
chief.
I think he could have said what
Th e commissioners arc sched­ hr wanted lo say und led Ihr
uled lo meet ut 4 p m. today al decision up lo us ... Our In­
city ball to discuss appointing an telligence Is tiring questioned
acting chief to work with Butler und he Is doing everything hr
until he retires They will also ran lo pul Steve in." Thomas
request Ihe city's Civil Service said.
Board (o begin a search for a
Hr suld someone from within
replacement for Ihe chief. The
Bee CHIEF, page BA
board will advertise for Ihe post
and review Ihe applications It
receives for Ihe next 30 to 45
days, according lo City Manager
Warren "P e te " Knowles.
But Knowles said In view of
Ihe ch ief s Impending drpunure.
Action Reports............... 3A
Ihe department nerds an acting
Bridge............................I0A
chief to work with Butler fight
Calendar........................
17A
aw ay He has recom m ended
Classifieds................ 11 UA
Harriett be appointed acting
Comics......................... I0A
ch ief Im m ediately, and that
Crossword..................... 10A
Harriett be named permanent
Dear A bby..................... 9A
ch ief after Ihe Civil Service
Deaths............................ 2A
Board completes lls procedures
Dr. Lamb. .................... 10A
In a memo lo the commission
Editorial......................... 4A
obtained by Ihe Evening Herald.
Florida............................2A
Knowles said. "Once the Civil
H oroscope.................... I0A
Service Board has reviewed the
Hospital........................ SA
available criteria. It Is recom­
Nation.............................2A
mended the city commission
People............
9A
appoint Steve Harriett the police
Sports.......................... 6 8A
c h ie f"
Television................Leisure
Knowles said Harriett Is the
Weather........................ SA
only city employee he knows
W orld............................ 5A

TODAY

Anti-Porn Ordinance Gets First OK In Lake Mary
By Roger Simmons
Harold S ta ff W rltsr
A proposed - ordinance that
would rrgu lu te adult en te r­
tainment facilities In Lake Mary
was given tentative approval by
Ihe city commission on s 3-1
vote Thursday night.
The proposal would make It
difficult for adult book stores,
adult motion picture theaters,
massage establishments or adult
d a n cin g e s ta b lis h m e n ts to
operate In Lake Mary. There are

no udult entertainment (arllttlea
In the city at this time.
The proposed ordinance will
come up for final approval st the
commission's April 18 meeting.
Commissioner Harry Terry,
who cast the lone negative vote,
wanted to toughen the measure
Terry wanted to change the
ordinance lo ban adult enter­
tainment facilities from within a
1.000 feet o f a church, school or
liquor stare, rather than the 500
feet stipulated.

He also wanted application
and Investigation rees raised
Under the proposed ordinance
an application fee of $75 would
be charged by the city aa well as
other fees for running back­
ground checks on owners and
workers.
Although the commissioners
agreed to the l.OOO-foot pro­
posal. Terry's other attempts to
get tougher with potential adult
businesses were met with stiff
oposttkm.

City Attorney Robert Pelrre
said the purpose of the ordi­
nance Is lo "reasonably regu­
late" such facilities and discour­
age adult entertainment facilities
from locating In Lake Mary.
But. he said if the commis­
sioners made the ordinance too
tough It might be considered too
harsh and be d eclared un­
constitutional.
"In short. I wouldn't mess
with It." Petree said. " I f you go
loo far In this ordinance and

Ben Butler

Butler's Move
Surprise; City
M anager Says
Hire Harriett

th is
mt. nor r let t te ta e « « # ii to 8 r « e » l the e r a « i i t i M t ee $ o iu $ c h ie f.
T M » M e le e « It e c s ii M otth n r . frene re ie ra .

See REZONING, page 5A

How Sanford will handle growth Is In the
forrfront of new Sanford City Manager
Frank Faison's thinking He spent his Itrst
(rw days on the Job cruising the area and
getting to know the stall at city hall.
“ Growth Is humping every community up
1-4,” hr said "And It's knocking on the door
of Sanlord."
He said he will be tuklng stock of
Sanford's resources for coping with the
growth In the curly days aiui months of his
administration.
Faison's first day was Wednesday. From
his unsettled office on the second floor of
city hall he has a good view o f Lake Monroe
ucross the street, u sight hr says Is
“ therapeutic."
"It's a very therapeutic thing to either

—

B u tler, w h o 's m a rrie d lo
Nuncy Butler and has three
During his years on the San­ children, served In the U S .
ford police force. Butler earned Coast Guard from 1947 lo 1950
numerous certificates of train­ and Joined the- (Killer force a year
ing. Including one in firearms laier.

Knowles’ Memo To Commissioners

f$i

r e s id e n tia l p la y g ro u n d for
youths und adults. They say
other money could lie found to
Improve the school.
A group of 18th Street resi­
dents have been circulating a
petition calling for the com ­
mission to deny the rrzonlng. As
of 7 p m. Thursday about 350
signatures has been collected,
according lo Sylvia Smith, of
425 W I Hib St.
“ I do not want u shopping
center In my front yurd." Ms.
Smith told the commission. She
said the commissioners, whom
she termed as "our public guard­
ia n s .” w ou ld be s e ttin g a
d a n g e r o u s p r e c e d e n t If It
approved the rezonlng of the
residential area.
Beading from the petition, she
also said there were already
e n o u g h s h o p p in g c e n t e r s
“ within u five minute drive from
anywhere In the city.”
Seven other residents spoke
ugalnsl the rezonlng. with one
woman. Dot Young, of 220 W.
18th St., saying she didn't care If
the school board got “ $600
m illion" for Ihe property.
“ It's our oasis In the Jungle of

Herald

C h ie f R e t ir in g

family. He emphasized he was "o n ly an estim ate” and he
under no pressure front any city
planned to stay on the force
official to retire and has been through 1987 and perhaps two
eligib le to retire for several or three years after that.
years.
“ I certainly won t be leaving
“ After I talked with m y family.
I decided that now Is the time I before 1987.” he said during a
previous Interview about city
want to retire. I need to relax a
while. I have no specific future leaders nearing retirement.
plans at the moment but while I
Butler's decision opens one of
am relaxing. I will be thinking nine key positions In the city
about 11.“ he said today.
that are e x p e c te d to op en
A year ago Butler, who Joined because o f retirements during
the police department as a rook­ the mfxt three years.
ie on July. 7, 1951 and rose
Butler hand delivered the one
through the ranks to chief, said
that his retirement date was -paragraph resignation to the

Residents Win First Round
Against Shopping Center
R esid en ts n ear a 1 0 -acre
playground across from Sanford
Middle School won the first
round Thursday In their fight to
keep a shopping center from
going on the property.
About 80 residents packed the
commission chambers at city
hall and cheered when the vote
was tallied By u 7 to 2 margin
the Sanford Planning and Zon­
ing Commission voted to deny
developer Don Huber's request
to rezone most o f the parcel from
residential to commercial The
frontage of the property ulong
French Avenue Is already zoned
commercial.
The I* A Z bourd's recommen­
dation will go to the Sanlord City
Commission April 2 2 .
In February Huber, o f Huber
Construction In Orlando, offered
to purchase the land from the
Seminole County School Board
for $600,000 on the condition
thut II be rezoned and the school
board agreed. Huber wants to
build a I 1 0 ,0 0 0 -square-foot
center complete with a grocery
store, departm ent store and
smaller shops. The school board
wants the $600,000 to fix San­
ford Middle School's roof, repave
the (larking lot and make other
Improvements. And It wants ihe
land back on the tnx rolls to
Increuse school revenues.
But
the homeowners feel the center
would create traffic, druw a
criminal element und they want
to keep the grussy field as a

Evening

outlaw sin. It will be upset on the
first attack."
C o m m i s s i o n e r K iib s
Mrgonrgal supported Petree. He
likened the ordinance to "an
obstacle course” which would
makes It difficult for adult en­
tertainment facilities to come to
Lake Mary.
Lake Mary Police Chief Harry
Benson, one of the formulators of
th e o r d in a n c e , s a id c o m -

In H o u se Nuptials
M O N T G O M E R Y . A la .
IU P I) — L a w m a k e rs
slopped their wrangling
over the education budget
Thursday Just long enough
watch the union of Frank
Brunner, adm inistrative
assistant to House Speaker
Tom Drake, and Beverly
File, secretary to Speaker
Pro Tem Roy Johnson.
Because they mrt In ihe
rapllol, the couple derided
lo stage their nuptials In the
House chambers.

Sac ANTI-PORN, page BA

■ ■

'«• V r " i '„ *

�XA—Evening Harald, Sanlord, FI.

Friday, Apflt f, HM

NATION
IN BRIEF
Reagan Offers Peace Plan
In Bid To Get A id For Rebels
WASHINGTON IUPI) — President Reagan endorsed a
peace plan allowing him to spend 9 )4 million In aid to
Nicaraguan rebels that Congress has blocked but the
proposal was swiftly rejected by the Sandlnlsta govern­
ment.
Reagan announced Thursday his Idea, adapted Irom a
March 2 declaration by U.S.-backed Contra rebels, would
seek to Impose a cease fire until June 1, set up talks
between the two sides to be mediated by the Roman
Catholic Church and provide the money to the rebels, but
only for humanitarian purposes.
Hut no matter what happens after that. Reagan declared.
" W e ’re not going to quit and walk aw ay" from the Contras,
who are fighting to overthrow the Sandlnlsta government
In Managua.
Congressional Democrats were quick to denounce the
proposal as a masquerade for getting the $14 million In
what was once covert military aid. which Congress had
blocked him from spending
National security adviser Robert McFarlane said It Is
possible the rebels could use their own funds for military
purposes In place o f money they would get from
Washington for food and clothing.

CBS Fighting Takeover
NEW YORK (UPI) — CHS Inc. has changed Ms bylaws in
an atlempt to thwart a possible lakeover by Atlanta
broadcaster Ted Turner, and General Electric Co. denied
reports It would come to the rescue If Turner makes his
move.
Undrr the amended bylaws only top corporate officials
and the CHS Board o f Directors can authorize a special
shareholders' meeting, company officials said Thursday.
The amendment specifies I hat a special stockholders'
meeting cun be colled by any two members of the Hoard of
Directors, subject to a majority vote of the directors.
Word of the change came as rumors surfaced that Turner
was trying lo marshal the resources needed to take over
the network.
Turner, the Atlanta based cable and broadcasting
entrepreneur, has often said he wanted lo head a television
network to remove the violence on television, which he
said hascuused moral decay.

Suspect Jailed In Agent's Death
United Press International
An alleged Mexican narcotics kingpin accused of
masterminding the killing of a U.S drug agent was
captured In a gunbaltle with police and held loday In a
prison In Costa Rica.
Also arrested with Rafael Caro Quintero Thursday were
four unidentified men and a 17-ycar-old Mexican who told
police she was kidnapped In Guadalujara. Mexico. The
teenager. Sara Coslo Martinez. Is the niece of a prominent
Mexican politician.
Ill Washington. Attorney General Edwin Meese said the
United S t a t e s could r e q u e s t the extradition of Caro
Q u i n t e r o . a n a c c u s e d d r u g t r a f f i c k e r I d e n t i f i e d by U.S.
officials as the "Intellectual author" of the killing In Mexico
o f Drug Enforcement Agent Enrique Cumerena Salazar.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Budget Cuts Will Cost State
$100 Million In Student A id
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Florida stands to lose more thun
$ 1 0 0 million In university student financial old under
budget cuts proposed by the Reagan administration, u
Florida education lobbyist lotd a stale Senute appropria­
tions panel.
Financial aid cuts were umnng u host o f budget Items on
the ugendu us House urn! Senate appropriations panels
begun work on next yrur’s budget.
Another Hem was Gov. Hob Graham's promised two-year
25 percent university tuition hike.
Gruhum aide Hob Cox told the Senate panel that
taxpayers ure subsidizing the educations of wealthy
students In public universities through the current tuition
structure.
Gruhum has said that Florida students puy lti percent of
thr coat of their educations und that Ills hike would leave
them paying 2 1 percent. Nationally, tuition covers an
average of 25 percent o f the cost of an education,

Malpractice Reform Offered
TALLAHASSEE (UI’ II — House leaders ure backing a
medical malpractice plan thut would set a scale for
attorney contingency fees und a assure doctors thut no
more than 15 percent o f their gross Income will go for
malprnctlre Insurance
The bill by Rep Art Simon. D Miami, would also require
lawyers to give dor tors and their Insurance companies 00
duys notice of an Intended mulpractlce suit. During that
time, an Insurance company could Investigate a claim and
— If the doctor wus at fault — make an offer o f a
settlement
If the company refused to offer a settlement, the case
could go lo trial with unlimited damages. However, If a
good-faith offer was rejected, a court could not award
general dumuges higher than $250,000.
All Jury verdicts above $250,000 would be subjected to
"In lrn sr judicial scrutiny" so thut Judges could reduce a
verdict, if sympathetic Jurors gave un Injury victim more
compensation than the cold facta of a case really Justified.
Simon a bill would also require the Department of
I'rofesalonul Regulation to order "peer review " of any
physician sustaining two malpractice Judgments In a
five-year period. It would also tighten control of licensing
for graduates of off-shore medical schools and make It a
felony — punishable by five years In prison — lo falsely
obtain a doctor's license.

UCF Band Holding Tryouts
T h e U niversity ol Central
Florida Marching Band will hold
tryouts for majorettrs. Hugs,
rifles and dance squuds hum 1)
• in lo I p in. April 13 In the
music rehearsal hull on campus.
Students entering UCF for the

llrst time are urged lo contact
Jerry Gardner, director of bunds,
at 275-2867 for Information
sheets and registration forms.
Euch squ ad w ill learn a
routine for the tryouts which will
be held at the end of the session.

A d viso ry Pa nel M e m b e rs Exempt

Financial Disclosure
Rule Becomes History
By Donna Estes
On a rela ted m atter, the
Mrs Scott was familiar with
Herald Staff W riter
county commission has hired a the commission. As part of her
Members who serve on the retired county employee to keep Job with the facilities, parks and
S e m in o le C ou nty H istorica l the doors to the h istorical recreation division, she had done
Commission who worry about museum, housed In the former the bookkeeping for the historic
others knowing the details of county agricultural building at commission and the museum.
their financial dealings need Five Points, open during the
Her salary approved by the
worry no longer.
hours of 9 a m . to 1 p.m.. county commission Is S-l 53 per
The county commission has Monday through Friday.
hour,
adopted an ordinance making It
Members of Ihe historic group
Mrs Scott says there are many
clear the group makes no de­ open the facility from 2 p m. to 4
fa scin a tin g e x h ib its at the
c is io n s , sp en d s no c o u n ty p.m.. Sundays, and by special
museum Including the "old
money, and is purely advisory, appointment In the afternoons or
limey school room ." an organ
thus m ak in g fin a n c ia l d is ­ evenings
donated by Sanford Mayor Betclosures to the stale unneces­
Julie Scott, a clerk-typist for lye Smith, the Grace Bradford
sary.
Ihe commission, also shows visi­ wing, which houses a living
Several members of the histor­ tors around the facility during room furnished with antiques,
ic board were considering re­ the morning hours.
an old Vlctrola and radio; the
signing last year when Ihe state
Mrs. Scott, a 30-year resident section dedicated to agriculture
Ethics Commission demanded of Seminole County, retired last with old farm Implements and
that they flic financial d is ­ May after 12 years as an ac­ displays of farm ing methods
closures. Grace Bradford, one of counting clerk for the county's
used In years gone by; and a
th e c o m m is s io n 's h a rd est
facilities, parks and recreation section about railroads and
workers, com plained that II division.
steamboats.
She said after she caught up
wasn't fair for persons who
The Daughters of the Amcrl
donate their lime and often their with all the projects she had can Revolution and the Unlled
money to a cause to have to thought about for years at her Daughters of the Confederacy
reveal their personal finances.
Sanford home In Mayfair Village, also have displays
The stale requires those who she became bored. She was
Volunteer firemen have also
serve In elective office and some preparing to search for n partIn advisory position who have ilme Job when she heard about set up a display showing what
the power to make decisions and the 2 0 -hour-a-week clerk-typist they did for Seminole County
spend taxpayer money lo file p o s itio n at the h is t o r ic a l b e fo re the a d v e n t o f paid
firefighters
annual financial disclosures
museum

Man Weeps After Rape Sentence
A Sanford man wept after he was sentenced lo
years In prison for Ihe repeated raf»e o f a
14-year-old girl
David Alonzo Anderson. 33. of 5 Ruby St., was
sentenced Thursday by Seminole Circuit Judge
Dominick J. Sail). The sentence recommended by
state guidelines was 5tA to 7 years
Anderson was found guilty Feb 16 by a Jury
that was moved from ihe courthouse before II
could begin deliberation because of a bomb scare
at the building
Anderson's attorney. Vince Howard, said earlier
that the move and a constant sounding car horn

onlside may be Ihe basis of an appeal because the
events could have affected the Jurors' decision.
According to court records. Anderson was
charged Aug. 14 with sexual battery after the girt
and tier mother reported Ihe "fo rce d " sex acts to
a stale Health ami Rehabilitative Services coun­
selor The counselor reported the allegations lo
Seminole County sheriffs Investigators on Aug
10. An examination of the girl at Central Florida
Regional Hospllull supported the girl's allega­
tions. a report said.
The girl said the assaults begun March 20. 19H4
and lasted until August
— Deane Jordan

D e p u t ie s
G o A fte r
B ik e P a th
C r im in a ls
D r iv e r s o f m o t o r iz e d
vehicles on bike paths In the
Wektva area near Longwood
w ill be th e o b je c t o f a
crackdown by the Seminole
County sherifTs department
which will bring a bicycleriding patrolman to the area
for two weeks.
Sheriff John Polk said the
bike patrol will start Monday
as sheriffs Sgt. Jerry Riggins
begins cruising bike paths In
th e W e k lv a Hunt C lu b .
Weklva Villas and Cambridge
areas near Lake Brantley High
School.
Riggins, who will be In
uniform and armed, will have
access to areas on Ills bike
that patrol cars can't drive
lnlo and where a foot patrol
would be too slow. Polk said.
Operators of mopeds. dirt
bikes, street-legal motorcycles
and go-carts have been racing
on the hike paths. Polk said.
He hopes Riggins' presence
will curb the Illegal activity.
He added that offenders who
arc caught will be Issued
citations.
Riggins will tie equipped
with a radio and will be able
lo call In sheriffs patrol cars
to pursue offenders who try lo
lire. Polk said.
The misuse of a bike path Is
a s c c o n d - d e g r e e m is d e ­
meanor, sherllfs spokesman
John Spolskl said, and calls
for a possible GO days In Jail
and a fine of up to $500.
Polk expects the majority of
Ihe violations Riggins will
encounter will be driving on a
bicycle trail with a motorized
vehicle, violation of bicycle
regulations, trespassing and
burglary.
—Susan Loden

P&amp;Z Votes To Keep Lake Hayes A Pastoral Paradise
Vocul opposition from Ihe audience and a
mother's emotional plea lo protect the rural
atmosphere of the Lake Hayes area In
southeast Seminole County for future gen­
erations struck a responsive chord with the
Semlnolr County Planning and Zoning
Commission which bus voted to deny
construction approval for a 430-unlt con­
dominium complex
The advisory board voted 0-0 Wednesday
lo recommend lo Ihe county commission
Dial II lurii down a rezoning request lo
prrnili const ruction of (lie condominiums In
the midst of country rstalca. The hoard also
tracked denial o f a change In ihe county's
comprehensive land use plan Irom general
rurul preservation lo medium density rrsl
den rial
Jerry Gallagher, one of Ihe develiqM-rs
who planned to hulld the project, said he did
not anticipate the opposition ami offered lo
reduce the density ol Ihe pnqrosed 43-ucrr
project Irom Hi mills |&gt;cr acre lo eight. Hut
Ills offer fell on deaf ears.
The property Is located west of Lake
Haves near Alafaya Trail, now designated

part ol stale Road 434 by Ihe state
Department o( T ransportatlon.
Margaret Hluck told Ihe hoard her family
had lived on (heir land for many years.
" I beg and plead wlih you lo let It (the
proposed development sllel be country
estates, so we can puss our land on lo our
children." Country estates zoning calls for
one home per five acres.
Pally Flowers, another protesier. said hrr
husband's family moved to the area In
1908 She described the beauty of I be land
and Lake Hayes where herons si III grerl
each dawn
With her voice breaking, she said. "It Is so
beautiful, I hale lo see It go." Mrs. Flo vers
said adding 430 families lo the lake’s shores
would destroy Its tranquil beauty.
PAZ board member Sue Lewis, who
chaired the meeting In ihe absence of Mlkr
Davis, said rezonlng would be an "Intrusion
Into (lie lives of the people here."
Harry llaglr seconded her moltmi and the
oilier lour members of ihe board — Dorothy
Meadors. Jim Weinberg. Hob Levy and Alda
Rowe — voted with her lo recommend
denial.

The rezonlng will be considered by Ihe
county commission on April 23.
Meanwhile, with about 30Tuskawilla area
resldcnls on bund to oppose a plan lo rezonr
8.5 acres al Ihe northwest corner ol
Tuskuwllla Road and Gabricllu Lane to
permit const nu t ton of I.GOO square fool
homes. Jack Krljps. representing Mr, and
Mrs Gregory Surname wllhdrew the re­
quest.
Krlps said the plan for Ihe property will lie
glvrn further study.
In other action, the board:
• Recommended approval of a rrquesl
from Freeman Cleveland to rezone from
agricultural to single-family dwelling district
ihe 4 6 acres on the south side o f Center
Drive near Winter Springs Cleveland plans
lo build 1 . 1 0 0 -square foot hom es on
9.000-squarc loot lots
• Recommended approval of Ihe reqursl
o f E. Lee Munlzzi to rezone from singlefamily dwelling district to duplex district a
one-half acre parcel on Sunset Drive, near
Pine View Avenue and county Road 427.
— Donna Estes

Christians Gather For Good Friday; Jews Begin Passover
J E R U S A L E M (U P I) T h o u a a n d s o f C li r 1s 11 a n s
gathered In Jerusalem on Good
Friday lo retrace Christ's steps
as he was led from Ihe Garden ol
Gcthsrmuiie (o Ills death on the
cross.
Jews open their wreklong cel­
ebration of Passover at sundown
today wtili a ceremonial meal
commemorating Un- Might of
Muse i and (he Israelites from
slavrry In Egypt 3,(KX) years
ago

In Rome, Pope John Paul II
was lo lead tile traditional "W ay
of the Cross" procession around
Ibe Colosseum and thousands
marched through the streets In
ihe Philippines, dragging crosses
or Hogging (heir backs In a
bloody day of jienllencr and
crucifixion reenactments.
Mure than 50,(XX) Christians
have traveled to Jerusalem to
celebrate the Christian Holy
Week, which begun Palm Sun­
day and culminates Sunday un

Easter. C h ristian ity's holiest
day.
T h e e v e n t s on M a u n d y
Th ursday and Good Friday
commemorate Judas' betrayal of
C h r is t In t h e G a r d e n o f
Gcthsemenc and the crucifixion.
A procession led by pilgrims
bearing wooden crosses on their
shoulders retraced Christ’s steps
down from the garden und along
the Via Dolorosa or "Paih of
Sorrows" to the crucifixion she
On Thursday, bishops from

Ralph Floyd. Orlando
G a rd en C hapel Hom e for
Funerals. Orlando. Is In charge
of arrangements

Seminole Community Hospital.
Longwood. Born August 28.
1931 In Orange, N.J.. she moved
lo l.ongwood from New Jersey In
1973. She was a supervisor for a
t e le p h o n e e m p a n y and u
member of the Church of An­
nunciation. She wus a member
o f First Women In Radio.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e h er
husband. John M ; daughter,
Linda Gale. Longwood: father.
William A. Moat. Longwood.
B ald w ln -F a trch lld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. Is in
charge of arrangements.

AREA DEATHS
REX CHISM
Mr Rex Chism. 69. of 51 S
Edgemon Si., Winter Springs,
d ie d W e d n e s d a y . H orn In
Haldwyri, Miss., he moved to
Winter Springs from Lake Mary
In 1U78. He was a retired
co n stru ction w ork er and a
member of the First Baptist
Church. Lakr Mary.
Survivors Include his wife.
Martha; a daughter. Miss Mary
Ann Chism, Tallahassee; a son.
William F. of Wlnler Springs, u
sister. Louise Gibbs. Haines City;
a brother. Mack. Haines City; six
g r a n d c h ild r e n , o n e g r e a t ­
grandchild.
Lane-H olt Funerul H om e.
Haines City. Is In charge of
arrangements.
KYNDELE M ARIE FLOYD
Kyndele Marie Floyd. Infant.
625 Coventry Court. Longwood.
died Wednesday at Orlando Re­
gional Medical Center. She was
bum April 3 In Winter Park und
was a Catholic.
Survivors Include her parents.
Mr and Mrs Stanley W. Floyd;
b r o t h e r . R ya n . L o n g w o o d ;
maternal grandmother. Marie
N e a l, O r la n d o , p a t e r n a l
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.

JAM ES O. GAUDREAU
Mr. James Oscar Gaudrruu.
56. of 2101 Orange Hlvd.. lot B.
l.akr Monroe, died Thursday at
h i s r c s i d e n r e . B o r n In
Burlington. Vt. on April 2. 1927.
he had been a winter resident
here for the past two years. He
was a retired barber and a
sell-employed upholsterer. He
was a 30-year member of the Atr
National Guard and attended All
Souls Catholic Church.
Survivors Include his wife.
Pauline; three sons. Thomas, ol
G reen ville. S.C.. Stephen o f
Memphis. Tenn.. and David of
Marina. Calif.; a daughter. Mary
Nolan. Greenville. S.C.; mother.
Blanche Qaudreau. Bristol. Vt.: a
brother. John. Barrie. V t : a
sister, Betty Anderson of Bristol;
four grandchildren.
Drisaon Guardian Fun eral
Home, Sanford, is in charge of
arrangements.
MARIE M. ON DO
Mrs Marie M. Ondo. 53. or 110
Urtdlewood Lane, Longw ood.
d ie d T h u r s d a y In S o u t h

dllfrrent churches gathered lor a
foot washing ceremony at the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre,
built on the spot where the
crucifixion is lielleved lo have
taken place.
The bishops washed the feel ol
their subordinate priests to echo
the message of humility con­
veyed In Christ's final speech to
Ills d is c ip le s d e liv e r e d on
Maundy Thursday.
Members of all denominations
gathered later In the Old City for
a m arch lo the G a rd en of
Gethscmcne on the Mount of
Olives, where Jesus und his
disciples camped after the last
supper

This Ad Is
Worth *50
Toward Any GM 350 Standard
Transmission Job From 1971 lo
1978 Plus 12 Month or 12,000
Mils Warrarly

Ken Kern Transmission
MO Laursl Ara., Sanlord

323-3040
E

Flowers F o r A ll Occasions

(fio lltn a

r.’SLV

323-1204

m

' i i I iij ; I l i T u k l

IU » P » M l &gt;M&gt;

Friday. April 3. i*t}
Vol 77. No 1*3
PvSIttfcod Dailr and Sunday, t i o p l
U iw rd a p Sp TSa la n ia rd Haraid.
Inc. M t N. FrancS A va . tdatard.
F la n r n
Sacand C la n P a tla *a P a id at la n ia rd .
F l a n d s m il
Hama O a liva rr: Waa*. 11 . 11 , M am s,
M I S ; ) MsntXt. l l l H i t MantS*.
M t M l Tea r. I I I M O r M a il: Wa*k
I I .M l MantS. M M , 1 M a n tS l.
H I M ; « M antSl, S it M ; Y * a r.

ua.at
PSana ( M l ) m

M il.

�’4

Evening Herald, tanlord. FI.______ Friday. April S. m s —JA

14-Year-Old G irl Refuses Ride,
Pulled Into M an's Car, Raped
A 14-year-old Fem Park girl
reported to Seminole County
sheriff's deputies that she was
sexually assaulted by a man who
pulled her Inlo his car.
The girl said she was walking
In (he area of stale Road 436 al
Lakrvlcw Avenue when the man
drove up beside her at about
5 30 p m. Thursday and offered
her a ride. She refused and the
man grabbed her by her left arm
and pulled her Into his car.
s h e r i f f 's s p o k e s m a n J o h n
Spolskl said.
The girl (old deputies the man
raped her In the car while It was
parked alongside state Road 436
In Fern Park. After the man
assaulted her. he pushed her out
of the car and drove off. She said
the m an's car Is a blue four-door
with a red top. It has a loud
muffler and a torn frontseat. a
sh eriff s report said.
Spolskl said the girl was ln&gt;
tcrvlewed by a sheriff's deputy
at Florida Ilospltal-Altamonte
Springs where she was exam ­
ined. She apparently was not
Injured In the attack, he said.
CHARGED WITH BOTS
An IH-year-old man who was
re|&gt;ortedly spotted at the scene
o f a theft has been booked Into
the Seminole County Jail on a
c barge of grand theft. Tw o boys
who also reportedly took part In
the theft face the same charge
and have been turned over to
Juvenile authorities.
T h e three reportedly stole
•450 worth of batteries from
behind Hotel TV Service, S.
Sanford Ave.. Sanford, and were
arrested at the scene at 11:45
a m. Wednesday, a sheriff's re|M&gt;rt said
The adult arrested In connec­
tion with the theft Is Tony
Wayne Angle. 18. of Deltona. He
was being held In lieu o f $5,000
l»ond.
THIEF WITH A THIRST
A thief crept Into Jan Shaver's
house at 703 Mattie St.. Sanford.
Monday morning or early after­
noon and stole and eight-pack of
cola and a bottle of whiskey, a
police report said. Police re­
ported the thief entered the
house through un unlocked
bedroom window.
ABU8INO SUSPECT
A 20-year-old man facing sev­
eral burglary-related charges has
ulso been charged with child
abuse because two alleged ac­
complices nabbed with him after
u Lake Mary break ln are 12 and
15 years old.
The three were captured by
Lake Mary police who were
searching for three suspects who
fled a burglarized home at 290
Hradmoor Ave.. Lake Mary, at
about 4:30 a.m. Wednesday. The
three suspects were found by

Action Reports
★ Fires

k Courts
k Police
police at about 1 1 a.m. near
county Road 15 and 3rd Street.
Lake M a ry. T h e y w ere r e ­
portedly Identified bv witnesses
who saw the burglars flee, a
police report said
After the 20-year-old was Jailed
on charges o f armed burglary,
grand theft, child abuse, two
counts of burglary and use of a
firearm In the commission of a
felony, sh eriff's deputies re ­
portedly linked him to an April 2
bu rglary at 219 T ea k w o od
Crossing. Lake Mary, and bur­
glary and grand theft charges
related to that break-ln were
added.
The burglars, who were re­
portedly looking for firearms In
W edn esday's break-ln. w ere
t u r n e d o v e r to J u v e n i l e
authorities.
The adult charged In the case.
Matthew Howell Napier of 328
Ruth Illvd., Long wood, was be­
ing held In lieu o f $15,000 bond
In the Seminole County Jail.
BUROLARIE8 A THEFTS
An e le c tr ic range with a
microwave oven and range hood
worth $1,500 was stolen from a
house being built at 584 Albany
Place, Longwood. The theft o c ­
curred between March 30 and
April I. according to a sheriffs
report filed by Louis Eugene
S caglla . 44. su pervisor fo r
Florida Residential Communi­
ties. owner of the range.
Tim othy Merrlett Holcomb.
29. of 205 Shadow Bay 01vd..
lx&gt;ngwood. reportrd to deputies
that his boat parked across the
street from his home was bur­
glarized and a $2,600 engine
and other gear worth about $600
was stolen between Monday and
Wednesday. Damage to the boat
was estimated at $500.
A male and female cockatoo
were stolen from a fenced area at
the home of M.L. Sweat. 60. of
1071 U S . H ig h w a y 17-92.
L o n g w o o d . on M on d a y o r
Tuesday, deputies reported.
A thief raided game and music
machines at the Club Two Spot,
llrtsaon Avenue and state Road
46. Sanford, and took $200 cash
on Monday or Tuesday, accord­
ing to a report owner George II.
Murphy. 42. o f 2514 S. Park
Ave.. Sanford, filed with sheriffs
deputies.
About $2,000 worth of tools

“Christ Is Risenl" And
once again on Easter Morn,
the miracle of His resurrec­
tion brings jo y and inspira­
tion, as we gather together
in the house of the Lord,
with our families and
friends . . . to worship, to
rejoice, to give thanks for
His gift of life everlasting.
May this Eastertide bless
each of us with infinite
trust in the goodness of
life, hope for the future and
faith in the spiritual truths
that sustain us.

— 1:21 pm.. First Street and
Mangoustlne Avenue, rescue.
Patients Involved In an auto
accident refused treatment.
— 1:40 p m.. Seventh Street and
Pine Avenue, rescue. A person
who appeared drunk refused
treatment.
- 1 1 0 3 p m.. 1209 Eighth St .
rescue. A 75-year-old man who
had difficulty breathing was
taken to the hospital
W ednesday
— 12:36 a.m.. North Orlando
Drive, fire. Firefighters put out u
brush fire. There were no inju­
ries or damages.
-1 2 :3 7 a.m.. 700 Wiley Ave .
rescue. A 75-ycar-old man who
had a possible stroke was taken
to the hospital.
— 10:55 a m.. Eighth Street and
Elm Avenue, rescue. A I -yearold girl who was choking on a
hot dog wus taken to the hospital
by her mother. Rescue workers
said the girl's mother dislodged
the hot dog Ireforc they got to the
scene. She was giving the girl
mouth-to-mout h resue It at Ion
when they arrived, the rrpor*
said. The girl wus revived but
dizzy, the reoort said.
DUI AR R ESTS
The following persons have
been arrested In S em in ole
County on u charge of driving
under the Influence:
—Denise Ann llum kc. 27. of 112
Autumn Drive. Longwood. was
arrested at 1:23 a.m. Thursday
on Georgia Avenue at county
Roud 427. L o n g w o o d , ufter
another motorist reported her
erratic driving to police.
- K im Vlllar Morgan. 24. of 1230
N. Grassle St.. Longwood. ufter
her car failed to maintain a
single lane on U.S. Highway
17-92. Longwood.

unfair to the other youth to defer prosecution.
LcfTler. uccordlng to the appeal papers, said the
slate attorney was not cooperating.
"I tell you what I am going to do. I am going to
take It upon m yself and let the state uppcul this I
am going to order that this petition be dismissed.
If the state wants to appeal It. let It do It.” la-fller
said.
He then dismissed the charges on the grounds
that It was not In the best Interest of the child that
he Ire prosecuted ut that time, und because the
state did not accept his recommendation thul
prosecution be deferred until the boy completed a
program at u boys ranch.
The high court, ruling lust week, said the
discretion to prosecute or not Is a vested solcy In
the state attorney.
"Prosecution o f a Juvenile may be deferred
where a plan of proposed treatment, training or
conduct Is presented In lieu o f u plea, but In
dellngqucncy cases the plan 'shall Include the
state attorney’s consent to defer the posecutlon of
the petitioner," ' the Justices wrote.
The case will Ire rescheduled for trial before
later. No trial date hus been set. — Deane Jordan

Youth Who Tried To Garrote Woman Gets 21 M onths
After lying back down she said
she saw Dukes standing In the
dining room, this time saying he
needed a cassette tape he had
loaned to her son. The woman
and Dukes then went to her
son’ s room to look for the tape
but did not find It.
As they left the room, the
report said. Dukes w h eeled
around, grabbed the woman by
the throat and started choking
her. During the struggle, he
managed to wrap a belt around
her throat and tried to drag her
back Into the bedroom, accord­
ing to the report. During this
time, the woman said she almost
passed out twice.
She fell to the floor screaming.
Dukes then let her go and ran
out the door, threatening to kill
her. according to police.
She then called authorities.
Dukes was arrested soon af­
terward about a block from the
woman's house.
At the sentencing hearing.
Assistant State Attorney Steve
Brady characterized Dukes os a

R IS E N

FIRE C A L L S
The Sanford Fire Department
responded to the following calls
Tu esday
— 10 23 a m.. Ridgewood Anns,
false alann.

N o t To T r y Y o u n g B u rg la ry Suspect

An attem pt to stran gle a
woman with a belt netted a
Longwood youth 21 months In
Juvenile detention.
William R. Dukes Jr.. 17. of
1201 Homossa Court, was sen­
tenced by S em in ole C ircuit
J u d g e S. Joseph Davis Jr.
Wednesday who will later decide
whul type of counseling the
youth wtll receive during his
detention. Dukes is to be held
until his 19th btnhday In De­
cember. 1986.
Dukes was arrested In Sep­
tem ber after he attacked a
37-year-old Lake Mary woman.
Hr pleaded guilty to aggravated
battery In January.
According to police reports.
Dukes entered the w om an's
home at about 2:30 p m. Sept.
18. The woman, who was lying
on her couch reading a boow
said Dukes stood In the door* a,
and said he was looking for the
woman's 16-year-old son. When
she told him he would not be
home until 3:30 p.m., he left,
according to the report.

IS

Several cameras and a gold
watch with a combined value of
•3.590 were stolen from the
home of Stanley Weiss. 59. of
219 Teakw ood C ou rt. Lake
Mary, on Tuesday, a sheriffs
report said.

C o u rt O v e rtu rn s Ju d g e 's D e cisio n
A Seminole circuit court Judge's decision not to
try a Juvenile l&gt;rcausc '*.. It would not Ire In the
In-st interest ol the child..." hus been overturned
by the 5th District Court of Appeals.
The high court overturned the decision of
Circuit Judge Kenneth Lefller In reference to a
child, whose Identity Is unavailable because of his
age. charged with burglary and grand theft.
According to uppcul paper*, the state charged
In March. 1984 that the Juvenile had committed
the crimes. The child, enrolled In a program at u
hoys ranch, was not available ut arraignment to
have a trial date set and Lefller gave the state two
weeks to decide whether to huve the youngster
tried or defer prosecution
The stale decided to proceed.
When the Juvenile later appeared with his
mother ut an adjudicatory hearing — the Juvenile
equivalent of trial — he did not have a lawyer.
LcfTler learned that the boy was not eligible for
a public defender and then said he was frustrated
with the State Attorney's ofTIce for not deferring
prosecution.
T h e state attorney said the boy was a
rodefrndant In the rase and that It would be

H E

Including a $ 100 wheel barrow,
a $600 air compressor, a $180
power saw. a $95 sabrr saw and
•800 wonh of hand tools were
stolen from a construction site at
3585 Ohio Ave.. Sanford. Rich­
ard G. Radebach. 44 of Lake
M ary, reported his loss to
sh eriffs deputies.

young man with a dislike for
women, particularly those about
his mother's age.
Dukes Is facing trial us un
adult on charges of rape and
armed robbery of a 35-year-old
woman stemming from a 1982
Incident In Longwood. No trial
date has been set In that cose.
Dukes was found nol guilty In
February In connection (he Oct.
23. 1984 rape of an IH-year-old
Longwood woman.

— Deans Jordan

T H E S A L V A T IO N
AR M Y
700 W. 25th STREET
322-2642

Holy Cross Episcopal
Church

t

" Rejoice In The Resurrection, And
The Promise O f Life Everlasting. ”
401 S. Park Avenue, Sanford
322-4411
Services: 9:00 a.m., 10:00 a.m.

St. Peterfs Episcopal
Church
(Worshiping at Lake Mary Elementary)
Father Robert M. Anderson. Vicar
Easter Service: 9:00 A.M.
'Come Share Our Joy On This
Resurrection Day."
Phone 321-LORD (5673)

RECTOR: FATHER L. D. SOPER

First United
Methodist Church

Lu th e ra n C h u rc h
O t The Redeem er

41* Park Avenue, Sanford

G ood Friday Service 7 :3 0 a.m.
E a ste r Sunday
Holy C o m m u n io n 10:30 a.m.

Morning Worship Service
8:30 a.m., 11:00 a.m..
Nursery Provided

2525 Oak Avenua, Sanford
222 2552

First Christian Church

C e n tra l B a p tis t
C h u rc h

( D is c ip le s O f C h rist)
1407 S. Sanford Avenue

1311 Oak Avanua, Sanford, Fla.

The Pastor: The Reverend S. Edward Johnson

EASTER DAY:

R E S U R R E C T IO N D A Y

Church School 9:45 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Sermon: " Good news From A Graveyard"
ALL ARE WELCOME HERE
"A Blcsed Easier To A ll!"

You are Invited to Join u&gt; at Central Baptist
Church, 1311 Oak Avenua Sanford. Attorney Ken
McIntosh will present ‘The Child of Je s u s ."

Church Training Hour 5:45, Lord's Memorial A
Worship Sarvlce 7:00 p.m.

Congratulations
First Baptist Church
O f Geneva

S a n fo r d C h ris tia n
C h u rc h
137 W. Airport Blvd.. Sanford

Cordially Invites You To Attend “ Living
Witnesses," A Fully Costumed Musical
Drama Celebrating The Resurrection Of Our
Lord And Savior. Jesus Christ, On April 7,
At 7:00 P.M.

U p o n T h e D e d ic a tio n O f Y o u r N e w
S a n c tu a ry O n E a s te r S u n d a y

Larry Sherwood, Pastor
From Your Brothers And Sisters In Christ
First Baptist Church Of Oviedo

JSH f&amp; i-

This Ad Is
Worth *50
Toward Any OM 350 Standard
Transmission Job From 1971 lo
1978 Plus 12 Month or 12.000
Mile Warranty.

Ken Kem Transmission
900 Laurel Ave.. tanlord

323-3040

Community United Qjjwft 1st Baptist Church
Methodist Church
O f Winter Park
17-92 At Pinay Ridge Road
Cassalbarry

Sunrise Service 6:00 a.m.
Church Breakfast 7:00 a.m.
Morning Worship
8:30 a.m., 9:30 a.m., 11:00 s.m.
Sunday School 9:30 a.m., 11:00 a.m.
No U.M.Y.F or Evening Service

tail N. Mew York Ave., Winter Park
444-MSI
Special Servlets For Easter
Worship Center open all day. B a.m. to 0 pan.
Lord’s Supper w ill bo oorvod ovary boor on
tbo hoar. Saarloe Berries 7 o.m. la Mood
Oordsoa. W inter Park. S&gt;48 Lord's Sapper
la Worship Coator. 9:30 Worship Service h
Sunday School. 10:58 Worship Service h
Sunday School. 7:00 P.M. Worship Berries.

.

9

�i

E v e n in g H e r a ld
IUSPS 411 NO)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA 3277 I
Arra Code 305-322-2611 or 631-9993
Friday, April 5, 1985—4A
Wsyn* 0. Doylt, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Malvln Adkins, Advortlsing Director
llomr Delivery: Wrek, 81 10; Month. 84,75; 3 Months.
814 25, G Months. 827 00; Year, 851 00 . Hy Mall Week.
81.50. Month. 80 00 3 Month*. 818.00: 0 Month*. 832 50.
Year. 800 OO

Stakes In
South Africa
The recent slayings In South Africa —
remlnltscent of the Sharpvllle massacre 25
years ago — arc a shocking reminder that this
troubled country Is lurching toward the
precipice.
During the last 13 months of South African
unrest, 242 blacks have been kltlrd and
hundreds more wounded.
Once again, the country uppears to be
caught In a vicious cycle: The fear of
repression has sparked resentment among
the blacks, and the expression of that
resentment has produced even more re­
pression.
Yet, the Irony Is that Pretoria has made
progress In reforming Its rigid jxdlcy of
upurthcld that denies blacks their civil rights.
jin fact. President P.W. Hot ha has ungered
his white constituency by calling for some
sdrl of political accommodation wllh the
country's black majority.
.U n fortu n ately, the gov e rn m e n t's In ­
cremental changes are on a collision course
with a rising tide of black nationalism.
And therein lies the dilemma confronting
Sputh Africa.
Eventually, the country's 5 million whites
will be compelled to share their power or risk
Inning everything In a bloody confrontation
with 24 million blacks.
tThe question Is how can this power-sharing
be accomplished without creating the kind of
h&amp;voc that resulted In Rhodesia following (hr
replacement of n white government by black
Ntyirxlsts?
ITliere Is scant agreement among the
opposition groups on how South Africa
should eventually be governed.
;Most black leaders publicly demand "oncjman-one* vo le " In a unitary system, while
rejecting any talk of power-sharing.
.Privately, however, many of them concede
lljut such a radical change could ruin the
i pantry by driving out the Afrikaners.
iThus. It Is left to Pretoria to devise a
Political formula that accords the black
n\a)nrtty Its fundamental rights without
pplllng the while minority at unacceptable
rpk.
IThe best way to achieve this delicate
bhlance Is for President Botha to scrap some
of the more onerous aspects of apart held.
;A c c o rd in g ly , the govern m ent should
abandon its policy of forcibly resettling black
communities.
.The new constitution should be amended In
oj-der to give black South Africans a voice in
parliament.
; The government also should actively solicit
the support of the country's black political
moderates In carrying out these reforms.
Such luitiatlves would be politically risky
insofar as ihry represent a clean break with
the pant.
Yrt. unless Pretoria reaches some sort of
ixilltlcal accommodation with the country's
black majority. South Afrlcu will be subjected
loan endless scries of violent confrontations.
Four years ago. President llothu warned bis
while countrymen that South Afrlcu must
either "adapt or dir."
Time Is running out.

Please Write
Letters to the editor sre welcome for
publication. All letters must be elgned and
Include s mailing address and, If possible, s
telephone number. The Evening Herald
reserves the right to edit letters to avoid
libel end to accommodete space.

B E R R Y S W O RLD

H E LE N T H O M A S

New Faces Popping Up At White House
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The White House still
Is undergoing Its second-term shakedown and
new faces are showing up as more and more
aides leave for other Jobs In the federal
government and private sector.
The departure o f Michael Deaver. deputy chief
of staff, undoubtedly foretells an exodus of his
key aides, several of whom have already cut
their White House ties.
The president has shown a lot o f understand­
ing of why some aides feel compelled to leave,
although he knows he will miss them and their
total dedication to him. He says hr realizes
many administration officials could not serve
more than four years.
The old order Is changing. Chief of staff
Donald Regan has quickly asserted his power as
a chairman of the board who Is enjoying the

D O N GRAFF

Former President Jim m y Carter was In
Washington promoting his new book — The
HUhh I of Abraham , a discourse on the Middle
East and possibilities for peace — and appeared
younger than during his last days In the White
House, more vibrant and more philosophical.
He said that his wife Rosalynn's memoirs will
soon come out In paperback. "She and the
children are doing superbly," he said,
"W e have a very full life built around Plains."
hr said of his Georgia home. " I'm teaching at
Emory |ln Atlanta) We do a lot o f traveling,"

He disclosed that he and his wife are
collaborating cm a book on health care based on
their 18 months of research at the Atlanta
Center for Communicable Diseases. "W e have
been analyzing the most severe cases o f
mortality and morbidity and analyzing causes of
unnecessary Illness and early death." he said.
It Is not true that President Reagan Is not
awakened for telephone calls Carter said that
beforr Reagan went to China last year, the
president called him from his California ranch to
ask If he had any advice. White House telephone
operators tracked down Carter In Chicago and
asked him to call Reagan. "Rut It's 2 a m. In
California." Mid Carter.
"H e said to call at any tim e." the operator
replied, and Carter did. He said hr had a brief
chat with the president.

W A S H IN G T O N W O RLD

N O H -SM O K SR S ' R IG H T S .'

Death
By High
Tech
John Healey saw it coining
"Eventually they'll M|id someonr
thry can’t gel a vein on Like wllh a
cancer patient — you’ re searching
for hours and they k&lt;rp breaking
down. It's going to happen. It's like
the guy being electrocuted who sat
(here and they hit him wllh Hie
Juice. He stayed alive, started smok
Ing. Hryl Hit him again! That
eventually becomes torture."
Healey Is executive director of
Amnesty International USA and hr
was commenting. In un Interview
enrllrr this year, on the lutest
refinement In execution methods —
lethal Injection
It did happen, essentially as he
foresaw It, In Huntsville. Texas, oil
March 13. Stephen I’rier Morin,
convicted of the murders of three
women and ucctised In two other
killings, died by the needle alter
technicians had searched more than
-ID in Intiles for u usable vein.
They tried both arms and one leg
without success, then made a sec­
ond slab at the right arm. The
needle held. Morin, a drug user
wlios veins were deteriorated from
long abuse, was pronounced dead
1 1 minutes later.
It w a s t h e m o s t p r o l o n g e d e ffo rt t o

date to kill a prisoner by the neeillr.
at least on record In Texas, which
has been the trader In this area and
where there had been five previous
Irthal Injections.
Texas Is one of 12 stales — out ol
the 38 In which the ileath penally Is
on the txMik* — currently carrying
out capital punishment by lethal
Injection.
It is. Healey says, a natural
enough development. Hanging and
shooting may strike much of the
public us crude these days, hut
lethal Injection Is different, h Is
■clenrr.
"Gel n doctor In, dress It up. Then
It's high tech, and It Isn't as bad
tiecause we're a high-tech society.
There's always this Instinct to cover
up what's really hup|&gt;rriliig,“ he
says.
And that Is the same whether a
condemned Individual Is gassed,
shot, fried or pumped full of poison.
"T h e person d ie t." says Healey.
Hut that Isn't the worst of It.
"T h o s e p eople say they urr
humane, yrt they are Into this thing
that sits In your unn six Inches or so
for a long period o f time — I'd want
to be hung to avoid that. That's
torture."
II the Infatuutlon with high tech
continues. Hrulcy says hr fully
ex peels the next Innovation to be
death by microwave.
Would that be any more humane
than death by Injection — or
hanging, shooting, electrocuting,
gassing or beheading'/
The question answers itself for
Healey and Am nesty, which Is
working lor the abolition of cupltul
punishment worldwide.
There Is no way to execute a
human being that is humane.

JACK

exercise ol authority. The five aides he brought
with him from the Treasury- Department are still
walking softly, but without question they arc
taking over.
The first-term aides who ruled the roost are
almost outsiders now,

THaT'5
anI HeaR
any MoRei SMoxeRS
H a v e R i6 H T S , T 0 0 ,
pout we?

JEFFREY H A R T

Sorry, Ms. Steinhem
To tie fair. I cannot estimate
accurately Just how representative
of American opinion the readers of
the magazine Good Housekeeping
actually are. They are certainly
morr mainstream than the renders
ol Gloria Htetnlioin'* MS or llir
Trader* of The Village Voice Ttirv
may well be more representative
than the readers o f The New York
Time*. I don't know, hut my guess
Is i ti.it though th ey are p re ­
dominately female they are pretty
close l» mainstream American opi­
nion,
That tiring lhr case. It came us
something ol u shock to tills colum­
nist just whom Ihesc readers chose
In a "most admired" i»oll conducted
hy the magazine. Though these
readers are mostly women, sorry
Ms. Steinhem. you didn't make It
Into the top 40. Neither did you.
J u n e F o n d a , or y o u S h ir le y
MacLalne. And Klcanc; Smcal Is
nowhere In sight, even lhough she
headed up something cullrd the
National Organization for Women.
The two ilsts. as a matter of fact,
will prove to he strychnine to
sensitive liberals.
The most admired woman Is ...
Nancy Reagan Fonda. MarLulne.
and Smeal probably do not even
consider her a woman In the true
sense of the word, but worse
follows.
Number two Is ... Mother Teresa
of Calcutta. What? I thought this
was supposed to tie a secular age.
Ami the old saint certainly holds
very slmng news on abortion. I’ hll
Donahue, call your olflcr.
The third and fourth choices
p r o v id e l i t t l e r c l l r f fo r the
traumatized liberal: they are Phyllis
Schlally and .Irani- Kirkpatrick
Finishing fourth. Mrs. Kirkpatrick Is
the most lltx-rnl woman on the list
so lar. and was even u Democrat
until a lew days ago.
Number five. Princess Diana, may
owe her position on the list to the
glamor ui royalty and who knows
what Diana thinks, but It Is not
exactly an rgalllurtun choice — and

next comes ... Pat Nixon. Followed
hy Margaret Thatcher, neither of
whom ure rrally women from the
standpoint of current feminism.
At last, coming In at eighth, we
have a liberal, Geraldine Ferraro
She's probably there aw The First
Ever, etc., or because someone
married to John Zacraro surely
nerds a pat on the back And the list
c o n c l u d e s w llh S a n d r a D ay
O'Connor, one of Hie most con­
servative Justices on the Supreme
Court, and Elizabeth Dole, a Reagan
Cabinet member.
Now. as a gentle soul I bate to say
Ibis, but that list was lire Good
News for liberals. Now we come to
the Had News.
T h e live most admired men are ...
Ronald Reagan. Jerry Falwrll. Hilly
Graham. Pope John Paul II. and Hoi)
Hope Three of those men are
Import.nit religious leaders — our
Secular Age, again
There Isn't much comfort for
liberals at number six. It's Lech
W alesa. A serious Catholic, ana n t i c o m m u n Is t m a r t y r , not
associated wllh detente
At seven comes Lee lacocca,
ptubahly felt to be a mao who
"s a v e d C hrysler" and a repre­
sentative of aggressive m anage­
ment,
Then, at long last, down there ul
number eight, we do get a libera) In
the actor Alan Alda — but he's very
handsome, and this lapse ts more
than made up for by Tom Selleck at
number nine.
Rounding out ihe list at 10 Is
Norman Vtncrnt Prale. our Secular
Age again, and scarcely a figure
from the liberal pantheon
Where — and the omissions are
revealing — Is Gary Hurt? Where,
lor that matter, ts Ralph Nader'/
M ario Cuomo? Jack Lem m on?
Meryl Streep?
Alter Hie recent 49 state presi­
dential election, the liberals knew It
was bad Hut maybe they didn't
know how bad.

Keep
Avenue
Intact
By Ira R. Allen
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President
Reagan Is Invoking old heroes of the
American Revolution to make his
case for American aid to Nicaraguan
"freedom fighters." and no patriot
did so much as Ihe Marquis de
Lafayette, the French soldier whose
timely financial und military aid
h e lp ed d e fe a t the B r itis h at
Yorktown.
Hut under a plan studied by the
Secret Service. Lafayette's nionu- !
mcnl In Washington — the grassy
square block across the street from
the White House that Is home to
chess players, protesters o f every
stripe and the homeless in a tent
city — could disappear.
The Secret Service Iasi week told
Congress It Is considering u plan lo
c lo s e o f f th e tw o b lo c k s o f
Pennsylvania Avenue on the north
side of the White House to traffic In
order to Improve security al the one
building (hat draws travelers from
around the world to gape In awe at
what has been railed "the people's

house."
From Andrew Jackson s Inaugu­
ral with public partygoers (rumpling
the front lawn, to Eugene Mc­
Carthy’ s im w campaign promise to
tear down the wrought Iron bars
separating the mansion from the
"Avenue of the Presidents," the
north face of the White House has
been one of the more Important
svmtxils of American democracy.
It must t»e the most accessible
view o f any world leader's tcsldence, and for that reason you can
count cars from all 50 slatrss slowly
cruising past on a dally tiasls. wllh
windows rolled down for snapshot
takers Children and their parents
stand mule, grasping Ihe liars and
slarlug at one of the world's more
famous buildings. Just a stone's
throw away.
Reagan often says he doesn't
Interfere in security recommenda­
tions made by the Secret Service, to
whom, o f course, he owes his life.
Hut this Is one case for a direct
presidential order to stop the silly,
grandiose scheme lo unnex the
avenue und ladayrttr Square In the
name o f fighting terrorists.
The grounds are well guarded —
as witness the prompt apprehension
of fence Jumpers on a weekly basts
— with police, dogs, floodlights,
electron ic sensing d evices and
snipers on the rooftop allegedly In
possession o f shouider-mounted
and all cruft missiles. If the security
gurus are that concerned about
tou rists or terrorists th ro w in g
stones, or worse, they might just as
well move the Executive Mansion to
Kansas, centrally located and home
of the Great Oz.
President Reagan should put his
fool down now and tell the Secret
Service to do Its fine Job o f protect­
ing him and stop messing with
American history.
He owes It to General Lafayette.

AN DERSO N

Agencies Differ On Soviet Warheads

tWl|M&gt; M

“It IS comtorlmg to know that people who dis­
agree wllh policy are mentally ill."

By Jack Andarsoa
and Data Van Atta
WASHINGTON - As fur us the
United Staten Is concerned. Ihe
most fundamental fact underlying
any arms control agreement Is the
number of nucleur warheads the
Soviet Union cun bring hurtling
down on this country.
Yet the C e n tra l In te llig e n c e
Agency and the Defense Intelligence
Agency don't agree on this basic
fuct of Ufc or death — und their
disagreement la enormous.
The CIA thinks the Russians have
6.500 in tercon tin en tal ballistic
missile warheads, or roughly three
times the U.S. number. The D1A
Insists that the correct figure on
S oviet w u rh ra d s Is 8.500. or
roughly Tour times Ihe U.S. arsenal.
The DtA tuts declared Us higher
figure in tts lost five secret reports

on the subject. As late us last wrek
some uuulysts In the DIA were
trying to have their 8,500-warhrad
estimate puhllshrd in the latest
Issue of Soviet .Mi /h .im - f'ou er.
Thai i the booklet that Is Issued
as part of the Defense Department's
effort to persuade Congress, the
American public and our European
allies that the Soviet thrrut is real
and grow ing
Hut at the last minute, the DIA
chickened out und allowed publica­
tion of the CIA's less scary estimate.
The new booklet was scheduled (or
release this week — originally on
Monday, until some Pentagon of­
ficial wise In the ways of publlc
rrUllotts pointed out that It would
then be dubbed the “ April Fool's
Report."
Why can't the two Intelligence
agencies agree? How ran they be

2 .0 0 0 warheads apart?
Q uite sim ply. Intelligence on
someonr rise's warheads Is hard to
obtain. Thrrr's no way lo count
what's Inside an ICHM'a nose as It's
photographed In the silo. So It's
tiastcully a matter of guesswork
based on known capability.
A Soviet SS-IM could hold somr
two dozen warheads. On that both
agencies agree.
But the CIA believes the Soviets
ure a b id in g by th e w arh ead limitation portion or the unnHIfk-d
S A L T 11 agreement, which sets a
m axim um of 10 warheads per
ICBM. The DIA. however, assumes
that the Soviets attached as many
warheads as they have successfully
tested — and that's 14 per ICBM.
With more than 300 S S -l 8 s de­
ployed. that accounts for much of
the 2 .0 0 0 -warhrad discrepancy be

twrrn CIA and DIA estimates. The
remaining 700 or 800 Involve re­
cently deployed new ICBM systems.
Including the mobile SS-16 missiles
banned by SALT II.
So who's right? In this case, w e’d
be Inclined to Iran toward the DtA.
Though the Pentagon agency has
gone off half-cocked at times, more
often than not Its view of the Soviet
thrrut has proved correct over time,
compared with the CIA's usually
roster analyses.
An example of this occurred In
1975. when the CIA finally agreed
that Its estimate of Soviet military
spending had been seriously un­
derstated — by 50 percent for the
year 1970. for Instance. When the I
em barrassing figures could no
longer be denied, (he CIA brought In
Us word doctors to sugarront Ihe
bitter pill o f confessed error.

*

�Lake Mary Stops Short
O f Trashing Mandatory
Garbage Collection Law
By Roger Sim m on*
H erald S ta ff W r ite r
A proposed ordinance that
would allow Lake Mary to
award an exclusive franchise
for garbage collection and
make collection mandatory
has been put on hold.
At their Thursday night
m e e t in g , c o m m is s io n e r s
voted to table the proposals
until the city's engineering
firm of Camp. Dresser and
M cKee studies 11 and re ­
commends changes that other
cities have adopted In similar
ordinances.
The commissioners found
several problems In the stat­
ute prepared by City Attorney
Robert Petree. primarily how
to give the law teeth.
" I have difficulty seeing
how the city Is goin g to
en force mandatory c o lle c ­
t io n ." C om m lssoner Paul
Trcm m el said.
He made reference to a
provision of the proposal that
said on the one hand that
residents must have their
g a rb a g e collected by the
franchised firm, but then adds
that If a resident did not pay
for collection, the company
would not be required to pick
up the waste.
That could lead to residents
disposing o f Ihclr garbage by
either dumping It somewhere
In the city or burning It. Both
would lead to pollution, the
commissioners concluded.
Also, commissioners were
unsure about what would
happen to residents who do
not live In the cltv year-round
under the mandatory collec­
tion provision. They w on­
dered If they would be forced
to pay for garbage collection
during the part of the year

...A n ti-P o rn
Continued from page 1A
mlssoners had to be careful In
the restrictions they want to put
In the proposal. "Anything here
that appears to be repressive will
l&gt;c thrown out In court." he said.
He urged the commission to
" g o along with this ordinance"
nnd "lea ve well enough alone."
With the objections voiced.

when th ey w ere residing
elsewhere.
Jim Bible o f Camp. Dresser
and McKee said his company
has been Involved In the
preparation o f several similar
ordinances and Just finished
working on one for Manatee
County.
He said he thought the firm
could look over the proposal
and suggest solutions to the
problems voiced by commis­
sioners.
The commission voted 4-0
to table the proposal until Its
April 18 meeting. Commis­
sio n er C o lin K eogh was
absent and did not vote on the
motion.
In other action, a proposed
landscape ordin an ce that
would require the planting of
trees, shrubs and ground
cover at new commercial and
m ulti-fam ily developm ents
was given tentative approval,
W ithout discussion, the
commission also gave prelim­
inary approval ‘to a proposed
o r d in a n c e e s t a b l i s h i n g
guidelines for the city's police
and fire department to fine
burglar and fire alarm owners
w h o h a v e an e x c e s s iv e
number of false alarms.
Also getting a first-reading
OK was an ordinance updat­
ing the city's traffic regula­
tions. Under the plan, the city
will now be able to Issue
Iuirklng tickets. Also, horses
will not be perm itted on
paved streets In the city and
riders must dismount and
lead horses across roads.
All o f the proposed ordi­
nances are scheduled to come
up for final approval at the
commission's next meeting
on April 18.

Terry withdrew his other ammendments to the ordinance.
“ This seems to be a sacred
cow," he said. " I won't attack It
anymore."
The commission voted 3-1 to
give preliminary approval to the
o r d in a n c e . C o m m is s io n e r s
Megonegal. Burt Perlnchlef and
Paul Trem m el voted In favor of
the ordinance while Terry voted
against It. Commissioner Colin
Keogh was absent.

...R e z o n in g
C o n tin u e d fr o m p a g e 1A
civilization." she said.
But one wom an drew the
loudest applause when she stood
and asked. "W h e re are the
children going to play*?"
Mack LaZenbv, the engineer­
ing consultant for the project
and Huber's representative at
the meeting, acknowledged that
the parcel has become home for
"sandlot heroes" and "duffers
trying to Improve their game."
But he said it ts "unrealistic" lo
think the Int w ill Stay un
developed.
He detailed plans for the
center, saying the property
would have a 7-foot high wail
around the center, set back 22
feet from the street. It would also
be bordered by sidewalks wider
than those required by the city.
Huber would agree to put In
turnlanes, traffic signals and
crosswalks to ensure the safety
of the students and other pedes­

...F a is o n
Continued from page IA
here as soon as they sell their
home In Richmond. Va.. he said
He said his daughter, a college
sophom ore, plans to attend
Seminole Community College or
the University of Central Florida.
Faison. 55, was the county

...C h i e f
Continued from page I A
the police department should fill
the post temporarily until the
commission can make a de­
cision.
Knowles said In his memo an
acting chief Is needed by April
15 " to avoid turmoil In the

department.

Thom as said he doesn't "b u y "
that.
*3f there would be turmoil,
then the department hasn't been
run effectively," he said.
Mayor Smith said she would
wall and follow the proper pro­
cedures for hiring a chief before
ucllng on any rrroinmendatton.
" I have a totally open mind at
this point." she said.
Mercer said he has no problem
with Harriett being chief, but
noted, "T h e city commission
will make the decision and not
the city manager."
City Manager designate Frank
Faison said It would be "In ap­
propriate" for him to voice an
opinion " fo r or against any
appointm ent" until after he of­
ficially become* city manager
May 1.

manager of Henrico County. Va..
from 1978 to 1984 He was
selected from more than 100
applicants for the city manager's
Job early In March Before com ­
in g to S u n fo rd he w a s a
securities salesman for Financial
Design Corp. In Richmond. Va.
W’iien not slaving over budgets
and purchase orders he likes
gardening, walking with his
dogs.
—Rick Brunson

Cvsninq Herald, Sanford. FI.
"You're here. You're ihe peo­
ple o f Sanford." Commissioner
Brent Carll said, motioning lo
deny the rezonlng request.
But Commissioners Cliff Miller
and John Morris told (he resi­
dents growth Is Inevitable In
Sanford, especially on that piece
of property.
And because the frontage Is
a lread y zo n ed co m m e rc ia l.
M orris said. " I f so m e b o d y
purchased that land and wanted
to pul a strip center In. there's
not anything we could do about
It."
But the commission denied Ihe
rcquesl 7 lo 2 with Commission­
ers Carll, Miller. Gary Davidson.
C.B Franklin. Darrell Grleme.
Sheila Roberts and Ed Keith
voting for the denial and Com ­

...R a id s
Continued form page 1A
When lawmen arrived at the
homes they announced their
presence over a loud speuker
and said they had search war­
rants. Wright said They kicked
In Ihe doors of the homes to gain
entry and Wright satd they met
no resistance and there were no
Injuries.
He said today's raids were
similar (o raids on 11 reputed

Friday, April J, 1MS-SA

m issioners M orris and J.Q
“ Slim " Galloway voting against

It.
Jalalne la c. of 423 W. 18ih
St., who started the petition
drive said afterward the resi­
dents w ill keep h ittin g the
streels collecting signatures.
"W e made a difference tonight
and hopefully we ll make a
difference on ihe 2 2 nd." she
said.
LaZenby declined comment
and Huber could not be reached
today.
He said Wednesday his con­
tract with he school board Is
negotiable for 6 months. If the
rezonlng Is ultimately denied. hf'Jf
said he possible could find.-,
another use for the property.
—Rick Brunson
drug supply houses In Sanford
on March 24 during which 13
persons were arrested,
About 25 lawmen working In
tw o teams executed today's
raids. Wrlgbt said
Pllngr was being held at the
Seminole County Jail today In
lieu of *5.000 bond and Rob*,
ertson was being held In lieu of
$500 bond.
Bond had nol been set for
Redden early today and Wright
said he may face additional
charges after Ihe search of his
home is completed.

★ 20 YEARN EXPERANCE
II uill ling Transmission*

★ WORK GUARANTEE!)
★ LOWEST PRICES

WEATHER
A R E A F O R E C A ST : Today
partly sunny, breezy and mild
High In the low lo mid 80s
Gusty south wind 15 lo 20 mph
Tonight partly cloudy and mild.
A 20 percent chance o f showers.
Low In Ihe mid 60s South wind
around 10 mph. Saturday a
chance of showers or thun­
derstorms. Continued mild ternperalures with the high In thr
low lo mid 80s. South wind 15 lo
20 mph shifting to north and
decreasing by late afternoon.
Rain chnnce 40 percent.
AR E A READINGS (9 a.m.):
temperature: 71: overnight low;

5 5 ; T h u r s d a y 's h ig h : 7 8 ;
barometric pressure: 30.09; rela­
tiv e h u m id ity : 6 8 p e rc e n t;
winds; south-southeast at 16
mph: sunrise: 612 a.m.. sunset
6 45 p.m.
S A T U R D A Y TIDES:
Daytona Beach: highs. 8:39
a.m.. 9:02 p.m.: lows. 2 :1 1 a.m..
2.24 p.m.; Port C an averal:
highs. 8:31 a.m., 8:54 p.m.;
lows. 2:02 a.m.. 2:15 p.m.:
B ayp ort: highs. I 44 a.in.. 1:26
p.m.: lows. 7:43 a m . H24 p.m,

F ATI IKK AM) SON O ITE H A TIO N
L O C A T IO N S T O S E N Y E Y O U

/

FREE

*9.95 Fluid

K*»«d
t

,».

__
ft

1 Din

Servirr In

^^^ C liu n g e

Yrans©are

Mnti (lust

A O M It llO N t

Andsrton L Brown
Wliiio Brown Vr.
Paul H Dantali
Calfwrlna L Dofcton
Ann N Bran

Richard
aanford

C

BIBTHt
and Ann N Ryan, a baby boy

SUNDAY
JA M

V

Now Appearing
D o n ’t M is s i

SESSION
6 -1 2

R O D E O

JIM WEST DUO

M O N .9-1 T U E S . 4 7 W E D .-S A T . 4 8

WHISKEY RIVER

Homo C Whll*

Lucy B E 19.rn .n n Da Bar r
J W Compton Daltona
Morton E Coi Oaiton*
Row Maim. Oaltona
Patricia B Lata, Lata Menroa
D I1 C H A H 0 IV
Vanlord
Alton B Du.bury
Roaa Plasm lar
Nancy L. Kyla Da IIona
Mary F Wllllamt. Daltona
Malania L Wllllamton and baby boy.
Wlntar Park

3 2 3 -2 2 8 8

WHERE COUNTRY* HOT A v "
FAD, RUT A WAY OF U F E

Cowtr.t Ftorlda S a^tw ul N n s U I

TkwnOsf

10

/transmissions

2710 HWV. 17-92 SANFORD

HOSPITAL
NOTES
Vnntord

H arriett said today he ts
"a v a ila b le for s e rv ic e " and
would await the com mission's
action.
Of Butler's retirement. Harriett
said, "I hate to see him go ... but
If he's made up his mind lo retire
It looks like that opens a door for
me."
The police chief's position
pays from $27,872 lo $39,991.
Butler presently Is paid the
maximum figure The assistant
c it y m a n a g e r 's post p a y s
$2G.GGl to $38,779 and Harriett
Is paid $36,356
C om m issioners David Farr
and Milton Smith said they favor
Ihe appointment of Harriett to
police chief.
"I've got a lot of confidence In
Sieve Harriett. I think he'd make
a good police chief." Farr said. "I
think the city of Sanford would
be happy lo have Steve Harrietl
os police chief, t think there’s a
whole lot o f community support
for him ." Farr said.
T h e c o m m is s io n e r s and
Knowles praised Butler, saying a
man with hla 30 plus years of
experience will be missed
' He was police chief through
the trying times of the '60s and
’ 70s." Knowles said. "It's times
like that the people lean back
and say ‘ I'm glad I'm not the
police chief."*

trians w ho cross congested
French Avenue. LaZenby said.
The center would call for paving
80 percent of the 10 acres, but
he said the drainage of the lot
would be Improved.
Huber would agree lo replace
the trees tom down as a result of
construction and lhe landscap­
ing around the property would
be better than most that exist on
most site plans. LaZenby said.
"Not Just a few shrubs and a
30 Inch hedge and a few other
things ... When I saw this it took
on more of the characteristic o f a
garden than It did a landscaped
area." he said.
Students would temporarily be
able to continue parking their
bicycles on a section o f the
property. As for the land's use as
a playground. LaZenby said
Huber would compensate by
making a "contribution" to the
city's Barks and Recreation De­
partment.
But when It came time for a
vote, the presence and concerns
o f the residents tipped the
scales.

A pril 9 - 21st

HAPPY HOUR 11 AM*8 PM
KITCHEN FACILITIES
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
FREE SNACKS 4*6
(Hwy. 17*92) Sanford
1200 S. French Ave.

FREE DANCE LESSONS
EVERY TUES. 7-9 PM
By: THE BARN BRATS

ttw y at

\

MEMIIEHSHII'S A V A IL A lllE
IIECOME A D IX IE DIEIIAHI)

■

PH . 3 2 2 -2 4 7 5 1 f i S

3

THE
BARN

L e t’s H ear »•
It For
S an ford !
D o n 't M i s s It...

Sanford Appreciation Week
APRIL 22 • 27
Special Tabloid April 24 In The

Evening Herald
3 00 N. French Ave., Sanford

322*2611

&gt;

^*»■»

%

'

-«•*#-*

*♦» -

W WwiT* &lt;

rr

�V

SPORTS
4A— Evening Merjld, Sjnford. FI.

Bsritnf

JWIffl B »W »
■*irwt (M il,)
Vntnual (Phil
Wtpgmt (S D ) .........
Smith (SI L )
IPhil |
IC n n
Wilton (N Y |
Dstpiet (C M 1
MtG** IS* L .)
0 Smith SI L l

L»ry (P

it)
C O a .it IS 7 1
O ff IP ,

t.
M«y»*

ft |

Leonard

&lt;1f I

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

|
...

71

n
70

*0

44
44
44
41
4)
11

Huns
*,on&lt;to4fg 'CM 1
Rain#* (MN 1
Aliggint (S D 1
Sttmual IPhil 1
M «tth * * t (CM 1
C fu l IHou 1
D»'fi&gt;*f ICM 1

..

Sthm.tll IPhil 1
Ooran IHou 1

114
...............144
ID*
- ..... 101
101
H
tl
»4
fJ
n

Dovfcltt
p«r tpi»f).

Friday, April 9, 1US

N
]|
J4

Caftgf (Mti |

,

JJ
|§

Hitt

)
)
Mufpfcy (AMj
R jln tt IMtl
Samuel (Pht)

Hrnnr PM}

113
Md
tti

147
171

Walks
M afH **t

(CM) .....

......

IN Y 1.
Sthmltft (Phil 1
Rama* (MN I
hompvxi iPlM |
Murphy (All 1
Slraabarr. IN Y 1
W 'jgitti I S O )
Crul
1
L Smith 1S* Ul

n

....

T

Triptt*

11
11

C^wl (Hou I
Dofan (Hou )
McGm (Sf L &gt;

V
74

n
;&gt;
7J
n

1H#u .

If
If

Slfflvtl l Phi• )
$*tdb*rf (Chi )

»0J
17

__If

11

Mc0«ynold« (SO)
Wyftna &lt;Pitt )

.... M

10
10

Gywftf' 11 O l1

*nwn IN V.)
R iin t!

__ t

(M (U ..w mm

RAINES RATES: Montreal’s Tim Raines ranked on the top 10 in seven offensive categories last year. The Expo left fielder was the N.L. le

Winningham Makes Left Right For Raines
By Bam Cook
H era ld Sports Editor
la-fi la right. T h a i’* Hir philosophy Tim "Hix k"
Haines In adopting for (hr 1985 base hall srason
which o |m-(in for liic Montreal Expos Monday In
Cincinnati.
Moved to renter field Iasi year as a replacement
for Andre Dawson's ailing knees, Haloes covered
Ihc ground of a center fielder but didn't measure
up with his arm. according
Exjw puhllclsl
Richard Griffin.
This year, however, he will return to left held
and he couldn't t&gt;c happier.
"T h ey (Itic Expos) asked me during the winter
which poMllon I wanled lo play. I told them Hint I
felt a lot more comfortable In leh field, said
Haines."
If the request Is granted. It may be the first

Baseball
shulllc-frcr year that Raines has enjoyed. A l­
though Raines has always he- an all-around
athlete, the Kxpos have been Indecisive about
where to use their June 1077 fifth-round draft
pick. He has batted first, second, third and
cleanup in the halting order. Hr has played
second base, left field and center field.
Raines, who will be 20 years old Srpi 16, was
gummed as a second baseman during Ills three
minor league stops at West Palm Reach IA).
Memphis (AAI wild Denver (A A A I Hr was the
all-slur second baseman for Memphis He was
I h r S porting News and Tapp* Minor League
Player o f the Year for Denver.

By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
Faring one of the lop teams
In (he slate In one s Initial
varslly start Is rnough (o grind
the rotator cuff on any pitcher s
arm Anyone, that Is, except
Sean "Flake" Flaherty.
"H e 's fearless." confirmed
Lake Mary coach Allen Tuttle
a fter his sophom ore righ t­
hander had handcuffed the
Doone Braves on Jusl one hit
and the Rums continued their
stampede through the losers'
bracket in the Colonial Classic
with an 11*1 victory Thursday

r -

*
—

Baseball

A win this uflernoon would
push the Rams Into a 7 p.m.
game against Edgewater. The
winner of that duel would have
lo beat Apopka (wire Saturday
(3 p.m. and 7 p.m j for the
championship.
Due to a rush of sore arms.
T u ttle sum m oned F lah erty
from the Junior varsity with a
24th hour cu ll.'T was Just
hoping he was home when I
called Wednesday ntght," said
ut Colon Ul High School.
Tuttle. "H e hud to wear 'The
Lake Murv which lost to Oak Whip's* (Erie tin gen) uniform
Ridge Tuesday, has won three But he sure knows how lu
straight lo Improve Its record lo pitch."
19-5 overall The Rams have a
And the fun-loving rig h t­
return mulch wllh Oak Ridge hander wusn't about lo he
loduy at 4 30. Mike Schmlt. Intimidated by u team which
Lake Mary's mononucleosis- was ranked lOih In the stale
stricken Junior, will also relurn Just a few weeks ago Flaherty's
lo the lineup, according lo post accomplishments tended
Tuttle. protMhly us designated c r e d e n c e to t h a t . A s a
hitler.
12 y e a r - o ld . he w as k e y

w

&lt; 4

Sean 'Flake' Flaherfy made
the most of his first varslly
start, hurling a one hitler
against Boone.
mem tier of the Seminole Pony
Broncos who finished second In
the World Series Last year, he
See FLAHERTY, Page 8A

Hysell Pumps Life Into Rams' Huriers

H t u ld Phaiaky Or*gary Osfcni

Reggio Collier bolts for a 63-yard TD to clinch win.
“ I wish the world for Uernle
runners wllh 03 yards A 34yhrd completion lo Rleky Porter Koaar. hut I don't have ihr time
to worry about him ." said Col­
on 3rd und-23 led to Chuck
lier. referring to ongoing talks
llushlieck's 26 yard field goal
tx-iwcrn Orlundo owner Donald
that mudr 11 21 17 w llh 4:25
Dl/ney and the agent for the
rrmalnlng
K e lle y co m p leted 7 - o f- 15 University o f Miami's coveted
quarterback. "1 have no control
p a sses fo r 152 y a rd s, but
m isfired cm four straight at­ over ihr situation."
Collier ulso scored on a pair of
tempts to turn Hu- ball over to
O rlando wllh u m inute left. &gt;I -yard runs und Jerry Parrish
Three plays later. Collier outrun gave Hie Renegades un electri­
a tired Memphis defense down fying stari when he returned the
the right sidelines lor u 63-yard game's opening klckoit 87 vurds
run that gave him his ninth lor a l l)
rushing T D o f the season.
See Sf X lR E tiO A H D ro r S T A T S

W INTER H A V E N Harold Pitts, Chris
HoaJtutn. Mult Palumbo and Ken Rohr alt turned
In |K-rsomil best Thursday us the l.ake Mary
Rains Ihitshed seventh among u lougtr Held ut Ihr
W lplrr Raven Invitational ut Winter Huven High
School.
Pills, a Irunsfcr from Kansas, hurl specialized In
I lie, 440 lire past three years until m oving to the
MHO this year. Pttts ran u LRU. I which wus good
lor third Ix-hlnd Luke Huntley's John Mondo
I I 67.7) and Oak Ridge s Percy While 11 57.41.
Bonham. a four-year vurslty runner, ran a 15.4
In the 120 hurdles for his brsi lime ever Dunham
utah run u 44.5 to take fifth In Ihr 33 hut Ides
Rohr and Palumbo, both seniors, turned In an
Indrrdiblr double, according lu Lake Mary coach
Murk McGee.
Rohr run his brat mile ever in 4.2H 4 and
Pulutnbo was right behind In 4:20 u» they
finished second und third, respectively. "Th ey're
cluking In on (Derek) Tangetnan's record." said
MiGee about the 4:26 standard, "Both kids ran

* f
t

S

See RAINES. Page HA

'Fearless' Flaherty 1-Hits Boone, 11-1

Pitts Doubles Distance, Sets Mark

t

Raines to second base on May 8 .
It didn't work. Kalnrs had grown fond of the
serenttty o f left field where he could concentrate
on Ills offense. He had also grown rusty on Ihc
double-play pivot and had trouble wllh II when he
returned lo the second sack. A season-ending
m|ury to Terry Francona returned him lo led field
16.
nr, Dawson's knees limited his coverage
r
v
made the move lo renter Held.
Because o f tds -ihlllly lo hit In the clutch 1.368
with runic
Ntfkt^M islilonl. Fanning moved
him to the third
the hatting order.
He fared much bettH*^i crn ier field Ilian third
In the order. Taking ihc beat learfoff biller In Ihc
National League and moving Mi ^RGnrd didn't

Old Broncos

'Gades
Get 1st
O RLAN D O ( I l l ’ ll Horns
honked on nearby Church Street
and fans milled around Orlando
Stadium for more than an hour,
This was no championship
witnessed hy the meager crowd
of a 1.223. m erely a maiden
victory. Hut for I tic Orlando
Mehrgadr*. there wan nothing
mere about It.
Behind three touchdown runs
by quarterback Reggie Collier.
Hie Renegades earned the firs!
U8 FL victory In franchise hIMory, T hursday nlgfil by downing
th e s lu m p in g M e m p h is
Showboats '1H-17, In 19H4. *,h*.
u . m plsyed nn »lie Washington
Fcflrrnln imd finished 3-13.
('oilier clinched Hie Inaugural
trltkmph with a 03-yurd scoring
rdrl with |usi 33 seconds re*
mktinlng
"Our philosophy tills week
was dial If we could win Hits
game. we could wipe oul all Ihr
olWer games ... and gel respect."
s.i(d Orlundo Couch Lee Corso,
wlio anguished over Hie club's
O ff start "I really dirt. In dutch
slluatlnns. Jusl give Hie hall In
Collier. I said all along that we
were becoming u heller (earn
each wrrk."
In a decision destined to earn
Memphis a line from the league
office, General Manager Sieve
Khthart dosed Hie broker room
to inrdlu — a dir cel viola!ion of
UJiFL regulations. One by unc,
l he Showboats trudged to the
Irani bus, a sullen, Ircalcn club
erutrarrassed by their stutus as
Otlando's Initial victims. Mem­
phis suffered Its Inurth straight
sc)truck following u 3-0 start
j'ollter hud eoinplrted Just 43
percent of his puss utternpts
entering Ihr gumr, but he hit on
14 of-19 for 130 yards against
Memphis without an Intercep­
tion Counterpart Walter la-wls.
Hu- league’ s top-rated pusser
at(cr six weeks, was yanked 111
laynr rtf Mike Kelley early In the
loprth period alter completing
tr pi 13 passes for Juat 04 yards.
Itiriudlng a 10-yard TD strike to
Mark Huugh In the first quurter.
Making Ills Oral appearance of
the season at quarterback.
Kelley had Ihr crowd frarful of a
replay from Orlundo's 21-17 loss
at Denver lust week, u game
which Ihr Renegades Ird 17-0 ul
halftime K elley entered the
gutpr with Memphis down 21-7
ami his 30-yard puss to Rough
set up a 13-yurd TD run by
Harry Sydney, who paced all

When lie hailed .354 and stole 77 bases In Just
108 games at D eitya . i k &amp; m M knew he was
ready. Hut they a " 1-V;'’.^Q3fcr' ‘ ' m' 1 t'asemun lu
Rodnry Scott who was ,-^Kiil base stealer and
had an excellent glove.
The Montreal bralntrust decided Raines could
adapt his versatile skills to Hie outfield wh
had an opening In leh. Raines didn't have
trouble udapllng. In the '81 strike shorteneu
season. Raines stole 71 liases In flH games and
balled .304. The Sporilrig News selected him as
Rookie Player o f rhe Year. Only Fernando
Valenzuela kepi him from being Ihc Nallonal
League's Rookie of the Year.
One year later, the Expo manager Jim Fanning
had other Ideas Impressed wllh Rallies' explosive
offensive skills and disappointed wllh Scotl's
salary demands and attitude, he decided to return

T r a c k / F ie ld
great races und good two miles, too. since there
was only utxnil u 30 or 40 minute break between
ruces."
Rohr came hack wllh u 9:35 two mile for
second place while Pulumtto was next In 9:55.H.
Seminole's Billy Pcnlrk. Hie only Tribe performer
who went to thr meet, run a 9 44.3 to win It.
IVnlck's lime tied Palumbo for the county's best
this spring
Also In the mile. Luke Mary's Eric Peterson
luwered Ins Ireshmun record with a 4:41.2
clocking.
W M to Hu m k n it ilw M l
«t Wlnlw H u m High S&lt;hMl

O M S as* «*. I M I G-btnn tl. t vant *7. Winter Keren

* t.

L «M

■••nliei N .V**t Orenee IS Lake Mary M Heinee City If.
t ifgewsfSi U . Colonial II. kafaland XelMean II. LaOeland 10.
AiAwrnUal* /, ; eta HtgtilenO Pres F, lenfor*? Seminote », Freelproat

By Rob Larla
Special to the Herald
Wllh the Ills pitching stafr ravaged by Injuries.
Lakr Mary Coach Allen Tuttle turned to untried
hnrlrr Kelly Hysell and the Rams hitting corps
tor tic Ip I hiirsday morning against Winter Park.
Hysell. himself recovering from tendinitis In
both elbows, hadn't pitched all season. As
expected he was not especially sharp, but
thunks in a responsive group nl teammates that
pounded out '.7 hits, the Rams cumc up
winners. 16-9. ul Colonial High School.
Hysell. a sophomore, went Ihc dtsiuncc.
yielding 13 hits. Not exactly a C'v Young Award
performance but for his courageous cilort.
Tu lilr gave him the gumr ball. The win raised
the Rams record to 18-3. while Winter Park fell
lo 18 H
"It felt rough." said Hu- right-hander. "It
really fell wrlrd getting back on Ihe mound No
way I though 1 was going all Ihe way. Coach told
tut- I'd pitch only a couple of Innings to get the
feeling of pitching again, but we started hitting
so I stayed In."
The hitting assault started slowly hut turned
Into a full-scale barrage In the third inning. With
the score knotted ul 2, Lakr Mary came up with
four runs on four hits. Wllh two runners on

Baseball
base, Donald Gravson Jumped on a Mark
Wagonh,iusen fastball and rode It over the left
field fence lo give Ihe Rams a 5-2 lead They
added another on a two base error by shortstop
Rich Esposito and an RBI single by Kevin Hill.
Winter Park made It 6-3 In the bottom half of
Ihe Inning on a sun-aided triple by Duane
Madlll. The hit was Just one of several In which
Ihe cloudless morning sky played havoc with
seemingly routine fly trails. The Kants gol a mn
In the fourth on a Rod "C .J ." Metz linedrive
home run to left field before Winter Park closed
the gap (o one In Its half of the frame.
l^tke Mary, though, put the game awuy with
three runs In each of the final three Innings In
the fifth. Wagonhuusen was knocked oul of the
box on singles by Ryan Lisle. Ron Natherson
and HU). A walk and two errors ulso contributed
to his demise. In the sixth, a litll double scored
Grayson for one run and a two-run blast by
bient Molle accounted for the others Four
straight hits In th*- seventh led to the final tallies
Sec HTSELL, Page SA

Bowers' Relief Job Turns Back Patriots
By C hris F lster
Herald Sports W r ite r
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS - In
only his second vurslty game,
Randy Ferguson was 2 for 3
with a home run and two runs
scored. Scott Bowers, who had
been cut from the Junior varsity
team last year, turned In two
Innings of solid relief on the
mound.
When you get these kinds of
u n exp ected c o n trib u tio n s ,
you're usually going to come
out on top. The performances
of newcomers Ferguson and
Bowers ulong with thr steady
play of veterans like Mark
Hofmann and Murk Merchant
enabled Oviedo's Lions lo claim
an 8-7 victory over hard hitting
Lakr Urantley Thursday night
In prrp baseball action at l ike
Brantley High.
The Lions Unprovrd to 9-14
with the win while the slump­
ing Patriots fell closer to the
.500 mark with a 12-11 overall
record.
"W e're probably the best

Baseball
9-14 team In the state." Ovtrdo
coach Howard Mable said.
This was a big victory for us.
Th e kids were confident In
them selves and they never
qu it."
The Lions return to action
Saturday at 1 p.m. against
Father Lopes at often dreaded
City Island Park tn Daytona
Beach. Lake Brantley returns
to Five Star Conference play
Monday at 7 us Ihe Patriots
host Seabreeze.
After a scoreless first frame.
L a k e B ran tley Jum ped on
starter Kevin Kewley for three
runs In the bottom o f the
second. Mark "P ork " Coffey
reached on an error to lead oil
und Mike Davis followed with a
double high off the fence in
right. Kevin Bass followed wtth
a solid single up the middle to
drive in Coffey. Dan Beaty then
stepped up and sent a Kewley

fuslbull over the fence in left for
a 3-0Brantley lead.
Oviedo got oul of the Inning
when Hofmann, the catcher.
pl&lt; ked Blair Patten off second
tor the third out. Hofmann had
ilri-ady thrown out a Brantley
runner trying to steal In the
1m l inning.
Oviedo came back with u
(bur-run outburst in the top of
Ifn third off Brantley starter
Tim Smith. Ferguson crunched
Smith s Aral offering of the
inning over the fence In left
center for h*» ttrst varsity home
run to cut Brantley's lead to
31 .
Smith then walked number
nine hitter Jim Barrett aud
Merchant followed with a single
to left. With one out. Mable
sent the runners and It paid otf
as Tony Be blower reached on
an Infield error to load the
hoses. Smith then uncorked a
wild pitch enabling Barrett to
score and. wllh two outs. John
8 «a BOW ERS. Page BA

. 1
.

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

SPO R TS
IN BRIEF
Smith Continues Torrid Hitting,
Raiders Fall To Central Florida
OCALA — Jack Smith continued hl&lt;t hitting ramage with
a homer and two runs batted In but the Seminole
Community College Raiders dropped a 12*7 decision to
Central Florida In Mid-Florida Conference baseball Thurs­
day.
SCC. 20 15-1 overall, fell to 6-7 In the Mid Florida CFCC
26 16. Improved to 9-3. The Raiders return to action
Tuesday when they play Florida Junior at Jacksonville. On
Thursday, they host rival Valencia at 3 p.m. The Matadors
have beaten SCC twice this year.
SCC Jumped to a 2-0 lead In the first Inning but Central
Florida came up with one In the first and then knocked out
starter and loser Steve Soyer with a five-run second Inning.
Smith rapped a homer and a single while catcher Mike
Sawyer rapped a double and a single and chased home two
runs Kenny Loopcr had a triple and two singles and Mike
Songlnl clouted a solo homer
Seminole pulled within 7*5 In the top of the seventh but
CFCC erupted for three more runs in the bottom of the
Inning to pull away again. The Raiders committed four
errors

Shuler's Hom ers Lift Connection
Perennial Sanford Softball League power Tim Raines
Connection opened the 1985 spring season with a 24-4
rout of Mobtllte Monday night at Plnhurst Field.
Th r Connection pounded out 22 hits. 16 o f which were
for extra bases Ernest Shuler led the way with three hits
Including a pair of Inside thc-park home runs Ned Raines.
Fred Washington. IJumett Washington and Lloyd Wall all
slammed hmners for TRC.
In other action Monday, a nine-run second Inning carried
Kltner Surveying to u 18-3 rout thumping of Brown Doveil.
Willie Harrison led the way for Kltner Surveying with three
hits, including a two-run homer that turned out to be the
game-winning hit. Brown Bovcrt had Just three hits In the
game.
SAH Fabricating broke open a close game with six runs
In the top of the seventh Inning In a 14-7 victory over
Sunnlland Corporation
Key hit in the six-run seventh Included RBI doublrs by
Barry Graham. Burrell Riggins and Kenny Jenkins Mark
Manning slugged a solo home run In the third Inning for
SAH Fabricating Nick Nergo and Bob Kelley had two tills
each for Sunnlland.

Cum m ings Carries Tune, Bucks
U n ite d Press In te rn a tio n a l
The Detroit Pistons found out Thursday night that Terry
Cummings can carry hts team as well as he carries a tune.
Cummings opened the show before u sellout crowd of
11.052 at the Milwaukee Arena by singing the National
Anthem. He closed It by scoring 15 of hts team-high 29
points In the fourth quarter to lead the Bucks to a 130*121
victory over the Pistons.
Afterward. Cummings did not complain o f having to hold
down two Jobs.
" I enjoy playing Detroit," he said. "T h ey are a young,
competitive team with lots of good scorers. With five or six
minutes left, I felt It was time to do something.
, " It was fu n ." Cum m ings added o f hts pre-game
performance. “ I was scared still most o f the day Just
thinking about It."
Paul Pressey had 20 for the Bucks, who have won 14 In n
row at home, and ran their record to 56-21. Kelly Trtpucka
led all scorers wilt 32 points. John Long finished with 23,
Islah Thomas had 20 and Dan Roundfleld 18
The Bucks shot 58 percent from the field for the game
and made the baskets when they counted most at the end.
Elsewhere. Atlunta demolished New York, 100*79;
Seattle defeated Utah. 119-118; Denver dumped Phoenix.
110*103; und Golden State beat Houston 113-108.

Annacone Is Ready For M cEnroe
CHICAGO fill’ll — Paul Annacone thinks he can pull off
the trick no one has been able to perform all year.
Defeat John McEnroe.
Annacone Thursday gained a chance to meet McEnroe in
the quarterfinals of the 4315.000 Chicago Grund Prlx by
duplicating Ills Wimbledon upset of last year with a 2-6,
7-5.6-4 victory over sixth seeded Johan Krlek
McEnroe, undefeated this year and 71*2 In his last 73
matches, breezed past unseeded Mike Leach. 6 -1, 6-2.
Annacone's upset was one of two In the second round.
Trrrv Moor rallied to oust fourth-seeded Yannick Noah. 4-6,
7-6. 7*6. Moor will face Scott Davis In a quarterfinal match
today.
Other quarterfinal matchups pit Jimmy Connors, a 6-4.
7-6 winner over David Pate Thursday night, against Brad
Gilbert, and seventh-seeded Tim Mayotte against No. 3
Andres Gomez.
The tournament Is sponsored by Volvo.
Annacone. form er college player o f the year at
Tennessee, said he would play McEnroe the same way he
played Krlek.
"M y game plan will be the same," said Annacone.
ranked No. 60 In the world, "I'm going to try not to give
hlin anything."

Soviet Wrestlers Strangle U SA
AMES. Iowa (UPI) — It wasn't summer, or Los Angeles —
or even 1964 anymore, but the wrestling team from the
Soviet Union gave an Olympic-calibre performance
Soviet wrestlers defeated a U.S. team. 9-1. Thursday
night at Hilton Coliseum, missing a chance for a shutout
w hen form er O klahom a State A ll-A m eric a Randy
Wtllingham pinned RaJIm Novruzov after 2; 13 o f their
match at 114.5 pounds.
"T h e y are at their highest form. This la their Olympic
‘ games because we are the Olympic champs." said U.S.
coach Dan Gable, who also headed the 1964 U.S Summer
Olympic tram.
" W e ’re just not ready for this type of competition." he
said. "It's humbling, but at the same time It can open some
o f the people s eyes We have to wrestle more Interna­
tionally If we're going to compete.
"A m erica has to open up more opportunities for
wrestlers so they can stay In the sport longer."

Broyles Interviews 3 For Post
F A Y E T T E V ILLE . Ark. (UPI1 Arkansas Athletic
Director Frank Broyles Interviewed three basketball
r o a c h c In h!» search for a replacement for Eddie Sutton,
who has .icc"ptcd the head coaching Job at Kentucky.
Broyles satJ he would Interview up to three other
candidates for the lob betoie making an announcement.
wt.l~h he says may nut c ume until Saturday.
"W ludn 'he next 24 bouts, two or three more will come
In here." Broyles stud Thursday. "O r I may have to go out
there."

N o

H op e :

T u la n e

NEW ORLEANS (UPI| — In the midst of a
scandal It believes ts beyond reform. Tulane
University plans to abolish Its basketball
program.
Basketball at Tulane suddenly Is near the
end of a 73-year era. The school president
seeks its demise, the coach and two
assistants have resigned, and three players
arc embroiled In a bribery scandal.
"T h e only way I know to demonstrate
unambiguously this academic community's
Intolerance of the violations and actions we
have uncovered Is to discontinue the
program In which they originated." Tulane
President Eamon Kelly said Thursday at u
news conference.
The 29-count indictments against six
students and two others were handed down
shortly after the news conference, and
District Attorney Harry Connlck said other
Individuals could be Implicated.
Connlck said he hoped to arraign the eight

suspects as soon as possible. He also said
the investigation would continue, and could
Involve suspects In other states.
"W e have reason to believe there arc some
other people out there who deserve to be
scrutinized." he said
Kelly said at the news conference he had
accepted the resignations of coach Ned
Fowler and two assistants for NCAA re*
m illin g violations in which they paid cash
to players.
John "H o t R o d " Williams, an NBA
prospect Implicated In the point-shaving
scandal, received $ 10,000 in a shoebox
when he agreed to play for Tulane in 1981.
according to The Tlm es-Picayune/The
Statcs-llein.
Every week this past season. Fowler gave

owt tavwi
Mime
' » » - tJ»* S i*w w v « i
x w * •&gt;

sm i » m -&lt; re-

» » • - UU. Util (-fUmfClK

Met
i r&lt;

fV»X ltd

D*y»
&gt;.[*&gt;&lt;*&lt;0*111

----- __.r*imrti

autoHems

* * * « - WV1. . . . CN«* tnh*
t«m
' * « i-w
&gt;« &gt;»
l " *41 t|*
1*11uu
' t&gt; • * - WTU C
m*.*. ■CMfu*
i- u c t * iM m id

i l l * - «fW| **MM
li !'• *»*.' **m *w* Urn**
KSIIM
»»■ wfTv ess o.W iC«uill
M*ml
I * «

-

i* i
* a**

X U t

W

l

n

*r rv t •*&gt; *»&lt;•&gt; w s

**i V* w

tM i n

m

roorsui
•

llatV'ilAata

- U » X HU W i n
-I "

It* - to* UHL
Tarn**
III
mr
1 1 1 * - li » » ASA S&gt;l*ll»
OwnfewtO*** -*&lt;
;*,.- &gt;*i v
111 " - Stitt I IMA

I.IMS. Cv-mOVSS
tHl4iw-l.se HU
o n .* '
« * is is
' Wm vs w .
1 s t*
is

OlllISS tillllMS T'llDW.
IIS'Kt- HA SH
II « klliSI
IS IS ) s
ilN V lu V
IIS IS
I *11*Owl#*
|S
0 OHMS. * IMl MSI (Mil HIM
MCI I't ISIS Mill ami mu
1-Utl HwS. UH &lt;1

FISHING

‘ • t * - « » T v i • « « w .« l* * ,«

MtUfKl
O il"

- m il

1**-* Or»**l **• U* l*M C»» r*
*"-* C-i UW&gt;
TIMM
'»•"&gt;- lit* V * to-tt-ww IM
Iw s w

« iBlAl
Y«ANpr* I m 'U (*VVl(| |ctH”
ITFWAJl |MOn Th k , u
!
***** I C M M T 'ils r' V4r n e i AM

MTMCmi I1CIM

" o tw i-M t tm lim m "

I * ■ - UtA. v .i C"*&lt;"*&gt;W

m

M IIN ta M IU

• ■** -Will &gt;.Uu«|iC4 iLI

SOKC
HlfSCS-Irtll hm
«C*iT*a*
m ) » \rn
tkdtNmf JAl
10 IS
l&gt;e&gt;C
10
Qihium fiammm.rutiMUP
it o me

10 10 10

10 IP
|TnAmAnftg
10
• tin 00 Pit n0 0. fit III HI0
MW - tit MYIH
i Om U I ki
10 10 10
10 10

' MO«0U»T*M
10
0(411MM. PI4II1M I (••11100
« ' m i &lt;4D tin
«0 40 |0
IMNVmWi
10 10
IJ«Vl4yt1pr*
10
• I4I10M. f IIII AM. ft) HUM0
tfl*M-UM It M
1M.**i ,
10 10 10
MA«M|Tr«rMr
00 10
lL4*t«*
10
O?)DI0 *'} flMtf, Ttlllirip
0 rK4*lM OHM
|I&gt;«40MC0M4
10 10 10
)****»*•
10 10
tU0M0 0 l«M
10
• &lt;&gt;i&gt;00 . mitPM foinniM
mr4ce-i 4*. A mn
•OWgDMMr
T0 10 10

I4

l»l I v Ut Intt Idvi u ilt fii
4 Urry
(»« hl'lt • 11 0 1 \
LM0 F| 01. MU 4
l « 0 HM 4r1«M
l||
M* I AMMuhi a »0 04 Ml I
^

Williams. Tulane'* No 2 all-time scorer,
and the others are accused of fixing three
Metro Conference games to win big bets

Sluman 66
Leads By 1

GREENSBORO. N C. (UPI1 Third-year pro J e ff Slumun.
starting early Thursday, played
bis best round o f golf ever. Ihen
watched fnim the clubhouse as
hts co m p etitio n w as blown
TO
TH E
away.
m o m uN Tum op tu b
Slum.m hirdlrd six holes for a
S W IN G IN G C L U b H E A C I.
6 -undcr-par 66 und the firstround lead In the $400,000
Greater Greensboro Opeti.
it wax the best round ever fur
T H A T IK B A n E T U B
W A I S T S E iK G IN
t h r 27 y e a r - o ld n a t iv e of
C O C K IN G A S T H I
Rochester. N Y W hile ntoreC lub HEAD AB.ACMES
cxperlenced gollrrs were having
K b O U T W A IS T
trouble with gustlng winds lute
V liO H s T H E N
in the afternoon. Slumun teed off
C O N T IN U E T o OO
SO J V IO O T M L V
early and hit died three of four
AND G A A O o A L L T
par-3 holes at Forest Oaks
I T C O N T IN U E S
Country
Club
T O A .\ B * .
"Early In the day It wasn't so
t)U T
A l l
w it h
w indy," Sluman said "I was
O U T C O N S C IO U S
able to gel into a good rhythm.
MS B F P O A . T . . .
Things were Just tailing for m e."
Englishman Sandy Lyle came
Of' C**4*f I -4(4' l-*4IM4 lUI II U 144(
In second with a b under-par 67.
II 0
with birdies till tlirt-r of his taxi
MT»0MAU|A4Uf
t tm il'mtMvi »s« i | 0
live holes.
*1
M l
A'M
•4 0
HI
" I played the jNir 5s well I hit
MmWmwi 0 tub
Iki&gt; 9&gt;
U 9
)u
most of thrill In tw o." Lyle said.
kM Amf»tn
0
*0 S.V4A » k 0 M
Nm tgi
II 0
"T h e putter worked very well
OiCMWv U
lei)
14 II
Mf»
It I) LM today."
Aiiza
Joey Stndclar. Dan Pohl and
I) I) 10
»l 14 44)
Botitiy
Clampett tlrd for third at
*‘»%0A
T| H
6 6 . Canny Wadktns and Roger
04PdrMli|lt 0
V* Hm*
I I)
Maltble came in at 69, fotlowrd
» "lk/f
I II 0)
by |0 golfrrs at 70. Defending
champion Andy Bean finished
IV-0-1 0 -0 -f
well back in the p*u w wuh a
4- 94)
M U.
twn over-par 74.
M
4-1
•t S M I
4-0 M 0
&gt;*..&gt;»« * iii* ««^ r i
Slumun entered the PGA lour
0 i« v e
*•» — SA * 1 II 1144411
In 1982. t w o y e a r s a ft e r
C «I 44« * " t C l 44U*t|Al||
•U m i i
graduating from Florida State.
IUV4I0Ol—&lt;i 40 Ir^rr
* 1. Am m Ct i I
After a mediocre first season In
0*1 IfM e r l)M Or wAde I M h I) 0
Orm1*411114 '.. mi
CM* 9 0 C*»«r 4 0 I t a v t I t l 0 N0r 11
which his best finish was 25th in
CLt**|IS It I c H h m i
the 1983 Texas Open, he swit­
RAltmC * m * 4» » L t t il 9 D IM
CMVWI t| 1*4 C*t* *
i r m M il IB O w m Ceurn DM# 10
ched lo the Aslan tour last year.
NBA
Hts return to the PGA this year
M C II¥ I0 6 - A U «0* t R»«04 I tl,
hud been less than dramatic so
)r0 w I ’4 IpMiM 11 Hmm I H IH i
M
'EM
M
1
0
O
r*
*
6
t)t
10 Nr*r j0 C/M0I 9)1 Own*
lur. Hr wu» cut from two o f the
4 n«At« A k s s T g l l
lu » m
10 (wwi in
Wn* tMU*«AI0
five tournaments he entered,
C0T0 )M 0 IWM4 I II
0
&lt;0 S r i W
und has earned Just 44,782,
100 111 hmtVm m
148th on the list o f PGA money
* f 149|‘ I • I • 4I
BASEBALL
iM f M M lf f )
winners.
0
4
4
»
A
f0$4»i«40K
t
■#-!
l l l l l l l l t l It lt M II
" I tried u new setup today,"
CM«Jf44*PA.I400A0 t 0|M
U li a i C U K A M I
t ■* **
B l Alt
Sluman said.
l A O0P91MOM04I I* *
0 I m
T»P «9
Moving closer to the ball und
W$AMVi«ciC)Mr 9 Mpm
14 9
C4H0 F40
■
*H Ainn 0 Bp«
d o s in g Ills sta n ce en abled
D D
CHAfl
•' ***** 0 I $m
0 t) m
Ot^Mt
Sluman to plate hts tee shot
•4 ;
within striking distance on sevNHL
I) D 10
s»* wi
II M 111
t-rul par 3 holes
1
1
n d
OMW0
l **«« 1
Hr used an right-iron to chip
II u
c
»urt0r«l MiMMrvnl
In from 25 feet on Ihr 215-yard
K
D M
Wkr"M ' ***** i
I) 0
******* l • Vl«l
eighth hole.
a 0
nt l«Mn i |i uwt «

■,.iM- in
ia
Oimiss runs, m in ts.
■ ria-t it OHS
itomsm*
"S * . is
im ik
ta is
I'tw lw t
IS
OllllBM *l»IIMB, m ill IMS
ic*- ii c as
•
is is is
I [■*"*.«,£"*
IS IS
’ iMotCxm
is
oiuius Actiias ttmiisa
ll*rw»-VU.C ns
Its**
its is us
II M .
IS IS
ns* ■*r CVw,
|s
9111)0* *1*11US t Mill SIS

"W *-M X C M a* III

*0*1(1
i * » - tie*.
*■ «*
'*•
&lt;WM 1*«* J*4**'** ••&lt;■»

Fowler and assistants Mike Richardson
and Max Pfeifer resigned Just hours before
they were called to testify to the grand Jury
under a grant of immunity. Although they
were not susj&gt;ecled In the point-shaving
scam, they refused to answer some ques­
tions

I ftC U E V e T H IB
V I T O L M IN O IV JQ ,
A C T IO N S h o u l O /
TA K E p l a c e
O N LV
IN
AE&amp;PONSE

-IS IS

13 4*4 C» 4,

M M r« , i

l« » -l

The Board of Administrators is to vote on
doing away with basketball at Its April 18
meeting

\ j ^ 3 r M t n .E d o
r T T H ( W IS.IBT5
C O C K IM n R EO U LC tp.
S O U . O O L H S W IIM O ?

*v b. ( I I I t ill &gt;1 « m t I * i h i

It

!»**►»*►* - -4***T

Williams admitted to the cash payments
— which are unrelated to the polnl-shavlng
scheme — in a taped statement given
authorities after his arrest, the newspaper
said

Play Better G o lf with JACK NIC KIAU S

&gt;» : «
I Mi l In
is
sticks rail ms, fuiaiata
ts tic*—n o as
iin-Ntai
ts . a is

D e m is e

Williams an envelope containing $100. the
report said.

Basketball

SCOREBOARD
TU BE

P la n s

O k M » t l n »4 9 Cat' «sr*s*

«t D4 tl 4 « HM
HC BID)

USFL

U*OIO ITATtl tOOTIAIl ItAMt
InNrsC
M i ? *&lt;■***«
1 11 nt s&gt; «•
14?
1 1 • HI Ht IN
***'• &gt;*r«*1
I 1 • » «l IM
Ubtmp* 1
) 4 1 &lt;n is u&gt;
iAAntSff
1 I I III st s
JMIMNV1I0
t I • in is in

O 0F0 i

1 1 • W IS Ml
C— Mtsses
NoaAisn
t 1•
OsiMAtf
« 1 1 IS IS IS
Ari4BN4
« I 1 S I M
C0**sr
• 1 • m. ID X
M iM
f 1 • 111 II HI
Um Aa0 h4
1 4 4 Ul H n*
L«H AAftftn
1 1 • SI tM tit
(W W ilS n *
C* MMm N 10 -# * 4 H
MWSiir l t*«w*«

i«npf&gt;mitfii04l«f
0*400 V 1*^40 I » *

I ■» *
•0W404r 0 t win I l| m
M’ -WI •* IM AF0404 4
• $m
I I 90-11
H • H4-0
V HUM '(♦/» &gt;Kl
041011 0

Ml) •0

Blackwelder Beats Heat For Lead In Shore
RANCHO MIRAGE. Calif. (U l’ ll
— With a M-orchlng desert sun
sending the temperature lo 100
degrees. It was a perfect day lo
lie outside. If you happen lo lie
an iron foundry worker. Or a
w elder. Or a Blackwelder.
Myra Blackwelder withstood
the sizzling heal Thursday und
llred a 4-undcr-par 66 for a
one stroke lead entering today's
second round of the 4400.000
Dinah Shore tournament, the
first major LPGA event o f thr
year.
Deadlocked In second place
w ith ro u n d s o f 6 9 w e re
Australian Jane Crafter. 1964
R o o k ie o f th e Y e a r P a t ty

Sheehan, und Judy Clark.
The heat got to Blackwelder on
the 11 th hole, where she said
she became gioggy and slightly
disoriented. She found some
shade on the remaining holes,
gulped down lots of water, and
capped her round with a 30-foot
hlrdlr putt on No. 16.
She had four btrdlcs and no
bogey* on the tough par-72.
6.275-yard Mission Hills Country
Club course. Not bad for only her
second tournament since Nov­
ember. And even more remark-

THE ADVANTAGES

This Ad Is
Worth *50

able considering Just 10 weeks
ago she guve birth to her first
child.

Golf

RADtAL MUD-TERRAIN VK
a m roim rauar race rrovin
RCRrORHAMCZ.

RAISE rOUH STANDARDS OF RIDC
AND POtrOHMAWCr.

Friday, April 5. 1 H J-7 A

1

Toward Any QM 350 Standard
Transmission Job From 1071 lo
1978 Plus 12 Month or 12,000
Mila Warranty

"M y legs aren't very strong
yet, und the heal really bothered
m e," she said. "I'm nI 111 working
on lots of changes after the long
luynrf. and nothing (eels rrul
comfortable out there. Hut I kept
working und I got some breaks."

Ken Kern Transmission
500 Lauisi A**., San lord

3 2 3 -3 0 4 0

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES...

We also make 1st and 2nd mortgage loans
on Residential or Commercial Real Estate
up to $100(000.
Personal loans ere available including
Revolving Credit Line.

f i mm*

Goodrich

r
fgBFGOQDfUCIijB

—

Goodrich

—

r

—

.......... i

K iri TLXmH
J/A HRADiALS
&amp;WT MAKE CARS PrRrQHMB
i

A O K T IK i: &gt; IA K T
Ge2pC1

* 9

MON rm U V J Q SAT tl J 00

3 2 2 -7 4 S f t K
24 1:i SL French Avt^x

SANRQRD

,
I

AT&amp;T

0 m *m J N m r
Gau jn c *
~ !2 S £ S r ‘

Famllr Crodlt Services. lac.
a atnary &lt;*css Gwwpa con****

&amp;

ON LA. 434, NCAA 17-92
In The Park Squars Shopping Ctr
Longweod, PL 32740

HAITI* K0TT,

831-3400

�ft

M

M

• *• * v

IA —£ vning Htratd, Sanford, FI.______ Friday, April 5, IfIS

American League Capsules

Henley's Hit Turns
Aw ay Trinity's Bid
LONGWOOD — Tw o ranked
baseball team s m et on the
diamond Thursday night. The
fact that one was a 4A school
and the other a I A school didn't
make much difference.
Mike Henley singled home two
runs In the bottom o f the sixth
Inning to ease 4A Lyman past
1A Trinity Prep. 12-10. tn prep
baseball T h u rsd a y night at
Lyman High School.
Henley. Lym an's hottest hitler
over the past two weeks, looped
a bases loaded single tn right
center which chased home two
runs for an 11*9 lead. Derek
Ltvernols then laced a base hit to
push the lead to three runs.
"When Mike Henley Is ahead
on the count, you belter look
ou t." said Lym an coach Hob
McCullough, "He’s going to hit
the ball hard somewhere."
The comeback erased an 8-1
lead by No. 0 (1A |x&gt;ll) Trinity
and Improved the Lyman record
to 19-4. Lyman, ranked No. 9 In
the state, returns to Five Star
Conference action Monday at
home against Seminole.
’ ’Our pitchers were asleep,"
said McCullough who used Clint
Baker, C ra ig M eyer, Hryon
Overstreet. Mark Whittington,
Dale Stevens. Baker again, and
Ltvrrnols to nail down the victo­
ry. "Baker and Overstreet are
just not getting enough work tn
be effective. T h ey're going to
have to throw more between
starts."

A.L. East

Baseball
Baker started and departed In
a seven-run Trinity Prep second
Inning. Meyer and Overstreet
fo llo w e d . W h ittin g to n , a
sm ooth-throwing Junior, was
next and he was the most
Impressive, going
Innings
while holding the Saints pretty
much In check.
Lyman pulled within 9-8 after
four Innings and McCullough
went with sophomore Stevens to
open the fifth. He couldn't find
the plate, though, and It was
back to Baker again. The senior
lefty had much better stuff the
second time around and his
teammates supported him with
four more runs tn the bottom of
the sixth.
John Bane and pinch hitter
Marty Martin walked before Kyle
Brubaker took a two-strike de­
livery on the hand to load the
bases. Henley, who had two tills
and th r e e runs b a tte d In.
Inllnwr-d with his base hit to
score l wo runs.
Ltvernols, who had a big
b a s e s •c I c a r I n g d o u b le to
highlight a four-run fifth Inning,
concluded the scoring with a
single. Llvernols had u pair of
doubles and a single lo account
for four runs. Brubaker chipped
In a double and a single.
Llvernols made a rameo up-

Mike Henley came through
with the clutch hit in the
sixth Inning to lift Lyman
past upstart Trinity Prep.
pearance to preserve Baker's
fourth win In five decisions In
the seventh. Coming on with the
bases loaded and one out.
Llvernols wild pitched home a
ntn but then blew away the next
hitter on strikes and Induced the
final batter lo pop out to Baker at
first.
O REYH O U N D G RO W LS Henley, one of the top football
players In Central Florida, said
Thursday that he has been
offered a scholarship to the
University of Pennsylvania and
wi l l s i g n wi t h the
Philadelphia-based school later
this month.
Henley was an All-County
linebacker and finished among
the top five In tackle during both
his Junior and senior years. He
w i ll p r o b u b l y u s e d a s a
linebacker or a defensive back at
Penn.
— Sam Cook

Rivers May Be Washed Up

a

I^OMPANO BEACH (UPI» - Mickey ftlvcrs. the
oulfielder who endearetl himself lo fans with his
own version of "Stengrlese.” may have played
his last major league game.
The Texas Bangers placed Blvers. 36. on
Irrevocable waivers Thursday with the Intention
of giving the 12-year veteran Ills unconditional
relense The left-handed outfielder was shipped
out lo make room for 25-ycar-old Tom m y
Dunbar, who led the American Association tn
batting last year.
"I'm not surprised. I kind of saw It com ing,"
Blvers said "I'll sit around for a couple of days
and see what turns up. I'll miss all the guys
around here, but I'll sec them down the road."
Blvers' com m ents, like those o f the lute
Yankees manager Casey Stengel, often Iran■cended rvrrdny KngUsh
During his tour with I hr New York Yankees, lie

... F la h e r t y
Continued from 6 A
played n crucial rule as Ihr
A ltam onte S en iors became
World Champions.
So. for the "F la k e ," It was
Just another game (hal Just
happened to be his first varsity
start. T h e b ig sophom ore
struck out four und walked
three. Hr gave u pu flrsl-lnnlng
double to Paul Guy and then
shut down the Braves as he
teammates once ugaln put on a
hrav) llreworks snow (see re­
lated itory. same page) with
the aluminum.

Continued from BA
by Lake Mary.
Down 16-7 entering Its last al-but. Winter Park
put two un the board un a long home run by Ed
Aiello to close out Ihc scoring.
In (he game. Lisle. Metz. Nathernon. and Mnlle

C o n tln u sd fro m 6 A
Lnwrte gave the Lions a 4-3
lead when he punched a tworun single lo right. Pat Lusk
then came on In relief and.
alter walking Bobby Bradley,
got oul o f the Inning when
Hofmann llnrd out lo right.
B r a n t le y s q u a n d e r e d u
buses loaded, no-out opportuni­
ty In the bottom of the third
and It turned out to be a costly
Inning for the Patriots. Mike
Beams drew a walk to lead oil
und Lusk fo llo w e d with a
double to left. Krwley then
walkrd CofTry to load the bases
and Muble summoned Bowers
to ball out the Lions.
The slim right-humier. who
was the third member of (he
Seminole Puny Broncos World
S e rie s ru n n e r u p to e x c e l
Thursday, q u ic k ly rsn Ihr
count to two strikes on Davis
and, on the next pitch, the
ru n n ers b ro k e and D avis
s q u a r e d f o r i h r s u ic id e
squeeze. But Brantley ended up
rutting Its own throat when
Davis mlsaed the bunt for the
third strike and Beams was
caught In no-man's land for (he

A.

ft a a n 1 * ,t^- .1 *,’*,! u

t

dismissed his relationship with munager Billy
Martin and owner George Stelnbrenner. saying.
"Me, Billy ami George — we'rp Just two of a
kind."
Or. os hr said once. "It was so cold out I here a
dog was chasing a cat, und I hey were both

walking."
Blvers' bal usually was more eloquent He bit
.300 In 313 al-bals last season to pull his career
average to .295 This nprlng. however, he was
hilling Just .259 In 27 ut-bnts.
Blvers Joined the Bangers In a mulll player
trade w llh the Yankees In 1079. He broke Into the
major leagues wllh California, earning n full-time
spot i n . 1974,

Shane Letlerlo started off the
pyrotechnics wllh a solo homer
to center for a 1*0 lead In the
firs t. W hite-hot S c o tt UnderwtxHl lied the tournament
record wllh Ills ninth hit and
Bod "C .J ." Meti rocketed a
homer to right center for a 3-0
edge, ft was Met*' seventh
dinger of the year which moved
him ahead of the Idle Schmlt
for the county lead.
In the second, Keith Wallace
walkrd, moved to second on
Brett Mode's groundnut and
scored on a single by Ryan
Lisle. The swift sophomore
stole second, moved to thhd
when the hall went Into center
field und scored when Letterto

...Hysell
...Bow ers

Baseball

reached on a dropped third
strike.
In the third. Metz doubled,
moved lo third on u balk and
scored when Bon Nalhemon hit
Into a fielder's choice for a 6 I
lead.
Molle singled und moved to
second on an errant plckotf
attempt. Lisle followed with a
single and Underwood un­
loaded his third homer of the
year way over the right field
fence for a 9-1 lead. Met*
walked and one mil later Kevin
Bill and Nntherson each drrw
tree passes. Wallace applied the
clincher with a two-run single
for the 1 1-1 victory.
— Bam Cook

had Iwo hits apiece, while Grayson und Hill
banged out three each.
In Thursday's winner's bracket game. Apopka
used a strong relief ellort by lefty Tim Oxley lo
outlast Edgewuler. 16-11. The Blue Darters, the
only unbeaten led In the tournament, erased a
10-6 Edgewuler lead with u five-run slxlh
Inning. Second sarker John Jackson's two-run
single turned the tide.
Oxley, who was making his third uppearuncr
in us muny days, stymied the Eagles over the
last two Innings to pick up the save. Keith
Ussrcy was the winner.

set oud oul. Bowers then struck
out Bass to end the threat and
preserve Oviedo's leud.
The Lions upped their leud to
5-3 In the top o f the fourth
when Ferguson drew u walk,
stole second and eventually
scored on Eric Shogrrn's KBI
groundnut, Shogren. Seminole
County’s leading hitter, was
held In check by Brantley's
pitching us he was 0 for 4 for
the night.

runners. Buss then got u
fusltxdl right In his wheelhouse
und hr sent It Into orbit for o
tw o-ru n hom er und a tie
bullgumr.
After Beaty looped a single lo
left. Mable lifted Bowers for
Crulg Duncan. "Bowers cume
In un threw well," Mable said.
"H e didn't do bad for a guy
Ihut was cut from the Junior
vartsty trum Iasi year."
Duncan hit the first baiter he
fuced but managed to gel oul of
the Inning wllh the score still
tied at 7-7.
T h e L ion s broke the tic
autcldy with a run In the top of
the sixth. Merchant drew a
walk (a lead off. stole second
and scored when Shogren
reached on an error.
" O u r to p tw o h it t e r s
(Merrhant and Shogren) really
gave Brantley problems on the
base paths." Mable said. "It's
g r e a t to h a v e g u y s w llh
wheels."
Merchant gave up Just a
two-out Infield tingle In the
bottom o f the sixth and. after
hitting the lead off m in In the
sevenlh. retired the next three
hitters lo pick up the pitching
victory.

Bowers pitched oul of a slight
Jum In the bottom o f Ihc fourth
and Oviedo catnr back with
two mns In the top of the fifth
for a 7-3 lead. Lester Cabrera
singled to right lo lead off and
Luwrie followed by slicing a
base hit to right W llh one out.
Cabrers slole third und Lowrte
moved tr second on s wild
pilch. Hofmann (hen stepped
up and drilled a single to right
to drive tn both Cabrera and
lawrtc.
Lake Brantley responded
wllh four runs on five hits In
the bottom of the fifth to tie the
score ul 7-7. With one oul.
Lusk and Coffey hit consecu­
tive singles and Davis smashed
a double over (he center field­
er's head to drive In both

I

Am *&gt;k«n Lt*g**
t a i l DHle!**
Oattlnwrt O rw k t
Lai* ***** Iwuitt — Jlft I U 77) Managar —
Jo* Aftoballl l l r d la a io n l. Vital 111*
itatlitici tJtti In on* fun g*m*a (10 H I; IJib
In hitting I 2171, 7"d In pitching (J 71 E R A I
Strtngth* — M int SoOdx-kan. Sta*m Davit
and Scott 7MGrtgor form cor* ot rotation
t in t bowman Eddia Murray and thortitoe
Cat Rtpknntwootbawball'itapplayori
N »* ta rn — Era# ag*nt owtrtalOart Frad
Lynn and Laa Lacy mould Improv* club
offanilvaly; Ira* agant pitch** 00" A*i*
botitan bwllpan. Larry Shaati may itlch at
laity DM
Tn* Kayl — A llrlc t o r y waton from
Oannii Martin*! would halp club and m arl
gratifying triumph ovar panonal probtami
Latt pannant — m i World champion*
Saltan R*d
Lail yaar’i flnlih — ith I la 7*1 Managar —
John McNamara ( l i t taaion, managad
Angat* la*t taaionl Vital 1N4 lla ttltk l' k t
In hiding I M l), 11th In pitching M I I). J«d
In homart*!* ( I I I ) .
Strangtht — Poanbly bait Outlaid In
bowbail with Tony Arm at. Jim Rica, and
Dwight Era nt; Wad* Boggt hiding U t
llfatlm*
Nan Focal — ' F it* agant Bruct Ktion
might halp on th* mound at a fldh tlarttr or
middla r* uavar
th* Kayl — Al Nippar. tr 4 tail yaar,
racovar Ing from ulcar
Loll pannanl — 1*75 Amarlcan Laagu*
Ctavaland Indian
Lait yaar'i flnlih — 4th (71171 M m ig a r —
P al C orralat (} r d la a io n l V ila ' 1*44
ttatiilirt 17th In pitching U l t l , IJth In
fialdlng 4th In hiding ( MSI
Stranglhi — Spaed o* Brad Bud*r and
powar oi Oft Andrt Thornton ( U homart):
Julio Franco on* ot top oftonilv* thortitopt
vataran Bart Btylavan 410 7) haadi pitching
Now Focal — P rttid tn l Palar Bavan
trying to ravltallta franchiw that hal failad
to contand line* l t d
Th* Xayi — L t d handar Ntal Haalon want
I I IS tail M ila n oud,*idtrt M ri Hall and
Jo* Cartar could glva club good return for
frad* of Rick Sufeltd#
Latt pennant — lis t Amarlcan League
Oalrad Tigan
Lo ll yaar i flnlih — Ilf (I04J1) Managar
Sparky Andarton 17th waton) Vital IH i
ttallldct — Record w iling )S S liar*. 111 In
pitching |] e*l. 111 In on* run garnet US III
Strength! — Strong up the middle combi
nation in C Lane* Parrith, JO Lou Whitaker
SS Alan Trammell, and CF Chat Lemon
pltchert Jack M o rrli and Oan Petty form
powerful I 7; Cy Young and M V P reliaver
Willie Hernandei
New Facet — Pilcher Welt Tarrall, ac
guired from Meti lor IB Howard Johnion.
needed at a No J or 4 Harter
Tn* Kayl - Mill Wllcoa. 17 1 , latt year,
tide Imad onlll M ar coming oil turgary
Loti pannanl - IM4 Work) champion*
Milwaukee Brewerl
Latt year i tinlth — 7th (at 441 Managar —
George Bamberger (111 waton I Vital IWt
•lallitlci latt In horn* runt I N I and runt
1441). pooretl record 11177
Strength! — Jim Gantnar coming oil tolid
waton both odantlvaly and dalantlralyi
Rome Flngan appear* tound alter arm
problem i
New Facet — Pitcher Yutak* Enattu. an
ICyear veteran ol th* Japanew League*,
creeled Intern training camp. Ray Burr It
thould tlrengthan rotation
Th* Kayl — Voter ant Cadi Cooper. Ted
Simmont. Ben Ogllvl* m ult rebound from oft

y a a rl. Bamberger mutt teach Staton lti*nd
Stnkar" gulekly
Latt pennant — 1M2 American Laagu*
Haw Varh Yank***
Latt yaar'i flnlih — Jrd (17 7SI Managar
Yogi Barra Und wavonl vital IN 4
ttatlttict 11 7* record In wcond halt wat
bait M (wwbait. Tnd In hiding I 774). Jrd In
pitching (J 7t&gt;
Strength* — Potent lineup with boding
champion Don Mattingly. Dare Wind*Id Don
B a ylo r, and Rlckay Handarton
Day*
Righadl cored 71 gamai
New Facet — E d Whilion tlept Into
tier ling rotation. Hander ion will lead oft and
play cantor. Dal* Barra. Yogt’i ton. will tea
lima at inert and third
Th* Kayi — Ron OuHPy tl'ppad to 1011;
hlt arm may ha re delivered too many
ilidar*
Lott pennant — IN I Amarlcan Laagu*

'rsvsr.'s.
- Bobby C ot ( 4th

taaionl Vital m e
iia iiid ct Highatt tlnlih In club hlttory tth
In taam i t m (1)1; )rd in hiding ( 777)
Strength* — Taam hat mlatwre at ipaad
and powar put to good u w In Exhibition
Stadium, a medium tired park wllh artificial
turf loaded outfield In Gaorg* Ball. Lloyd
Mowby and Ja tw Bar(,aid
New Facet — Bill Caudill and Gary Lavalt*
loom at fcayt to th* bullpen, Jett Burrought
being given a look at pottibl* replacement
tor C II d Johnion at right handed DH
Tn* Key* — WUh Alfredo G ridin traded.
Tony Fernand*! mutt ;om* through at t o r i
Caudill hat navar pitched in pennant race
Lott pannanl — Non*

A.L. West
Welt Dtvltien
California Angalt
l a t t yaar’i flnlih — Tt* Jnd (1141)
Manager _ Gan* Mauch (I I I taaionl vital
IWe ilatlttlct: 17th in hiding I 74!) 17«h In
tavat (741. 17th In on* run garnet [77 to )
Strength* — Mike Witt and Ron Romanlck
head pitching Had, Brian Downing. Rod
Carew and Doug DeCincet can twing th* bal
New facet — Donnie Mr or* taken from the
Brevet at compantatien tor lha loti ol Fred
Lynn, hat a chance to be bullpen ttopper.
Ire* agant Outtreldar Ruppart Jonat add*
depth

Th* Kayt — Center Haidar Gory P tH it and
thorttlup Dick Sc hoi i* Id m ult produce:
right handar Kan Fortch attempting com
eback from due located moulder
Latt pennant — I H 7 Wett
Chicago Whit* $*•
Latt y a a r'i tinlth — Ti* Sth 174 M l
Manager — Tony LaR utw I tth w aton) Vital
m e ilatlttlct biggetl dropod ot any me
|or league taam latt In hitting ( J 4f); latt In
on* run garnet (17 77)
Strength* - Front line pitching tllll tlrong
with Tom Saavor. Richard Dotton. Floyd
Banm tltr. outfielder Harold Balnat develop
mg Into tup*f|t*r. good power with Ron
Kldl* and Greg Walker
New Facet - Rookie thortitop O tll*
Guillen, obtained from San Diego with Lull
Salarar and Tim lollar. n*t rang* but a weak
arm . raliaver Bob Jam et hat never taved
more than 10 garnet In a waton
Th* Key* - Second bowman Julio Crur It
tide lined wllh knee turgery and it needed to
provide coltetion In mlleld
Latt Pannanl - m i Well
K antaiCIty Royal*
Latl yaai '1 tlnlih — 111 IM 7(1 Manager
Dick How ter (Slh te aton l Vital l t d
ttatlttict 4S 7S wcond hall record Sth In
hiding ( 744). tth in pitching I I t?)

Strongtht — Dan Qull*nb*»ry It bait
rtiiav#* In A L. todd young pitching tla d with
Bud B la c k . M a rk G w b lcia and B ra t
Sattarhagan Gaorg* Brad tllll on* ot th* ban
htttari around. Wim* Wilton ball 1*61* w ttar
inbawbail
New Facet — Can't find many batter
detenuv* catcher* than Jim Scmdbarg Ha'll
mak* KC 1 pilchart that much batter
Th* Kayt — No tubtlafy about Ihlt taam d
Royalt lead altar aevan Inning*. Quit m a k tt
•ham tough to beat
Latl pannanl — 1N 4 Wall
Minnatata Tw in!
Latt yaar t drum — Ti* Jnd ( I I I I ) .
Manager — Billy Gardner IJth waton) Vital
IN* ttatlttict Bait record tine* lt7t. 7th In
hiding! MSI. 4th In pitching (J IS)
Strength! — Good young hitting club,
bolttered by Kent Hrbak. Tom Brun«niky;
darting pitching alto young but maturing
nicoly wllh Frank VM a. Mika Smithton and
John Butchae, tophomoret Kirby Puckett
let) and Tim Teufel (lb ) lorm nlc* nucleut
up th* m iddl*
New Facet — Slw tttop Roy Sm*li*y
return* to Mlnnewt* where b*"i may rockal
pad him on artificial turt Gardner Ilka*
Mika Stamhouw. who’ll w o tlm# at D H and
outflaldar
Th# Kayt — Third bowman Gary Go*til kit
only S homer 1 latt year Ron D a rlt collected
7t level but lacked condttency
Latt pennant — 1*70 Watt
Oakland A t
L a d yaar t Unlit! - 4th (77 U l , Monagar —
Jack 1* Moor* I jnd taaion) V ila! it**
d a tld ict tail In pitching 14 *11; la tl in
balding ( t i l l ; 10th In hitting I JJtl
Strength* — D a w Kingman (JS homer*)
and Dwaynt Murphy I7J homart) tupply th*
powar and Camay Lanttord It on* ot top
hitting third bowman
Naw Facet — O F D*v* Collint and SS
Aifrado Griffin acou.red tram Toronto lor
Bill Caudill, till two tpoft In linaup and add
tpaad Oon Sutton decided to raporl and ha II
be in# da rling rotation Jay Howall landed In
Rickey H ende'ton deal and It leading
(andldat* for thorf relief
Th# Key* — Replacing Handar ton y 11)
run* won t b* ta ty. whether club trlet tpaad
or powar
L a d pennant — I N I Watt
laatlt* Mar mart
Latl year’s llnim — T,*d lor Slh (7* Ml
Managar — Chuck Codiar (Jnd waton) Vital
IN* ilatlttlct 17th In pitching &lt;4 71); n th In
hilling I JStli Jrd w ont an th* road (77 **)
Strength* — Rookie of the Year Alvin Davit
and lop rook lo pitcher Mark Langtton
Naw Fact* — Outflaldar Ivan Calderon and
thorldop Danny Tarlabull ar* vying tor
darting tpott. Darnell CoHt and Jim Pratley
lighting it out tor third b a w |ob
Th* Kayt — If power hitting Gorman
Thomat can return from rotator cull surgery
Mariner* will hit lot* ot homer*
Latl pannanl — Non*
T tt a t Rangert
Latl yaar t flntih — tth Itt *7) Manager —
Doug R adar (J r d ta a io n l V ital l t |4
d a lld k t w ord home record in A L 1)4 N i l
11th In homart (1701, latt In tavat (71)
Strength! — Haart ot lineup it tlrong with
Buddy Ball. Larry Parrith. Gary Ward and
Cliff Johnson Ball and Parrith art two of top
ottontivo playart In laagu*, velar am Charlie
Hough and Frank Tanana top darter*
Naw Facet — Fra* agent Johnion eddt
powar at DH, fra* aganlt Burl Hoot on and
Dav* Rorama hope to make darling tlatf,
)a year old Toby Marrah protected *1 wcond
bawman
Th* Kayt - Radar laid It hlm w ll the rati
of dlvltion mutt play at poorly at II did lad
year lor Rangarttohavaachanco
l a d pennant — Non*

See Monday's Herald For The County Baseball Leaders

...Raines

Continued from 6 A
make much b c i i h c to rnosl bust-hall mind*
Through 62 gaim'tt. Halite* sv.it baiting .302 hut
he wasn't driving in the run* nrresaary lor a
third-place lilllrr. Fanning readjusted hi* think­
ing and moved him bark to his customary leadofT
spot.
Hallies slartrd slowly In the oulilcld. loo. lie
committed four errors in the first 66 games. He
closed wllh a rush, though, ns in the next 94
games he erred Just once and accountrd for 420
putouls. Just lwo behind N.L. trader Kevin
MrRrynolds His llcldlng percentage was 9HH.
This year It should be left held all year and
maybe all career. Haines said It's not so much
whether hr could do the Job or not but Ihr
emergence of Hrrni Whmlngham. The KApo*
acquired the fleet 6-1, 170-pounder along with
catcher Mike Fitzgerald and pitcher Floyd
Youmans from ihr Met* for Gary Carter
Tile Ex]x&gt;s hope Wlnnlngham will tx- ihe key
player of ihe &lt;leal and take control o f center field
The 23-yrar-old outfielder was Ihe Mels' first pick
In the secondary phase of ihe 1981 frrr agent
dralt.

"What really pushed me over was when they
acquired Wlnnlngham," said Haines, "lie 's been
a center fielder all Ills career and Ihry figured
they'd nil her have a natural center fielder nut
there (ban me."
Winnlgham was In a head-to-head balllr wllh
Hoy Johnson lor the Job but a pulled muscle
curtailed Johnson's chances and Wlnnlngham
stepped In and did Ihc job offensively and
defensively,
Haines said he thinks he's In led field lor g(x&gt;d
Not even a slump hut Wlnnlngham will get him
buck locrn ler. "I don't think that they will move
me har k." he said. "H crm and Hoy are Ixilh good
players and one of them will handle |i."
Which will be fine wllh one Timothy Haines.
R A IN E S R A P — Tim was the first winner df
Ihc Player's Performance Trophy donated by
Imperial Tobacco to Ihe player with the highest
Total Average on the Expos. Total Average Is a
statistic developed by Washington Post baseball
writer Thomas lloswrll. T o get a player's T.A&gt;.
add total bases, steals, walks and hit by pitch,
then divide by Ihc numtx'r of outs. Haloes' mark
o f 967 was lops In the National League.
In addition to the seven categories listed.
Haines was eighth In the N.L. In game-winning
Hill wllh 13 and four In on base percentage
(.393). He was second In plate uppearuners
1737-718) to Juan Samuel

Dunn's HRs Fry Poppa Jay's
Duvtd Dunn smacked u pair of
two-run homers to lend a 12 -hll
offensive attack ns defending
Sanford Little National League
champion Sunnlland opened the
1985 seuson wllh a 13-8 victory
over Poppa J a y 's Thursday
night al Fort Mellon Park
Dunn's first homer came In
the top of the first with Anthony
Mead on. Tom m y Hampton’s
Kill single and Johnny Knight's
ru n -scorin g dou b le en abled
Sunnlland to take a 4-0 trad tn
the first frumr
Poppa Jay's retaliated with
three runs In the bottom of the
first. Maurice Fisher led o(T the
Inning with a home run. Sam
Klrhaids drew a walk and later
stole home and Demetrius Pre­
sley scored the third run on a
single oft the bat o f Hllllc Tinch.
Dunn unloaded hts second *•*

Baseball
homer of the game in the second
Inning to give Sunnlland u 6-3
lead Poppa Juy't scored once In
Ihc bottom of the second lo
make II 6-4.
Sunnlland scored four more
times In Ihc top of the third wllh
the big blow being a three-run
double off the hut of Robert
Redding. Sunnlland put the
finishing touches on with three
runs in Ihe (op of Ihc fourth for a
13-5 lead.
Hampton wus the winning
pitcher for Sunnlland while Pre­
sley took ihe loss. Along wllh
Dunn. Krddlng. Grcgroy Taylor.
Mrad and Knlghl had two hits
each for Sunnlland.

24 KACUtti DAYS LEFT
wi CLOU. MAY 2
NIGHTLY 7:30 P.M
(C i o n * Ion.)
■ATjuon. wed sat

ipi

PLAYTHEEXCITING4 HI
PAYING "PICKr ft "BIG
TH U R 8 . FACE

ORAMOtTANDADM.

Don't Gat Caught
Cold...
■Kk la w 11 rut** Saaa

This Ad Is
Worth *50

Hoot Pump/Air Conditional
^ M*- V* * N i N* Irut Sa

Toward Any QM 350 Standard
Tronarnlsiion Job From tfl/t lo
1978 Plua 12 Month or 12,000
Mila Warranty

W A L l£ S X ‘

Ken Kern Transmission

1007 S Sanlotd A*g
Sanlotd

800 Lsurol A»a., Sanlotd

323-3040

FOR LAOtES
Viart our two camato
conirodad cJubhouaaa ♦
yOur tinoc n.ng and
antonammant pioa
Clubhouse raaarvi

831-1600

Sinford-Orludo
Kennel
Club
North or Orlando
JuatoflHwy. 17-92

ai

Sorry No Minors

i,

�PEO PLE
Evtntng Htrsld. Sanford. Ft.

Friday, April S. m J -»A

Gardening
Spring
Fashions

Let Your Lawn Tell You When To Water
April Is generally n dry month In our arra.
and If you want your lawn to respond to
recent fertilizer application, you'll nerd to
do a little supplemental watering Even
when the heavy rains do come, such
precipitation alone won't satisfy turf needs
As your lawn's growth Increases, so does Us
need for moisture.
Unfortunately, our soil In most Instances
doesn't hold moisture very well — this
compounded by rapid evaporation during
warm weather. Regular Irrigation Is essen
tlal to maintenance of an attractive lawn —
especially during spring and summer. Three
things — watering frequency, amount you
apply, and the time of application — must
be carefully watched If It Is going lo he
effectlve.
There ure several clues to a lawn's need
for water. If bluish-gray spots appear In the
lawn, and then It begins to turn brown,
water Is needed. If footprints remuln In the
grass for a long time after you walked on It.
water Is needed. And. If a soli sample, taken
from the root zone of the grass feels dry and
crumbly, water Is needed.
The time between waterings will depend
to some extent on changes In the environ­
ment. such as high temperatures and strong
winds, which adds to plant water loss to the
surrounding air through evaporation.
You'll have to adjust watering frequency
to your soil's specific capacity lo hold
moisture. And. this will change. de|N*ndlng
on the season of the year. In summer, grass
may need watering as often as every three
or four days, while In winter. It may need
water only every two weeks. Text much
watrr can be as bad as too little. Don't water
until the signs of need appear. Then, water
Immediately. Any delay could cause perma­
nent damage.
Watering tlmrsnnd the amount you apply
are definitely related You want to wet the

Alfred
Bessosen
Urban
H ortlcu ltrist
323-2300
Ext. 181

entlrr root zone without saturating the soil.
Light, frequent watering arc Inefficient, and,
too much water Is both harmful and
wasteful. Constant saturation retards root
growth. And. If more water Is applied than
the soil can absorb, the extra Is lost as
runoff.
As a rule, apply about one-half to one-inch
of water each time. This Is roughly 300 to
00 O gallons of water for each 1.000 square
feet of lawn area. Remember, though, the
best amount depends on your specific still
type.
Now that you've got that all figured, you
must decide when to water. True, watering
during the heat o f the day wdll cool the
grass, this practice wastes watrr which Is
rapidly lost through evaporation. To con­
serve both watrr and money, apply watrr
early In the morning, when It Is more likely
to souk Into the soil, rather than raising the
humidity In Ihealr.
Use common sense. You don't want your
grass to die of thirst — yet. you don't want
to drown It At each application, supply only
enough to wet the root zone without runoff.
And, don't watrr ugaln until your luwn
shows the need.
Now that you know watering Is essential
lor u nice lawn, next comes the mowing.
Mowing Is (airly uncomplicated. However,
some folks can min a lawn In a hurry.
No mailer what kind of grass you have,
m owing can make nr break u lawn. For best

Michele Cameron. 12, models
an Easter outfit in a Spring
Fashion Show March 30 at K
m art In Sanford. Twenty
models from ages 1 year
through adults showed K
m art's line of spring fashions
in a colorful parade in the
store. Featured in the show
were fashions for girls, boys,
men and women, running the
gamut from bathing sulfs
and casual wear to dress up
styles. According to Kelvin
Wilson, the store's apparel
manager, the toddlers stole
the fashion scene. Each child
model received an Easter
basket and Wilson said the
fashion show "w a s well
attended and turned out
great.”

appearance, regular mowing Is needed. Hut.
mowing too low severely weakens the grass
plants, and the sod thins out. When you
mow too low. too much of the leaves are lost
and the grass Is unable to produce enough
food to maintain Itself. The grass literally
starves. When this happens, next come the
weeds. Insects and other pest problems.
Most of our lawns arc Dahla or St.
Augustine grass Close cutting these will
practically destroy them. Generally, these
grasses should be cut with a rotary mower
with the blade set at three Inches high, the
year around. Keep your blade sharp. Dull
blades do a tremendous amount of damage.
Avoid mowing the grass when It's wet. Dry
grass Is easier to cut. and won't clog the
mower. And. It's wise lo use a bag lo catch
the clippings. If clippings are allowed to
build up. they tend to smother the grass,
promote thatch problems, and Invite Insects
and diseases to dinner.
Actually, when to mow should be based
on the umount of growth since the last
cutting Generally, once a week will do It.
You should m ow often enough so that not
more than one-fourth to one-third o f the
total leaf surface Is removed at each cutting.
In other words, leave more than twice as
much leaf surface ns you cut off. Excessive
one-time mowing will shock grass severely,
so It's a good pructlce to mow regular'y
during the growing season. During the
winter, lawn growth Is much slower, and
will need fewer cuttings.
R e m e m b e r, u se com m on s e n s e .
Overwatrrlng Is perhaps the greatest pro­
blem In maintaining a good lawn And. you
will blrarh out all the nutrients, too. Thus,
you will need to fertilize more often to
compensate for the loss. Let your lawn tell
you when to water.
Happy gardening!

I

S m oker's C a n ce r W ip e s O u t Fa m ily $$
DEAR ABBY: I um hurting
more right now than I ever huve
In m y whole life. My beloved
younger sister died nine months
igo. 1 still can't believe I will
lever be able tu cull her on the
jhone again to gossip and giggle
a-i‘ only sisters do. God, how I

ntlss her!
I asked her doctor what actual­
ly killed her. and without trailing
an eye he said. ‘'Clgarrtles!"
Now I feel so guilty because she
took up smoking because I. her
older slstei, smoked. Thunk
God. I was able to quit In lime.

25th Street
LA W N

&amp;

G A R D E N

S # 4 tv i

C E N T E R

(^e jte jfria tcW '

S O C I E T Y G A R L IC
D A Y L I L L I E S IN B L O O M
C O N F E D E R A T E J A S M IN E
G O L D T IP L IG U S T R U M
R E D T I P P H O T IN IA
P H IL O D E N D R O N SELCU.V.

LANDSCAPE
PLANTS

S2 .J T

Reg
3.9V
GERANIUM S S" SIZE RED. PINK,
SALE PRICE
SALMON, VIOLET, V A R IG A TE D
ANNUALS - V E G E T A B L E S .................... A Pk

HOURS: MON. — SAT. 9-5:30

2400 W. 25th St.

•1.47
69 V 79*

SUN 12-5

321-2525

SANFORD

GULFPORT, MISS.

Dear
A bby
She tried lo quit, but It was too
late for her.
Her husband and children arr
Inronsolablc. I have learned a lot
from Ihls terrible experience. A
smoker has a lot more lo worry'
.ilx.ut than dying. My sister's
stay In the hospital with lung
cancer wiped her fumlly out
financially.
Ahhy, why do advertisers
make cigarette ads so attractive?
Instead, they should run a brloir
and uflrr picture of u onceliraullful woman vomiting and
bald from radiation therapy.
I know this letter Is too long (or
your column, hut If II will help
just one person lo reach Inlo her
purse (or his pocket) and Ihruw
lhal park of clgureltrs In the
trash. It will lie worth II.
G R IE V IN G IN

P IC K O N E
O R O N LY
lst W E E K ’S

5 .0 0

RENT

2 WEEK MINIMUM Including Delivery-Set Up
M icrow ave O v e n s-C o n so le s
P o rta b le s-V C R ’s-R efrigerators
Freezers-Washers &amp; Dryers-Stereos

—

*

• No Credit Check
• No Long Term Ohli^dtion
• No Deposit
• Delivery &amp; Service Included
• Rent To Own

i CALL —

-------------

3 2 3 -7 8 8 5
S u it e * 7 , L a k e v le w P la z a
316 C o m m e r c ia l A v e n u e
S a n fo r d , F lo r id a 32771

VIDEO
ELECTRONICS

D EAR A B B Yt Several times
you huve suggested In your
rolum n that writing material
would tie u practical gilt for un
elderly person.
My son. who lives In another
sta te, w ent one b etter lust
Christm as. On a Girl Seoul
calendar he had marked I hr
birth dates of all my grandc h i l d r e n and g r c u t •
grandchildren, and the wedding
anniversaries of all (he members
of m y fumlly.
In addition, he sent u bruutllul
selection of cards appropriate for
each occasion. On the envelope
In the corner for each stamp, hr
had penciled In the name ol (he
|ierson for whom the rurd was
intended.
He didn't forget the stamps
either — even remembering die
Incrrase dial was due In Febru­
ary I9H5
j cannot think o f u more
acceptable gift for Ihls 8 6 -ycurold lady whose eyesight Isn't
what It used lo tie.
All I need to do Is udd a
personal line or two lo each card.
This may help others who don’t
know whal lo send an elderly
friend or relative for whom
shopping Is a chore.
O.K.J.,
LAG U NA HILLS. CALIF.

m

m

1MPATIENS
G o rge o u s Colorsl
0" Basket
Reg. $7.99

$588
Sal* Thru Thursday

E a s te r F lo w e r s

D E A R O.K.J.i W hat a
thoughtful, generous son you
rulsed. And how generous you
are to waul to share that Idea
with others. As iny beloved
mother used lo say. “ The apple
doesn’t fall far from the tree.'*

IM PATIENS

• GLOXINIAS
• PERSIAN VIOLETS
• FLORAL MUMS

P IL O T !

COMPANY

323-3040

00

* 5 " ...

NEW SHIPMENT
ROSES and
ROSE TREES

Toward Any OM 330 Standard
Transmission Jot) From 1971 to
1978 Plus 12 Month or 12,000
Milo Warranty

Ken KernTransmission

,$5

*1 0 "

This Ad Is
Worth *50

RENTAL A SALES

f.

$999
AND UP
• RIEGER BEGONIAS
• NON STOP BEGONIAS
• BEGONIA HANGING GARDENS * 1 1 "
*8 "
• IVY GERANIUM BASKETS
$999
• HYDRANGEAS
PINKSNOWS

D E A R ABBYl Should you
ever doubt lhal women are puld
less then men for doing I he same
Job. let me assure you that my
personal experience will confirm
lhal fact.
I was bom a male and trained
lo be a computer programmer. I
am also a transsexual and have
had sex reassignment surgery. I
am now a female, physically and
legally.
After my sex change. I look a
Job doing exactly the same work
I had done aa a man, but as a
woman. I am paid 810,000 a
year less!
A W O M A N IN
A M AN'S W O R L D

_________ _

5

4” P o ts Reg. $1.29 Each

SCO Lours! A**., tan toed

i-

~

271 W. LK MART ILVO

MtM Mui y R,(s

2035 HWY 17-12

LA K E M ARY
323-6133

OPEN SJNMf 12S
OPEN DAILY 9 303 30

M A IT L A N D
834 2080

non

J i :

�I0 A — E v e n in g H e ra ld , S a n lo rd , FI.

B LO N D IE

Friday, April 5, I9BS

by C hic Y o u n g

by Mori Walker

BEETLE BAILEY

AM O l P
CLEAN HOSE /

I THOUGHT IP \/ T H f lE E
&gt;OU PUT iN YOUR
YEARS
TIME ANP KEPT
AMP WHAT
YOUR H O S E ___ , P O I HAVE
Cle a n
/ " - V , '=N t o 5 MOW
YOUP
( .____ ( n ) FOR
GET
r
VA A
IT?
PROMPT EP '7 ------ rvO&gt;vN--- , ____
/ J
V
~— &lt;
y
^
&amp; ,\
m- c /

/

y&lt; —4
by Art Sansorn

THE BOHN LOSER
/
~l'

/WHAT DCfcS THAT \
OJCVO FtVJHtW .
'\ T

OF l j { '

CGMECM.tON’T ItX) HAVE
1WAA1IHATCW?
L

“&gt; 5.
I FOECZj IT ICIMC*
LOOfcSUKEA TUFmL
WITH ATELEMOJE

/

ITS flYSKj
-

f

e

%£j o m A J f s

»4

^ . V ftp .r w . a a

by Bob Montana

ARCHIE

by Howie Schneider

EEK &amp; MEEK
IM WfVJRCOIMG ID ffW D A C tV

WHO WANTS D S tT T U K M )
—

c

7
I

MEfJ THESE DAYS DOMT
UUAMT A W IF E ..

THEY CUAAJT
[X rM T fF V k 'E

wiiSi &amp;

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am 31
and In good health. bui my
breath has smelled had for the
past three years. I have tried
every toothpaste and every
mouthwash, but they make It
worse. I have seen two doctors of
In tern al m e d ic in e and two
doctors of Inirsttnal medicine,
but they can find nothing wrong
Neither can my demist
I do have a white film over my
longue Why do I have this
problem and what can f&gt;e done?
DEAR READER '— It can l&gt;e a
lough problem I am glad that
you have seen a dentist, since
dental problems ran cause bad
breath I'm also glad that you
have seen specialists In Internal
medicine and gastroenterology,
since this helps lr» eliminate
some important diseases that
can contribute to the problem
You should see an rar nose and
throat specialist, since sinus
problems also can cause hail
breath
The white coating on your
longur probably Is caused by the
shedding of the specialized skin
on I hr sufa&lt; e of the longur Thr
longue can lx- the source of bad
breath finish II clean each time
you brush your teeth
Mouthwash Is nl limited value
in controlling had breath and
serves only as ,1 temporary
covrrup Often the odor comes
from the bloodstream Cheml&lt;als that produce odors are
released from the circulation
Into the lungs and the exhaled
gases then cause the odor
You may have an Intolerance
to some lood This Is a more
Irequent cause of had breath
tlian Is com in only realized.
DEAR DR LAMB — Help! 1an.
&lt;(infused What Is Nutrasweel? I
have heard that It Is made from
natural bulls I also have heard
thiii 11 eonslsis of natural proirtns, becomes an alcohol when
It reaches H4 degrees, and will
cause severe brain damage If
used continually
I am a senior citizen and am
not too con cern ed about It
personally, hut I am concerned
about my grandchildren Is
Nutrasweel the same thing as
aspartame?
DEAR READER - Regarding

what you have hrard. "It aln t
necessarily so ** 1 won't try to
guess what the motives for the
different rumors really are
Yes. Nutrasweel Is aspartame
Aspartam e Is also m arketed
under the brand name Equal
Aspartame has been one of thr
m o s t e x t e n s i v e l y s t u d ie d
a r t i f i c i a l s w e e te n e r s e v e t
approved by the Fixxl and Drug
Administration ll Is not a pro­

ACROSS
1 Shod* tr*«
4 Kind of biasd
9 California city
10 On* who
• nliitt
13 Seaport in
Algina
14 Piano part
15 Fait aircraft
tabbr |
10 Ovar (po«t I
17 Wain* traa
IB Tow*l word
70 Riv*r m
Normandy
33 Disease
carrying tly
76 Dismount
30 Baseball tvtnti
31 Unaipirat*d
33 Golf norm
34 Of God Hat |
35 Neked
36 Ball laam
37 E«rjt«- llnvwv
39 Onad grap*
41 Biblical propkat
43 And to on
labbr |
44 Grab*
47 Duka If r |
49 fv&lt;4&gt;y 53 Elament
vanati**
55 Musical work
56 Cap*
57 Space agency
labbr)
5B Map book
59 Htghait not*

7 Kirghu
mountain rang*
B B&gt;rd
9 Negatives
10 P-ac* out

tein In lbe usual sense, but It Is
made up of two amino acids, and
proteins are made up of amino
acids Phenylalanine, one of the
iwo amino acids in aspartame. Is
found In milk, berf and other
foods.
.Srltd tour i/liestiiUls to O r
l.nnh / '(» H&lt;&gt;\ LVW H .ulioO ly
Sr,lilt 111 .Veil fork \ 1 JUO/M
Answer |n Previous PuII'4

11 Roman *mp*roe

13 Dutch
common*
IS CIA forerunner
19 Postass v*
31 Clairvoyant
33 Compass pomi
33 Commotion
(comp wd |
34 Plaintiff
35 Evade
J7 Amancan
Anglican

church
IB Egyptian daily
79 Tram (Sp)
37 M C Sullivan
35 Nor** gobhn
36 Insect egg

38 Lodging house
40 Former nuclear
agency labbr)
47 Fust garden
44 Wa* drmk
45 Bawildared
46 Malal fastener
48 Employ

50 Irvkisn
51 Royal Scottish
Academy
labbr)
53 Openings
54 Grask latte's
55 Smglaton

DOWN
1 Rowing loot*
3 Impassive
3 Sunflower Slat*
labbr |
4 Twistad
5 Fireplace shall
6 FIce* to vm*J

ic u a 'S ... **t *

WIN AT BRIDGE

by Hargreaves &amp; S ellers

MR MEN AND LITTLE MISS

Common Bad Breath
Has V ariety O f Causes

by Warner Brothers

D yJ i m c i Jacoby
Thr necessary conditions lot a
■rnssnill ,irr easy In Idrnllfy II
itiiiiiiuv Its short 111 iinr hull, and
d ecla rer htiori In a n u th ri.
crossriilllttg 1fit* hand In ultrn ihr
tight approach in inking the
maximum number n( Irlckh
Proper (rchnlqiic involve* two
tiit|Hirtaut principle* Don'l get
ovcm ilfril mini Mi&lt; h lime a* you
i.m alfiiril ll. and ca*lt your
hide Mill winners llrsl In prevent
an opjtonrm wiih long iruni|i*
Irom gelling rid of Ills losers In
vour side stills Tixlay’s declarer
rememltered thr llrsl principle
hut lorgnt Ihr second
Declarer won the ace nl hearts
lint correctly read the nine as a
singleton trail Hr trumped a
heart wilt 1 tlie spade ace and
trumped a club Oblivious to Ihr

fact that West had discarded a
diamond on thr heart roll, he
p la y e d a not tier h e a rt and
trumped with the king
Away went another diamond
trnm the West hand He now
trum|XMl annitirr club, castled
one diamond trlek (West bail to
billow), and Irnnqted another
heart high One more club mil
was lollowrd bv a heart trumped
with the spade IO. West ovrr
ruffed and led a spade, won by
dummy s nine, but the detrnd
rrs now claimed tile remainder
ol the tricks
M aking thr hand Is easy
enough Cash dir are and king
ol diamonds Immediately, itten
proceed as before W rsi will
eventually be able in come in
with lhe spade jack, hut not
la-fore the contract Is made

MIHTH
1.
♦ '&lt;&gt;,(:
Vuut!
♦ \K 2
*
WKST
KLST
♦ J ll 11
a7
vy
V g y J 111 .1
♦ U to 7
♦ MS
♦ tgjij
♦ Kyv t
sot Til
♦ A K U III
Y1
• * * t .1
4l0iii
VuInert hie Holh
Dealer North
Hr%l Nurlh i'Jil
Suuih
|V
I'Ati |#
Pass
:♦
Pass « «
Pain
Opening Irai] V.i

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...
by Bob Thaves

FRANK AND ERNEST
i ’f&gt;

p l a y

T 8 W IA L

P u p J - u iT
t * I v &lt;a l

V

4rw^“‘r

v

X

•

Q

g u r

T H IN K X
u iz z ic a l

•

LACK
F lT N p / X .

\4 5

by Jim Davis

GARFIELD

YOUR B IR TH D A Y
A P R IL 6 . IONS
In Ihr year ahead you may
s u r p r is e o t h e r s and e v e n
voutself with your Imaginative
and resourceful approach to
money matters Pul your bright
Ideas to work lor profitable
results.
ARIES IMareli 2 1 April 10)
I n to avoid taking speculative
risks today The odds agulnst
you will be quite sluing If you
have no voice I11 railing Ihr
shots Major changes arc I11 store
lor Arles In thr coming year
Send lor your Astro-Graph pre­
d iction s to d a y . Mall $1 to
Astro-Graph. Box 489. Radio
City Station. New York. NY
10019 Be sure to stale your
zodiac sign.
TAU RU S (April 20-May 20)
Guard against tendencies today
to do things contrary to your
better judgm ent. When your
common sense warns you to

circumvent something, listen to
y o u r in t u it io n a n d d ou t
embrace the situation
GEM INI (May 2 1-June 201
Your desires may be ralher
grand today and you're not apt
to lx* satisfied wllh small things
Bigness Isn't always bcsi. so slay
wtihln the realm of reason
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22l
Although your judgment will tie
rather keen In many areas today.
11 might not tx- up to par In your
1 111 a n c 1a I a f f a i r s
Move
cautiously
LEO (July 2.1 Aug 22) Don I
rely loo heavily i i |k &gt;i i Lady Luck
and your good look* iixiay. Each
are asnels hill It w ill take
dedlcatcd elforl to achieve suc­
cess.
VIRGO |Aug 23-Sept. 221 lie
able to distinguish today be­
tween optimism and false hope.
If you build castles on sand
they're likely to lx- swept away
by the first adverse tide
L IB R A ISept
23-Oct. 23)
Conditions that pertain to your
material well-being could be
subjected to broad swings today.
Trv to maintain balance In your

monetary affairs
SCORPIO lOel 24 Nov 22l D
not leave Important matters u
10 chance today, hoping that a
will com e out well in the Ion
run The results will be sue
ressful only If you dim 1 events
SAG IT T A R IU S (Nov 23 Dec
21) Your compassion to others I
co m m e n d a b le H ow ever, b
careful nol to put yourself In
hind today In a misguided ai
letup) lo do good
C A PR IC O R N (Dec 22 Jan
19) lusldr lips passed onto yoi
unlay tty well-meaning friend
should lx- taken wllh a grain c
salt Their Information coub
tiavr more form than subslancc.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan 20 Feb lii
The advice yon oiler friend
today will tx- quite sound am
helpful. Unfortunately, however
you might nol take to heart th
wisdom you Impart to (hem.
PISCES |Feb 20-March 20
Important judgments must t&gt;
based upon talltlcs and extstlm
factors, not upon ihe way yoi
would like things to be Kratov
your rose-colored glasses and t»
logical,

ANNIE
by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEOS

'i t t J n w e IT* F u r i u i o dons THAT)
•me k e s

a k Ap a rt a y M

SOMEWHERE.

JL*
T *

A.I*

fV * y

by Leonard Starr
.CAN'T BE ANTCtiE
Qt r
LEFT Alive ,N THERE,
The RIVER
SHAPP0-

(w

check

0UNF/ME? SOMEONE
snoot /st

* r SAtioy?* J

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI

Friday, April 1, I W - I 1 A

Comparable Worth
Florida Business Lobbyist Says It Would Cost $5 Billion
A l l A c c r r urnti
s
. , .
I i^LLAHASSEE
(UPII — The thead ofr .the
state's
major business lobby claims adopting a "compaIruble worth pay plan for government workers
would cost Florida taxpayers about 95 billion a
|year

Associated Industries of Florida president Jon
I L. Shrbel said that would amount to an Increased
Jtax burden ol S I . 117 per taxpayer. Even
[deducting the taxes |&gt;aid by tourists, he said, the
cost ol comparable worth would lx- about SHI7
per permanent resident

«

—

.

Committees o f the House and Senate are
considering resolutions to set up a study ol
"c o m p a r a b le w orth .** a system used In
Washington State for basing salaries on the value
each job has for the state — rather than
qualifications and market demands. Comparable
worth Is a goal long sought by feminists, who
argue that women are generally clustered In
low-paying Jobs, while unskilled Jobs held mostly
by men pay more
Shrbel said that II factors in Ihc Washington
study were applied to Florida’s 105.(XX) stale

. .

.. .

.

workers, the cost would be 91.12 billion He said
an AIF study of government pay scales Indicated
the rust would lx- another S3 H billion for cltv and
county governments to upgrade salary brackets
to brtng about equality between male- and
Irtnalr dominated Helds
Shcbcl conceded that AlF's Interest til compa­
rable worth was based on the fear that tl state
government adopts the concept, tl will soon be
imposed on private business Hr said Associated
Industries opposed the concept because it bore no
relation to supply and demand In the labor force

'This W ill Be R e m e m b e re d A s A W oodstock

.*-«**_

* ■

,

.

The comparable worth doctrine assumes that
all Jobs within a system have some value and that
the value of each |ob can lx* related to another."
he s a i d
Ih r basic doctrine i s lundamentally
Hawed
A comparable worth resolution by Rep Helen
Gordon Davis, D-Tampa is languishing In a
House committer li would not mandate pay
equably In state government but would create a
study ot salary disparities between |otis tilled
mostly by women ami those mainly held bv men

Fur Flying
A lre a d y O ver
Com prom ise Budget
WASHINGTON ll'l'll
Critics are accusing
President Reagan ot going back on a campaign
promise bv accepting a compromise budget that
includes a reduction in scheduled Social Security
pay incuts as pari ol its S3 2 billion drllclt cut
Senate Republicans and While House aides
agieed Thursday- to a spending hluepttnl lor lineal
year I9HU that halves Reagan’s requested
increase In inllitar \ spending, cuts many popular
programs and heads inward cutting thr estimated
$230 trillion current budget delicti to 9 MX) trillion
trv I9HH
File pact, which Republican leader Robert Dole
acknowledged will tare a tough light on the
Senate floor, lim ed Reagan s band tin Ills two
most contentions Issues
Reagan wanted a li |x*rcenl raise lor the
Pentagon next year the accord allows a 3 percent
increase The president also bad rrlused to touch
Social Security payments In Iris campaign pledge
not to tamper with the program the agreement
hums next vear s scheduled cost-ol-living In
crease to a 2 percent luke Instead ol the proposed
5 percent
I he agreement will not satisfy many Senate
Republicans, to sav nothing ot the Democrats in
the House and Senate who have not tx-rn
involved in negotiations with the While House
White House &gt;lu d ot stall Donald Regan
applauded the Social ScentIIv compromise
saving tl guarantees recipients some kind of raise
But Rep Claude Pepper. I) Miami. Congress's
staunchest delender ol the elderly said he was
shocked Reagan would go hack oil his com ­
mitment definitely and clearly marie Ix-turc the
election In the elderly ol America "
Pepper said It*- doubled thr agreement would
survive the Senate and said It would tx' (ought In
the House
Cyril Brtektteld, executive director ot ihr

Behind U SA For Africa's M akin g O f 'We A re The W orld'
By F.thlle A nn V src
N ew sp ap er E n terp rise Association
You watch the seven-minute video of USA lor
Africa’s "W e Are the W orld’ * and your heart
leujrs to your throat No matter how wimpy the
song — and It Is wimpy — you can’t help but lxa ile d rd by the incredible urray of talrnt Bruce
Springsteen alongside Stevie Wonder; Bob
(Hiatt, unmistakably out *&gt;( tune Ray Charles,
demonstrating what soul really means; Tina
Turner and Cyndl Laujx-r. singing their guts
out. even Huey Lewis, giving the best vocal
performance of his career.
What you don’t realize when you watrh the
video are the Incredible logistics that went Into
making it 45 hours of documentary footage had
to be pared down Into (hat w vrn minutes: the
12 -hour, six-camera shoot was distilled by way
ol 70 hours In an editing booth Every camera,
every light, every piece o f tape and every jKitr of
human bands were donated
The video was produced by Howard Malley
and Craig Golln. TV' producers who bad already
worked with USA for Africa organizers Lionel
Richie and Kenny Rogers It should have cost
more than 91 million; Malley and Golln got It
made for nothing

"T h ey needed someone who could put It all
together, get cam eras and lights and thr
operators." explains Golln. "And the catch was
— It nil had lo tie for free,”
"I would guess that there were 2(X) in ;too
jwoplr Involved In It." says Malley "Our llrst
thought was. How arc we going to put together
a million dollar shrxrt lor free?’ Hut everyone we
talked lo, thrlr llrst response was Sure, we’ ll do
It.’ ”
Golln and Malley arrived at the sound studio
at 9 pm and left at 9 the next morning. They
went home, showered and arrived within hours
at an editing hay. That same day. they had a
short promo clip available lor broadcast In a
week, the video Itscll was ready Six weeks later,
a one hour HBO program was done, as well as a
half-hour home vldeocasscltc.
HBO paid 92 m illion fur the rights to
broadcast the USA (or Africa sjieclal In May. all
the money gtx-s to charily All profits from the
home cassette go lo charity All proceeds front
the T-shirts, the sheet music, single amt allium
go to charity.
"In fact," adds Malley, "the USA lor Africa
Foundtion has only two paid employees, but
they're not paid out of foundation money

T h ey ’ re

paid

out

ol

Kenny

and

Lionel's

| X K 'k c t S , ”

The video is a straightforward account of the
session.
I was trying to duplicate the emotion and Ihc
leel of what was going on In that studio.” says
Golln "T h e energy level there was so intense, tt
was Intoxicating You'd walk lit and scr all these
people and you’d say. Am I dream ing?’”
I itere are moments that stick out In Golln s
memory, which he helix's to preserve on the
USA for Africa documentaries
"Things like peoplr leaching Dylan how In do
Ills p a n ." says Golln. "and Michael Jackson
leaching everyone the chorus Diana Ross doing
aerobics ai 4 a in. to stay awake."
Six weeks later Malley and Golln are out a
small fortune m man-lmuis. (heir names will
certainly lx- overshadowed by the names of the
|xTtormrrs But they have no regrets about the
time and love they've Invested.
This will lx- remembered as a Woodstock. I
think." says Malley. "Someday, my daughter
can tell her friends that her daddy was Involved
In Ibis T h a t’s what you do It for; you don’t do It
because you think you're going to gel rleb from
11."

p ru t)lire a F lorid a d r iv e r 's
license.
Dltchlleld said he lalrr rerognized ihc man as Goetz alter
seeing a television newscast
Latrr hr searched Ills records,
Goetz said he believed his life
he said, and learned Goetz had
was threatened.
"Unfortunately, there are peo­ bought two 9mm Star pistols at
ple who are capitalizing on the the shop Sept 4 from anolher
Incldrnt and the mass support employee
A grand Jury In New York
that Mr. Goetz has received "1
Ken Dltchfleld. operator of Indicted Goetz Jan 25 on Illegal
Ken’s Gun Shoj&gt; near Orlando weapons charges, hut declined
told newsmen a man ordered a to charge him with attempted
.38-callbcr Smith and Wesson murder. Prosecutors received
revolver with a 2 Inch barrel jiermtsslon to resubmit the case
from the shop curly last month.
to a second grand Jury, which
Thr man left a 950 deposit and last month Indicted Goetz on
irturnrd about a week later for fo u r c o u n ts o f a t t e m p t e d
the gun Dltchfleld told the murder, one count of reckless
newspaper he refused to sell the endangerment and one count of
weapon when the man could not criminal possession of a weapon

Am erican Association ot Retired Persons, said

Reagan ‘'dishonored his pledge" by accepting the
e n s l- o U lv in g re d u c tio n and Sen
D aniel
Moynlluin. I) N Y . said the agreement "breaches
an understanding between thr president and thr
public, '*
The budget com prom 1st was lorged to try to
bridge ihc large gaps tx-lwrrn Reagan's version
anti that approved by the GOP led Senate Budget
Cnmmltlrr tx-lnre taking thr document to the
Senate lloor
Budget director David Slockinau said, "T ills is
going lo be thr most dlilli uli Imaginable
proposition lo win In Ihr Senate, so we're going In
worry about that right now arid move mi to the
I louse later
Stockm an said the Defense Departm ent
satisfied themselves’ ’ they could live with the 3
|M-rrrnt Increase prompting Reagan In accept tt.
Limiting the Pentagon s Increase to 3 percent
would cut 91H.5 billion oil Reagan’s 9313,7
billion request
Sticking |Miints on the consensus plan will lx*
its terminations ol the Small Business A d­
ministration. Amtruk and general revenue shar­
ing. among oilier programs
The consensus budget cuts 952 billion nil (be
projected deficit In fiscal I9H9, 999 billion In
fiscal 19H7 arid 9143 billion In fiscal I9HH
Dole said hr plans to bring the compromise up
lo the Senate the week ol Apill 22 It would lx*
olfered as a substitute In the Senate Budget
&lt;‘om m ltlee’s version

Lawyer Denies Goetz Tried
To Buy Weapon In Florida

Court: Governments Are Not Liable
In Lack Of Police Powers Enforcement

NEW YORK (UPII - A lawyer
for hernhard Goetz has denied a
gun dealer’ s claims that the
accused subway gunman a t­
tempted to buy a weapon In
Florida after being Indicted In
New York on illegal weapons
charges.
The dealer’s statement Is "a b ­
solutely untrue.” lawyer Barry
Slot nick said Thursday.
"One need not go to Florida to
purchase Illegal guns." he said.
Goetz, 37. has admitted he
shot four youths on a New York
subway train Dec 22 alter one
allegedly asked him for 95.

TALLAHASSEE (til'll — Cities, counltes and
other governmental units cannot lx* held liable
lor failure to enforce I heir police powers, the
Florida Supreme Court has decided In a serlrs of
major decisions
Handing down rulings In eight similar cases
Thursday, the high court formulated a standard
that could affect hundreds o f suits pending
against governmental bodies.
All levels o f government generally enjoy
sovereign immunity precluding lawsuits against
them hut the Legislature adoptrd u statute In
1975 partially waiving that exem ption for
“ common law torts." such as a highway accident
caused by a government driver.
Under that law. cities, counties and the stale

Doonesbury
XANHOttT
WUSHEKJUK
6 M * n fC C L -

U6£ANAK

SIKP.BitttU*

WATStm.
ecowvps
ICGAW T
AX60UT „
M K R / f '*

BY G A R R Y TRUDEAU
A JOB*60..
i c o n wan
TM KMrcr
a w w ro
H tstw es.

J fW
iTi.OOOA
NtiHTHX
OFFIOAPHS
CARGO
\

rnjoooA

UGKT*0M1

I

m s a ju 9
p &amp; m M tx .

60CP
news
A W

rey, h a t a
m m jh . i m

ytAH, but
rrs io o im . j u ifiTG c r
3:
tCUMWrC. ‘ t

Shopping For A
NewOr UsedCarl
low ( i n e lm e fI IIn d the
M i l M i l l la I M t i i n l n j
H m M i C l e f tiled t e d Ion
Heed h id e i a tr e n in g Her eld
lo r I he t&gt;« •f e e le tllo n e

Evening Herald
M W l k Irrarli Straw
k a a la rd . • I . e U .
Ili-M l I

can be surd by victims ol negligence under
certain circumstances am) Jury awards of up to
$190.(XX) are automatically paid. Jury awards in
excess of that amount require passage o f a "relief
b ill" by thr Legislature for full payment
In Thursday's key case, the high court spilt 4-3
In deciding that 95 condo owners In Hlalruh's
Trianon Park Condominium cannot sue the city
because building inspectors upprovrrl a roof thut
later was found defective
"T o hold a governmental entity liable for this
type of enforcement activity would make the
taxpayers of ihr enforcing governmental entity
insurers of all building construction within the
Jurisdiction of the entity," Justice Hen Overton
wrote for the malorltv

�13A— Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Friday* April 5, m j

CALENDAR
FR ID A Y , APRIL B
Parents Without Partners TG IF
party, 9 p.m., Lake Monroe Inn,
Highway 17-92. Sanford. Country
music and danclnff. Call 904-73466J7.
Weklva A A (no smoking). 8 p.m.
Weklva Presbyterian Church, SR
434. at W eklva Springs Road. Closed.
Longwood AA. 8 p.m.. Rolling Hills
M o r a v i a n C h u r c h , SK 4 3 4 .
Longwood. Atanon. same lim e and
place.
Tnnglewood AA. 8 p.m.. St. Rich­
ard’s Episcopal Church. Lake Howell
Hoad. Alanon. same lime and place.
Sanrord AA Slep. 8 p.m., 1201 W.
First St..
Plant sale sponsored by
(he Hemophilia Assn, of Central
Florida, tiooths H-15. 17 and 19. at
Flea World Highway 17-92 south of
Sanford. Indoor and outdoor plants.

FHA M a king
Emergency
Farm Loans
The Farmers Home

A d mi n i s t r a t i o n Is
ma k i n g e m e r g e n c y
loans In the following
Florida co unties:
S e m in o le , Hr evar d.
(H ow ard . C h a rlo tte.
Collier, Dade, DeSolo,
Glades, Hardee,
He ndr y . He r n a n d o .
H i g h l a n d s ,
Hlllstiorm igh. Indian
R i v e r , L a k e , 1. r r .
Ma n a l e e , M a r i o n .
Marlin, Monroe,
Okeechobee, Orange.
Osceola, Palm Beach.
Pasco. I'lnrllas. Polk.
Put nam. S I. L u cie,
Sarasota. Sumter, and
Volusia.
These counties have
been chosen because of
dam ages and losses
caused by January's
severe freeze,

Farmers and ran­
chers In these counties
who sustained produc­
tion or physical losses
as ,i result o f the freeze
may lie eligible In re­
ceive an em ergency

FHA loan.
Those who have not
received a loan lo assist
t hem In rec o ve rin g
from Ihrlr loss result­
ing from litis disaster
may apply for such a
to w n lit t h e appropriate
eminiV nTTIrr twforr the
close o f business on
Nov, JH: Volusia. 21H-A
E. New Y o r k A vr..
DeLand; Orange. Agri­
cultural Center, Room
401. Federal Uulldlng.
HO N. Hughey Ave..
Orlando; and Seminole,
312 W. First St.. Suite
( 110 , Sanford.

REALTY
TRANSFERS
William F Pop* &amp; Wt Wilma
»s Tutu* StOg Contr lot . Its 1
S t. Bill DMato* Addn, 1141 008
Ma,iwi D « Mom** lot to
Wilt&gt;*m J
Cod*. J r 4 Wt
M*r*/i* L . I t 4. Bit It. NottO
Orlande Haoth**.
Bat
It.
m m
Alan Moor* 4 Wt EI«lo* lo
David C Mahar 4 Wt M *t»l P .
LI &gt;18 oak For**t, Un Two B
U IS O
Thomas P Jonat 4 Wt Chong
M to Clave H Karr 4 Wt
Patricia H . L I 1M Wmlvr
Spring* Un 4 1*8 000
Richmond Amar Mom** to
Hobart
J
ta rta r
A
Wt
Katharlna, L* tr* Country Lana.
MO HO
Richmond Amar Horn** lo
Raymond J Staudt 4 Wt Con
nla, LI II Country Lana. 881*00
Ktnnalh A
Backar 4 Wt
Char ly na to Fartakla Intarna
lional Contlr . It f. Blk It. Tl*r
1 CM Traitor dt Map Sant

1 10.000
Otcaola Land Day to David
G Stonar 4 Wt Jan*I, I t a* Th*
Foratt at Lak* Harney Sat B
O*taoi» B M I So (It.too
Fradarltk M For. to John V
Uroaddut 4 Wt Virginia R . It
tia. Winter Spring* Un t.
ItlOOOO
Bonair* Oar C* to Anna H
Lewis, 4 W illiam Bachrach J r ,
Un ttl. Carmal By th* taka,
Un t.Mt.JOO
FRC
Int
to John
F
Bonalaklt 4 Wt Allca, Lt M
Storktvidg* Un On* |tt too
FRC Inc to Randy C Hatton
4 Wt Carl* A LI II. Sloe kbridga
Un On* tt.000
A ilnn 0*v Inc to Davgiai I
Tomlin sub 4 Wt Slwrrl*. Un 01)
l*k* LatuaCluB I. i l l too
Arbsn D a . . Inc .a Stephen C
MitUio 4 Wt Orbgrah P . Un Olt
lak* LatuaCluB 1.011.000
Aibon O ar to Jack F Thom**
4 Wt Diana K . Un Olt lake
lotus C M . *4* 408
Alton Oav Inc t* Chari** M
Hunter III 4 W t Karan I . Un
*D taka lo tu s CiuS I. OaJ.MO
Alton Oav to Tarrant* 0
Mr Cal loth Un tt l. lak* Latin
O u s t, oat. roo
' Governor* Point. Ltd
to
Chart** P Pack. LI 47 Gavar
**r* Point. Ph ). 0*C I m a n
0 M A Prop Inc to Franci* W
Am an" 4 Wt ■ Band, a. LI tit
lak* at th* Waadi Tawnheut*.

11*000
Norman Harris. Tr to Croaks
Band Partner*. LI II. Croak'*
Band.BlO.OBO
Croat* Band Ptr to Ban
(Sm art ( n t r . In c . U
II
Cr**k * Band
K amain Baraga
Elua to
Am*rltlr«t Fad , l • II. Gavar
nor*Pomt. Ph I S J M M

, RvttlC Wood* Ltd toLuclloD
Wiaaman. LI Wt Wildwood
p u d . ssa.*oo
•watte Weed* Ltd to Barry I.
Rindnar 4 Wt Marianna Lt f*
Wildwood P U O . l i t 00S

•

S A T U R D A Y . A P R IL S
East-West Klwanls Club. 8 a m..
Airport Restaurant. Sanford.
Central Florida Zoo Easter Egg
Hunt with 3.500 colored eggs for
toddlers Ihrotigh 16 years. 10 a.m. to
noon. Prizes. Bring your own basket.
Regul ar a d m is s io n : Adults. $3;
children 3-12. t l ; 60 and older.
S1.50;, under 3 free.
30th Annual Easter Egg Hunt
sponsored by Winter Park Jaycees for
children 10 and under. 10 a.m..
Central Park. Downtown Wi nt er
Park.
Easter Egg Hunt for preschool
I hrough second grade sponsored by
Altamonte Springs Recreation De­
partment. lO a.m., Weslmontc Park.
500 Spring Oaks Blvd. Bring basket.
Sanford A A . noon (closed dlsmission) and 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St.
open discussion.

legal Notice
C I T Y O F SANFORD
N O T IC E T O T H E PUBLIC:
Nolle* It Ivareby glvan Ihal th*
Board of Adjustment ol th# Cny
el Sanlord will hold * regular
mealing ol April TJ. Iff! I" IN*
City H all at It 10 A M In ordtr
to consider a request lor a
variant* In tti* Zoning Ordl
none* at II pertains to required
lot width and lot arta In a
MR IL lonadoiStrlcIln
A parrel ol land lying In SEC
) ) , T W P 1*0. R G E TO E.
Seminal* County, F L , mar*
p a r t i c u la r ly d a ic r lt a d a*
tot low* Com manta al the NW
corner ol Tract " A " ot M ar1*1'
Maadurr* a* recurdvd In PB TV.
PG* 11.J&gt;. J 1 of th* City ot
Sanford. F L . tald point alto
being th* POB, thane* run It
J4 -H 00 ' E S II lo a point on a
curya concave N Ely and having
a radio* ol IS ) 04 I t . thane* run
NWly along tald curve trom a
chord baanng ot N *0 *44*11" W
an arc dlatanc* of 41 TO ft
through a central angle ol
10*1r » " lo the P T ol taid
curve, thane* run N 1 I ‘ M M
W 7* adit to th* P C of a curve
concave OEly and having a
radlut ol IQS 1* I t . thane* run
NWly along tald curve from a
chord bear log ol N ri* 44')) " W
an arc dlktanca ol 01 10 It
through a central angle ol
a a -ir * )'1 lo the F T ol tald
curve, thane* run $ 80*01‘41"
W «S *0 tl lo tho P C o i l curve
conear* N E ly and having a
radlut of t)a f t . thane* run Wly
along tald curve from a chord
hearing ot N 77*11 I I" W an
arc ditlanc* of It* 47 tl through
a central angle ot SS’ IM O " to
in P R C
ot a eutv* concave
SWIy and having a radlut of 100
It thence run NWly along tald
curve from a chord bearing ol
N 44*17 0* W an arc distonc#
ot 77 07 It through a central
angle ot ***)0 OS" to th* P T of
ta id c u r v e , thane* tun N
**•110 *" w n a a t i torn* p c .
at a curve cancava H tly and
having a radlut at tt l tl tl
thane* run NWly along tald
curve trom a chord bearing ot
N *7*&gt;rst" W an arc dlktanca
ol 11* S7 H through a central
angle of a)*)* !*" to th* P R C
ol a curve concave SWIy and
having a radlut of 17117 I t .
thane* run NWly along tald
curv* from a chord tearing ol
N *0*71 a*" W an arc dlatanc*
Ol ** 47 If through a central
angle of I T U ' S ) " to Ih* P R C
ol a cury* concava NEly and
having a radlut ol H I H I I .
thane* run NWly along tald
curv* from a chord boaring ot
N d I M r n " W an art ditlanc*
of 10* at It through a central
angle of M * IM 7 " to th* P R C
ol a curve concave OWly and
having a radlut ol t i a i i I I ,
lhanc* run NWly along H id
curvo from o chord bearing ol
N »7*)*')7" W on ore ditlanc#
ol *7 t t M through o central
angle ot 17*»'*l ' to th* P C C
ol o curv* concava OEty and
having a radlut ol 17 H It .
lhanc* run SWIy tlong H id
curv* Irom a chord bearing ol S
* 1*0* 11 W. an arc ditlanc# ol
aS I ) It through a central angle
ol » * * lV t}" to th* P T ol u ld
curv*. lhanc* run N 0*14 41"
W M i l . fhonco run N 74-71 n
E S f t tt to th# P C ot a curv*
concava Wly and having a
radlut ol 0* 71 f t , thane* run
Nty along H id curt* from a
chord bearing o tN 07*SI a* W
an arc dlktanca ol *1 la It
through a central angle ol
M*X&gt; 01" to th* P T ol H id
curve, lhanc* run N 77*00 W
W i r t l l h to th* P C, ol a
curv* concava SWIy and having
a radlut ot ri 10 t t . thanco run
NW ly along H id curve from a
chord bear ng ol N ia*18 11 W
an arc ditlanc* of at 1) ft
through a central angle at
SJ*S* 11 " to Iha P T ot H id
curve thence run N I P I I 'I I '
E. SO tt to the P C ot 0 curvo
concave Sly and having a radlut
ot 1)1 I* M , thence run Ely
along u n J curve trem a chord
bearing o i l 01*01 l i " I an arc
ditlanc* ol I I I ) tl through a
central angto ol 1(7*00 00 to a
point on M id curvo. Ihonco run
N St*at 7* E taa 7) t l . Ihonco
run 0 17*111)' E I t ) la It to
th* H C ot a curv* concave
N E ly and having a radlut *1 I I
f t , lhanc* run SEly along u ld
curv* trom o chord boot mg ol S
*7*1111' E an arc dittanc* ol
Tl to *t through o control onglo
of S T U M ' to Iho P R C ot a
curv* concava OWly and having
a radlut at l i t 0) tt . thane• run
O ily along M id curvo Irom a
chord booring ot 0 ft* tl'll i
an arc ditlanc* el 1*1 U It
through 0 central angle at
**•1111 to a point on a lino,
lhanc* run N 00*7* at" W H I M
t t , thence run 0 84*41'H" E
at 71 T l . thorn* run N 101 t t .
lhanc* run N ti* u la E 07)1
It . thence run 1 O f l l H E 71
rt . thence run 0 *1*1*07 E
r i U t t . thence run 0 110 tl .
lhanc a run N O Tla 1) E 71U
I t . Mono* run t IT a B U " W.
la* 10 n . thane* run 0 00* ltM "
E
IM 71 I t . lhanc* run N
lIM O 'll" I
U H tt. lhanc*
tun N M ’ U O I W It) It H .
•hone# run M. ) T M
*7" t
Ml U n . thane* run 0 71*00 11"
W l i la I t . lhanc* run N
a r i l ' l l " W M i l l I t . lhanc*
run N 11*14'40 t *7 t l H to
the P C *0 a curve cone*** Sly
and having a radiuk i t l U H P .
lhanc* run Ely along u ld curve
Nam a chard bearing at N
*1*017* E an arc dutonc* el
M l t i n through * central angia
1 IW'17'1* to th* P T a* u id
curve, lhanc* run 0 a ro i rt I
i t l B I l »&gt; m* p C a l t curve

8h Jf*f+***

:o n c* v* Wly and having a
radius ol 17111 I t . thane* run
Sty along u ld curve trom a
chord bearing 0 01*1* *7 W an
arc ditlanc* ol 111 11 II through
o central angle ol ti'71’01" to a
point an a lln*. thane* run 0
? 1* W 10 f E 7 » t t . thane* run
0 O T U ' l l " W HO ft to a point
on a curv* concave Sly and
having a radlut ot *** to ft .
thanco run Wly along H id curv*
trom &gt; chord tearing of N
i t ' l l 0*" W an arc ditlanc* ot
4] 41 tt through a central angle
01 O S M l'll to tha P H C ot a
curv* concave Nip and having a
radlut ol 1*141 I t , thane* run
NW ly along u ld curv* Irom a
chord bearing ol N 7**41 00" W
an arc distance et 17*14 ft ,
through a central a n g lt ot
7**10*00" to 4 point on u l d
curv*. thane* run S la *10 00
W *1 li toth* POB Sato parcel
containing 1) S* acrat mere or
lata
Being more cpeclllcally da
scribal ai located at th* NE
corner of Poqto Road and Or
agon Avenue
Planned ut* of tho property it
townhouut
B L Parkins. Chairman
Board ol Ad| ustmant
A D V IC E TO TH E P U B LIC It
a person decides to appeal a
decision made with respect lo
any maltar cantidtrad at th*
above mealing or hearing, be
may need a verbatim record of
th* proceedings Including the
iatllmony and evidence, which
record It not provided by Ih#
City ol Sanford If 07*4 01011
Publish March 71 A April S.

1*01
O E D IM
F IC T IT I0 U 1 NAME
Notice Is hereby given Iha I I
am engaged In business at 1 ST)
J e r ic h o O r , C a s s e lb e rry ,
Seminole County. Florida 11707
under tha llctltlout ham* ot A
TO U C H OF CLASS C A R P E T 4
U P H O L S T E R Y C L E A N IN G ,
and that I intend to register u l d
name with Mi* Clerk *4 th*
Circuit Court. S*mlr&gt;olo County
Florida in accordant* with tti*
provisions ol tho Fictitious
Nam* Slatolas. to wit Section
M l ot 7 tor id* Slatults 1*17
/*/ Bernard B C enter
Publish March 77. 7* A April S.
II. It t l
D E O 111
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T,
IN A N O FO R
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY .
FLORIDA
CASE NO t* lit* CA 11 G
IN R E Th* Interests
of K IM B E R L Y JEANNE
M A C H E T T E . AMlnor
N O TIC E OF AC TIO N
W IL B U R C STEVENS
1710 lath Avenue
Wllllamttown. New Jersey
0*0*4
Y O U AR E N O TIF IE D that *
Petition lor Adoption hat boon
tnad against yuu Ywu a** i*
quirad to w ry* a copy ot your
written dalansot. it any. to th*
Petition*! t attorney JO N 0
R O S E N B E R G . E S Q U IR E ,
whnse address It li t O North
M a gn o lia Avonuo. O rla n d o ,
Florida 17001 on or betor* April
71. ISO*, and III* ih* original
with th* Clorh ol this Court
nlthor before service on P*||
Honor's attorney or Immodialoly
lh*r roller otherwise. a dalaull
will b* entered against you tor
th* fallal da mended In Ih*
Pet H Ion
This nolle* shall b* published
once each week tor tour comae
u tlv t weeks In tha Sanlord
Herald
W ITN E S S my hand and u a l
this lath day ot March. ittS
D A V I D N BERRIEN
CLERKOF
TH E C IR C U IT CO UR T
By Susan E Tabor
Deputy Clark
Publish March 11. 7* 4 April S.
II. I H I
O E O IM
IN T H E CIRCUIT C O U R T.
IN A N O FO R
SEMINOLE C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
CASE NO U *S*CA *4 E
In R* Th* Marriage ol
M A R K A M ILES.
Husband.
and
S T A C IL M ILES.
Wit*
N O TIC E OF AC TIO N
T H E S T A T E OF FLO R ID A TO
M A R K A M ILES. whoa# ran
done*It unknown
YO U ARE H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D lh*f S T A C I L
M IL E S hat Iliad a Petition &gt;n
Ih* Circuit Cauvt el Saminqi*
County. Fiend*. tor Dissolution
Of Mar nog*. Ond you * '* r*
quirad to servo a copy Ol your
w rit ton dt tontat. Horsy, on N E D
N JU L IA N . J R . Etqulro ol
S T E N S T R O M . Mc IN T O S h
JU LIA N . COLBERT
i.
W H IC H AM. P A . Poal O tl.ro
Ro* D M . Sanlord F lo rid a
W T t IU 0 Attorneys tor Pan
ttoner ond In* th* original with
th* Clorh ot Ih* atov* styled
Court on or baler* April X
A O . IMS. otherwise a d e l* .'
and ultimata judgment will be
*nt*,*d against you lor th*
rail*I demanded In to* Petition
W ITN E S S my hand and at
lielal tool a* u ld Court an this
lain day at March. IM1
IBEAU
D A V ID N B ER R IE N
Clark *1 th* Circuit Casa I
Seminal* County. Flarkl*
Hy rt'C h e ryl R Franklin
Deputy Ctork
Publish March I t April 4 1).
I*. IMS
O E O IM

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

F IC TITIO U S NAM E S T A T U T E
A F F ID A V IT FO R
INSURANCE M A R K E T IN G
GR OUP
S T A T E OF FLO R ID A
C O U N T Y O F S E M IN O L E
On this day par tonally *p
paarad bator* m*. an otttcar
duty author: rad to administer
oaths JAMES H R A P R A G E R .
P re sid e n t ol I N S U R A N C E
M A R K E T IN G G R O U P . I N C .
who. being llrst duty sworn,
dapotat and u y l
Th* nomas of all th* parsons
Interattod In lha business eon
dueled under th* foregoing
llctltlout nemo, and th# aslant
ot th* interest of each ot thorn In
u ld business, isos follows
NAME
IN T E R E S T
JA M E S H R A PR AG ER
SON
LAW R EN CE A S M ITH
SOX
IN S U R A N C E M A R K E T I N G
GROUP. INC
By Je m tlH Rapragar
lit President
Sworn to tha subscriber be lory
m * th 'i»th dayo! M arch, lag}
Publish March 1* April |. IJ
IS. IMS
O E D IS*

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O UR T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT .
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C IVIL A C T IO N NO
** 1711 C A W K
FED ER AL N ATIO N AL
M O R T G A G E A S S O C IA T IO N
etc .
Plaintiff.
vl
OG ALE E R A Y , ot u*. ot Rt.
Datmdanti
N O TIC E O F SALE
NO TICE It hereby given that
pursuant to tha Final Judgment
ot Foractosuro and Sal* onlartd
in th* earn* ponding to th*
Circuit Court ot tho E IG H
T E E N T H Judicial Circuit. In
and tor S E M IN O L E Caunty,
Florid*. Civil Action Number
*4 171) CA 0* K th* under 1 grad
Clark will M il th* preparty
situated In said Caunty da
scrlbad at
Lot 71. N O R TH W O O D . *c
cording to Ih* plat thereof at
recorded In Plat Book IF. Pages
41 and 47. ot th* Public Records
ol Saminoto County. Florida
at public u to . to th* htghast and
bast bidder tor cash at 11 0*
o'clock A M . on th# ll lh day ot
April |Ml. at th* W E S T FRONT
door ot lha S E M IN O L E County
C o u rth o u s * . S A N F O R D ,
Florida
(C O UR T S E A L I
O A V ID N B E R R IE N
CLERK O F T H E C IR C U IT
COURT
By Susan E Tabor
Deputy Clark
Publish March TV. April I. IMS
O E D M l _______________________

IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JUDICIAL C IR C U IT
IN ARD FO R
SEMINOLE C O U N T Y ,
FLO R ID A
CASE NO: *41U4 CA a t G
B EN E FIC IA L S A V IN G S B A N K .
Plaintiff.
v
L E W I S M
G L A S S .
C H A R LO TTE I
GLASS.
B A R N E TT B A N K OF
C E N TR A L FLO R ID A . N A . 4
T R O P IC A L W E L D IN G 4
FAB R IC ATIN G . INC .
Defendants
NOTICE OF SALE
NO TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that pursuant to a Summary
Final Judgment ot Foreclosure
dated March V , 1M1, Case No
■ e lta tC A O tG

nf

the

C ircu it

Court ot th# Eighteenth Judicial
District In and for Seminal*
C o unty. F lo rid a , In w hich
B E N E FIC IA L SAVINGS BANK
It Ih* Plaintiff, and L E W IS M
GLASS. C H A R L O TTE I
GLASS, B A R N E TT B AN K O F
C EN TR A L FLO R ID A N A . 4
T R O P IC A L W E L D I N G A
FA B R IC A TIN G INC . are th*
Dafandonls. I will call to th*
highest and bast bidder tor cash
In Ih* lobby *1 th* Watt Front
door ol Ih* CourthouH Ir, San
lord. Sam mol* County, Florida
at II M A M on tha lath day of
April, IMS. th* following da
scrlbad proparly M l lorlh In th#
Order ot lha Summary Final
Judgmental Forectosur#
Lal ). Block E. B O N A V C N
TU N E HEIG HTS. 7nd Section.
According to th* Plat tharaol as
recorded In Plal Booh IS. Pages
•a and IJ ol th* Public Records
ol la m Inol#County, Florida
D A T E D this 17th day ol
March. IN I
IS E A LI
DAVID N B E R R IE N
C LE R K OF T H E C IR C U IT
C O UR T
By S uun E Tabor
Publish March IS A p r il!, IMS
DCOM

IM T H I C II C U I T C O U R T
OF TH E E IG H T E E N T H
JUDICIAL C IR C U IT .
1EM IN0LE C O U N T Y .
FLO R ID A
CIVIL ACT IO N NO :
H tltC A H Q
FEDERAL N A TIO N A L
M O R TG A G E A S S O C IA T IO N
ale .
Plaintiff.
vs
H A R R E LL R W E B S T E R , ol
Uk.ttol.
Defendant i
NOTICE O F SALE
NO TICE It hereby given that
pursuant lo Ih* Final Judgment
of Foreclosure and Sal* entered
In Ih* lama pending In th*
Circuit Court ot Ih* E IG H
T E E N TH Judicial Circuit. In
and lor S E M IN O L E County,
f lorid* Civil Action Numbor
** Sat CA ** G tho undersigned
Clark w&lt;M tall fhw [khparty
situated In tald County, da
scribed**
Unit 1*1. CR AN E S ROOST
V I L L A G E . S E C T I O N V lt ,
together with and undivided
a two char a In Ih* Common
alamanlt appurtenant thereto
according to Iho Declaration ot
Condominium recorded In Ot
tlclal Records Book 1107. Pago
0*17. ol Ih* Public Records ol
SominoloCounty, Florida
at public Hi*, to Ih* highest and
bast bidder tor cash at 110 *
o'clock A M on th* n th day ol
April IN I al Ih* W E S T FR O N T
door ot tho S E M IN O LE County
C o u rth o u it. S A N F O R D .
Florida
(CO UNT SEAL!
O A V ID N B E R R IE N
C LER K OF TH E C IR C U IT
COURT
By S uunE Tabor
Oapuly Clark
Publish March TV April S. I N I
O E O 1*1

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Nolle* It hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 71*
E Maitland Ave . Altamonte
Springs S a m ln o l* Caunty.
Florida under Hclltious name ot
TH E C O L L E C T IO N , and lhat I
inland to register u i d name
with th* Clark ol th# Circuit
Court. Sominoto Caunty. Florida
in accordance with th* pro
visions ol m* Fictitious Name
Statutes To Wit Section t k l »
Florid* Statutes 1*17
Miltl* H arris
11*0 Lake Talmadg* Or
Daland. Fla 17714
Publish March ft. 4 April 1. II,
I*. IM1
O EO IF)
F I C T I T I O U l NAM E
Notice Is hereby glvan that I
am engaged In business at SSI
A a E . S l a t * R o a d 4 )4 ,
Longwood, Samlnolo County,
F lor Id# 11710 under th* tlcfltloul
nam* ot R O Y A L PRESS, and
that I inland to roglttor u ld
nam# wllh th* Clark ot th#
Circuit Court. Samlnol* County.
Florid* In accordance with Ih*
provlttont ol th* Fictitious
Nam* Statutot to wll Section
•41 ot Florida Statutot 1*17
/t/Gll* Sharlti
(owner) M O H A M M A D
HASSAN S H A R IF I
Publish March 1). IV 4 April 1.
II. IM1
D E O 114
F IC T IT IO U S MAMR
Nolle* lo hereby glvan that I
am engaged In business at 1a*0
Guinevere O r , Casselberry.
Seminal* Caunty. Florida under
tha Bctllious name ot TE R M I
H AL C O M M U N IC A T IO N S .
INC , and that t Inland I*
•agistor H id nam* with tha
Clark ot th* C ircu it Court.
Samlnolo County, Florida In
accordant* with Ih* provisions
ol In* Fictitious Nam* Stoluttt.
to wit Section M l 0* Florida
Statutes IM7
/ s 'Larry A Willis
Publish March 1). IV 4 April 1.
I). IMS
O EO 11*

Lega! Notice

CLASSIFIED ADS

I N T H E C IR C U IT COURT
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU O IC IA L C IR C U IT.
S E M IN O L E CO UN TY.
F L O R ID A
C IV IL A C TIO N
NO 04 I rVO-CA OS I
C .E BRO O KS M O R TG AG E
C O M P A N Y . IN C . etc.
PlaJntIM,
vs
M ARK T . L IP F O H D .e tu «.

Seminole

322-2611

831-9993

RATES
CLASSIFIED DEPT
1 tint* .................67C a lino
HOURS
3 contoortivo tinsel 61C a Hit*

1:30 A.M. • 5.30 P.M.
MONOAY Urn FFIOAY
SATURDAY 9 - Noon

N O T IC E OF SALE
N O T IC E It hereby given that
pursuant to th* Final Judgment
ot Foractosuro and Soto ontorad
In Ih* causa ponding In th*
C ircuit Court ot Ih* E IG H
T E E N T H Judicial Circuit, in
and tor S E M IN O L E County.
Florid*. Civil Action Numbor
M 17*0 C A *V E th* imdortignad
Clark will u l l Ih* property
situated in M id County, do
scribodas
C O N D O M IN IU M U N IT NO
111. Of T H E A L TA M O N TE . A
C O N D O M IN IU M , according to
tha Declaration ot Condominium
lo r T H E A L T A M O N T E . A
C O N D O M IN IU M , and Eihibita
annavad thereto, fltod th* 1st
day ot Ju ly, iftt. In OtHclal
Records Book 1144. Pag* IMS.
Public Records el Samlnol*
County. Florid*: TO G E TH E R
with an undivided mtorast In th*
common atomantt and limited
common alaments declared In
t o ld O t c l a r o l i o n ot Con
d o m i n i u m lo b* an op
pur tenant a to th* above Can
dominium Unit
at public u to . to th* highest and
bast bidder tor cash at II .00
o'clock A M . on ih* nth day of
April ISO), at th* W EST FR O NT
door ot th* S E M IN O LE Caunty
C o u rth o u s * . S A N F O R O
Florida
(C O U R T SEAL1
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C LER K O FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
By: Susan E Tabor
Deputy Clark
Publish: March IV 4 April 1
net
D E D 704

7 con**cuti»* tins*) 52C a line
10 consocirtiT* timos 4CC a lino
Contract Rates AraiUbto
3 Linos Minimum

DEADLINES
N oon The Day B efore Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
Monday - 11:00 A .M . Saturday

23— Lost &amp; Found

21— Personals
I will net b* r*tRans.U* tor any
debts Incurred by anyone
other man mytall as ot a a I I
G A R Y R AM 1EY,_________
Th* lent fly at th* lata
Mrs Doris S. JackMn
wishes to t ip r v ll thalr smear*
thanks to all tor aspratttant
at b indaatt shewn dut ing their
haws #1 baraavamanf
Th* Jacks** Family
I P ill N O TIM E
T IM E T O PLANT Y O U R S E LF
IN A HOM E OF Y O U R O W N I

LO ST Blu* 4 goto macaw
Sanford a'*a was! ot 71th St
R E W A R D Days 111 af|0.
Evas JH 4 4 H ._______________ •
LOST Black mala Doberman
Vicinity ot 10th 4 Mailonvill*
A n s w e r s to " T h o r n "
R IW A R O . KI47V*__________
Lott R IW A R D I Brown purse '
red wall*! ol Imperial Gat
Station I t 4 H w y *4 cm
4 115 No questions otkad
121 0147

23— Special Notices

legal Notice

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT.
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E . CO UN TY.
F L O R ID A .
CASE NO t l I0S4 CA M O
IN R E
T h * M t r r la g * ot
H E L E N A N N M AD OR E.
Petitioner rvvito.
and
P H IL IP E D W IN MAOORE,
Respondent'Husband
N O T IC E O F ACTIO N
T O Philip Edwin Madort
11* South Wamar Straat
Oneida, New York
YO U AR E H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE O that a Petition lor
Dissolution al Marrlag* has
been Bled against you. and that
you ar* required to serve a copy
of your response or ptoadmg to
th* Petition upon th* patitianar't
attorney. Thomas C Groan*.
Past Oftlc* Baa *V1. Ian lord
Florida 17771 and III* th* or g
not response or ptoading In th*
attic* ol th* Clark t t Ih* Circuit
Court, Sominoto Caunty Court
house Sanlord. Florida 11771.an
ar baler* lha 7th day et May
1*U If you toll lo do so. a
Dalaull Judgment wilt b* taken
against ywu tor Ih* relief da
mended In th* Petition
D A T E D at Sanford, Samlnol*
County, Florida, this ltd day of
April. 14*1
O A V ID N B E R R IE N
C L E R K O F TH E C IR C U IT
COURT
B Y Batty B Colbert
Oaputy Clark
Publish: April 1. I). IS. » . Ittl
OEE l )

IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T
FO R SEM INO LE C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A
P RO R ATE DIVISION
Fil* Number U 7*1 CP
IN RE E S T A T E O F
B E R N A R D KIN OMAN
Dec *a sad
NO TIC E OF
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
Th# administration ot th*
a t I 4 t a et B E R N A R D
K I N D M A N . dtcaased. F ile
Number *1101 CP. It pending In
th* Circuit Court for Samlnol*
C o u n t y , F lo r id * , P ro b a ta
Division, th# addrastol which it
P O
D r a w t r C. S a n lo r d
Florida. 7)77)MIS Th# nomas
and addrttsas ot th* par tonal
representative and th* personal
raprasantotiv* s attorney ar*
sal lorlh below
A ll Inlarattad parsons ar*
required to 1) 1* with this court.
W IT H IN t h r e e m o n t h s o f
TH E F IR S T P U B LIC A TIO N OF
T H IS N O TIC E (11 Oil claims
against tha astol* and 111 any
objactlons by an Interested
parson on whom this nolle* was
u r v a d that challenges th* valid
Ity ot th* will, th* qualifications
ot lha portonal represent*!!**,
venue, or jurisdiction ol th*
court
A L L CLAIM S AND O B JE C
TIO N S NO T SO F IL E D W IL L
BE F O R E V E R B AR R ED
Publication at this Nolle* hot
begun an March IV. It t l
Personal Representative
r*7 Shirley Klndman
•I ) Garaite Trail
Wlntar Springs F L » 7 M
Par tonal Hapratantaliv*
/t'B ru ce M Bogin, ot
BOGIN M U N N I
M UNNS 4 StMON
P O Bom 1807
Orlando. F L 17887
Telephone (1011 411 181)
Publish March ft 4 April I,
It*S
O E O IM

Balloon M a gic

- &lt;Al »■ «* (
JOS M S 0400
_____1EN D A G IF T
...... W ITH A L I F T !

______BALLOON.
_____ BOUQUETS.
____ W* Deliver I
f or every reesan a w ry tea taa

CELEBRATE
A BIRTH!
Mr Stork's visit
makat tor a litotlm*
at mtmariat. gilts 4 till
Call Linda m at If
a M ARY K AY C O S M E TIC S a
Skin car* and cater flair
CO NNIE
tJITTM

★
NOW
That we have
your
itttnlion
Ac I dasslflad aOvvrtivrr In th*
E V E N IN G HE H A LO ,
INCREASE Hi* R E A D E R S H IP
at yaur ad by using ttarsl
Oir# n r i i l n r tp t a call at

322-2611

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Accounting &amp;
Tax S a r v k *
Pr*tot liana I Taa Eapartl Pro
par*, my attic* ar yaur ham*
Bast or leas I I
H A 118.
Lang 111. Call attar 8- FT4 U f l
Tam accountant 1* years a.pa
rlanc* W ill proper* H i t t In
yaur ham* P trse n a l and
tmall bucmait 70* l l u _______

Additions A
Rem odeling

Electrical

Landclaaring

Painting

R E S ID E N T IA L WIRING
Indaar/ OuSdtar Lighting.
Service Upgrades. Anything
tto ctrk a l Fra* IsIkM tos
line* 1*781 Call:
Tam 's 1 toetrie tarvka m 177*

TH O R N E LA N D C LE A R IN G
BUSHOGGING
CLAV4SHALE N l M U

W A L L F A P IR IN Q P A IN T IN G
Rafataacas------ -..V a ry Raliabto

FI re wood/Fuel
T R I E S E R V IC E A FIR IW O O O
FO R SALE C A LL A F T E R
4 P M » ) MM

General Services

Rf MODELING SPECIALIST
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T
OF T N I E IG H T E E N T H
JU O IC IA l C IR C U IT ,
SEMINOLE C O U N T V .
FLO R ID A
CIVIL A C TIO N NO :
*41111 CA#* l
FEDERAL N A TIO N A L
M O R TG A G E A S S O C IA T IO N ,
ate .
Plaintiff,
vc
O G A L E I HAY. el ue. at al.
Datondantt
NOTICE O F SALE
NOTICE H havob. given that
pursuant to th* Final Judgment
ol Fortcloauro ond Sal* an tor ad
In lha causa pending In th*
Circuit Court ol Hi* E IG H
T E E N T H Judicial Circuit, to
and lor S E M IN O L E County.
Florida Civil Action Number
*4 1111 CA *1 E th* undersigned
Clark will M il Ih* property
situ*tad In M id County, da
kenbadas
Let tl. N O N TH W O O O SUB
DIVISION, according to th* Plat
tharael as lacordad in Plal Bee*
17. Pag** al and 4) , Public
Records at Sominoto County.
7 tor Ida
ot public uto. to th* highest and
best bidder tor casts al II **
a clock A M . an th* u rn day at
April lMl. aim # W E S T PROMT
door *1 lha S E M IN O L E County
C a u r lb a v iR . S A N P O R D .
Florida
(C O UR T SEAL!
O A V ID N B E R R IE N
C l EDA OF T H E C IR C U IT
COURT
By Susan E Taber
Deputy Clark
Publish March I t April S. IM )
D I D Ml

Orlando - Winter Park

H » Handle
Th* Who! s Ban Ot Wem

Handy Man

B L UNI CONST.
122-7029

■ kp. Handyman. Rat Reliable
Fra* CSI meal any jab Bast
Rases n t g t l t CallAnyllma

masir/xjtt

sva 1 1 * 1 1 4 7

Lawn Service
ACE LAWN 1 IR V IC E
M#iv*9«fi4fKV
yning
Cleaning TTsalctong Farlillilng
Fro* llttosafac............. M l 1711
Jan un's Lawn Car# Sanlord
area T i l IT U Weakly and
monthly ratal
Lawn Maintenance
Landscaping lush Hag Mowing
la* MSI

LAWNS M0WTD 1 TRIMMED
taring Yard Clean vas

m m i

Paper Hanging
P AP E R H A N O IN O
Any type wmllcavaring
Raatarukl* — ______ 111 14*4

Pest Control
Got rats’ Gat E N F O R C E R
ra t 4 mouse k ille r
Th*
slrangotl you can buy Easy to
u u toss bags Sanlord Ac*
Hardware I I I 0**1 Tu c k »r
Farm Supply N T ID S

F macing Available

Appliance Repair
Mlm ApplUBct Santo
14 hr. larvic* Na EaSr* Charge
If yr. ta p 8d » 8* 8l, I J 4 R U
F a il, dependable appliance
service Mott major brand*
W a r r a n t y s a r v l c * ta r
W h irlp o o l. Am ana,
Kalvtnaler. Hetpoml Atchlay
Appliance 4 TV . t i l ltdl

Building Contractor*
A D D ITIO N * R E M O D E L IN G
•HI Strip* Custom Builder
Ita to L k .................. RHOO 115*8

(95-7411
Carpentry
R IM O O R L IN e
R E P A IR IN G
Ratorawcas
Vary Rababto
fiia&gt;if/K&gt;aa............ ate m u t t

Health

4

Beauty

TO W E R 'S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y Harrietts Beauty
Nook JIV E . 1st St 12)1141

Ckntng Ream • Hall *18.84
M s 4 Osatr, U A I B T M I

J A N IT O R IA L ( C R V IC R Specialist Its aftica cleaning,
carpal 4 ttto TO years amparl
ant# C all Ik m orning 1 M
until Id A M P I A I M _________

C gnp tttt

'j 1

Lawn C u t

\ j h l i M M f c l * lg i« j
e c s * w

Catliar's Budding 4 Remodeling
Na JaB T t* Smalt
I I I BurSan Laaa. Saatord
m -M n
M c C l u r e • h u r t R*m*d*i
mg. carpentry, cabtoat* N*
job Sea small N T 1 N 4
Plumbrng. Paining. Etoctrk
Carpentry Oon l Sa* ITT A H Bat
TRyrg Bap------- .... BAL H I &lt;441
Screen Rooms. Aluminium sid­
ing. gutters, carpentry, can
crato. p*tl*4 repairs Fra*
Estimates
Ik
D t 1474
TH O M A S A THOMAS. Hama
rtptslr. skewing, lawn car*.
CaU M l D M

Nom e Repairs
C A R P EN TER
Rapalrs and
remodeling Na fob to* small
Cali m Mas
Mamtonanct a* *“1types
Carpantry, paint tog. pumbtog
and etoctrk m a d

Plastering
V A I L Phase* *r PI* star mg a
Repair. Hacca, Hard Caat.
StmatoSad trick 111 1M1

3234401

Plum bing

Hom e Improvament

Cleaning Service
N M ^ Sm ^ E E SS^ B SE e L

U ir a tu A I m .

Masonry
B E A L Cancrato 1 man quality
oparatton Patia*. driveways
Days l i t 7 iu E .* s » 7 m i
0 H Baby Cancrato
Heat* slab* a Orly** a Pallas
I * * ! Orad*ag ................m IIM

N u n in g Care
O UR R A T B S A R I LO W E R
Labavlaw Matsing O n to r
SIS 1 lac and I t . Van. vrd
m 4787

Painting
CALVIN A TO M S
Haas* PatnMag A W*U Paper
Yaw bay motor 1*11
W# suaaiy iahar Ta S AVE M l
m rn i
Rasaanttbto Maa and helper nrtll
paml yaur Ham* ar Bwttoats
etc Give yaur prabtoms ie us.
W E C A R ! Quality work. M
yrs t i p 137 7047 L k cant

a Redds Plumbing Sarvk* *
■*#*» a Replace * R am idil
a Fra* Ith is u ltt a n i M M a

Pressure Cleaning
F R I V A T I 4 M O B ILE HOM ES
C O M M E R CIA L
___________ lav m i

Secretarial Servi
A LL S E C R E TA R IA L At
WORD P ROCESSING S\
Reasonably PvkadCaU Anytime
H I I8dl
V tn / Maskarcard

Tile

TcaHmam^^H^^TTsTur*

Cleaning C e ra m ic . V in y l
AsbatSos All Phase* P C :
•rkk Hamas lu cm asu s
Free 1st B itu n a b le 12)4741'

Tree Service
C C H O L S T R IE II

MAIDS- Tb -Of0.1

Landclearing

FrtaEtftmetosILai

N aaat T *
Call tat* helpers!

W T 0 N T C 0 R IN 0 W
Infm laul Cntm faintini

G E N E V A L A N D C L IA R IN G
La) and Land cleartog.
till dk*. and hauling.
Call la tM M a r 1481711

Serving Canty si Fla tar I I yrs
wish tampkto quality paint
Ing sarvkas Quality a Must
Special wail c m Nag 22} M7I

JOHN A L L IN S LAW

CAU NOW! 339-0100

)

licensed insured

“lank* Pv*l*n lm
Deadtree removal I
Fraaasl m )

�KIT ‘N’ CARLYLE ’ by Larry Wright

27— Nursery A
Child Care
hltd U f » by tic ftwrw lunch.
cht Daily activfflot *«• i
I &amp; »* * - Wtokdayt tarn *pm
L a i a M ary M l M U __________
tovtog &amp; quality
| child car*, call A Child-*
frld 7 1 5 * 4 7 4 ___ _____
SUMLAMO ■ S TA TE S
hud car* my ham* *xp*ri
I r'lC K j day u h o t l toschar
[Nutfltlou* m eal,. fenced yard,
[large play ar*a t g n I thru
I U Monday thru Friday « AM
1*0 « P M Lot* O* T i c Call
m iw

3 3 -R e al Estate
Courses

Think Inf *1 gaffing a
Real Eire to Lleant*I
M M *&gt; a* awe Caraar Night
April i*na it* a p m
W# ***ar Fra* Turtle*
and rantmlavt Training!
•II Dick or Vicky lardalallt:
h p
m m
(a * . 77a losa
Karat •« Florida . Inc.
If Ta a rt (.p a r tone. I

55— Business
Opportunities
UTIRHOON PAPEIt I0UTE
)R SALE Phono H I mSeftsr I

61— Money to Lend
utm ost C apital 1)0 000 to
I t 000.000 and ovor P O Boi
1411 W lntarPk Fla 73770

71— Help Wanted

Employment
WY

323-5176

171] F ranch A v.
[cryllc Applicator] naadad to
applr p'Olactlv* coating on
cart boatt and pianat t l *0
111 par hour w# tram For
wor* m Sanford araa call
Tam pa H I M* H U
S S IS T A N T M A IN T (N A N C E
MAN Eaparlanct prtlar'td
lly In par ton Monday thru
I Friday t AM to 4 PM Sanford
|N u&gt; i l n | M o m #
*10
ai ion* d la_____
ran altrayt hiring Irdlat A
J man Call Immadlataly 771
[ i t i r n s i M _____ _________
YON Hiring Smiling Facatl
I Fall A pt lima Call Immadi
J Italy I 77157I I or TO-IBM.
t A I P E T C llA N C R W A N TE D
I Good talar* bantllti Call
laf IM A attar 1
_____
t R UISE SH IP JOBS! Orta*
mcoma potanlial All eccupa
Ilona For Information (1171
7*7 k*7oact igg
AVON E A R N IN G ! WOW 111
3 P IN T E R R IT O R IE S NOW111
171 t i l l ar 111 otlt
JA N IT O R I A l P E R S O N N E L
ParmAnant part tlma petition
To ha Ip claan ratall ttort
Morrlnot from 7 to 7 X) AM 0
da*t w*#k E tc tor rttirtd.
, tami ratlrod par ton e t t llt l.
I t AM to 1 PM

Legal Notice
P * C T (T 1 0 U tN A M f
Notlca It harab* gi»an that I
m angagad In business al 7705
lllat Graan Clrcla. long wood
fcaminof* Count*. Florida undar
I ho llc lltlo u t nama ol SUN
S T A T E F I R E S P R IN K L E R
CO . and that I inland to raglttar
raid nama with tha Clark of tha
Circuit Court Sam molt County.
Florida In accordant* with tha
provisions ot tha Flctlllo ut
Nama Staluttt. to wll Sac I Ion
M l 07 Florida Statutot I7S7
*/W *yn*M Wlthalm
Publlth March II. » 77 A April
I. I7A1
D ED HO

t

F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Notica it ha,*o* gi**n that wa
art tngagad m but matt al 11
Nurttf* Road 111. Longwood.
Samlnoi* County. Florida M7X
undar tha I let II lout nama ol
C O M M E R C IA L O R A P E R V
IN S TA LLA TIO N S , and lhal w*
inland to raglilor toM noma
allh tha Clark ot Itt* Circuit
Court Saminolo County, Florida
m accordant* with th* pro
ritlont of th* Flctitlou* Nam*
Itatutaa. to wit SatHon MS 07
Ftor Ida Statute* 1717
1*/ E ugan* m Sc M a ta '
/%/ R S Cobaan
fuWIth March 17 A April 1. I t
7 17*7
1C D l t l
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
FOR S E M IN O L E C O UNTY,
F L O R ID A
P R O R A TE DIVISION
Flla Num btr Al 171 CP
IR E E S T A T E O F
K IN D M A R K E T .
D e c iif d
N O TIC E T O C R IO IT O R S
0 A L L PERSONS HAVING
A I M S OR D E M A N D S
A I N ST T H E A B O V E
T A T I:
o d m ln lilra tlo n ol th*
M al JO H N O M A R K E T,
caatad, Flla Numhor
71 C P . It ponding in th*
Cult C ou rt tor Samlnal*
n t y . F lo r i d a , P ra b a l*
1 lion th* addrott *t which It
[I Off lea Drawar C. Santord
t ida 11771 Tha namat and
| r t t t * t of tha ancillary
mat rtpraaantatir* and th*
I l l a r y R a rto n a l ra p r*
s llv O t attorn*, ar* **t
paraont ar* ragutrad la III*
th* Clark at ltd* court
itIN T H R E E CALEN O A R
•THS O F T H E F I R S T
I L I C A T I O N OF THIS
|CE All cloimt agalntt tha
R In th* farm and mannar
[' bad by Sactron 7117*1 al
Florida Slatutaa and Rut*
| ol Tha Florida Rut** at
and G u p rd lfn a h lp
C L A I M S A N D DE
TOOT SO F lu E D W ILL
1 E V E R R A R R ED
lion at thit Nalic* hat
all S, 17AS
|mar*
Rapraaantatla*
RAS M A R K ET
ten Routovord
. Near Jar*** M U
ter Ancillary
Rapratanfah**
IM . Harman. E tguira
m*. Cam it**
u to .e rj
, Florida 13117
1 1KM I 1711700
r lll.I Z .I M S

7 1 - Help Wanted

71— Help Wanted

D E N A R Y MANOR now hiring
cook tor noon la I PM th in
Inttitutional *■ par lane* or
knowledge at dlatt nacattar*
Apply to N. Highway IT n .
DaBar*
O E L IV E R Y D R IV ER
Muct hey* »aiid Fta drtvqr*
llcana* with good driving ra
cord Apply at 7774 O R LA N D O
D R I V E , IN T H E Z A Y R E
PLA ZA ,___________________ _
Dump Track Drtvar
F C L Clean dn*mg record E «
parlance preferred Sanford
Area Coll » I7M _________
Earn a good living doing phema
work from you* hom* Top
poop a earn TAX plut weakly
I kOOT7» 1111_________________

H O U S E PAR E N T S - Christian
tie'I*f tar abutad A troubled
Nan* i d Mae_______________

E .p a rlo n c o d F I B E R G L A S S
SHOP SUPERVISOR Mutt b*
quality and partonnal or
H r tad Haw modern lector*
Inquire Mailer Craft Boat
Co . R a u t* 7. B oa I S } ,
Maryville. T N 17101__________
Experienced power taw opera
te n A wood pa'ft cutlort
A l t o ne e d c o u n t e r lo p
lam inatort Hetpitalliatlon,
bonut. vacation, h o lld a rt
Apply * II ar I I at Formltaa.
Inc , Port ot Sanford. La**
Monro*, f t__________________
F i t t e r , w a ld a rt. to r tta o l
fabricating shop M to 17 par
Flour to ttart bated on aaparl
ante Call 17? W O O ________
G irl Frida* wanted for tmail
manufacturing and wholatai*
butinotl Mutt hay* plaatant
taHphon* par tonal it* and be
able to handle cuttomart
on* on on* Salary nogotlabl*
Contact Bob Row*. Cypratt
Intarnatlonal. H I 1*70
___
Full time ample*mar., availably
te r c o m m e rc ia l t a w in g
mochin* aparator Enp with
canvat helpful For appf Coll
117 7M 7 ______ ______
G E N E R A lO F F I C I C LER K S
(Farf Tim* I
M utt
with
part
II L
tael

ha*a attic* aiparlanc*
typing lor permanent
lima 1 dayt each weak or
Mon thru Frl Navar a

TEMP H IM PERSONNEL
774-1341

HELP WANTED:
O F F IC E H E LP no *&gt;p*fi*nc*
naadad Good llartlng pa*
Fulltim e Call »7» *K»
W A R E H O U S E W O R K Im
mediate Will train Alto Gan
era! Leboreri *71 ooo
C U k T O M E R O R E E T E R w ill
lull* rain Good pa* Start
now Fulltlm * *71*100
T R U C K DR IVER S, local or long
haul W ith er without rig
Ekcallontpa* Call *7**100
C OM PUTER OPERATORS
Good Pa* Scalat Secure pot I
Horn Call *71 OOO
TRADESMEN
all photo*
Eacallanl pa* Start right
away *71 000
Tiradal lab Hunting!
Call Futurat. the* can Iwlpl
They hava W i H tpanlngt.
many wlthnaaiparlwnca
. Call tor Intel
*7*41**

legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Nitlc* It hereby given lh*t I
am angagad In butinatt *1 111
E
Woodland Dr . Santord.
Samlnoi* Count*. Florida under
th* llclltlou* nama a* E A G L E
C L E A N IN G SERVICE, and that
I Inland to raglttar told namo
with th# Clark pt Ihe Circuit
Court. Samlnoi* Count*. Florida
In accordance with th* pro
vltlont ot th* Fictitious N in a
Sta'uttt to wit Section M l 0*
Florida Statutot I7S7
/*/William P Puttln
Publlth Marcn II, 17 A April S.
II. 17*1
O E D 111

C IT Y OF
L A K E M A R Y, FLO R ID A
N O TIC E OF
P U B LIC H E A R IN O
T O W HOM IT MA Y CONC E R N
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by th* City Commlttion at th*
City ot Lake Mar* Florida, tha I
tatd Cam nut*ton will hold o
Public Hearing on April II. 17*1
at 7 X P M . to canudar an
ordinance enimed
AN O R D IN A N C E O F TH E
C I T Y OF LAKE M A R Y .
F L O R IO A , A M E N D IN G SEC
T lO N SI I ! OF TH E CODE O F
O R D I N A N C E
S
E S TA B L IS H IN G NEW W A T E R
S Y S T E M IMPACT F E E S
P R O V I O I N G
F O R
S E V E R A B I L I T Y : CON
F U C T S i AND E F F E C T I V E
D A T E OF PASSAGE
A copy of told Ordinance than
b* available al tha office ot the
City Clark. City Hall. IM North
Country Club Rood. Lake Mary.
Florida from I M A M
until
* 1 0 P M . Mondt* through
Friday, lor all par tont detuing
lo examine tame
The Public Hearing thall bo
hold In tha City Hall IM North
Country Club Road. Lake Mary.
Florida, at » X P M , an April
IB. 17*1. *r Ol toon thereafter ot
poatlbta. at which time Intarati
ad portlet far and agalntt th#
raquatt tlaled above will bo
hoard Said hearing may be
continued from tlma to time
until final **ti#n It taken by tha
C ity Commlathm
TH IS N O TIC E iholl bo pot tad
in thro* I I ) public peace* within
the City of Lake Mary, al tha
City Hall, and pubhUwd In tha
E vonmg Haraid. a navnpapar of
general circulation within Ih*
City of Lako Mary, ant* tech
weak N r lour canaacutiv* wa***
prior N Ih* daw at th* Public
Hearing
A taped racer* of Rut matting
It mad* by th* City lor It*
convent*net Thlt record may
net cowantuN an adaquaN r*
from a daclilen mad* by th#
C ity Cam mitotan with ratpacl to
th* la rtg a in g m atter. A ny
adaquaN record at Ih* proceed
M gt la maintained Nr appollaN
pur petal la advitod N me** Ih*
nacaaaary arrangement! at hi*
C IT Y O F
L A K E M A R Y . FLO R IO A
/V Carol Edward*
City Clark
O A T C O March ll,t**S
Publlth March I I M. 1* 4 April
1 lf*S
O E D IM

Evening Herald, Santord. Ft.

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
* a * IN D E L T O N A . * *
* * HOMES FOR R E N T a *
a a 17* US* a a
5 bdrm on Summerlin Av*
F r tl lest and deposit re
qulredw' reference* 7M *461
1 bdrm . I ' i betn Fenced yard
Children A pats O K 1x10 mo
*TS IM7

LABOH / C Y f O
FOR C t
*kt'*7*l

Papon ready
Nr work at « A M tor W
Itt St Santord_____________
LAB O R E R S - Strong rallabi*
madlaNly DifNrant Ncahont
Phono and tranaportattan a
mult N-v*r a No Apply

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent

I HIT SERVICES
____ 440-7331
__

B E A U T IF U L 1 bdrm I bath
carpal appliances screened
petto laundry SXB M l MSI
1 bdrm . cant heal A air
carpal
C o n v a n l t n t to
downtown 1575 plus deposit
Ml t i l l

LANDSCAPE LA BO R E R S '
Valid driver-* Ileant* Start
Ing par 1110 par hour 171
im

E LE C TR IC IA N S Top Helper,
tor Are# Prelect Top Pay I
Good BanafitV For Appt call
1117 01*0 or 1 111 *111 t&gt;*
twaan hrg of / A M N « PM

113— Storage Rentals
Mini Wifthouws
M* 4 Up............

M*ld lor S ttu rd o yt. Winter
Spring, M m i have 'i h r m c r i

A trantportatlon &gt;77 0V77
MORTGAGE LOAN
PROCESSOR
Commercial mongaga Erporl
ancod with good tacralarlal
•kill* Salary commanaurne**
with aiparlanc*

TEMP rERM PERSONNEL
774-1341
REEDED;

PART TIME HELP
1 1 calient epparhmtty
. n i s iti

Nr

th*

REEDED;

INSURANCE ANALYS
Oaadpay Fait promoliam
__________171 l i f t __ ____
NURSER Y C H E M IC A L S P R A T
071**10*
E ip a rltn c a d
S4 10 hr to ttart 147 1170
P#rl Tim* Leasing Agent 10 to
X homat par weak E ip tri
anted preferred Call M l 7*00
between * A S. Monday th rj
F riday ______ __
PER SO NNEL T R A IN E E
Will train to tcraon and In
•aryiaw applicants Roquirat 1
yaart pttlca arparlance High
degree ot mNlllganc*. energy
and daur* tor caraar and
growth

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
771-1341
PKontWork
Ho aiparirnca nacastary Will
train No tales 74 00 an hour
plus bonut IQS 077 17*1
__
P RO DU CTIO N P E R S O N N E L
SANFO R D
Auto P a n , R*
builder Call M l 477*________ _

NN’S
fulltlm# opening! available tor
e■penanced RN In th* follow
I n g p o i l l l i n i :
• E R tla lt.il t
•ICU.SII
’ Gan lloar ttatl. H - l
E tc salary A banal'tt Apply
Partonnal W Volusia Memo
rial Hospital. 701 W Plymouth
A r e , Poland.________________
R O O FIN G C R E W W A N T E D
Start licensed rooter needs
local craw tor future work
C H I weekdays or evening*,
f * 1 *0* 71* 1711 o r
I 101 11414*1________________

Legal Notice^
F IC T ITIO U S N AM E
Notice If hereby given that I
am angagad in bufinast at 1170
W Mwy O f. P O Rot IIS*.
Forest City. Seminole County.
Florida undar lha llclltlout
nam o ol E A R L D E G E T T E
SCHOOLS OF R EA L E S T A T E ,
and that I intend to raglttar said
nama with th* Clark ot Ih*
Circuit Court. Sam mol* County.
Florida In accordance with tha
previsions of tha Flctlllo u t
Varna Slalulat. to wll Section
MS 00 f lor ida Statutes 1*57
It/ Earl Dagatta
Publish April S. II. 17. M. INS
D E I II
C IT Y O F SAN FO R D
NOTICR TO TH E P U B L IC :
Notlca It hereby given that th*
Board at Ad|u*tment ot tha City
of Sanford will hold a regular
nesting at April ll, IN S In the
City Hall at II M A M in order
to consider o raquatt tor a
varlanc* in th* Zoning Ordi
none* a* II partaint to raquirad
lot area In a MR 1 toned ditfrlct
In.
Lot I, Blk A T r 10. E R
Tr attordi Mad of Santord
Being mare specifically da
scribed at locted 100 S Maple
Avenue
Planned use of tha property it
a duple ■
B L Parkins. Chairman
Board ot Adjustment
AO VICE TO t H I P U B L IC II
a par ton dacidat to appeal a
decision mad* with ratpacl to
any matter cent.dev ad al m*
above mealing# or hearings, h*
may naod * verbatim record ot
tha proceeding! Including th*
tottimeny and avldanc*. which
record Is net providsd by ih*
Cltyot Santord (FS IM O IO S I
Publlth March I t A April S.
IN I
O ED IU

71— Help Wanted
PART T IM E COOK tor ratir*
mrupfit hom# E ip tritn cH l Of
• II fr#ln M l JfSI

SANDER GRINDER
Natd tom eon# ta oparat* a
stroka la nder In Cy p r t t t
Clock Factory
Espantnc*
halptul but not n*&lt;*it*ry
Cypratt Intarnotlonol. I 4 In
dutlii*! Park, Santord. H a
Ml 1*10_____________________

SEWING MACHINE
OPERATORS
Experienced sawing machine
Oparatori wanted Apply !r*t
Old Lake Mary R d , Suita l »
Santord. or call N I IIM
(H IP P IN G R E C E IV IN G
Reliable strong with good al
lHud# Permanent and tempo
rory petition, Navar a teal

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774-1344
Super
m a n at
experienced
cilhiar Afternoon thill and
waakands Apply In parton
Park and Shop lllh and Park
Sea manager
TE C H N IC IA N Bath til* m t fr
ration No aiparianca nacat
tary Will train Eitansiy*
travel Must have own trant
portalion Husband A wlf*
Okay 111*114

73— Employment
Wanted
ON TH E SP OT P OR T A B L E
W tL D IM O F#fRt, f#PKh r#
p#&lt;fi, i f ji n r hnth#t i3&lt; i

t l — Apartments/
House to Share
I will share my apart man i | » a
weak pays all No deposit
M l OEM______________________
LONGWOOD
M a l a t asks
mature tamale to Liar* 1
Bdrm LaSatronl hom* Call
MO 1047._____________________
Master bdrm . with private
bath Furniture A T V Kitchen
privileges 70th A Park M00
mo , S71 deposit M l T IN
Will there restored Victorian
hom* with responsible parton
MM mo Inc I utilities M l 4X4

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am angagad In business al 1S7
W Lake M a ry B ird . Laks
Mary. Samlnoi* County. Florida
undar th* lictlttoua nam* ot
L AKE M A R Y V E T E R I N A R Y
C LIN IC , and mat I Inland to
raglttar said nam* with th*
Clark at th* C ircuit Court.
Samlnoi* County. Florida In
accordance with Ih* provisions
ot tno Fictitious Nam* SlaluNt.
towtl Section M l Of Fiend*
Statutot Iff!
is -1Joseph W Vaughan III.
DVM
Publlth April S. II. I*. M I N I
DEE M
CITY Of SANFO R D
N O TIC E T O T H I P UB LIC :
Nolle# is hereby given that tha
Board of Ad|uttm*nl ot tha City
af SenNrd will hold a regular
mealing of April 11. Ifti In lha
City Hall at II X A M in ardar
to cent.Oar a raquatt tor a
yananc* m m* Zoning Ordi
none* at It pertains to Irani
yard tatbock requirements In a
SR IA district in
Th# S N ot Lott t l A 11.
A m tiid s * P l a l M a g n o l i a
Haights. PBS. Pg l*
Being more specifically da
nrib*d at toctod 1*07 Locust
Avenue
Planned us* of th* properly it
toaracl a corporl
B L. Parkins. Otoirmon
Board of Adjustment
A D V IC E T O TH E P U B LIC It
a parson daodat to appeal a
decision mod* with raspect to
any matter conndarad at th*
above moating, or hearing, ha
may need a verbatim record of
Ih* proceeding, including tha
testimony and evidence, which
ftcerd it not provided by Ih*
C ity *4 Santord I F S N t S I M )
Publish March I t A April S.

1*01
C IT Y O F S A N F O R O
N O TICR T O T H I P U B L IC :
Notice tt hereby given lhal th*
Board ot Adjustment at tha City
a* Santord will hold a regular
masting af April 11. ISOS In th*
City Halt al II M A M In ardor
N consider a raquatt N r a
varlanc* In m* Zoning Ordi
nonet at It portslnt to aid* yard
W hack requirements M a M R I
district in
T N I d l l df th a w I M f l *4
th* N I] af l « f n . Robinson t
Survey *4 an Addition to San
tord
Bautg mar* spec IReally da
tended af toctod at M il Paean
A venue
Planned uw at lha proper,,
o llngt* Family Owaillng
R L Partin*. Ctiairman
Board of Ad|u*4m*nl
A D V IC E TO TH E P U B L IC It
a parton dacidat to
decision mads wll
any matter canaMarad pt th*
above mastinga *r hearings ho
may head • verbatim record of
the proceedingi including m*
testimony end iiid a n c*. which
record I* not providsd by ih*
Cltyef Santord (FSM SO M SI
Publlth Marcn ig a April L
IT U
O E D 10*

O E D 1*4______________________
CI T Y O F SANFO R D
N O TIC E T O T N E P U B L IC i
Notice Is hereby given that th*
Beard af Ad|u*tm*nl af lha City
af Santord will hold a tegular
meeting at April l}. I N I In tha
City Hall at II IB A M In ardtr
to cantidar a request tar a
variance In th* Zardng Ordi
nance at It pertain* to front
yard setback requirements tot a
RC l district In
Let I LIppland Park. PR M, Pg
A Saminow County F L
Being mor# specifically da
scribed at toctod MB Upaaia
Read
Planned us* ot th* property Is
to *r*Cl a canopy Over Slitting
• L. Par k in*. Chairman
Bear d af Ad |uatmont
AO VICE T O TH E P U B LIC If
a parser dacidat to appeal a
decision mad* with respect I*
any matter canaldarad at th*
may need a verbatim record *4
th* proceedings including the
testimony and avldanc*. which
retard it naa provided by the
City at Santord IF IS U .S M D
Publish March M A April A
INS
O E D Ml

13— Rooms for Rent
Christian Apts A Hamas
T V . kitchen, laundry, maid. AM
Wk up Of I 411 14M 411 *410
Claan. com lorlabi* clasping
ream Maid serve# 140 par
waat. Includes utilities Call
M l N M or MI 4447________ __
Furnished and Unfurnished
IBIS Geyta Piac#
_________ Call M l MSI_________
Privet#
room In my hom*
House privilege, tel weak
147 5540
SAN FO R O Furnished room, by
I7-# weak Reasonable rates
Me id service Call M l 4X 7
1 7 PM 411 Palmetto Av*
SANFORD
Raas weakly A
Monthly rata, util Inc all
MB Oak
Adult, 1 H I 7**)

17— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
E F F IC IE N C Y A P T Furnished
no pats no small children
771 l**t
Porn Apt, tar lamer C ilii.nt
H I Palmetto Av*
J Cowan No Phono Coll,
l o v e l y I b d rm Compi at *
privacy 1*0 par weak plus
s u b security deposit Cali
n itu io rc iw t
M A K E TO U R S E L F A TH O M E
In a compiat#)y furmihad , ’udio
apartment Single ,tory Hying
at It, bat) Sound controlled
wall. Built in bookcase, da
cor wall coveting A i m
7
Bdrm available
Flexible I#aw,
Senior Ctitran, discount
Santord C ow l Apartment,
M l IN I
S TU D IO C O TTA G E Adlacant
to temity home For working
tmgl* Utilities Included lake
Iron! S IX plut AX0 deposit
Eac neighbor hood talar
ancat M3 *X1
I bdrm , claan. *ut*f. b*( yard,
pan* *7*1 par me
M l SIM

W — ApRiim enls
Unfurnished / Rent
Apartment tor rent St! 00 t
weak SX0 00 Deposit M l MIX
after S BB
B AM BO O COVE APTS
XB ( Air part Blvd
Etflancy 17*1 t bdrm i H » 1
bdrm U » par month M l
a c x M l ta ll IN Discount tor
Senior C l i n e n , _________ ___
Canlptbtirj i t |h« C io tu n p
1 Bdrm . I a rlk a th Csnds't
Private Pali* A Carport
W ashtr/Drytr Naak up
Baawtthri Country tatting
Children, small pat, welcomed
Samar cittans diicaent
___________ m m i _________
LUXURY APARTMENTS
Fam ily A A d .lt, taetton
Paelud*. 1 Bair eons*
Matter Cava Apartments
M l rt*a
OpnnOn Wawknxtd*.

RIDGEWOOD ARMS APIS.
I Bdrm U A i a 1 Bdrm srvu
1 Bdrm S4 M
M l *4X
a or M l *4*1 a________
Spacious I bdrm . lakatront.
pool tennis Adults No P*tf
SMI mo 77107XJ tosa*
I end 1 bdrm Also furnished
efficiency from »7) week S IX
deposit No pels Call M l 4X 1
S 7 PM 41) Palmet t o ____
7bdrm , I'lbalhtownhous#
Newly remodeled l*SB par
month M IB 7 I)

101 — H o u s e s

Furnished / Rent
1 bdrm with w*t#r bad S4M
mo. including ufllltlo* Pool
Itt. lost. A 1X0 security M l
N Th o rp * . O ra n g t City
W* ft) *714

$295
Deltona
A ir cend , I
bdrm .living room screanod
porch No children, no pats
SXB security

574-1040
103— Houses

UnfurnishEd / REnf
A L T A M O N T E SPRINOSLakalrgnt, Irtas 4 b d rm ,
split plan. 1 bath, liraplac*.
screened porch SaM me
Far asI Ocean* Realty, I m .
Pars MB *7II, E r* 7 tX « A M
C A S S E L B E R R Y - 1 bdrm . large
wjoxtad let Kid* A pan *k
*771111 N Winter Park Or
O R O V E V IE W New hem* 1
bdrm . 1 bath. 1 car garage
No pat* 554! me Dayt 7M
Bit* Evas A weekend, 174
*777_________________________
Hidden L a s . ) Bdrm . l bath.
Cant Heat and air SXB mo
pluatac M l 1(71 evening*
M ID D E N LA K R . 1 b d rm . 1
bath, split plan, blind*, appli
ancat. calling Ian* Pats con
siderad E v o a M Id W ________

* LANDLORDS*
Tired *1 th* headaches* Let us
m anage ya u r rental pro
pertws Professional tow coat
service M l X M Call anytime
Uattod Sales AsaoclaS**. Im .
DM ..Realtor
Large I b » W , daubto garage,
goad location s*X par ma

m a id .
I

_______________

........... n s ec**

’

STO R AGE TR A ILE R S
For ext site coxtsfrucftoxt. etc
Wllce Sales t i l 7TM M7 t*to

115— Industrial
Rentals
U P T O 11 000 A V A I L A B L E
M O N T H T O M O N T H OR
LONG TE R M
AIRPORT
BLVD SANFORD I I X PE R
SO F T 704 411 1141

H I — Homes For Sale
ARE YOU DISTRESSED*
M O V I N G * F A C I N G
FORECLOSURE* GOT TO
SELL FAST* N E E D HELP*
CALL M l 7S4I____________

BATEMAN REALTY

141—Homes For Sale

141— Homes For Sale

In va sio n Dream
l bdrm I
both lik* naw As llttto as
S1X0 down 10 5 IN Intfrost
rat# (457 71 PI p*» mo Must
quality 554 we I* ] 7741
M UST 5 IE TO A P P R E C I A T E )
tS*n!ord Owner 1 bdrm
1’ y
bath CHA carpal scraonod
porch Sit.NO M l 7*S7_______

Santord NIc* 7 bacHoom hom*
with living room dining room
pansier) family room, laundry
room workshop Call for to
formation M l 1101 or Six 4517
Sal son or bast ottor

NEWHOME
ViWftOod Or Loch Aibov Af# •
} Bdr m . 2 both ##t in
ditch#*
cAb-ntfi, form #!1
dining room, Vir#pl#ct p«dd&gt;#
t#m
ctiirngi, gnorgif
p#(L#g» M jn y oti^ff
Vow h#*# to i f f *o *ppf#&lt;i#t#
Op#n howl# S itu rd # v
Sunday tl to S oth#f tlm#t by
#p*&gt;Oin1m#nf

PHONE 323 1443
For aual'ly cnttm am hip and
compatitivo pneot lot u» price
Out yaur naw homa
__
Rambiawcmd No money down
l m m t d ! * t t occupancy
4
b d r m / ] ba t h
U N FHA
aiSumabi* Owner financing
1 7Q7 mo 1*1*00 *41 7*41
SANFO R D 1.14B sq tt ol living
. &gt;74 Large lamity room with
tuaptoc* Lorg* game roam
plvt in*round poet Assumakl*
mortgsg* Alt this tor snty
14*00*
W A LL ST. C O M P A N Y. .111 MO*
SPRI NG) AROUND
TH E C O R N ER
Did you snow that to acr#s
covers 4 whoi# city blocks*
Locatsd Ottson ora* Bettor
Call Now !It

CALL BART
REA L E S T A T E
RE A L T O R
17) 747*

149— Commercial
Property / Sale
C O M M E R C IA L SPECI ALIST
LAKE MARY REALTY
REALTOR
11171**

151— Investment
Property /Sale
C A S S E L B E R R Y I acr* toned
PR i 1*5X0 w Mai crow ski
REALTOR
111 TTtJ

153— AcreageLots/Sale
G#ft#v» ! * #cr# Mom#tilrt o*
peivbi# Mob*l# Hom# $i'#%
IMU doskh f i l l |S p#r moKifti
I Y fsr% HOMO tot#l
O ISCO UN T FOR CASH
countryw ide realty

Rag R E Realtor............Il l i l n
S T. J O H N ' S RIVER
PALATKA
Al l u 111II l*s
Beauti ful v i . w
Bargain
Terms *77 i l l )

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale
C A R R I A G E COVE Adult t*&lt;
bon, 7 bdrm . 7 b*Wv Corner
U)t t#nc#J 17 000 UfeMY 371
M24

S T EM P ER

LU Rn I E lU t f Brofctr
U40 Vanfard A*#.
Moving to N C A* mull t#H
b#tO*r FIMA appr o t i l l
t
bdrm /I both, now fcikh«r&gt;
bom. root &lt;a*p#»#d ttrtpioct
f#n&lt;«d t a i h carport Im
m # d ia t # OC(LFOpon&lt; y 1 13*00

4 Bdrm /I bath compl#t#ly r»
nov#t*1 l i t 100

321-0759 Eve 322-7643
BEST B U T IN TOWN
7 bdrm. It , bath In *&gt;c location
Only S77.TOC
C A L L O N THIS ONE 1

A TT E N T I O N INVESTOR*' 3
Unl i t lOyfh Sanford only
%\7 OOP Larg# dottn or r#
11r&gt;#n&lt;v 0««fi#r • ill h#lp
IMPACT BONO MONEY*
10 W N 3 Bdrm . I ba'h •#•!
I#pf hom# only |4 S 000 Call
forda'clli
•
iA N E O R D l J Bdrm hom# Halt
acr# ♦/
brick flr#piac#
larg# roomi bvau'ityl dhttor
i a c f l l r n t condition 3ut'
U4 000
l ANFQRO
R*nf#|
Hibath taoomo

CALL BART
RIAL (STATE
REALTOR
Jll_74*a
■ V O W N IR i S47.7BB. ] Bdrm . 1
both, larga kltchan. H A
Flraplaca. utility room, 1 car
garaga. quiat cornar. big oak*
C#tl 111 1100 or M l BIST____
DE BAR V 1 bdrm . I bath Fla
tcom utility, carport larga
lot U 5 7X Aftar l PM ta*
asX

j Hdrm

CALL A N Y T I M E
R E A L T O R )}&gt; 4tf»
ME NE E D LI STI NG! '

Uf(«1 He«...|.,.Us*d Mobile
Homt Dgaler in this Area.
Famili*,
A
Adult,
I N I Mwy I t 7!
I l l SIM
177] Cyprstt l| s *fi Newly
ramodalvd M ull h# moved
SHOP Call M l 17*1___________
1 bdrm
, c r * . n * d pal l o
carport. AC. utility thtd
Adult,, no pat, Park Av#
Mxjb.i# Part 777 J**i
11 B E A C H T O W N C R A F T
JxXxx 7 bdrm . I bath In
park tone ad lot 1) 1 * 11*
•I Concord ixil* Adult sac
Hon Carnag* Cove 114.X0
^ J H tlK t ix c im x n M ^ ^

159— Real Estate
Wanted
Art you g#'Hing Olvorcod *r§nt
tor rod ' or #&lt;
M l# ' t .in

* N ennI quk k
IJ1 m i

BUYER
lo ti. #crv#g # 4 grovti in A
oround O rU ndo

C «lt prln

Clp At* f1• u I Stmd#r too
Grarfvlaw 1 bdrm /] bath dbl
garaga. appi la* SOD
S u nl ae d - 1 bd rm / 1
bath Spallasst Appt lane as
Owner 0,01It S4I 00*
Su al an d - 1 b d r m / 1
bath Appi ♦ washar/dr yar
Dollhouoa 115 000
Caunty 5 bdrm ilty bath
qualifying lit mfg 547 oos

No

Twskawilla 1 Acrasl] bdrm +
pool A barn T E R MS 1115 000
Cassalborry Only S5000 down 4
b d rm '1 bath Dbl wide mooua
Including land 117.500
Dalian# Duple a. 1 b d 'm 'H ]
bath T E RMS 17)000
Ent.fprts* 1 bdrm /1 bath ac
ca n to SI John s Owner will
assist illio o o
Enfarprlf* Vacant land from
(1)100 up Owner will hold!
le»ew*ed 1 b d rm 'T’j bath
Appi 115000 Owner anxious1
Lakx Mary 1 b d rm 'lt) bath
appi Only 151 000

LAMOSTOCK BROKERS
3*5-1 712___________ M y t iN t .

H tP l

t

H A L L
i*t
Alto
II 11111 I l f I M K I

H UG E I STO R VI * Adrm 4
bans, to Cavalry I Oaks palms
tad trvil trows I Maw *1/1 ton
Cant Heat and Air with hast
pvmpl Haw Salar bat water
haatari OauAto Stdad Brick
liraplac* I t ' ■ I t ' screen
parehl
Baautilul
Vtowl
Unbaitavabl# to* 10*
C A L L H A L L ...................M l S774
F H A V A S P E C IA L Law Pawn
p * f x a * i l Low n a a t b l p
pay meat I I Bdrm ham* in
ntc* tocaltanl Call tor dalatlil
Only 15*. 70*
C A LL H A L L ....... ........MS 1774
S P A R K L I N G C L E A N PO O L
S I T S T HR MOOD FOR TH IS
C O U N TR Y T Y P I 1 Bdrm
b * a i* h a c r * . l a n c e d ,
a tla m a b la , a* gual ltylng
m o ftfjft ut.ioc
C A L L M ALL...................m i n t

CALL HALL

Moat aiswtlaS*! wantad I Will
Nato tor a f awarding
SSRI A L I S TA TE CARB IR IS

323-5774
Sta* NWY 17-01______

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS
W m U TM M V

• Adult 4 Family
Section!
• W D Connoctxon.
• Coble TV . Poof
• Short Term lo o t **
Avoxtoblo

L 1 1 1&gt;- M l t Ei. TA

STEN STRO M
R E A U Y .R E M .1 0 R
Sanford's Silts Itidti
WE LI ST A N D I E L I
MORE H OMES T H A N
A N TO N E IN N O R T H
SEM IN O LE C O U N T T
S T U N N IN G 1 bdrm I b4 lh
hom. with o.tro largo ulittty.
control atr «hcl hsaf, trull
traoi. lanced yard 147.700
C O N V E N IE N T 1 bdrm/J bath
hom. c Io m to schools, chop
ping, control air host kitchen
tutly equipped, loncod yard
m ass
E Z SHOWINO ) bdrm/1 bath
hom. with paddle tans, oat in
kltcksn. central air/ tuat.
largo c touts 1)4 107
O LD fA 1 H IO N E D
4 bdrm/1
bath homa with sat in kltchan.
Ill .plal#, centre! atrr haat,
dbl French dears, childrens
pixy heut* 17*.IS#
INVESTORS D E L IG H T 1
bdrm / I bath vary nice heusa
plus ) ppts All ppt*. a rt
luimshad liv e In have* and
rani 1 .p i, ar rant all tar
grspt i m a m * p r a p t r l y
IIM*S*
WI LL B UI 1 0 TO SUI T! YOUR
LOT OR OURSI E X C L U S I V E
A O C N T FOR W INS O NO
DEV C O R P . A C E N T R A L
FLORI DA L E A O E R I MORE
HOM E FOR LESS M O N E Y !
CALL TOOAVt
a G E N E V A O S CE O L A RO *
I O M E O F O R MO B I L E S '
I Acr* Cexmtry tracts
W*tl trsad an pavtd Rd
X \ Dawn I* Y rt p t I I N I
Frsm III.1 M I
It yau art tea*mg tor a sue
catitul carsar in Rtal (t l * lt .
Slanttrsm Raally It leaking
tor you Call La* Albright
today al M l ItM
Evenings
M l IM )

C A L L A N Y T IM E

322-2420
IM IS Park. Santord

NI Lk. Mery Bhrd Ut. Mary

IMS VIAHCRMOSA
I Bdrm / 1 Balk, quality built
ivttd limbar hom*. appr*a
D M *q- ft under m, high
oaargy valvat, daap wall,
saptlc lank, custom m o d cab
mats, prlxpcy tonca . f 15* *00
From M a t H * y **•••&lt;.
0* watt *spro&gt; * mi
to Ling .O ld Markham Rd ,
than 1 ml la V m Harm#**
Realty......... R E A L T O R S
F v sningl M l (M l

SHENANDOAH
V IL U G E

*100 OFF
SECURITY
DEPOSIT
1 H BROOM DUrax
kAMTUCS WUCMK

323-2920

bdrm . bath, living ream.
dopotll 17*4117. Thuf* A
F r l , a Nor S Sal A Sues

Friday, April J, m j - U A

IS M W. 2 S* Jt

i 4Z2Q1 ORLANDOM M
Ll
SANTORD

I MO 1)4 0044

U l — Country
Properly / Sale
H»r I# H im h
• llh 32000
Good wAtfr,
good o&lt; tow

10 Acr#i HO 000
down U09 mo
pl#nt#d in §9 411.
Cntl 123 90*0

163— Waterfront
Property / Sate
Santord t Acr* ) lot, 54V 000
W M a llc io w ik l. R E A L T O R
171 T N I

181— Appliances
/ Furniture
Air condition#/. *ouo B TU 1*1
Fr**i*r chati • cubic tl I I K
117 7*14
Matched Pair Green f rigid*)/.
Wash*/ A D 'yar Vary ra*
ion*b!t Call 17) xi 14 attor t
Old chttfsrsbc, locking mirror
wardrobe door s i l l
Tall
m tlal kitchen cabin#! twin
&lt;»«■&gt;, l l ' 177 171) altoi x PM
Racandifianad Appllancas
Ira m U S W A R R A N T E I D
BARNETTS
CAS S ELBE RRY
tXSIll
*WS4II
• R E N T I O OWN *
Color T V s . siaraot. washart
dryers, rafrigaralor. I/Miars,
lurnifur# video ttcordars
Spa, 1*1 III weeks rani fee
Altorisaliva TV A Appf Ranlals
Zayras Snapping Cantor
1)1 1*04
Usad Washers Paris A Sarvlcs
tor h .n m a r .,
171*477
MOONEY A P P L IA N C It
WILSON MA H H I U R N I T U R I
111 U S E FI RST ST
177 5*17

183— Television /
Radio / Stereo
COLOR T E L E V I S I O N
Ztnlth 25" color consol* totovl
non Original prlc* ov«r 5*00
balanca due 5J*a Cash or Is!#
Over payments ol U l month
NO M O N E Y DOWN Still in
warranty Frso h o m a lrlo l.n o
(Alligation Call Btl 51*4 day or
nXghl
GE solid si*to consol* LIS*
now S IN Of boot orfar M ini
seal Absolutely no colls attar
If MI-BB77.
» ” PAN ASO N IC COLOR TV .
SUN) now. 1 years aid As*Ing
5X0 Him M l X**

191— Building
M aterial*

Railroad 1*1 ind Gfitot
tarsal* C alt Ml 11M

RIDGEWOOD
ARMS
APARTMENTS
1-2-3 BEDROOMS
'320

SIABItaO Af 0741 r
Ijt f l*B*H I Kill

MOVE. IN SPECIALS
ON SELECTED UNITS
IlfNEl’to k U l Ell *• Iff ^
S t T - f r » tt H ♦trr r
J1B 0 (ffc lp d w o o c l A v u ,
S o n fo fd

323 6420 oi 323 6481

••#

�H A — Evening H«rald, Sanford, FI.

223— Miscellaneous

This Ad Is
Worth *50
Ken Kern Transmission
500 Laura! Art., Sanford

193— Lawn &amp; Garden

213— Auctions

R ID IN G SNAPPEM MOWER
W O O D BUSTER

FOR E S T A T E
C a 'u m trc la l or Ratidantiai
Auctlona &amp; Aagraltalt Call
Pair* Autllen T O
________

199— Pels &amp; Supplies

L &amp; E AUCTION

R E S T A U R A N T E Q U I P let
matblna. B U N N Spot col
laamatar. Sd o'iddia. Jd"
Char brotlar 404 r?S U4T
Sj taunt TV S ytltm t
Compk*» AH you naad IOOX
Financing No rrvorar down
S I X 00 Ualvartol M l 57*4

Friday Nights— 7 PM

231- C a r s

m 0&lt;H_________

Tvavd
CV JSO Standard
Tia*vnm«« lot from J971 I*
1171 H.1 12 Montti or 12000
Milt B*fr*»f|

7 R E C T O GOOD H O M II Pan
pit bull. beaar A fH r ( , 1JI
SIA M ESE KI T T E NS I
l i t E A CH
m a w . ____________
ARE

3 2 3 -3 0 4 0

IO U D I S T R E S S E D ’
N O ! F A C I N G
F O R E C L O S U R E * GOT T O
SELL F A S T ? N E E D H E L P ’
CALLmrSal

MOV

M0 Sanford Aw.
W.n* la rk Rattar. AAaa‘« Bad
and Chatl Tu la M l » l l h
W k b tr Maad Raardt 4 add
C N n t i al D r a a i r t ,
G l a n a a r a . and O l l h t l .
Picfurtt. Laanaa Chair* and
many mara dam*

323-6593
W r—

II USED CAR
11EXTRAVAGANZA
{ 1972 BUICK EliCTRA
I ONE OWNER.
| PULL A BOAT
I 1979 HONDA PRELUDE
1 SUN ROOF
I NO MONEY DOWN
1 1981 AMC STATION WAGON
1 ONE OWNER.
1 LOWMILEAGE

’995
*995
*2495
*2995

1 1983 CHEV IMPALA
I NO MONEY
1 DOWN

*4995

I 1913 TOYOTA TERCEL
I A/C. AUTO
1 9000 MILES
..............

*5995

1 1981 HONDA ACCORD
1 AUTOMATIC.
1 AIR CONDITIONER

*5995

215— Boats and
Accessories

1984 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
| LOADED

*7995]

425M90

------- Day tana Batch

PUBLICAUTOAUCTION
EtaryW ad Nita ol T:M PM

217— Garage Sales

* Where Anybody *
* Can Buy or Sell! *

i i .m

m «ir*

F L E E T R E S E R V E . H Hoy &lt;4
S4 l April 4 / A M S PM
FREE CO FFEE I
F n A Sat » l l . Ns tarty kirdt
All thy ut t al plat b o o n ,
b w ta lt baby ururyffung 111
Hddan Laba_
Y A R D S A LE Thur* F n Sal .
* S IIS M c K a y B l « d .
Wlathmg»on O a »t___________
a • Y A R O SALE • • I N I Part
A it HU* Saturday Irani • AM
»y_f Ha aarly bird* piatta
4-F A M IL Y SALE 1 riding laon
mowurt, 4 blcyclat. chlldran t
cl ot h#*, 4 d u l l t ( l a l h a t .
tnlctnactt
104 Oabl and
Orlva Sunland S A T O N L V I

’13 Econoim* Van. 59.000.00
of b »ii u n »f

n &gt; &gt;414 »nof &gt; &gt;4

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes
I I I ) HONOA N I G HT M AW K
Good condition t l J0C A fur
« W? 4114____________________
71 H ON DA 404
4 cyl .good cond
______ *144 f tb *11 M l _______

LOWEST
PRICES
ANYWHERE

^
j

79

' 79 CHRYSLER
NEWPORT

L if t pl4y. If4vol. wort » fl
Ufumutoago Fifth whuui S im n
4 AC A Clwvy truck, cryw
cab t44't * AC. Automatic
Mut t t t u fa a a p r t c l a t t l
x » toa ooao

BUY JU N K CARS A TRUCKS
Frem H I to 1S4 or mara.
_ C a lilT l 1414 M l 4)11
TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk L
Used cart.trucks 4 heavy
eq i;pm ent!21$H O ___
W l P A Y TO P D O LLA R FOR
JUNK C A R S A N D T R U C K S
CBS A U T O P A R T S Tf) 4S4S

D IS C O U N T
AUTO
SALES

250 CARS
10
CHOOSt
FROM

| Serving Central Florida Over 30 Years

243— Junk Cars

F or m e n details
i m m t m ____
D tS ify Auto A Marme Volet
Acrtsi the river top •( h«ll
111 Kory 11 f l Dabary 4a tS4i_

^

2 3 5-T rucks /
Buses / Vans

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Cam pers

11201 Saaferd321-4075

Mwy f l —

76 DODGE
A SP E N

CHEVEnE
ONLY 54.000 MILXS. RUNS

« , AM FM. P S. P t.
Nia CAR SeiOAL

perfect. cooo caj miles.

HIT BUY AT ONLY

*1995

*1695

CAN FINANCt

*1688

NOW FINANCING
1977’S AND
ABOVE-HURRY
FOR BEST
SELECTION!
LOANS UNDER
$2000, WAC

79 OLDS
C U T L A SS
Mown. perfict
CONDITION
NAS Uttl
a iu u a S O Q O Q
incut
U O O

830-6688

SUNT
COLD AIR.
EXTRA C U A R . EXCELLENT
TRANSPORTATION 4 ONLY

H W Y. 17-9 2
S A N FO R D

81 HONDA
ACCORD LX
2 DOOR. LOADcO.
READY TO CO.
SUVTR. 5 SPUD. ONLY

*5350

321-0741

WE FINANCE

’l l M ail** Moo down
’If Maverick Law Down
ISC! Franch Ave.............. H I IMS
i m FOftD M U S TA N G 4 cyl .
4 ipood. AM FM (BtMMo. air
2 door hatchback Gray A
black arim rod Interior US00

m n n ________________

219— Wanted to Buy

Vlffa Crultor If 14. air. moon
Baby Badi. StraUtri. Clalhat.
Playpaat. Etc Paparback
Bank* m t i n &gt;]] H 44
Naad Crib*. Playpant Baby
fu rn llu ra . clothing Good
Prjcat Altar 1 PM
JJI I H J
PayingCASMIor
Aluminum. Con*. Coppar.
Brat* Laad Nawtpapar,
G latt. Gold. SHvar
Kokomo Tool. 411W lot
• S 00 Sal » I t i l 1100
W A N T E D DE A D OR AL I V E I
Ralnoaralart, Wathart

Drytrt...................in am

221— Good Things
to Eat
ST RAWS C U R I E S

plentiful

Lar ge

L

You Of *• pick

Q u a n tify

discounts

Other vegetablet BOB BALL.
Mary 44.1ml W leeiburg

*5995

77 LTDSSOO Down
•11 Dadpt S W IM 4 Dawn
74 Im palatIM Down

72-lt ft Larson Bowndcr

uHPcvrtio

d o ily

1 1912 DATSUN KING CAB
1 CUSTOM TOPPER
| AIR CONDITIONER .. .

Bad Credit?
No Credit?
Wt FINANCE
RATIONAL AUTO SALES

★ DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION ★

C O U R T E S Y P O N T IA C — d

1 1980 AMC CONCORD
I BODY MAN'S SPECIAL
1 NO MONEY DOWN

Jim Lash’s
Blue Book
Cars

Friday, April J, m j

223— Miscellaneous
C HE S T F R E E Z E R . S CU F T .
L I K E N E W . tlSO PORCH
G L I D E R . S40 i n SUI
R E A D Y TO INSTALL. 4t"
H IG H . G A L V A N I Z E D CHAIN
LINK F E N C E . ORIVE
TH R O U G H O A T E . &gt; WALK
OAT E S . A L L ACCESSORI ES
B E T T E R TH A N NEW . ] ] ]
0014 A F T E R 4 PM.
R•built KI RR Y / III* to A up
Ouarantoad Kirby Ca
n a w . lt«M . &gt;i i *444

root, power steering brakes

t t « f t o c iiM !i« Runt A drives
better than new1 Low miles
t f IS Phpseanytime l l f H U
*tflf CHR Y S LCR
NEW Y O R K f ft*
A C . 1 dr . original pa»n! and
equipment Only 4J 000 mi A
reel cream puff! I I HO Call
Pat Days 111 414). Eves
174 4141______________________
IfM VW
S1S4 ar best after
1H-44M.___________
14 J f C P C M I R O K f E
t l . 144 #r best offer
m MS)
I ) P ON TIAC P HOE NI X
Like new 4.134ml U *00
m 1414

2 3 5 -T ru c k s/
Buses / Vans
tffO Ford 1/4 ton pick up dump
truck Near painting, upbol
ttery tun# up and front end
alignment Apple p*e condl
lion Yours lor S4SOO Dump
truck foafure alone Is worth
tIO 00 a day IQS Sla i m
I H I Ford Bronco X L T New
tires, brakes, shocks svjo and
takeover payments 111 l l f l

SALES
MF SA SAT. S-SSUN i s

SERVICE

’79 AMC Concord limited

T* S4-SAT. SS

4 cyl w to iM lW ml dblt vanity
yltuct. M 444 urgiiul mil**
SM4 D m . CtlD or trada A
•uw m « &lt; N ( yaymantt

PARTS

SEMINOLE

1749 HWY. 17-92
(At 5-Points)
L0NGW00D
322-3253

H O N D A

RLF S4.SAT. SJ

Illllllllllllillllllllll I in I lllll 111111Tl i I! I n : llllIITni; III! I MITT'l i: IIII11Him III1! Ill ! TITTTMl IIIIITIITTITTMTTr I

EARLY BIRD SPECIALS
SATU RDAY — APRIL 6. 1985 — 9 A.M. Til 12 NOON

82 BMW 3201

83 FORD VAN

79 OLDS CUTLASS

GREAT PERFORMANCE

STICK - 625P

NICE CAR

9990

$

7290

$

3995

The Prices Listed Below Are Good Thru Sunday April 7th
1985 D O D G E
CO LT

1983 IS U Z U
IM P U L S E

1981 P L Y M O U T H
R E L IA N T

1981 F O R D
ESCO RT GL

1983 F O R D
ESCO RT W GN.

LOADEO

A1C. AUTO.. RADIO
LOW MILES

AUTO,
A/C

A/C. 5 SPEED
GOOD FAMILY CAR

*9895

*4695

*3995

*5995

1983 P O N T IA C
J2000

1082 C H E V Y
C A V A L IE R

1981 H O N D A
C IV IC W A G O N

dOOD ECONOMY CAR
A/C

A1C. AUTO..
SHARP CAR

A1C. RADIO
1 OWNER

*6490

*3999

*4595

*4595

*11,495

1981 P O N T IA C
G R A N D P R IX

1981 T O Y O T A
CO RO LLA

1982 H O N D A
C IV IC

1983 H O N D A
A C C O R D LX

1982 T O Y O T A
SUPRA

AtC. RADIO
EXCELLENT. SHARP

EXCELLENT ECONOMY
A/C

3 OR. A1C.
STEREO

FULLY EQUIPPED

*3995

*4750

*7495

*10,450

A/C, AM/FM STEREO
3,500 MILES

*8995
1983 H O N D A
C IV IC
AtC. 5 SPEED
SPORT SUSPENSION

AtC. AM/FM STEREO
LOW MILES

W E WILL BE
OPEN S U N D A Y
APRIL 7th

*4790

1983 O L D S 98
REGENCY
loaded

REFLECTION OF QUALITY

SANFORD, FLORIDA
2913 ORLANDO DRIVE (HWY. 17-92)
O RLANDO 831-1660

H O U R S : M O N .— F R I. 8:30-8 S A T . 9-5 S U N . 12-5

�F i v n i n ^ llc r .ilr i

LEISURE
C o m p le to W o o k 's T V Listings
Sanlord, Florida — Friday. April S, ltlS

In S e a rc h O f
B u r ie d T r e a s u r e

Arm ed
withmetal detectors and a lust for riches,
Urban adventurers are taking up on ancient quest

�1— Evanlftf Hrrrld, Sanford, FI.

Friday. April 1, IftS

T h e r e 's G o l d In

Them

Thar B ea ch es!

By Buitn Lodcn
Herald Staff Writer
T h e pi rate spirit di dn' t di r nut wi t h the
swashbucklers.
In fart, the lure of hurled treasure has been
enhanced In recent years by advances In technology
that sends millions out armed with metal detectors to
scan beaches, backyards and battlefields with the
hope o f finding. If not gold, at least a bit of history.
" I can't think of anything greulrr than walking
along and hearing that drlerlnr beep," Maitland's
Stuart Auerbach said “ It's a heart-slopping sound.
You don't know whnt'senmlng up."
T h e 52-yeur-old Auerbach, owner o f u metal
drteclnr distributorship, first used metal detectors 33
years ago to clear mine fields In Korea.
W hile 20lh Century warfare may have given birth
in modern metul detecting. Its origins datr truck
hundreds of yeurs. The Chinese, history tells us. used
a magnetic mclul detecting system to ferret out
wru|iona hidden on those seeking to sec the emperor.
Today most detectors arc In the hands o f hobbyists,
nearly 3 million In the U.S., Auerbach said.
Aland Hit of them trelong to the Central Florida
Mclul Delecting Club. Club member Tom Killian of
Winter Park says sup|x&gt;rt from such a group can help
the novice gel off to a good und possibly profitable
start.
Both Auerbach und Killian say Florida, with It’s
Ireachrs, history and cllmatr In an Ideal Irrasurr trove
Tor under-sand sleuths
Killian, 3H. was attracted to the hobby about three
years ago after he saw a television report showing u
pair of men pulling thousands of dollars worth of
jewelry from the shores o f the Atlantic Ocean.
He was lured by a lust for such riches, us most
hobbyists are. and like many he has been successful,
“ You always hope you're going to find that gold
coin or a diamond ring. And they ure out there." he
said.
Lust year, working mainly In church yurds. parks,
and old homrntlra. Killian found 4.S12 coins und nine
rings. One ring was a gold wedding bund and 70 of

Tom Killian scan s an old Winter Park homeslte,
using h is m etal detector to find treasures trom
the past.
the coins were silver. The total value of his haul was
•250, which Is about what he unearthed In each of
the two previous years.
Ills finds have more than covered his 9500
Investment In a detector, two sand scoops and
trowels. And besides, he said, the hobby gets him
outside and even provides a bit of exercise (walking,
trending, digging} every weekend.
With the exception of the upfront capital outlay.

HW Y. 17-92 — S A N F O R D

NOW THRU APRIL 7th
SPECIAL SATURDAY AND SUNDAY MATINEE

B R A C E L E T D A Y S 1-6 P.M.
BUY $5.00 BRACELET AND RIDE
AS MANY RIDES AS OFTEN A S YOU LIKE

OPEN FRIDAY and SATURDAY TIL 11 P.M.
CLOSE SUNDAY 6 P.M.
4

*» *% 1 'i s i eft

» A 19 t

Sec DETECT, page 3

2 D e fe ctive D e te ctive
S ho w s: 'E y e / 'H o u s e '

AMERICAN LEGION CARNIVAL

M Y E R S IN T E R N A T IO N A L M ID W A Y S
R ID E S A N D S H O W S F R O M A R O U N D T H E W O R L•D* *

metal detecting Is something Just about anyone can
do All It takes Is patience and a healthy dose of greed.
“ The little child In most people wants to go. ‘Yo. ho,
ho and a bottle o f rum. This Is great.* There's a
tremendous excitement of never knowing what you'll
find and you can do It alone or In a group." Auerbach
said.
Killian says searching with the support of a club
can add to the rewards. "You'll learn how to dig for a
coin properly without disturbing the property. You'll
learn where to go to find coins. Som e places have
been worked out."
Killian's club plans a monthly trip within Florida to
a forest, beach or other site where there may be
elusive metals just waiting to be found.
He points out that If you search on private property
you should ask permission first. And most owners, he
said, are happy to grant such requests because they
loo are curious as to what might be hidden beneath
their soil.
Most of Killian's hits' arc found 5-8 Inches Itclow
the surface, but his search Is sometimes thrown off by
a strong signal picked up from an oil drum burled a
couple of feet down.
Soda cans and [top tops arc the bane of a searcher,
he said, but some metal detectors are sensitive
enough to tell you whether It has located a coin or a
pop top. With that type of gear, he said, you know
whether to dig or not to dig.
Hut Auerbach said yesterday's trash Is Indeed
today’s treasure. Most hobbyists search for coins, but
many arc searching for history. They haunt old
homrsttes looking for a burled trash pile that might
hold old bottles or other rare clues to lives led decades
ago
Several years ago Auerbach scanned historical sites
In Sanford, Including Fort Mellon and the shores of
the St. Johns River. He brought up bits o f the past
Including numerous 91 and 92 gold pieces, cannon
and musket bolls, spearheads and other fragments of
ancient weaponry.

s

By David Handler
It used to be that networks
tried to find Just the right
sitcom vehicle for a gifted
charact er a ctor like Judd
Hirsch or Charles Dumlng. Not
anymore.
This Is the season for tailor­
ing tongue-in-cheek private-eye
outtngs. I don't know how
many more o f them we can be
expected to stomach, but as
long as the networks keep
them coming there isn't much
else in which actors — no
matter how auccesaful they are
~ can find steady employment.
Hence Hirsch and Dumlng Join
the car-chase brigade.
Durnlng has a little better
lurk In "Eye to Eye" on ABC
than Hirsch does In CBS's
"Detective tn the House." A
little, but not much. Neither
mid-season show feels like It'll
be around thia fall.
Dumlng plays Oscar Poole, a
pudgy Hollywood private eye
who's right out of the '40s.
Oscar wears baggy suits, calls
rverybody "p a l" or "doll" and
has a one-man office with a
•horshlne stand downstairs for
a reception desk.
Trouble Is. these are the '80s
"jd O a c a r Is. well. old. We find
Dot

retirement when his ex-partner
— whom he hasn't seen tn five
years — is murdered. Oscar has
to break it to the guy's dlrry
daughter, T ra c y (Stephanie
Faracy). She wants to find out
who killed her father. And
wants to help. And so our latest
crime-stopping Odd Couple Is
on Its way.
She: *T can't believe I'm In an
actual gun battle." He: " I can't
believe 1 said 'freexe.'*' She: "1
didn't think he'd beat ua up."
He: "H e beat m e u p."
Inspired by the Art CarneyLtly Tomlin movie. "T h e Late
S h o w ."
" Eye to E y e " Is
reasonably professional but It's
so familiar you can practically
mouth the lines aJong with the
cast.
Also, there are so many of
these shows on the air that the
plots are getting more and
m ore fa r-fetch ed . Th e expartner waa actually murdered
with a lady's high-heeled shoe.
I swear.
The plots aren't the problem
with "Detective In the House."
This Is a weak, talky. one Joke
show about a suburban family
man. ITeas W ym an (Hirsch).
w h o qui t s e n g in e e r in g to
u fe e DETECTIVE, pags 4 - &lt;

�Friday, April j, i w - j

Evonlng Harold. Sanford, FI.

TELEVISION
April 5 Thru April 11
L iM * Cb
( D

O

( 5 ) 0
D

Cabto C b

1A R C 1 O rla n d o

O LD ( 3 5 )

ln d rp rn d .n l
O rlando

f C B 'l) Of U n d o

(8 )

In d rp rn d r nl
M r Ib ournr

O

Or lendo

CD

O rlando Public
R ro a d c a slin g S y s t rm

(1 0 ) e D

•n addition to tbr ( h a n n ttt la ird , t a b ir v m o n l u b u n b e n m ay t u n * m to m d rp rn d rn t ( h a n n r l **.
SI P r t t r t b e r g by tuning to cb a n n rl 1 tuning ta tb a n n a l 11. w h ich c a r n r t tpertt and ttir C h ris tia n
B ro a d c a tlin g Netw ork I C B N I

Specials
SATURDAY
AFTER NO ON

12:00
(Z) o ABC W EEKEND The Return
01 Bun|e#' Bunp* Ih# prahrstanc
creature. and rut brands K trm and
Andy |ou#ney lo in# mvVlw M INI
Middle Age* (Part I Of 2 )Q
EVENING

8:00
(1 ) o

d affy

praaanlatton of Chraal a raturractton t’rtuie Clark ting*
&lt;D IS) FAT ALBERT EASTER SPE­
CIAL With Cellar |u*t around the
corner Fat Albert and the Coeby
kid* tat pul lo Mt lha ipeitt of a
hoapil ahead Inend

8'30
d) a
BUQ3 BUNNY'S BUSTIN'
O U T ALL OVER Arumaled Spnngi m pong* Bug* a elkldhood tarniruacanca an ancount*. atlh Marvin
Martian. and a chant* lor Wil* C
Co,ota lo Itna*, catch Ihn Road
Runnar |R)

SUNDAY

0 ® CHURCH SERVICE The Rev
Or Waham Boggs conduct* [attar
ter meet live horn W itTwe Method
Ml Church m loa Angafa* f j
AFTERNOON

0:30

(D O

7:00

W ALT DISNEY W ORLD'S
NAPPY EASTER PARADE Joan
L unden and R*ck Daa* cobotl lha
t4,h annual. Easier parade bom
Florida • Walt Disney World g

9:00
&lt;U&gt; (JS) PERRY C O M O 3 EASTER
BY THE SEA Dabby Boone and
Kenny Roger* tom Perry Como *i
ihn muweel special taped at San
Dwgo a Sea World

12:00
Cl) o CBS EASTER PARADE So
tan Sufkvan and Robert Foiworth
anchor a takjta lo spring trom New
York a Fitlh Avenue In St Pelaraburg fl a. Conatance McCakhm
and Brian Mitchaa ho*t lha Fatltval
01 Stale* parade Pant La B#ae perlorm* New Athtuda '

U (35) PETER AND PAUL Anthony
Hopkmrn and Robed Foiworth alar
in Una lour hour drama about Peter
and Paul, the ■pottle* of entirety
different temperament* whose
common tmaaaon lo preterve CF-ttliantiy uhenalafy led lo tlwe death*
ea mertyia

MORNINQ
QD O TH E O R EA TC S T MYSTERY
A loo* al how F atter n Cetebratrd
around I ha world, with a dramatic

EVENING

11:00

d o c k s ea s te r

SNOW Ammeled After battling SyCvester lor a gofdan egg and y a r d ­
ing chocolate bunruea trom Speed,
Datt, dacidaa 10 try hrlchfukmg
north &lt;R)

Of The Week

3:30
a

110) EASTER A T SOYS TOW N

An Falter concert ol rabgiou* muK by the fii vtvc# Boy* Town
Chou

MONDAY
AFTERNOON

abut* whan la*mg multiple m e d ia
lion* t»esc mtied by phyiiuant

4:00
O ® SPECIAL TR EAT The Sisih
Street Kid* School-aged young
atrr* learn much about kte able
Irymg to convince thee parenl* lo
qud smoking and allemptmg lo pul
together a Schorr show
EVENING

8:00
( S (•) EMPIRE. INC Begeewig m
**2V tie* m m a i e i lorfows Ih*
ruthlets capful* of James Munroe
(Karmelh Wet aid a Canadian mduatnaktl capable of driving aatvaasaa
ie* lo scacide and usang pfalanthro
py tor Imnnclat gain (Part t ol 3)

2:30
(B I TO) THE BEAT GOES ON An invetligalion of Florida a iecorder!
m ule industry with a look at it* fu­
ture po**ibum** and how Florida a*
ancouregeig it* growth enlhm the
title

TUESDAY
AFTERNOON

2:30
QD (10) MEDICATED GENERATION
A documentary to adural# the efrterty about the polanlial lor d&gt;ug

WEDNESDAY

hi* daughlu Amy (Milch M,ulm)
pen* lhe f nc nl party and ton Larry
(Joseph liegimt tfecti lo leave Ih*
business and attend medical
whom (Part J o l 3)

9:00
(1 ) O THE WINNING HANO K n t
Knttorterson Brenda let- Wilke
Netton Doa, Parian and Jubnny
Cash share Ih* tlage of lha Tannet
tea Partormmg Art* Center m
MashviM* to pertum Help Me
Make It through the Night
King
ol a Lunefy Cattle.
"Th* Litlle
Hung* and other hilt horn the
Waainanq Haru) album
( D ( TO) PAOES OF TESTIMONY I a
t, Jacob * IB M rcluin to Auschwitz
where the wat imprisoned I* al­
ter woven with documentary footage
hum World Wat II and reprmlt horn
her photo album

FRIDAY
EVENING

700
ED 1101 MEDICATED GENERATION
A dncunwitlify la ih Iu u i Ii* if** ekl
fiftl dtMwl Itw |h 11mild! tot til ay
dlNiitd * h « i l.ikmg rvsuHipk* mnlK .1
l* O M ( N n d i t m t try i m y w c i d n t

7:30
(1 ) O

THE MAKING OF SPACE A
tHFfMHf (hr w •*«*•■* kwk «l Ifw mnli*

mg of th« mwndtfWB S fN K i" In*

EVENING

Irivm-drt
jam*** MkClWnif.
GrVfW flndu tlm lg n and
MdhdHVofl tknt fliM (Itodn

THURSDAY

8:00
CD (10) NATIONAL OEOORAPHIC
An overview of tlate-of-fha-art high
lachnufogy including a look al a
computer-driven walking dew a
rompulerued dance notation lactury robot* and a computerized
tkghl Simula Ior tJ
O f (l| EMPIRE. INC Munroe (Kan
netti Wefth) n dealt poetical and
personal bfnw* by tea ctetdran when

11:30
&lt;B (■) THE WINNERS A look at how
lu ll useful business pantile got that
way Host lied tr w n Ouetlt
Mary Hay Ash luundei ol Mary Key
Cokmeticft. th Adeh- Scheele psychcikrgnl John Benanti educator
Jelt Me Hone, Ieclurer author

EVE NINO

11:30

800
OB (•) EMPIRE. INC Alter tut 70th
Jam*** Muren# (Kfnnrlh
WaHJh) l«R « km k&gt;v* swift

*

)rOu&gt;rig

|uurnili»l |l n d i QrittitKt). imuilmy
w* a pow»# fctrugg** bftiiWtri Tub
cMUhon tot coni tot ol hid w i* * *

(Part 3 of 3J

O l III THE WINNERS A k « » al how
kuccesktul business penphr got that
way Hosl Fred lewis Guest*
Mary Kay Ash founder ol M ar, Kay
CoStneRt*. Oi A dole Scheeh&gt; psy
ilwAugrirl. John Be isnli educator
Jett MeH&lt;me lectuer authw

Sports On The Air
SATURDAY
MORNING

8:30
O

paon Marvelous Marvin Matper a* ha
prepara* lor a bout w-lh Thomas
Hearns

1:35
(12 TENNIS f a d Chaaeng* Cup

405
IX TENNIS Ford Chaaeng* Cup

0 ® SPORTSWORLO Scheduled
Supuslu* competition, mdnndual
champsomlup* n 10 avanl* horn
Kay Bdcoyne. Fla
CDO THIS IS THE USFL

2:30

(•) ANGLERS M ACTIO N

0:00

as (Ml 9 ( 1 ) WRESTLING
0:35
(Q WRESTLING

1&lt;fc00
(M ) ARM WRESTLING
(SI WRESTLING
AFTERNOON

8

1:00

O * WREST LING

1:05

4:30
0 ® LPGA GOLF Nabisco Oman
Shu* mutational, thed found. k*a
horn Rancho Meaga CaM
(D O WIOC WORLD OF SPORTS
Scheduled Mark Breland (3 01 v»
Slava Littwr (10-2. 4 K04) m a waftarwaagM bout and Matured Taytot
(J4). 2 KO*l v» Vaclot Ftora* (14-S,
S HOal m a kghlewghl bout, both
bouts tchadutod tor p i round*, hva
horn San Angato. la * . NCAA
Swetwvung and Orvsng Champion*iupa horn Aualm Tas

■

EVENING

3:00
BOWLING USO.OOO Old

Space Clautc
Cdy. N Y

bv* Iron* Garden

8:05
(Q W R U T L M O

10:05

3:30
(3) PRE-SEASON BASEBALL

SPECIAL Bob Cotie* ho*I* IN*
ho* al lha upcoming Ma«or Laagua
beta baa taaaon and J*n Rea. Ed
dw Murray, h c l SutckCI# and Wh­
a n lata part «i a Nugfaat lofiba*
gama horn Saraaola Fla

o MTERNATONAL WINTER SPE­
CIAL OLYMPICS Hrghkghtt of ski
eig and U a ln g events hatd M Utah.
Much 24-29

SU N D A Y

Pad k* ih# ib f IrgMwaaght Cham-

p-onaNp icrwOuwd toe IS rmmda.
kva from Allan!* City- N J. hMarod
Doo Stod Race • t 04 » mile 14day ri ca through the wed* Of AlaaU a proto* Of rraddtoaaiflM Cham-

USFL FOOTBALL Houston
Gambler* al Now J*r*#y Generals

4:00
0
® LPGA OOLF Nabisco / Di­
nah Shore Imntahonal Fuel round,
kve horn Rancho Meaga. CaM
I X FWHW- « v n « ORLANDO WIL­
SON

CD 88 NBA BASKETBALL New
York Knack* at Boston Catoc*
u *
o TTB8 WEEK M BASEBALL

1:30
ffi «

BKA OAKCB OUTDOORS

(1 ) O PDA OOiF Maslei* Tourna
menl Highkghtt ot today * lest
round, bom Augusta Ga

OX BASEBALL Attanls Brave* at
ptdadalpfMa Phdke* (Taped ConcluwonOIGam*)

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

8:06

7:35

7:35

O
NBA BASKETBALL Boston
Celtics at Philadelphia 7Bar*

I X BASEBALL AHuile Brava* al

dX BASEBALL San Oagn Padre*
al Atlanta Braves

7:35

EVENtNO

EVEMNO

Ptutadefphsa Ptuawt

...Detect
Continued from page 3

It a ls o
liunliTH
rl&lt; it t t o r s

b r o u g h t a n e w s le w o f t r e u n o r r
i n t o his s h o p to buy i n e l i i l

ami

g e t h i o n llie

lutiuin/a. lie

S.111I

Kver&gt; place in .111 has turn lie Itits led
11** trvmcndouii to I mill u p ln r ol ii-sidiic Inland Out Itear ht* are a goltl
lilslnry hi your hund." lie &gt;11111. "You mi ne repllnlsht d every flay ' An
uoiitlt r how It goi Hu rt-, wberr slid 11 III aslniitnhlilg 6.T3 million wort It ol t (tins

in lilt ovt-riill hclM-rtiP. II ||‘b Mimi Ihiriji mtl fewelry are found along Hie iK aeltes
ln»m •&gt; lull If you utl|(hl wuuder how hi this country every year." hettald.
uidiiy shorn were llrrd "
Hi ady tu join litis quest lot riches? ,
Aut rlMirh has .1 vm ill full ol u n cu rlh t tl lilt (.'entral Honda Metal Delecting
1508
ircuN urm h r suys is worth thousands ol I lull met is the second Friday ol ruch
O W R ES TU N O
dollurs.
moulh al Ihe (iolditirtal l ‘lvle C rnlrr.
MB
O
NBA BASKETBALL Houston
" T h e o ld rr I n&lt; 1 the less room I have I7FLT I'alineiio Ave.. Uoldenrnd.
5:35

O WRESTLING
EVENING

Rockets al San Ahlomo Spur*

O SPORTS PAOE

1:00

12:00

10:20
dX BASEBALL Alluila Brave* at
PMadUpfea Ph*e* |T aped ConciuHonOtGamal

EVENtNO

3:30
® O NBA BASKETBALL Putland
Trad Blazers at lo* Angate* LaOws

10:35

400
( D 0 CSS SPORTS SATURDAY
Scheduled Marry Arroyo » » Ammy

CD O

4.05

I D PRE-SEASON BASEBALL Ah
lanta Brava* e* Monlraal E &gt;po*

CD O

200

TUESDAY

MONDAY
EVENMG
7JO

G E ^Q R tN tQ A D S RAGE: COACH

lo rll a ll.liu l still he c u u T give up Ihe search
lie s d ra w n in part hy the n u m -t o ol
01 her M -a r e h m Lust rh a n k s g lv ln g s
storm y wt-ulher along Ihe shore* of
south B re va rd C o u n ty , lor rx u n ip k '.
w ound up p u llin g about 6.T.000 w orth
ol gold and silver coins Into Ihe h ands nl
1 o llu To m . . . .

O n Thm Covtr

Is It treasure or trash? Tom
Killian silts Ihe sand of Lake
Maitland to find out.
He, *M Phata by Crapary Babaz

�4— E ve nin g H e ra ld , Sanford, f t .

F rid a y , A p ril I , I t U

April 5

FRIDAY

SATURDAY
MORNING

EVE NINO

0:00

(f)
( i l C l ( D O NEWS
(14) JCf HR SO N3

8

110) UACNEIL / l EMBER
NEWSHOUR
CD &lt;l| LAVERNE A SHIRLEY

0:05
I I DOW N TO EARTH

0:30
Q (4) NBC NEWS
(T ) O CBS NEWS
&lt;7)CJ ABC NEWSQ
np (Sl| ALICE
&amp; (1 )0 0 0 0 TIMES

0:35
12 OOMlR PYLE

7:00
O (f) SALE OF T )!« CENTURY
( I ) O P M MAGAZINE MihM
with a tmgke perfect feature worn
irungm a i A vm i i g i

(7) O JEOPARDY
10 (35) TOO CLOSE FOR COMTORT
0 (10) THE BEAT DOES ON An tnveahgtlron of Florida'* tecotded
music Induslty with a look al &lt;1%Li
lure j*..-L&lt;Miei -nd how I kuda It
tnruHtowig ilk growth rstlhtr the
•laIt
(D ili HAPPY DA rG AGAIN

7:05
11 SANFORD AND SON
7:30
O (f) ENTERTAINMENT TONIOHT
I n Iik h I Tally Sevalat. chad mod
( I ) O WMF EL OF FORTUNE
(D
If! O
1100.000 NAME THAT
TUNE
(18) BENSON
|I0) THIS WEEK WITH CHRIS
MOflOAM
CD HI A lt IN THE FAMILY

8

7:35
11 NBA BASKETBALL Chicago
Hull al P lilu M iA d 76m t

BOO
O (1) KNIGHT RIDER Michael and
KITT pursue a group of mihlaiy tin
viYtfcilt who ham stolen tv Iwh
euuipmenl uv haling User beam
weapons
(Si a DETECTIVE IN THE HOUSE
A UitrU game company hues Pitta
to go undercover at a Question
wr tin to Imd oul who t seeing car­
pi walt aatrala lo a comjaddi*
(7) O WEBSTER Webster coerce*
Katherine and Otorgt mlo cuddkng
him unlf ht heart Iha retorts of
modical taalt regarding tha lulura
of hiagrowlh c)
(It) (31) MOVIE Tha Smurlk And
llw Magic f kilt 1 19611 Arwnaltd
Tha kivebki Smurfs atl oul lo la
breve a magical mutical malrutneni
tluftn by a «iaam
CD (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
CD HI MOVIE I h t Grtalatl Slot,
Pvtt Told |t965| Mai ton Sydow
John Waynt for 33 ynart J wmii
Ch ill walkt T arlh at a mortal man
unlf ha rt truedied on Iht Croat

030
(7) a U R BELVEDERE Wealey
t ld d n Mr llaftadara when Iht
bulltr ovttpnwmk a bottler Out
wrttlkng Ian who knocktd oul
Gtorga (J
(D (I0| W A U STREET WEEK
G u n ) Polar Varnvlye clw n iiti.
f ndowmtnl Managnmanl I Ht
ttarth fund

0:00
O ( £ HALF NELSON Rock y p o m
kt a htatlh and attrertt atparl
whan ht kiywatrgalaa Iht dtalh cd a
lieveris MJtt tilnaaa guru
(1) O MOVIE Stormin' Horror
(Piarmartl Of Gerard l rat ttiounl
Whitt praparmg lot an ai nnporlanl
item, a drvotced cartbtt rroHo
Croat ratal notra In reform hit itch•
kraa kltalyla and lo accapl Iht retpuriaibtdnrt ol bamg an adult
(7) O BENSON Whan benaon w
namad Man of lha Yaar Claylon t
(aafouay Wadi lo a sc*prise al lha
Mack la award car kmony I )
• |*0)0000 NEIGHBORS

0:30
CD O OFP THE RACK Sam * af
•orIt lo pftaaa a young buywr tv
Uu.lt arranging a dala tor him with
Bait t dtighf f. U
50 (34) pink a t Fir s t s ig h t Tha
Path Panlhar tncuunitrt yeaious

huabandt ytcroua dogs gangstm
and tha panibrnatt ol hr* d r a f t
urban ba work a at a tinging mat
tangor on Vatanbna t Day
CD I TO) OOOO NEIGHBORS

5:00
10 (38| NEWS

5:05

IX MKJMT TRACKS

10:00
B fX) MIAMI VICE CrockBfl and
Tubbt pose at a speedboat racing
laam lo nab a drug imugglar who
plant lo uta a item lo Bmvm and
back a* a covar for bit lalatl run
IR)
(7) O ME A MOM (Pramiwal An
allraclive dalactryw, har erlrsvaganl tociahla motbar and a Ior mm
enp form an off boat Ino of private
aivatbgalort (J
I p (38)INDEPENDENT NEWS
(D (10) TOOAY IN THE LEGIStATUNE

5:25
(7) O
STARS

HOLIYWOOO AND THE

6:00
(9) O BLACK AWARENESS
® ( J OIGOLESNORT HOTEL
) (33| EDITOR S DESK
I NEWS
) (I) JIM 6AKKER

0'30

(4) QILLIGAN S ISLANO
( J O THIRTY MINUTES
7 ( J TENNESSEE TUXEDO
(1b (15| IT'S V0UF1 BUS'NCSS
O

10:05
IX MOVtC
Tht Nkghf
(IM S ) MolMfl T iy'of (Ur bum
St«n«ryrti A wwlos* en(l.irtg#f i hw
II* WftNNt llw
i f«K.ur
nng UrtifTl

10:30
10

(38) BOS NEWHART

11:30
n ff) TONIGHT Hint Inhnny Car
tun Gchaduhni Juan Codnt Tony
Randall
( 1 ) 0 TAXI
(7) O ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE
ID (38) SANFORO AND SON
CD isi twilight zone

12:00
( I ) O MOVIE Doc 119711 Slacy
Kaacb. T aya Dunaway
(J) o THE SAINT
nil (38) r h o o a
ip MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED
CD IS) KOJAK

12:30
O ( 0 FRIDAY MIGHT VIDEOS Vk
dao* by Eric Clapfon ("forever
Mart L PM CoHmt (O n e Mora
Nigfil l Kmt 6 Tha Gang | I rath |
Palm W H II Ot&gt; ea-drdkry Finn* l
10(3811 LOVE LUCY
(IX NIGHT TRACKS

1:00
(1) O MOVIE Getoromo (I96J)
Chuck Conrota HamM* Uwtr
(38) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
|S| MOVIE /otto (1474) Alem
OkfOtl, Stanley llakar

a

1:05
10 NIGHT TRACKS

1:30

2:00
10 (381 PUTTIN' ON THE HITS l ip
tyro ml randiliona ol I'm Go (te n ml 1 Would Ota 4 U
What tha
World Naadl Now.''
Haadly
School Dropout. A l l (Pittty
Young (tang)' ant) Sofcd

2:05
10 NKlMT TRACKS

2:30
10 (381 GUN SMOKE

7:00
J 14) INCREDIBLE HULK
( j 0 WORLD TOMORROW
I 0 KICK) INCORPORATED
} (15) JIMMY SWAOOART
|(I) ABBOTT AND COSTELLO

7:05
IX SATURDAY FUNNIES

7:30
(4) OH.LIGATES ISLAND
O ALEXANDER QOOOBUOCV a GOOD MEWS MAUAJ.MC
(TlfJX IOK W O RLO
« ! ID FOCUS

f

7:35

IX OET SMART

000
o (1) SNORAS
(T) O

B IS K IT I9

(7) O SUPERFRIENOS LEGEND­
ARY SUPER POWERS SHOW
10 (15) IMPACT
(D (10) LAP QUILTING
(S O IO E T SMART

8 05
IX CIMARRON STRIP

0:30
o (4 ) PINK PANTHER AND SONS
) 0 OET ALONG GANG
! U SUPERFRIENOS LEGENDAny su re n p o w e r s s h o w
10 (34) CISCO KIO
B 1*0) SQUARE FOOT GAR0ENUNO
CD ID ANGLERS IN ACTION

0:00
| (4) SMURFS
( £ 0 MUPPET BABIES
i U MIGHTY ORBOTS
1114| B O ) WRESTLING
t (10) FLOWOA HOME GROWN

0:30
OUNOEONS ANO DRA­

GONS
|T) B TURBO TIEN
B ( K » IRUOAL GOURMET

0:35
IX WRESTLING

10:00
(I) O
BUGS BUNNY / ROAD
RUNNER
(7) B DRAGON 8 LAIR
It 1151 ARM WRESTLING
(D («0) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
0 ) 0 ) WRESTLING

3:00
a
( 6) MOVIE Ftghltr Allark
|I9S.1I Slarkng Hayden Joy Paga

3:05
IX NIGHT TRACKS

3:30
10 (35) FAML. f AFFAIR

4:00
a t (35| PATTY 00*1

4:05

10:30
B (3) ALVIN ANO THE CHIPMUNK8
CD B SCOOSY-OOO MYSTERIES

&amp; (10) THIS OLD HOUSE
10:35
IX MOVIE Shram 11981) Alar.
Ladd JaanAthur A itlurmad gun
kghlrn it to'cad lo uaa htt gun
agam lo dahnd homaalaadara bum

IX NIGHT TRACKS

11:00

4:20
(7) O MOVIE Tht liberation Of
l B Junta |i»70l laa J Cobb. An­
thony 7atha

4:30
10 (34) DORIS DAY

|(I&gt;KIDC VIDEO
I CBS STORY BREAK
i VICK.O GAME
) (18) Wh.0. WU.0 WEST
) 1 101 AM* RICAN GOVERNMENT
lOIM OVW TON

4:40
&lt;D (St MOVIE
Cotptt" (1941) J
berg Frank Jankt

Tht Mating
Edward Brom­

12:30

0:35

&lt;i) o

(U) (38) SC TV

(7) O ABC WEEKEND "Th« Baturn
Ol Bun|m&gt; Uunya IThi ptahttlonc
oaalura, and him Inandi Karan and
Andy fournay lo lha mrddta ol lha
MhddM Agm IPart I nf 3) rJ
10 (15) MOVIE fUtpotm Tha Mad
Mora (I960) Chrnlopbar laa. Bat
bar a Shatlty Abandontng htm hot,
otdart a Butaron monk lr n * t to
St Palmtburg whme ha hat a d,a
tiohc mhutmee on Ilia lourt and « graiiairt lha Taarata lo bacoma lha
royal phytroan
ID 110) GROWING YEARS
(X |S) MOVIE Shallow Ol A
Doubt 11941) Trarta Wright. Jotapb Collar, Whan a man coma* lo
tlay with hit tralnt and har lamfy m
a mull Vital Coat! town, hit mata
it pfaguad with tha nagging tutptClon lhat ha rt raalfy lha ' Mmry
Widow karar
1(X) AMERICA S TOP TEN
I SATURDAY SUPERCADE
AMERICAN BANDSTAND

(IXBETWEEN THE LINES

11:00

■ r f x ] 10 (7 ) 0 n e w s
,10(351 BENNY HILL
A ( 10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
Ob (I) NIGHT GALLERY

April 6

11:30
4) MR. T
IX PRYOR S PLACE
O LITTLES□
1 10) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT

J

AFTERNOON

12:00
B QD AMAZING SPIDER-MAN
(!) O
BUGS SUNNY / ROAD
RUNNER

faalurad Ookkan (" J u t l Gol
lucky."
AJona Again L Gladyt
Knajhl 6 Tha Pipt I My lima ) Go
Waal a ntlno Wa Cloaa Our Eyat “
B ( 10) GROWING YEARS

1:00

S

CI) WRESTLING

( 10) EARTH, SEA ANO SKY

1:05

.

IX PRE-AFAAOH BASEBALL Al
Urita llravaa ir Ltonbaiai Ctpua

1:30
|POLE FGoillON
i ) , u ' &lt;I MOVIE Haiurn Of lha Fly
(1989) Vineanl Plica Brat) Haltay
Altar an imrtnlor dan uamg hn d&gt;
amlagralaig mac ham hit ton con
linuat 10 work on rl dmprla prolaatt
bom hit untia

(D 110| EARTH. SEA ANO SKY
2:00
O

(f )

MOVIE

Journay From

Darknett (1975) Marc Smger. Kay
la ru A Maa) fnrtng* aludrm) drug
glaa to ba auaplad mlo m d u a l

tchool
MOVIE Pur-blo 11973) Hal
Holbrook. Andcaw Duqgan North
Koraant caplura lha U S Puahto
and lit craw
10 I18I MOVIE Viva Knarvaf
I '97 7) [ rat Kmavaf. lauran Hutlon
Crook t plan lo tabotaga (vN
Kmawf t motorcycla jump m Man
CO to Ihay can tmugglr. coemna
min lha MR hy tttctwng i! a\ ||M
daradavf t tofbn
(I0I FOCUS ON SOCIETY
ID MOVIE Halt Bayond Van
gaanca ’ 119M| Chuck Connor v Ml
chiMf Rannra A buflalo huntat
kaakt ravanga cm tavaral oullawt
who klikckarl and robbad ban ahat
Tat writ rayaclad ban

(I) O

3

2:30
S ) ( «&gt;l FOCUS O N SOCIETY

3:00
(7) O

BOWLING 8150.000 Old
Rprea OatkK. bva bom Gar dan
City N 1
( D ( 10) PRESENT E

3:30
B ( i ) PRE SEASON BASEBALL
SPECIAL Bub C o t I at but it thrt
look al lha upccarong Major laagua
batabaX laa ton and Jan Rica. Ed
dta Murray R e ) SuIckfW and crlhart lata pari ai a tkrglatl toflban
oama. hum Saratola Fla

( D I *0) TONY BROWNS JOURNAL
John Jacob, praudanl and chat ar aculrva cKbcar of lha N a im a l U r­
ban laagua. OuMmaa Iba orgatvaImn t fufura (Pari Z of 7)

400
(D O

CSS SPORTS SATURDAY

Schadufad Harry Arroyo n J a m ,
Paul kb lha IB* Irgbtwarghl Cham
paonahrp. tchadiAad kw IS roimdt
kva bom Altanl* City. N J. kktarod
Dog Sfad Rata a 1 049 ma* 14.
day raca through lha wrklt of Alas­
ka. a proMa ol midrXawaighi chan
p on Marvaaoua H a m Hagkaa aa ha
pragaraa kv a bout with Thomaa
Haarna

10 (38) CHIPS
tD (KB DC BONOS THINKING
COURSE

B
ID GREATEST AMERICAN
HERO
4:05
I X TENNIS ford ChMUnga Cup

4:30
a

H ) LPGA GOLF Nabisco Oman

Shot# myitatiooaf. Itwo lo rnd kva
bom Rancho Ma aga. Ckbf
( D O WI0E WORLD OF SPORTS
Schnduiad Mark Bratand (7-0) 11

Siam Ldlbr 1 10-7. 4 KOtl m a warlarwmght bout and Maldrad Taylor
ll-B 1 KOtl v» Victor Florn (14-5.
4 KOt) in a kghlwatghl bout both
boult tchadulad lor pa rounds kv*
bom San An&lt;jHo Taa, NCAA
Svnmmmg and Dying Champiootlupt. bom Autlm Tat
fD ( 10) HEALTH MATTERS

5:00
(IB (35) BJ 7 LOBO
O ) (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW

(B 18) BARETTA

5:30
( 0 (10) WALL STREET WEEK
Gustl Pwiar VarmKy*. chairman,
fndnwmani Managamanl 6 Pa­
triarch fund
EVENING

0:00
B C D ( D O ( D O new s
10 (35) BLACK SHEEP SQUAD­
RON
(10) SOUTHERN CIRCUIT
(B)VEQAI

S

0:05
IX WRESTLING

6:30
a (1) NBC NEWS
( J) 0 CBS NEW3
Q l U ABC NEWSp
CD (10| NEWTONS APPLE How
(Kaclncdy it made how ayaglattat
aid vtaron. whal rkucoi mnil el­
bow akKiA .rl bul.t Yn

700
0 (f»O * F »C E FEVER
(D O MEE HAW f nalured Louisa
Mandrvri llonny Rubbmt UAon
Dollar Band (Rt
(7) U SOLID GOLD Host Ikek
Daat Cohoat Crytlal Gkyts
Gumtt I'trim Brown. Mata Mary
Jana Galt. Grmarai Pubke. Bril
Mrrhry L.iura Brarugan Anna Mur­
ray (mlerviawl
10 (35)BUCK ROGERS
tD (10) D-SCOVER THF WORLD
OF SOFNCE r ualurrd an FAA latl
ol new anknar salat y taaturm, sleep
daprrvalron 'star ays turgsry. monFay lanfputgn. compuiar X-nyi. a
parpatual mo-on mactwia 9
O ) (•) T A if il FROM TH2 0AAKSlOC Whifi a (inU niito u tok) man
fflrlufiii Irnm irw d«*d ht% farm*,
•nd community try to x«nd hsm
brack

7.30
) FLORIDA S WATCHING
GALLERY
8(f(61NHJHT

0:00
B (3) OlfF RENT STROKES AtliCKd I new brand and nmghbor Carmade » partuadad In baal up tha
tebocK IjuSy who it pickmg on Sam
(R)
(1) O OAFFY DUCKS EASTER
SHOW Aromalad Attar ba'tkng SylVktlar lor a gukkm agg ar.d guard
mgchocofata bunnwt bom 1 (wady
OalFy dacidaa lo try raid hiking
north &lt;R|
( D B U HOOKER Whan Comgan la accuaad ol thoohng ah
unarmad Pripacl because ol an old
grudge Hookor tell out lo prove
lha officer 1 mnocanca 9
I I (38) MOVIE The Kmg t Ihwl
( '9551 Edmund Purdom Ann Bh'h
Tha court of England t Kmg Charlat
II a rocked by a nobleman t at
lemptt to tlaaf the crown lewert
and trvre conlioj ol the Ihrorw 9
B ()0 ) MOVIE Tht Crust Sea
11953) Jack Hawkeia Donald Smdan Man aboard lha vulnarabre
Corwitee r u n lace tha perils ol
Mifi tub mMljvm
CD («) MOVIE Tha Story Of Jacob
And Joseph ' (T974| Kadh Mahan
Tony lofiianco A teiaamg of two
brbfccal llonat tha IgM between
Jacob and E aau over thaw bathnghl
and llw probtamt encountered by
Joseph when ha it tofd mlo slavery
by his br other t

8 05
IX MOVIE
faecreet
|196B)
Jamas Slawart Henry Fonda A
sma* lown protected by • tvrvd
FbsrKf a tert or,rad by a gangteadar
and htt man

0:30

B (1) DOUBLE

trouou u m .a
thrtlad lhal aha a ba a mag^-wi t
pratlnbgilafor can I pwkxm
-— 1
’ the tenptaal lock |Hj
(X) O BUGS BUNNY'S BUSTIN'
OUT ALL OVER Aromaled Sprngbrna brmgt Bugs a ctvrdhood ramewKsnce an sncouMat wdh Uarvm
Martian an) a chance lor Was E
Coyufa 10 ImaWy catch lha Road
Runner |R)

000
0 *4) G'MME A BREAK a ■
tome older man sweeps Nell on hn
feel, than tfie learns ha s Andy 1
long-loat lather (R|
( ! ) O AIRWOLF During a scwnMc
mission in lha Northwest* volcanic
eruption (ureas Hawke and Santm,
lo laka refuge m a nearby mmmg
loyvn where an ampkyyew rebalkon
la underway
( D O LOVE BOAT Aprf Loper
makes trouble lor the craw Iwo
brothers wager a bet on women
and a reporter thmkt ha has the ul­
timate scoop when ha maals a
woman (R I9

0:30
B ( D UNDER ONE ROOF r.pence,
tusjyaclt hit tchool churn* have
something to do with (he voices
ha t haanng m lha halls at tchool

10:00
S
GD HUNTER A Narlett atuttm
namad "Tha Beach Boy uses a
specially-designed machine gun 10
ebmeiale drug pusher* who have
coated a crime boss
CD O COVER UP AMer har escape
bom prison, tha Black Widow baps
Dam and Jack m a bonding tun of
eiprouvas where Ihey conlemplale
thaw bun laatmgs
CD O FINDER OF LOST LOVES *
young leporine teaks Daisy s help
In surprising har lather wdh hit nk)
Hama, a high tchool student asks
Cary lo help ham hnd hit trussing
girlfriend 9
(VC (35) INDEPENDENT NEWS
FD (10) OAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
01 (B| EISCHIEO

10:05
I X INTERNATIONAL WINTER SPE­
CIAL OLYMPICS tkghhghl* cl ski
rnq and ta almg even's held In Utah
March 24-79

10:30
10 (38) BOS NEWHART
tD (TO) MONTY PYTHON 8 FLYING
CIRCUS

11:00
O (3) a ) O ( D O NEWS
I D (35) PUTTIN' ON THE HITS U p
synced renchlKmt of “ The Gismo
rout Life." "War Song. ' Can I
Drive 53," "lover GK1,'* "Rip II Up
and Too Much Too Young
CD (10) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
(D II) HONEYMOONS FIS

11:05
oa NIGHT TRACKS CHARTBU5TERS

11,30
B ( D SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE
Host Christ,ipher Reeve Guests
Santana ( Say II Agam "L comedian
Slevsn Wright
(X) a STAR SEARCH Uuetls 0#
v'd Bunny Tom Jones |R|
CD O LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH
ANO FAMOLhi Inter news wdh Hugh
Helner Dorothy Mama former ra­
dio broadcaster Gordon Mel en
dun. Hueywood btness minuet.*
Jake S’cnnleld |R|
10 (38) MOW ! Tba Trap" (19591
Rrchard V/rdmark. Tma Lours#
B &lt;•) HAMMER HOUSB OF HOR­
ROR

12:05
12 NIGHT TRALKS

12:30
CD o MOVIE Betor# And Alter
11979) Pally Duka Alim Bradford
Dolman
T o AL LOWREY REAL ESTATE
SEMlHAR
03 (SI HAMMER HOUSE OF HOR­
ROR
I jOO
B (3) * ROCKS TONIGHT
(7 ) O
MOV*
Pdm Sprmg*
Weekend 11961) Troy Donahue
Conroe Slav ana
H i (35) MOV* Twenty Pkrt Two
1)961) David Janttan Jeanne
Cram

1:05
H NIGHT TRACKS

1:30
I D IB) M OV* The Mad Magician
(19541Vincent Puce Eva Gabor

205
I X NIGHT TRACKS

3:00
( D O MOVIE A Tree Grow* M
Brooklyn ( 1945) Jtmat Dunn. Dor
olhy Me Guae
10 (381 MOV* Gomfl Hone
(1971) Robert Udchum Brandt
VtCCAfO
B (•) MOV* Oon l Open The
Door" 1 19741 Suten Brtcken Lorry
O Dwyer

3:05
® NlOMT TRACKS

�SUNDAY

A p r il 7

moaning

500

ITlMlNiWS
CD&lt;111SAT

5 05
11 NKj HT TRACKS

o

5:25

B
HOLLYWOOD AND TME
STARS

8 00
I
'
ff
II

1100

7:00

0 P IS COMAANY
S O ROBERT SCHULLER
7 0 PICTURE Of HEALTH
I t |1S| BEN HA DEM
11 IT IS WRITTEN
CD &lt;11JAMES ROBISON

7:30
l ) T ) HARMONY AND GRACE
’ U ESSENCE ON TELEVISION
H ( I I I E J DANIELS
11SUMOAY FUNNIES
® Iliw V GRANT

600
n
1
7
U
■
U
®

t VOICE Of VICTORY
O REa HUMBARO
O BOB JONES
IJSI JACKSON FIVE
I «L I SESAME STREET |R|Q
Aiv iN AND THE CHIPMUNKS
IISU^ERFRIENOS

630

0 &lt; 1SUNDAY MASS
1 r j day of disco very
j j O ORAL ROBERTS
H h JSI PORKY PIG
11 BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENDS
CL ill saider man

900
f|i WORLD TOMORROW
O SUNDAY MORNING Scbnd
&lt;*•«&gt; b*t&gt;Un ol la r w CWvMand Inp*Ww* Boe Fnl#* farmer
Nnon tide Chiilgt Coitcn
I'K u llM h*l priMK WoMNp (*&lt;*MR
® O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH Of ORLANOO
It o i l TRANSFORMERS
♦B110) PAINTING CERAMICS
® III VOLTRON, DEFENDER OF

?

the universe

9:30
O &lt;1 VIBRATIONS
7) O THE GREATEST MYSTERY
A Y-O* II No* E llin 11 MMKlINt
rramd the *Oft0 *iin i dumitK
b*nvml4tion ol Chrnt I n w i K hor ArliAl CUlfc ungl
11 IlSlP'NK PANTHER
001 JOY OF PUNTING
III FAT ALBERT EASTER SPE­
CIAL With Eutof n ii MrOur*} the
tamer tel Attert end me Colby
hiT' *W oul lo Ml inn ip.ru at 1
KoipiliNM Nano

535
a WRESTLINO

_11____1005
GOOD NEWS
10:30
3MUPPETS
MACE T h e n a tio n
J FIRST BAPTIST CHL-RCh
A HOUSE FOR all SEA

0 ® I AM j o t S HEART
0 ) O CSS EASTER PARADE Su
san St Anan am) Rabart Foi»o*lh
nnchoi e iduta lo ipnng bom Nna
Vorl i F.itn Avanua In SI Petert
burg FI*, Constanta McCulw
and B&gt; in Milena* boil Iba Faslnal
o« Slain oerada Patti la Baa# paa
loamt Na ■ Altituda
&lt;U (IS PETER ANO PAUL Antbon,
Hoplin» and Robaat Foaaaoatn tier
m INt l » boul diaana about PaHa
and Paul iba cpoinm ot cnlady
Oillrryrl lytnpyfimynti aaboaa
u m n o i nvlfcoi' to pinytt* Cbmlian.t, eitimatHy Nd to thru daaiM
at mait)ti
® ( 101GOOD NEIGHBORS
a IS) MOVIE Tha Smet Chakta
1 T*i4| Paul Naanvan. Vagma Mayo
A young U n i dmont It* last
Supra* t habca

II

6:00
a i j k i i o i t o n ew s
11 (JSIGRlZFlY ADAMS
® i to&gt;nature o f rHinas
® III VEGAS

AFTERNOON

630
0 41NBC NEWS
&lt;T) O CBS NEWS
(71 O ABC NEWS g

SPORTS PAGE

11:00
U 41j : O CTi O NEWS
H |»| SANFORD ANO SON
CD (tOI ADAM SMITH 3 MONEY
WORLO
£D HI HONEYMOONERS

1105
n DAY OF DISCOVERY

11:30
6:35
12 WILD. WAD WORLD OF ANI­ O ® ENTERTAINMENT THIS
MlfEK feJfuMftl MckAfd Cftamb**
MALS
7:00
B (3) SILVER SPOONS Rita dm
comas that or* ol tha ctiddryn ai
hn na* chad car* tarvice it a nctan
ot pa*anI* tajnappmg
' D M MINUTES
S O WALT OtSNEV WORLD S
HAPPY EASTER PARADE Joan
lundan end FLatb D m cohost tha
tatr annual Eailai paiada bom
Floaida •Walt (htnyy Woald (J
(fl (SSI FAME Dorn luftaas bom
Kathbaclt and mgntmaaat ehn
tuangnuggad
ffl ttoi AUSTIN CITY LIMITS Fra
tuiad tt* Nitty Grilli Oat {land

| Ml Boiangin
Shot Fiat ot
lo * I a tnbuF* to mng**aa*
(D O WALL STREn JOURNAL Siam Goodman I City oF Na* OtREPORT
Irani |
CD 110) HEALTH MATTERS
® IS) TALES FROM THE 0ARKSIE* Fnant iaPy buidanad by ho
100
n ® l EASTER SEAL SPECIAL
U/y **N and ipoalad ion a tugh
® O NBA BASKETBALL Nana ithool Enghih laaeba* tmafy grti
&gt;o*l smell at BoltonCaRici
tba land pxxaim ha 1 dtramad
17J O SKM.OOO NAME THAT 01 and dntomis it hai tapabdilot
TUNE
ha na*a* HTvagnad
ffi |I0| MASTERPIECE THEATRE
7:05
AH fat late Atpmtlu*, puamg at
It* anty cd a h**F»*lyi *u«*** J J WRESTLINO
born a growng obaauaon antb an
7:30
anagainy aon !J
O ® PUNKT BREWSTER lYMi
Ponhy
1
tontaalad
b*nd n tn la n
105
a baauiy pagaant M * * ban Ma
&amp;
THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL

12 30

( 1 ) 0 MOVIE M o w |t9J6)Bur1
lAOCAil® Anthamy Ow4»l^
if O AT THE M OW S :WNr&lt;fe»d
Mog« [M U and Qtiw Sitlri it
»*» A PdfiH l uncfioai “AIatpio
lliy
H»l And M*»AFtN*Afc
•vi
(SS)CHCO ANO THf MAN
® |l) MOVIE Tha Urn. her Erg*
Murdr* Cat** Mytlary |t|7)l
j«h&gt;« CoogATi (istuvl tv*

11:35
I t JERRY FALWELL

1200
® O Al LOWRY REAL ESTATE
SEMINAR

I t |M| WAD KINGDOM

12:30
Q 4t FANTASY ISLAND

12:35
I t OPEN UP

100
(J: a MOVIE Tt* Gay Ihn.iaa
mjl|F&gt;adAll*r« Gmga* Rnjaat
®|l| THE AVENGERS

1:35
I t MOVIE Apia by Pain &lt;m i l
Doan Day Flay BcAgaa

2:30
(]l O CBS NEWS MOHrWATCM

badgaat Punly anynay mlo bacom- Q ) Q MOVE The lady in Tha C «
mg a cemail am m it* kxat mart With (Artery And A Sun ItWH

1:35

® III NIGHT GALLERY

(Z) O BILL DANCE OUTDOORS

VamamhaEgga* Obvan FWd

O TENNIS FoadtbaPanga Cup

3:45
I t GET SMART

600

■ I ® MOV* 'kHanta H g N n
200
4:15
■ ® SPORTSWORLDStbaduiad gala iFbanuyial JacJyn Smith ten 11 THAT GIRL
Supaaitaaa toanpatitidn nlandual Olhy Dalton A t»th tanti»y Engbsh
4:45
Cbainp-uMtnpt in 10 aaarali boan iwbhMaoman McntKal lha painI t WORLD AT LARGE
Hay Bncayna Fla
Irgai ol ariMouacy to study i m p
mg and anwygrt as a rat&gt;0**1 I*
O THIS IS THE USFL
1101 g r e a t p e r f o r m a n c e s rnr* by tyMAalioncimg British
P intail terete Ftamaanpaiad myd*calc4*n CJ

S

Wlt v n Facniiopomb tondudi Iba
Nabnnal Syanpbony Oat»*iba |*a
tormang Samiasa Baabaa &gt; Adagio
lo* Sbmgi Op II and TtPanon
My i ' Syanpbony No S hi E Mine*
Op M and Fail lady Nan*r
Haagan lacitai Caaauna SaintSaany Tha Camnal ol It* Am
man m a spatial Inbuia to Pun
ta n terete ot Monaco l)

ri) O MURDER- SMC WROTE Jat

An Eatta* tuntaal ol rabg«ua nu ­
nc by It* IS i o m Boys Tom
Otoe

4:00

a GD LPGA GOLF Nabnto t O
nan Shorn wntatonM Fatal found
k«a bom Rancho Manga CaM
O il HAWAB FIVE-0

8

(tOt GREAT PERFORMANCES

on

805
(O NBA BASKETBALL Motion
Rotiats at San Amomo Spual

900

(I) O CRAZY 1*1 A FOB «***&gt;
b*s lo tod Hannon s old uFMgt
cmh* a p n m in* auFht* *ho may
I M bam irdnappad altaa a*nmg
in aapota ol orgaauaad tim e m
SanFiancoao

Tha And&gt;«* Lloyd Wahba* Ra
guam PiatMo Dommgo and Sat ah
Brqhtman ata Matuiad hi Hm
lapad ao*id ftemere parlotmanta H (Ml PERRY COMOB EASTER
BY THE SEA Dabby ~
Mitian by ma compoaar M EnU
and Cats Loan Maawatnmbrli
(has momM a«ao* lapad et San
3 III SWITCH
D*gn iSaaWoatd

(D (101 MYITERY1

TF* Adeem

o FISHIN with ORLANOO YWL- u n OF Shallott HoM*l Herr**
SON
mual aclva Wa Malt ol a top Mtaal
trial r batora t t dnappaaaanta
bnaaiaa* a**td paata

4:35
O HKJH CHAPARRAL

1000

500
IT rui DANCL BOONE
$ (101 FdtnaO LA I

What

Eve ning Herald

S a nford. FI.

F r id a y . A p r il 5. IW 1 — 5

G O GUIDE
Another I*.ir( of the Forest.
drama hy I. till, m Hr liman. H
p m . April 5 ti. 10 19, 17-20;
April 7 and M. 2 p in.. Fdyth
Hush Theatre. 1010 E. I’ rtneclon St.. Lorlt Haven P.irk.
Orlando Tickets avaltahle ni
Ikjx olflce: 806-7365.
Sem inole Community C ol­
lege concert series under the
auspices o f lire SC C Kuunda
H on p r e s e n l s Ki ck H o s .s .
wel l - known Central Florida
|&gt;lantsl. 3 p m Sunday. March
31.
I‘atnllng* and walcrcoloni hv
A m e r i c a n l m ( i ressl on 1s t s.
through May 3. at l.och Haven
Ait Crnlrr, 2416 N. Mills Ave..
Orlando. Admission charge
Also, a free exhlhlt through
April 26. features I tie works of
17 Chicago artists Hours 10 5.
Tuesday through Friday: noon
In 5 p m . Saturday. 2-5 p in
Sunday.
W 11 h I u c h o o c h c r S p r i n g
U h ie g ru s F t Jamboree, Mutch 20.
30. and 31. six miles west ol
Dunnrtlon on Highway -It).
Features Ji mmy Dickens. The
L e w i s F a m i l y , and m a n y
olhers. Camping Kor Inform.i
lion or advance llckt-ls call

day.Thursday. and Friday.
Seminole County Museum.
Hi ghway 17-92 at Bush
B o u l e v a r d , i n o l d Agr l Centcr/Counly Home building.
2 4 p m curb Sunday.
Central Florida Zoological
Park. Hi ghway 17-92. Lake
Munntr. open every day 9-5.
Picnic factllllcR.
McDonald s and Ihe Hurrau
o f K ccrea tlon 5000 mcl cr
Easter Ciiudlcllghl Hun. Satur­
day, April fi. Turkey l-akc Park.
Orlando. Hcglstratlmi 5 30 p.m.
F&lt;ir Inlonnatloln call Gordon
Hmadhcad. h -H&gt; 228H.
Winter Park Jaycces 30th
Annual Easter Kg&gt;» Hunt, H&gt;
a m . to W i n t e r P a r k ' s
downtown C entral Park for
children It)and under. Prizes,
Nature hike each Saturday.
10 a.in.. Wrkiw.t Springs Slate
Park. Exit oded day hike. 12:30
pin., every I It In I Saturday ol
the month Two-hour anlnuil
and plain IdcnltllcaBon trip.
12 30 pm ., each lirsl S.iiurd.iy
Call HH9-3140 lor lulormulinn

Council &lt;d Ai l s A Sciences
“ Happy Ilnur" lor ml Iovf-fs.
e v e r y M o n d a y . 5-H p m . .
904-732 7343.
TowiiHcnd's Fish house, Or­
G eneral Sanford Museum lando For Information on re
and Library. Fort Mrtlnn Park, ceiling a mrmtM-rshlp card and
520 E. F'lrst St.. Sanford. 2-5 si-1 id lr« i drink cou|mhis. call
p i n. . S u n d a y . W e d n e s ­ Paul ill THE A R TS I843 27H7I

3:10

1:30

405

O MOV* Tree ( „ th H «* *
l'» l» i Rati HisJion Men S-yTn# tomnncn UHaaan a
WMS Mfflai amt her gunUUrr_* — » «" M * grnmston • ynaer^ered by wwomy end H f W l

fo» lov# Drying
pAffntt
4 IJ-iriNSP1■o*di gsn'l
s mw
tflKng hOT »N* eMuci* el tx^ng
ga»5dkJ J l*rni WotU

10:30

J

Kwrlml (Uughlnr in coaea*
ffl CIO) MAGIC of DECORATIVE
PAWTINO
O III MOVIE ( h i # Peredt
I 'U l i Judy GnUng hed Atteee
A tug H i (urns an is*non mlo •
M niiKin end In # n 10*# **1h her

p&gt;tti Goo-

lHUJIdOONEWMAFT

EVENING

uta l taiHHon anth har toBtga
loommat* it maned aahan hea
hand 1 tupaaitat aa hmband as
muHMaad dmpita has raputaoy m»pargnab* hater it* lastam
CP O
MOIRE Supaaman IF
(HMOl Ctuiu ophy* Haavr Ur* goa
Kiddei WhHa lavmg Pa** bom a
huetana eapFowm Supaaman unwtirngN baas thaaa p o a a M nHaant
2:30
*bo
mete oaigmaiy rmotteaned by
(X) O USFL FOOTBALL Houston
hai
Kryptenanlathaa tR|!J
r,*mt)U*i 41 Nna Jatiny GanmaH
Q6 (I) MOV* Tha Ratutlanl Ha j &gt; ( » | CHARI * S ANGELS
to n U17II Kan Hairy Can**on • (tOtHATUNI tf* FtghlOF Tha
9:35
11 ANOY GRIFFITH
M-ltban A doomed ragmanl it Conor* Host Gnoign Paga net
M m ] ham amWMauin at It* ratal a rournay boan South Amaa&gt;
10:00
bands ol tha enemy bi tba tom te I Capa HUH lltand horlh lo tt*
t TAXJNO ADVANTAGE
Andai ob*a»mg M W b along tha
manda* tlnoaMdgaotNMory
J I T « WRITTEN
■ay |Par I to O H R K j
3:30
I I t » t MOVIE Ttlo H*| SR# •
® (■) MOVIE Kmg Ot Kmgi
®
O
NBA
BASKETBALL
PoaBand
Mfl# ( 1««| J*y** SNnnrt SenItM Jl JaRray MmltH RoOail Ry*n
tt* tommg oF Jaws and It* aaanty
(Pi Dc# An Owr-poNOn* IKIW Tiaa b*a/a*t at lot AngMaa 1M an
Nil mnny p»ociem» coping win Ns O ) OOl (ASTER AT BOVS TOWN « l has Ma gav* b*1h lo r na* rahg-

8

irjd9 to a

1035

12:00

| ® FlQ-'bOAS WATCHING
O SPECTRUM
» O VIEWFONT ON NUTRITION
1 CJSIW V GRANT
6 WORLD TOMORROW
I III ABBOTT AND COSTELLO

Sammari m Yonlafi NY ini
® HlBARETTA

11:30
IT) O BLACK AWARENESS
(Z) O THIS WEEK WITH DAVID
BRINKLEY
CD (101 GOURMET COOKING

CD&lt;&gt;i focus

U*n%punt dornv ffw « \ «M7 Ok)

io* ot tha Church ot Out Lady ot ID (R|
V«loa&gt; II Nr* Vo*! tha Hr* ws- flf' &lt;351H 0 i.P t NOCNT H
lam B South daan ol St Jotapn a © 110) yASTfRPKCI TNtATWf

O ® CHURCH SERVICE Thy H».
Di wibnm Boggi conduct! Enttn
Mrncai Ina bom WHJwy Uylho.)
■It Chuich n Lot Angdat y
® O th ir ty MINUTES
8 ) 1101NEW TECH TIMES

O LAW A W YOU
o AQWCULTUREUS A
()S| IMAACT
NEWS

6:30

L.bn alwi ThamogyY Guam Iba
Rav G«&lt;*ga Rulia* aiiocula pat­

H»lmt Seeking
More M oney
For CBS Takeover

KALKIGH. N.C lUI'IJ
— Sf-ii .Ji-tisr llrlinN.
H-N. C. . ti n* iinkrit
aimservulivr lullowi-rti
lor another tmo.OEX)
lo conilnue hit* cani|iallin lo hike control ol
CHS. whi ch lie has
iiu usctl o f hlased. un­
fair and iinll-ltruKan
nrwsrr|Kirllit({
tf e l m s s a i d h i s
F a i r n e s s In Me d i a
Stroup n e r d s ni or e
tnoncy lo learn If there
is enough sUN-kholdrr
suppnrl to launch a
proxy flfthl to elect
conservatives to the
lO mrtnhrr (.'IIS tatard
of dlrreioni
“ KIM must ratsi- at
l east 4 1 5 0 . 0 0 0 —
*32.000 In the next
two w*tks — If the
project of ran tact tnj(
CiiS stockholders is to
succeed." Helms said
In a statement Issued
Tuesday.
"When the necessary
lunds have been raised.
Kalrnrsa tn Media will
fYHilacl Itte slockhold-

® a
TRAPPER JOHN. M O
Irappa* 1 ***d to locaM • haaat FTS.**

NEED MORE
STORAGE SPACE?
SOLVE YOUR PROBLEMS
WITH A SHEDS AMERICA
BUILDING!

Everything for &lt;
your storage
needs
A BUILDING OR SMiD FROM
SHEDS AHflCIA MEETS SOUTH
TL BUILDING 11 STANDARD COOES

A BUILDING 01 58(0 FVOM
SHEDS AMERtCA IS BUILT
STRONG t STURDY TO LAST!

In**

WE HA VE OVER 40 VARIOUS
THEM ALL ON DISPLAY
100% FUnuciig

IN SIZES
6'*6
24’i SO'

LONQWOOD

ORLANDO

I1M H*f o u t

B ill L Coinmnl D*
OOnnMn. Fin

099-9340

273-8063

On M a il

m i (MUntg ..
FBIl Ul Ug

�Friday, April 1. 1MJ

♦— Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Daytime Schedule
MORNING

8:30

7:00
TOOAY
CBS MORNINO NEWS
OOOO MORNINO AMERICA

$8

5:00
I (35) NEWS
) IT S YOUfl BUSINESS (MON)

&lt;3S| FLINTSTONES
(10) FARM DAY
SCHILDREN'S FUND (THU)
(SISUPERFRIENOS
) AGRICULTURE U S A (FRI)
7:15
5:15
(D(10)AM WEATHER
12) WORLD AT LAROE (WED)
7:30
5:25
(Til (35) TOM ANO JERRY
00 o HOLLYWOOD AND THE FI1&lt;I0)SF8AME STREET tj
BTARSIMON, TUC. FBI)
(1) (•) INSPECTOR OAOOET
7:35
6:30
12) I DREAM Of JEANNIE
a ( D r s c o u n t r y (T u e - fro
12 JIMMY BWAOQART
800
(It) (JS| WOOOY WOODPECKER
m (I) HEATHCUFF
0:00
I Til NBC NEWS AT SUNRISE
8:05
I o MORNINO STRETCH
12 BEWITCHED
) O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
8'30
f 0 9 )0 0 0 0 DA VI
(It (35) PINK PANTHER
pNEWS
O (101 MISTER ROOER3 (R)
) (I) JIM BARKER
IMON THU)
B ( I0| SUNSHINE SYSTEM (FRI)
0:30
ID («) FAT ALBERT
a GD NEWS
(T) O CBS EARLY MORNINO
8:35
NEWS
(7) O ABC NEWS THIS MORNINO 12 I LOVE LUCY
; CATHOLIC MASS (THE)

I CC LOVE CONNECTION
I (I ) HERE S LUCY

10:00
TIME MACHINE
HOUR MAOAZ1NE
SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
) (35) BK3 VALLEY
( 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
) ( 8) MAYBERRY R F 0

S

10:30
n (4| SALE Of THE CENTURY
(7) O FAMILY fe u o
A ) ( I0| 3-1-1CONTACT (R)tJ
CD (8| REAL MCCOYS

11:00
J (4) WHEEL Of FORTUNE
IT O PRICE IS RIGHT
C J ALL-STAR BLITZ
) (35) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
j ( 10) WE RE COOKINQ NOW
) (S) FAMILY

1105
12 CATLINS

11:30
(4i SCRABBLE
O RYAN 9 HOPE
(I0TFLORIDASTYLE

S

S
12

0:35
f UNTIME |FRI|

0:45
(7) O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
(2 )110)AM WEATHER

B05

12 MOVIE

MONDAY
EVENING

a

0:00

(D ll)
( D O NEWS
(351JCFFERSON3
(10) MACNEIL / LEMRER
NtWSHOUR
( S (I) LAVERNE 8 SHIRLEY

2

6:05
12 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

6:30
a (J ) NBC NEW S
(1 ) O CBS NEW S
‘ 7*
1*
8O ABC NEWS CJ
i l l (35) ALICE
O d l O O O O TIM ES

champion aulo racar ahnta t*a tt hi
donga* IR|CJ
12 (35) DALLAS
(D (10) THE LIVING PLANET A
PORTRAIT O f THE EARTH An a.
[duration ol tha wddkta found on l*
landt. wha*e unutoal tpaewt davalnp HI notation IJ
d ) (I) MOVIE Tha Block Station
Raturrit 11083) KaOy Rano Tan
R « l A boy llairH lo tha Sahara
Datarl lu hnd hi* W i n d Arabian
tlallKHi which aat rrclownad try rlt
pravtou* (r n r w

8:05
12 MOVIE Tha Grail Bant Unit
bary ( 1069] /aro Motlal Kan Novat A bant it bauagarl hr gangt ol
iruuld-bw lobbrut

6:35
12 SAFE AT HOME
7:00

8:00

SALE OF THE CENTURY

P M MAGAZINE Fmalaudt
M
horn In l l » lov* Boal danctrt,

8(

a loylaM hi Naw Volt
) 13 JEOPARDY
(35) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT lipaili Hy whan Ratify
HI will Hit to h « ohJ galling lha
tlw len poi A n d i n T barm &gt;i
INJtadlu

(D (10) WONDERWORKS

A p r il 8

tod Ol

A ligar A irnung m « M H p li M
Inrtl gait help l i o n an ok) pdol and
Ihtaa ghoatt k h w ha tiiaa lo ra
butW a Tigat Molh hghiar plana IJ
( B ID HAPPY D A YS AGAIN

7:05
12 SANFORD ANO SON

7:30
B CD ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
I HkiiHtd a (fibula lo Qity Cooper
1 Q WHEEL OF FORTUNE
T O RENEGADE RAGE COACH
LEECORSO
&lt;U(35) BENSON
O (8) ALL W THE FAMILY

7:35
(Q ALL IN THE FAMILY

8:00
O
(1 ) T V * BLOOPERS ANO
PRACTICAL JO K E S G ana Ban*
and Cathy ftghy Maaon ara pracbcal iota victim*, gaRea horn Autir a
tan TV
l SCARECROW ANO MAS
Laa poaaa aa a burn**) out
agent to kwaaligale Iha dtiappaaranca ol Ihtaa format Agency operativea aha M l lor raoaont ol tnatib*ty
(D
O H A R O C A IT L I AND
MCCORMICK H tld c k tllO and

M

McCormick gaar up to harp a world

O (1) MOVIE WaAanlrarg A
Haro t Story (Pari I ol Z)|Pramlatal Rtchard C-hambarlam IMit
ArHtaratnn Hi Iha aanaig day* ol
Work) War II Swaikah d.pk&lt;nal Ha­
nd WaUaubarg goat lo Budapatl
raitli a UatHig plan lo protida pro
latliva pattat and thaflar l « Hun­
garian Jtrtvt llatai'. on a trua ttory
K A TE A A U K halt accapla
\Tad
i)Ot marnaga
propotal. than ba
g»nt lo doubt Iha witdnm ol har da­
emon allar navlm y fra l« o trtlart
( D O MOVIE Young OcKkHt In

Low
(11)3?) Mcchaal MeKaon
Saan Young A young turgaon Inat
to Otar coma hn Mat ol lha kntla hi
that tponl ol aoapopaiactchaa L)
12(35) QUINCY

(7) O LOVING

1:00
|® DAYS Of OUR LIVES
O ALL MY CHILOREN
I) (35) DICK VAN DYKE
)(10) MOVIE (MON. TUE)
I (lO)CONORESS WE THE PEO­
PLE (WED)
(D 110) AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE
(THU)
(I) (10) FLORIOA HOME GROWN
(FRI)
(B (8 ) MOVIE

12:00

2:00

O (41MlOOAY
T i O ( 7 ) O newb
( H (311 BEWITCHED
ffl (I0| NATURE Of
(MON)

O 3 ) ANOTHER WORLD

iT D one life to live
THINGS

10:05
m&gt; MOVIE I ha Big Trrat (195?)
HHI Douglat I »r M.iic-r L andown
art ara dalrrnunad lo proiacl thaw
lanbarland bom a graady krmbar
baron Hi Cakkxraai rodwood lor ail

iffl (35) ANDY GRIFFITH
OCl (10) MARTHA MITCHELL:

11:00
(4U ] i O GD O n e w s
(35) BENNY HILL
(10) TOOAY IN THE LEGISLA­
TURE
( B ( 8) NIOHT GALLERY

2

11:30
O 9 ) TONIGHT Guatl hotl Joan
Rural t Schadukid BrH Cotby
boaar Marvin Haglcr. Lucw A in u
( J ' O TAXI
OD U ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
&lt;12 (33) SANFORD ANO SON
O IS) TWILK3HT ZONE

EVENING

12:00
SIMON 8 SIMON
(7) U AL LOWREY REAL ESTATE
SEMINAR
I (33) RHOOA
BASEBALL BEHIND THE
SCAMS Rat Dougiat hotlt Ihit bahrnd lha tcanat loot #1 Main
laagua batabai tt toon through
lha ayat ol lour 1984 Atlanta
tlravaa - IP wee Banadrcl Tarry
Fort Car Brad Kommmtti and Bob
Walton
O IS) KOJAK

6:00
(4) ( I &gt; 0 ( 7 ) 0 n e w s
(35| JCFFERSONS
(10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
NCWSHOUR
CD HI la VERNE 4 Sh ir l e y

8

6:05
12 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
6:30
I (41 NBC NEWS
I Q CBS NEWS
O a b c n e w s cj
) |35) ALICE
1(8)0000 TIMES

6:38
12 OOMER PYLE

(1) O

12:30
B GP LATE NIGHT WITH DAVTO
LETTERMAN SchaduNd co*ag*
maallar Brand# Day U n a Dr
Charl*« Kalman
&lt;12(38) I LOVE LUCY

1:00

too

2:30

O C M NEWS NK3HTWA TC H
(3SIOUNSMOKE

3.00

CD O MOVIE Don I Rama Tha
Bndga lo a a Tha Rnar (IM S )
Jarry Latvia. Tarry Thomat

230
12

P S ) f AARLY AFFAIR

3:00
I H i SANTA BARBARA
) O GUIDING LIGHT
O GENERAL HOSPITAL
$(35) BUGS BUNNY
1(10) FLORIOASTYLE
) (I) HEATHCUFF

3:05
12 BUGS BUNNY

and

FRIENDS

8

3:35
12 HECKLE ANO JECKLE

4:00
O ( I ) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE (MON. WED-FRI)
) SPECIAL TREAT (TUE)
|STAR TREK
| MERV OFUFFIN
[: (35) SCOOBY DOO
)(W&gt; SESAME BTREETg
||l) SUPER)RIENDS

S

4:05

A p r il 9

cut tj
&lt;1I(35| DALLAS
S (10) NOVA Chma t Only Chdd
Tha HTipacaliona ol tha ona-chddpar-lamdy pokey oI lha Pkopra t
Rapubkc oI Chwva ara avanwiad |R|
Q
ONE MANS OBSESSION
a WITH POWER) EMPIRE
INC THE SAGA
BEGINS T0NK3HT1
____________________KtdfO

7:38

32 BASEBALL A llama Brava* al
PhdadMphia Phdkat lTapad ConcArwon Ol (Jam*)

IDO
■ GD A-TEAM Tha laam Iradat hi
lha tan lor a fancy car and pcatuat
a croc*ad Brvarty Hurt art daalar
•ho t niapaclad ol tmadar CJ
OD O L U O ARNAZ SHOW Jana
Comat lo rtgrar kwilavg har ordar
1»I*&lt; Jdl lo trail tor a aaaa ahan
-ML* botnuau taaart har patwnc*
M
(7) O THREE'S A CROWD Jack
naarty toed* htngt up lor Vicky Ow­
ing tha Ummg ol an kakna comma*

8:05

9:00
B 3 ) MOVIE
Wadanbrrg A
Haro ■ Story (Pari 1 ol II IFYamtartl Rtchard Chambariam Brbi
Andartaon With Hritar * mi location
ol l morn mdiianl ragtm* m Hun­
gary Walanbarg. datpil* an attampt upon hr* own Ma raaortt lo
mot* parocut lachci lo combat lha
Th*d Rawh * allamptad fikrmnaIronolJaw* [J
CD O WHO 9 THE BOSS) N i a
mghl Angola wuutd at* lu tergal 8 only llw courd famambar tuchy
Tony tail avantng (J
M l Q u in c y
(tOtWORLD AT WAR

8

9:30

O £ ) PEOPLE S COURT
i O m ’ A 'S ’ h
m a new s
ID (10) OCEANUS |MON)
ED 110) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
ED (101 NEW LITERACY AN IN­
TRODUCTION TO COMPUTERS
(WED)
( 10) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
(10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRO
(D (I) MORK AND MINDY

S

10:00
(7) O MACGRUOER 4 LOUO Janny avtuma* lha rota ol a prosldut*
Hi an ahorl lo rounrlo a runaway
laan agar with har portnti CJ
12 (35) INOEPENOENT NEWS
ID ( 10) WORLD AT WAR
( £ (8) POLICE WOMAN

10:20

12 BASEBALL AttanM Brava* at
Ptuiodatphia Phdta* (Taprd ConeHrIron Ol Gama)
(35) BOO NEWHART

11:00
Ad.

8

«

5:00
a 3 NEWLYWED GAME
m l * THREE'S COMPANY
(?) O LET'S MAKE A DEAL
it ! (35) DUKES OF HAZZARO
(2) (10) OCEANUS (MON)
ED (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
(D (10) NEW LITERACY: AN IN­
TRODUCTION TO COMPUTERS
(WED)
ED 110) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
CD (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)
(D ( I I I DREAM OF JEANNIE

10:30

• (4) SALE OP THE CENTURY
12 NSA BASKETBALL Botlon
lT) I s PM MAGAZINE Dr Ruin
Gallic* al Pnaadatphra TSart
Watthawnar lha W ntlon man
0 JEOPARDY
830
__ (35) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
MOVIE
Coal Umar •
FORT Hanry t anragad by Monro* ( £ O
Daughlar (1980) Slaty Spaett
•ho can I avan m m lo hang a pot.
lummy La* Jon** Batad cm l u r l
Iran timothy
la Lynn ■ autobmgr aphy A got Horn
(D ( TO) ANCIENT LIVES Hotl John
a poor lamdy n rural Kantvet y mar Romar Uilroducat lha ancranl
n*» a man who angmaart har rna lo
Egyptian vriaga ol Daw El Madata
tlardom m in* muatc mdutlry |R|
and aiamwiat lha dady Ida ol lha
(7) O FOUL-UPS. BLEEPS t
craRtman who mada lha royal
BLUNDERS f •*turret Tawny
lombt hi lha VaHtry ol lha Kmgi [J
Schnaidar; a tnbula lo Burl Roy.
CD (8) HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
nokti gadrt by Dorn 0*1 un* Doty
7:08
ParIon Gaotg* Sagal St*r F«k)
12 SANFORD AND SON
and Slalom* Powatt tj
• ( £ ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
laahntd Linda Cvana a tnbula to
i Tracy
|WHEEL OP FORTUNE
*100,000 NAME THAT
TUNE
(35) BENSON
(8) ALL M THE FAMILY

4:35
12 FLINTSTONES

II

(D 18) EMPIRE. iMC BagmnHig Hi
19?4 (hit mrmtariat lollcnrt lha
rulhtatt aiptoilt ol Jamat Mumoa
(Kannath Worth), a Canadian mdvtInaktl capabla ol driving advartar■at lo turcid* and utmg phdonlhropy tor hnanccal gam iParl 1 ol 3)

7:30

OF THE UNIVERSE
d&gt; (I) VOLTRON. DEFENDER OF
THE UNIVERSE

5:35
12 ANOY GRIFFITH

12 FLINTSTONES

7:00

4:30

12 (35) HE-MAN ANO MASTEFIS

5:05
12 LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
5:30

3:30
(10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
IB) INSPECTOR GADGET

TUESDAY

10:30
dS (35) BOB NCWHART

S

2:30
(T) O CAPITOL
ifj (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
( L (10) THE BEAT GOES ON
(MON)
O ) (10) MEDICATED GENERATION
(TUE)
0D (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(WED)
{D (10) MAGIC O f DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)

32 (35) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

( ! ) O AS THE WORLD TURNS
12 (35) OOMER PYLE
£0 (10) CONGRESS WE THE PEO­
PLE (WED)
(D (10) PAINTING CERAMICS (FRI)

AFTERNOON

8

(A) P O U d WOMAN

a

3 } SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
1 a YOUNG ANO THE REST­
LESS

QLALTMAKER (WED)
8 ) ( IS) JOY OF PAINTING (FRI)

1:30

12 LUCY SHOW

»

8

12:30

IX MOVIE

MOVIE ftalMB Wmlar
(10) AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE ( D O
Concaatad Enamtat
Whillatar Comat (19891 Dand Nrvan Topol
|3S) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
Chambar t homoattuatty batomat
III) THE AVENGERS
pubkc knotHadga lha Him hrpaanlar it lound and a paryrry haar1:10
mg bagma. Altar a oHilnal and a
(1) O MCMILLAN 8 WIFE
lacand Inal. Algal Hwa it lound
1:30
gudly o l par pay and tanlantad lo
tan yaart hi pnaon (Parlt 3 and 4 ol ( U (35) SCI V
«H R )lJ
(38) BIZARRE
8:30
MOVIE Tha Baatl From ?0 000
(1) O NCWHART DKk madvarlanl.
Fathom
#
(1853) Paid Chnahan.
ly landt Har try Hi (ad aAar knrkng
hrm a |ob lhal luma out lo ba a Paula Raymond
team lor taamg bnud ptolt h i a

10.00

12 PERRY MASON

1:05

CD

( C o CAGNEY A LACEY Chna
and Maty Bath ImatbgaN ahan •
rath ol i obbar rat al ( numbar ol lha
City t Cathode church#* ratultt hi
lha brutal Maying ol a nun
(35) WOE PENDENT NEWS

12:05

11:35

S 00

J (El DIVORCE COURT
[) O DONAHUE
QOBARNABY JONES
] (35) WALTONS
1(10) SESAME STREET O
|(■)PARTRIDGE FAMILY

&lt;33| ROREYE
FUNTIME (M O N TH UI

( S (TO) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
m il)
CD (10) MYSTERYI (WED)
ffi (10) NOVA (THU)
It) MO) WONDERWORKS (FRI)
O ( 8 ) MANNIE

(D O MAS. TO THS CHIEF (Pram•artI Tha twat woman Praardanl
copat with IN* ratponadHMwt oI
har Olhea and lha comptcabon*
ganaraiad b y dady M a with hot to n y
lamdy Star* Patty Out# Hartchal
eg

1(4) ( I ) 0 ( Z ) 0 NEWS
) (35| BENNY HILL
I (10) TOOAY IN THE LEGISLA­
TURE
0)18) NIGHT GALLERY

2

11:30
O 3 ) TONIGHT Guatl hot) Joan
Rrvar* Schadulad Tady Savala*.
Char Ctnl Hokna* Edaan Brannan
U ) o TAX)
00 O ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE
12 (35) SANFORD AND SON
Q ) (8) TWILIGHT ZONE

12:00
( I ) O fall ouy
(7) O AL LOWREY REAL ESTATE
SEMINAR
(351RHOOA
(8) KOJAK

12:30
O (1) LATE MOHT WITH OAVIO
LETTERMAN Schadulad tportacaatar Marv Albarl. ituprd pat
tncks
12 (38) I LOVE LUCY

12:35
32 MOVIE

Tnplt Croat 11987)
Chritlophai Fhummar. Yid Brynnar

_
_
0D O

1:00

MOVIE Dully 119651
Jama* Coburn. Jamat Maaon
(35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
(8) THE AVENGERS

a

ray aw
1:10
( 1 ) 0 COLOMBO

32 (35) BCTV

1:30

2:00
32 (35) BIZARRE
2:30
UD B CSS MEWS NK3HTWATCM
32IM IG U N S M O K I

3.00
CD O MOVIE Kraa Tha Gala And
Mata Than Oa |1M7| Mrchpal
Connor*. DorMhy Provma

3:15
32 MOVIE Banyan Walt Up And
Dio (1*71) Rohan Foryiar Dorran
MeGavtn

�F rid a y , A p r il J, I f t S — 7

E v e n in g Herald, Saniord. F I.

What's Billy Mum y Up To These D a ys?
DEAR DICK — I have a alight problem. I've
been a longtime fan of B illy Mumy of "L o st In
Space.” I haven't aeen him In anything lately, la
he atlll acting? — J.H., Kemah, Texas.
Yes. Mumy la still acting, You'll soon see him In
NBC's "Alfred Hitchcock Presents.”
DEAR DICK — My w ife and I both enjoy Pat
Bajak and bla "W heel of Fortune" ahow. Howev­
er, we are both curloua about how hla hoateaa,
Vanna White, waa aclected for the Job. Could It So Miss While wns chosen at least partly because of
be ahe la related to aoL^eone In production or one her depth perception and not Iter relatives
of the aponaora? —
Seabrook, Texaa.
DEAR DICK — Could you please tell me whst
DEAR DICK — I would like to know If Vanna happened to Lee Msnnlug. the hostess of "Bale
White and Pat Sajak of "W h e e l of Fortune" are of the Century"? I missed s few shows sad now
they have s new girl. — F.M.J., East Detroit.
married to each other? — B.B., Muakogen, Mich.
To answer the second question. Vanna White and Mich.
Mi ss M a n n i n g , a c c o r d i n g t o t he s h o w' s
Pat Sajak arc not married to each other. Producer
Nancy Jones, the producer of "W heel of Fortune," spokesperson, "wanted to try other things and
tells me that Miss White was selected after some 500 wanted to spend lime with her* hlldren."
DEAR DICK — 1 waa wondering If you could
|K)tenllal hostesses were Interviewed Miss White was
one of the last. They hud videotapes made of the 25 settle i bet between my friend and me. 1 say
Lauren Tewea of "T h e Love Boat." Sammy Davla,
tlu -y c o n s id e r e d the most promising, then n a r r o w e d It
down to three, who all appeared on the show. Miss Jr. and Sandy Duncan have glass eyes. — E.8.,
Jones says that Miss W hile appeared lo be the lirst. Warsaw, lad.
Davis and Duncan do have artificial eyes but not
It takes some talent to turn those Inters around."
she says. *'A girl must have good depth perception." Miss Tewes.

WEDNESDAY
EVENING

6:00
0 ( 3 ) 9 ) 0 0 ) 0 new s
fp (M l JEFFERSONS
CD 110) MACNEIL I LEHRER
NEWSMOUR
CD (!) LA VERNE 4 SHIRLEY

6:05
12 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

6:30
) N8C NEWS
_ J C B S NEWS
7 O ABC NEWS Q
L(JS) ALICE
I III QOOO TIMES

6:35
12 QOMER PYLE

technology including a look at a
computer-driven walking device
computerized dance non lion, laclory robot* and a computerized
Right aimulalor tj

EMPIRE INCI THE
SAGA CONTINUESI

•wo

T j £3 p m . m a g a z in e a i *
•flancy to* mtsnU • last lood
threkso entrepreneur
0 JEOPARDY
1M| TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT Mono* gets • surprise a N n
h* Pu v m a gwKrwnd o* Jack* k
• 110) ANCIENT LIVES Hoal John
Ro*n«. discus*** anal Paneb t caf*m. » • « Iha wot ic papyrus ot Tie
»*n ami use* IF* world i otdetl map
to Und ancient gold rw «* t )

8

O W NAPPY DAYS AGAIN
32 SANFORO ANO SON
7 :3 0
• ( D e n te r ta jn m e n tto m o h t
Featured Mary Tyler Moo*a. Iha
Jgjandary asplenia at Enet rtynn

1 OWHEXL OF FORTUNE
(7j O 1100.000 HAMS THAT
TUNC
(M l BENSON

It) ALL M THE FAMILY
7:36

12 ALL IN THE FAME.V
6.-00
■ 9 ) HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN A
ma#&gt;» ambition to maaa a movie
u**'9 nn-flhtxxhood lalanl la booal ■
•0 by Jonathan and an “
“
producer, while Mark
•auia &lt;Vmh&gt; and marry tha
--------- DOUBLE OARS IFramwro)
J , , R F | . rophuncaiad maator tn*t
BWi Diamond and firs Mraahaiae
Patinor Sttao mveetigeto a murder, 0W&gt;wy caaa « lhaa Ural aHort al
“ Warcoaar crime-trghbng to* lha
5an Franctaco poaco Start Bar*
Oaa W*ama, Kan Warn
® O FALL OUV Con and a grom
o&gt; nova stuntwomen try to roatuo
►towra and a precious Mm negeuve
b*mg held lor ranaom by a narcot­
ictdeetor [ f
IM ) DALLAS
4W) NATIONAL g e o g r a p h ic
*n overview oI stele oF the ar| N gn,

S

* «.

O (8) EMPIRE. INC Mutwoa (Kennath Welch I m dealt poetical and
par zonal blows by hw children whan
hit daughter Amy (Milch Martini
joint tha Fecill parly and ton tarry
(Joseph Ziegler! aleclk lo Nano lha
b u iin eii and altand medical
achooi {P a rtlo t3)

8:05
32 PORTRAIT OF AMERICA: TE N ­
NESSEE

7 .00

O ( I ) BALE OF THE CENTURY

A p r il 10

0:00
■
( I ) FACTS CF LIFE Jo i*
awampad wrlh work end protiNrm
whan the kaakt aura income by
aabaig pizza baaed on her mother a
original roerpa I Mi tj
d ) O TH E W MMNG HANO K m
K rilloHaraon. Branda Law. Wdb*
H a lim Doty Par loo and Johnny
( M l mere lha stage ol lha Tanneaaaa Pertormmg Art! Canter In
NaehvdM to partorm Help Me
Make n Through Tha NigM." ' Kmg
of a Lonely Caaba.” The Uttia
Thm gi and other N il horn tha
Wmrung Hand album
( D O DYNASTY Neka and Kryille
lake 0*1 on a romantic lournay. lha
prmce'l aacunty tyklam tad* lo pravant a kidnapping JWI uaaa Lady
AaMay to help hen target about Fa*-

31 (M|INDEPENDENT NEWS
ED 110) TODAY IN THE LEGISLA­
TURE
(B l » POLICE WOMAN

10:30

11:30

0 CD T 0NK1MT Guest host Joan
Riveri Scheduled KaaTva Knight
Psdfcam. David Brenner
(Si O taxi
(?) O ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE
.1] (IS) SANFORO ANO BON
Q (I) TWILIGHT ZONE

11:40
(Q MOVIE ' Kmg FLcliard And Tha
Crusaders' ( 105-4) Rea Harrison.
Virginia Mayo
(X) O MAGNUM. P.L Magnum la
head lo protect M*ggme looa-aaas
halt brother, a Taaan who owns a
rodeo, ehan ha vtaill Hawaa with
hn uaugi
daughter |R)
ru%

O O ) P AQ ESO F TESTIM ONY l &gt;
•y Jacob i 19*0 latum lo AuachwiU
where tha was imprisoned re In­
terwoven with documsnlary toot age
bom World War N and raprmt* bom
her photo atom

“ OTHEBAPFT
gootl
) RHOOA
)K0JAK

12:30
® 9 ) LATE NIGHT WITH OAVK)
LETTERMAN Scheduled comedian
1 awfii Mifi+r

I I (3S| I LOVE LUCY

IKK)
CD O MOV* "Tha Tiger Makes
Out ( IMF] EMWaOach. Anna JacS•on

9;30
■ (X ) EAAA Sara haa a danca data
with a man adw * Sevan Kwhaa

•W *
*
moua tatgar Cj

6:30
I NBC NEWS
|CBS NEWS
I ABC NEWS g
j (34) ALICE
M il QOOO TIMES
6 :3 6

32 GOMER PYLE
7K)0

• 9 ) SALE OF THE CENTURY
a) a PM MAGAZINE IMhard
agent

31 (M ) TO O CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT A daemon by MurM and

a De n a t u r e the Fight oi The
Condor " Hoal George Pag# nar­
rates a tourney bom South Amen
ca t Capa Horn Island north lo lha
Andes observing wUdete along lha
m y (Pari 1 ol3)|R )U
m HAPPY OATS AGAIN

a

7:06
7:20

200

nountee that hn latent! we being
waslad in a part tana |ob al the tV
elation, Steven a plant lor Ihaa fu­
ture go up at smoke (Ft)
a 110) THIS OLD HOUSE Chooemg fabnc • turnrUvngi and carpet-

wog

tone

® O JEOPARDY

a 9 ) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT

31 (331 BIZARRE

Featured Van Helen • lead ungar
David lea Roth, a tribute to Clark
a W H E E L OF FORTUNE
62 S TOOBOO NAME THAT
TUNC
(SB) BENSON
IS) ALL St THE FAMN.Y

a

0.00

746

10-00

32 BASEBALL Altanta Braves al
pmladatohto Phdaaa

2:30

6:00

a 9 ) h il l S T R U T BLUES Hunter
diepelchaa a modihad tan* m a nar­
cotic* raid. Coltay poses at a mat*
pruslitula FjrMto plana lo mak* an
ailravaganl annvartary purchata
tor Davwnpoil
9) a
KNOTS LANEXNG Karan
tome* over Dr Azaarman a evawvanaaa about Val'a b*b*a Gary
wgnt on wrlh Empire Va*ay, Rulh
Gatvwslun trie* to undarrmn* Lau
ra t ratallomZap with Drag l )
® B *0 / 20 SchedMad Barbara
Wanart proMa* heart S u rg e o n Or
Waaam DeVries t J
I f (34)INDEPENDENT NEWS
a (10) TODAY IN THE LEQiBLATURE

2:50

O D a M O V * ThaPaopto'MSM)
Kaa Darby. Dan O Hereby
31 (M l FAMILY A/FAJR

4.-00

1C (M l FATTY DUKE

4:20
CD o MOV* Crazy Joe (I9M|
Pater BoyN. Paula Pranliaa

4:30
1.1) (St) DOR* OAV

4&gt;*0
i "9? • he, m w O R LOATLARG
I.

B 9 ) COBBY SHOW CkFt and
Ban are Furious whan Panin a boy
•nend pull down lha medical and
'(•941 pi o *i#o nt atxta dmng •) (fia
KnlabW home IftI
(£
MAGNUM. PJ. T C s m lha
hotpnal m a coma aa a result ol a
heacopter crash, and whan Magnan investigates ha hnds endsnee
ot tac* play (R)
7 O WtLOSiO* lha WSdsato
Chamber ot Commerce hopes Bro­
il* and Banraatar can put thee dnagraamanla aside long enough lo
rid lha town ot pamatent araoraal
(351 DALLAS
(101 WILD AMERICA A nail to
(ha North AmencafUUpna lo Ob
H 'va It* prongSarnaYlKMnaK)

a

8

•

2

2:10

CSS NEWS NKJHTWATCH
(35J QUN8MOKE

12 00

(D
PGA GOLF Masters Tournament Highirghlt ot today'! leal
round, bom Augusta. Ga
0 THE s a in t
(M ) RHOOA
(l)KOJAK

a 9 ) CHEERS (sane raluctantly
decides lo Nava Cheats and travel
lo ttaupe with frawer who haa a
tamper ary poarton m Bologna Italy .
9 ) O S4M0N S SIMON lUck and
12:15
A J . are Farad lo •nvettgale the
( D a NEWHART
pSOSBM sabotage o« an mdy typa
race car (R)
12.25
9 ) a EYE TO EYE Whan a gtamo32 MOVIE Rampage (19431 Rob­
tout actress bland ol Tracy * la
ert Mil churn. Fisa Mailmen
found dead ol carbon monokid*
12:30
pOMonlng. Tracy and Oscar trrvwtUa 9 ) LATE MIGHT WITH D A W
LETTERMAN Scheduled comedian
S l'n s io u m C Y
Steven Wright
• (to) THE u vm o FLANCT: A
I
I (3511LOVE LUCY
PORTRAIT OF THE EARTH An ••
ptorabon ol lha anbMa tound on ia1:00
land*, whar* unutual special deval
9 ) o MOV* The Southern Star '
op M Notation tj
(19491 George Begat. Ursula Andi'iMii
0.30
(34) LEAVE If TO BEAVER
a 9 ) NIGHT COURT a computer
(I) T h e a v e n g e r s
whiz n brought before tha judga to
aiptam how ha managed lo gom ac­
1:25
cess lo lwa school t computer lye
( D O HARRY O
tom (R)

32 MOV* “Term Ot Trier (19*31
Laurence Owner. Simona Signorat

8a

11:30
a 9 ) TONIGHT Guest Moat Joan
Mrmrs Scheduled Catherine Os an
twau corned.in Gariy Shandkng
( I ) O TAXI
7 O ABC NEWS M OHTUHE
i n (351 SANFORO ANO SON
&lt;M (II THE WINNERS A took al how
toccktlfuf tuunras paopla got that
way Hml Fred lewis Ouoals
Mary Key Ash, founder ot Mary Kay
Cosmetics. Dr Adels Behests, ply
ctrotogtat, John Rwnantl. educator,
Jett Melton*, Nctursr-author

8 30

a t * ) THE AVENGERS
CD a
MCGARRETT McGanttl
and Oanrry travel to Singapore la
■met! gale a Honolulu drug con­
nection |fl|

O («| EMPIRE. INC Alter his FOth
bathdky, James Munroe (Kannath
Walsh) la*k m love with a young
journaatl (Linda Gnftilhii resulting
tn a power atruggla batwean has
children lor control ol hn empire
(Pari 3 ol 3)

a 9 ) FAMILY TIES When Alai an-

32 SANFORO ANO SON

3:30

10.00
a D I T . ELSEWHERE A mother
wpaior rvwtlt that kto support be
lamoved bom a tomeioee pauant
tha nurses threalan to Mr*e three
bratightara cope eWi burn aijunaa
(Part tolZKRI
03 O HOTEL An up-and-cortang
terms alar rabaN aganal h*» P*»•nit pt«n to ftltfn to Ifc* Sovwt
JuM f*ftt lor • «ongaril*

32 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

11 (15) A/RICA. COKTMCNT M

806
02 M O V * 'The Sail 0&lt; Rachel
Cade ( 1M1I Angie Dickinson. Pa
tar Finch A imaaionary taaaa lha retpect o* lha nelrraa altar aha me
cumba lo temptation

6:05

a a n ]) a 9 ) 0 new s
(TJ (3*) BENNY HILL
fD (10) DAVE ALLEN AT LAROE
A (I) NIGHT GALLERY

EMPIRE INCI THE
SAGA CONTINUESI

8

Oraytuat. modeling
Blanchard

10:30
3 f (33) BOB NEWHART

11:00

6:00
9 ) 9 ) 0 9 ) a NEWS
(35| JEFFERSONS
(10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
NCWSHOUR
O (I) LA VERNE A SHIRLEY

12.-00

ai
ausa Iheu call* hard 1a
twang destroyed lha owners at­
tempt lo capture tha nvounlaet Son
responsible

A p r i l 11

(.lha* arvmalt erdganout lo lha re­
gion (R|tJ

EVENING

11:00
S K I ) 0 ( 7 ) 0 NEWS
(M| BENNY HILL
(10) DAVE ALLEN AT LAROE
(II n k ih t g a l l e r y

1:10

8

THURSDAY

(U) (M ) BOB NEWHART
a
3J
(&amp;
d

DEAR DICK — Please settle an argument. My
buaband Insists that the blond In the Tic Tec ed
on TV la Cheryl Ladd. 1 told him not so. If you
tell him in print, m aybe he'll believe. — J.R.,
MortonvUle, Penn.
According lo Cheryl's slsler, no, she did not do that
commercial.
DEAR DICK — My dsd end 1 have a slight
disagreement every Saturday night when "Covet
U p " cornea on. I eay that’* Jennifer O'Neill
singing the song "H olding Out for s H ero," at the
beginning of the show and he says It's not. W ho's
right? If It's oot Jennifer, then who Is It? — J.H.,
Indians, Penn.
Father knows t&gt;esl this time. The singer Is Elizabeth
I &gt;.t11\
DEAR DICK — W hy have you not answered my
question concerning Jam es Hall, who played
with Clara Bow In "T h e Fleet's In" around 1020.
When did he die and how old was he when he
died. — E.J.A., Bsndon, Ore.
Sorry aboul not answering your question beforr
You (amt the rest of my readers) must realize that I
get approximately 2 00 questions each week and have
room for, at the most. 20 In (try column Hall died In
IIWO at the age of 119.

a

1:30
U H M JS C TV

2.00
31 (M ) BIZARRE

2:25
32 MOV* Tha Fur** ' (19501 Bar.
bar* Slamryck, Welter Huston

2:30
I I (M l GUNSMOKE

2:45
d ) a CBB NEWS NKJHTWATCH
Joined in progress

3:10
CD O MOV* Doctors' Wives '
119711 Dyan Cannon. Richard Cranne

3:30

(t| POLICE WOMAN

11(3*1 FAMILY AFFAIR

10:20

«

&lt; m » j« n r p i2 u .

�I — Evening Herald. Sanford, FI
i

Friday, April S. HIS

serins to havr no Idea what
he's doing. Even worse, wc
havr no Idea why h r's doing It.
Continued from page 2
H is wtf r. Diane (Castle
become u gumahor.
Yatrsl. a schoollrarher. seems
I'rras drives a irm|&gt;rrumrntu| confused, too Hut she Is sup­
Million wagon, coaches a son's por t i ve . ' ‘ You' l l f i nd her.
soccer Irani, dors Ihr grorrry honey." she says o f Ills search
shopping U r's non vlolrnl and for an rx-sturlrt. " I couldn't
Ix-fiiddlrd Hr could lie Ozzlr even find the detergent." he
Nelson. Hr has a mentor, Nick laments.
(Jack Elam), a gruff, retired
"Detective In Ihr House" Is
prlvalr rye. but mostly I’rras woef ul l y lean on plot and

...D e te c tiv e

Social Security Disability

action. Half the time It seems to
lie less about detecting than
about other detective shows.
At one point. Diane offers
advice to Press by telling him
w hat Jim Rockford did on "T h e
Rockford F iles." "It doesn't
work that w ay." he assures
her. "T h a i was TV. Life doesn't
work that w ay." (Of course, the
tip does pay off. since this. ton.
Is TV. remember?)

Wc Specialize In:
• NEW C L A IM S
• RECO NSIDERATIO NS • BENEFITS CUT OFF
• H EA R IN G S BEFORE THE JUDGE

WARD WHITE &amp; ASSOCIATES
(Over JO Vrs. Experience!

Free Consultation • No Fee U n le ss We Win!

___________ ( 3 0 5 ) 3 2 1 - 1 3 1 9

I Floyd Theatres I

I LOST 30 POUNDS
IN 30 DAYS.
Thank You ASM !"
“ ASM Systems
Lose 30 Pounds
The Device Is
And Really Does

Helped Me
In 30 Days.
Comfortable
Reduce My

______

Appetite. Ten More Pounds And I Plan To Use Their System To
Quit Smoking. This Is A Tremendous Way To Lose Weight
Without Strict Diet Plans And Almost No Effort . " ' j
.

/f*

TAKE WEIGHTm AND

w ^ r .■

IT OFFI

DOCTOR PATENTED, SAFE, EFFECTIVE, PERMANENT METHOD
9 « % SUCCESS RATI • PROGRAMS START AT S35.00
The Acu Slimm Method Along With Our Nutritional Counseling ELIMINATED
Otet Pills. Strenuous Eierctse. Shots. Hormones, Special Foods. Group
Meetings, and Starvation D ie ts... fQREVER!

ASM SYSTEMS -

' nofvrei Way Since 1974
Weight, Saw king i Nutritional
Control Contort

Cofl for ftt! Comufsarton - Rnd Oat A W Cor Frte P ra y m
Max)
m

731-20S
TOSS

call t o l l

ru r

l-MP-MIIUI

103 Vt

'N

]

**xm\J

f

[

DM

1976066
197-6066

A
'N

)|

\J6I2
1612 lL Ca
dkna
st OrJ'

(

.W arn*

134-5010

&gt;

HOURS MOMMY. mONESOAY. fRIOAY 9 AM 5 PM.; TUESDAY. THURSDAY 9 AM ? PM SATllRniY o A U

The Whole Town Is Talking About The
Everyday Low Price O f Poppa Jay’s
For Only
Better *N' Backyard Burger
^ B ^ B ^
A 1/4 Lb. Of 1 0 0 % Pure Beef

1 Du

poppa jay’s |iI
where the cbtice 1%\mmrs.
Ph. 3 2 2 -9 2 1 2
2 5 0 1 French Ave.
Sanford

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152138">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, April 05, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152139">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152140">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on April 05, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152141">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152142">
                <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;, April 05, 1985; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152143">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152144">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152145">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152146">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="15247" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="14861">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/88a99a03132bd894f92b12c285a1fe70.pdf</src>
        <authentication>676d88c40c3eba5915efe7c451870456</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="152137">
                    <text>77th Year, No. 193 Thursday, April 4, 1985— Sanford, Florida

Evening

Herald

(USPS

481 280)

Price

25 Cents

Where's The Low G round? Mercer Gets $3,680 Answ er

An engineering technicians survey, which
took 297 man hours and cosi about 83.680. has
determined there are about 588 lots In Sanford
lower than allowed by city code
_ Results of the survey, requested by City
Commissioner John Mercer, present a thorny
enforcement problem for the Sanford City
Commission.
While some of the lots are exempt, about 200

must be filled In according to code. Hut the city
manager says the code would be expensive to
enforce and could easily be ruled Invalid.
The commission agreed to have City Attorney
William Colbert to examine the ordinance and
determine If It can be rewritten to make It more
enforceable or "reasonable
Low lots are defined as those below the level of
adjoining streets. Mercer said Lots exempt are

those with buildings on them, designated as
drainage retention basins and other lots used as
part of an existing drainage system that. If filled,
would Interrupt the run-ofT of storm water.
According to the code. If the commission
believes such a lot constitutes a threat to
public health or has any “ other good reason"
It ran order the owner to fill it m within 30 days
If the owner doesn't comply, the city may fill it

In and charge the owner for the dirt and labor It
the owner doesn't pay the city, a lien can Inplaced against his or her property and the cltv
could srl/r It.
Mercer said after reading the ordinance he
noticed such lots in the cltv and decided
something should be done about them lie then
asked for the survey.
See LO W LO TS , page 8 A

6 Cents For State; 4 Cents For County

G as Tax Hike Sought
Work

By Donna Estes
Herald Staff Writer
la-gislatlon calling for up to a
rents per gallon Increase in
gasoline taxes to provide funds
for state and county road Im­
provements has been filed by
Stair Rep ArtGrlndle.
Grlndle* bill culls for a 6
rents-per-gallon tux hike to be
used for stale roads and provides
for counties to levy up to
4-ccntsper-gallon for county
mads.
County Commissioners Hill
Klrrhhoir and Fred Streetman
“ Id they support the concept.
It is estimated that an addi­
tional 4 cents per gallon gas lax
lor Seminole County would raise
about $3.6 million annually and
"would go a long wuy In helping
Seminole solve Its road pro­
blems." Klrchhoff said
Sen. George Stuart. D-Orlando.
has agreed to sponsor the Grindie bill in Ihe state Senate.
Grlndle forrsees a review of

"...Constituents feel
strongly a gas tax increaso
Is the way to fund the
noeded (road) improvements.'
-State Rop. A rt Grlndle

the pro|H&gt;srd legislation by at
least three committees utul three
subcommittees ol the House
before It gets to a vole on the
lloor there.
The Altamonte Springs Re­
publican legislator says h r
doesn't exjx-ci any Dak from his
constituents because of the bill,
lie says constituents have been
telling him governmental leaders
"have mu nirasurril up" to
solving road problems und "the

Costly Courtroom Faux Pas

W a tch W h a t Y o u S a y
Deane Jordan
Herald Staff Writer
A witness in an uggruvuted
assault trial *(x-ni u long lunch
hour In a holding cell at the
Seminole County court house
after a judge declared him In
contempt of court following u
mistrial
On the witness slanii, Ihe
Sanford man blurted out de­
scription ol an alleged Incident
unrelated to the assault case,
lie hud been warned sevrrul
times prior to the trial not to
mention Ihe ullrgrd Incident.
Afterward. William Kenneth
Kelly spent two hours In Ihe
courthouse holding cell only to
lace a sllll-pceved Circuit
Judge Robert B. McGregor
who fined tire man $350
Aeeurdlng to court records.
Kelly was u slate's witness In
the case against R onald
S I m k I n •. 2 7 . o f 2 7 4 6
R ld g rw o d A v r ., S a nford.
S I m k I n s Is a c c u s e d oI
threatening a man with u gun
and rbasing him through a
parking lot.
Assistant state attorney
Tom Hastings said Kelly had
Ix-cn told several limes not to
mention while testifying that
S im p k in s hud rep o rte d ly
slashed the tires on Kelly's
car.
About two hours after Ihe
Jury trial began. Kelly was
called to testify. When Assis­
tant Public Defender Paul Aril
asked Kelly If the Incidents lie

witnessed followed un argu­
ment uhout a (larking space at
an apartment complex, he
said It had. U r then blurtrd
out that Simpkins had slashed
tin- tires on his car.
Arlt Immediately asked for u
mistrial slnre Ihe testimony
was not relevant to the ag­
g r a v a t e d a s s a u lt t r i a l .
McGregor granted the expen­
sive and tlmr-consumlng re­
quest — since a new Jury must
lx- selected und paid — and
then asked Kelly If he hud
Ix-rn (old not to mention the
alleged llrr-stashlng
When Kelly confirmed lu­
ll ud, the Jud ge o r d e r rd
sheriffs deputies to take Kelly
Into custody on the contempt
charge.
About two hours later. Kelly
was standing ulone In the
courtroom before McGregor
T w o sheriff deputies sal
behind him.
Kelly apologized several
limes and said he was nervous
and had not Intended to say
what he did.
McGregor told Kelly that his
statement was very costly to
Ihe Judicial system In that
about four hours had gone
Into Ihe Jury selection and the
(rial.
A c c o rd in g to Hastings,
another trial date will be
picked along with another Jury
— probably within two weeks
— and Kelly will again be
called as a slate witness

constituents Irel strongly a gas
tax Increase Is the way to fund
Ihe needed Improvements "
Grlndle said his constituents
see a sales lax as the next best
method of funding road Im­
provements after gasoline taxes.
"I don't object to a sales tax.
but I feel we need sales lux
revenues for other things." he
said.
The Greater Sanford Chamber
of Commerce fuvors u user-fee

type solution. Grlndle said, udding he will be talking to the
Greater Orlando Chamber of
Commerce later this week and-to
the Greater Seminole County
Cham ber next week seeking
support for his bill.
Klrchhoff said, "If we are going
to gel a transportation network
and we don't huve the money to
do It in Seminole, our only
recourse Is some kind of a user
lax."
While Grlndle says Impact fees
levied on land developers should
Im- used for such things as water
and sewer Improvements and
not on mads. Klrchhoff says In
some cases, like Red Bug Lake
Road where new developments
are Im pacting the two-lane
roadway, the fees should be used
for roads.
W ith the e x tra 4 c e n ts
Klrchhoff said a lot could be
See OA8 TAX. page 8A

Holy Week Dram a

Seminole County government
and school txrard offices will he
closed F rid a y to give the
employees u "spring holiday."
Seminole County Schools have
lx-en closed this week for u
spring break
Altamonte Springs City Hall
will lx- closed Friday und there

David T h o m a s , In the role of Jesus Christ, stum bles under
he burden of the cross as he Is goaded by R om a n soldiers
(D a ve F a r r , lett, a n d .Jo h n L e R o y ) In re enactm ent of the
Easter Story w ith " L iv in g P ictu re s " M onday night at Ihe
Central Baptist Church, Sanford. M any area Christian
churches w ill be holding spoclal M aundy Th u rs d a y services
tonight and Good Friday services tom orrow.

will be no refuse collection that
day. The next pickup will be on
the regularly scheduled time.
Tuesday.
Other city, slate and federal
offices, banks, and (&gt;ost offices
within the county will remain
open.

Lake Mary To Consider 6 Proposed Ordinances
Six proposed ordinances that
Include the regulation of udult
entertainment, (tie awarding of
an exclusive franchise for,
garbage collection, und setting
requirements fur landscaping
new developments arc sched­
uled to come before the Lake
Mary City Commission tonight
The meeting Is slated for 7:30
p in. at the Lake Mary City Hall.
258 N. Country Club Road
A proposed adult entertain­
ment ordinance, tabled ut the
last commission meeting on

March 21. should come up for
discussion.
Commissioner H arry Te rry
asked that the proposed ordi­
nance be tabled so It could be
changed to allow the city to
charge a higher fee for In-*
vestlgullng persons who want to
obtain licenses for an adult
entertalment facilities In Lake
Mary.
Even though Lake Mary does
not have any adult entertain­
ment facilities, the proposal
would ullow the city to place

s t r ic t c o n t r o l s on a d u lt
Ixxikstores. movie (healers und
dancing establishments.
The proposed garlxigr collec­
tion ordinance would do away
with Ihe city’s "free enterprise"
attitude that has city residents
utilizing four waste collection
companies.
Representatives from at least
two of the companies said they
plan to attend the meeting.
The proposed landscaping or­
dinance would make adding
trees, shrubs und ground cover

Pictures Of Missing Children
Soon To Be In Many Gas Bills
W ASHINGTON (U l’ll - Tucked Inside
your future utility bill may be pictures of
two missing children.
It's part of a new canmalgn. assisted
by first lady Nancy Reagan and Amer­
ica's gas companies, to find the 1.5
million youngsters reported missing In
the United States each year.
The National Center for Missing and
Exploited Children says each month,
beginning In May. pictures of two
mtsslng youngsters will be placed Into

Ihe bills mulled out by participating
utility firms, now numbering 60 na
ttonwldc.
To date, two companies In Florida —
one In Winter Haven and Ihe other In
Tampa — have agreed to participate In
the program. No gas utilities In m
Central Florida are yet In Ihe program,
according to Wendy James, spokesman
for the American Gas Association which
represents about 300 gus companies
See MISSING, page 8A

Drinking A g e M a y Be O n The Way Up
TALLA H AS SEE |UI‘I) - After six years of
trying and with some help from the federal
government — Rep. Fran Carlton Wednesday
persuaded a House committee that Florida should
ruts.- its legal drinking age to 2 1.
By a unanimous vote, the House committee on
regulated Industries agreed to an amended
version of the Orlando Democrat's bill (HO 54) lo
ban drinking by persons younger than uge 21 by
Sept- 30. 1986.
Hut Cartlon promised a House floor light to
restore provisions in her original bill that would
•often the blow to 18- to 20-year olds by Imposing
the higher age gradually over two years, and that
would exempt members of the armed forces from
the higher drinking age.
Carlton said she expects to win that fight

Mm «W PS»*o *» Tcm n ir Vmctnt

Som e O ffice s To Be C lo se d Friday

because two-thirds of the House members have
signed on as co-sponsors of her measure.
The adopted version would raise the age from
18lo 2 Ion Sept 30. 1986.
"It’s high time Florida raised the drinking age
and If this Is the best you can do I urge you to
puss It on." Carlton told committee members Just
before the vote.
Several comm litre members said they would
vole for the bill solely because of a federal law
that would mean the loaa to Florida of some $80
million In transportation money unless the stale
raises Its drlnk.ng age to 21 by Oct. 1. 1986
" I ’m only voting for this because of the
blackmail." said Rep. Ron Silver. D-North Miami
Beach.
Carlton first Introduced similar legislation In

1979 and the next year won an Increase from age
18 to age 19.
Representatives of the hotel and restaurant
industry and student leaders told Ihe committee a
higher drinking age would be an unreasonable
denial of drinking privileges to persons who are
considered adults In every other respect.
But the bill s supporters — Including repre­
sentatives of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, a
delegation of high school students and a Florida
Highway Palrol trooper — said the higher
drinking age will save young lives.
Sen. Dick Langley. R-Clermont and a former
public defender, said the measure will also
prevent alcohol-related crimes and family dis­
putes among members of the affected age group
Saa DIUNKINO, paga SA

mandatory un all new rammer
clal and iiiulll lamlly develop­
ments.
Other proposals scheduled to
lx- discussed are the establish­
ment of guidelines for the city's
(xillce and fire department In
dealing with fulse alarms from
fire and burglar alarm systems,
updating the city's traffic regula
(Ions, and Ihe addition of u $2
fee to all criminal proceedings to
lx- used for law enforcement
education and 1ruining
—Roger Simmons

TODAY
Action Reports..3A
B rid g e ........... ..... 20
C a le n d a r.......
Classifieds... ...3 5B
C o m ics..........
C ro s s w o rd ... ..... 2B
Dear A u b y ... ..... IB
Deaths........... ..... 8A
E d ito ria l............. 4A

F lo r id a ......... ...... 2A
Horoscope... .......2B
H ospital....... .......2A
N a tio n .......... ...... 2A
People......... ...... IB
Sports ........... ...5 7A
Tele vision ... ...... 6B
W e ather....... .......2A
W o rld .................. 8A

Brown Derby's Last Supper
HOLLYW O OD (UPH - Booth No 5. where
Clark Gable proposed to Carol Lombard. Is
one of the artifacts lo be saved from Ihe
famed Brown Derby restaurant on Vine
Street, which has served Its last meal ufler
more than 56 years as a movlcland
landmark.
The restaurant, which opened on Valen­
tine's Day 1929. closed Wrdnesduy because
of lease problems.
"We are taking off every picture, every
chair, every booth, every lampshade and
storing them until we open up our new
Derby, und everything will be the same
again." a spokesman said.

Friday1
There Is a wealth of buried treasure in
Central F lo rid a and you can be one of
the lucky ones to unearth some of If.
Find out how In this week's L E I S U R E .

’m w w r T ' K r&amp; n t* :v w ' W z c s r f f i s x w w a T D - o w e w w

�IA — Ivs w ln f HaraM. I»tHor9, FI.

Thursday. April 4, IfM

NATION
IN BRIEF
Alois Anti-Apartheid Protests
To Honor M artin Luther King Jr.
United Piet* International
Thousands of protr'-**-ra nationwide will pay tribute to
Martin Luther King J r . and m-rfc the 17th annlveraary of
Ilia aaaaaalnatton today by launching n a t i v e proteata
agalnat South Africa's policy of apartheid.
In Waahlnglon. District of Columbia workers will mark
Ihe annlveraary with a clty-aanctloned rally and vigil at the
South African Embassy — site of demonstrations and acts
of civil disobedience since Thanksgiving.
More than 1,700 demonstrators have been arrested at the
embassy demonstrations. Including the Rev. Jesse
Jackson, Harry’s wife, Effl. Sen. Lowell Welcker. R-Conn.,
Rep. Ron Dellums. D-Callf., and Walter Fauntroy. the
district's non voting delegate toCongress.
Congress also Joined In rtcognlzlng apartheid protests
with two resolutions \yednesday. The Senate urged
Secretary of State George Shultz to study the mid-March
violence in South Africa and branded apartheid "Institu­
tionalized racism."
House Democrats gave their backing to legislation
Imposing a series of economic restrictions on the South
African government.

Fire Forces Road Closing;
Three Units Battle Blaze
DEBARY — Personnel from three southwest
Volusia County fire departments were called out
to battle a 10-acre brush fire that forced the
closing of a road Wednesday afternoon.
Deltona Fire Chief Mike Holland said his
department, along with those from DeBary and
Spring Lakes responded shortly after noon to the
fire that started near the Glen Abbey golf course
In DeBary.
Holland said the fire headed east of the golf
course and charred about 10 acres of land before
burning to the edge of Enterprise Road where It
was eventually stopped.
After ordering the road closed. Holland said
four tankers lined up along Enterprise and hosed
down Haines close to the roadway. He said the
action was Intended to prevent the fire from
crossing Enterprise Road
But as the trucks were refilling their tanks at a
nearby subdivision, the fire jumped the road
about 500 teel Irotn where the trucks had

prevented Its crossing Holland said several small
patches of fire that got across the road were
quickly extinguished.
Stopping the fire at Enterprise was critical since
across the road is more dry brush and Interstate 4
is less than a quarter of a mile away. Holland
said.
Although the fire's origin has not yet been
determined. Holland said the lack of rain was
responsible for making the area very dry and
providing fuel for the blaze.
By 4 p.m. Holland said the fire had been
controlled and extinguished.
But while Holland and his group was batlllng
the fire along Enterprise Road, another brush fire
started near Palamar and Fort Smith streets In
Deltona.
The Lake Helen. Osteen and Stone Island fire
departments were pul on stand-by before Deltoa
units extinguished the small fire
— Roger Simmons

1Innocent' Rapist M ay Go Free
MARKHAM, 111. |UR1) — Saying she has already made her
peace with God. the woman who claims her false testimony
sent an Innocent mun to prison for a rape that may nevrr
have happened Is beginning the legal proceedings that
could free him.
Cathlcen Crowell Webb Is to appear In Cook County
Circuit Court today to testify that she lied when she
accused Gary Dotson of rape In 1977. Dotson, 28. has
served six years In prison since being convicted of the rape.
In appearances on national television and at news
conferences In recent days. Webb has said she made the
story up because she feared she was pregnant with her
boyfriend's child.
Webb could face up to five years In prison for perjury If
her recanted testimony Is accepted and the state presses

charges.

Proposed Am trak Cuts Blasted
W ASH IN GTON (UP!) — A key House subcommittee
chairman says the administration Is relying on "Alice In
Wonderland” thinking If II believes the states cun replace
fcderul support for Am trak If those subsidies are
eliminated.
Rep. Hill Lehman, D-Mlaml, chairman of a House
Appropriations Committee panel on transportation, was
skeptical Wrdnesduy about the administration's proposal
to terminate 9684 million for Amtrak and have states [my
the way.
Utley said that In view of the growing federal deficit, the
government could no longer aflord to support Amtrak and
stales benefiting from the service mostly in the
Northeast — would have to take up the funding slack.
Riley estimated I hut each Northeaster! state would have
to come up with 918 5 million to maintain Amtrak service
and other ulfeclcd stales 98 9 million

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Porn, Violence Against Women
M ay Disappear From Cable TV
TA L L A H A S S E E |UP1) — Violence against women would
be Included in the definition of pornography banned from
cubic television under a newly Introduced bill In the Fluridu
House,
Rep. Fran Carlton, D-Orlando, said Wednesday she
n|KJiisorcd the bill to put Florida law in line with a 1984
lederal a d ullowlng states to regulate what Is shown on
cable. She sold raunchy sex films broadcast from New York
or Los Angeles would have to be deleted by local cable
companies. If they violated "contemporary community
slumlords'‘ of the region served by a cable com puny.
The so-culled "cable porn" bill has been Introduced for
several years, ever since "adult" premium services like the
L m Angeles-bused Playboy Channel have been available In
most malar inctroixilltun markets. In past legislative
sessions, however, the bills have dealt only with sex films,
rather than those depleting violence,
Carlton, who has a television talk show on an Orlando
stutlon. said she was not advocating censorship of the
airwaves. Her bill would not set u statewide standard, but
would permit a state attorney in one urea to prosecute a
ruble franchise owner for carrying nationally transmitted
lllms that transgress ugalnsl local community standards.

Saudis Train For Shuttle Flight
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - Two Saudi Arabian Jet
pilots, including a nephew of King Fahd. ore In training as
candidates to fly aboard Ihe shuttle Discovery this
summer, officials say.
With Frrnchmun Patrick Huudry already assigned to the
seven-member crew. Discovery's flight will mark the first
American spare mission Involving astronauts of three
nationalities. The other five rrrw members are NASA
ustronauts.
The shuttle's three-satellite payload Includes Ihe second
Arabsat communications satellite, owned by the 22-natlon
Arab Telecommunications Consortium.

STOCKS
riWM «u**tten# pravMM *r i w i t o l */
Ms Matte)is! Z m w W i s i at U tv r ttm Om V i
*r* reprew fsM es a w s w u r p r i n t u

•t

Inter XSater mart eft

(Aon** Mrpuffm it Me 4»t Prtoa* *&gt; iwt

Mete*ratett mprtup- trmkpnm
Atlantic Bens
Semen B ans... ............... ....
First Fteattty 14 L
FterteaPawar

A former Casselberry man
who pleaded no contest to an
attempted lewd and lascivious
assault on an 11-year-old girl
has been sentenced to 6
months In Jail and 5 years
probation.
Robert
Suss. 39. now
living in north Florida, was
sentenced Wednesday by
Seminole Circuit Judge S.
Joseph Davts Jr. Suss could
have received up to a year In
the county Jail.
Suss, a self-employed In­
vestment counselor, was ac*
cuaed of fondling the girt In
September In his home.
Th e girl told Investigators
she went to Suss' home, along
with some other glrla. to
discuss starting a Girl Scout
troop Suss and his wife had
organized Girl Seoul troops in
the past
While there, the girl asked
to use Suss' telephone so she
eould call her parents and tell
them where she was. accord­
ing to court records. After she
c a lle d her m other fro m
a n o th e r room . Su ss r e ­
portedly enlcrrd the room
and fondled her.
Susa was allowed to plead
lo the lesser charge of at­
tempted assault so the girl
would not have to testify,
As pari of the probationary
sentence. Suss Is to have no
contact with Girl Seoul activi­
ties.
Suss told Ihe Judge at thr
sentencing hearing that he
does not think hr committed
a crime. Davis, who m en­
tioned that Suss appeared to
have been drinking prior to
Ihe hearing, suggested that ft
that was the ease. Suss
should lake thr case to trial
Suss declined.
-Deane Jo rd a n

H t n Id PTwIo br O t t f u r , O t M i

Prosecutors have said privately they have some doubts
uboul her recantation,

ffltemamMp M r

M a n Sentenced
To Six Months
For Fondling

IU
Jf
IW

Aek
It*
ns
tv,

4 Ll*M
.... - ..........
U te
F 'll- PlY#(pf,B®(L-******-t-n ..... - .........MW
HH
F re e * m U v * § » ... ....
»W FW
tilt
NCA
M u y t e ik m i ,
l§ ill*
1 iiix4w»nwti|»ii ■,-***&gt;•***»■*-»«#*■10 ItW
NCB Carp
....... . ................
ttte ItW
Pt*M*Y
...... „ ........... ........... M S
Ilta
•mt.tppt.-i &gt;&lt;**»•■|4Vll u x
tawMaatl San* ........... ...... —
l/te
MX
3■r■«wwM«teMww»teMi»n i*** JO^9 a w

Erector Sot ... With Wings
I t 's c a lle d a H l g h C r a f t B u c c a n e e r ,
m anufactured by a Longwood firm , but
w ha t It is is an u ltra lig h t am phibious
a irc ra ft you put together yourself. T h e
one m an plane has been on display at

various locations in Casselberry this week.
Bernie B rlc k e r, left, and Connie Bailey are
shown installing the automatic parachute
deployment system .

Group: Halt W ekiva Development
Until Impact Has Been A sse sse d
By Donna Estes
Herald Staff W rite r
A environmental group has mutinied a |&gt;etlllon
drive to halt development In I lie Wekiva river
bust n.
The Seminole County CoinmiMiun Is scheduled
to discuss the petition with thr Friends of Ihe
Weklvu River, Inc, at 3;30 p.m. Monday. The
petition calls lor development in "environmen­
tally sensitive" areas ot Ihe Weklvu River Basin In
slop until the Impact of existing development
there has been assessed,
The League of Women Voters In Seminole
County has Joined with Ihe organization lo echo
the same request.
The Friends of (tie Wrklva. alter completing a
69-puge study on the basin, sent a request to Gov.
Huh Graham and the slate De|iurtment of
C o m m u n i t y A f f u lr s to d e s ig n a te th e
IBO-aquarr-mllr basin utung the river in the three
counties as eligible (or a resource planning and
management committee study. The group also
asked Ihe stale lo designate the b.Vsln as an area
of critical state concern.
Put Harden, president-elect of thr Friends of the
Weklvu. said the state agency has notified the
group thut their request has been plated on a list
of matters for future consideration.
Meanwhile, the League of Womrn Voters has
dour Its own study and determined that not
enough attention has been given by Seminole
County to "Planning Area One," generally
described us the MarkhuuvPuolu area, which Is
bounded by the Wrklva River and Ihe St. Johns
River.
"At Hie present time ihe (Seminole County)
comprehensive plan spells out less protection for
environmentally sensitive lands In Planning Area
One than II does for seven other planning areas
(In Ihe county)." the League report says.
The two organizations are calling on not only
Ihe Semlnolr County Commission, but also the
county commissions In Orange und Lake counties

to study the situation.
League spokeswomen say while the com­
prehensive plan emphasizes thr unsuitability of
Planning Area One for urban residential devel­
opment because It has 'neither the facilities nor
environmental characteristics required to support
them." urban development In the area tnerrused
from 6 percent of the area’s 21.640 acres In 1975
to 17 percent tn October 1984.
The League report says In 1975 there were 736
dwelling units In (he planning area, hut since
then 5.200 new dwellings have been commuted
for construction.
Tony VanDerworp, the county's principal
planner, says the county Is already working on a
revision of the land use plan. Th e work has
started with Planning Area One und with the
Geneva urcu where there Is concern about the
water supply.
VanDerworp said all the conditions of the two
planning ureas have been put tn Ihe computer. He
said the conditions Include all land use data,
soils, water quality, wetlands, surface water
IkkIIcs. where roads ure und whul the zoning Is In
each of (he areas.
With this Information computerized, he said,
overlays can be developed so soils conditions can
lx* compared with zoning and development. He
said by this methixl each of the conditions in thr
area can he compared ami analyzed.
"We are In the pnx'rss of doing Ibis analysis
right now," VanDerworp said.
"The League and the Friends are concerned we
are not protecting environmentally sensitive land.
They are looking at the long Irrm ." he said
adding, the county Is requiring 200-foot setbacks
from the river lor new construction us one
example of the controls being developed.
" W e are c o n c e n tra tin g rig h t now on
Markham Paula and Geneva, focusing our atten­
tion there and In the process working on updating
the land use plan for the entire county."
VunDerworp said.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Pacific
breezes cooled ufT California to­
day, ending u record heatwave
that puckrd beaches, sent Ice
cream sales soaring, and pushed
the mercury to the century mark
for the drat time this year In the
c o n tin e n ta l United S la te s .
Th u n d e rs to rm s m auled (he
Midwest, pounding New Berlin
and Central, III., with hall the
size of murblrs. Rain fell front
southeastern Iowa to southern
Indiana, and snow mixed with
rain glazed the Northeast. Idaho
and Montana
A REA FORECAST: Today
sunny and mild with the high In
the lower 80s. South wind 10 to
15 mph. Tonight lair and mild.
Wind light south. Friday, mostly
sunny, high In the mid 80a.
Wind south.
BOATING PORECABT: St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50

miles — Wind variable mostly
northwest or west less than 10
knots today then south around
10 knots tonight and Friday. Sea
3 feet or less. Mostly fair.
E X T E N D E D FORECAST:
Partly cloudy Saturday then a
cha n ce s h o w e rs or t h u n ­
derstorms north by Sunday
spreading to south by Monday
and ending north Monday. Mild
temperatures with lows averag­
ing upper 50s north to near 70
extreme south. Highs averaging
upper 70s extreme north and
80s elsewhere

ARRA READINGS (9 a.m.):
temperature: 83; overnight low:
46; W ednesday's high; 75;
barometric pressure; 30.16: rela­
tive h u m id ity - 70 percent;
winds: south-southwest st 6
mph; sunrise: 6:12 a.m., sunset
6:45 p.m
FRIDAY TIDES: Daytons
Beach: highs. 7:48 a.m., 8:10
p m.; lows, 1:19 a.m.. ) :37 p m .;
F o rt Caaavsral: highs. 7 40
a.m., 8:02 p.m.; lows. 1:10 a.m.,
1:28 p.m .; B a y p o r t: highs.
12:55 a.m,, l;0 l p m .; lows. 7:11
a m , 7:38 p m.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Cantral FlanS* R•*•**&lt;

WaSMtSay

ADMISSIONS
A/itan Michatt. laniard
N an cyl Kyi*. Dal Iona
RaSaOaH MeCtawd. Daltona

TaaannaS Stall laka Monro*
Maiani* V tM .ta rra n la
D IS C H A R 0I1
M *rf*r*l A Smith. Santa, d
CaMarMa K r»n . O ctant

Bant Grasary IMaMary

Hooper Waits
To Pick Deputy
S e m i n o l e C o u n t y Ac
m lnlstrator Ken Hooper h
postponed until Tuesday ai
pointing a deputy county
mlnlstrator In charge of
ministration.
Meanwhile, one of the lop
candidates for the position
Ann Nrlswciulcr, director ■
person n el se rv lrrs for L
Seminole County School Bo
— has withdrawn her appll
lion.
Hooper said he will seek ti
commission's approval of
choice ut its April 9 Hr said
delayed the appointment to gl
d u rth rr consideration to t
matter.
Candidates still In thr runni
ure:
• Eleanor Anderson. 44. t
c o u n ty 's m anagem ent at
budget director for the past fo
years and acting asslstai
county administrator for t
past six months. She has be
employed In the county for 1
years In a variety of jobs, She
m a jo r in g In busin ess a
ministration and business ma
agrmenl at Rollins College an
lacks 17 rredlt hours of having
her bachelor's degree.
• Richard C. George. DeLanrJ,
special project coordinator for
Ihe Volusia County manager!*
office. H r has a bachelor's drgrder
In political science from Stetson

University and Is enrolled In the
master's program there studying
political science.
• Paul J . Wiener. 41. asalaf
tanl director of budget and
management In Cleveland. Ohlo.j
He has a bachelor's degree In'
management and a master's In
urban studies from Cleveland
Stale University,
• Carroll P. Huffman, ad­
ministrator of Lancaster County,
S.C.. and has a bachelor's degree
In management und a master’s
In urban administration from
thr University of South Carolina.
• Thom as Bra n of Orlando,
management d.tector of Tabcor
Inc., a management consulting
service. Brant has a bachelor's
degree In political science from
Lor an College. Dubuque. Iowa,
and a master's In public ad­
ministration from ihe State U n i­
versity of Iowa
Salary range lor the post Is
943.596 to $60,881.
-D o n n a E s tts

E v e n in g Ilc ru k J
IU S P S M l )M &gt;
T h u r s d a y . A p r i l 4. 1WJ
V o l. 77. N o I t t
PwSluAad Daily an* t w * , , t i c * *
la ta rd a y By Th* Santa,* H araM ,
Ii k . M* N . F r tn d t A** , Santard.
Fla » l n .
WcaaB C U s s P a n ts * Paid at tauter*.

Fterxu u rn

Ham* O a liv a ry ; Waah. 11.1tj ManIX.
M i l l J MaatKs. 114.1}) 4 M onth,.
U /.F4) Y a a r, U I H By M ail; Waah
1134) M a n ia . U N ; I ManlX*.
I U . M ) 4 M antht. I l l 14; Y a a r,
(M S )

m tsu.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, PI.

CALENDAR
T H U R S D A Y . A P R IL 4
F A A Accident P revention
Program Aviation Safety Ed trea­
son Seminar. 7 30 p m., Skyport
Kestaurant Banquet R oom .
I r®nrort* Airport. Sponsored by
South Seminole Flying Club
Free to the public.
Sanlord Jaycees. 7:30 p m
J a y c e c b u ild in g . 5th a n d
French. Sanford.
j Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St..
; ®;30. closed discussion, and 8
p m., open, speaker.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m., closed.
First United Methodist Church.
Overcaters Anonymous, open.
•7:30 p m . Community United
Methodist Church. H ighw ay
•17-92. Casselberry.
F R ID A Y . AP R IL 5
Central Florida Kiwunts Club
7 30 n m .. Florida Federal
Saving*, and Loan. State Road
4,16 at 434, Altamonte Springs.
Sem inole Sunrise Klw anls
Club. 7 a.m.. Airport Restaurant,
Sanford.
O p t im is t C lu b of S o u th
Seminole. 7:30 a.m.. Holiday
Inn. Wymore Road, Altamonte
Springs,
Central Florida Blook Bank
F lo rid a H o s p lta l-A lta m o n te
Branch. 601 E. Altamonte Ave..
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Free Income tax help for re­
tirees. 9 a.m. to I p.m.. Sanford
Chamber of Commerce. 400 E.
First St., Sanford. Through April
15. Bring copies of last tax
return, forms for the current
year and other relrvanl materi­
als.
Gentle Exercise lor seniors.
1030 a.m.. Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry

Ta x help w ith AARP/IRS
trained volunteers, 12:30 p.m..
Casselberry Senior Center. 200
N , La k e T r i p l e t D r iv e .
Casselberry.
Parents W ith o u t Partners
T G IF party. 9 p.m .. Lake Monroe
Inn. Highway 17-92. Sanford.
Country music and dancing. Call
904-734-6637.
Weklva AA (no smoking). 8
p .m . W e k lva P re sb yte ria n
Church. SR 434. at Weklva
Springs Road. Closed.
Longwood A A . 8 p.m.. Rolling
Hills Moravian Church. SR 434.
Longwood. Ala non. same time
and place.
Tangle wood A A. 8 p.m.. St.
Richard's Episcopal Church.
Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same
time and place.
Sanford AA Step, 8 p.m., 1201
W . First S t ..
P la n t sale
sponsored by the Hemophilia
Assn, of Central Florida. Booths
B-15. 17 and 19. at Flea World
Highway 17-92 south of Sanford.
Indoor and outdoor plants.
S A T U R D A Y . A P R IL 6
East-West Klwanls Club. 8
a m.. Airport Restaurant. San­
ford.
Central Florida Zoo Easter Egg
Hunt with 3.500 colored eggs for
toddlers through 16 years. 10
a.in, lo noon Prlrrs. Bring your
own basket. Regular admission:
Adults. $3; children 312 . $1: 60
and older. $1.50;. under 3 free.
30th Annual Easter Egg Hunt
sponsored by W in te r Park
Jaycees for children 10 and
under. 10 a.m.. Central Park.
Downtown Winter Park.
Sanford A A . noon Iclosed
discussion) and 8 p.m., 1201 W.
First St. open discussion.

REALTY TRANSFERS
Ptillpot H o m tv I IK to Baf r»ard Nawman 4
Wl Lorralna. L I It*. WakivaCow. Ph j. »ioo
Vllusl Art* Prod to CMnato F Qaach 4 Wt
Boltf A . Lt 7, Blk I t , Townlltt ol North
Chutuota. tot (X)
To U o Bov Cv Ltd to D a . id J R’chordton
4 Wt Valor* 0 . Lt tl, Tukkabay Ph I.
SIOV.JOO
Jomot V SUomoro 4 Wt Colhor.no to Ella
P SUomoro, E M l M ol W TCI IV ot N W ’a ol
NE Wot Sac V JO 1J Not Sr u »IW
t *m*t L Dunn to Odotta M Hondtrton,
•Id 4 Linda Thomat, Lt I. Bit H, Country
Club Manor Un 1. tioo
Ronald Ackarbaum lo Chat Snapp Co Inc
81 I I I . Palm Spring* Madical Cantor Otl
Cond 1 100
J tllr ty Koran 4 Wl Barbara lo Chat
Snapp Co Inc Bl I. Un C. Palm Spring*
Modical C lr O il Cond &gt;IM
Chat Snapp C o , Inc lo Ronald J
Ackorbaum, Bl 1, Un C, Palm Spring* Mad
Clr OH Cond MS,000
Sama to Soma at Abort, Bl J. Un O .
MS.000
Chat Snapp Col lo Altrad S Jolton. M O
PA. Bl I. Un B Palm Spring* Mad C lr O tl
Cond ,*70.000
Chat Snapp Co . Inc lo Ruit Carrliota
Madical P lr , Bl I Un A Palm Spring* Mad
Ctr Otl Cond U l t r a
Jack T ra v lt. Jr 4 Wt Eltt to i&lt; &lt;ddy L
Smith 4 W l Pamaia M . LI M Weklra Club
E ltt Sac. J. 141.000
H tn r y C la y H orn 4 Wl Pam aia lo
lawranta P Altono 4 Wt Elit T . LI 111.
Wranwood Un ] 2nd Addn IM 000
Milton Marcado 4 Wl Lidia M lo Elliot W
Cooparman, LI I t Spring S Landing Un 1.
114)000
Warran A F Ithar A W l Mary to Hobart A
Dlckay 4 W l Nancy 0 . II IIS. Woodcratl Un
I. I l l 000
FRC. Inc lo Paul L Adamt. III. L I 41.
StocktorIdga Un Ona. I l l 000
Joa A Phillip* 4 W l Alica R lo Gaorga J
Clark Jr 4 W l Rabacca, LI M 4 E 't ol IS.
Blk E, Hobart L Sail* Addn. AS, *4f 000
Aibon Oav , Inc, to V meant T. Carailo, Un.
I l l , laka Lotui Club I, Cond .ISI.SOO
FRC Inc to Thomat N Alar 4 Wt Shlrlay
M LUS. Stockbridga Un I. I l l 000
Aibon Day . Inc to Warran Smyla 4 Wl
Joanna B . Un IIS Laka Lotut Club I, Cond .

tsa too
Haothrora lo Robtoil, Inc.. LI tl. Chat mu I
Hill. 1114. TCO
Sama at abora LI 14. Chattnut Hill Ltt IS A
14.114*. (00
lama* Wllhlta. 4 Sandra J . lo John E
Ovarton 4 Wt Barbara M Hick*. LI L Blk C.
Wintar Spring*. HOJ.SOO
William J Cook 4 Wl Lattla to E Hugh
Choppoll Jr . Iruttoo. N l » 14' ot E 140 FT ol
* t, ol Lt ». Blk A. John ton* Poultry Form*.
MS 000
Mary C Vocilh 4 Hb Stophon A to
William S B orU &amp; Wt Maryai K . LI II. Blk
B. South Plnacratl. *44. TCP
Sarvica Etoctrlcol Supply Inc to Oartd J
Carter Sr Lt* 10 4 II. Big Traa Crokklng Ph
Two. MS.000
Wm F Slandho. rapr E tl John Slandke to
Wl'Ham F. Star.oka 4 Wl Lydia 4 Arthur
Standka, LI I I 4 E l» to ol If. Wk A. Oakland
Shore*, t '00
Carer a I Hama* to Howard W Blackburn.
Jr 4 Wl Char lotto W . LI 40. Dear Run. Un
10. MO 000
Central Homo* to John N Whltlokar 4 W l
M a r, P LI 41. Dear Run. Un IO.I44.SOO
General Hornet to Contlance T Sptnot. LI
*J Dear Run. Un 10. M l 000
General Hone* to Atoi J Abrami 4 Wt
Jacqueline M 4 William G Craig. L I 4f.
Dear Run. U n 10. M0.S00
Manual R Guevarra 4 Wt Carol to Rotoecl
A Goidtorb 4 Wt Catharine 4 Sandro R
Goidlorb, Lt 410 Wren wood Un 1 rd addn.
ifi.n o
Weklra Prop to Jattory L Millbarg. On 10
Weklva Villa* an tha Groan II. Cond , V I . 100
C B Von Alttma 4 Wanda 4 Hwghot lbe to
Patrick J Hargon 4 PH M a r, F . R 1)4' 04 W
AS ol E 410 ol L I A. rapt T r IS. Sanlandu
Spring*. *40 000
Howard tk Howland III 4 Wt Barbara to
Horbart J. W arnon 4 Wt J*»w 4 Ricardo
Floral 4 Wt Denite. Lt 4. Concord Wood*
Village Sac Ona. 114.000
Tha R ,!end G rp to Gaarga ttochman 4 Wt
Dianna. L I 0. Oear Run. Un 1A. Mf .TCO
Alfred G DoLaltibooudtora 4 Wt Juanita to
Wilbert A Gordon. Lt I t BW i . Gungotow
City, MOO
. FRC Inc. to Vernon M Pobolit 4 Wt
Marcia V . L I 4 rapt Hunter* Oton. » &gt;04.100
. John T Bally 4 Wt Helen to Lorry A Wing.
N 111' at E MO r el Let U New Uptaia
M l 000
; fa r I P Pact 4 W l JMI to John M Erranto
4 Wt Jotona. Lt f. Tha Httftlandt Sac One.

tr; ooo

•

l

Kannath w
B re p h a y ta Ronald C
Farguton 4 W t Linda 0 . 1U 14 4 IS. btk I .
Watt AHamonto Height*. tFM
• Sutan Stovena to Sutan Storm* 4 A w
iana Ho Storant. U n 14JO Spring wood VIII
, C a n d .i m
• William H a ,m a n 4 Wt Carol,n to Gory O
Ha,man 4 W Sandra J . t 4S0 *4 ot ( t o pi
s w - at N w w at s e a » note, u n
; John I . L o lio to Midtond Canttr 4 O a r Inc LI U . Amended Plat Cardinal Oak*. Ph
11,434004
Cuban ■ . Motor to Jama* C Sapp 4 Wt

Robert A McCormack 4 Sutan to John T.
Brltkay 4 Wl Connie Raa. Un C 111 Bldg f.
Wyklve Villa*, o n 000
CacillO local 4 W l Digna lo Da,Id F
Curry. LI 0Pondlaton. 411.000
Tha Century 1] Plr to Robert C Maltha**.
Jr 4 Wl Sandra L . L I I. Blk G Carriage Hill
Un l.tt o OOO
Robert McWllllamt. to Audrey G Van
Noordt. L IU S . Haatherton Village. Un One.
410.(00
Winter Spgi Da, lo Benchmark Entr ,
Inc . L l t . luuawilla, U n 11.411,S00
Garry Hodgat 4 Judy to Virgil E Brynel 4
Wl Sara. LIM . Pelican Bay. I l l s 000
J Clark. Ind 4 tr to Salaway Store*. Inc
lend In Govt LIS. Sec I t I I 10, 41.014 400
Allan E Dobton 4 W l Battle to Lorry R
Green 4 Wt Julia E . It 14 4 V * ol It. Citrut
Haight*. 41000
Cherlet Towntend 4 W l Batty lo Michael L.
Thomat. LI 4, Sunny Slope*. MS.000
Bonaire D r , to C h lu M e i Lai. Un 414
Cerm eiby tha Laka, Un. 1.444.000
Bonaire O f , to M u rray I M otw rvey 4 Wt
Eugenio. Un 411. Carmel by me Lake Un 1.
tie. too
LeCette Carp Lk M a ry to Edward J
Bimgen 4 Wl Elacto E 4 Jo Ann P.
Chamberlain 4 Edward J Hlagan, Jr., L if t .
Greenwood Laka*. Un 4, *14.TCO

Thursday, April 4, I t l S - J A

Trio Nabbed In Casselberry Coke Deal
Tw o of three men nabbed on
drug charges early today by
Seminole County drug task force
agents have been released on
$10,000 bond each. The other
was being held In lieu of $10,000
bond.
Agenls reported making a deal
for the purchase of cocaine from
the three suspects at about I
a.m. at 1201 Lake Lucent Circle.
Casselberry. The undercover
agents had negotiated to buy
two ounces of cocaine from the
suspects for $1,600 an ounce, a
sheriffs report said.
Agents reported having met
with two of the suspects pre­
viously. once In Ormond Beach
«&gt;n March 14 when they bought
4 grams of cocaine for $250 and
again on Monday at Summit*"*
Restaurant. Dogtrack Road.
Longwood. when they bought
one gram of cocaine for $90
After one agent made today's
deal and was walking out of the
house to get more money from
his car other agents moved In
and arreslrd the three suspects,
the report said.
More than two ounces ol
cocaine was reportedly found In
the home along with drug par­
aphernalia and a 25-callbcr
automatic firearm, the report
said.
James Edward Phelps. 23. of
1201 Lake L u r r r n C irc le ,
Casselberry, has been charged
with trafficking In cocaine, con­
spiracy to traffic In cocaine and
sale of cocaine He was bring
held in lieu of bond today.
Jo se p h Ackerm an. 24. of
O r m o n d Beach, has been
charged with conspiracy to tral

Action Reports
★ Fires
★ C ourts
* Police Beat
fie In cocaine and possession ol
cocaine, Anthony John Consolazlo. 27. of Holly Hill, has
been charged with conspiracy to
traffic In cocaine.
Ackerm an and Consolazlo
have Ik 'cii released from Jail and
are scheduled to appear in court
April 22.
M O T H E R L Y D EC EP TIO N ?
A Winter Springs woman who
reportedly lied to Scrnlnolr
County s h rn ffs Investigators
searching for ail escapee from
lhr county Juvenile Detention
Center has been charged with
resisting an officer without vio­
lence.
The woman was questioned at
be r home at a bout 4 p.m .
Tuesday and asked If her son
who had reportedly been seen
Friday with the escapee. Dwayne
G. Mtllrr, 17. of East Haven.
Conn., lived with her.
The woman reportedly denied
that her son. Mike, lived al her
Winter Springs home, adding
llutt none of her three sons have
cars She said Mike lives In
Connecticut. Miller had reportcdly hern seen with the
woman’s son in a yellow car. a
sheriff's report said.
Investigators then talked with
her neighbors who (old I hem
Mike lives with his mother.
Deputies met the woman

again at her home at about 4:30
p .m . and arrested her. She
reportedly told them she didn't
know where Miller was and was
trying lo keep her son from
being Involved In the case, the
report said
Miller escaped from the clelenHon center at Five Points on
March 29. He was being held on
a local traffic charge and out­
standing Connecticut charges
including aggravated battery
with a vehicle on a poller officer.
Miller Is considered dangerous.
Charged Tuesday was Mary

MMTIARD C44U4LTT
C0 MFART

•o

KARNS
IN S U R A N C E
413 W. First St.

A G E N C Y

im c .

Ssnford

Fti. 322-5762

Oarald W. Maysr
Account RpprpitnlBtlvM

William H. "Bill" Wight C.P.C.U.
Pratldont

DUI A R R E S T S

The following person has been
arrested In Seminole County on
a charge of driving under the
Influence;
— Kenneth Drew. 29. of Forest
City, was arrested al I I 22 p.m.
Tuesday after he was found
passed out In tils truck at Live
Oaks Center. U.S, Highw ay
17-92. Casselberry,

FEDERAL
B E N E F IT S
for V e t e r a n s
and D e p e n d e n ts

• ELIGIBILITY
WWII, Horta. Vietnam

• MEDICAL
Strtic* and Non Sam cr Carmrclrd

w ./ liny.

• PENSION
Stryica and Non S ank a Cannactad

• SOCIAL SECURITY
CREDITS
• These and Many More Federal
Benefits Now Available

TO TAL INSURANCE
SERVICE
REMEMBER
YOUR INpEPENDENT AGENT
SERVES YOU FIRST

A nn McDermolt. 41. of 317
Arapaho Trail. She has been
released on $500 bond and Is
scheduled to appear In court
April 10

K rV In rd Ix x ik lct (o r v r l r r t l t n h r n r lll* r r r r n t l v p iililln h rtl liy Hit^ vit-f.tit* A iliTS IliIn lra llttn n o w ,t* .itl.tl »l«- tu I i o i m i i .i I i I v iliu li.iit*
r t l V r l r n t n n ul n o r n n i

rO H F U H T H E H IN F O R M A TIO N A T NO C O S T OR OBLU1A
TIO N F IL L O U T COUPO N B ELO W A N D M A IL TO :

OAKLAWN’S VETERANS' DIVISION

N4 4 44

P .0 . Box 9 2 8 , La k a M a ry , F I 3 2 7 4 6

Name
Address
City
Year Of Discharge
Type of Discharge.

Ph.
State

%

to
VISIT OUR BARGAIN WAREHOUSE
BEHIND OUR STORE...

2 0 %

Here's a fe w of th e b a rg a in s yo u 'll flndl
Some Item s a re o n e o f a kind, n ew , d e n te d , scrat­
c h e d , u s e d , e tc .

NOW *40
. NOW *75
Dining R oom Tables, R eg . $ 3 2 9 .
NOW *25
Dresser Mirror, V a lu e s To $149 .
NOW *55
Dining Chairs by Broyhlll, Reg. $129..
5 Pc. PH, Burned Orange, Reg. $1200. .NOW *299
20 To Sell, Used D in e tte Tables 32 x4 8 .*20 Ea.
Metal Fram ed Pictures, Values To $79 . . .*20 Ea.

Off ONALL
FURNITURE BY
by
P u la s k i

Over-stuffed Chairs, Values To $429 .

F u rn itu re C o rp .
Highlighting Ihl* collection It solid oak
and ash. and oak vpnppit. hand screen­
ed minors, polished brass hotdwatp. teal
l*od fltaM, beveled glass, bowed drawer
front*, genuine poicetaln knobs and adKisfabt# cheval minors
The knoglnottve design of the corved
glass china Is revived, os Is Ihe cNfforobe
Grandma's woshstand with cheval mlnot

Is reinstated along wtth Ihe mttodys
vanity.
The grealeil opeal ot this noilaMgtc
-Keepsakes" collection will be found in
Its ability tor you. the customer, to evoke
your Individual expression and bring you
many year* of Joy with this gteal "mixable" lor today's living

W ine T ab le s, Re a d y To A s s e m b le .............* 8 Ea.
- yS

D O O R B U S TE R S

Sub|ect To Prior Sale...Cash &amp; Carry...All Sales Final
5 Full Size Sets, M att. &amp; Foundations . . .Set *99

NOW *219
Wall Units, Nicked, Scratched, Etc. Reg. $429 .Ea. *89
Assortment of End Tables, v a u » s
)279Ea NOW *45
3 Twin Sets, Latex Rubber Reg. $499 .$el

to

3 Pc. Ice Cream Sets, Marble Table,
2 Chairs Reg. $299 ............................Ea.

•

M

ROUND TABU IOF,
BASE 6 CHAIRS

CURVID
GLASS CHINA

^

NOW *109

2 Only, Party Sets,
Table &amp; 4 Chairs n*g. $ 17 4 9 ................to.

NOW $599
4 D ra w e r C hest, O a k or W alnut Finish .Ea. *38
Room Dividers, 48x16x68, R e a d y lo A s s e m b le . .. .la . *143

ROUND
COCKTAIL
TABU

OVAL
IND
TABU

40 NO. DIXIE HIGHWAY

NOLL’S FURNITURE
OPCNMOIL-m M ; SAT. H

(HIGHWAY 17-W&gt; CASSELBERRY, FI.

SUM. 12:30-5

Carolyn Lt* 4 4 lata N I I 47 at 4 etc. blk 1
Fatryww. S U M

3 -L -

�* ('i «%•

f‘vyjr$*tp»*r ** ‘ ■*%

Evening Herald
I

(USPS 411 JW)
300 N. FR EN CH A V E . SANFORD. F L A 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9093
Thursday, April 4, 1985— 4A
Wayne D. Doyl*, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Mnnigtng Editor
Mol vIn Adkins, Advertising Director
Home Delivery Wrrk. SI 10. Month. 84 75 3 Months.
•14 25; 6 Months 127 00 Year 451 OO ISy Mall Wrck.
• I SO: Month. 56 &lt;X). 3 Months. $IH 00 6 Months *12 V)
Vrar. MX) 00___________________________________

Breeze
Of Freedom
D u rin g Ju s ! the lust few y e a rs , nine
countries In La tin Am erica and the Caribbean
have m oved from m ilitary regim es and
dictatorships to elected, civilian governm ents.
A m o n g the m a n y benefits from this wave of
democratization is a marked, if far from
complete, expansion of [tress freedoms in a
part of the w orld where a free press has been
more the exception than the rule.
Those denied freedom often cherish It more
keenly than those w ho have rarely kn ow n Its
absence. A cco rd in gly, some In the United
Stales m ay regard the grow th ol press
freedoms hi La tin Am erica as heartening but
not especially vital. T h e y could not be more
wrong.
Freedom of the [tress In Latin A m erica, as
elsewhere. Is a m o n g the very best barometers
of every other freedom. Would, for example,
Argentina's form er m ilitary governm ent have
been able to co m m it such atrocious excesses
— kidnapping, torture, and m u rd e r — In Ms
"d irty w a r" against Idt-w lng terrorism had
there been a free press there to report the
tr u th ? O b vio usly not
Nicaragua p ro vid e s a more Im m ediate
example. T h e best measure of w hat the ruling
Sandlnlslas Intend for Nicaragua Is p rovldrd
by their relentless censorship of L a /’rensa.
that co u n try's o n ly dally new spaper not
w holly controlled o r operated b y the govern­
m ent. W ho believes that a Sandlnlsta regime
u n w illin g to p e rm it the barest hint ol
criticism in La Prcnm i nonetheless Intends to
h o n o r Its p r o m is e s of d e m o c r a c y for
Nicaraguans?
T h e press as political barometer sim ilarly
holds up In assessing the Castro dictatorship
In C ub a . C ub a n s have the fewest political and
economic rights of any |ienple In the Western
Hem isphere. A n d so complete Is C ub a 's
totalitarianism that nothing even resem bling
an Independent or opposition press Is allowed
to exist C o m m u n is m and the Orw ellian
control of all inform ation com plem ent each
other perfectly.
Hut the good news, as we noted. Is that a
fresh breeze ol press freedom ts blowing
across Latin A m erica concurrently w ith the
wave of dem ocratization. To d a y, the citizens
of A rg e n tin a . B ra zil. U ru g u a y , i'e n i. Kl
Salvador, H onduras, Panama. Bolivia, and
Grenada enjoy a freer press along w ith more
dem ocratic governm ent. We say freer rather
Ilian free because serious restrictions against
the press rem ain In several ol these countries,
as well ns In other Latin nations where
citizens enjoy the limited benefits of partial
press freedoms.
T h e In trr-A m crle u n Press Association, a
private organization ol publishers and editors
from North A m erica and l.altn Am erica,
m onitors the status of press freedoms and
Issues an ann ua l report. Th is year's edition,
com piled at IA P A ' h m id-year m eeting recently
In Panama C ity , was the most favorable In
years. And w ith reason.
IA P A ' h upbeat report augurs m ore than Just
livelier newspapers, magazines, and broad­
casting In Latin Am erica. Ii portends, if press
freedoms endure, a freer, more prosperous life
for millions ol o rd in a ry people to w h o m a free
press In a nyth in g hut an expendable lu x u ry.

Please Write
Letter* to tlie editor lire welcome tor
publication. A ll letters m ini be signed and
include a m ailing address and, It poaalble, a
telephone n u m b e r. The Evening H erald
reaerve* the rig ht to edit letters to avoid
libel and to accommodate space.

BEN WATTENBERG

Facts Behind Infant-M ortality Crisis
It is interesting to check out the facts behind
what Is being peddled as a new crisis — Infant
mortality. The Washington Post headlined.
"W a r on Infant Mortality Seen Lagging." The
New York Times put It on page 1 above the fold
on a Sunday: "Decline Slowing for Death Rate of
U S Infants." Post columnist Haynes Johnson
wrote abouf It under the heading "The Weaker
A m e ric a ." A task force of the Southern
Governors* Association has Issued a report: so
has the Children's Defense Fund. The Times
followed up with an editorial entitled, "O n the
Death of Poor Babies ”
Now. Infant mortality Is a serious matter;
we're talking about real babies. If conditions
were getting worse. If conditions were not
getting better — that would indeed be an
Important story Hut. when you dig Into It. that's
not l hr situation.
Visualize a ski slope. From the top of the
mountain, the course drops steeply. Then,
following a sharp plunge, the downhill path
rontlnurs, but t tie angle of descent Is somewhat
less sharp ns the ski lodge comes Into sight.
Finally, the course flatleris out so you can take
your skis off
The (Irst two legs of that ski course — a steep

higher than those of other maustrial nations.
Actually, we are about In the middle of a tight
range of rates; lower than Austria and Italy,
about the same as England. Belgium and
Germany, and higher than Sweden and the
Netherlands.
The second school or thought maintains that
the slowdown In Ihe drop ol rates rellcris the
cutbacks In funding for women-and-chtldrrn
programs by ihe Reagan administration. Now, a
good rase ran be made that ihe Reaganauts
have been too quick In slicing some of ihrsc
expenditures. Such cuts may Indeed have some
effect on Infant mortality rates In future years
But arguing against ihls. at least for the
moment, is the generally imreported fact that
the slowdown started in the late 1970s. That, nl
course, was several years before Reagan came to
Washington
The numbers — as always — are being
massaged and distorted for political purposes. If
activists want to keep the programs Intact,
activists will maintain that babies arc dying
This flaitenlng-oul phenomenon Is already because of program cuts The media will reflect
apparent among many other advanced nations these charges.
But that's not really what's going on. At us
that have experienced sharp drops In Infant
mortality. Incidentally, contrary to some of the root, what It's all about, ts good news al a
scaremongers. U S. rates arc not generally somewhat slower rale.

drop changing to a steady drop — accurately
describe the recent pattern of Infant mortality
rates In America, From the mid-1960s to the
late 1970s. the rate dropped from 24 deaths per
1.000 births to 14 That Is a decrease of 42
percent In a dozen years It represents one of the
great untold American success stories, and one.
by the way. that affected both whites and
blacks.
Since 1977. the rale has continued down —
from 14 to I I deaths per 1.000 lit 1983. Thai's a
somewhat slower rate of descent to bo sure, but
It s still clear and potent progress
Why the slowdown In ihe rale of decline?
There are two schools of thought about It. One
As the infant mortality rate goes down toward
zero, further progress gets harder and harder to
achieve. After all. wc'li never get to zero That's
not the way the world works; some Infants will
ulways die. and we're already down to about one
Infant death per IOO births. There's only so
murh that medicine can do.

R O B ER T W A LTER S

SCIENCE WORLD

Behind
The Ohio
Scare

Ritual
Sexism In
Melanesia
Dy Lidia WAascowlct
UPI Science Writer
S TA N FO R D . Calif. (U l’ll - Some
of the world's most ardent sexists
live on a tropical Island In Ihe Soulll
Far llle, practicing secret homosex­
ual rin-s and bleeding themselves lo
rllmlhntc the "female essence," nil
nnlhrnpolnglsl says
Gilbert Herdi, assistant professor
ol anthropology al Stanford Univer­
sity. has s|H-nt I I years studying
the Samblnns. one of 7(X) cultures of
New Guinea, wtio until two decades
ago had nevri seen outsiders and
relied on slone weapons.
"Young males are expected to
have homosexual relations for years
al a lime as part of a secret cult — a
practice hidden from women and
children." said llcnli. who over the
years was Iri In on ihe most
Intluialr aspcclsuf tribal life.
"O ne r ihr boys urr adults, they
m a r r y a n d u s u a lly a s s u m e
heterosexual relations lor the re­
mainder of their lives."
Fm m urh of their lives, Ihe men
view women wllti fear and hostility,
I let di said In an Intrrvlrw, noting
the Sumblnu Initiation riles are
shared tty many ol Ihe other New*
Guinea Irlhrs. "These cultures
produce some ol ihe most ardent
sexists In the world "
Hoys must slum &gt;1(01 tear women,
men undergo rlluallzed bleeding in
gel rltl of thr "female essence"
acquired during birth, und. alter
marriage, husbands, idler every sex
•lei w iih th e ir w lv rs , p u rify
themselves by rubbing cold mud all
over llictr laxly and cleaning their
nails wllti a bone loot
"We found almost every type of
bleeding ritually practiced by men."
said lim it, who has made eight
trips |o Ihe Island. Ihe longest
lasting two years.
I'radttloually. the homosexual
tllual was seen as a way to keep the
s o c ie ty m ilit a r ily s t r u n g by
iranslormlng boys into aggressive,
brave men ready lo bailie other
tribes. Ilcrdi said.
Since Incest is taboo In the small
villages of ibis tribe ol 2.400. many
ol the women are brought over Irom
neighboring cotmiiunUIrs, often
from a hostile village
"There often Is Intense sexual
antagonism as a result." Ilcrdi said
"The men already fear women's
Ik h IIc s , and now they fear they may
Ik- In league with the enemy."

W IL L IA M

Reagan Phenomenon
NEW YORK (NEAI - President
Reagan 's triumph In the MX battle
has reduced ills adversaries lo
talking to themselves. How in thr
world, they wonder, docs he do It?
Here was a missile the congres­
sional doves figured they had scot­
ched for good when some of Mr
Reagan's closest friends In Ihe
Senate, such as Paul Luxull of
Nevada, balked at basing It In llie
Western drsert 'way back in 1982
Hut M r. Reagan thereupon ap­
p o in t e d th e r e s p e c te d u n d
bipartisan Seowerolt Commission to
study the problem and It came up
wllti a proposal to base Ihe weapons
in present ICBM silos, sutlubly
"hardened." Grumpily. Congress
agreed.
Hut proceeding wlilt manufacture
and deploym ent required still
further congressional assent, anil
Hep .Joseph Addabbn. the New
York Democrat who chairs Hie
Bouse Appropriations Committee's
D e fe n se S u b c o m m itte e , hud
marshaled, by mid summer 1983.
enough opposition to block the MX
when It was scheduled to come up
for a vote In the committee lute thut
September. But thru on Sept. I.
came the shooting down of Korran
Airlines fllghl 007. Adroitly lapping
Into the outrage of Ihe American
people ut tills vicious act, Mr
Reagan whlp|ted the necessary ap­
propriation for Ihe MX through
Addubbo's com m itter and the
Congress

Last year Congress — preparing
to fucc thr voters — again refused lo
scuttle thr MX: hut 1985 seemed
likely to be a different story. Liberal
parliamentarians arranged that the
MX appropriation coming tip early
Ihls yrur would have lo run a
gauntlet of no less Ilian four votes:
two In the Senate and two more In
the Bouse. It seemed almost Ineonrclvahlr that the president could
prevail 011 all futir
Hut now. miraculously, the at­
mosphere changed As one MX toe
complained. Congress had hern
persuaded to vote tor the missile
last year cm the ground that the
Russians were refusing lo negotiate.
Now it was bring urged to authorize
production of 21 more MXs because
they were negotiating' By r.artuw
margins In the Senate, and even
narrower ones In the House. Mr.
Reagan prevailed on all four voles.
Writing In the March 4 New
Yorker, lib e ra l c o m m e n ta to r
Elizabeth Brew opened her article
with a sentence that deserves
thoughtful study: "The large ques­
tion that Is preoccupying many
people fiere Is how lasting Ihe
Reagan phenomenon will he "
"How lasting (this phenomenon)
will be*' — nothing lasts forever,
certainly not a mere phenomenon,
however remarkable So we Perma­
nent People ran comfort ourselves.
In these trying days, by detuning
how lasting ihls particular phenom­
enon will be.

W ASH IN GTO N (NEAI - The dc
pusltor panic about the llnaiu tut
integrity of Ohio's slate-insured
savings and loan associations lias
subsided, but the political re­
percussions arc |ust Ix-giiiuitig lo lxfelt
The tw'o men In the middle of a
|xilciillalty explosive political stliia
iion arc both Deittix-rais — Ohio
Gov R ichard Celeste, who is
expected to seek re-election next
year, and Cincinnati businessman
Marvin I. Warner, a long-time
m.qor tlnanclal backer ol Democrat
le oilier seekers
Warner owns virtually all ol the
outstanding stork ol the Home State
Savings Hank of Cincinnati, whomsudden closure last month caused a
tin.ir 1ci.1t crisis among tin- oilier 70
Ohio thrift Institutions Insured by a
state agency.
Warner alvi was a major investor
in ESM Government Securities, tin
a Fori Lauderdale. Fla . firm whose
arcane specialty was the trailing ol
short-term, high risk financial inHirumenlH known as repurchase
agrremrnls.
Home Slate invested almost hall
of its assets through ESM On March
1 ESM w.rs closed under a court
order sought try the Securities amt
Exchange Commission, which lias
accused the lirm ol fraudulent
practices.
Five days later. Itomr Stale was
timed to close amid rc|H&gt;rts that it
had lost as mtu it -is $150 milium on
its Investment wit It ESM
Warner was a ma|or tlnanclal
backer of Celeste's 1982 gubernato­
rial eampalgn, personally con
tiihtillng $36 (MX), co signing n loan
lor $75,000 and hosting a parly that
raised about S200.(XXJ
In addition, he has marie sub
sianltal donations to the presi­
dential campaigns nl Democrats
Glenn. Jim m y Carter. Sen. Alan
Cranston of California. Sen Gary
Hart of Colorado and others
Feurlul that Ihe state's ol tidal
investigation of the financial debucle m ight be perceived as a
whitewash. Ohio DenuxTuts gladly
accepted the selection of a Re­
publican la w idely respected
Cincinnati lawyer) to lead the prntxCeleste handled himself deftly
during the llrst month ol the crisis,
but Ihe official Investigation — us
well as possible unofficial illsclosures — could adversely aflccl
Ills promising political career.

JACK ANDERSON

BERRYS WORLD

Marcos, IRS Try To Close Newspaper
By Jack Anderson
and Joseph Spear
W ASH IN G TO N - The Internal
Revenue Service Is threatening lo
shut down a crusading little news­
paper. Ihe Philippine News, which
Philippine President Ferdinand
Marcos has tried hut failed to
destroy.
T ilt s S u n F ra n c is c o -b u s e d .
English language paper targeted at
ihr Filipino community In thr
United Slates, has already been
driven to the brink of rutn by
Marcos. As we reported In 1975.
Marcos pressured ma|or travel
agencies and atrllnes to slop
advertising In the newspaper.
The advertising boycott had a
devastating elfect on the paper's
income. It recently filed for protec­
tion under thr bankruptcy act.
-

v * -v _

"Amsimg. how tom e folks an* able to handle
the annual spring thaw around here'"

One of the paper's creditors la the
IRS. which Is owed $213,500 In
back taxes, penalties and Interest.
T h r government has slapped a lien
on the newspaper's assets, which
mukrs It utmost Impossible for
publisher Alrx Esclamado to obtain

new luiuncitig
R e c e n tly the IRS n o t if ie d
E m lamudo that It would seize one of
the paper's most valuable assets —
Its mailing llsi — and will then
move on to the remaining physlcul
property. Th is would close the
paper, silence this voice of opposi­
tion. und delight Marcos
Hoping to prevent this. Sen Alan
Cranston. D -C allf. intervened with
Treasury Secretary James Baker. In
a phone cull and a followup letter.
Cranston pleaded for leniency.
As C r a n s t o n p o in te d o u t ,
Esclamado had tried to arrange a
compromise with the IRS — some­
thing that delinquent taxpayers do
all the time. The publisher offered
$16,000 cash to settle the actual tux
bill — or payment of $63,500 In
taxes owed over a two-year period.
EtcUtnado told our ussociute
L u c e t t e L u g n u d o t h a t h is
newpaper's physical assets totaled
just $10,600 - $7,800 for the
mailing list and $2,800 foi a few
desks chairs and other office
equipment It would lie foolish, he

argued, to seize this instead of
accepting his offer nl $16,000 m
cash or the whole sum over a
two-year period.
T h r IRS rejected Esclamado's
compromise offer, anil last week the
publisher Hied for bankruptcy —
which iem|w&gt;rarily prevents any IRS
seizure of his assets
Cranston may have committed a
tactical political rn o r In hts appeal
to Baker for leniency.
He mentioned the newspaper's
history of opposition to Marcos, and
the P hilip pin e president's de­
termined efforts to shut the paper
down. Closing the Philippine News,
Cranston wrote, would be "some­
thing the Marcos government could
not do alone but could accomplish
with the aid of Ihe government of
the United Stales."
Continued publlrailon of the
paper. Cranston wrote. Is "very
much In the best interest of our
nation."
But Baker may well be deaf to
such a plea. The White House Is
pushing for $300 million In military

and rconnmic aid to Marcos In this
year of severe budget restraints ft
seems unlikely that Uakcr will
accede to a request for leniency
toward a vocal opponent of a
g o v e rn m e n t the Reagan ad*
ministration is supporting.
Yri Esclamado is convinced that
he rnuld keep his pa pci going if the
IRS would give him a chance. He
has a circulation of about 60.000
nationwide, und wllh support from
local advertisers unintlmldatcd by
Marcos, he experts revenue of about
#1 million this year.
One asset that has no precise
monetary value Is a note Esclamado
received from Marcos's most pro­
minent opposition leader two years
ago. Just days before Benlgno
Aquino flew back to Manila and was
assassinated on ihe steps of his
plane at the airport, he w rote:
"Your newspaper has not only
been the beacon but the vital link
between those actively engaged In
the struggle and the moss of our
people. (It Is) the oasis in ihe arid
desert of government-controlled
m edia"

�SPO R T S
Marlette Will Not Return As Tribe Cage Coach
B y Sam Cook
H erald Sports Editor
Chris Marlette. the head boy*
basketball coach at Seminole
High School for the past three
years, will not return in that
rapacity Seminole Principal
Wayne Epps announced Wed­
nesday.
Epps said he has offered
Marlette a chance to return as
physlral education teacher
Marlette said he Is undecided as
In what he will do "I'll be
leaching somewhere," he said
Thursday morning, "Hut it came
as a total shock to me."
Marlette. 37, won 57 games
and lost 33 In Ills three years. Me

won 22 games In his first year
and 20 the next. The Seminotes
also won the district champion­
ship two years ago. Last year,
the Tribe was 15-12
"I felt that It was time for a
change." Epps said about the
move. "The program nerds a
coach who will continue to
maintain strong discipline but at
the same time provide the kids
with the motivation and en­
thusiasm they need in order to
become champion*
Epps said he had a successor
In mind and would name him
within a week
The Seminole Job Is considered
one of (he most attractive in the

Basketball
state This year's team lost just
two starters — Kenny Gordon
and James House — and at thr
end of the year Marlette was
starting two super freshmen —
6-fi Craig Walker and 5-7 Andre
Whitney — along with till Rod
Henderson, who Is considered
one of the top sophomores In
Central Florida.
M a rle tte . a g ra d u a te ol
Southern Mississippi, begun his
coaching career ai I he Sanford
Naval Academy After three

years with the Midshipmen.
Marlette moved to Crooms High
School While at the former
Sanford ninth grade center.
Marlette posted a 98-15 record
during his five year stay. His
teams won the Seminole County
Fre shm a n Su nrise K lw a n ls
Tournament from 1978 on
When ex-Scmlnole coach Hill
Pavne took thr head Job at
Seminole Community College
Hirer years ago. Epps selected
Marlette over a strong held to
replace him
"I think our program has
gotten to the point where It Is
recognized as one of the best in
Central Florida and possibly tIn­

state." Mid Marlette
I really
enjoyed working with the ktd&gt; at
Seminole High Other than that.
I don't have much to say ,"
Epps sale) It was a lough
decision lor him but with the
right leadership h r lelt the
Semlnolcs could return to the
state tournament III the next lew
years.
Marlette is the third varsity
coach ai Seminole to resign or
not be rrh lrrd Je rry |’osr\
resigned tiefore the last loot bail
game and Hon Menhir, head
girls basketball coach resigned
several weeks aflrr thr season
concluded

Harris,
Edwards
Propel
Kiwanis

Rejuvenated
Underwood
Boosts Rams

Anthony Harris was 3 for 5
with a Ihrec-run homer and
Sammy Edwards went the dis­
tance on the mound as defend­
ing Sanford Ju n io r League
champion Kiwanis' opened the
1985 season with a 15-7 victory
over Moose Wednesday night at
Chase Park.
Klwanls broke a 4-4 tie with
flvr runs In the lop of the fourth
and added five more In the fifth
In sew tip the win H arris'
thirc-run homer highlighted the
fourth frame for Klwanls while
Ik rnard Mitchell s double was
the big hit In the fifth Harris.
Edwards and Mitchell are all
returnees from last yrar's cham­
pionship team.
Edwards scaiicrcd live tills,
struck oul 15 and walked seven
in picking up the pitching vlcto
ry Jim m y Murphy took the loss
for Moose
behind Harris lor Klwanls.
Mitchell had two hits while
L e o n a rd R ic h a r d s o n a n d
Edwards had one each. Harry
Chlggerton. Jeff Derr. Mike
Merthle. Murphy and Anthony
Mcrthlc had one hit cacti for
Moose.
K N IG H TS DR O P R O TA R Y
In Wednesday nlghl's second
game. Knights of Colum bus
opened the season by oulstugglug Holary. IH I I , handing
Holary its serond straight loss.
Despite control problem s.
Dewlghl lirlnson wenl the dis­
tance on the mound for (he
Knights, allowing seven tills,
sinking oul nine and walking
Mi
lirlnson helped Ills own cause
by going 3 for 3 at thr plate with
lour runs scored, three stolen
bases and four Hills
Lea doff hitler Ray Williams
was 3 for 5 wlih a double und
three stolen bases for KOC while
Denny Clayton stole four bases
Like Brinson, notary's pitcher,
Earl Williams, lasted the entire
game despltr control problems.
Williams allowed 12 tills, struck
out 14 and walked 10. George
Gordon and Williams had two
hits each for Rotary.

Chris Mar Idle will not return
as Seminole's head boys
basketball coach

Herald Pfnioj by Tam m y vmeant

E v e ry successful baseball team has a potent offense and a
stellar defense. A tlan tic B an k's Keith M ye rs, left, m a y have
been a little under this fastball but he did ra p a p air of hits as
A tla n tic bom bed Seminole Petroleum , 12-1, W ednesday in
Little A m e ric a n League baseball. M y e r w as also the pitching
hero, allow ing just a first-inning single. A bove, H a rv e y
C lin g e r, a sm ooth-fielding first sacker for B utch's Chevron,
snagged a throw and looks for action elsewhere. C linger
made several nice plays as Butch's opened the season
M onday w ith a victo ry over A tla n tic Bank.

Polk's Homer Snaps Tie, Lifts Sun Bank
By C hris Flster
Herald Sporta W riter
Lorenzo Polk drilled a two-run homer to
tirrak a 7-7 tic Wednesday as Sun think
o|&gt;ened the 1985 Little American League
season with a 12-7 victory over Mcdco
Pharmacy In Sanford Recreation baseball
actional Fort Mellon Park
Mcdro had taken an early lead when
AIIx t i Anderson Itelted a two-run homer in
tile top of the first. Merlco look a 4-2 lead
Into the bottom of thr Imirtli when Sun
Hank rallied for five runs and a 7-4 lead.
Medcn bounced hack to tie II al 7-7 In (hr
top of I hr filth
With one runner on In ihr bottom ol the
fifth. Polk slrp|H-d up and smacked a shot

B a s e b a ll
over the center Held Irnrc to give Sun Hank
a 9-7 lead. Sun Hank added three more runs
In the frame loinukr thr final 12-7
AI Perkins wenl ihr distance on the
mound for Sun hank while lirllt Henderson
look the loss,
Perkins helped Ins own cause by going 3
lor 4 al lire plale und Polk added Iwo hits.
Anderson was 3 tor 3 to lead I he way for
Medea.
M YER S S H U T S DOWN FORD
Things started mil well lor Seminole Ford

Wednesday as Ray Williams led oil the
game wllh a single, ll was all down hill Iroin
there Ihough
Atlantic Hank pitcher Keith Mvrn* allowed
no hlls the rest of the game and struck out
nine as Allanilc Dank rolled to a 12 I rout ol
Seminole Ford In Little American League
action at Bay Avenue Field.
Atlantic Dunk managed |tisi three (ills In
the game off losing pitcher lurrry Lawrence
hut took advantage of o multitude ol walks
and errors Allanilc Hunk scored seven
limes In the second Inning and added five
more In the third sew up Ih r victory.
Myers wus ulso the leading hitter lor
Atlantic Hank as he went 2 lor 3. The only
other hit was Johncll Drr wlngton* single

Begining F rid a y , It "R a in e s E v e ry d a y " In the Evening
Herald. T im Ra.nes, left, begins his tilth season w ith the
M o n trea l Expos M on d ay In the season opener at
Cincinnati. Th e "R a ine s G a u g e ." a statistical breakdown
of Raines day by day and seasonal perform ance, will
appear each day. See the first In a series of articles about
the form er Seminole H igh School standout In F rid a y 's
H erald,

'Raines
Everyday'

M trtW PS»t« k , la n fflf Viiuant

Shell-Shocked Cornerbacks Seek Refuge Against 'Gades
ORLANDO |UPI) - Tw o young shellshockrd cornerbacks will board a bus
Thursday and head over to Orlando
Stadium, where the living Is easy.
Leonard Thompson and Mossy Cade,
both selected In the first round of the
1984 N FL drah. are starting for the
lISFL’s Memphis Showboats und after
last week's strafing by Tam pa Day
quarterback John Heaves, the Orlando
offense looks like a perfect tonic for an
Inexperienced secondary.
"Mossy Cade's gonna he one n« the
best talents in the country.” Memphis
Coach Pepper Rodgers said, "but he
came oul of the University of Texas
playing strictly man-lo-mun defense.
He's still learning how to play zone. Our
Inexperience on defense has shown up In
recent weeks."
The Renegades are the league's only

F o o t b a ll
wlnlcas team through six weeks and
moat of the problems have been on
offense, wticre quarterback Reggie Col­
lier has proven lo be a belter runner than
passer- Collier, who replaced Jerry
Golateyn as starter aflrr three games,
has rambled for 200 yards, averaging 7.6
yards per carry. When he throws the
ball, the results are conspicuously less
successful.
"Reggie has gone In and given them a
spark." Rodgers said, "lie certainly can
run with the football but he hasn't
proven he can do things through the air
like u Reaves, lie has thr sjiue kind of
lalenl Waller Lewis has."
Rodgers was comparing Collier, who

has completed Just 43 percent of his
passes wllh five Interceptions and no
touchdowns, to his own scrambling
quarterback. Lewis, though, lias thrown
for 1.156 yards and 13 Tl&gt;s. with Just
ihree Interceptions.
The Showboats have dropped three
slralght after starting thr season 3-0 and
Orlando couch Lee Carso Is telling his
players lo have Ihelr chin belts lightly
strapped lor the 8 p m. E S T kickoff.
"Th e Stiowboats are one of the best
all-around trams In the league In terms
of personnel,” said t orso, whose club
has lost the last three games by a total of
just 13 points after starting the inaugu­
ral season wllh three blowouts. "I
tliuughl we'd t»e belter than this. 1 really
did. but we're not so we Just have to tee
ll up. I never dreamed we'd be 0-6."
The bright spots for the Renegades In

Iasi week's 21-17 setback at Denver were
tin- running of Curtis Bledsoe (99 yards)
and a surprisingly grudging rushing
defense which limited the Gobi to Just 55
yards on the ground.
Memphis dropped a 28-20 decision lo
Tampa Day at home last week and the
Showboats have played three of the
league's elite in consecutive weeks
(Birmingham, Oakland and Tampa Day).
The Renegades should provide a wel­
come brruthcr but Rodgers won’t say so,
The Renegades have played decent
pass defense desplle a pathetic puss
rush. While registering Just three sucks
all year, the Orlando defense has picked
off eight passes and opponents are
completing Just 48 percent of I heir
attempts. Wide receivers Greg Moser and
Derrick Crawford are having big years
for Memphis, wllh 42 receptions snd
nine TD s between them.

l-Pfe-

-*£f*a■?.

Iiy Hob Laris
Special to the Herald
ORLANDO - lire Luke Marv
Hams Jumped oul in a 8 3 lead
Wednesday m orning against
Kissimmee Osceola High then
held oit lor a much-needed wm.
8 7 to avoid fllmiiiullon In Dir
( 'oloniat Classic
rite Hams now 17 5, faced
Winter Park Ibis morning at 9 11
•lit’V win. Die Hams must come
b.n k al 2 p in lo continue plav
m the loser s bracket ol the
tournament
Willie Lake M.ir\ Coach Allen
I onic is happy wllh Die win. tie
will have lo dig deep lo lliul
h ca lihv arms to linish the
Classic lie plans to use sopho­
more Kelly By sell, who hasn't
pitched llils year against Winter
Park and may seek help front Ihe
Junior varsity. Ihe Kowboys.
13 I I , were knocked out u| Du12-lram Held
"Right now. we re taking one
game al a time." lie said, "1
really don't know who we will
pilch In these games "
Tile Rams gol a chance lo'pluy
today, thanks lo an right-hit
attack led hy Scott Underwood,
wtio for the neeotid straight
game hail Direr hlls.
Underwood, who languished
in Du- lower ,20&lt;)s most of the
season, has raised Ills average lo
-301 with Die recent surge.
Eric "Th e Whip" Hagen went
all Die wuy. yielding eight fills
while recording five strikeouts,
lor tils fourth win in live de­
cisions tic wasn't In fils no-till
form ol two inning ago. bui tie
got the Job done
"I Jiisi wrni wllh m y slider."
lie said "I couldn’t gel my other
pitches over. And I lelt llrerl the
whole game. Doi I'm happy; I
was |ust worried about Die win.”
The Rams slaked Hagen loan
I o In the Itrsi inning when
leudoll hitler Ryan Lisle walked,
stole second and scored on a
blimp double by Underwood oil
losing pm tier Kent Donahue.
Osceola look the lead In Dir
third with three runs on Direr
hlls and two walks An error by
rigid llrldrr Danny Bridges and
a wild pilch also contributed lo
Die uprising
Lake Mary. Ihougli. came rigid
hack with a live run. Iwo oul
rally In the bottom hall ol the
Inning Underwood started ll
with a single to center held He
was billowed wdb an Identical
till by Rod " t ’.J ," Metz. Donnie
Grayson Dirn followed with a
hard grounder through Dir legs
ol third baseman Rob Mi ('ready,
scoring Underwood. A wulk
loaded Du- bases and another
scored Metz to lie the game The
next haltrr. Kevin Hill, then
delivered a big double lo led
center, clearing Die buses lor a
6 3 lead.
The Rams added Iwo more In
Ihe fourth on Iwo hits, a single
by Underwood and a double by
Grayson, plus Iwo walks. T ra il­
ing 8 3, the Kowboys charged
back with four runs on four inis
In the nilli Inning to close the
gap. The big till was a three-run
homer by McCrrudy over the left
Held fence.
However, the Kowboys could
gel no closer, us Hagen und thr
Rams held together. Hagen did
not allow a till In Ihe final two
frames.
"W r played bcllrr as u Irani.";
Tut Dr said. "We hud a pep talk
Ix-fore the game, and we dis­
cussed some things we were
doing wrong and some things we
were doing rigid. We got some
hig two-out hit* inday, lint we re
not getting that first butter on
boar We've got lo start doing
thut."
In oilier Classic action. Winter
Park outsluggrd West Orange.
9-5. Winter liavrn nipped litsh
op Moore. 5-4. A u b u rn d u le
e d g e d C o lo n ia l. 1 -0 . a n d
Edgewatrr trimmed Oak Ridge.
52.

ST

€t*

�f

4A — Evtnlng Mtrald. Sanford, FI.

Larry
Williams
FI8MINO
/HUNTING

321'0720

Cross Breeds
Produce A
P o pula r Bass
Striped buss and sunshine
bass have become papular
with many Florida fishermen.
beginning In the late 1960s.
the popular saltwater striped
tuts* wan Introduced Into fresh
water. The striper, which Is
considered excellent table
fare, was xtockrd to utilize
overabundant shad population
In Florida lakes and rivers.
Spawning habitat Is limited
for stripers as they must be
maintained on a "pul. grow,
and take" basis In Florida's
fresh waters.
Commission biologists were
not satisfied with the limited
surcess of the stripers and
turned their emphasis to
hybridizing striped bass to
obtain higher survival and
growth rules.
A promising hybrid was the
crossing of while bass and
slrljM-d buss. The outcome Is
Ihc populur sunshine trass.
Sunshines aggressively feed
on shad, are strong fighters,
and must Ire restocked on un
annual basis like striped bass.
Both striper* und sunshines
can Ire easily Identified by
their silver color and six to
eight black luteral lines runn­
ing the full length of the fish.
Sizes for sunshines runge from
III to 30 Inches with weights
up to 10 pouinis They have
llie potential for growing two
•o three pounds per ycur.
Stripers arc known to grow
larger with weights ranging
from 30 to 50 (round* under
Ideal conditions.
SuiiHhlnc bass have the abil­
ity to reach hurvesluble size
much curlier than stripers. A
sirijM-r needs 14 to 10 months
to reach the legal minimum
size limit of 15 Inches while a
sunshine cun reach harvestatile size within nine months
after stocking.
S niper en d sunshine lu llin g

Is unique and requires a vari­
ety of methods, both are
schoolers and s|iend much of
their lime In open water feed­
ing on shud.
Trolling Is (he most eirrctlvr
method of locutlng these
lighters und often results In
illmll cutches. Shud or min•nuw-ly|rc lures, tqtoons. Jig*
land spinner fly lures are lop
j.irtlfldulx which get consistent
jirsulla.
| Live bull also produce* well.
;KI*hlng the bottom w ith
{shiners, grass shrim p or
jinlnnows cun Ire very sueVessful. Using minnows ut
night with u blight light us a
llsh attraction offers un Interrsllng change of (Nice. Water
lluw also at tracts these fish,
ihcrcfurc. you should seek out
mil try those nreus first.
The striped and sunshine
trass project has come u long
wuy from Its Initiation In the
19 t in 's . A p p r o x i m a t e ly
274.(XX) striper und sunshine
llngerllng* were produced In
1972. tarsi year nearly three
million *trl|rer und sunshine
Iruss llngerllng* were proluced und Stocked
The Uumc und Fresh Wuter
Fish Commission presently
stocked 13 8 .0 0 0 acres of
public lukrs and 907 miles of
livers In this program. Future
pluns ure to continue to
rxpand the stocking program.
Com m ission policy lim its
shtcklttg to waters open tn the
public. The decision lit stock a
raitlcular lake or river Is ulso
rased on the uvullablllty of
shud or other loruge llsh for
stripers und sunshine to feed

I

tn.

Glen Crulg. Sunford. cuught
H buss averaging 3 to 4
pound*. Craig was using blue
and purple throne worms.
II.It. Owens and Mike Vlhlen
caught 11 buss on Hupulus at
Hat Bill.
Hun S m ith reports that
speck und shud fishing has
slowed down. Bums and sun­
shine truss ts picking up.
Dell Abemethy. owner of the
Osteen Bridge Fish Camp, said
jibe trass urr doing real well.
C TIte bass Ituvc come olf the
{shullow water and are starting
|o school." he sa|d.
I Abemethy said his Buddy
(lass To u rn a m e n t will be
tundsy beginning at saicilghl.
I expect some pretty good
velght to win II. said Dell.
We re looking for a real good
oumament. All In all. we're
laving some pretty good llshlo g ."

Thursday, April 4, IttS

G a t o r s G e t To K e e p S E C C r o w n
BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (UPII - Florida coach Galen Hall
said the Southeastern Conference decided vimcthlng
Wednesday that his players fell was true all along —
that the Gators were the i 984 SEC football champions.
The SEC's executive committee ruled Wednesday
that penalties already leveled against Florida for
recruiting violations are sufficient, and that the Gators
can retain the conference championship without
further disciplinary action.
*'We were hopeful they would allow us to remain as
the champions." Hall said In Florida when told of the
board's decision. "I had no gut feeling, though.''
One thing was set. however. In the mind of the man
who ran off eight straight victories after head coach
Charley I'ell was fired amid the scandal.
"O u r players would have always recognized
themselves as the 1984 champions." Hall said 'll Is a
lot easier for them to know It officially."
Florida was barred from post-season play In
November, but the SEC committer deferred consid­
eration of other penulllra until after a university appeal
was heard.
The Gators finished the 1984 season ranked 7th

Football
nationally with an overall record of 9-1-1. Their 5-0-1
conference mark topped Louisiana State's 4-1-1 record,
but the post-season ban meant the apparent league
champions could not appear In the Sugar Bowl as the
SEC representative. LSU went Instead.
In announcing Its decision Wednesday, the commit­
tee praised the response of university President
Marshall ('riser, who said afterward that the ruling
"confirms our decision to work within the framework
of the SEC."
"W hile reiterating Its deep concern over the
Infractions, the committee calls attention again to the
prompt, decisive actions taken by President Marshall
Crlser to correct the problems Identified, and com­
mends him for these actions and for his unwavering
commitment to full compliance with conference and
N CAA legislation." the board said In a formal
statement.

SEC spokeswoman P .J Ellis said a major consid­
eration In sparing Florida further penalty was the
Impact of a state public records law on the school s
reputation.
.
.
"That law says anything to do with a public school
or anv facility ai all Is to be made public." she said. “ So
there was no secrecy at all. and all of the accusations
made by the NCAA were made public.
"Had this rase been handled In the traditional way,
nobody would have questioned Florida s championship
In the first place because all of the allegations would
have been handled later In a hearing and some might
have never have come out tn public.
Ellis said the school did not appeal an SEC decision
to deny It the share of Sugar Bowl mone" that usually
goes to all teams In the conference — In this case about
S 155.000.
The Gators will continue on probation for the next
two seasons and will not be allowed to appear on
television, she said But because 'he team already has
missed Its first year of post season play, that restriction
lasts Just one more year. Florida could go to
bowl
.« ----------i o u r .

-National League Capsules
N .L .
N .L .
H*tl*A*l
C u t Otvltteri
CM uw CUi
Last , i v

i

IlnltS —

II I I N ,11

M »fi»g »r

Jim Frey Und M t r n l Vital Its , 11*1101(1
» lt k Sutcliffe's t* I record t i l e co«.,:r-3 from
Cleveland. lied for &gt;nd In u m (M l. lnd In
homers IIM I
Strongthi - Cy Young winner Sutcliffe *nd
M VP Ryn* Sandberg. deceptively ttrong
pitching, * powerful linoup that or^roift
tmoll dlmonOont of Wrigley Flotd
Now F t&lt; »» — 72 r**r old Shewon Ountfon
it looking to unseat veteran Lerry Bow* of
trior 1, v*t*f*n right hander L o r , Sorensen
ilgnod ot twlngmon. Brlon Do,oft It tporo
oulfloldor with homo run powor
Iho Keys — I n Smith tovod 11 gom«t loti
season but o&gt;porion&lt;od hnoo problem* neer
the tod, Sufclltfo. Stovo Trou* end Dennli
Eckertle, ro signed el greet tvpente
Lott pennant — IN * E o il
Montreal Eipo*
Lott year's finish — Jill I f , 111 Manager
Buck Rodgers (1,1 seaton) Vital I N ,
tietiilict llth in runt (S till 19th In homer*
( N ) . Irdlnpllchlng ( 1 11)
Strength* — C h a r lie Lee end B ill
Gulllckton lead tolld starting corps, Jeff
Reardon It durable reliever; Tim Relnet It
the Rlcke, Mtndorton of the NL. m e,be
better, when health, Andre Dawson it one of
top 10p ie ,art InNL
New Feces — Mike Flligereid replaces
C a r , Carter behind the plate. Hubie Brooks
and U L Washington new shortstops, rookie
Harm Wlnnlnghem wilt petrol center field.
Vance Law will battle Doug F I ,nn at second
The K e ,t - Steve Rogers slipped to , II
lest (rear but appears to have won hit battle
to regain spat In rotation, defense must mete
more p ie ,t
Last pennant — I N I East
New York Matt
Lett year's brush — 2nd (SO FI) Manager
Dave Johnson lln d season) Vital IN*
statistics Jed In double plays llis ti 1st In
ana run games ( T t N I i 1st In estrs Inning
ga m a slii i|
Strength* — Dwight Oaaden best young
pltshet In btssSisll. titang butlpan In Jesse
Orosco end Doug Sisk. Keilfi Mernendtt It
the best first baseman In NL, If not best
player In the league
New Feces — All Star G a r, Carter tills
void as catcher end right handed power
hitter. Howard Johnson will platoon at third
with Ray Knight, promising outflaldar John
Chrlitanson could moho club
Ttio Ksyt - Ron Oorllng mutt giro Isom
copoblo second starter to bock up Gooden.
D o r r ,I Strawberry's bo I disappeared lost
August Inhoof of ponnont roco
last pennant - l» f l Notional league
Philadelphia Fhllllot
last , tor's finish — ath I I I I I ) Manager
John Faith* (Rooki* taasonl Vital IW4
statistic * pis,ad , games under WO on
artificial lurl. second baseman Juan Samuel
lad league with 1) errors, eth In teem ENA
11*71; llth Infisldlngpercentege I SMI
Slrtngltit - Third baseman Mike Schmidt
tied lor Itegue leed with la homers end 10,
R B I. reliever AI Holland registered career
high 10 te resd evl'e weak finish
The Keys - Lomeback needed from IN I
C , Young Award winner John Denny, who
spent time on DL last year; club must settle
on regular shortstop between Ivan Dejesus
or Jell,
Lett pennant - I N I National Looguo
Pittsburgh Plrtlst
Lost y to r't llnlth — Ath If S t f ) Manager
Chuck Tonner 10th sootonl Vila) ION
statistict ftti In homors I N ) , linlthod loti In
division dospilt leading league In teem ERA.
lost SO games by two runt or lets
Strengths - Pitching ot all kinds tlortort.
rollovers Milos, righlios
Now Facts — George Hendrick end Side
Loiceno will most likely be everydey players
but Steve Kemp has shoulder problems. Tim
Foil could tie tle rlln g shorlstep. Mike
BMeckl. Ill* Minor League t Player ot the
Year lest season, could crack tlerllng
rotation
The Keys — Four time belling champion
Bill Medloct must rebound from a 1ST.
!n|ury marred season. Hendrick mutt hit IS
homors and drive In FS runt. Tekulve't save
total has dropped tour ot last live years
Lett psnnonl — If FI World them plant
St Laeti Carousals
Last year's Units - Vd Its Ft) Manager
White, Htriog ISth season) Vital I N ,
statistics Brucs Sutter’s *1 saves; 1st in club
flslding | N i l . Ural In stolsn bases inc&gt;
Strength* — Solid dslentlv* clu b ,
shortstop Out* Smith, ret, on speed te
generate runs. Jack Clock gives them e bon*
lids power hitter and 100 RBI men. nlc#
mislureef youngsters and veterans
New Facet — Clark. It health,. It a
perennial All Star; John Tudor moves Into
ter ting relation, e week spot tor SI Louts lest
season
The K » ,t - Neil Alton and Ricky Horton
must m tkt up at least two thirds ot the
departed Sutter t cl saves, how good It Terry
Pendleton, who hit 114 In »f gem# tryout let!
year Heriegrestsape starting rotation
Lett pennant - I N ] World champ on*

If the Atlanta Braves want to
fill Fulton County Stadium,
above, they'll need a return
to form Irom cleanup hitter
Bob Horner, left. Horner, the
Braves’ oft-injured slugger.
Is attempting to bounce back
from a wrist ln|ury which he
hurt while sliding. Sliding Is
what the Braves did last year
after winning the National
League West the two pre
vlous seasons.

W e s t

W H l D»vi**#n
Atlanta | r « v t t
Last years finish — T»e 2nd (10 921
Manager - Edd* Haas ( Ilf Mason) tvta
Vital Statistics 1)0 pamat mistad by third
basaman Bob Horner f 17 record ot sopng
more right hander Craig McMuftry 10th m
hitting ( 247)
Strengths — Canter fielder Dale Murphy Is
on# ot best players in maiors. right hander
Pascoal Parer established as met or laague
starter
Neve Faces — Bruce Sutter, best reliever in
the NL. brings 7e0 lifetime saves to a bvlipen
that atraady has Gena Garber catcher Rick
Caron# gets new life after coming over from
the Y a n k e e s; rook ie o u tfie ld e r M ilt
Thompson hit )0) In 2S games last year
The Keys — G M John Mullen freely admits
Braves are much weaker team without
Mornar. Stave Badrosian protected tor switch
from bullpen to starter before developing bad
arm
Last pennant — Itt2 West
Cincinnati Reds
Last year s finish - Sth (70 f j ) Manager *
Pete R o m (2nd Mason) itt4 vital statistics
llth m hitting ( 244). llth in E R A (4 19). last
In saves (2S)
Strengths - Mario Soto (19 7 .) S31 is one of
dominant power pitchers in ttio laague.
11 year old Oav* Parkar hit MS. with I,
homers and t* RBI
New Feces — Colorful m*|ovlty owner i*
Merge Schott, right hander John Stuper
could help in hit first full season with the
Reds otter SI Louis gave up on him; Tony
Poroi. 41. gives Rose a younger" player tp
beck him up *t llrtl
The Keys — How long will It lekt Rose to
om ett tho f l hits he needs *o surpass Ty
Cobb's coreer total, end how much playing
time will he give himtalf in this pursuit?
Last pennant — If F* Wotl
Houston Astret
Last year * llnlth — Ti# Ind I*0 S21.
Manager
Bob Lillis lath taasonl lf*4 vital
statistics A 1 * start, the second straight
season In which the Astro* have opened
poori,. Jose Crus's H em leading 17 homers
— none ot which cam* at home 10th in
league on grass I jet)
Strengths — A competent starting rotation
including Jo* Niekro Nolan Ryan and Bob
Kneppar a bullpen ot Dev* Smith. Bill
Dewta, end Frank OINino. yfrong outfield
anchored b , JoseCrul and Torrv Nuhl
The Keys — Shortstop Oickl* Thon must
'•bound Irom saver* bearing fences I*
Astrodome have been moved In 10 lee I
Letl pennant — INO West
Las Angeles Dedgtrs
Letl rear's llnlth — «th (Ft U ) Manager
Tom my Letorde (tth season) lets vital
statistics
lest in betting I Jsa). first
basemen Greg Brock hit 771. llth In league
In saves I7F)
Strengths - Fernando Velenjuel* is orsa ot
top left handers In the league; rig h t, Ken
Howell sel Dominican Winter League record
with IS saves Pedro Guerrero hit I , homors
end drove In F7 runs in an off year
New Facet — AI Oliver acquired from
Philadelphia lor Per Ja r h r, and will play
against right handers *t often as the teem
can Und him e position
The Keys — Lefty reliever Steve How*
returning Irom I year suspension tor drug
involvement Oliver counted on to drive In *0
runs, detent* mad* IF more errors than
double plays (141 la*l
Last pennant — ISki West
San Dsaga Padres
Lett year's finish - 1st &lt;fj FOl Manager Dick Williams (ath taasonl
i n s vital
statistics Tony Gwynn't league leading SSI
average s 1 gem* winning street alter
dropping llrtl 1 games ot NL playoffs Coots
Got tag* t IS to vet
Strengths - Right tid t ot Infield with
powerful llrtt baseman Steve Garvey and
tw ill second basemen Alan Wiggins, bullpen
ot Cottage Craig Letter!* and Tim Stoddard
Naw Facet LaM arr Hoyt won tha
Amarican Ltagua Cy Young Award In I N I
Stoddard brings 19 s record end F saves,
utllltymen J tr r y Royster It mors then
adequate replacement lor Luis Solesor
The Keys — Third botoman Groig Nettiot
turns si in August Kevin McReynoidt must
bounce beck from wrist In'ury sultsred in
pleyoftt Cormolo Martin*! hit Ilka pitchers
figured him out second half
Last pennant — itg* National League
San Francises Giants
Last year's finish - ath (** M l Manager Jim Devenporl Irookte season) IN* vital
statistics *f F, against right handed pit
thing, left hander Atle* Hammeksr *p
peered In only * gemot led Ivague In errors
IIF I)
Strengths Outfield It escellenl with
center Holder Den Gladden I 111) joining
Chill Dovlt and Jett Leonard Catcher Bob
Brenly hit JO homors
Now Feces - ml.elder David Green end
left hander Dev* LaPoint were the key men
In the trad* that took Jock Clerk out ot
Candlestick
The Keys — Teem cen t go anywhere with
shortstop Johnni# LeMat'er t 21 errors end
117 4«tf#Q*
Lett penoAAt - If 71 Watt

Championship Series Expands To 7 Games For '85
I'A L M S P R IN G S . Calif. (U P I) Basrliull's Iruguc rluunptonshlp series
will lie expanded (rum five to seven
guinea this full, bul the Players' Associa­
tion has h i to give Us permission lo
make the muve pcrmunenl.
The uwnera and Ihc union Wednesday
responded lo u deadline Imposed by
nriwoik lelejislon by agreeing to Ibc
scvcn-guiitc foiuittl fur one year and left
unresolved ihc question of how in
distribute 19 million In additional reve­
nue that the two extra guinea will bring
m.
The American and National leagues
tuul been playing a best-of-five I.rague

Baseball
Championship Series since 1969 when
each spill Into East und West divisions.
"If (he LCS Is played. II will be a best
four-oul-of-aeven for 1985 only." suld
Don Krhr. acting executive director of
the Players Association.
Kchr noted an overall lubor contract
bad not been reached, and "the player*
have not given up their right to strike."
The two sides ugreed that If the
seven-game series ore played und the
distribution of the funds was not re­

solved by Sept. 16. the entire $9 million
will be placed In an escrow account.
The division of the escrowed revenues
would be resolved os part of the labor
discussions which have been underway
since November to reach a new basic
contract.
The contract talks — which resume
April 15 In New York — have been
stalled on many Issues. Including the
question of how much the owners should
pay Into the players' pension fund. The
players want one-third of the owners'
network television contracts, a $1.2
billion six-year package.
The owners agreed with the networks

It would move to a seven-game series
when they negotiated the new contract
and urged the players lo accept Ihc new •
format lo help ease the In d u stry'sfinancial problems.
The owners recently made the unprec-;
edented move of revealing that U rge:
operating losses were draining some of
the major league teams In an attempt to!
convince the pUycrs that escalating;
costs — Including saUrles and pension!
benefits — were underm ining the.
stability and future growth of the game.
Presumably, the $9 million pUyofT.
revenue would be divided In the same!
way

�Evsnlng Hsrald, Sanford. Ft.

SPORTS

SCOREBOARD
TUBE

IN BRIEF

Raiders Wallop St. Johns, 11-0;
Barker s 7 Steals Break Record
Mm ^Cornell hurledST U|h sof llcd a P31' of homera and
Community Collror drilled"*!11 ,'du'ou' aa Seminole

,,s ^ « - ^ s i f c d S 3v“ w - "*

n r,,. p ^ T a c ^ L " ™ , ” “ '*? ^ ? ,dfc^,
,wo ,n ,h'
In the seventh Mil*morr n 8c fourth and four more

»HhhC em S ?,„,r?dVa':1 “ ° " ' a T

Iln d T c X ,"

8am' °f ‘ " ” UL'r hra" "

a 3

* am-

»ve , Grace

Barker has stolen 73 bases In 80 attempts this year He is
Slate's
tinhn*UOna,t[
eCL°rd rapped
°f 87 s,ca,»
bv W lchlU
states Phi°ns‘
I nil Stephenson.
Barker
a homer
three
Knights3"! f°Ur S,nRlcS whllc &lt;,r,v|nR In five runs as the
K UCF*s“ ?20aT ay WUH 20 0and 2 1 6 wins.

Hagler O r Hearns: Vote Winner
U nited Press International
N EW YO R K (UPJ) - B o x I n T ^ s w.ii havr an
opportunity to vote for who they think will win the Anni i
worhl middleweight title bou, ^ . w w n M ^ m S ^ l f r i n J
Thomas Hearns by registering in a tclelphonr poll *
I *900^720 3720 Ht f ,Cr canrcasl ^
v o li. by dialing
900 720 37 2 ? ti e.V n * ,? "• can volf ^ railing
, 720-3727 Balloting will begin April 4 at 5 p m E S T
and votes will l&gt;e tabulaled on a dally basis The
results will Ik - announced April 14.
Hagler. the undisputed middleweight champ Is 60-2-2
f i t a T c E f n S r 1 3 flRh' !"
^
Hearns!*,he VVorld
E S W
h T welterweight champ, will attempt to
hree h O e r e . K '
'n 80,1ln« hlsl«ry to Win titles In

su^ , z ; k

,“S‘

h" °"i&gt;'

Rookie Lifts Black H aw k Hopes
United Press International
From I he play of a rookie Just may come a division title
tor I he Chicago Black Hawks.
Warren Skorodenskl will take a back seat to regular
goalie Murray Banncrman once the Stanley Cup playoffs
start, but In the meantime he is drawing Chicago closer to
catching the first-place St. Louis Utues In the Norris
Division.
Skorodenskl recorded his second shutout of the year
Wednesday night, turning back 34 shots in a 5 0 victory
over the New Jersey Devils
Five different Black Hawks scored goals In the victory,
which moved the Hawks within two points of Idle St. Louis.
The Blues, who beat the Devils 8-4 Tuesday, have three
games remaining. The Black Hawks have two.
Elsewhere. Calgary topped Vancouver 5-3. Detroit edged
Pittsburgh 3-2. and Minnesota shot down Toronto9-7.

Inkster Looks For Kind Greens
RANCHO M IRAGE Calif. (UPII - If the greens urc kind.
Jull Inkster may see green Sunday — &gt;1 million worth.
A victory by the defending champion at the Dinah Shore
LPGA Classic, which begins today at the Mission Hills
Country Club, would give her nol only the winner's share
of *55,000, but a *1 million bonus offered by a sponsor,
Nabisco.
.
Inkster began the year with claims she seldom thought
about the whopping bonus. Now. though, she admits It s
about all she thinks about.
_
. . .
"'No matter how hard 1 tried not to think about the *1
million, you Just can't help It." she said It s always on
vour mind. But I have to try to keep It tuckrd uway In the
back of my mind, ir that's all you’re thinking about out on
the golf course, then you don't have a chance.
Inkster Is the only one on the tour with the chance to
pocket the unprecedented bonus.
"I think about 160 other ladles on the LPGA tour would
love to ire In rny shoes right now."' she said. ’’So I figure
I've got nothing to lose. I'm Just gonna go have at It

Beans Defends A t Greensboro
GREENSBORO. N.C. |UPI) - The *400.000 Greater
Greensboro Open starts today with Andy Bean defending
his championship against some of the IG A s top
moneymakers on the rolling greens of Forest Oaks Country
Club.
•I probably put a lot of undue pressure on myself b u t!
know I can handle It." said Bean, who would win *72.000
with another first-place finish "M y expectations for my
play are much higher than anyone who knows me.
Many golfers see the 47-year-old GGO as their last
chance to qualify for next week’s Masters, while others use
the tournament to sharpen their skills for the prestigious
tournament In Augusta. Ga.
"Some pros come here trying to find their games." said
Lanny Wadklns. the 1983 G G O champion.
Some
obviously don't have It. while others are hoping they can
find It In lime."
Wadklns is buck along with Masters titllst Ben Crenshaw,
Fuzzy Zoeller. Ray Flovd and Craig Stadler. The 144 player
field also includes North Carolina native sons Scott Hoch.
Vance Heafner and Chip Beck.

Gomez Is Ploying Best Tennis
CHICAGO (UPII — Andres Gomez of Ecuador says the
last five months of his tennis career have been the best.
In the past five months he played no tennis.
Now. the 25-year-old player ranked fifth in the world to
paying for his vacation.
Gomez needed three sets Wednesday to defeat John
Fitzgerald 3-6. 7 6 |8-6). 6 4. in the second round of the
*315 000 Chicago Grand Prtx tournament Gomez also
needed three sets Tuesday to beat Juan Farrow, who tsn l
ranked among the world s top 300 players and hadn t
played In a Grand Prtx event In a year.
The tournament to sponsored by Volvo.
__
John McEnroe, the lop seed, whipped Peter Doohan of
North Little Rock. Ark., 64). 6-1. Jim m y Connors, the
second seed, easily defeated former All-America Jay
Lapldua of Princeton. N J .. 6-2 .6-3.
In other second round matches Wednesday. No. 7 T im
Mavotte of Spnngfield. Mas*.., defeated John Sadrt of
Charlotte. N.C . 7 6 19 7). 7-5; No. 8 seed Scott Davto of
Biimoor Fla., downed Robert Green of Boston. 6-3. 6-4;
and Brad Gilbert of Ptedinont. Call/., defeated Mike Bauer
of Lafayette. Calif.. 6 -4 .6-1.

•»
r*lav*
uunuu
IS|&lt;o -*TU &lt;•»
* *M« Lett (U
POOtUU
••• - i SUi# i
i iir-tin
1*"’ »♦«I U **» '1Si m
BOIP
’

-

r*M. I N *

«««&gt; o

NQflV?
»**-.-UUttHi 0
MU Amlam

&gt; Om 4 w *-* J**W *M» r
• •» « l » u I P k t n w fiiK M
*, 44 &gt;M I ,«■ |
M S )

i -M IT h i i

VrNil
rw 1 lao 1
C&gt;&lt;1«1 Ni l
OhinUIi Iv l'n v il
&lt;*&gt; M ' W4-41
ti V*i»
CNm L*ll it *»• *r» i«u I
T-a*, v
I*tl « «•.«*•t- ««-*•
Urwi Ci*i « *p-w i- •*■&gt;, Wk* &lt;i
tivuC***' I ' m
***w* n * I***, r Car
m v la
*-m u Ic v tiitr.,
Nr. t « ISCI n Or-** r
Lina la
Ciawn CVifiiatir «au Sin

• In l_.

«| &gt;' '4f l it* **&gt; &gt;KU ti
It I »#n»*e%a C**-vr XC. t.f UI t
t » P 9 1*1 INU (|U,| ( W.
i* "n , * ft t*S t ! k r l
• !&lt;*•* i « u ) - t U i S * m

■«c«
; i it 1, tin* 4rte
’ •*'1 *' 'll m n » Id** Om
n i l 'I Wtwi
Mra Sun
I ’I '1 lumm, 1 Nl«M*
u
1U 'i iiw am* •Mri'MCm'txrn
It It

USFL

SOKC

■mo m m iNtuti tuevt
law Ckviw
A’tMMOrtoM
■ IT Kl W »*
Fiteiiiifqttt
•
-«■
-f-4*
1 1 1 KB FI
IFPtett—LIA1 HO
4 t • ot ••IF
'"tel-wCArt
IB IF IF
'••a 1*4
IttMtttltt
**#• Jmn
) 11 m FI M
IF IF
«44*l
iy v w M
1 11 m V
)F
V»*- » l
I 1 1 •■F* ■:
•DUMB
TU4IIM*
wiann
1 1 1 m *J Iff
W-M- l\ D n B
O'**
IT* fF IF &gt;
1 1 1 n r *n
4li»i CwWtan
i
C*»-» f
•F IF
-w *
1 1 1 IU m *»
IF
4 1 I *F 'F &gt;F
•IMI •* t ,*tl ** T |»44|11', M O44tn
S
r
IW
4
GO 141u ft
4 11 14* *F n
« 1 • HI' &gt;D j*
HfitHLA* nit
14a4n«!Vpftpiw
fw IF IF
1 1 • IU If Til
l*« t«4&gt;4
*{T|f mm
1 I • m F Ilf
IF IF
LM V*4I
t 1 • I'D* Hi w
lll&gt;«#lM
IF
0ll*Jhe. A[&gt;*l HJ* T(I4|l i&lt;] M
It
I fm
■ w - I X ( nil
M a n iim
Liwtin
xt &lt;■ ia
-«»MW‘*aT4«p4|4,
|,.
■»&lt;&gt;»**
ta &lt;■
3m«U *
4 4*
’ClVM
«a
M n iV m
•II411444. » 141)47M.T141IIP4&gt;
•
Vjr
j m, .
S-4B-VXC IIJI
s
m
W
TTK W i |If*
■4B IF IF
•Wwtw04r1*
II* 4*
V ' a la
i p*
A«*tew
■Mi i i Vm
IF
Sr
tut
v
Ow
a•
4
»
QlHIFF POil t?«F Tllftll !.»*•tt
»n*4t 44,4I)
*Fr*cY- If. C FF
*MTttM
W- »-»4 a liinaM •4m
IF IF IF
;0u*«A'
l*at4, la* tl
•F IF
)h«t iMt
Om w* a
1 4*
IF
QOnilF. /(Illftg f (fllllMtf
Van 4a*n
/FfM-fttl FI4
LKh4m|ll«**ll|4
IJ-*fttJF
w—a ,«•la—a, 1 14«
1/F IF IF
in |B
0 '««4 V im 1
Sxr’ trt it V, wn 114 a
*te'mtoF
an tin*. r»HH« nm &gt;i«i
r*tn—vat ns
O w iia il
ns is ta
I 'n i w
ns is B A S E B A L L
t .tru &gt;ra
is
1111|tft** I m t i l l
•mi** rntims.tnititna
**e*»—n c an
AMltlCAHLliOVl
Ia*aim*
is ts i*
*1
» t
&lt;nrra
is ta W *
*
II ,*N*
]S C*K««i
Ml
an mis, in mis. iih iiih s
m
n*rut-m an
C*
m
!&gt;•*►*
i a is ia !♦*-*»
m
tlaVri
is IS
11*&lt;IVan
is ••W f l it
Ctrv «nd
aon ii s. roams, t o*n bis
«»Htt (l^
n »m - viac «a
t| II
llanailant
as is ia
II u
•at i i n
as i a Ott*i*Ag
II V)
■Iwt
ia
11 H
Wtot
•n«i us. » on &gt;•■ t lain ais
t n CT
A*'on
iy vi nil mi, a awn i h h
II I* e)
nr.tiNM, m m
M f lO A lU U M I
naeati-vial in
• l Rti
i«n&lt;*Hwai
ia is IS
H a M
•»r»«iaN*n-*
is is
ti ♦ FI
1( i U r n
(s
ii % FI
Hr*
•nans aiin&lt;ta.Tiaanina
n • W»
CmcmmiAi
iatmt~aai
u ii U)
ilCHit*
IS ta IS
ii u IF
1I I I C**n
ISIS tot ItmuKi
a
IF
it
limkliMn
IS
ti
•naivs, m ilna. t mu wa,
nau *i»
assis inmm
U iM
M
i i * anaa urns
»

i‘*iu
rt st
IP «f
mn

Qt AA
e .'ll n
N »a M
*» W*
iai r»
* i* M

« a a 31 Hi JT
u r • » Mm
n tu m
•m ‘ a *
u u q * u* it
"* vr
a u • »• r w
i « a r,mt*u
■••m
•

ii rr a

•

m na tom

•'•'ll!,, 1*M1|
&gt;-••1 - -ie.' y ;
' aijm*!
* • w i •V n * f

Ciiri i i K u r i
iWiWf tum
MMlIaa, *«(•
•»,’ (a«Ni*rt *b i iieai&gt;«*r*,i. *»»■*

'"A ff &lt;t t» l«k%
•m Lj U
t#u* **
Tr« iAll p ti

* * n a n it » - a * r - i •b »"
**l m
r 1' l(u-i I » i a

N BA

MISL

MTIOMt I1UI1I1U MI0&lt;
Itiliei Cliliftm

WM '&lt;»»&lt; kXCII HIM!

• L Ki 61
•teY
F 4 Y*
Ur
|
*Nn jmwt
F F 4*4 n 1
i An*
V F 03 n
tew Y*r*
U U IF la
CMMDkttMM
f 8 «MM
ur m
•OFF
41 u ui i) *
•Ckcap
V F F F1
CfwM
u O 4k n
ifttntt
F 41 m D
F V M F•
Att*WtAPttMri
MMIDmimm
* 1 M 61
1 Om*w
F r *.
•8MRP
M 11 tt’ 4
•D*iw
c w U) «‘1
•U a Am***
Fan* 4
MB
v a *• 11*1
■*n« C&lt;*V
'•1

LA Cl

• if
i) » 'i
r u #
r at If
no j
nt i

•9»n » “
■K - W t

W-Ciifi V I’WOafi -r * n i lmt-r«t vr*
trva a * « . » r

wn
aa
D i)
» •»
f *

a s *m
v xa ■
U M* r
* e •u

it- IM

f * S n a W -a r ’ n r I n

F L Art 61
8 IJ HI
ft 1 F t
» X LB
r n if » 1
M» Ml t
tt r n 1
11 n iu

t
« v'xif*
•(M M
1* LM
¥sura**

1 In fpt

•*%***«Pnihh
*Up Ottft
U 11 *0
*LM tfftM
Fkm 1
t Lm Aufrtti
n V m &lt;4
*&lt;¥«*
Fn
f)
»*HM
if 14 **•') t
*Pimtt
if X IMIf
OFF*
♦I E n V
*&lt;irxtetpt*rt«teeni
1AUMhttFlwrihist
t »«*f1
’***4 t in A^»*t j
•

*1? a i
ik J]
ma
)m n t

is ,*

DEALS

a w kj tt

*
OF**4
tt
•&lt;•***4*
Ih*x '»•/•««
- W
ft* ******
■*• Hit *w* ***d Am#,
*m
*4"
M ft'*4 C^i*m%
0*»vf* If Amtt Km A ilK «*ttn
F*n, il«4&lt; Sift!* LMfv*
FHttt In ln*utt* .. i i.ai* CV't
Fnnw*# Wd
4»*rt
H
l**
|*T**4i *«
IM** AAA h
IU ^ (4
tt»« T*r» IAll - P
|&lt;Mf
•*’IF* AttM to*m4p\*~
On*4 Ah**4*Hh» k it tt*fi» *i
• I4ti4uk«4 V
T******IA*rtN i&gt;*w|tt
Vf**t«*4 ¥ A* iniirv**«n* iMfMf **
'Airrwl pitttt* Tint ftut «n4 tsHlW &amp;*t

»&gt;»1 Hi ttrw7*1«|
I ill *.*•**« &gt;If
C*wc*pi«
♦
W»A*»**«Ifl. l AIMP,'!
l A C'gprt Ik irut C*y ’IJ
•«■*!
i*Ji T * n H T l
0***’rtt
l l| «
l‘4MiH*Nf|rt I Fpm
WttFVHAI F*«
*»fN*r i * 1| m

I F U^*t Itttt t%D $m

NHL
FA1I0FAL HOCItV IIAAUI
Wtifl C*Nl«f«n&lt;i
FlWxlOattod
• U h tl V
« * IV* *-*•** t

II I I
M 14

Ml* iirttv

I* F
H if

•HY HBttri
« ttv iftftftri

FISHING

War till I*Ta
JUPa*.
InDal

•Ore*
•M i l

Bw - 4» ' U ’ N r i l

•«AMiC*y4Cincmfta«l
HMtttttt F*«T*%|NU&gt;
A^tttFrtpMlIf IM1

1m
* If

IF IF
M III

l**| m*«g iUHU ~ 1•*!•« JIM
F.i,.««**« It
tlgnl
- I f k ftoflrtf***•*! 0**
C«Ht*ttttr'****d*4Br*mm r»%4ll
Cd*M lit - llttMM fettntilf (toll
ilMiOlT
F* Ott4*tt - IcanHtf*tt*J#*Mill

F I) I B) Id At
n *) i« * m if
I

» 1) Ml H i
U I F 111

F If II F in HI

ELEMENTARY SCHOOL TRACK RESULTS
t Wm &lt;ACm It
I TM
I &amp;Nttfl*| IKI
I Uw»4 r*wv. IMI
) AnfMlrtAHl
I C%Ma &lt;K)
« 'enuOM* (Wl

Ilf
tm i (K L
(ll
• ' Y K H LnMttkry iLFt

IntUaikMB
MM
1.J*tt|Afenn*f, iRCl
|I IWINI
1iCttmaiCviwiippkiGl
ILMl
II
I I MB.
(F I
1
I Iff
t 0*M&lt;JYY*. mi
1Dtrtvjm oil
44
aP
1DymmCFM-wfft iGl
■l*efA*F
/•
1immi J*',**. (Gl
II
1If fttlWf ini
H
I MtMf (II
IF
kl
1i*ff*i1Jjifth(Gl
HI
J JmmSrtSmU ,Fl
FI
I TrmAtottM(Wl
FI
&lt;11
1 Inti
fWI
1f«N«RtiO*rtl.4Gl _______ tu
1f*&gt;min]
1)9
■
1 T'irtHfin, (G)
1M
)F
I Orii later*INI
_______IFI
1IpyMF (Gl
IF
li |hh IftpttH 1WI
.... H1
1«.H«• »R« (Wl
FI
FI
1Mefitmm (Ml
iatev
’ GfAFt*
09

MpW
lafFttiteta
1 NFarFmftUI)
I TrftwhM (Kl
) Tr*w|m (M|
Laafltt*
1 tettfFcOp (UU
1teftnttKWrttiFl
)0Mlfrw&lt;«l(K)
1 TFftiytmm(Gl
1Tp«|G&gt;ttr«F. Ui
1ijt*
(Ki
F
1Uifttni 1*1 mr (ff|
) WsalkCM (IFi
t F«rft (G)
«F
t lava* r««K (KI
I piar* h a (H)
1M a I6(

te •
Iu
iia

)F
in
hi

« ID****ilrrw*- (Ft
) OfttF(PCI
I BiiYlrfMlNl
Crvfli* ml
} AnterMA Ml
L*aam i
I
iFi
J CFate
IFI
1ArMw*M IGI

1 t « . .•»"*** IFCI

F ilte r*

ttefM
I |e**&gt;G**r«M(Gl
| fMtetettMH
) ’fM 4 ‘ Am *Ipir*** iGl
ttetef
I I'fMlMt &lt;Ki
1
III
«te*
I FI
I frttl R*ter (Ml
A -4
I Ror F*r»i cm:
in
I l*ro*Jvpfti. iMJ
»
99
t w-f-ttCmpm(Kl
99
1iHlMfPftPR Gl
)
in)
n
«0
0%
1 ANttP) IteH IN]
in
) IrtYlNttMP (Ml
________ nj
1IhhMMMLli.Ml
FI
1 'WwiFCap* (Kl ________u
HI
1(Fvftl’% IN)
UI
t if*'ir IGl
■a
1F
1R«*p&lt;aR«r*4P IMJ
)F
I t«of Ha«Ff IGl
________I I
1*
(Gl
m
kNP, toMrtt. IM)
) T«MfN*Htf Gl
) Tmwm IU
•an
' f 1 min

it UI

----SI
F4
F9
Ml
___ __ Ml

■tea
i NUP*« 1*fW 1M|
) U&gt; JM4 ( K l
I *
(Gl
M
LIRPY* &gt;"*p"*a u m
) IifN
(Gl
)
(l|
•F
1 a*. MnJX. M ta IP( |'
) B«Mp&gt;Mg Witt**. i K l
I UMtetei (Gl
FI
1 la t p iM W'liwaMi. tFJ
9 laftPYf T IW M (CM)
M

1

« 4 .at4M«a4 iKi

| ¥ (run* 1&gt;ittr 1(11
) f U M IlN l K )
m
1 t # p i M WVittPN* IFI
t i«&lt; w a C «v F im i
1
iK )
but
i Cft Ften
I FFN

G o ld s b o r o D o m in a te s T r a c k
Goldsboro continued IU dom i­
nance In elementary achool
track as It won the North Cluster
Track Meet held at Lake Mary
High. Goldsboro, coached by
Jack Williams, to the defending
Seminole County champion.
In the boys 8-9 age division.
Lenord Jellet led Goldsboro with
a pair of first places Including
the 50 yard dash (7.0) and 440
dash (74.6). Hamilton’s Essex
Stephens had an outstanding
meet with first places tn the 220
131.1) and 100 (13.2) and a
second tn the longjump.
In the 8-9 girls division. Lake
Mary Elementary's Sonja McCoy
stole the show by winning the
long Jump and 100 dash and
finishing second In the 50 yard
dash. Pine C rest’a Lattonla
Faison won the SO yard dash
and the 440.
In the hoys 10-11 age group,
Pine Crest's Willie Cooper dornl-

FI

HI
FI

1FI
111
I M)
___89
41
It
Dl
UI
m

n a te d the s h o r t s p r in t s .
Hamilton's Anthony Roberts led
the way tn the longer sprints and
Hamilton's Patrick Parker was
the distance ace^
In the girls 10-11 age group,
Lake Mary’s Latonya Thomas.
Pine Crest's Ntkl Washington
a n d M i d w a y ’ s K a ta r s h la
Williams won two events each.
Thomas took the long Jump and
50 doth while Washington won
the 440 and 880 and Williams
claimed first tn the 100 and 220.
In the boys 12-13 group.
Wilson's Dexter Brown took
firsts In the 220 and 880 and
second In the longjump.
In the girls 12-13 group.
Idyllwllde'a Latrtcia Montgomery
and Pine Crest's Maggie Buckner
won a pair of events each
Montgomery won the 50 and
100 dashes while Buckner took
the 440 and 220. — Chris Plater

RACING
NOW!

it urM
I CkniFtee* Gl
I CmmUb iGt
J ttafptr Ml
I (Jr**FMftfTt IM|
1A*|F M-*n UI
F

1L4»&lt;&gt;4
l|
| •ivuI y **' IMI

ui
&gt;i*
9k»
in
9UI

PI

I iteft*La*** (Kl
IlFi
| UtNFl^
1ftvte IMI

Ft
PIl
F(

) C4 *

FI
F)
F4

III

Gl

D*n Cii It.
I Im i I imi*U»
I *«•** Ki
m
i mbhyL i y K j
I l4teFl &gt;lV(Gl
) TrttiCM* IFI
(IFI
I IfMMFlT'..
| T**»Cf V (FI
) W*&gt;M04*L Kl

Ml
M1

AUI
* '*
IF

NIGHTLY 7:10 P.M.

(Iiospt *o")
MATjmon . whi. sat. 1PM
PLAY THE EXCITING A HIGH
PAYING " P I C K O ’*
THUN*. FM I
OfUNOSTANDADM.
PON LAOIIB
Visa out two ciimats
controltod ciubhouMt for
your tirvadining and
•nisrtainnwnt ptoaaurs
Ciuthous# (Marvationa
831*1600

/I
II

1 Cms* (Gl

I Da**T*fW (Ml

25 RACING DAYS L i n
Wl CLOU MAY 2

I¥
IF
!V

I U 4 N &gt;**&lt;*■ (Gl

1)11 ten
IW M
i Gpffrv T#»te iKl
) U ftittNtftlW)
| A m i * iM)
1 (k n * t t n j M (Ml
. r mmtm
_____
8
■■ imei
ir »i
) | '&lt; iJvterl iGl
M
* M v f C F M INI

U n ite d Press International
Larry Bird and the Boston
Celtics came back with a
vengancc Wednesday night.
T h e Celtics were riding
w h a t w as for them an
e p id e m ic of consecutive
losses — two Bird missed
those two games w ith a
tender elbow.
He returned to the starting
lineup last night and scored
35 p o in ts. Including 1 1
straight In a 13-0 Celtics run
in the first quarter to lead
Boston to a 119-103 victory
over I he Indiana Pacers
"A flcr four days of not
playing. I frit like I’d been In
&gt;i cage." Bird said. "A nd I
was glad to get a lot of time
because then I can gel m y
IshixTtlngl rhythm back preil\ quick."
The loss dropped Indiana
lo 20-57. worst In the NBA.
amt was Its IHtli defeat In the
last 19 games
Boston, with the league's
Ih-si record at 60-16, defeated
Indiana for the I8ih time tn
I heir last 22 inertings and
tilth time In six games this
season
"Tonight they came on the
court with lire in their eyes,"
valil Indiana Coach George
Irvine.
" I ’ve been reading for a
week ihut Larry Bird can't
move his elbow — then he
goes out and scores 35
|M»ints Not bad "
Aller the tlrsl quarter, ibe
Parers drew no closer than H
INilnts.
Bird, who was hampered
by a pain In his right (shoot­
ing! elbow which prevented
him from fully extending Iris
aim when shooting, was
l6-o|-2H from the floor and
added 11 rebounds and 6
assists in 39 minutes.
D u rin g B ird's absence,
Boston lost to Detroit and
Milwaukee, the first time all
season the Celtics had lost
consecutive games.
Elsewhere, San Antonio
lo p p e d the Los A ngeles
Lakers 122-108. Cleveland
edged Philadelphia 113-110,
(M i I c u g o d e f e a t e d
W ashington 100-91, New
,lrr,»cy dcleulcd New York
113-100. and the lain Angeles
Clipper* bent Kansus City
124 122

I* 1

Bryan Orayaon
...ahot put w in n er

) CAT**#* (Ml

11
/J
11
FI
m
F«

J F
J F

m
n;
tel
ut

Bird Keys
Celts' Win

n
it
it/
rti
n»
ui
FI
111
ta
IFI
1■
FI

—0.1
-ttl
Hi

IKI

(FI

Thursday, April 4, tfcs— 7A

&gt;11
III
*11
IFI
in
ia
FI
ID
11)

Sanford-Orlindo
K
ennel Club
North ot Orlando.
Just oft M«ry 17-82
ttlfcBTrMtl«iU*Mto
Sorry No Minors

FI
AH

t,
I Cteteri
W V K I WteGFtta

FteOmlfFw

II

7TtE&gt;uxMJraG£:ist
AAB£ rot/fl 3TANDABDS O f MDE
AND nUrORMANCL

RADtAL MUD-TERRAIN VK
Give YOUH TRUCK M C t PROYO#
PtfirOAMANCt.

Goodrich

m - g o o p m e M S ™ I WEHAKZCAJOPmvnM^

AUK TIK I-: M AIM
KgUilR

MON Ffll U S 30 SAT U 3 OO

3 2 2 -7 4 8 0
,m

2413 S. French Ave.

J 5 E __. — SANFORD----------- -

I

�I

•A — Evtning Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday. April 4. m s

T r a d e T e n s io n s E s c a la te

WORLD

Japanese Envoy To Try To Placate Americans

IN BRIEF
Israeli Troops Storm Villages ,
Round Up Suspected Guerrillas
IIK1HUT, Lebanon IIJJ'I) — Hundreds n) Israeli soldiers
*1firmed three soul hern Lebanese villages In search (or
uapcclfd guerrillas today and a Lebanese army unit was
surrounded In one of the villages. |x»ll( e said,
In llelrut. mat hlne gun battles, sniper Tire and
kidnappings briefly elosed two of the si* crossing (mints
linking the Christian and Moslem seelIons of the capital.
(Miller said
The llelrut &lt;lashes were sporadlf and Involved Christian
and Moslem millllas deployed on either shies of the Orem
Line, (xillce said.
('oiler In die southern port til Sldon said several hiimlrcd
Israeli soldiers and at least 30 in,op carriers looks and a
hulldo/er were Involved In today's search ol three viulhern
Villages
About 200 Israeli lrfMi|is stormed loin ih&lt; Shiite Moslem
town rd ( hehablych Wednesday anil roumlerl up 3(X) men
lor ((ueslloning. Lebanese security sources said
The sweep was part of Israel's "Iron list" [mlIcy against
Moslem guerrillas who have altar kerl Israeli occupation
forces 1 he Israelis are withdrawing from ihr region nearly
three years alter Invading southern Lebanon to oust the
I’airsllnlnn Lifter at Ion Organisation

M ilitary Backs Duarte Win
SAN SALVADOIL LI Salvador (Ill'll — Lie, lion nlllt lnls
voted uuanlmoiisly lt&gt; reject a r all by two right-wing purl les
in overturn President .lose Napoleon Duarte's upsel victory
in nallollng for a new congress anrl town mayors
The Central Elections Council voted Wednesday night
alter LI Salvador s army leadership showed strong support
for Duarte's ejection victory and sharply denounced
rightists calling for the election to lie annulled
Elections Council President Mario Samaytru anrl the
other iwri board members marie the anuoiim i mi nt shortly
alter the army warned the nfllclala to res|x-rt the will ol
the (icople '

TO K YO lUPIl — A special trade envoy
headed for the Untied Slates today as
government and political leaders considered
a comprehensive economic package lo tpiell
an escalating trade crisis with .Japan's
closest ally — the United States.
Special go ve rn m e n t e n v o y Relshl
Teshlma. deputy foreign minister for eco­
n o m ic a ff a irs w as d is p a tc h e d to
Washington to explain Japanese policies to
U S officials
Foreign ministry officials said Teshlma.
the ministry's top trade expert would
remain m Washington through Saturday
Kronomi*. experts worked out the package
of market -opening steps, including tartll
ruts and the removal of other harriers to free
trade, and presented It Wednesday night to
Prim** Minister Yasuhtro Nakasone. Japa­
nese news reports said.
Nakasone planned to meet later today
with government ministers and leaders of
lit* ruling Liberal-Democratic party In a hid
lo gain support for the measures aimed at

mented lo show In court It Is In
violation ol the ordinance,
Knowles wrote, To doc ument the
lots would require the work of a
s u r v e y fie ld c r e w a nd a
draftsman for at least 200 days
Thai would rost about $56,000.
he slated. The cost of prrparlng
property notices and liens Is
estimated al SIH.OOO.
The unrsilmatcd cost ol filling
tla- Inis would Im- tx»rnr by I he
owner or I he e-tty. If Die owner
didn’t pay
Knowles said If any landowner

...Low Lots
Continued from page 1A
II that law is valid we should
abide by the law
II Il s not
enforceable wr need lo gel it off
Ihr Ilooks "
C ity M anager W arren E
Pi le Knowles. In a memo to
lilt- commission, said enforcing
the ordinance would be difficult
and expensive- Each lol would
have 10 be recorded and docu­

...G as Tax
Continued from page 1A

done In Seminole to Improve the
road siiuat Ion
the While Mouse wilh stale and
Strcclman said he likes the
federal officials and leaders ol
organizations dedicated to find­ Uli-a I,ui he would have to read
(irlndlc's bill before he could say
ing the missing children
lie urged "a new partnership whether he sup|x&gt;rts li or not
lor ■h IId safety" among law
"Every study shows w r have
e n lo rce in e n l agencies, the an enormous lin-al shortfall of
Justice Department. s&lt; Ii&lt;m&gt;Is and bunts for needed road Improve­
community service groups so ment*." St reel man said "Either
"every child In the country can out road service Is going to
have t..e opjKirlimllv to be safe i onilnur declining or w&lt;* have to
and secure."
llnd additional money People
'I hi- presldrnl asked purlict
have no objection to paying
pants lu the session. Including more taxes (or roads II the
Mil Director William Webster, lo revenues from the tax are
re|M&gt;ri back lo hlin In three earmarked lor roads."
wreks on how to structure tIn*
"What w r need the tax for t»
new rtlort.
T h e p ro b lem of m issin g not to expand roads In advance
children. Reagan said, "is a ol im reused imputation, hid lo
major issue" dial
iliicuiens upgrade roads where [xipulatlon
every American family, rich m explosions are already occur
pool I hi- pnsslbllllv ol kidnap
ting." hr said.
(ilng oi losing a child Is one ol
Al the same lime Streetmnn
the ma|ors Icars dial parents
agreed wtlh Klrchholl that the
now lace

...Missing
Continued from page IA
nallouwldc.
Mrs, Itrugan will lx- honorary
chairman ol the National Child
Wall h Campaign, announced
|usl lour moulhs alter the center.
In conjunction with milk dlstrlh
ulnm. began pulling pictures ol
m is s in g c h ild r e n on m ilk
cartons
"Th is campaign is a natural
evolution of rffnrln launched lu
dale," Jay llowell. the center's
executive director. Mild at a
news conference Wednesday.
In a xtolcmrnl the II,-a Indv
said. "Missing children are m
creasing al an alarming rale "
“ We catmol Invesl too much
lime and riicigy In the salrlv
and protection ol our children.'
she said
Later. I'rrsldrnt Reagan met at

easing tlie Increasingly acrimonious trade
tension.
Officials have previously said the trade
parkage will be announced next Tuesday
after formal adoption by Cabinet ministers.
Japanese leaders have expressed consld-.
rrable frustration over what they feel Is a 1
lack of understanding by American officials,
particularly congressional leaders, about
recent actions by Japan to foster free trade.
In unusually blunt comments Wednesday,
government leaders sharply criticized pro­
tectionist actions In the U.S, Congress,
warning the measures could damage overall
U.S -Japanese relations
The prime minister, who fares opposition
from some political and business leaders
who feel he conceded too much to the
Americans, also plans to make a (devised
address to the Japanese people next week to
appeal for support of his policies
The United Stales, faced with a record
S37 billion trade deficit with Japan Iasi
vear Is demanding Tokyo open domestic

impact fee concept of having
developers pa&gt; the rosts ol
Improving roads when the Im­
p ro ve m e n ts are necessary
iwe.iuse of new development Is a
good one "The only drawback of
Impuci fees Is thal they have to
Ih- speril specifically lo Ihe area
from which Ihry come." he said
Slreettnan also said the gas
lux proposal Is "m uch more
palatable than giving taxing
atiihorlty to a non-elccted super
agency." like the one proposed
some weeks ago by a committee
appointed by the governor.
Grtudlc said II Ills projKised bill
Is approved. It "w on’t lx- neres
sury lor ns to go Into a new
Infrastructure, a super agency,
to build roads."
Hut he said he will not categor­
ically take a position for or
against ihr concept of a super
agency.
It's a nrw concept thal needs
more debate." he said. "Hut we
don't have to hold up solving the
problem watting lor a super
agency "

AREA DEATHS
ANNA ACAM PORA
Mis Anna Acuinpora. 6H. ol
106 Delores Dllvr. AI billion Ir
Springs, died Wednesday at
Whiter I'aik Memorial llosplial
lloin Aug. 6. IHIH lit New York
City, he moved lo Altamonte
Sprlugs Iio iii Lonsdale, I’a lu
1974. She was a homemaker
and a Catholic.
Survivors Include llircr sons.
Louis of Canton. I’a John ol
Poughkeepsie. N Y . and James
ol Winter Park, lour daughters.
Maty June Gallagher ol Redding,
Calif.. Joan llaga ol Deptford,
N .l . Linda Cyindul! ol Spring
Mouse. Pa., and Anne Sclg ol
KansasCUy. Mo
Cnx-Parkcr Go.mil.m Luneral
Home, Winter Park. Is in charge
ol arruttgenictits
K A T H R Y N J .U A K U E K
Mis Kathryn Jean llarher, 59.
ol 319 Marjorie SI.. I.ongwood,
died Wednesday In Florhla Hus
pllal Altamonte Springs Ikon In
St Catherine, Mo June 16.
1925. she moved to Longucxxl in
l!W7 Irom Seining She was a
member of Ihe First lta|,tisl
Church. I.ongwood. and was a
hoinrmukci
S u r v i v o r s I n c lu d e h e r
hunttaud, Joe I. . a son. Marlon
Lee Cheek. Edgrmunl, S I) , four
daughters. Cecelia llogicii.
Longwood. Vcnessa Pyaii, Alla
motile Springs. Cecelia Ann
Sturm, Urookvitlr. Mo . Charlotte
llurrls. Missouri, three brothers,
Archie Farrts. Kansas City, Roy
Farris. Hrookvllle. Mo . Marlon
Furrls. Denver, three sisters.
Opal Puce, Knohnoster. Mo ,
Ruby Cheek und Elsie ILtlley.
ImiIIi of Hrookvllle; 10 grand

children, nnr great grand, lilld
Oakl.iwu Funeral Ifoinc. Lake
Mary. Is in charge ol arrange­
ments
TH O M A S II. E D W A R D S
Mr Thomas Henry Edwards.
HO, ol lKir&gt; Cherokee Circle
Kunland Estates, Santotd, died
Wednesday at Central Florida
Regional llosplial. Sanford. Horn
ill Asheville. N C . April tt. 1U04,
he moved here in 196H Irom St
Cloud lie was a llapltst und was
a rrtlrrd engineer fur the St
Lucie County hnad Department.
Survivors Include his wile,
Frances S ; a son. Stephen. West
Palm lleaehi a daughter. Nancy
Johnson. Sanlord live grand
c hi l dr en, lour g r r a t
grandchildren
Oaklawn Funeral Home, luikr
Mary. Is hi charge ol arrange

menu
O E H TR U D E II. A T IIO W
Mrs Gertrude II Athow. 02. ol
25H Aeoru Drive, Lougwixxl,

died Tuesday ai Park Lake
Meallh Carr Center. Winter Park
Horn March 31. IHU.i in Candler.
Fla., she moved lo 1-ongwood
Irom Tacoma. Wash lit 1054
She was a homemaker and n
member ol the First United
Methodist Church of Sanford.
She was a member of the
Rrhrkah Lodge. Tacoma, and
Eastern Star. Sanford
Survivors Include u daughter,
Carroll Hush. Puyullup. Wash ;
three sons, Rotx-rt F. ol Tacoma.
Floyd It of Pensacola, and
Adcltx-rl of Arab. Ala . a brother.
Clarence Benjamin. California;
17 g r u n d e h lld re n and 27
great - grandchildren
Maldwtn Fairchild Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. 1,. lu
charge ol arrangements

Funeral Notices
BASSES.KA1HSVNilAN
Fuwtl kervlco* lor Mr% Kolfryn Jean

Baihai t*. of l i t Morion* I I . Longwood
who d-*d Wednvtdar Will ba held f nday at &gt;
p m at Oak lawn F u w t l Mom* chapel with
Fh* H e, Ja m tiW Mammock of F I r i t Beplitt
Church. Longwood officiating burial will be
in Oaklawn Manorial Park Violation will ba
'□day 1 4 p m Oaklawn F unarat Horn#. Lak*
Mam m charga

Funaral **r*lc*» for Mr Thomat H
Edw aidi 10. ot *01 Charok** Orel*. Sanford
who died Wednekdey. *11) tw Laturdar a) II
a m al Oaklawn Furterol Mom* chapal with
Ih* Mev Haiph Fry and Tom Edwerdt
offlclaling Burial will ba In Oaklawn Mamo
rial Park Vltllallon lor family and Iriandt
will b* Friday I I p m Oakltwn Funeral
Mom* Lek* Mery In charge

t (tool 4)1 im
^ .

. - -d * j 1

8X12 E S TA TE DELUXE
IN C L U D E S TR E A TE D FL O O R S
40 YEA R S W A R R A N TY
Rfl0n . . .
SAVE!
$859
$160

S A L E *699

8 .1 0

ESTATE STANDARD

Reg

_

. , _

S A L E *549

$599

"You do not have a-strong lawon which lo base your union*
against p ro p e rty owners.**
Knowles wrote, lie taler told
commissioners. "It wouldn't
lake a very smart lawyer to take
the Mrs! ease to court and gel the
whole thing thrown out."
He Is expected to make a
recommendation to the com­
mission in two weeks
Meanwhile Mercer said he is
taking a w ait and see attitude

...Drinking

said youngsters would merely
learn to drink In ears, rather
than in lwrs.

Continued from page 1A
A n d K atie H a rg ra v e s , a
16-yeur old Clearwater high
school student who said her
t»oyfrlrnd. David Marlin. 16. was
killed by a trenaged drunken
driver, made a personal plea lor
adoption of Carlton's bill
"Th e teenager who killed my
iKiyfrtend thoughl It would lxtntally fun to get totally wasted
and take his car out on the
expressway." Hargraves said "I
keep asking myself, why?"

II we thought there was any
tm llra llu n that raising the
drinking age would In l.u I save
lives we'd lx- on your side,**
Shaw said
Hut Carlton said the hill's
opponents were blinded hv Ihclr
own vested Interests III Ihe low er
drinking age
She also expressed disap­
pointment over the complaints
about "blackmail "

Ihil Robert Shaw of thr Florida
Restaurant and Dining Associa­
tion said raising the drinking age
would not save lives and might
even Increase the road toll. Ilr

— Rick Brunson

"I feel thal the federal gov­
ernment has given Florida an
Incentive to raise ihe drinking
age." Carlton sutd alter the vole.
"I would have hoped wr had a
motive lo save lives."

1100 FRENCH AVE.
SANFORD, FL

322-7953

DON’T
MISS
FU R N IT U R E &amp; A P P LIA N C E

A T H O W .0 IS T S U D IB
-Fu n e ra l tar,Ice* lor W n Gertrude fl
Alhow *1 ol )M Acorn Orlu*. Longwood
who dkrd luekday. will be held Friday al )
p m ar lha Altamonte iprm gt chapel o( Ih*
Ualdwln Fairchild Funeral Mom* with Ih*
Ray Archie Sul* officiating Burial will
follow In Gian Haven Memorial Peik
Vlmation lor Inendt will be on* hour poor lo
korvlco In llou ot Itowert. I ha family
raguettt mamorlal confobuftoni bo mod# lo
•ho F iril United Mefhoditl Church. Sanford
&lt;n m e m o ry ol G o r lr u d o B Athow
Boidwm Foirchnd Funorol Homo. Altamonte
Springe m chorg*

M l M i ; S i n lo r d

41)1444 Or Undo

protested the ordlnanre In court
"the eltv would will be hard put"
to defend it by reason of a threat
lo "public health, other reasons'
or that the lol Is lower than the
road or doesn't add aesthetic
treauty to the eltv
The eltv could (rosslbly defend
the ordinance II the lot had thick
vegetation and was a breeding
place for snakes and rats.
Knowles said Hut a court might
rule that Is not sufficient enough
cause to seize someone's projx-rly, hr said

EDWANDt. THOMAtH

YAR D BARNS B Y SPAR
'Hatton j deaden. Stonaye SAeeU
1 ( I I ) ) ) ) ) M i l T im p a

markets lo forrlgn products in four keyareas — telecommunications, forestry prod u c t s , m e d ic a l e q u ip m e n t a n d .
pharmaceuticals and electronics
Details of the new trade package were
revealed In virtually Identical stories citing
"government sources In this morning s
editions of major Japanese newspapers
The reports said the package r tint prises a
number of steps to be taken over three y tur»
that will further open Japanese markets to
foreign products. Including concessions in
the recently deregulated telecommunica­
tions area, a key U S demand
The reports also said It calls lor the
lowering of tarllfs on imported Industrial
and agricultural products, and the removal
of non-tariff trade barriers in the four key
areas of U S intercsi
The program, areordlng to the reports,
also will contain measure* to facilitate entry
Into the Japanese market by developing
nations, especially In Southeast Asia.

SAVE!

$50

18-HOUR
SUPER
SALE!
M omf.,.4 O c ta l W iy i to Chmrgol

Flowers For All Occasions

(EulltlUi

U tt 1

x TA C K R 00M
S A L E *659 SAVEI

10 8

i

ALL WOOD BUILDINGS

BUILT ON YOUR LOT

323-120*

Reg,
$759

NO MONEY DOWN
100% FINANCING AVAILABLE

C O M E S EE OUR FA C T O R Y S A LES LO T A T
200 S . M Y R T LE A V E .
SAN FO R D
323-5557

*of

’* 9* &lt;%t « * t s ,

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
9 a.m. ’TIL 6 p.m.
•

«

30 •60 •90 DAYS WITH NO FINANCi CHARGE!

�QS V
IKS
undays
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Your Satisfaction
is Guaranteed!
W e w a n t you to be completely
bappy w ith everything you
purchase at Scotty's H. tor any
reason, you are not completely
satisfied with the PR O DUCT or
the PRICE simply return the
merchandise, with your sales
receipt, to the store where you
bought it within 3 0 days
we
will cheerfully replace the pro­
duct or refund your money

Rmchecks
W e make every effort to have
plenty of advertised merchan­
dise in stock However, w e will
gtedfy issue a raincheck whan
temporarily oul of stock except
for rtems that are being dis­
counted , closed out or marked
limited quantities O ur Hard­
ware Stores and some of the
smaller stores do not stock
every item Scotty s carries In
that case we will gladly order
it for you through our central
distribution center

Creii1

We Po Pefim
Delivery charges are not
hidden ' in our prices Short
distance charges are 5 \ of the
purchase pnee with a minimum
of *5 00 and a maximum of
*25 0 0 H o w e ve r, delivery
charges m ay be higher on
roofing, gypsum , sheathing,
and insulation products and on
long distance deliveries

Scotty s honors two convenient
methods of making credit p u r­
chases. Visa* and M asterC a r(f“ For your convenience
check cashing cards are avail­
able at your nearest Scotty s
store Your completed applies
tion lakes approximately 10
days fo procoss and it will save
the time-consuming process of
chock approval at fhe register

■ u m m m v j m i a m n r 'ii

mm

- IB IB *

■ M i
P o rta b le GAS GRILL
185 sq. in. table top grill. Single
burner rated 11,000 Btu, foldover wire legs. Uses a propane fuel
cylinder (not included).
No L505
A

$

3 6 " B a y s h o re
CEILING FAN

W

CONCRETE M IX
V 4 0 lb. bag.

• Three w hite metal blades
with white housing
* Single speed
^
• Accepts optional
S t
light kit

6V)" foil wrapped
pot. 3 to 5 blooms.

S&amp;Hi

™

Scotty's

(^ u iu m n
Nilr&lt;«f%l •aiH%un

P o w e rlo c k ®

3 / 4 " x 2 5 ';
No. C T 7 5 1 9 .

Y e llo w 1 / 2 " blade is
durable and easy to
read. Locking knob gives
positive blade lock. 10'
blade is graduated in d o ”
1 /1 6 ". H as belt clip.
No. 3 3 -2 1 0 .

*«1 US

P re fin is h e d
BUNGALOW

PANELING!
5 / 3 2 " x 4* x 8'.
choose from
au tum n oak,
m ushroom hickory
or tan bark hickory.

Your Cnoice:

Rff 6.97

Gasoline

Scotty?

K e n c o

TRIMMER
1V4 hp. No. G T 800

ira S P « 5 » w a a g fc

C O SCO
T R IM -A L L

Specfraade
lire ant
L killer A

S p e c tric id e ®
FIRE AN T KILLER
Ready to use granules.
Controls fire ants w ithin
24 hours. 5 lb. bag.
No. 5 3 2 1 0 .
.

lin p t e

7.47

Rtf. 439

U G H T B U LBS/
Intkto frootodin40, \
60.75 and 100watts.
aercsd can.

N o Rain Checks

MEASURING)
TA PE

Power Return
TAPE RULE

soomrs

h i) . rwniTtiw

EASTER
LILIES

�a-

• Four wood blades
• White or brown
• 6-year limited
warranty
• Accepts optional
light kit.

• Four teak finish blades
• Cane inserts
^
,
• 5-year limited
J i
warranty
" J
• Accepts optional
M
light kit
™

• Four wood blades
• White or brown a
• 5-year limited a
warranty
• Accepts optional
light kit

S S S S fa H M U n

• Four light oak blades
• Bright brass motor
housing
• 3-speed pull chain
• School House light kit

W all-Cote Interior

if W

LATEX PAINT

*e d w o &lt; x l StaiR

300-400 sq ft

pa i n t

House
. P a in t.

W h ile

C olors

G a llo n

G a llo n

lu ll I P A IN T S

P
_ _
4 #

L a t e x ^ 3

REDWOOD
STAIN

I Gallon

R ti.

C o v e n try ^
In te r io r
LATEX
$
P A IN T

G a llo n

3. W hite and colors

EXTERIOR
iATEX PAINT
G a llo n

White and custom
colors

R tl 12.99

24" TOWEL BAR
n

Solid brass. N o . K5.

I

2-HANDLE LAVATORY
FAUCETS

f

m

■
B

Colors
Gallon

GAS GRILL

361 sq. in. chrome cooking grids
30,000 Btu dual burner
Lite-a-matic’ push-button ignitor
20 lb tank included
No 3173-Z/31 7 4 /3 1 75H

225 sq. in. chrome-plated cooking
grids 24,000 btu dual burner
'Lite-A-Matic' push button ignitor
20 lb tank included
No 9041/9054

5-SPEED MINI
5-Piece
Ratchet Box DRILL PRESS
WRENCH SET

S co rin

S ize s 1 / 4 " x 5 / 6 " th ru
1 1/1 6" x 7/8"

No CHL1001 -5

M

I A A 5-Piece
' y y Mechanic
Rti. 9.99 PLIER SET

£

Polished brass finish.
.
W ith pop up.
Your Ch° ^
No. B 4111.
*

W hite and custom
colors. 12 oz. net w eight

COMBINATION
SQUARE

Insulated handles
No. KY-5PL

W
■
■

W h ite
G a llo n

Scotty's

Iron, heavy g a u g e drop forged
4&gt;.&gt;l galvanized a ga inst rust
iV l hardened at all stress
*&gt;nts

Solid brass. No. K4.
TOILET PAPER HOLDER

house*
c o te

M o p a c o te
■
L a te x
HOUSE P A IN T

HAND POWER
FULLER

Solid brass. No. K4.

Antique brass f i n is h .^
W ith pop-up.
No. A-411-1.

Coverage per gallon
250-400 sq. ft.

p

18" TOWEL BAR

Chrom e finish.
W ith pop-up.
No. C-411-1.

House-Cote Latex
EXTERIOR P A IN T

A c r y t c La*e

I

• Four oak finish blades
• Translucent glass .
inserts
€
• 5-year limited
WA
warranty
A
• Acceots optional
V
light kit
^

• Antique brass
finish
• Four wood blades
• School House
light kit
• 6-year limited
warranty

Mo p a c o t h

^ S s S c o tty s ® ^

Coverage per gallon

INTERIOR
latex

iP

52" A T H E N A ^

52" NAPLES

• Four wood blades
• Antique brass
a
housing
q
• 3-speed pull chain
• Light adaptable
• Reversing switch

..

STAPLE GUN
/ r n
TACKER

T im

No TCT-710

^

“

97
w

m

No. 10 2 6 3 0

Chick Scottf t fora
complete lint of iutttt path!
-------- -

O tCA N K

H #m e
SCOTTY'S BE!
27-3-3 LAWN
FERTILIZER

DEEP GREEN
VIGORO FERTILIZER

G a lva n ize d
GARBAGE CAN

c X c
FERTILIZER
5 " x 1 0 ’.
In w h it e
or b r o w n

Your C hoice

Y our Choico

Tapered sides,
snug cover. £
20 gallon. S i r
ST-203

p o - lt 'Y ° u

SPRAYS

S co tty'S ’

and i

Y o u r C h o ice :

SpotWEEDER

4 cubic foot capacity
for

on ornamental* and tlowenng plant*
Uta for controlling chit* weed dandelion hentxl
Kill* aphid* HxdamMia* v*twiell.e» mealybug* and other brneikeal weed* and g ia iw t m lawn
and oinar intact* No 0073
No 0070

j

u h

Vegetable Garden

Weed and G rass K

Control* ap»)&gt;d» leethcpper* wtulafly cabbage
worm* and other intact* No 0072

Kill* weed* and gratae* No 0071

Quart

KeriGQ
■ K e n e o jiB ii^

Flea and
Tick
SPRAY
Pi ami cad with
N&gt;ayer No 412

Dlazinon Soil and Turf
INSECT CONTROL
f

Gallon

Rat 7.47

Heady to u*e granule* cover
up to 6000*4 H 1 0 U

Spectracide* 600
Lawn and Garden
INSECT CONTROL
No 53840
101b bag

Plastic Flush Head
SPRINKLER
For underground iprinkler tyttem t
Chooaa full, hall three quarter or
one-quarter tprey ^

Your
Choico
Gallon

t't (W

H

I

■

Pop-Up SPRINKLERS

COMPACT » SPRAYER
Hgh denwty polyethylene with brata
attention rod rotating thut od and
ad|u»iabla nozzle 1 gallon No 1991

COMPACT * SPRAYER
High denwty polyethylene wrtn brata
•it ana-on rod. routing abut oil and
ad|u*labla nozzle 2 gallon No 1992

dan wry polyethylene with brata
aitanaron rod. relating thul off and
adiuttabia nozzle 3 gallon No 1993

PREMIUM POLY
SPRAYERS

PREMIUM POLY
SPRAYERS

Polyethylene lank with brata 15" brat*
attention rod 2 (gallon capacity
No 1996

Polyelhytane tank with brata 1S ' brat*
attention rod 3 gallon capacity
No 1997

�W D -40 LU BRICANT

BEL-AIR ENTRANCE
LOCKSET
kuak/et

Scotty'S

M ]

Gallon
Refill
Size
SPRAY
APPLICATOR

Satin chrome finish.
No 893BX26DCP.
o

C o m b in a tio n

m

Empty

18f

$
1 H

88

1/2 "

x 50'
REINFORCED

HOSE

R*l 438

No. RX12-50

P oly

IIII1

Nylon
WATER
NOZZLE

ffi m e b K K

&lt;

O s c illa tin g S
SPRINKLER

Durable plastic
body adjusts from
mist to jet spray,
No 40 11/KT208L

Waters up to
Baa 1/VS 2,200 sq. ft.
M odet 5 9 ,

Polmethylene
FIL...

H A N D 'S l

SPRAYER
Rtl 937

2 liter No. 1985.

Electron
INSECT KILLER

10' x 20' Super K O t t Y 'S
strong 2 mil

25-watt bulb 100-foot lure
range No 2210

R tl 2.99

M n iC c r

F lo o d lig h t
BULBS

Fan T ype
LEAF RAKE

C o m b in a tio n
PADLOCK

Clear in 75 or 150
watts. 5,000 hours

No. 8041.

Double wall construction
Steel shackle 11V' case
No 1500-D.

Y o u r Choice:

Rti 8.49
—

S ilic o n e
C AU LK

*v
•

Interior/Exterior

LATEX
KORKER Scotty'S
CAULK
i n B ft n r c t n t k l m

Exterior white and clear
or bathroom white.
1 0 .3 1( o» .
Your Choice.

W E A TH E R S TR IP P IN G

3 /1 6 " x 3 /8 ” x 17'
No 2 0 2

Rtl 3.59

R tl 99*

PINE TUFF

ODOR-X™

T h is h e a v y duty cloaner
d isinfe cta nt n o w co nta ins
rn o ru pine oil

ALKALINE
BATTERIES

Homoves and eliminates,
pot odors, smoke odors,
mildew odors, sewage
odors, and cooking odors
16 02

28 0
o i........................*
2 ..........
1“

1 6 o z. size

'C', ’D ’ and AA' (twin
pack) or 9-volt (single
P«ck) ______. ,
Y o u r C h o ic e :

Rti. 237

R t l 2.15

POLY PANELS
Expandod polystyrene insulation in 3/4" x
14H" x 48" sheets R 2 82 *
Th*
Iht PIMWu* r*##***•*tM msuHug (■**•«* Am y&lt;M
Sctwry«
bPwiict Heel onH,ii,m

Pack of 6

Rtf. 8.47

ASSORTED SCREWDRIVERS

wT

ARb

• 3 " 01 P h .ll.p t • 4 " 0 2 P h illip s • 4 “
cabinet bp • 4 " standard • 6 " cabinet tip

or standard

S u n d a y 9 am to 5 p m
P R I C E S G O O D T H R U A P R IL 10

OAK
VANITY
SoT^jakfront with on# door and two drawers
•fonts Oak veneered plywood sides inside and
out Antique brass salt closing hinges and
oak insert handles (Vanity top and faucet not
included)
No VAD2410
No VAD 3010
24" x 18" x 30“
30" x 18" x 30“

W

117

49*

Your Choice:

OPEN TIL 9 PM
ORLANDO
5744 E CokauaiOi
Rhona 27)8874

5) JO M m

Ad

R u n t 291 7*48
1551 N O N t,.4
42 J 0569
7500 5 O in g i Am
f+xjnm 551 31 70

ALTAMONTE SPmNQS
1019 E Altamonte Dr

(Hwy 4361
Phone 339 8311
875 W Highway 436
861 7254
Phone 86

i— 0PM T il I W

K I S S IM M E E
U 3 0 N M a m Si
(Corner erf Hwy
H w y 4441 A 192)
Phone 847 5001.8464848

— OPIM 1M M I AM TO ■ PM —
Stony* HARDWARE ST C IO U O
524 IJthSttaallUS Hwy 152)
Southland Shotaang Center
Ahona B M J I t l
,,
S. wry i U O a r A M M i 00 *

O COEE
Catnm oI I4wy 50 4 520
Phone 655 I
4AN7OR0
700 liench A m
Rhona 3234700

— O M N fM H M A M TM P M —
(9041353 0751
Scotty &gt; H u n open it 7 30 a m
Monday thru Satwdey
Opan Sunday* 9 a m to 5 5 m

�PEO PLE
Evening Herald. Sanlord. FI

Thursday, April 4, l»Si— IB

Heirloom Breeds Family Feud
without Including the woman hr
D E A R ADDY: ll s e e m s that
lives wldi and her Illegitimate
m y mother-in-law. who lives
sou Is II possible 10 do Ibis
quite a distance, promised both
without causing hard feelings'.’
m y husband and Ills older sister
PROBLEM S IN
lhe same piece of antique
S O U TH E R N C A L IF .
furniture doth have admired
Hus piece lor a long lime
D E A R P R O B L E M S : No
Recently, my husband re­
Abandon the Idea There are no
turned from a visit to Itls
We would like to include our illegitimate children pisi tilegtt
mothers triumphantly bearing
this treasure It Is now silting in brother and bis legitimate child Itttale parents
m y living room and t haven't
the nerve to tell my Msirr-in-tau
Me have It (Site lives near ns
and visiis often l 1 am dreading
her visiting us and seeing It
here a s I am sure the sparks M ill
fly!
Frankly, the piece doesn't
mean that much to me I've tried
to gel inv husband to oiler it to
Loretha Carpenter
Ills sister hut lie Hath refused,
saying. "This is die only decent
thing I have from m y mother's
home my sister has already
p .m .
managed in get everything else.
I suppose ll's true, but I like
im sister in-laM a lot. and l*m
(urn b e iM ce n the two of them
I hex are both very stubborn,
and I need some advice on how
4 1 9 P a rk A v e n u e , S a n fo rd
io keep peace In d ie lumllv
Celery City Lrxlgc N'o 542 and
IN T f lE M ID D LE
C h ild c a re P r o v id e d
Evergreen Temple No 321 urr
sponsoring their Ligluli Annual
D E A R IN; You -ire not In the
Scholarship Hall Friday. April 5. middle unless you pul ynurscll
from lo p in lo 2 a in at the there If vour sisicr m Lim hits
most ol die heirlooms, and this
Sanford Civic Center
1‘roccrds from the xcmMorntal is die only "derctif" piece left I
hall Mill he used for a scholar­ can'l blame your husband (or
ship lor a deserving Seminole Icellng dial dlls one Ix-long*. lo
County high school senior In him Slav out of It And wlitlt on mine his/her ctlm allon
we're on Ih-it subject*, read on:
Tlekei donations arc $«» |x-r
D E A R
A B B Y :
My
jxrwm. For Inlorinallon. eoniaei grandmother is a wonderful,
item.ml Milehell ur anv mcmtx-i generous lady bui she has
ol I he lrxlgc or temple
already caused a lot ol haul
Highlighting the evening's Ice lings In the laniilv In-cause
In
festivities M ill lie die c r u M 'i i l n g n l she keeps promising the same
a Scholarship Hall King and pieces of Jewelry to three or lour
Uiieen by popular vote Can
members ol our family
did.lies are: Loreiha Carpeniei
I don t waul to ap|x-ur grubby,
Joyce M Davis. Walter Mosley
bid when m y grundm olher
KdM.nd Earl Jones and Felix promised me her peat! necklace,
Smith
i should have asked her m pul It
PRIME CUTS
in writing
&gt;You re all primed lor a season ol style when you ve QOl Ihe
O U T OF LUCK
1styles that are cul out tor get noticed glances The tashion
is hoi amt so are Ihe colors Raindrop cut pump lr*hot pink,
and hot blue Increartible’ Altordable leather fashions
D EA R O U T: II vim had pul

Dear
Abby

Y o u A r e In v ite d . . .

s

W alter Mosley

Joyce M . D avis

M AU ND Y TH U R S D A Y
i
COM M UNION
SERVICE

Thursday, April 4,
7:30
F IR S T U N IT E D
M E T H O D IS T C H U R C H

Candidates
For Ball
King, Queen

conme.’s
Just
Time
For Easter

Felix Smith

Ed w a rd E a rl Jones

S p r in g
S u its

D A YS O N L Y
• THURS.
•

y2 price

FBI.
SAT.

• LINENS
• G A B A R D IN E

• STRIPES
• SOLIDS
• LONGC
SHORT
JACKETS
BIG GALS BRAS t
GIRDLESS2.00 REBATE
Junlor-Pclltc-fiM say'Largc-,/» Sites
"HlUKcr Values O n Ilr t t r r Q u a lity "
711 E. FIR S T S T R E E T . D O W NTOW N S A N F O R D
M on

S a l 9 JO S 30

Pen Women
To Meet

th ose

The National Leugue of Ameri­
can I'rn Women will meet April
0 at 1130 u.m. ai the Lunlord
lin t e l

In

W in ter

Park

tor

a

luncheon.
Following the luncheon the
group will gather at the Uadi
Haven Art Center lo view 50
paintings and wutercolora from
1he Impressionist period In
American Art which Is on dis­
play ul die Center through May
3rd The exhibition. "Directions
In American Painting. 1H75IH25." Is from a collection of Dr
and Mrs. John McDonough
Admission Tec Is $3 Loch
Haven Art Center members
admitted free For Information
and luncheon reservations call
67H9436

pearls

ol

Misdnm

into

* 4 6 .9 9

action, you'd have "mmiii found
out m-he liter your grand modicr
w a s stttnglng you a lo n g

D E A R A B B Y t Our parrnIs
anniversary ts coming up stxin.
Some of us Mould like In make
Ihrmu gift of a lamlly |&gt;oriralt
Including ihelr children, ihrlr
children’s spouses and their
grandchildren.
We waul to limit this portrait
to legitimate family members
only, which would exclude the
mother of one of Hie grand­
children and her son from a
previous relationship

208 i. 1st SI.
Downtown
Sanford

322 0 2 0 4

ft:

SANFORD - 2 0 0 4 ORLANDO DR.

SALE STARTS

Z A Y R E PLAZA A T A IR P O R T BLVD.

THURSDAY
PRICES GOOD
THRU SAT.

ffSasfStJS"

I dtlm%

------Camp •»CIMDI
4 **
- ^SEERSUCKER I
1FEATHER WEIGHT
CORDSby OANRIVti
lw 0«m » «
VwiH.
p j, Ca«»" $ 2
4V
'

NIV! SHIPMENT

CINDI
t - shirt
SOLIDS

Cta,ax

tst

’

M

FANCY
YARN DYE

OXFORD../
CHAMBRAY

s -m

P*It*(IM C*u»n
Mo.h Walk

.4 t « k

Yd V,

Polyailar Cotton

[ Un§th»

45

9 9 *« *1“

Va " N O R O IL

ELASTIC
5 YARD HANK FOR
lima 4h tm

Hank

y S f*

VINYL

H BULO

WE/Gwre V - e i e c t ,o
w e ig h ts

LACE

PLACEMATS3 0
N ow Reduced

n *
stv,\VIOn
°f colors
p r in t s

Ugh»wel9j,t

v

,n*n l«okSef,d,

Each'

Create Your O w n

* p C,n*( Y L n e n
Prints

$ 0 4 9

EASTER BASKET
BONNET

Yd

$098
Yd

decor at

0»Mf Gift

„ MAE’S LOW.

INJT

*5*/S.®msket
C * e

All Cotton

&lt;-

B°K*HZA

HR

Campmt l}*{| » v

m *6 V

•Theft Ow ^
T
• U e e e y r u a e ^ ,,,^ ^

1 29

1.98 Value

TERRY STRIPED
KITCHEN TOWELS

it

Woven Design, 15"x26"

'i a.

'I
*

-d me .

�JB -E v tm n g Herald, Sanford, FI.

blondie

Thursday, April a, HIS

IT 9 C h O CCXATC-'
PuA vosec ,

by Chic Young
W&amp;jl P nO j

h .Av B

7)

SO wSh T
MOO a
a u /VOn o ?

P u TTV ^

)

|

\

&amp; .y
by Mort Walker

T H E BORN L O S E R

by Art Sansom

A R C H IE

by Bob Montana

by Howl* Schnaldar

EEK &amp; MEEK
B U T TALfclMG. T O
StXJRSELF A WO BEJIJG
V
IGJXRLD-

T A IK IH G T O S C U R S E L f
IS WOT fJ E (E !£ A f? lL V A
s io j

a

u m iu f tY .
.Air

M ilk A lo n e Isn 't Enough
To P reven t O ste o p o ro sis
DE.sR DR- LAMB — My friends
tell me that, at 46. I should be
taking a calcium supplement so
that I don't eventually end up
with a “ widow's h u m p' and
delicate bones t maintain that
because I run 30 miles a week
and drink a half-quart of milk a
day. I’ll be all right, but my
friends are beginning lo make
me nervous I prefer not lo take
supplements of any kind, but to
use natural foods and exercise to
stay healthy Am I on the rlghi
track?
DEAR READER - Hurrah for
your friends They may save you
a lot of trouble later. You may t&gt;e
on a calcium-deficient d in
Many adults are. and that has a
lot to do with the reason v j
m a n y w o m en deve lop o s ­
teoporosis (dissolving bones),
which causes the "'w idow 's
hump" you dcscrUw and leads to
hip fractures and other serious
problems A half quart of regular
milk only provides about BOO
mg or less of calcium The
recommended dally dietary al­
lowance IRfJAl Is HOO mg Many
authorities believe ihat a woman
should Increase her calcium
Intukc when she approaches
menopause At the onset of
menopause and thereafter, she
should either take an adequate
amount of estrogen replacement
or consume 1.500 mg of calci­
um a day
Exe rrise Is Im portant li
makes Ik u k s stronger and af­
fects subtle bone architecture
However, women who run a lot
and are very thin may stop
having menstrual periods slop
ovulating and actually lose bone
tissue. This may have something
lo do with Inadequate nutrition
for the lrve| of exrrdsc
You cun eat naturally, exercise
and still gci enough calcium In
your diet A quart of skim milk
lorilfled wilh 2 penrnl non-fal
milk solids contains more than
1.400 mg of calcium and only
HOO calories
DEAR DR LA Mil - Alton! a
month ago, my IH-yrar-old son
was Injured In a car wreck Hr
broke his hark In Iwn places and
broke bis spln.il cord lie had
hack surgery and bone was
taken mil ol his lup and put In
Ills back T wo rods were placed
in Ills hack. They will be taken

out In a couple of years
He has begun rehabilitation.
The doctors told us he won't be
able to use his legs. He Is
paralyzed from the waist down
is there any hope that hr will
regain the use of his legs?
DEAR HEADER - I always
hate lo hear a story like thai
because so little can be done
The basic problem Is lhal tissue
In Ihe brain and spinal cord
rannot regenerate As a result
ACROSS

Dr.

Lamb
an Injury to the spinal cord is
permanent. Initially. It may be
hoped that part of the function
loss ts related to swelling and
injury* wlihoui permanent dam­
age. but after a few weeks, this is
no longer a factor
Send i o u r qiic'.iinn* r&lt;&gt; Dr

t..Ullf&gt;. I'O Iti&gt;\ Li.*/ W.idlu t'm
Sr.iuun Yen i.ifk

R k ljf )

Answer to PreviOut Fu ji'#

3 Fronth women
(abb' I

1 J « *a s
4 Seated
S Frower
5 Greek
9 Anglo S*» 0n lot
physician
tor
6 Nou«iist
12 Womans name
flegno d
7 Navy snip
13 Handle (Fr l
lire* v la o p r)
U W*1#r ( fr |
8 Oetii .non
15 D.ii seed
18 Won*
9 fie c tn c lah
10 Small vai&lt;*y
17 Low degraa
1 1 Centers
latibr I
19 Burmese
18 Sewed
20 Organi Ol smell ?1 Octane
numbers labbr |
22 Author Homing
23 Loud no.so
23 Putt on
24 Spirit in
24 Lilting devee
Moslem lor#
25 Composer
Stravinsky
27 Air 1rov#l form
26 fro n t of an
31 All t id ie d
airplane
32 Saucer shaped
27 Goddess ol late
ball
28 D &lt;m nt |p i* l I
33 Netherlands
29 River in
Commun#
Germany
34 T u d u ltl island
30 W riting tools
35 It human
36 Woodod valley
1
1
1
37 Russian Citodol
• J
39 Pud drmfco
12
40 Toko * moot
is
4 1 Long Cm*
42 Puts togoinor
14
45 Folk loro
49 Tokyo I lormor
namo
5C Construction
24 J % 24
beam lcomp
wd |
n
52 Lovantm* katch
53 Pootic
14
contraction
»&gt;
54 Region in
Morocco
55 Sicilian its o n
56 Royal Scottish
42 41 44
Academy
labbr |
6*
57 Popular dissert
58 River in furepe M

V |

32
35
36
38
39
41

pluck
Supple
Creations
Guys
Marsh
Scary

44 Island ott
Scotland
45 Thin end limp
43 Zola heroine
47 Acirese V e m ll
48 Blemish
5 t College degree
labbr I

42 Scott
43 Poems

10
'
"
"

a sm

DOWN
t Fodaral agent
(comp wd |
2 One (Oar |

If

. d i m s i.i M * in

WIN AT BRIDGE
by Haigr*av*a A Sailers

MR. MEN A N D L IT T L E MISS
f) «**i #»m&gt;na
W H E R E A R E Y o u G O IN G
M IS S S C A T T E R B R A IN ? /

AT T H IS l I^ U K ?f
l I ' - r ^ L ’ i THREE-

T H IR T Y ! '

o o p a ' *-o k r y . I KEEP THIMKIMG
l r «=

F R /P A Y '

srttfdcc
by Warner Brothers

B U Q S BUNNY

■ I

By Jam es Jacoby
How you play a particular Milt
com bination depends upon
whether you need all the irlrks
in dial soil or just some ol them
II you don't know the answer
right away, line! mil first That's
true even 11 ihe suit happens to
V Hump

can afford lo lose one heart trick,
but mil two Accordingly at trick
lour tie should lead a diamond
toward the |ack In his hand
When ihat holds the contract
can then lx- guaranteed with a
safety play In hearts Th e king of
hearts should be played first,
and then a low heart played
The defenders started with the toward dum m y, II West plays
king and ace ol clubs and tin* right, declarer should play
another club, woo In dummy the nine II lhal loses ihe trick,
with ihe queen Declarer now the ace will pick up Ihe last
blithely played ihe ace of hearts trum p On the actual layout.
and continued with another West will lx- held lo only one
heart When East showed mil. trum p trick
the coot ini t was out- down
II Last had started with four
On this deal, declarer may hearts to the |J ID, declare! will
have a diamond loser, depending win ihe second heart play with
upon Ihe location ol the queen. 11 ihm uiiv's ace and come through

there Is no diamond loser. South

U 10

M IIIT II

i i as

♦ 0.1 10
» tm
♦ ■At
♦ 0 72
W EST

EAST

♦ 461

♦ a ? %4

v g n u i

?;

♦ » 5 J

* 0 10 7 2

♦ AK a

♦

iovx i

m ip t ii

♦ AK 2
V K J 41
♦ AK J

♦ J 54

Vulnerable North South
D e a le r South
Wm
Nutlh
Pau
I’a u
Pass

(♦

East
Pau
Pass

Suulk
I NT
IV
Pass

Opening kail

HOROSCOPE
W hat The Day
Will Bring...
FR A N K AND E R N E S T

U" LnM-&gt;^

Q'P ' " T ?

o u ft

Pa ^ K Be n c h

^

■ ^

• It U J

IA

p 7

C

*
'-.SAlX

IS (SONe! .. T H EY ’v f
ANOTHER s o c ifi. 1.
"T&gt; .
P/^oe/JAMl
,,

cut

Trs***) 4**
by Jim Davis

G A R FIE LD

l CAN S i t THE HEADLINES NOW.
'CAT STUCK IN MAILBOX SOMEHOW
MANAGES TO SlVERlLV INJURE
LOCAL M AN"

YOUR BIRTHDAY
APRIL 5. 1088
Pursue your secret ambitions
in ihe year ahead Even Ihnugh
you may have shelved them
temporarily In ihe past, the
timing is now right und your
c h a n c e s fo r s u c c e s s a rc
excellent.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 10)
Something that might be helpful
to you In a business way rnuld
be brought to your at ten linn at a
social gathering today. Be a good
listener The Matchmaker wheel
reveals your compatibility to all
signs, us well as showing you
which signs you ure bcsl suited
to romantically. To gel yours,
mall $2 to Astro-Graph. Box
489. Radio City Station. New
York. NY 10019
TAURUS (April 20 May 20) If
you feel Inclined to be of
assistance to another today,
so quietly without calling atten­
tion to your deed. Your kindness

won't go unnoticed
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20| Iksure to check Iti with home base
Uxlay II you have lo do a loi ol
running around Gixxt news may
lx- trying to gn through to you
and you won't want to nils* the
connection
CANCER U u n r 2 1 Ju ly 22)
This is one of those fortunate
days wherr things have a way of
working out for your ultimate
gtxxl Be positive and optimistic
rrgurdlngyour Involvements
LEO (July 23 Aug 221 Your
words carry a lot of weight with
your peers uxtay. so If anyunr
coines to you for advice, keep In
mind Ihat they will take to heart
whatever you tell them.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22)
Chance plays a big role In your
alfalrs today and something
might pop up lhal could be
financially meaningful.
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23)
Tim e devoted to pleasurable
pursuits will not be wasted
uxlay. In fact, you need In­
volvement In activities that are a
departure from yo u r usual

A N N IE
by T . K. Ryan

TU M B LEW EED S
T R IV IA M A R K E R

S « t h Sonjum .com pcaarof
'A r m p t t V a lU y B lu # » " d u ■ ppaarad n e a r h a re last
ye a r. O n ly h is jo u ia y h a w
w a s fo u n d .

!

ilk

iii

S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov 23 Dec
21) You have the rare ability
Uxlay lo build ujxjn gtxxt things
you already have going and
make them even belter Put your
ialeni to worthy uses
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 Jan
I9| You could be the recipient of
some good news today Ihat
you've tx*cn hoping for pertain­
ing lo your material well being
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb. 19)
Think optimistically and act In a
positive manner loday, This will
give you complete control over
events dial can advance your
self-interests.
PISCES |Feb. 20 March 20)
Circumstances that have an effeet upon your finances continue
to look encouraging. Give priori­
ty to matters that could make or
save you money.

by Ltonard Starr

. T H E R E .M ,
FAY BE 6OIE0HE
IN THE

routine
SCORPIO |Od 24 Nov 22)
You'll derive greater satisfaction
uxlay out of doing things for
others than you will by merely
w ivin g your personal Interests.
Ik- hclplul

cm \

K IT H THE A5f»

SHACW-

YOURE IN THE hftOHO
M&amp;lhESS FOR HUTMENT.
GeiTlf HEN. ,

�E v e n in g

TB Testing
n Schools
Scheduled
Tuberculin ITE M
s k in l e s 11n g In
Seminole C o u n ty
sch o o ls w ill be
sponsored by the
c o u n t y p u b lic
health unit April
h

12

and

April

I r» m for first and
seventh grade stu­
dents
Tfiese c h ild re n
will be tested by an
c xperlenced
t ii t&gt; r r c u 1 o s i s
s c r e e n in g te a m
with the permission
&lt;&gt;l the s tu d e n ts '
parents The faculty
a ii il s t a f f art*
s t r o n g l y ent nu r a g ed ( o
participate
The Seminole
County Public
Health U n i t r e­
cently moved into
its new f a e l l t t y
lot ated .it 240 W
An|K&gt;rt 1)1vd . Sanlord.

Florida's Homeless

Legal Notice
C I T Y OF
L A K E M A R Y . F L O R ID A
N O T IC E O F
P U B L IC H E A R IN G
T O A im O M IT m a y C O N C E R N
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by the- C ity C o m m iiP o n of the
City Of Lake M ary Florida *hat
va-d Com rm #i«on wilt hold a
Public H e a rin g ,pn April 111 I'US
at 7 JO P M *♦ Lake Mary City
Hell t© con#!def an O rd nance
entitled
AN O R D IN A N C E OF T h E
CITY
OF
L A K E MARY
F LO R ID A
AMENDING
C H A P TER
10 S U B S E C T IO N
B
AS A D O P T E D BY O R D I
N A N C E N U M B E R 1 OF TH E
CITY
OF
L A K E MARY
F L O R IO A
P R O V ID IN G FOR
Z O N IN G W IT H IN T h E COR
PO R A T E L I M I T S
P R O V lD
IN G F O R A Z O N IN G M AP
TH ER EO F
O E S C R IB F O IN
T E R E I M
Z O N I N G RE

There Are 13,000 Of Them; Little Help
TA L L A H A S S E E (CPU - A special stale task
forre has estimated that there arc as many as
13.000 homeless people living In shelters and on
the streets In Florida on any given day.
In a preliminary report to Gov. Bob Graham
Wednesday, the Statewide Task Force on the
Homeless said of the available aid (or the
homeless, most comes from private Institutions
such as churches and there are few govern­
ment-run programs lor them at any level
The panel said the homeless suffer a multitude
of health problems, especially children
"M uch of the waking time of many homeless
people ts spent simply on thoughts of survival —
how will I get my next meal, where will I sleep,
how can I avoid being mugged, beaten or
robbed?" the task force said
T o get some idea of the number of homeless In
the state the task force surveyed shelters lor their
overnight populations on the night of Jan 20
The shelters reported more than 3.500 ocru*
pants
"In addition to the 3.500 sheltered persons, we
five estimated that as many as 9.500 persons
were on the streets on that night for a statewide
total of 9.700 to 13,000 persons." the task force
said
The panel called the estimate conservative and
said additional surveys are being taken to develop
a more precise figure
"Feelings of fear, anger, frustration, hatred and

hopelessness characterize the emotions ol the
homeless." the task force vud
Many of the
homeless arc trapped in a downward spiral of
poverty due to lack of money and low-Income
housing Many employment-ready people sinipl)
arc unable to get a |ob because thev have no one
to care for ilteir children or are unable to find
clean clothes, shower and groom themselves to
apply for a job
T h r task force said the ma|or cause* Ol
homelessness in Florida include
— poverty;
— Migration of unemployed people trout
depressed areas elsewhere,
— A lack of sufficient i omimiints mental health
services,
— Alcoholism and drug abuse
— A shortage ot low income housing
— Domestic violence;
— Federal Immigration policies
— And a lack of housing lor farmworkers
The panel said main ol the homeless do not III
the traditional stereotype ol a
derelict
or
"hobo."
T h e h o m e le s s p o p u la tio n to d a y Is
heterogeneous, knowing no I m u i i u K with regard
to age. race, gender and educational achieve­
ments." the task force said
The task force Is due to deliver a final report to
Graham by June 1

q u ir e m e n t s

yndtr

giw#n th jl
a»
C a ii# lt&gt; # rry
F ie n d * 12707

tn# I Acttl tout nam* ot

G R E A T G A M E S end fr»a*
intend Id register $*'d name
with th* Cl#*-*, ol the Circuit
Court
inolo County Florida
to accordance wltti the pro
vfl*on# ot the F ft tit tout Name
StatuTet to unit Section M ICH
Florida Sta»gte% 195*
t Robert RutwHI
I M ary K H u i m Ii
P ufchth A pril « II &gt;• 2* m s
D EE Jt
IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T
IN A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
F L O R IO A
CASE NO 9S 0 t ! « CA ## G
rtfllL I A M L
B A L lE W ANO
A LICE A H A L L E W h itM t’e
plaintiff#

*1

Paper Pushers
Longwood M a y o r H arvo y Sm erllson, loft,
and Sanford M a y o r Beffye Sm ith lend their
support to the Shrine C lub 's annual paper
sale by p ro cla im in g F rid a y and Saturday
Shrlners A pp reciatio n Days. Sh rln e rs will be
selling club newspapers those two days to

ra is e money tor Shrlners hospitals tor
crippled children and burn centers Accept
Ing the proclam ations are Jim P rice , right,
p a p e r sale c h a irm a n , and Bob M orse,
Sanford Shrine C lu b president.

Man Loses License Permanently,
Fined $1,000 For Drunk Driving
A Dclionu man lias been lined
$1,000 and his driver s license
suspended perm anently for
driving under (h r Influence of
alcohol.
Sem inole C o u n t y Ju d g e
Will lace H all also ordered
Steven Lee Ritchie. 25. ot 1516
Floyd Circle, to pay 9125 re­
stitution lor damages his car
caused alier running into the
back ol another car on Nov. 1!).
T h e accident o ccu rred on
Raymond Avenue off state Road
434 west of lamgwood Ritchie
was arrested by a Florida
Highway Patrol Irixipcr follow­
ing the fender-bender.
In a second DU ! case. Newrll
Ackerman. 37. of Brandon. Fla.,
w as tlned $5&lt;X) by Hall w ho also
suspended Ackerman's license
lor 5 years
Ackerman was arrested Sept.
27 b\ Lake Mary (Miller. He was
lound asleep in his car In u
convenience store parking lot
The otflcer told him not to drive
hut later saw him driving and
made the arrest.
In other county court artlon.
thr following persons have ei­
ther pleaded or been found
guilty of driving under the
Influence, or having an un­
lawful blood alcohol level
A h first-time offenders, most
have had their driver's license
suspended for 6 months, or­
dered to pay a $250 line, pay
court costs of $27.50 and com­
plete 50 hours of community
service. When a guilty or no

contest plea Is entered or If the
defendant Is found guilty of an
alcohol-related offense, other
charges are usually either not
prosccutrd or arc dismissed.
Most ol the first time offenders
are allowed to apply for busi­
ness-only driving jierrnlts. In
cases where I hr sentence dif­
fers. the actual sentence Is
rejMirted:
— Milton Charles Thompson J r .
24, of Box 1224. Oviedo, ar­
rested Dec, 7 on U.S. Highway
17-92 south ol Lake Mary after
Ills car straddled lanes several
limes and ran onto the median
— Herman Nathan. 61, of Or­
lando. arrested Jan 4 after he
was found asleep In Ills car on
the easttmuud entrance ramp to
Interstate 4 at state Road 436.
Altamonte Springs. •
— Jackie Maye. 30. of 227
Bradshaw St.. Sanford, arrested
Feb. 2 after Sanford police saw
his rar Jump a curb on Flrsi
Street at 0.jk Avenue. Sanford
— Joseph Anthony Mlreau. 25.
of 1709 Howell Branch Road.

Winter Park, arrested Dec 9
alter his car remained slopped
th ro u g h ! two traffic light
changes on 17 92 ai SR 4.36
Casselberry.
— Nino Homo. 27. ol I' O Box
216. A popka, arrested March lt&gt;
after tic stopjK-d at a red llghi at
slate Roads 436 and 434. Alta
monte Sjirings. and harked his
car up and then sped away
The following jK-oplr arrested
lor DUI have been lound guilty
of the lesser charge of willhil
and wanton reckless driving
— Frank John Szczepauskl 51
ol Orlando, arrested Dec ft after
Ills car crossed the centerline ol
county Hoad 427 and hit a curb
B r was lined $250 and ordered
lo complete 50 hours ol com
m unlly service.
— Wlll.e Reese Louis J r . 47. ol
300 E. Georgia Avc.. Longwood.
arrested Dec, 13 alter Ills car
was seen swerving on 17-92 in
Longw’iMKl He was find $250
and ordered lo complete 50
liours of community service.
— Deane Jo rd a n

Schroeder To Score A nother First
LO U IS V ILLE Ky. (UPII Artificial heart recipient Bill
Schroeder will become Ihc first
artificial heart patient to live
outside a hospital uftcr he Is
d ischa rg ed S a tu rd a y from
Hum ana Hospital Audubon,
hospital officials said

The world's second recipient
ol a permanent mechanical
heart w ill he moved to a
"hulfwuy house ' across the
street from the Louisville hospi­
tal which has been modified to
house heart patients from the
Humana Heart Institute

D oonesbury
*.««** «
1&amp;S60PCUA
• W M rS Tk&amp;tzny&amp;.lV
| £ ? 1 UKS 1CTALKHMH
\™ % * * c w s w i
: 6&lt;sev

JU D Y A Mac IN TO S M
Defendant
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO J U D Y A Mac IN TO S M
Y O U A R E N O T I F I E D that an
action to cancel a mortgage on
th* following defer i!&gt;ed property
located In Sem lnol# County
F lor ida
Lot 7 Bloch 21 N O R T H OH
LA N D O F IR S T A D D IT IO N
according to the Plat thereol at
recorded 'in Plat Booh 12, Page#
7) and 2a, Public Record# ol
Seminole County, F lor Ida
hat been filed agalhtf you end
you are required to la rv a a copy
of your written defense# If any
to I f o n R I C H A R D
L
R O B IN S O N . E tq u ir# Plaintiff »
attorney. *ho*e addre## ii Pott
Office Bo# if*. C a ite lb e rry
Florida J2707 on or before April
72 IMS. and fit# the original
with the Clerk, of fbl# Court
•liber 'before tare ice on Plain
til#* attorney or Immediately
thereafter o th e rw iie e default
*MI be entered again it you for
th* relief d e m a n d e d In th#
Complaint
O A T E D on M a rc h I I 1*9)
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R I E N
C N rk of the C irc u it Court
By Dorothy Norton
Deputy Clerk
Pwblltb M arch 71 H Aj**if f,
II. INS
D E O IS7
IN TH 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 A N O F O R
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY .
F L O R IO A
CASE NO U t f l J C A N K
IN RE The M a rria g e of
BEVER LY M AE O R A/OA
SALAZAR
Petitioner
end
JOSE R A M O N S A L A Z A R
Retpondent

N O TIC E O F A C TIO N
TO'. Jote Ram on Sate tar
La Caul Norte
Car ace# I07tf, Venezuel a
YOU A R E N O T I F I E D that a
Petition for Qiiaolution of Mar
» age hai been filed agem tt you
and the Petition #ee«t a (Safer
m m * !io n of p a r e n t i n g re
cponubiiile# Y o u era required
to *erv* a copy of your written
r*«pon#e# if any. to the Petition
on the Ptltttto n* r‘t attorney
S TEV EN G
H ORNEFFER.
*ho#e addre## 1% 7#0 South U S
H ig h w ay 11 t j . C e t ie lb e r r y .
Florida 11707. on or before A pril
2# iftS end file the original
with the tie -'I of ftili tour!
either before ftafvkci on P«ft
honer # attorney or imm ediately
thereafter otherw lte a default
win be entered age in# I you for
lb# relief d e m a n d e d In the
petition
Dated M arch IS. IH S
(S E A L )

T O B K U K 0 W IM -

S IK .H M T L H E

P C K X M FO U Je

OFUOKA&amp; HAW.VHS7U
HA6K)OJMT

QJULfie.

v#
M A K C F R A N K L IN and D ANA
M f R A N K L IN
Defendant#

N O T IC E OF ACTION
TO M A K C F R A N K L IN and
O A N A M F R A N K L IN
UM61 U n ity Lana Potom ac
M a ryla n d KM #4
Y O U * A R f N O t t r i P O t h a t an
action fa far#clute * mortgage
on the following detenbed pro
p a rty
#Huate and being In
Sem ino-i# C o unty, F lor Ida
Lot a. Block G S E C T IO N VII
S W E E T W A T E R OAKS
ac
cording to the Plat thereof a#
recorded in Plat Book It Paget
21 and 7# of fh# Public Record#
of Seminole County Florida
ha# been filed egain#l you and1
you are required to te rv t a copy
of yoyr w ritten detente# if any,
on pialn tiff # attorney, whose
addre#1 i»
TA YLO R
B R IO N
BUM M A
G R E E N E 111! South Bey there
D rive M ia m i, F lo rid a 111)1
Tel No 177*700
A# #oc IA ft CswT.fce! F ie nk im L
Whig hem
E squire 200 W !#t
Street Sanford. Florida 17771
Tel No 177 7171
on or before A p ril IS !«•# end
liie the origina l with the clerk o*
this court either before tervice
on plaintiff # attorney or mmme
dietely thereafter ofherwlte a
default will be entered egainil
you tor the relief demanded In
the com plaint or petition
D A T E D on M arch I IFfS
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
A# Clerk ot the Court
By i%f Diene K Oakley
Deputy Cterk
Publlth M a rc h la 71, 29 April
4 IHS
D E D 107

F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Notice l# hereby given that I
am engaged in bu «ine«« at Stf
W Lake M a ry B ivd Suite 204
Lake M a r , Seminole County
F tor Ida 127 4* under the He tl! tout
name of L A K E M A R Y M E O I
CAL C L I N IC , and that I intend
lo regtftter *a&gt;d name with Ihe
Clerk of the C ir c u it Court
Samlnoie C ounty, Florida in
#&lt; tor dance will# the provlkion*
of the Ficfltiou# Nam e Slatute#
fo w il
Section MS 09 Florida
Statute* 1917
■I'Gien F D e v il M D
Pubhlb A p ril 4. It 19. 2S IMS

DIE 21

O AVIO N B E R R IE N
By Dorothy Norton
Deputy Clerk
Pwbnth M arch 21 t A p ril 4 II.
11 tits
D E O »I7

XoM6ru.ALUAY5 BC A FAR.” -

FIAWASK,

IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T
OF TH E IIT H
J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT
IN A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
F L O R ID A
CASE N O IS QS04 C * e t k
M E R R I L L
L Y N C H
M O R T G A G E C O R P O R A TIO N
a D e ia * « '* torpor a 'ion
Plaintiff

CLERK

BY G A R R Y TR U D E A U
« u w &gt; ‘“ r

p e n a l t ie s

F mai Cali# lo# D ia r SOI #0)

U n ib e d
w ay

Shopping For A
New Or Used

tA A T h e A A T Q H C &amp; K X A C V U 8 &gt;

Gen in &gt;o *
BiOOOAtV SSRfS ThO tt' .

fakmihs ju s t

WKANlUm,
A&amp;WCMV
PKVt-lNS.
IHAVt.TO
KXATtm
CtCPSA
LOT..

Ta w can airraya Find Ih #

B *k l d ra ft In Ih« Cvtnlng
H rra fd &gt; O arH M rd a tc lio n
R e a d F rid a y '* I t t n l n g l i n t Id

For t h r Aar I t*l«clfon*

Evening H em ld
1 9 9 \ § r f l Ir r ik r lk

lir a a r

k a a l* H . I lu r id ■
3 IU III

* •»

Thursday. April 4, ItJS IB

F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice # hereby given that * e
ar# engaged « but me i t at T#0e
N o r t h O r l a n d O Aw*nue
M a it la n d
Sem m oi* County
F lor da J JTJ! u*der m* I k M - o u #
n a m e of E L L I O T T
TO
B R O K E R S and »ha* we intend
to register %a&gt;d nam# *'th the
C le r k pt th# C ircuit Co urt
Sem inole County Florida *n
accordance with th# pf®*i#Rs&lt;Yi
ot m# F tel input Nam# Statu*##
♦O W i t
Section late* F tor-da
Statute#it*7
# M arti El!left
# G a ry Elliot*
P u b lith M arch la 7« Z9 A Ap.
4 iftS
D E D ’ do

AND cf
f E C T I V E
D A T E
OF
PASSAGE
A copy of $Aid Ordinance th ill
he available at the office at the
City Clerk at City Han 'M N
Country Club Road Lake Mary
Florida from I M A M
until
4 JO P M
M on da y through
Friday for all per ton# deiiring
toe* am me fam e
The Public Hearing #h*li be
held at the City H all IS# North
Country Club Road Lake Mary
Florida at f JO p M on April
’# itftS or a# toon thereafter a#
pottibi# at wh-cb lim e mterett
ed parti## lor and agam il the
regweil tia 'e d above will be
heard
Sens hearing may be
continued from lim e »o time
until final action it laken by the
City COHtm ittten
T H IS N O T IC E then be posted
in Inree (3 ‘ public place# within
the City of L ik e -Mary, at th#
City H a ll and published *n the
E vening H erald prior to the
date of the Public Hearing
A 'aped record of th:# meeting
i# m ade by the Cl»y *0$ '!#
convenience This record may
no* conttifute an adequate re
cord lor the purpotet of *pp#al
from a dec«lion mid#- by the
City C o m m ittio n with retpeif to
the f o r e g o in g m a tte r
Any
per ton w ith mg to • B lu rt that an
adequate record of the proceed
ing# i# m aintained tor a p p tlliff
pur pone# .# advised fo mak# the
necektary arrangement# *t hi#
or her ow n eapente
C I T Y OF
L A K E M A R Y F L O R ID A
x Carol fd w a rd #
City Cler k
D A T E D A pril 1 i
Publlth A p ril 4 l*#S
D E E JO

F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Nottct ‘#
« r « mgiNgvd m
S tn d p 'p # ' L «
Wm'noi# County

S a n fo rd . F I

Legal Notice^

c o n f l i c t s

Legal Notice

H e ra ld

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
E IG H T E E N T H
J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT
IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY
F L O R ID A
C A S E N O M 119) C A 0# K
S T O C K T O N W H ATLEY
D A V IN A C O M P A N Y a F io r da
corporation
Plaintiff

v#
B E N T O G O N C A l v ES i v a m
G O N C A L V E S S T E WA R T
A N D R E W M A R S H A LL HI
P A a profe##i0n*l a%#0O 4i't*n
c re a 'e d under the law# jt th#
State of F iprida U N I T E D
ST A T E S OF A M E R IC A and
C I T Y O F S A N F O R D apolitical
tubd ivit'o n of th# State ot
F tor ida
Defendant#
N O T IC E OF A C TIO N
TO E VA M GONCALVES
Re#idente Addre## Unknown
Y O U A R E N O T tF tE O that an
action to toreciota the mortgage
e n c u m b e r in g the fo llo w in g
property in Seminole County
F lor id#
Lot a B L O C K A C O U N T R Y
C L U B M A N O R un t 2 accord
ing to fh# plat thereof A# re
corded m Pie* Book 11 Page &gt;00
at th e P u b m
R e c o rd # of
S# m i note Coun fy F lor Ida
ha# been filed by ihe Plaintiff
ag*in#t you and other# in the
above entitled cau#e and you
are required to %+r\§ a copy of
your written detente# it any to
(t on O O N A L O L S M I T H
Plaintiff # attorney It* Barnett
Bank B u ild in g
J*ck*onVille
F lo rid a 1JJCJ on or before April
77 I N I and til# the original
with the Clerk of thi# court
either tie tore tervtce on Plain
tiff # attorney or immediately
thereatter othe'wiye a default
w ill he entered again#! you tor
the re b e l dem anded in the
com piem t or petition
W I T N E S S my hand and teal
Of t h ii Cour! on Wit# itth day of
M a rc h it9\
(SEAL I
D A V ID N B E R R f l N
C lerk of the C ire wt* Court
By Su#*n E Tabor
Deputy t ler k
P u b i.th M a rih 71 29 A A pril 4

Legal Notice
N O T IC E TO R H E A R IN G
ON D EC LA R E D
P U B L IC N U IS A N C E
IN RE L a t iU A f 'd 1* R E P L A T
O T W IN PrO O O P A R x . * c to a
■
lo lh « PlAl Ih o ro o l o «
-♦&lt;0,0*0 P Pl*l Boo* 1 P*G*
X
ol
Public R *co,0&lt; ol
S*m,noiO Cou",» TIcu.Oo p ' » »
cNcnan at boi«g w * d 0*
E . i M S i r n n ^ t And AM |m , n **
h a .t^ g o* &lt;IA '"'lr'9 *0 NOV* prty
,,g h l HU* O' m t*f*tl in th*
p ,a p * ,t, o*«t^&gt;*0 aN o.*
V TH ER EA S
IN* B o a tO ol
C o u n i t C o m m l t t i o n o n Ol
Sam.noi* Coun It T to, ,&lt;la 0&lt;0
tu. tn* n th oat ot T * b ,u a ,t
IM S
li n o and d t c l a r * a
t'tu c tu r* &gt;&lt;xa*Ml In Wnninoi*
Contt c io , da to 0* u n u t *
u " » a n lt a t t and a p u b l i c
n u iU n c l that th* ottn*, ol Ih*
p-op*,*t *&lt;&lt;0, 0*ng to th* p,0
o o rtf rccorOt in *h* Sam inol*
Co unty P rop *,It A p p r a lw , t
Ottic* on »h l&lt; h th# ttructur* It
'O ta'*0 It E ta X* Sim m on*
P O
B ot J it
T » r n P*rX
T 10,&gt;0* J J t w that th* public
n u ' t a n c * it a , * * I O * n l i a l
*t,uclu ,* lo ta 'nJo n L*on St'**t
- Allamont* Spring* T loriOa
a -d forth*, d*«c,it&gt;*0 a* **&lt;
forth abo&gt;* and th* t o r , * &lt; !,.*
a.tion it ,*qu&gt;'fd to ahat* th#
public nuitah.a and
WHEREAS
ih* B o a rd ot
Count* Com m it* ion#,* found
thal tha following condition*
ton*hfu, *d a public nultanc#
i l l Th * b u ilding na* b**n
**t#t1y damag«d by th# *1*
m a n t t ot n a l u t * d u # t o
abandonmanl
i l l Foundation
p.*t* **t*,iot wall* * * t* tio,
lt*p« Moo, framing * r d Mow
ing partition* roof raft*,* and
thtath .ng c*u,ng |0‘»&gt; •*t#fto,
and int*no, doo,* roofing m l
f*,ial* root Hathlng window
g ia it
window le ra a n * and
wmdow fram*t a r« da m ag*. 1
b#vond raatonabla rapalr
111
E i x t r i c a i tattle * a lv c tric a l
pan#i* •i*ctrii*l r*c»ptab l* t
♦irc tn c * ' HgNt* and * w iU h # t
ar* damag*d to th* #«t* nt that
th#* ar* a h a lt'd 141 P lum b ing
f.*lur*t
p lu m b in g d r a i n
*t*t*m
hot and cold wafar
d ttrib u tlo n ly t t t m a n d hot
wat ar h ta ia r ar* d a m t g # d
t w t ond rvatonabl* r «p a tr or
noncalttanl (SI Th # ,# I* no
#vid#nc* ol a tepHt tan* ol
d 'a m lia ld 1*1 Th * ,* I* t,* »h
and d*t&gt;,i* m vd* and ou ltid * of
th* building and (T ) Thr* con
dihon comlitut** a pot*nllal Hr*

hajard

M H E N E A S ttw following . w
r a d l t * action* n a e t tt a r y lo
atvat* Iho public nultanc# It to
,1#m onth and ramova ttru c tu r*
from pratTMtai
N O W T H E R E F O R E nolle* I*
h * ,»b t givan to th* card E *a M
Sim m on* and #11 parti#* h a tin g
or claim ing to hat# any right
I h i # q, tntoroil m th* p ,o p * ity
date r 'bad abot* to appwar tw
to,* th* Board ot County Com
mi**,on*r* ot S#mlnol# County
F lo rid a at ID 00 a m
at tl*
,* g u l# r m »*ting on th* lath day
ol M ay l i t ! *' th* S#mlnot*
11 1*9#
Count* S*,ylC*» Building Room
D E D tSI
W IJO tIOt t a i l E lt tt S t,* *'
Sanford F loud* to »how cauta
II any
w hy tuch i l r u d u r *
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
thou Id not b* d* d# ,*d * public
Notice &lt;# hereby given that I
nultanc* and th* COFFBCtlv* a&lt;
am engaged i,# butinev# at f O
Hon of a b altm tn l *p*c lfl#d In
!#o» 7|7 G en eva Sem inole
ih# Nolle* ol Public N u lt# n c *
Count y F tor (da 12 712 under tire
thou id not tw latan or c auta II
hcldiou# name ot O P P O R T U
an* why th* cotl ol Ih# c o trtc
N 1 T Y 1 )1 V U O F M I . N 1
C O M P A N Y &lt;Nm A W I D O t N O
l i t * a c t i o n ol a b o l o m o n l
t N TH E
C O U N T R Y
A#
tpwcitwd ,n in . Nolle# o l Public
C E N T E R O AK and that I in
Ni.ic.nc* yhowld not tw p a id to,
tend to reyiiter Mid name with
t'r F » * M Simmon*, h o r h o lrt
the Clerk of th# Circuit Court
or att-gnt o. , aut# il a n y . why
Sem inole County Florida in
taid cent ihouid not tw a t t a ita d
accordance with the provitfont
wgainit th.
of the F ictifiou# Name Statute#
* i T N E SS m* hand an d *#at
to wit
Section MVOY F lo rid a
thi* w thda* ul March. t**J
Statute* It lJ
IS E A U
I V irgin ia l Blanchard
O A V I O N B T H H IE N
PuM .*h A p ril 4 tl 19 2S \H\
Cl*,* tottw boardol
D E E ?•
County Comm otion#, *
By Angala SclHi*
Oapufy C tar *
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
P ub lith March rt X A p ril , it
Notice ♦* hereby given that I
•• IN S
am engaged m bukinetk at 404
D E D IM
N
Hwy
17 92 C a tte lb e rry
Seminole County Florida under
N O T IC E
the ftc fih o u t name of A i I
N O T IC E It haraby g ,v # n that
Wt P A IR SI M V IC E . and thal I
th# Board ol County C o m m it
intend to r#gi|fer **id name
H o n o rt ol Stm lnol* C o u n ty
with the Clerk ol the Circuit
F lo rid# , inlondi lo hold ■ public
Cour t Saoninoia County, F for Ida
hoar mg lo tontldor Ih* #nact
in accordance with the pro
m oot ol on ordinary** tn lltlo d
vikion# of tr&gt;e Fichtiou# Name
A N O R D IN A N C E A S S E S S
Statute# to wit Section MS Of
I N G A N A D D IT I O N A L |J 00
F lor ida Statute# I9S7
FO R C RI M IN A L J U S T I C E
* A j Ja c k io n
E D U C A T IO N D E C R E E
Publi#h M arch 71. 79 A A pril 4.
P
R O G R A M S ANO T R A IN IN G
n ms
.C O U R S E S AS A C O U R T C O S T
D E D 149
A G A I N S T PERSONS CON
V I C T E D F O R V IO L A T IO N OF
A S T A T E P EN A L O R C R IM I
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
N
A L S T A T U T E OR CO N
Nolica i* Iwrab* giv*n Iha I I
V I C T E D F O R V IO L A T IO N OF
am tngagad in b u im a n al M l
A COUNTY ORDINANCE
Chauc*, la n * So Lata Mar*.
P R O V ID IN G FOR C O L L I C
S*minoi* Count*. Florida Ufa*
T IO N , R E M I T T A N C E A N D
undar th* llcllhou* n*m* ol
E A R M A R K IN G FU N O S FO R
S I M P L T E L E G A N T and thal I
C R IM IN A L J U S T IC E E D U C A
inland lo rag.tiar t a d ream*
T IO N A N D T R AIN IN G ; R E
with i h . C&gt;#th ol th* Circuit
P E A L I N G O R O IN A N C E N O S
Court S#minol* Count* Florida
H l » and *1 JO P R O V I D I N G
in accordanc* with ttw pro
FOR SEVERABI LI TY, P R O
titio n t o l iho Fie HI rout Ham*
V I C I N G FO R IN C L U S IO N IN
S ta tu ttt to wit S*cl«m la t 0*
S F M IN O L E C O U N TY C O D E
F lo rid a Slafutat I Fit
A N D AN E F F E C T I V E D A TE
t 'J a m r w C Law
at 10 00 a m , or at toon thoroal
P u b lith M arch II I &lt; A A pril 4.
t*r at pott.bt*. at li t rogular
II I N I
r e e lin g on ttw llrd d a y ol A p ril,
O E D 1*4
1*01 al th* Stmlnol* County
s * ry lc * t BuMdmg •101 E a t l
F lr t t Slr*#t, Room TV 1 » . San
F I C T I T I O U S NAM E
lo rd
F lo r id a
P a rto m a r t
Nolle* It horab* g irtn that I
a d , , tad that, || tha* dac,d# to
am *ngag*d in butm *tt at I4IF
appaal an* daemon mod* a l Ih it
C A th O r e l*
C a t t i lb o r r y ,
twanrvg ttw* will rw#d * record
Saminol# Count* Florida IJ/Of
ol Ih# proc#*dmgt and. lo* tuc h
undwr th# ll(lltlo u* nan* ol
pur po t* , tha* m ay noad to
A T L A N T I S T R A D IN G COM
m tu r* that a »»rb atim record ol
P A N T , and that I fnt#nd to
th# proceeding* It mad# w hich
r*gitt*r told nam* with ttw
record Includtt ttw t*|tlmon*
C la rk o l th* C irc u it C ourt.
and *»id*n&lt;* upon which ttw
S tm ln o l* County. Florida in
appeal It to tw bated
accordanc* with th# proyitlont
D A V ID N IIE R R tE N
ol th# F k t llio u t Nam# S la lultt
Cl#rk to tha Board ol County
f o w il
Saclton 1410* Florida
C o m m ittio n a rto l Sam Inch.
Statut#* It s ;
County. Florida
A la n T u lc d a i
By SandyW aH
Publith M a rc h } t A April 4. II,
Dapv I y C l#r k
II. INI
P u b lith A p ril A IMS
D E D IH
D EE »

�45— I v o t o t H t f l M , M nlerd. FI.

Legal Notice

TtwrsdAy. April 4, &lt; W

Legal N otice

Legal Notice
Legal Notice

CLASSIFIED ADS

N O TIC E F O R N E A R IN O
ON D IC L A R E O
NOTICE OP A
P U B LIC NUISANCE
conflict herewith, ba and the
N O TIC E FOR H EA R IN G
S e m in o le
O r la n d o * W in t e r P o rk
IN R E Lot II. V E IN G S A D
PUBLIC HEARING
tame are hereby revoked
ON D E C L A R E D
O IT IO N T O M ID W AY, accord
TO CONSIDER
S ECTIO N I That thlt ordl
P U B L IC NUISANCE
ing to tha Plat theraof. at
nance thall become effective
THE AOOPTIOMOF
IN R E
L o t t H and f J.
recorded In Plat Book 1. Page
AM ORDINANCE
M ID W A Y , according to tho Plat
Immediately upon Itt pottage
41.
of tha Public Racordt of
theraof.
at
recorded
In
Plat
and adopt on
■v t m i c it y
C L A S S IF IE D D E P T .
R ATES
Seminole County. Florida prat
Book l. Page 41. of the Public
O f SANFO R D. F L O R ID A .
All portlet In in ter at I and
ently mown at being ownad by
Notka &gt;t hereby given fhef *
entrant than have an opportuni
Recordt of Seminole County.
1 time .....................C7C a Him
HOURS
R o b e rt C h am be rt, D o ro th y
P ublk Hearing will ba held at
Florida pretenti, thown at be
ty to be heard at told hearing
3 eensecutirt timet 61C a Him
Event end ell pertiet having or
lha Commission Room In tho
•ng owned by Robert Chambert.
By order of the Clfy Com
8:30
A.M. • 5:30 P.M.
7 contacutlt* timet 52C ■ line
Claiming to have any right, lift*
City Hall In tho City at Senlord.
misskn of the Clfy of Sanford.
D o ro th y E v a n t and D a lly
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
or interotl in tha property da
10 CMtMRtht timet 44C ■ line
Florida, at 1 noo'clock P M on
f lor id#
Hadlay. hairt and all portlet
April 71. i«tl. to cornMlar the
having or claiming to hava any
SATURDAY 9
a o v i c e t o t h e p u b l i c it
ter,bad above
Centnct Rates Available
adoption ot an artftnanca by tho
W H E R E A S , the Board of
perton dec Idea lo appeal a
right, fitia or intarett In tha
3 Linas Minimum
o u n ly C o m m lt t io n e r t of
dec ttton made with retpect to
City ol Sanford. Florida, at
pr opart y date r ifaad above
Semino*# County. Florida, did
any matter corn,dared at tha
lot Iowa
W H E R E A S , the Board of
•ha llfh day ot Ftbruary.
above meeting or hearing, ha
O R O IN A N C C N O 1747
C o u n ty C o m m l it lo n o r i of
D E A D LIN E S
F IS . fin d and d e c la r e a
may need a verbatim record ot
A N O R D IN A N C E OF TH E
Seminole County. Florida did
tfruefure
located In Seminole
the
proceeding!
Including
the
on
tho
tlth
day
of
February,
C IT Y OF S A N F O R D ,
Conty. Florida, to ba unuta.
tettimjny and evidence which
F L O R ID A , TO A N N E X
IM S . fin d and de cla re a
u n t a n l t a r y a n d a p u b li c
record It not provided by the
W IT H IN TH E C O R P O R A TE
ttructure located In Seminole
nuitanca. mat the owner of the
A R E A OF T H E C IT Y OF
Conty, Florida, to ba unMla.
City ol Son lord IFSltoOlO S)
property according to tho pro
M N Tam m , Jr
u n t a n l t a r y a n d a p u b lic
SANFO R D. F L O R ID A . UPON
parly recordt In the Seminole
City Clerk
nwiMnca. that lha owner of tho
A D O P TIO N OF S A ID O R D I
County Property A ppraisers
PubUth March ja April t. II.
property according lo tho pro
N A N C E . A P O R TIO N O F TH E
Office an which the ttructure It
party
racordt
In
lha
Sami
not*
P R O P E R T Y L Y I N G S O U TH
I I INS
OFD III
located H Robert Chambert,
County Properly Appraiser t
O F S IL V E R L A K E R O AD
Dorothy Event teOI Valencia
EX TEN O EO W ES TER LY ,
Office on which tho ttructure Ik
N O TIC E FO R H EA R IN O
25 — S p e c ia l N o t ic e s
21— Personals
Court Sanford. Florida JI71I;
located Ik Robert Chambert,
N O R TH O F N O R TH W AV
ON D E C L A R E D
that the public nulMnce It a
O o ro fh y E v e n t and D e ity
E X T E N O E O W E S T E R L Y AND
P U B LIC NU ISAN C E
'a tid a n lia l ttructure M v e rly
Hadley, heirt of 1401 Valencia
W E S T OF A N O A B U T T IN G
IN R E
L o t k I I and I I .
I Will not be retpontibN tor any
Balloon
damaged by Bra located on
Court. Sanford Florida »7 M ,
CR
alt, SA ID P R O P E R T Y
M ID W AY, according to the plat
debtt Incurred b y anyone
Centro Street. Sanford Florida
that the public nultonce It a
B E I N G S I T U A T E D IN
Ihereof at recorded in Flat
other man mytelf a t ol 4 4 AS
l U . SI V 0400
end further detenbed at let
retidentiel ttructure located on
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
Book I, Page 41. of the Public
Tha Ixmily at the late
'______ S E N D A O IF T
forth above, end the corrective
Water Slreet. Sanford. Florida
FLO R ID A IN A C CO R DANCE
Recordt ol Seminole County.
Met Derlt S. Jack ton
_____ W IT H A L IF T !
action It required to abale the
and turf her datcrlbad at tat
W IT H TH E V O L U N T A R Y
Florida presently thown at
withet leeiprett their tineere
public nuitanca. and
torln above, end the corrective
A N N E X A T IO N P R O V IS IO N S
BAUOON
being ownad by Roltert Cham
thenkt N ell tar eiprettiawt
W H E R E A S . Ihe Board ol
action It required to abate the
O F S ECTIO N IM 044. FLO R ID A
bert, Dorothy Evant and Dotty
at kindneti thown during their
BOUQUETS
County
Commlttlonort
found
public
nulMnce,
and
S T A T U T E S . P R O V ID IN G FOR
Hadley, hotrt and all partial
heart at karee vement
.....Wa Delltrerl
that the following condition!
W H E R F A S . lha Board ot
S E V E R A B IL IT Y , C O N F LIC TS .
having or claiming to have any
The Jeckten Fam ily
Far r r r r y roosow-oeory taataa
continued e public nulMnce
County Com m lttlonort found
A N D E F F E C T IV E D A T E
right, title or tnterett In tha
( I I The building hat been
that the following ccndltlone
W H ER EA S. Ihora hat t
property datcrlbad above
CELEBRATE
23 — L o st &amp; F o u n d
lever I y damaged by tire end the
Iliad with tha City Clark of tha
commuted a public nulMnce
W H E R E A S , the Board ol
A BIRTH!
e
le m e n t! ol nature due to
I I I Th e b u ild in g hat been
C ity of Sanford. Florida, a
C o u n ty C o m m l i 'l o n e n ol
M r. Stork t rltit
abandonment. (Ji Foundation
loverly damaged by the ale
pafltion containing tha namat of
Seminole County. Fnwida. did
LO
S
TBlue
a
gold
macaw
piart. erttrior wallt. eaterlor
make* far a lifetime
men ft ot naturo due to ebon
tha proparty ownart In tha araa
on the ITtli day el February.
Senlord
eroe.
wait
ot
ISth
Sf
tlepv Boor Naming and Boor
*f mamartat, gift* A till
an I |]| Foundation piert.
datcrlbad haraln attar roquet'
IM S fin d a n d d e c la re a
R E W A R D , Day* 11) 47*0.
Call Linda m a i l t
mg partition!, root reltart and
trier lor well! erttrior itept.
ing annotation to lha corporate
tfruefure located In Seminole
Ere*
H
l
t
t
l
J
________________
thaaming. calling )oi|t. eatarlor
floor fram ing and flooring,
araa ol tha City of Sanford
Conty, Florida, to ba unMle.
LOSTBlack
mala
Debarman
and
Interior
doort
roofing
ma
Florida, and requesting to bo
partition !, roof re fle 't end
u n t a n l t a r y a n d a p u b lic
Vicinity of K th 1 Mellonellto
ter talk, roof Bathing, window
theethlng. celling |0‘lt. erttrior
Included thoroln. and
nuisance, that tha owner of the
A m a i n fo " T h o r n "
g la tt. window tcroent and
end interior doort. roofing me
W M F R E A S , lha P ro p o rly
property according fo tha pro
REWARD H I 41*4
window Iremet ere damaged
Appro i tar of Sam Inolo County,
•erlala. roof Bathing, window
party recordt In the Seminole
beyond returnable repair. ( ! )
g le tt. window tc rte n i end
Florida, having cartltlad that
County Properly A p p re lM r’t
Electrical tervfce. electrical
window Iremet ere damaged
tharo aro fwo proporly ownart
O ltka on which the ktrucluro It
25— Special Notices
penelt. electrical raceplabiat.
beyond reaionebte repair I II
In tha araa to ba anna tad. and
located Ik Robert Chambert,
electrical
Ughlt and twltchat
Electrical ter vice, electrical
that M id proparty ownart hava
D orothy E v a n t end D a ily
are damaged to Ihe erlent that
penalt. elactrkal receptebiet.
tignad tha Petition for Annera
Hadley, heirt of 1401 V4lencli
• M AR Y K A Y C O S M E TIC S a
they are a heierd (41 Plumbing
electrical llghtt end twitches
Hon, and
Court, Sanford, Florida Jl/71,
Skin care and celur lie ir
f l r t u r e t . p lu m b in g d r a i n
ere damaged lo the orient lhat
W H ER EA S. It hat bean da
that the public nulMnce la a
C
O N N IE ...........................m 77M
ty tlt m . hoi and cold watar
they are a heterd. 141 Plumbing
termlned that tha property da
retidentiel ttructure located on
dltlrlbu tio n tytle m end hoi
n a t u r a l p lu m b in g d r a in
tc r lb e d h a r a ln a f ta r
Water Slreet. Sanford, Florida
w ater h te le r are dam aged
tytle m , hot end cold water
raatonably compact and con
end further datcrlbad at tel
beyond returnable repair or
dltlrlbution
tytle
m
end
hot
tiguout to lha corporate araat of
forth above, end the corrective
nunentlanl. (SI There It no
water heater are damaged
tha City of Sanford. Florida, and
action It required to abate the
evidence of e tepllc lank of
beyond reaionebte repair or
It hat further boon determined
public nulMnce I and
dreinfleld. Ml There it garbage
nexlslant, { ) ) There it no
that tha annexation of tald
W H E R E A S , tha Beard ol
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T
and rubbith Intlde end outtlde
evidence ol a tepllc tank of
property will not reaull In tha
County Com m lttlonort found
IN A N O F O R
of the building, end
drelnlleld. M l There It garbage
creation of an enclave, and
lhat tha following condition!
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY ,
W
m
E
REAS,
the
following
cor
end
rubbilh
Intlde
end
outtlde
W H ER EAS, the City of San
commuted • public nulMnce
FLO R ID A
roctlve ectiont necetM ry to
ol lha building end IM Thlt
lord. Florida, it In a potitlon to
M l The build in g hat baan
CASE NC M 047I C A 04 P
abate the public nulMnce It to
condition comtilulet a potential
provide municipal tarvlcat to
w verly damaged by Iht ala
IN RE THE AAARRIAGE OF
demollth end remove ttructure
tha proparty datcrlbad herein,
flrohaierd
m erit ot nature duo lo aban
R IC H AR O R G U E R R E R A . JR
from premitet
W H E R E A S , the corrective
and tha City Commltikm of tha
domenlt I I I E vtenor wallt,
PtliBnoer.
NOW TH E R E F O R E , notice It
action necetMry to abate the
City of Sanford. Florida, deemt
partition!, root ra tte n end
and
hereby
given
to
the
Mid
Robert
it In tha ball Inlerett ot tha City
public nultence It to domollth
thealhlng. celling folit. erlerlor
KARENE GUERRERA.
Chambert. Dorothy Evant and
to accept Mid petition and to
end rem ove ttructure from
and interior doon, rooting me
Rttpendxnl
ell partiet having or claiming to
annex Mid property
prem lM t
lerlelt, root Bathing, window
NO TICE OF A C TIO N
have any right, title, or Interact
NOW T H E R E F O R E , nolle# It
NOW. T H E R E F O R E . BE IT
g le tt. window tc ro tn t and
TO KARENE G UER R ER A
dttintion
in the properly detenbed above,
hereby given lo the told Robert
E N A C T E D B Y T H E P EO P LE
window Iremet are damaged
YOU ARE N O T I F I E D lha) an
At a clattlltod a d v trllH r In th.
to appear before the Board ol
Chambert Dorothy Event end
O F TH E C IT Y OF SANFORD.
111 There l» Hath and debrlt
action lor Olttolutlon ot Mar
C V E N IN O H E R A L D .
C o u n ty C o m m lt t lo n o r t ot
Deity Hadley heirt and ell
FLO R ID A
intide and outtlde ol lha build
nag# hat baan Bled agalntl you
IN C R E A S E Ike R E A D E R S H IP
Sammolo County, Florida, at
portlet having or claiming to
S ECTIO N I That tha pro
Ing. end |4| Th lt condllloo
end you are required to terve a
at yeur ad ky xtlxg ttartl
10 00 a m . at lit regular meet
have any right, title or Inlerett
party datcrlbad below tifuated
contliM et a potential lire hai
copy of your written detente*. It
Give aur Mtot rape a call at
ing on tha Mth day ol May INS.
In tne property detenbod above,
In Seminole County, Florida, ba
ard
any. to It on Law rence L
el tha Seminole County Servlcoi
lo appear be lore the Board ol
and tha lama It hereby anneied
W H E R E A S lha corrective
Lidteldt. Etquirx. Petitioner'!
Building Room W IK . 1101 E e lt
C o u n ty C o m m lt t lo n o r t ol
to and mada a pari ot lha City of
action nocettary to abate the
Attorney, who*, a d d r.ti I* Suite
F lrtt Street Senlord Florida, lo
Seminole County. Florida el
Sanford. Florida, puriuan! lo
public nulMnce It to demoltth
D . M l N Orlando Avanua,
thow
route.
It
any.
why
tuch
10
00
a
m
.
al
lit
regular
meet
tha voluntary annaaallen pro
and remove structure from
27— Nursery &amp;
Maitland. Florida 117tl. on or
ttruclura
thould
not
ba
declared
ing
on
lha
lath
day
ot
May,
INS
v lt i o n i ot S ection l/ l 044.
premitet
tw 'o r. April U . INS. and Ilia the
Child Care
e public nultence and tha cor
el me Seminole County Servkot
FioridaSletutei
NOW T H E R E F O R E , notice It
original with lha Clerk at Ihlt
roctlvo action ol ebalomonl
Building, Room W IN. 1101 E atl
Lying In Section l&gt;. Townthlp
hereby given to the M id Robert
Court either before oervice on
tpecilled In the Notice ot Public
Flrtt Street. Senlord. Florida, lo
» South, Range JO East; begin
Chambert. Dorothy Event end
Child cere by lie nurte Lunch,
Pill,oner t attorney or Immedl
NulMnce thould not bo taken,
thow ceuM. if any why tuch
rung I ) is chelnt ta ct of tha
Deity Hadley, heir* end ell
tnackt Deity ocBvIBet
atoly fnersettor, otherwlk# a
or
caute,
i|
any
why
the
coat
ot
ttructure thould not be declared
S W corner ol tha S E to;
parllet having or claiming la
A over Weekday! AemApm
default will be entered agalntl
the
corrective
aclwn
ot
abate
e
public
nultence
end
the
car
thence run North K chalnt,
have any right, title, or Inlerett
Itk e M tr y M ltl*
you tor the relief demanded In
ractlva action ol abatement I man! tpecilled m the Notice ot
thence run Eatl to tha Wetlerly
In the property devrlfaed above,
th. PetllMn
Far tender, loving
' '
A
Public Nuitanca thould not ba
tpwctfied in tha Nonce ot Public
R 'W ot S R 4]7, thence run
lo appear before the Board at
WITNESS m y hand and teal
child ta ro , call A Chlie-I
paid lor by Hobart Chambert.
Nuitance thould not bo lekon.
Southerly and Soulhwatlarly
C o u n ty C o m m lt t lo n o r t ol
ot tnli Court on thlt l*fh day ol
World
I
D
0414
Dorothy Event, their hairt or
or caute. It any why tha cotl of
along Mid Wetlerly R/W to tha
Seminole County, Florida, el
March. IftS
S U N LA N D E S T A T E S
ettlgnt or caute. It any. why
the corrective action ol abate
beginning. Seminole County,
10 00 a m . el lit regular meal
IS E A LI
Child coro my homo export
M id cotl thould not be attattad
rnent tpecilled In the Notice ol
ing on the !4th day ot May. I*
Florida
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
xnc.d
day tchool l.achar
agalntl lha property
Public NulMnce thnuld not tie
S ECTIO N I That upon Ihlt
el the Seminole County Servlcoi
C L E R K O F TH E C O U R T
Nutritious meals, toncad yard,
W ITN ES S my hand and Mai
paid for by Robert Chambert
Ordinance becoming effective,
Building, floum W IK , 1101 t ail
By Dorothy Norton
larga play araa Ages I thru
Ihlt Kth day of March INS
O o ro lh y E v e n t end D a lly
tha property ownart and any
Flrtt Slreet, Sanford. Florida, lo
Deputy Clerk
11 Monday thru Friday 4 AM
IS E A U
lledlwy. heirt, their heirt or
retident on tha property da
thow ceute. It any, why tuch
Publitn March II, I t April 4. It,
la 0 PM Lott ol TL C Call
D A V ID N B ER R IE N
ettlgnt, or ceuM, It any why
tlrutlure thou Id not be declared
tcribed haraln thall ba entitled
NS
M
l 111*
Clart lo the Boerdol
tald cotl thould not bo attattad
to all tha rlghlt and privilege!
a public nulMnce end the cor
D E D ISO
County Commlitlonori
agalntl the properly
redlve action ol ebelemenl
and Immunltlet a t are from
By Angela Sclrlce
W ITN E S S my hand and teal
lima to lima granted lo rati
specified In tho Nolle# ol Public
Deputy C ler k
thlt loth day ol March. INS
dantt and property ownart of
NulMnce thould not be taken
Publlth
March M A April 4. II.
IS E A U
the City ol Sanford. Florida, and
or tout#. II any why *tia cotl ol
M. INS
D A V ID N B ER R IE N
at further provided In Chapter
the corrective action ol abate
O E D IK
Cler k to the Board ol
menl specified In the Notice ol
IM . Florida Stalutae. and thall
County Commlttlonort
Public N ulunce thould not be
further be »ub|ecl to tha re
F IC T ITIO U S NAM E
By Angela Sclrlce
paid for by Robed Chamber!,
tponilbllltlei ol retldence or
Notice It hereby given that I
ownerthip at may from time lo
Deputy C ler k
D o rothy E v a n t and D a ily
am engaged in business al P O
Publlth March I t A April 4, II,
Medley heirt. their heirt or
lim a be determined by lha
Box 140a Lake Mary. Seminole
II IN S
DEO Me
governing authority of lha Clly
assigns or ceute. If any. why
County. Florida 11744 under Ihe
at Sanford. Florida, and lha
Mid cotl thould not bo attattad
lIcBtious nemo ol S E L E C T E D
N O TIC E OF
provltlant of M id Chapter IM.
agalntl the property
S E C R E T A R IA L S E R V IC E S ,
P U B LIC AUCTIO N
W ITNESS m y hand end teal
Florida tlatutei
and Ihe I I intend to register sold
Purtuanl to Section ft) SAS ol
S E C T IO N ] It any tec llwi or
thit iwth d*r 4l March, leal
nemo wllh the Clerk ol tho
Florida Statutes •*«* tallowing
portion ot a tec I Ion cf thlt
(S E A L )
Circuit Couft. Seminole County.
motorcycle will be told el public
ordinance pro,at to be Invalid,
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
Florida in accordance with the
auction u e AM on 1/41I t el HO]
unlawful, or unconttltutional. II
Clerk lo lha Board ol
provision ! ol the Fictitious
E Allemonte Ave , Altamonte
tfiall not be held to Invalidate or
County Commlttlonort
Mama Slalules. lo wit Section
Sprlngt. Florida
Impair tha validity, torce or
By Angela Scinca
U S 0* F lor Ida Statute! I*S7
I H a rle y D e vld te n Low
allect of any other tec lion or
Deputy Clerk
toi Leila A H a rm
Rider. Iff*. VIN IlF ilfM H *
Publlth March ]• A April 4. II
perl ot thlt ordinance
Publish April 4. II, II. 11. INS
Publlth March n l April 4. II.
S ECTIO N 4 Thai all ordl
II. INS
D E E 14
II. IN S
D ED M l
nanceaor parti ol ordinance! In
O E D 1*1

831-9993

322-2611

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

★

G irl Friday wanted far (M a il
manufacturing and who*.tan
buvn.ee Mutt hare ptooinnt
••‘•phone personality and be
able to handle Customer*
o n . on one Salary negotiable
Canted Bob Rowe C r p r .t t
International. M l M U
Full lime employment available
f a r c o m m e r c ia l t a w in g
machine operator E rp with
canvat helpful For app' Call

Thinking at getting a
Real Ettata LicenceT
Ja&gt; n &lt;n at eur Career
April len t ; * t p m
We after Free Tettlen
end cwwtlwieut T reining I
Call Dicker V k k y leraeltilt

m in e

in m i_______________

c&gt;. n * me

Karat e4 F tor Ida . Inc
! » Year* Experience!

O C N E R A L O F F IC E C LE R K 1
I Part Time)
M utt have office tip e n e n c t
with typing 'or permanent
pert time 1 dayt each week or
I ] I. Mon thru Fri Never a

55— Business
O p p o rtu n ities

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774 - IJ U

ATrtRROOR PAPW ROUTt
FOR S A LE Fttene » &gt; SlAUfter

H ELP WANTED:

6 1 — M o n e y to Len d

O F F IC E H E L P no experience
Hied Good |!»rtng pa,
Full lima Call ATI 4J00

B u t m . t t C apital tK O O t to
Si 000 000 and over P O Bov
1411 w inter Pv Fla 137SC

Mogk

Legal Notice

7 1 - Help Wanted

33— Real Estate
Courses

A R E H O U I E W ORK
Im
mediala Will train Alto Gen
eral Laborer* |7| iXC

7 1 - H e l p W anted
Acrylic Applicator* needed to
apply protective toeing on
cart, boat! and planet IS to
111 per hour w . tram For
work In Sanford area call
Tam pa 111 m F ill
A D M IN ASSISTANT
E X E C U T IV E I I C R I T A R Y

C U IT O M E R G R E E TE R
will
fully ram Good pay Start
now Full lima 471 4)00
TR U C K O R IV tR S local or long
haul W llh or without rig
Excellent pay Can H I uoo
C O M P U TE R O P E R A TO R S
Good Pay Scale' Secure pot!
tiont Call ATI 4)00

Principal ot national Brm da
tlre t an a ttlM te n t who It
Intelligent, tentible. with good
tklllt Starting M le ry SIS 000
Never a teat

all phases
RAOESM EN
Excellent pay Start n g h l
away ATS 4XO

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774-1341 _____

Tired at Job Hunting 7
Call Futures, they cenhelpl
They hare lOO't to openings,
many witk no txperienca
Call tor Into:

Attttfenf Maintenance manag
ar E xperie nce pralarred
Apply In perton Monday thru
Friday. * A M to 4 PM Sanford,
H u r t i n g H e m e , IS O
A A e lto n vlIle _______________
AVO N Hiring Smiling Fecetl
Full A pt lima Call Immedi
atoly t ) H l * l « a r ) l ) l i l t
| C A R P E T C L E A N E R W A N TE D
Good salary, benelllt Call
US 11*4 eftor ) _____________
CRT

tr»4Ma

H O U S E P A R E N T S Christian
shelter lor abused A troubled
leant 14* SO**
I N S T A L L E R .-................ to *14*
W i l l t r a i n I T h lk g r o a t
established co need* to hire
now Went! latl energenlc
perton
Plenty O T I
prf
HR) riETtl

Employment
323-5176

Data entry eaperlenct lor per
menent potitlon* Never a

NOW

ISM Frsnch Ave

TIMP PERM PERSONNEL

That we have

774 1341
C R U IS E S H IP JOBSI Greet
Income potential All occiqia
lion. For Information (1111
74] o tK e x t I N
A V O N C A R N IN O I WOWtlt
O P E N T E R R IT O R IE S NOWIH
111 MIS or 111 MS*
D E B A R V M ANO R now hiring
cook tor noon to t PM thift
Institutional experience or
knowledge ot diet! nocettary
Apply M N Highway 17 ft,
PeBary
D E L IV E R Y DRIVER
Mutt have valid Fla driver's
license with good driving re
cord Apply el )tS4 ORLANDO
D R I V E , IN T H E IA V R E
P L A Z A . ____________ _
Earn a good living doing phono
work Horn your hnme Top
poopto earn I d ) plot weokly
i aoo m i i u
______
P i l l a r , w a l d t n . tar v ita l
fabricating chop 14 to 17 per
hour to t'kct hated an viper I
once Cell 117 o k o
F u ll'P e rl lime
tearing aecreteryt Export
once p r e le r r o d . but not
required Cell M l *»t*

your

322-2611

J A N IT O R IA L P ER S O N N EL
Permanent port lime potitlon
To help clean retail ttora
Morning* from 7 to * X A M 0
dayt week Esc lor retired
semi retired perton *7* S II],
* AM to S PM

LABO R
xur e»x

' ^

FO R CE
our rtr

r

Help Wanted
Report ready
tor work at 0 AM 407 W
Itl Si Senlord_____________
L A B O R E R S Strong tollable,
general laborers needed Im
mediately 0 'll.r .n l location!
Phone and trantportalion a
mutt Never a In Apply

KELLY SERVICES

660 7339
L A A O R E R . ..................... to 1700
Love the outdoors? This com
pony could be 4 U*All around
general dutiet Fun crew

Employment
323*5176
_______________ H I ) Franck A re,
LAN D SCAPE LABO R ERS
Valid driver t license Start
ing pay SI SO p*r hour 171
ID )
____ __________

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Accounting A
T i x Service
PretetHenel Tea Bapertl Pre
part, my alik e ar your homo
Boil prkasi E l
M. A tl*.

tang- All. ColloHor a- 774 M7)
Tax accountant la years rip e
rlence Wilt prepare taxes In
yeur home Personal and
small business I N 1)44

Additions A
Remodeling

The Whole Ball Ol Wax

Carpentry. PSambled. Btoctrkel

B u ild in g C o n t r a c t o r *

new ih in g t a n d m eeting new people.

The pitmti the Ainiy ha» Isrtt *4 way* fo help you male ihe nv»»t of yiHir two college year*.
Find out how. Call your local Army Kn ruiier.

C A L L / C O L L E C T / V I S I T : 305-323-4500
S w rgw a n t F irs t C la s s J u a n B. L u g o
S u lla 7, K irk P la za C o m m a ro la l S t ro a l
S a n fo rd , F L 32771-1214

ARMY. B f ALL YOU CAN BE.

S A H TR A N S C R IP TIO N
Medical T r arisef tat ton
m m&gt;
_________

^ ^ • m e c t o ^ v a U a b l^ ^ ^

MIeri Applunce Spoke

A DDITIO N S R B M O O E L IN O
•III SN ipp Custom BulMar
lie's L&gt;c
AROOJ1S

You Name III............ -Free Itl.
___________ m i w _________
Exp Handyman. Rat Hxiiabte
Free E t l meal any |ob East
Ratos t t l *1)1 Call Anytima

Home Improvement
CatIter's Bxlldlixg A
Ma Jad Tab Small
I II BurSan Lana.

________a n a

2 1 S SR EZP A IR IN- G 1 Carpentry Den i lea llf Ask Aei
“ “

■ tU B H W

Cleaning Service
Heed Carpet Ctoaniwg Ltotog.
Dswtog Ream A Hall US.M.
Safa A ChMr, MS. M l M U

MAIDS- Te -Of4t»
C tooMutest It naat Ta GaSllx
Call His helpers I
Guaranteed Service Lew Ri

CJUIN0W1 33V0400
S P R IN O T U A E
T I M I TO P L A N T V O UR S C LF
IN A HOME O F JfO U R OWN!

(P&gt;m
BAL-------------a I MAI
T '» E x p —
Screen Rooms. Aluminium sld
Ing. gutters, carpentry, can
ertto pattoa. repairs Free

ikftmatoa-------L x .......B I R R
TH O M A S A T H O M A L
repair, tk
CaBIft-M S*

Heme

Home Repairs
C AR P EN TER
-.—
1likai
f- v- j n
i vo4ai 1
|ng I
Can X U N i l

Sorving Control Fla tor I t y r s
with complete quality paint
mg Mexico* Quality a Must
Spactal wkM ceatuxg m a*7i
W A L L P A P E R IN G P A IN T IN G
Aster ewext --------- Very Raliakto

A C E LAW N SERVICE
Maintenance Sodding Pruning
Cto.rung Thatching Fert lining
tons Lawn Care
aroa I t ) U l t

Senlord

Repairs and

i ol ail types
Carpentry painting, plumbing
en dttoctrk U la O N

m eei7/k m

»»4 110)1*7

Paper Hanging
PAPE AHANOINO
Arty typo walk ever mg
Ree tenable...... - ............ M l '***

Lawn Mamlananca
Landscaping Bush Hog Mewing
___________ At* M M

Plastering

LAWNS HONED I TRIMMED
Spring Yard Ctoaeep* M S IM J

• a l l Phases at Platter mg •
• ■ M V Stocce. Hard Cael,
SimetatoP Brkb Ml &gt;**)

ClUIStlAA Bf*.

Plumbing

TO W E R S B E A U T Y U L O N
F O R M E R L Y H arrietts Beauty
M m k J lf B U IS IlM S lia

R IM O O IL IN O

m a n / iit .

PfoimioflAl CustomPunting

"J*

Caapttte I m Caw
Ra j m a i SU Ritas

Health 4 Beauty

M c C L U R I R H U N T - Ramadtl
ing. cerpentry.
|ob too small 771 AM4

&lt;15-7411

★ TONYCORINO*

fill dirt, and hauling
Call MO STM or M t S7S1
TH O R N E LA N D C LEAR IN G
BUSH OG G ING
C L A Y A SH ALE M I MM

Free I iN d t a N * --........M i n i

Handy Man

14hr. terstoe No Extra Charge
I 7yr xxp.u a M l . I l f W l
Fast, dapgtsdabla appuanc*
tarvka Matt malar brands
W a r r a n t y s o r v l c x fa r
W h ir lp o o l. A m a n a ,
Kalvinator. Holpoinl Atchtoy
Appitanca A TV . A ll 1*81

O K N E V A L A N D C L I A R IN G
Lot and Land clear ing

Lawn Service

T R I E S I R V IC e A FIR EW O O D
FOR SALE C A L L A F T E R
a P M B )t » e |

B. E. LINK CONST.
3227029
Appliance Repair

Something hat iluLrJ AitJ you want in untunin' tour rdmanon NLhere m il sou get tier
money.’ ContiJct ilic Atmv College FunJ. li vihi qualify, tour iwo-tear college rJui.ition (60
mmctirr Ivouit) tan hrip you .accumulate up to $20,ll\) in a two-tear enlistment And sou can
erstrt th e Army with a promotion
Whilr you're getting ilie money feu college you'll lx- learning a valuable skill, You can chooac
from a satiety ol d ill* uteful lo the Arms (net could lead to a civilian career,
You'll alto hate a couple of yean lo ek|xneiuc the excitement and aJventure of fratrl, doing

Firewood/ Fuel

General Service*

REM00CLING SPECIALIST

MAKE THESE TW O COLLEGE YEARS
REALLY PAY OFF.

R E S ID E N T IA L W IR IN O
indeer ' Outdoor Lighting.
Service Upgrades. Anything
Electrical. Free Isttmetot
Since 1*7*1 Call:
T a m 'lE to c t rk S e n r k a ^ J lllT l*

1234441

e Rudds Plumbing to rv u e .
Repair a Reatoce • Ramadel
a Free Estlmatol • 71) H H e

Pressure Cleaning

M aso n ry

P R IV A TE A M ObILE H O M ES
CO IM M EICIAL

B E A L C e n c re to T m S i duality
sparatlan Patios, driveways
Days M l I P ) Eva* M l DM
D H Roby Concrete
House slabs a Drives a Pottos
............W I 1 M

H* m«
Secretarial Servica
A L L S E C R E TA R IA L A N D
W O R D PROCES1INO SVCS

Nursing Care

Reosenator P rk aP U II Anytima
) ) l I N I ...........Visa/ Master card

O U R R A T E S ARE LOWER
Labaetow Nuntog Caetor
*1* B. Second S t. Santorp

Tile

■H ie

Painting
C A L V IN A TO M S
■a Phtoftop * WaB Fapar
Yau buy meter toll
We srppfy laber Ta SAVE *S*
M AP)I
___ _______ , Men and helper will
paint yew Hama ar AusIm s o
etc Give your problems to u*
W E C A R E Quality werX. jo
yrs axp 1J7 K*J L'c cant

S c a ttm a n n T il* P re s s u re
C le a n in g C e ra m ic , V in y l
Asbestos All Phases P C
R rk h Home* Rutinesees
Free E tl Reesanebto I M 0)41

Tree Service
ECH O LS T R I E S E R V IC E
Free Eslimatotl Lew Price*I
Lknnsed/maured/» » TO*
JO H N A LLEN S U W N A T R E E
Deed free removal L k A to*
Free xsl Ml M

�71 — Help Wanted

E L E C T R IC IA N S - Top Helpers
lor Ar*# Protect Tap P*y1
Good Banalityt For Appl call
I I W 0140 or I JJJ O i l bo
tw uunhn of 7 A M to* PM
Lino ol block border tapa
M E D IC A L ^
T R A N S C R IP T IONIST
Mutt ho vo knowledge ol madlcal
term mology Salary common
toraty with experience

TEMr PERM PERSONNEL
___ ___ 774-1341 ____
M O R TG A G E LOAN
PROCESSOR
Commercial mortgage Eiparl
tncod with ooo&lt;1 locrotarlal
tkilly Salary cemmenturnat*
with tipononco

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
________774:134*__
NEEDED:

PART TIME HELP
l

E ■(titan! opportunity lor Iho
lutura m m i
_________

n eed ed

INSURANCE ANALYS
Oood pay. F a it promotlont

m-n*f

NEW ACCOUNTS
CUSTOMER SERVICE
Our Santord ofttco It Making an
individual to work with our
cuotomort in Iho Nrw Ac
county department Pravlout
ralatad aiparianco knowiadga
ol banking larvicat and pro
d u e tt, and a tc a lla n t In
la rp a rto n a l tkilly a rt ro
qulrad. plot typing tklllt.
Sun Bank ottari a taiary com
m onturota with trparitnea
a n d a c h a lla n g ln g work
anvlronmanl To apply, plaata
complain an application at our
Somoron Branch oltk*. JOS
E a tt Somoran. Farn Park

SUN BANK
An Equal Opportunity
E m ployov M/F/H/V
O F F IC E O A L ............ „ N » l t a T
Outgoing parionality winyl In
voices/light typing Room tor
advancamant

Employment
( f il S 1111323-5176
Franck Ar#
Part Tim a Looting Agani JO to
XI homot par waak Caper I
mead pralarrad Call 111 TWO
botwaan * A J. Monday thru
Friday
PE R SOWN E L TR A IN E E
Will train to tenon and In
tarvlawf applicants Raquirat )
yaart otlKa arpenenc* High
dagraa ol Inlotliganca, anargy
and dailra lor caraar and
growth

TEMP PENM PERSONNEL
774-1341
PERSONNEL MANAGER
Working Monagar
to hondla
dolly operation ol Ttmporary
Haip Company M ull hava
Suparvitory tiparianca wail
organised high dagraa ol
anargy. and dailra caraar with
growth Call Gallo or Jyrl

774-1341___
Phong Wotk
[ No aiparianco nacattory Will
train No talat Si 00 an hour
ptut bonuy jQAaaa waJ_______
■ P R O D U C TIO N PERSONNEL
SANFO R D
Auto Party Ra
buiidar Call H ) 4*1*
R E C E P T IO N IS T

■for aaacutlva oltlca Mult ba
good typiyt A protaiiional In
oppaoranca Novara too I

TEMP PENM PERSONNEL
774-1 M l
R O O F I NO C R E W W A N TE D
S ilty llcanaad rootar naadt
total craw lor M ura work
Call waakdoyt or avanlngy.
4 I
t 404 7 )4 J 7 I I or
1 JOS &gt;74 7441________________

SANDER GRINDER
Noad tomaona la opart la a
ilro h a tandar in C yp ra iy
Clock Factory Eiparlanco
haiptul but not nacaikory
C yp rati Intamottonal. I 4 In
duttrlol Park. Santord. Fla
H I 21JO
S E C R E T A R Y . ............. IM4 +
ProNttional appaaranca could
la nd you t h li onal T y p
In g 'o n y w a r phonal G ra a l
•oaal

m

Employment
323-5176
U N Franck Ava
S H IP P IN O R IC E IV IN O

RaMobta. ylrong with good *t
Mtwda Parmananl and tampo
rary potitiona Navorataol

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL

774-1341
Sugar
market
aiparienced
cornier A War noon yhift and
weekends Apply In parion
Park and Shop nth and Park
Saa manager________________
T E A C H E R Part lima AM Oey
Cara Etpartancad Prater ad
M I W _______________ ______
T E C H N IC IA N Balh Ilia ratto
ration No atparlanco natal
tary w ill train Eitantiva
travel M utl havo own trank
portal ion Hu*band 1 wlta
•kav s j u u

RIDGEWOOD
ARM S
APARTMENTS

1-2-3 6EDR00M S
SIABtaycl At OM '3 2 0
MOVE IN SPECIALS
ON SELECTED UNITS

KIT 'N* C AR LYLE •by Larry Wrtghl____________

7 1 -H e lp Wanted
M a id tor Saturdayy. w intor
Spring* Mutl have ratyranct*
A trarriportatian *440411

73— Employment
Wanted
O N T H E SPOT P O R TA B L E
W E L D IN G Farm, ranch ra
pa.ry, trailer hltchey H I 1740

91— Apartments/
House to Share
I will there my apartment ISO a
waak payt ail No dapotit.
m i oaoi_____________________
Laky M ary Protatuonal mat#
will thara ) bdrm . I bath yplit
plan with ratpontlabla parion
&gt;40 par wk JJJ 4744____________

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
Htddan Laka 1 Bdrm . 1 bath.
Cant Meat and air 1)00 mo
C u t tec M l lt7lor*nlngt
Tutcaw llla, 41 Tarpon C tr..
POOL HOME I bdrm i bath
family room, dbl ga'ago w/
Open*#, irg I:r**n*d porch
Va-&gt; ilco houw! &gt;71S d n
ctuntad Owner will tall or
laaw with option Call B rlhth
American Realty, *14 1171
1 bdrm . bath, living room,
kitchen 1)00 par m o . UOO
dapotit 144 4114. T h u r t A
Fn
attar l Sat 1 Sun
anytime
1 bdrm on Summerlin Ava
F lrtl, lait and dapotit ra
quirodw/ratarancat M l axil

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent

Will thara rtt'ortd Victorian
homy with ratponubl* parion
Slid mo incl utilities M l 4XH

B E A U T IF U L 1 bdrm/I bath,
carpet, appllancet, screened
patio. launWy UBO H I M SI
1 bdrm , cant haat A air.
c a r p a l C o n v e n i e n t to
downtown SHS plut depot il
M l 1*11

Chrittlan Aptt i Hamai
TV . kitchen, laundry, maid. ISC

wk up on &lt;» uat en t&lt;!Q

Clean, comlerlabla tlaaplng
room Maid wryica MO par
waak. includet utilities Call
M l« a M o r H I 4447 __________
Furnished and Ontumithed
TtlS Gay I# Plac*
________ Call M l MS)
N l c a l y D a c o r a lt d R o o m y
ItS /w k or monthly f it *
Kltchan prlvl ledge* homay
H BO A m o r.i U l 4411
Prlvat#
room In my homo
►tout* prlvllagat MS waak
144 S140
S A N FO R D Furniihtd roomy by
th* waak Raatonabl* ratal
Maid service C altM l iM t
S 7 P M 41* PalmattoAv*
S A N F O R D R a ti waakly A
Monthly ratal Util Inc art
WO Oak
Adult! 1 Alt 7U7

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
E F F IC IE N C Y APT Furnlkhed.
no paty. no email children
M l 1444
Tu rn Apft tor Sailor Cltiiant
111 PalmattoAv*
J Cowan No Phony Callt
L o v a ly I bd rm C o m p lo t*
privacy *40 par waak. plut
SJSO tacurily dapotit Call*

mi tan or in n*t

M A N E Y O U R S E LF A T H OM E
In a complataly lurnlthed tludio
apartment Single llory living
*1 ill bait Sound controlled
wall* Built In bookestat. da
cor wall covering Alto
*
Bdrm availably
Flaaibt* itaiai
Senior Cltiiant dHcaunt
Santord Court Apartmantt
M l 1741.
S TU D IO C O TTA G E Ad|ac*nt
lo family horn* For working
tingle Ullllliat Included Lake
tronl t l » plut 1100 dapotit
E a c . neighborhood, ralor
ant at » j ij o j
I bdrm . clean, qalat, big yard,
patio tM Ip arm a
111 4**4.

99— A p a rtm e n ts

Unfurnished / Rent
Apartmant lor rani MS 00 a
waak *100 00 Dapotit M l 1414
attar S 00
BAM BOO COVE A PTS
MAC Airport Bird
Ettiancy U U . I bdrm U IS . 1
bdrm AJSO par month M l
4410. M l 4401 i \ Dltcount lor
_______
Sanior Cltiiant

CMttrbury il th* C/ouin|s
J Bdrm ., I ar 1 bath Cand* i
Prlvat* PatN A Carpart
Withac/Dryar Haak up
Beautiful Country Salting
Child i an. imall pati wale am ad
Senter cltiant dltcaunt
M l 1*11
LU XU R YA P A R TM EN TS
Family A AOiKtt S o O a r
Peal: Id*, t Badraami
Matter Cava Apartment*
H I 2400
Open On Weak tndi

RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS.
I Bdrm AMO a I Bdrm A140
1 Bdrm USO
MJ 4410
a or M l 44*1 a
Spec lout I bdrm . lakalronl.
pool, taruslt Adult* *No Pati
IM S mo M l 0741. lo w *
I and 1 bdrm Alto lurnlthed
efficiency from BPS weak S1S0
dapotit No pati Call M l 4*07
S 7 P M 41* Palmetto
101— H o u s e s

Furnished / Rent

$295
O e tle n e
A ir co n d , I
bdrm .living room, tcreened
porch No children, no pati
1)00 security

574-1040
103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
O R O V E V IE W Now home 1
bdrm . 1 bath. 1 car gar eg*
No pati IMS mo O ayt M l
U l* Eves *74 4*17
M ID D E N LA K E - 1 bdrm . 1
bath, tpni plan, blind*, eppii
ancat. railing lank Patt con
aldarad E vat H I *M *________
a a a IN D E LTO N A a a a
a a HOMES FOR R E N T a a
________a a 17»I*S* a a

★ LANDLORDS*
Tired at the header hat 7 l a l u*
m anage your ra n i* ! pro
partial ProNtwonal lew cat!
tarvica M l M U Call anytime
United taMt AtwclaW t. Inc.
Prop Mpml Qw., Realtor

113— Storage Rentals

Son Iotcl
323 6420 of 3236481

*• •

AR E YO U D IS T R E S S E D *
M O V IN G 7 F A C I N G
F O R E C L O S U R E ? G O T TO
SELL FAST? N E E D H E L P ’
CALL 1117 Sal

» * a U p ....... ............ — m e a n
STORAGE T R A IL E R S
Far an lit* eentlracflaa. ate.
Wile* Salat ...M l t i u m u l f

17(5 VIA HERMOSA
1 bdrm / 1 bath, quality built
valid limber ham*, apprai
!*•* tq ft under air, high
anargy valuat. daap wall,
wptic tank, cut tom wood tab
matt, privacy lane*— I ’ M k m
F ram I 4*tH w y44*ii«.
go wait approt 4 mi,
t* Lang wood Markham Rd ,
than 1 ml. fa Via Harmata
Hwtkty Rtally

R E A L TO R S
Evening! JJJ m i

ML T0U N((0
10 IBON
in m m tsnn

HALL

HAEM me

«1 A|IO«

ii iim tinMaci

O N E ACRE plui. coma! with
thli trailer in Ih* country I
Privacy 114. tw
C A LL H ALL..................... 111-1774
ASSUME NO Q U A L IF Y IN G ! 1
B drm , I t/1 b a th , large
Nncod yardl *1.400 down, ill*
Me P ITH • I7X Approt Jl
y n M g v a n g h tln llM .S M C A L L H ALL....... .............M l S774
M O VE RIO HT IN. I Bdrm .. 1
balk b ta u llla l ip llt plan,
laadyd m lh * &gt; 1 ra «, only
lia.aoa Cell ut quick I S44.400.
C A L L H A L L ...— .............m-ST74

CALL HALL
New a iw d a tt! w in lad I w ill
train far a rewarding
U R E A L E S TA TE C A R E E R S !

323-5774
laaaHWV I 7 » i
Invatlor* Dream 1 b d rm /l
both. Ilk* naw Ay urn* at
SHOO down. 10 J / iX Intaratl
rat*. Sail 71 PI par mo Mutt
quality U4 400 M l 7041 ___
Lung wood 174 400 buy t a pool
horn* 1 b d rm t, living and
family room Largo Iraad tol
M o v* In i A t i u m * F H A
Owner will deal ***0004

NEW HOME
Vina wood Dr Loch Arbor Area
1 B d rm . t b a th , e a l l n
kitrhan oak cabinet#. formal
dining room tiraplaca. paddi*
lent vaulted calling* anargy
package Many other axtresl
You he** to tee to apprac lata
Open haute Saturday and
Sunday II to S. other timat by
appointmanl

PHONE 333 8483
For quality crattmanihlp and
competitive prlcat let ut price
out your naw homo__________
Romb&lt;*wood No money down
Im m e d ia te o cc u p a n c y 4
b d r m / ) b a th
U N FHA
auumabl* Owner financing
*70*/mo |41 400 M l 1*41___
Santord Owner will help I inane a
spacious con variable horn* 4
bdrm . 1 both* or horn* 4
mother ut law apt Attumabl*
* 'l mortgage &gt;&gt;4 000 M l )*JI
I Nlc* 1 bedroom homo
with living room, dining room,
panalad lamlly room, laundry
room, workthop Call for In
formation H ) 110* or 414 aSJI
Saj *00 or bait of for
IIA ltO N t

5TEM PER
A T T E N T IO N I N V E I T O R I I 1
U n til south Santord only
U 7 H 0 La-ge dawn or r*
finance owanar will help
IM P A C T E O N D M O N E Y I
IB44N 1 Bdrm . I bath wall
kept hem* only 14* 0 * Call
lor d tlillt
SANPORDI J Bdrm horn* Hail
aero a/-, brick Hraplac*.
large room* beautiful decor
Eacallanl condition J o lt
144.000
SANFO R 0 • Rental. 1 Bdrm .
I* ibom laoomo
CALL A N Y T IM E
R E A L TO R m a u i
W E N E E D L IS T IN O S I

GENEVA GARDENS
o n iu n w a
• Adult B Fam ily
• W O Connactiona
• Cub la T V . Pool
• Short Term lo o a m

hm *9—
IM S if. 25SN I t

141— Homes For Sale

BATEMAN REALTY
Lt€ Rn I E t t i l i Brok»f
2M0 UnfortJ Avft
AAovineg to U C A mvtl n il
b * io * F H A t p p r a i t i l 1
bdlTm. t tatri. n «* hltcNH*,
t&gt;4*n roof. CArpolod firopi#&lt;«
ftn etd bock CAfporl lm
OCCUAPOACV i U *00
4 bdrm 1 bath compiifftff rt
novotto V*i 500

STENSTROM

321 0759 Eve 322-7643

REALTY«REALTOR

Or•vtviNttt 3 bdrm ;| bath, db&gt;
g «'o g «.o p p l U l W0

Sanford's S ilt s Lcidai

S if n I i n d
3 b d rm / }
both Spo1l«»% ' Apphtncoft
ftiiu l U l 000

WE LIS T A N O S E L L
MORE H O M ES TH A N
ANYO N E IN N O R TH
S EM INO LE C O U N T Y
FIX ER U P P E R
I bdrm 11’ t
bath ham# with aal lit hilchan.
p a r c h . S a i d la " a t
It' rendition &gt;24,000
SW EET D R E A M S
I bdrm/l
barn ham* with paddi* lent,
utility thadt. cable, lanced
yard &gt;44.&gt;04

l 1 1 ft. M l I B&gt; t j i
256 0 Iri t j u w o o d A v «

141— Homes For Sale

FAM ILIES O E L IG H T 4 bd.m 1
bam ham# with mother m law
quartan, paddi* Ian*, aal In
kltchan. large rooms U1.40*
TE R R IFIC 4 bdrm /l bath ham*
wltb aal In bltch an, split
bdrm plan, central haat air,
utility reom, lancad yard.
S llkbl

Vy n I i n d
3 bdrm
J
b*1h Appl « w Bih#r d fy «r
OoM kouw ISS000
County 1 bdrm; l ^ bjfh No
Q’uA11i f tfig l '|t m tg M t OOC
TgikamUi# } A c r v i'l bC m*
pool A turn TCR M S $113 XX)
( Jittlb w rr y Only 1J000 down 4
Udrm JtNlth Obi wkI# motoll*
•ncliPding
137 300

Lantoro i Acr* l ton N I im i
W M eliciow skl. R E A L T O R
H I 74*1

1120 S Sanford 321 4075

HI Mdl

322-2420
IM IS Park, Laniard
M l L I M ary BSvd. Lk Mary
LAKE M A R Y AT THE
CROSSINGS I Bdrm , I bath
spill plan w ith cathadrat
cailmgt. vanity and garden all
matter b d rm .. Lake Mary
Lcheal District &gt;44 ao*
W A L L IT C O M P A N Y

t il &gt;4*1

I 'M T K I )
S .V L E S

V?

vvm

x :i\ i k s

*

h t S I D I N T I A L L I lT I N O t
1114*4 Handy M a il ] bdrm i n
X IH Lot Zoned M R J
Daiirabl* Country Ham* on
l i n e d acre RaducadSaOWO
Hidden Lake V illa. Largo tphl &gt;
bdrm. dbl garagt ondlol
Paol Homo Fla room, bar,polio.
I bdrm/l bath nice t r M S u OOCI
New Ov p lii fully rented p04&lt;
live cash Itow &gt;44,0001
Hart* Rancb I a e rtt with
custom horn* M U S T S E LL
Li H u m id Hart* Farm Unique
horn*, la Hall atabi*
Apartmant Bldg Graal location
Attractive Income! t i l l M0
***********0****
M U L T I PSkMILY LOTS
PRIM E B U IL O IN O SITES
Oak SI. at P a rt Ava l loll loft,
cityaawor ♦ water •114.400
w Jnd St. lo n a d tor a p ti.
walar'towor all 1 lota U1.400
Traod* Ptaa Let/newer 114.400
Wn did I * Acre* RuiM a draam
horn* Hovaas OK
UO 000
A lpo rt BSvd naar 17/41 H e
Acros. toned aO units/acr* I
****************
C O M M E R C IA L U S T IN O S
Laka Mary Showroom War ant*
Bldg plus incama prsporty
Laka M ary O tfk a Cammarc’al
budding p rim # all* OOtAOt
Lang wood H w y «14 oapoiuro
naar Springs Plata t i l MOO
Laniard Busy Grotary Star*4
gatbur.... Reduced M i n t 000
P R IM t C O S A M IR C IA L / A P T.
S ITES All uHlIHos It 000 000
ooaaaooao*******

★ LIST FOR U S S ^
W I W IL L L IS T . A D V E R TIS E .
SELL T O U R H O M S POR 4 V
W H Y F A Y M ORES
FR EE COM PUT I RI I I O
M ortal Auntytt* at Your
Ham* Call USA TO O A Y I

321-3833
1*4 W. Laka M ary Btvd

T.V. and T.V. parts lot sal*
Call C A p a rin * it H I t i l l
» * PANASONIC COLOR T V .
STOOD punt I yaart old Atkino
$$00 firm 111 $oaa

193— Lawn &amp; Garden
R ID IN G SNAPPER MOWER
W O O D BU STER
____________ H144S4____________

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

e Where Anybody *
* Can Buy or Sell) *

C O M M E R C IA L SPECIALIST
LA K E M ARY R EALTY
r ea lto r
m t ia a

323-6593
215— Boats and
Accessories
' 7 2 1 1 ft. Larson Bowndet
41 HP Chrysler I I W I I l l l l l

217— Garage Sales

Geneva I &lt; acr* Homatitai or
pcnaiot* Mobil* Hum* &gt;&gt;i*i
ID O down, l i t ! M par month
4 Yaaia II0M G total I0X
D IS C O U N T EO RCASH
C O U N T R Y W ID E R E A L TY
Ro e - R .B . Broker............m « M
Oitaan 10 acr* parcel 4 cold
Only I 1*11 Improved Good
accaaa Good water U 000
down &gt;174 par mo DC 000
O tartarf Garland. Raartar
H I 4*4*

a a Y A R D SALE • • 1)41 P*rk
Ar* this Saturday N*m 4 AM
I* 7 Na early birds Maas*.
4 F A M Il y SALE 1 riding lin n
mowers, 4 bicycles, children’*
c lo th e s , a d u lts t lo lh e s ,
knlcknecks

153— A creageL o ts /S o le

157— M o b i l *
H o m e s / S a lt
C A R R IA G E C O VE Adult lac
lion. 1 bdrm , I bath, corner
lot lancad &gt;7 000 llaao H I
ataa_________________________

COUNTRY VILLAGE

Adult Mobil* Hots* f Ml
H00CLS ON DISPLAY
I TO l

Mm

tbroFrl

sat 447 4*47..... —
«** 771 7771
IS** E. Gravel ------ Orange City
JU S T OP P 14
A T O R A N O B C IT Y E X IT SS4

Baby Beds. Strollers. Ctefhet.
P la re a n i. Etc. Pegerback
is ) ) ) S ) I I » ) * t * 4 _____
Need Cribs. Playpens. Baby

1*7) Delta Royal* A C a dr hard
top Naw paint, radial tires
brakes Tun* up Rettery Low
mi I p rtv owner I107S or
bast otter 174 4411

S T R A W B E R R IE S
Le rg* A
plentiful You or w « pick
dally O uenlily diiceunls
Other vege'abiat BOR B A LL.

Larfnt Nra...4...Us«d MeM e
Homa Desist in this Ai i l
Pam UN*............ 4 --------------Adult!
t m Ww t ti-es.................. m i x *
IFT1 Cygroa* 11 * a* New ly
rtmodawd Mw*t b* mavod
EM M Cali W P a l ___________
1 b d r m . a craan ad p a ll* ,
ca rg g rt, A C . u llllly lhad
Adults, na pats Park Aug.
Mobile P a r t .x n w a i_________
'F I B E A C H TO W N C R A P T 14X44. 1 b d rm . I belli In
gork. lencediol m ass*
' l l Caacerd. lease Adult lac
Hon Carriage Cave IM M *

J M N U jjJ jR IN W t^

C H E S T F R E E Z E R . I CU. F T .,
L IK E N EW . SIS* P O R C H
O L IO E R .ia r H1S447_______
R E A D Y T O I N S T A L L . 44"
HI OH, G A LV A N IZ E D CHAIN

LINK PENCE. DRIVE
THROUOH O A TB . I WALK
OATES. A L L ACCBSSOaitS
R ITTE R THAN HEW. )U
*444 A F T E R * PM.___________
KIRBY/111* 44 A up
lead K lrtY C*
IM W .IR R .R H 4 e
R E S T A U R A N T E Q U I P Ice
machine. E U H N Spe* col
loemeser. 14” griddle. 14”
Char broiler Ida 771 *141
Saladrs* TV Syitomi
Com pi*!* Ad yau rwed I0OX
P Inducing N* mcmay down
si.JW W Universal t i l 174*

A C . I dr
original paint and
equipment O nly 41 000 mi A
real cream putt) SI aeo Cell
P e l D a ys 111 414)
Evas

A re you getting Ofverced Irene
lerred FeracMeedl Ne*d gulch
la N tC e n Dal* H&gt; r W

774*1*1_____________________
1471 VW
ItM a r bail altar
H ) 441)
■74 JE E P C H E R O K E E
SI.74*or bast oiler
H I M il,
*J PON TIAC P H O E N IX

R U Y JU N K C A R S A T R U C K S
Fro m 111 f* S M er mar*.
Call H I ls )« t&gt; ) 4JIJ
TO P Dollar Paid tor Junk A
UsaJ cars trucks A heavy
equipment H ) &gt;4*0______

11*
.«T4's
•*^i I

W E P A Y T O P D O L L A R FO R
JU N K C A R S A N D T R U C K S
CBS A U T O P A R T S 74) 4Mi

Like new 4 1)4 m l 14.M0
U l 7414

CHRYSLER, PLYMOUTH
.

S i S i i

i

a

. i

i

i

i

i

i i A 6 A

A a

.

CHEAPER
W ▼ ▼▼▼ Y Y ▼ ▼ ▼ ▼ ▼ Y f T Y f ▼▼

CHUMBLEY’S

1
i i&gt;'.f

Ai ! -*
i' i

; •*

4125

1976
GRAND PRIX

4725

1977
MONTE CARLO

i*1

4775

SU4IB C U M

1979

CHRYSLER CARDOBA

v .' ;♦

J2975

1980
PLYMOUTH HORIZON

J2995

m[ifin) srrcui

1979
DODGE DIPLOMAT

53350

(OUXO, i l l

DEAL W ITH A GOOD CHUM

JIM CHUMBLEY
ir t m iT ii

C iw v iK A - n n e o u iH - v o c a t w io m

— » - » *&gt;•», *14 — nv, , , u
•■ M ia • ■ H i m u I i a i w i w u s n
w ’n w i.ii

|
I

U . M &gt;111#

t

l| « W W F
l m m ~k~
I *

i

n q —

I*
ifrtS|
tAit?a

COURTESY PONTIAC

t'^hf

USED CAR
EXTRAVAGANZA
1980 AMC CONCORD
BODY MAN S SPECIAL
NO MONEY DOWN

•

$9 9 5

1972 BUICJt ELECTRA

$9 9 5

ONE OWNER.
FULL A BOAT

■i

I

1979 HONDA PRELUDE
SUN ROOf
NO MONEY DOWN

*2 4 9 5

l t t l AMC STATION WAGON

*2 9 9 5

LOW MILEAGE

1983 CHEV IMPALA
NO MONEY
DOWN

*4 9 9 5

1983 TOYOTA TERCEL
AyC, AUTO
9000 MILES

*5 9 9 5

....

1981 HONDA ACCORD
AUTOMATIC.

*5 9 9 5

AIR CONDITIONER

1982 D AW N KIIN CAB
cusiom

lorpfR

&gt; k

Q

Q

k

AIR CONDITIONER

1984 PONTIAC FIREBIRD $ 7 Q Q C
LOADED

I

231— Cars
Oab i ry AMa A M aim* b m
Ac rut i the three. Sag at bM
174 Hwy 114) Dabary 44g**4d

» a pr

243— Junk C irs

159— R eal Estate

Wanted

f&gt;3
l -A*
4J

♦$k

^4wj&gt;j4;2i2UJR_(e2SlSi_
223— Miscellaneous

'\)

1174 O O O O E J « F T
M IN ,
M OTOR HOME M U S T S IL L
BY APRIL Mth » ) 111)

-ir tlC H R Y S L E R
NEW Y O R K E R '

ONE OWNER.

221—Good Things
to Eat

09**1

241 — Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

Good

Price* Alter 7 PM
H I 174)
Paying CASH tor
Aluminum. Cans. Copper
Brett. Lead. Newspaper.
Glass. Gold. Silver
Koeomo Tool. I l l W 1st
1 1 nos** * 11ll I 'M _____
W A N T E O i D S A D O R A L IV E I
Rttr igereler*. Wethers

ocn

•71 HONDA 40*
4 cyl . goad cend
ISO* cash 11) 1444

219—Wanted to Buy

furnitur*. clothing

N IG H T HAW K

Good condition &gt;1 J00 After
S H J 4114_____________________

WITH SUREOOf

Frl A Sal * II. He tarty birds
All lb* vsual glut beaks,
bucfcafi. baby everything I I )
Hidden Leh*
M U L T I F A M IL Y A L I T T L E
B I T OF E V E R Y T H I N G
S A TU R D A Y O NLY 141) S
E L M A V I . N I A R H I h SI.
Y A R D SALE Th un . F r l . S et .
4 )
11) M c K a y I H . i t
Washing ion Oaks
_
Yard Sal* Frl., April S. an East
*4. 4th driveway an right nail
Rickmand Ava 14* III 4 Rain
av Shin* I____________________

C A S S E LB E R R Y I acta rorwd
PR I sat OOO W Maliciowaki.
R EA LTO R
H I 74*1

141) MONO*

usoiumt tut Mw

Wing Beck Ratktr. M ayli Bed
end Chest Twin Beds with
Wicker Heed Baird! 4 add
( l u l l *1 D r a w e r # ,
O le s t w a r a . and O l i h a i
Ptcturai. Laune* Chain, and
many m art Hams

if i\v

iliV

WEEKEND SPECIALS!

500 Sanford Art.

1 12

HAH

'77 Meillbu &gt;44* dawn
‘7* MavarKk Lew Dawn
IMS French Av* ............. H I IMS

MtCJURICS SMCIAL

149— Commercial
Property / Sale

) » &gt;4)4 after I M

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes

WE FINANCE

L&amp; E
Friday Nights...„7 PM

Hf tO A
“ W H A T C H A M A C A L L I t " OR
" 1 H IN S IM t l)l&gt; " l
A D V E R T IS E POR IT W ITH A
W A N T AOt

*r bast alter

D IS C O U N T
A U TO
SALES

1975
CHEVY VAN

L/ftk# NUry 3 Ulr m ■I 11 b#m
«ppl Only $$3 000

HA

'S3 Econoiinf Vtn. {9.000.00

Far mar* details
1 4*4 m u i i

r o * E S TA TE
C o m m ir c ie l or R t ild t n lla l
Auction! h A o u n lie l! Cell
Dell l Auction H I MW

REAL10R *

.321 - M l

G E «oiid *»•♦# convjt# Lika
te a $190 or ib«if of far M ull
mmi" Abtoiytfly no t*iU attar
st n i QQ77___________________

kcyl avfematic w /dbl* vanity
visers, M *00 ergsnel miles
SS44 Down/ Cash ar trad* A
law menmir gaymants
4*1 4*0* .......................... 444 *4*4

Every Wad N ita * t7 :M P M

In f t r p&lt;il # V#c*nt land from
11J 500 yp Owntr will hold 1

151 — Investment
Property / Sale

C A LL A N Y T IM E

COLOR TE LE V IS IO N
2$ co»or contoi* Tfidv*
noo Of iglnjt pflc* Otwt $too
b#i«Ac# dcr# $ ;u C alh or lake
0¥tf pay m#nti ol $2$ fW ilfl
NO M O N fY DOWN Still i«
»ar»anfy F f » t bom# trial no
obligation Call M2 $3*4 day or
nigh*

••n

'79 AMC Concord Limited

............. Dayton# Boath

• * « •• Haidi «•••••
PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION

213— Auctions

IANDST0CK BROKERS
3653712________ Anjtimt.

II yaw ar* leaking lor a sac
cental earner In R ial Eilat*.
Stanitram Realty it tanking
tar yau Call La* Albright
taday at H I I4 !« Evenings

183— Television /
Radio / Stereo

Hwy »J

IM tr p r iM 3 bdrm /) b4*ti *c
c m *o St JoNn't Oyenor uuill
« M l l( |11$ 000

W ILL B U IL O T O S U IT ! YOUR
LOT OR O UR S I E X C LU S IVE
A O I N T P O R W IN S O N O
DEV C O R P . A C E N TR A L
FLO R IO A L E A D E R ! MORE
HOME FOR LESS M O N E Y !
CALL T O O A Y I
O O E N E V A O S C E O L A RO e
IO N E O F O R M O B ILE S !
t Acr* Country tracts
Will tread on paved Rd •
74 \ O e w n 1 0 Y n *111X1
From s it.seal

Old chirtaroSi*. locking mirror
w ard ro be door t i l ) .
Ta ll
m*tel kitchen cabinet, twin
door! S I) H I H H after 4 PM
Racanditianad Aptltanct!
t.e m s t) W A R R A N TE E D
B AR N ETTS
CASSELBERR Y
*10)111....^..................... U * &gt;411
. R E N T TO O W N *
Color TVs
sttraos washer*
dryer!, rttrigaralor, traaiars
furnitur* video recorders
Special 1st waak! rant as*
Alfarnetiv* TV A Apoi Rantali
Zeyrts Shopping Center
________ 17110*4________
Used Wishers Parts A Service
tor Kenmores ...... ..... HSM47
M O O N E Y APP LIAN C ES
W ILSON M a Ve r FU R N ITU R E
111 H I E FIR S T ST
HI M l

★ DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION ★

F R E E TO GOOD HOME I P irt
pit bull botar After 4 321
0427_________________________

long wood ) bdrm H ) tmth
Appl $$$000 O w w *nrkk/4 f

1*40 Ford 1 4 Ion p,cn up dump
truck Naw painting, uphoi
story, tun* up and front end
alignment Apple p*e condi
ho" Yours for &gt;4)00 Dump
truck Itetvr* alone is worth
&gt;10 00 *d*Y MS S74 i m
1*41 Ford Bronco X L T New
tires brakes shocks SU0 and
&lt;4k4 over payments H J TMt

’77 LTDSMO Dawn
*77 Dodge S W Slag Omen
*74 Imgal* U N Deem

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

lets—SB

2 3 3 -Tru ck * /
Buses / Van*

Bed Credit?
Na Credit!
M FINANCE
NATIONAL AUTO SALES

Dwllonj Duple■ } bdrm I'y
btfh TE A M S $73 000

DREAM HOM E 4 bdrm/1 bam
hem* with aat In kltchan. In
tlda u tility , p a d d lt Ians,
cantral air/hddl Graat tar
lamilyl 141.700

Thursday, April 4,

231— Cars

in m*_______________

Mini WifihwMt

141 — Homes Fo r Sale

163— Waterfront
Property / Sale

Air conditioner tOOC B TU J4S
Fraaiar chost I cubic W . | 1 »

1 bdrm . |iy bath. Fane ad yard
Children A patt OK S430 mo
at) i*a*

LO N G W O O O
M ilt l . l k i
mature tamale to thara 1
Bdrm Lekafronl home Call
174 lea*________________

93— Rooms for Rent

L U !ia lyc i.'-a

HoQStUOt* TIP S ton U lT 5
iTBrs can b e
IKTVieTfeCCM.
INSTANCE, ALUMINUM
TV WNNQ&amp;TtJM/S PiaAtt f*\ Q CH lEN T
MEAf6 Ttft OJAm, VoUfc. OUWEfc !NfU€
MIWJE Cf THE NICjHTIN oeneR.Tb R3&amp; YoO.

Evening Herald. Sanford, Ft.

S

mm

P M WALKS AWAY! ‘
lltl S net

1M l — SSNfO AO

■

t
*l*4|

32

. Ifttf

�* B — E v e n in g H e ra ld . S a n lo r d . F I .

4B-

T h u r t t U y . A p r i l 4, I t l J

TONIGHT'S TV
torn it MiNrauiaa Buell

(

6:00

mt
Clt|
F la

Apr

0

*1
AH
SAI
AO
NA

MTWSMO j *
( 9 Itl W U C O M f BACA. KOTTtF)

6 05

PR
OF
E)
NC
IV
Ml
C I
B I
SI
FL

630
U

&lt; NBC NCWS
5 O c m news

1 O

a b c n tw s q

11 (M| ALIC*
a&gt; 111 OOOO TIMES

635

12 o c m c n

p yu

700

(10) N A TU N f I N i m K n .
[ P » l &gt;•**•* l/vj tfmtal vuMo

At
1

•"0 U1MC1I O M M It 0
(B (II ONE OAT AT A TIME

i«r»u»qu«» mat#. L po.vt« lor
*•**1 10 *•• t*a •O'VJ It

fill

Cl

7:05
12 BAHFOftO A n o s o n
O 4 ENTEPTAINMENT T0NI0HT
I n Iu ' N Aon* Bones0*1 t da, •»
t r « Mo o&gt; • m o M

FI

I s O WHEEL OF FOPTUNE
7j O
1100 000 NAME THAT

TUNE

n
■*
’K
a
•k
N
t

N
ti
•

il
tl

l&gt;
C

II
(
«
4

(
I
I
4

I
(
I
I
I
&lt;
I
1

11 (M l BENSON
d l l l l AIL IN THE TAMILT

2:30

} o CSS NEWS NIOHTWATCH
3:10
T O MOVIE Rampaga (tte ji
Robad M tenum Ena Mart ran,

3:30
I I (Ml FAMILY AFFAIP

4 00
11 (Ml FATTY DUKE

4:25
12 t h a t Girl
11 (Ml DORIS DAY

____ FRIDAY______
MORNINO

I I 4 A O Naro bac&lt;y*a. ar*par.
or p « a it osowod lo it and mot m
Porno Noro b o llo n *wt mothor and
onjoy* 1*0 busy daatruclen 0*
Pom « • pure* .i dacraad aga««l
IM CnnotiAni |Pv1 J o l i i y
J ) O UA O N U M P L T m tuddon
* M p p M r* n c« o( • laan agar Modi
Magnum to na*av« tnar, i m o,,
l*i«n A *,nuly laud in ro*^d
7i O M ilO B lO f Th# WMIKH
C t a n tia of C o m m a c t tom#i to
" N •** o* M il lari utio ara bamg na*m a d by i gang ol fanagadai

IO T

( X O ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE
1 f (M ) SANTORO ANO SON
QD (S) TWILIGHT TONE

II (M l DALLAS
ffl MO) WHO AMEPlCA A M N ) ol
unutuAl immitt including tr*
" 1*10100 and in# d»vmg tp*)* at
■Ml at tahnet prahittorc c/aa
tirat
(D ( 0 MOVIE ' Ac* E l And Podgar

(Ml P0PEYE

(tM S l

1230

8 05

•ii&lt; I u i I iiil ;

J u lio

lnli ni.is

J tlM '

P i 'l l i T i t t i r t it iit l S&lt; rijli* M f i t t l r w
It .it r
|ottu'*| t in
l.iiiiin r r f l i r l
I m i i i I w u e iii ii. ,i i i i i " iiih iiih
i Ih \
W ill I t i n t 1 1 ,1 SI H it; In r,I Is* III) III* V
Itl I I I it s l,| | \ | | iii |m i r|lit

III A l l l t d

■m il I , . K i l l A i n r r l t ,i
11, t i l l . t u n s i l i l l i i i i r

M i i i i i Iu

til l i l t it lit i s u| 1 1 ii

ll im l U 'n r lil

K i ll u . I l l l l I I llt s i l . l l III (III s . l l l l l
1 ,\ M U t r i i r t l s s iila in i u h n r 15
\ m t r l r .h i
siu^iis
a . il li nga

1 1M i i i s* ( u s U S A lu i A i m . i iti u n l i t ) i l i r si 11141* \\V A l t - l l i f
M u t lil
Mt

liiJ .in ii.il)
Am

I hr

M u ilt l

lc .itm

m il U r u i r
S | ir iiiK s it c n
S irv ic
M u n t il i I i n h D v I. h i .m il M il h . i c l
l.ll k s u il

l l . I S . l l l l . n l ) lis t 'll l u \ u

Mi l l it* ........................ tl I n
,\p% \|
H i * u n i s , m h u l l is |t«ii 11 v o w n t 'i l
I n * m c r ia li M 'f l l r r t i A 1 1 m i i
I'llC y r u u p
)) 'll
m i Id le
In
I' - i . is F* I ii m i i u
d ie

u iu H p

| 1 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
Q PRICE IS RiQ h T
O t r iv ia t r a p
! (Ml E ig h t IS ENOUGH
) 1101WE RE COOKING NOW
J ill FAMILY

\ | c t id e s A I| m i i

M i i i h i Iu

M a ria C o n

•Io i.i
o p e ra
siii^cr
I 'l a c i d o
I l u i i i I i i it o
a m i
. los e I.i iIh
Uodnunc/

A M'KKrie te iiirtlin ^ called
I mil tit Alrtea . h m I I i ,h i h h i l i
' i k i i i lit,h i ,i tlo/* ti snifter* also
n i l It* released h i die United
s,.Hi s .mother ellori desl|(ne(l lo
u s e niuiiev lor larnine-r.ivafted
\ltiea
lt.mil Aid a similar charily
C » « » n p I e a I ii r l ii f( l l r l t l s h
snpernlar* r.nsetl S IO million lor
Kdnopla )vllh dn rentrdiiift l)u
I In ) K iiid ) li s t *inisimas'*’

300
o T SANTA BARBARA

a

1:30
O AS t h e w o r l d TURNS
(SSIGOMERPY l E
1101 PAlNTlNa CERAMCS

A
v

2:00

X

4:00
l it t l e

mouse

on

th e

PRAIRiE
i T O H A * tr ek
' U MERV GRIFFIN
ftlM lS C O O B Y DOO
0 (I d SESAME STREET g
III ROBOTMAN FRIENDS

5:05
3 LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

I

7 O GENERA^ HOSPITAL
fl (Ml BUOS BUNNY
0 | 1 O|FLORiDASTYLE
a II h EAT h CL iFF

U FUNTSTONES

3:05
Q BUGS BUNNY ANO FR:EN0S

! J (M l HE-MAN ANO MASTERS
OF t h e UNIVERSE
a III VOl TRON DEFENDER OF
Th e UNIVERSE

405

5:30

? QT
Jo

PlOPLE S COURT
m 'A ’ S ’ h
NEWS
0 1 ioi ART OF B EN S HUMAN
a &gt;4l MORK AND MiNOY

430

3:30
© I !0l MISTER ROOIRStRI
a ill VELVETEEN RABBT

T a n o t h e r WORl O
O ONE LIFE TO LIVE

^

o

a

) O QU'Di NG l ig h t

105
a MOVIE

C M

m

535

435

1J ANDY GRIFFITH

Q FUNTSTONES

u ( lu

I« t,

2020 McCRACKEN ROAD, SANFORD, FLA. 321-5330

sneui
] And Dawn

Ittkar End Or
Whaia

F tar (da Prrmium
Ci .d r " A "

SPARE RIBS

PORK LOIN

WH0L£ FRYERS

IB

*1 .5 8

*1 .3 9

IB

CM AT OR TM MILL

LUCID m i

U S D A CkOKr B »« '

O 4 SCRABBLE
1 Q RYAN S MOPE
© U O IFLO R i DASTYLE

1•19
Shoulder Roast.................. a . 1.49
Lean H a m ..........................a 89*
Stew M e a t .................... a *1.99
Ground Chuck..................a * 1.59
Short R ib s .................... a $1.58
Blade Chuck Steak . . . n.

11:35
IX LUCY Sh o w

1205
12 PERRY MASON
1230

l)k n

.

Bara I*-F h(It Caaka4

la tra laan

E it rila a n

_

HWY u

ma

-

r J
AW 'KAA

ID
s i*

MCCRACKEN ROAD

f j 4 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW

3

Q

H H w

Swift frtPMuat
Fait? Caakad

BUFFET HAM
S4 U

C

»

Uart t

WITH SI0 PURCHASE

. m

U S.D.A. Chatta Baa* Aaund Ban.

0 (10 1 w o n d e r w o r k s
a 1Si mannix

0 '4 today
1 O CBS MOANING NEWS
U. O 0000 MORNING AMERICA
11 Oil FUNTSTONES
©HOIFARUOAY

Latin Music Stars J o in in g
A f r i c a n F a m in e Relief Drive
M &gt; S A N G K I .K S l l l l 'l l M um
'••■i i i M J l . . i t i n i n i iN ir Mt|H*rs i , u s

0 T ' s a l e OF T h e CENTURY
1 O FAMILY FEU0
0 ( 101 S - l - 1 CONTACT |R| g
a &lt;11REAL MCCOYS

12:00

700

2 (Ml GREAT SPACE COASTER
® (101 MAGiC 0» DECORATIVE
PAINTiNO

r d a y * o f o u r liv es
• Q a l l m y c h il d r e n
h IJS ID C K VAN DYKE
0 1 ioi F l o r id a h o m e g r o w n
III MOVIE

_

X NEWLYWED GAME
I THREE S COMPANY
J L E TS MAKE A 0EAI
ft (SSI DUKES OF HA22AR0
0 (1 01 ART OF BEINQ HUMAN
a ill I DREAM OF JEANNE

1000

Q T l MIDOAT
) O I X O new s
2 (M l BEWITCHED

6 45
7 ) O EYEWITNESS OAYbreak
ffldOIAM WEATHER

2:30
1 O CAPITOL

10 0

a

5:00

O HECKLE ANO JECKLE

o T TIME MACHINE
7 HOUR MAOA2INE
I SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
[(U lB lQ VALLEY
1(10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (A)
M im a y b e a a y a f o

AFTERNOON

11 FUNTiUE

O
4 LATE NIGHT WITH OAVIO
IFTTEPM AN Scnaduiad comad.
Card l»*tr
I I (M ) I LOVE LUCY

Ba s k e t b a l l : n k o ,i Pn

9:30

63 5

1220
I X MOVIE Tha Nann,
Haiti Oama WPiam 0u

Of Tha S la i 1 1B73&gt; COP Retail
•on Pamaia Fianian A Hunt n&lt;ar
ol t*a i«? 0. tindi that *,« ion
•trtt lo Iooobb m hs« footiiapa

S

a l o v in g
(M l BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

X LOVE CONNECTION
III HERE S LUCY

11:30

0 ' 4 NEWS
II O CBS EARLY MORNING
NCWS
X) O ABC NEWS THIS MORNINO

1200

900
0 f divorce co u r t
T Q donanue
1 O b a r n ab * JONES
UO Sl WALTONS
(10) SESAME STREETS
ItlPAPTRiOQE FAMiLT
9 05
12 MOVE

11 CATLINS

6.30

111 O NEWHAPT Dici anroyt p*a,
mg god m a lourioma but bacomaa
•dgy anan tna aagamg gati out ol
hand (P|
C71 O THE SAINT
(11 (M| PMOOA
( D Itl KOJAK

605
Q BEWITCHED
830
1J 0S| PINK panther
1101SUNSHINE SYSTEM
iii f a t Albert

11 05

h im io o o o d a y i

2 NEWS
a HI JIM BAKKFR

aju

7:35
12 I DREAM OF JEANNE
600
n 0S| WOOOy WOOOPECKI*

i

600
O ^ M C NEWS AT SUNRISE
I O MORNING STRETCH
(Ji a IICWITNESS DAYBREAK

11:30

O ill INSPECTOR GADGET

3:35

W I*01JOY OF PA.NT&gt;Na

11:00

530
O ' l) J J COUNTRY
11 JIMMY SWAOQART

0 4 TOFPOHT Hot! JonnnyCa.
aon Scnaduiad OaorgaSaga

7:30
It OS) TOM ANO JERRY
0(101 SESAME STREET^

2 OS) ANDY GRiFTTh

YOUNG ANO TN I P U T .

10:30

525
Q HOLLYWOOD ANO THE
STARS

1100

600

500
(Ml NEWS
AORCUKURE U S A

X

o f i r j o 1 a new s
11 (M l BENNY MILL
CD 110) DAVE ALLEN AT LAPQI
O ) III m ig h t o a l l e p y

a 110) A M WEATHER

s

430

II

7:15

O

less

6:35
12 I L0vE LUCY

11 ISSlOUNSMOKE

11 (M l BOS NEWHAPT

12 ALL m THE FAMILY

nba

2:20
12 MOVIE Tna Faa On Tnaima
Jordan Mt 4t| Barbara Sianrryca
WmdaaCora,

1030

7:35

11

200

BASEBALL SIMINO t h e
A banAd-t*a-acanaa tooa
at Map* laagua baiabaa tocuamg
on tour mambart 01t*a 1914 Allan,
ta B r«,ai .. Bruca Banad&lt;t Tarr,
Foraata Brad Kommmaa a d Bob
Wat ion

«

X

a U lH U T H C U F F

11 (Ml MZAPPE

1020

12

7:30
•f

t l (M llC TV

Cl O KNOTS LANOtNO Cat*, and
Jothua taca toma R/p&gt;'«aa on t*wr
•adding da, Oag » ai , t naa
&gt;an* ana taarnmg *d t,t*ar tap
fmpua Vana, to Oar, Er&lt; mtroducaa twa n#a gattnand g
7 O » / JO &gt; Tmotn, jonnaon
••amaiat rada iwatotom, t*a
and rontrmaraa art turga-,
•Fucb Ciarmi to turf naarfcgntad.
*WM y
T l (M l INOFPENDENT NEWS
ID M0I TODAY M THE LEOlSLATUBE
d l (I) POLICE WOMAN

' *or Brolacnna

At
OF
ST
SC

1:30

1000

D 4 SALE o r t h e c in tu f ty
&gt; O PM MAOA2NE IVcAWd
Cna**ban**i Natnmgtvi tut* •
PAM3
netting Qty^&lt;3%
I O JCOPAPOY
I I (M l TOO CLOSE FOP COMFOWT War •,*&gt;, dctoMT Mgr a*
*"&lt;1 H anr, «*'•&gt;■ * , em.de* to bur

M

X O MOVIE Tna Poman S png
OTM'iStona H M t i Viman L»gn
Wartan Baatt,
11 (Ml LEAVE rr TO BCAVEP
CD (D th e AVINO EPS

X
O
SIMON t SIMON Tha
Sunon* ,&lt;&gt;
ia A J | tor.
mar prpnand *»•. tham to laid Out
•no iPad nar (rstnar dur-ng a K t
paacaraay i * i
X O EVE TO EVE WN*a (Hear
t'a i to taacn M naa parmar Tracy
ma prorata datactnra M , a t i ana
aanti to mnaitigata • tutooout
•med a g
U (M | 0 U N C T
ffi (10| THE LIVING p l a n e t A
POPTPAJT o f th e EARTH A lur
r*r ol tna amma and p&lt;an Ma mat
nour’inai *&gt; attgara. and lan , t
lar n » i N i g

/ L lH B f*

’ 2 B c v t m v H n .L B n .u u

A
C I
F l

100

900

X T . 0 7 . O M tw t

i t issi j c f f i n s o n s
m
MO) M AC N U L

C*t|
folk

X O MOVIE Start Tna Parotunanwanout Ma in r O ) Gana wasa Donald Sutnanand

O l (10| THIS 0L0 HOUSE Maang
(N m to *adaco&gt;*ta an agartman*
g

IV tM N Q

H
P Jt

a IS! 5'JPtPFP.ENOS

12:35

6 30

IB

AVCE

*1 .8 9
READY TO EAT

U S D A C h .K . Baal

*

T-Bone S te a k .............. a $2 . 8 8
Turkey W in g s ...................a
. .a 4 9 *
Baal ar Park

Hillshire Sausage

i. * 1 . 8 9

U.S.D A. Chater Baal BaaaWtt

Chuck Roast. . . .
Cantar Cat

Pork Chops.........
P a ri Shauldrr Bana In

Butt Roast..........

a

*1 .5 9

a *1 .9 8
, . .a 9 9 *

laan P a ri CanRtry

Style Ribs............

a *I .2 9

PRICES IN THIS AD GOOD THRU APRIL 10, 1985

11

YOUR GRILL-OUT HEADQUARTERS

W E X L PAY U P TO $1,525
TO G IVE YOUR H O M E
T H E W O RK S.

J tin I h r II i III mi. i i i I cli.ills .m il
U l ^ . l l l l / t ' l s l'\ | l| '| | III* ) )M &gt;)«'&lt;-1 ))'|||

IrjFtoyd Theatres I

nils* $ 2 0 1 1 1 1 111 *,i i I d K .is tii
I h c H i n i i u n u N tiM M ip w ill i l o
it.H e 11 . 111 i h c | iru &lt; i n i s 11 u h i i h r

PIA/A TWIN I

s .tli
*il l l i r
S | N IH Ih ll li l l l K l l l l l t C
s iiiu lt.il lm i n a n il f i 'la u il p m
ilm ls N iir li a n
I s ln r ls in d i e
n u n | i io lii U S A lu r A l d c a l u m i
t la iiit ii.

I In' r n iiu liilit t i 5 0 (M-ri r n i w ill
no in I i i i |n i \ c iis h c tl |.aim A tm rl
i . h i i im n irlt 's . oru a n l/t rs said
Ih i' s o il i i m i i tfil m inx a m i
.i I I h i i i i

p ro d u c e d

by

A llie n

17? rfi3
■At I I I I II atla

l Best Actress

•it an

f

SALLY FIELD
PLACES IN THE
Xk h e a r t nsa
PLA/ATWWM

I l.iin m u m t a m ) Jus*' U t iln ia n a ,

2.50
[Ml

W IW

Cddl. Murphyl

Q9 c 8 T
“BEVERLY
7 : 3 0 /) A . HILLS COP"
MOV il LAND D l

“ "IS®

U J l? 1b

"POLICE
academyM

W®“

,.^ * ? .

—

♦ «*

Let’s Hear
It For
Sanford!

1
H.E.L.P. YOUR HOME.
WITH HOME ENERGY LOSS PREVENTION.
Nia \; get total H .E .L R for &gt;our home.

Don’t M iss It...

Sanford Appreciation Week
APRIL 22 - 27

\M* II actually pa&gt;- &gt;ou up to $600 to replace &gt;our
energy-hungry air conditioning system with an energysmart central air conditioning or heat pump s&gt;stem
'Ve il also pay you as much as $300 to put up
ceiling insulation, another way to bring &gt;our air
conditioning costs down.
Up to $400 to install a solar water heater.
.\nd up to $150 to take the heat off windows and
glass doors with solar film, solar screens and sunresistant awnings and shutters.
.

We ^ e n H .E.L.R with the basics. With up to $75
for caulking, uvatherstripping. water heater insulation
jackets and other m inor installations.
/Vid m ai ’ll save another kind of energy, too. Nbur
(Avn. So let us send an FPL energy specialist to your
home, free of charge, to see how much H.E.L.R &gt;\jur
home needs
For your free Hom e Energy Survey, call our
24-hour toll free num ber today. O r write Energy
Conservation Department. Florida Power &amp; Light.
R Q Box 0291001 Miami, Florida 33102.
Cet H .E .L R for your home from F P L Call right
now 1-800-821-7700

S pecial Tabloid A p ril 2 4 In The

Evening Herald
300 N. French Ave., Sanford

’•iorvr&amp;h n

322-2611

F=PlSft?rf&gt;
We re w orking hard at being the kind of power com pany you want.

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152128">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, April 04, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152129">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152130">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on April 04, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152131">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152132">
                <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;, April 04, 1985; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152133">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152134">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152135">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152136">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="15246" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="14860">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/02deb5002dbff1224bd701d4e9e50ba2.pdf</src>
        <authentication>0984c4b6c91ed1c461b9f75204b1c2d9</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="152127">
                    <text>77th Year. No. 191 Wednesday. April 3. 1985-Sanford. Florida

Evening

Herald

(USPS

481 280)

Price

25

Cents

Residents Petition To Bar Shopping Center

Residents around a 10-acrr lot across from
Sanford Middle School have mounted a petition
drlv« to try to stop it from being turned into
•mottier shopping center.
M ir residents don't want to see the grassy lot.
ultleh serves as a play area for youngsters and
.Hulls alike, turned Into a concrete havrn for
truants and traffic, according to the petition
1 he land, across from Sanford Middle School,
was sold by the Seminole County School Hoard to
Don lluhrr of Huber Construction In Orlando for
$0 0 0 ,0 0 0 in February Hut the sale was made on
the condition that the land be rezoned lor

commercial use The frontage o f the propertv
along french Avenue Is zoned commercial but
the remaining part Is zoned single-family residen­
tial.
The Sanford Planning and Zoning Commission
Is scheduled to deride on the rczonlng request at
Its Thursday meeting at 7 p m. at city hull The P
A Z hoard will send Its recommendation to the
Sanford City Commission which w ill make a final
derision on the matter later this month
Huber wants to build a 110.000-square foot
erntrr which would Include a grocery store, a
department store and smaller retail shops

II the rezonlng request Is denied Huber will find
another use for the property or return It to the
school board and the deal will be oil. according to
Benny Arnold assistant superintendent for facili­
ties and transportation
Arnold said he would hate to see the school
board lose $600,000. most of which woidd go
toward fixing up Sanford Middle School.
T Ills Is money the taxpayers don't have to put
up to support their schools."’ Arnold said.
Hut Jalalne Lee. of 423 W 18th St . who Is
heading the petition drive, said money lor the
sc hool can be raised without sacrificing one of the

Lokefront
Plaza Plan
Study Set

city's few play arras
h‘1t ‘•h01'* ibe money the taxpayers couched
up to pay for that field In the llrst place • I think
we can litid ways to raise money for ihe school
without giving up an area that has h istorica l
been zoned a residential district, she said |f
school nerds money. HI be the first m c&lt;&gt; out
colleellng with a cup "
Ms Lee sold about 100 people have signed the
(Million and about 15 people are dath combine
the streets around the lot collecting more
See PE TITIO N , page lO A

C o u n t y

B y Rick Brunson
H erald S taff W r ite r
A proposal for a $1 million
plaza of shops and a restaurant
near apartments under con ­
stru ction along the Sanford
lukefront will get Planning and
Zoning Commissioners' scrutiny
Thursday
Called lie rjxilnle Plaza. Hie
collection o f shops would be
a d ja c e n t to the P le r p o ln te
apartments on the southwest
corner of Seminole Boulevard
•"id Myrtle Avenue, according to
S ieve Hovdesvrn. o f Coldwcll
Hunker. Orlando, the company
bundling the plaza leasing
The Commission Is scheduled
•o meet at 7 p m in commission
cham bers city hall
Plerpolnte Is bring developed
by Hland Development Corp of
Houston. Texas.
I hr restaurant would be u
5.000 square font full-service,
sit-down establishment. Ilovdesven said I he If) shops would
be housed in two one-story
buildings nexi to ihe restaurant
mi Myrtle Avenue. One would be
about I |.OOO square feet and the
H»r*W PfwM kr Timmr VlacMt
"ih e r about 9,000, he said.
C oldw cll la trying to attract
High profile retail stores Into the
Rev. Bernard T. Mifchell and 18 month old
baritone while his wife, Beverly W ater,
pl.t/.i hul so tin there have not daughter Angela observe Ihe Salvation
sings. The music and scripture Holy Week
been any lakets, lie said
Army's Holy Week open air service at
services, In celebration of Ihe resurrection,
"W e 'r e at the point where
Magnolia M a ll In Downtown Sanlord Tues­
w ill be held at noon each day through
we ll take any giant tenant,"
day. Director of Ihe Sanford Salvation Army
F rid a y. Rev. Mitchell Is frorp Ihe Church of
llnvdesven said, adding that
branch, C apt. Mike W aters, plays Ihe
God
Pentecostal W ay, Sanford.
some ol the spare may tie leased
to olllces.
Th e exterior ol thr plu/a will
Im- similar to the gray and white
decor of the apartments, ac­
cording to Robert Rahils, ol
Zliiimentiuri Design Group of
as u group at a work session at I
Altamonte Springs, the architec­
ministrator's Job — William T
By J an e C asselberry
pm Friday In City hall
tural I Inn lor the project.
H erald S t a ff W riter
Powers — and opted to Interview
Pow ers. 42. assistant c ity
Unaware hr suddenly beratnr Terry Instead
" It will be a good looking
the lop c o n te n d e r for Ih e
"1 would like to talk with the manager and finance director for
building.' Rahils said
ihe city of Perry, was one of two
He said the plaza was thr L o n g w iM M t d t y administrator's cominlsslonere." Terry said.
Terry has not applied for Ihe finalists out of 63 applicants fur
second and llnal phase ol the job. City Clerk Don Terry, con
the jmisi and was the unanimous
laded today In Tampa where hr |oh. hut Mayor Harvey Smrrllson
Pl«*r|Milnte project
said hr meets the criteria called choice when he ap|&gt;carrd lM-luie
Is attending a d ty clerk's con
"T h ere's no more land lell."
vrntlon. said "I would certainly for In the dty code. Instrad of thr commission on March 22
Riihlts said
Both Powers and Payne, who Is
making tlir runner-up. Wallace
Scheduled completion ol the consider the Job II It Is offered
city manager of Crystal River,
The city commission voted 4 1 i'aynr. an olfer. the commission
project, pending approval o f site
work by the commission. Is at a special meeting Tuesday ers will Interview Terry on an asked for an annual salarv ol
nlglu to reject a counter olfer by Individual basis Thursday and $40,000
N o v e m b e r II1H5. Ilovd cttven
The commission made a w rit­
said
thetr first choice for the ad­ Friday before m eeting with him

Salvation Service

B l o c k s

D e v e lo p m e n ts
By Donna Eatea
request be denied and the lout
H erald S ta ff W riter
commissioners
present — Mrs
The dozen or so residents of
the Tuskawilla-Red Hug Lake Christensen. Sandra Glenn Fred
roads area won their second Streetman and Hill Kirchhoil —
voted against the pro|K&gt;sul Also
battle In tw o weeks against
commercial development near denied was a request to change
the cou n ty's com prehensive
their hom es Tuesday night
land use plan on that parcel
without firing a single salvo
from low density resldemi.il to
And residents of Sky Lark, a
commercial
s u b d iv is io n In L o n g w o o d .
Meanwhile. 15 Sky Lark rest
persuaded county commission­
ers to deny a request for Indus­ d e n ts with an a ssist from
trial zoning neur their homes Longwood City Commissioner
despite n written recommenda­ Perry Faulkner urged denial ol a
request from John and Gloria
tion to the contrary from their
S rh n eem a n to r r z o n r from
district county commissioner.
agriculture to industrial the d H
Hob Sturm, who is recupetatlng
ucres at the south end of Tlmoat his home from minor surgery
cuan Way.
County Commissioner Barbara
Mrs. Schnecman mild she and
C h risten sen fo re s ta lle d the
her husband have a contract to
necessity for the Tuskawllla-Red
purchase Ihe property from Hie
B ig Lake residents to present
o w n ers . W illiam and Edith
their arguments against over­
Jackson, contingent upon the
development in their neigh­
rezonlng.
borhood by making a motion to
She said plans tire to develop a
deny Ihe request for rezonlng to
w u rrlio u s e park at th e site
commercial requested by Multi
tMiundrd by hom es on the east
Services o f Orlando.
and south, by the railroad on the
No one sh ow ed up repre­
w est and Industrial on the north.
senting the development com­
The residents argued that In­
pany to argue in favor of the
dustrial
would destroy
firm 's request to rrzone B.4 th e ir n c lg zoning
li borhuod.
acres, on th e east side of
Mrs Glenn made the motion to
Tuskawtlla Road, onc-half mile
north of Red Hug Lake Road deny both the requested change
In the land use plun and the
from residential to commercial.
Plans were to build a shopping Industrial rezonlng and her mo­
center at the site. Stalf and thr tion was seconded by Klrchhoff.
Mrs. Christensen told Mrs.
p la n n in g a n d z o n in g c o m ­
mission recommended dcnialthe
B ee C O U N T Y , p a g e IO A

City Clerk Would Consider Administrator Job

Topless Jogger Will Fight On
PALM BEACH |UPI| A
topless Jogger who was fined
$500 In posh Palm Beach and
has spent $25,000 lighting an
ordinance Hud prohibits peo­
ple from going harechested,
lost his cute In federal court
but |&gt;l.ills In appeal
A lle n D rW ecse. J7. an
assistan t public d efen d er,
claim s his civil rights were
violated when he received a
ticket In 1979 for running
along a Palm Beach bicycle
trull without a shirt. The
tow n 's law bans m en and
w om en 14 and older from
going topless In a public place
l)eyund I50lccl ofthe bcurh.
Last week. U S . District
Judge Norman Roettger ruled
the town could maintain such
an ordinance.
' Tills ordinance represents

a valid exerrisc o f the town s
poller power ... The court has
found no fundamental right to
dress, speech or health at
stake In this case." the Judge
said.
Town council member Paul
Ilyinsky said, "It's a great
satisfaction to feel that some
of your ordin an ces aren't
frivolous."
DcWeese said he plans lo
appeal the Judge's ruling to
thr 11th U S. Circuit Court of
Appeals In Atlanta Lower
rourts called the ordinance
silly and unconstitutional, but
Ihe town uppealed those de­
cisions.
"T h e main principle
Is It bothers tne the town la
willing to litigate front here to
eternity Instead of accepting
original rulings gracefully."
DrWecse said.

that three of Powers' demands —
a three-week vacation alter one
year. 45-day notice and OO-dav
severrncc jsiy — are agulnst the
|M-r*onnrl |M&gt;llcy. Commissioner
Ed Myers said Powers had said
he wasn't bound by the policy
iM-causr he would Im- a con­
tra c tu a l e m p lo y e e and yet
claimed parts n( the policy that
hr liked "II he's a contractual
em ployee. Ihe city couldn't pay
all those benefit* and supply a
See CONSIDER, page IOA

Elementaries Face Boundary Changes
By R o ge r Simmons
Herald S t a ff W riter
Several j&gt;ro|&gt;osala for attendanrr bound­
ary changes for Sterling Park and Wood­
lands elementary schools arc being mulled
over by the Seminole County School Hoard
The changes are needed lo relieve 'crisis'
overcrowding, said schools spokesman
Karen Coleman.
At Its April 10 meeting, the board wants
to act to reduce the number ol students at
Sterling Park In Casselberry and Woodlands
In l ongwood In an attempt to bring the total
enrollment for both schools down Im-Iow Ihe
state recommended capacity.
Sterling Park has a state recommended
capacity &lt;&gt;( HOI students. t&gt;ut principal Mike
Townsiey said Tuesday hr has 929 students
enrolled Woodlands' slate recommended
cuparlty Is 7!)6. but close to HOOattend.
Under the promised boundary changes,
some students (rom Sterling Park wuuld be
shipped oil to Casselberry. Lake Orlenta and
English Estates elementary schools Some of
W o o d la n d s ' p u p ils w ou ld sw itch lo

Longwood and Altamonte Springs clemen
tar) schools If the txmndary changes are
approved.
The new boundaries would take elfert this
full for the 1985-86 school year If adopted try
ihe school ttoard.
Mrs Coleman said the overcrowding
problem at Sterling Park and WixMlIands is
at $ "crisis" level.
She said the board's consideration of the
proposals will end a long process which has
Involved com m ittees of parents, schiwl
officials and homeowners associations. Mrs
Coleman said the groups worked and were
able to formulate sevrrul proposals for
boundary changes
Proposals for boundary changes at both
■V bools were sent to school l&gt;ourd m cm tiers

by Director of Elementary Education Marlon
Gtannlnl.
Three plans were submitted lor lowering
the enrollment at Sterling Park. The one Ms.
Glunntn! recommends calls for:
• Students living In Wyndam Woods
subdivision. Lake Kathryn Mobile Homes.

Man Jailed For Cruelty; Dog Destroyed
A Sanford man was being held day and charged with cruelty to
In the Seminole County Jatl an animal, unlawful confine­
today on three counts o f animal m e n t o f u n a n I in a I a n d
c r u e lty In co n n ec tio n w ith abandonm ent ol an animal.
Each charge Is a first degree
tre a tm e n t which u ltim a te ly
fo rc ed the destruction o f a misdemeanor carrying a penalty
of up to a year In Jail and $ I .OOO
DntM-nnun pinscher.
Ronald Lee Scott. 28. of 4220 fine.
According lo court records.
S Orlando Drive. Apt. 58. Is
scheduled to appear today at L o n g w o o d p o lic e found a
I 30 p m. before a Seminole middle-aged m ale Doberman
County Judge to have u tentative pinscher abandoned at Stott's
trial date set on the cruelty former residence. 549 E. Church
charges. He was arrested Mon­ St. They called the county's

ten oBer to Powers of an annual
s-ilaiv of $35,000 und an In­
crease to Im- negotiated alter six
months, a car. and m oving
expense*. Powers, who earns
$24,800 agreed In Ills 3|&gt;agr
counter o lfer to arcr|)l thr
$35,000. hul hr wanted an
automatic Increase of $5,000 in
six months, subsequent cost ol
living and merit Increases, und
other benefits, which the com­
missioners left were excessive
Mayor Harvey Smcrtlson said

Anim at Control departm en t
which contacted thr Humane
Society
The dog. according to In­
vestigator iiarbara Woodall and
a veterinarian'* report, was suf­
fering from lack o f food, an
extreme flea Infestation, swollen
eyes and Infections tn the pads of
its feel that caused swelling In
Its legs The dog was reportedly
kept tied without food tn a yard.
The animal was taken to the
Humane Society on County

Home Road In Sanford, but did
not respond to medical care and
had to I m - destroyed
According to the repon. when
Scott was contacted by Ms
Woodall he said he did not have
ibe tune to go to the shelter and
"mess with the dog."
A summons was to be deliver­
ed to Scott at ihe lomgwood
address March 8. but he appar
rntly had moved and was not
located until Monday.
—Deane J ord a n

Lake Kathryn Woods subdivision and Its
nearby area would attend Casselberry
Elementary.
• Children residing In Forest Brook
Summit Village. The Hills. Branch Tree and
CedarwiMMl subdivisions, as well as Plutitn
lion. Red Lion. Squire One and Sorrento.
Scdgcflrld and San Jose apanments would
ultend English Estates Elementary
As an addendum to the proposal. Ms
Gtannlnl recommends children who ultend
English Eslates Elementary and live east ol
Longwood Avenue lo state Road 430 and
west ol U S. Highway 17-92 should attend
LakeOrtenta.
If approved, the proposal would give
Sterling Park a student body ol 094. English
E slates 05 0 . Luke O rlenta 740 and
Casselberry Elementury 663.
F iv e p la n s w e r e s tu d ie d to e a s e
overcrowding at Woodlands The plan Ms
Gtannlnl recommends calls lor
See SCHOOLS, psge IO A

Spelling For Space

TODAY

PORTLAND. Ore. |UPII - Thr
search for teacher-astronauts lo
Action Reports............... 2A
ride the spuce shuttle has turned
Classifieds.............. 10,1 IB
up some educators who have
Dear Abby......................4B
problems spelling and writing
Deaths......................... IOA
"Most shocking." was the way
Jonathan Nicholas, column: it for Editorial........................ *A
The Oreflunlan newspaper, de­ Florida........................... 2A
Hospital..........................2 A
scribed It.
Nicholas was a member of a Nation............................ JA
People..........................MB
s c r e e n in g p a n e l that rea d
Sports......................... A ?A
through applications from 170
Oregon school teachers applying Television...................... 9B
Weather ....................... 2A
for a shuttle seat.

�2A — Evening Herald, Sanford, El.

Wednetday, April 3, I t t )

Grants Extension To Mobile Home Permit

County: Old Woman Can Stay

NATION

By Donna Estes
Herald S ta ff W r ite r
An appeal lo let an III. elderly woman live
out her remaining days In a mobile home on
a 5-acre tract o ff Chapm an Road In
southeast Sem inole C ounty has been
granted by the county commission
Commissioners Tuesday granted Wilma
Ketchum a six-month permit lo keep the
mobile home on the property on the north
side of Chapman Road and advised her to
seek a permll of longer duration Irpm Ihe
county Hoard of Adjustment under a new
application
Her request for renewal o f Ihe permit for
the mrtbllc home was based on a medical
hardship. Her son. Franklin Allen, sub­
mit led a doctor's certificate and federal
approval of her medical disability as proof of
her Illness
Following Intense questioning by Com ­
missioner Sandra Glenn. It was determined
Ihal Mrs, Ketchum may come under a
county regulation allowing ihe permanent
location o f Ihe mobile home at Ihe she under
a life eslale agreement r— meaning Ihe
mobile home rould remain as long as she

IN BRIEF
Parents Shout 'K ill Him I *
A s School G unm an Surrenders
DETROIT |UPI) — An angry crowd gathered around the
school where a gunman held three second-graders captive
for four hour* and rnlled for Immediate punishment of the
suspect who suddenly freed hi* hostages and surrendered.
Alwiiil 200 neighbor* and parent* Tursday chanted, ' Kill
him! Kill him!" as the man was put In restraints and
carried out of Ihe Loving Elemcniary School on Detroit's
north side
T lir l)rlm lt F rrr t'rcsn Identified the suspect as Alim
Sanders. Iff. of nearby Hamtramck. but a police
S|x&gt;ke*mnn refused to confirm the report. The man was
firing held on suspicion of felonious assault.
"W e don't know why he did It.” Police Commander
Jerom e Miller said after the suspect put down his
small-calliter rifle and released hlsH year-old hostages.
School Su|ierlnlcndrnt Arthur Jefferson said the man
walked Into the srluxd through an open door with a group
o f parents at about 11 a m. and entered Room 174. where
Evelyn Mitchell was leaching second grade.
Th e suspect selected three student* as hostages, allowing
the other children and Mitchell to leave, police said. The
other 53 9 students In the building wrre evacuated.

lives, taul musl be removed aflcr her death.
The major problem with permitting the
m obile home lo rcmaialn where It Is
jH-rnianrntly is ih.it a house was also built
on the property several years ago and thts
may have violated some county regulation
Involving the splitting of property. Part o f
the property was deeded to Allen and In­
built the home
However. Mrs. Glenn pointed out that t(
the live acres was under a single ownership
In 1970 the regulation against splitting the
property would not apply
In granting Ihe six-month permit, the
commission overruled Ihe Hoard of Ad­
justment which had turned down the
request because of opposition (rom nearby
property owners.
In other business Tuesday. Ihe com ­
mission
• Again overturned a Hoard ol A d |ust•
merit ruling and granted a two-year permit
requested by Doris L. Love lo park a mobile
home on a lot al The Forest at Lake Harney
• Denied a request for rezoning from oneand two-family dwelling district to residen­
tial professional from Helen Smith, trustee

Two Men Facing Prison
For Child Sexual Assaults

Con Makes B loody Escape Try
S A LT LAKE CITY (UPI| — Prison officials refused to
reveal If they had details o f how u heavily guarded convict
planned to escape utter he shot his way out of the county
courthouse, kilting one man and wounding another.
The shooting began Tuesday when a woman slipped a
gun in Ronnie lav Gardner. 24. In the basement o f Ihe
i ourl house when he arrived with Utah Stale Prison guards
lor a hearing on charges he killed a bartender.
Il ended on Ihe courthouse lawn when Gardner, still
handcuffed, shackled ul the waist and bleeding from a
bullet wound In the shoulder, surrendered to encircling
polio- of Ileers hv Hipping Ills gun Into the air.
Gov. Norm liangerier promised an investigation Into
security measures (or transporting state prison Inmnlrs
and lllah prison olllclaln Insisted there were no security
slip ups Ihal allowed Gardner to make the escn|&gt;e attempt.

A 44-year-old Oviedo man on
15 year* probation for a 19# 1
sexual assault on u girl has
pleaded guilty to molesting the
girl again. In a separate case, an
Orlando man pleaded no contest
lo child molest lug charges

F lyg irl

K irkp a trick Switches To GOP

An Altamonte Spring* couple
w hlch alleged ly b u rglarized
moms al an Altamonte Springs
motel on several occasions have
Ixvn nahhed aflcr a woman who
went along oh an attempted
hreuk ln reported them to police
The |Milr have been charged
with conspiracy lo commit u
felony and burglary lo an orc o p ie d iiw riiiu g. A lta m o n te
Sprin g* Police ch ief William
Llquoil said burglary charges
arc also pending against (hr
woman who reported the pair lo
police. Police have askrd the
Seminole Courily Stale A llornry
(o Issue a capias warrant fur her
arrest.
According lo a police rrpori.
Nancy Porter Glass. 20, o f 203 S
Weklva Road. *28, Apopka, told
D a y 's Inn tnan gager J e r r y
Spivey Ihal she and Ihe two
s u s p e c ts , w ho a r t fo r m e r
e m p lo y e e s of the m otel on
W y m o r e R oad . A lt a n io n ic
Springs, had opened Ihe dixir to
an occupied room on March 4
Ms. Glass alleged that she had
been mil drinking with the pair
unit they showed her two keys to
rooms at the Inn and claimed
they hod burglarized rooms
there several limes In rrccnl
months since fx-ing fired. They
reporlrdly told her they hud
stolen televisions and other
Hems from m old nxmi* uml
oullined a plan lo do It again
wllh her us an accomplice, die
report sold

IN BRIEF
G overnor Pushes Impact Fees
So 'G row th Pays For G ro w th '
I Al.l.AIIASSKK (UPII - - The overriding Issue of the 1985
Florida legislative session
how an environmentally
l i agile slate can cojte with the nation's fastest growth rate
- was evident tn virtually everything lawmakers did on
iqx-nlng day ol the 60 day meeting
In Ills annual Stale of the Slate address at a Joint
legislative session. Gov. Rob Graham focused on growth
problems from start to llnlsli Graham called lor lawmakers
to study use of Impact lees" to make newcomrrs pay the
cost ol new government services. Increased "user fees" on
existing services and strengthening of the Local Govern­
ment Comprehensive Planning Act tn make cities und
counties direct major construction projects to areas that
can absorb them w ith minimal environmental damage

H e ckle r Pleads For Liver
GAINESVILLE |UPI| — With a loving hand und u gift of
toys lor the dying 14 month old Ixty In Ihe hospltul crib,
the lady from Washington called on all Americans to set
aside personal grids and donate organs of their terminally
111 loved ones to Ihe thousands of people who need them.
President Reagan sent Murguret Heckler, secretary of
Health and Human Service*, to visit Huy Ryan Ostrrblorn
l uesdny In Ills room at Strands Teaching Hospital wherr
doctors hope to InlllR his desperate need for a liver
transplant
Doctors said the critically 111 child can not live without
the hrnrfR ol a liver of his blood Ivpe IBpositlvel

4•* roptvnhtirt ml*, dMV. prlftt «• ol
mhl m ornrng 'odor In in J osw m e rA ett
d u n g * tArvugSaul is * day P r im do not

Sid At*
A lU s lK Bank

l*'X

Harnett Bank
Flfkl fidelity U l
IIO&gt;kUPuM&gt;

a '» Jut
IN

I

MV

The girl. 13, lold a sheriffs
investigator on Jan. 14 that
Smart forced her lo jM-rtorm oral
sex In December. The girl's
parent* lold deputies the suspect

Action Reports
A Fire s
A C o u rfi
★ Police Beat
The Irto went lo the m old anil
the other female suspect and Ms
Glass reportedly used a key to
o|m-ii the dour of a m old room
hill wrrr scared awav when the
occupants of the room shouted,
the report said
They fled along wllh the male
suspect who had waited In a cat.
the rrjmrt said
Ms Glass rr|M&gt;rir&lt;i the Incident
to Spivey and alter she repeated
her story to police Ihe accused
couple were arrested al tlir Inn
al 2 10 p m Tuesday, the ri-|Miri
said
Charged were Anthony Hlaln
Hull. 20, and Mary Alice Hates.
2H. both of 2851 W Lake
Hratilley Court. Longwnod. Ms.
Hairs was also churged wllh
d r iv in g w llh a su sp en d ed
license. All have Ixvn rrlrased
from Jail on tH.txto bond each
and arc scheduled to appear In
court April 22.
KNIFE A T WIFE
An Altamonte Spring* man
who reportedly lilt his wile.
Ilirealened her wllh u knife and
then threw the knife ul her us
she lied has Ik-cii charged wllh

aggravated assault.
Ann Michaels, o f 101 E, Allaiiionlc Drive *921. Altamonte
Springs, lold police that her
husband attacked her at about
5 20 pan. Monday. Mr*. Michaels
fled in the office of her apart­
ment complex m anager and
called [roller. u jxillrr report said.
Aftrr questioning her jxillcc
went to her home und arrester!
Jerald R. Michaels. 39, He was
being held In lieu of $5,000
bond. Mrs. Michaels did not
appear to have been Injured, the
report said.
MOM &amp; D AUGHTER If IT
A Casscllx-rry woman reported
to shertfTa deputies ihal her
husband hit her when she tried
to keep him Ironi striking ihrlr
daughter I Wit li were allegedly
till by the man who has hern
charged wllh tw o counts of
hat l rrv.
Jackie Callahan. 42. and Chris
Callahan. 17, ol 1113 Santa
Crurz Way. were reportedly at­
tacked In thrtr home around
3:30 a.m Tursday. No reason fur
the attacks were given In a
s h e r i f f 's r e p o r t , but Mrs
Callahan told deputies she was
hit alter she tried to krejt the
suspect Irotn hitting her daugh­
ter.
Ronald Jerry Callahan, 42.
was arrested at his home. He
was being held In lieu o f $500
bond.
DUI A R R E ST S
The following person* have

WEATHER

NATIONAL REPORT:
Californians lined the shores of
I he Pacific to enjoy record 90
d e g r e e h eal w h ile w in t r y
w eather In Ihe East chased
tourists from Florida's beaches
and threatened an overnight
Irrezr today In Ihe Carolina* und
Georgia The temperature fell to
Specially marked "p rize" eggs 26 degrees III Asheville. N.C .
will lie among those hidden and today and readings In the 30s
the lucky egg hunter* will claim spread us fur south as northern
ihrlr prizes al Ihe end of Ihe Florida. At 1 a m., the tempera­
liiiul. Children should bring ture was 50 degrees In Great
I heir own haskel for collecting Fulls. Mont., and only 47 In
''HKS
Jacksonville Freeze and frost
Regular zoo admission prices warnings were posted today In
will In- In effect with no addi­ northern Georgia and Inland
tional cos I lo participate In Ihe set (Ions of the Carolina*. To the
egg hunt. Children under 3 are north, snow and rain apread
admitted tree o f charge; 3-12. SI; from Michigan and w estern
senior adults HO and over, $1.50; Pennsylvania to northern New
and udulls $3
England. In Florida Tuesday.
West Palm Beach lied Its record
low of 54 degrees and Miami
Beach set one with a reading of
56 It was a record 96 degrees at
Los Angeles. 89 at Santa Marta.
88 at Sacram ento and San
s I* *'
.... mw in*
Francisco. 86 at Oakland and the
Fla Progrmt
Ilk
Molfetl Naval Air Station, and 83
treedam laving*
ft* ISS
MCA
OS O
ut Ihe San Francisco alrporl and
HugSat lugply
II ill*
the Alameda Naval Air Station.
Morntar t
It III*
Bakersfield equaled Ha high of
NCR Cary
! ’ H *FW
FWtta,
IJ u«*
90 degrees and San Jose lied 11s
IcgtVt
taw H| mark of 85. Thermal. C a lif. was
lewttieeit Bank
MIS in*
the nation's hot spot at 98
t v Bank!
» la M

E a s te r Egg H u n t P la n n e d A t Zoo

P a w iyume*ren« prvintotl * r m t m t e i of
f*• Nthonti Atwroe'wi ol Seorillit* Dm W i

J -mes Harvey Smart. 44. of
1255 Lake Charm Drive, entered
the plea on a lewd and lascivious
charge Ik-fore Seminole Circuit
Judge S. Joseph Davis Jr. who
set sentencing for May 15. Smart
could receive uji lo 15 years In
prison for violating his probalion.

had also threatened lo kill them
and I heir daughter If l hey went
lo authorities, Ihe rrjxirt said.
In Ihe second case. William
Robert Dawson. 40. pleaded no
contest to committing a lewd
and lascivious ossa nil on a child
and lo committing a lewd art In
i h«- presence o f a child.
Dawson erttered I lie plea I m fore Davis who sei May 15 lor
sentenrlng Hr rould receive a
year In Jail.
According to court records.
I)a w i n n w a s a c c u s e d oI
p erform in g a sex act upon
himself several limes in the
presence o f Hie girl, then 11, and
Inndllng and assaulting her al
age 12.
..
— Deane Jordan

Burglary Suspects Jailed A fter Accomplice Squeals

FLORIDA

STOCKS

HtflW Ph#tf Iff Timmy Vtnctnl

Seminole High School graduate Tam ara Harrison, now an
Army helicopter pilot, shows her flight helmet lo some
students al Sanford's All Souls School during a guest
appearance Tuesday.

WASHINGTON tUl*1) — The Republican Party has
captured a long-sought prize with the conversion of former
U.N. Ambassador Jrnne Kirkpatrick, a lifelong Democrat
Inn a darling of conservatives
Kirkpatrick will make her party switch official at u news
conference today, followed by a gala reception where she
w ill be honored by a W ho's Who o f the Reagan
iiilmlnfalralloii. Vice President George Rush rrjxjrlrdly will
lead the celebration.
Republicans have enjoyed a number of significant
Democratic converts In recent years including former
Treasury Secretary John Connally and some House
members, one of whom Is now Sen Phil Gramm of Texas
Kirkpatrick, who slrpjx-d down from her U.N, jx&gt;*l last
week. Insists II Is the times and |m&gt;IIIIcuI parties that have
changed, not whal she believes

Hundreds ul hunters will lx. s|.tlklng tlir trail* al Ihe I'entrul
! Florida /on Saturday bin they
! will lie armed with basket*, run
! grins Tin- / i m i a ls o will 1m - lx! itiisi to ihe Easier Hiiiniy who
! will I m - busy hiding 3,500 col
I ored Easier e g g s and | M i* ln g lor
! souvenir photographs
i The big egg hum will liegln al
&gt; Itt a mi and end al noon w llh
I designated areas ihrnnghmil Ihe
i &lt;oo grounds tor various age
| groups (min toddler to Itt

of a parcel o f land on the west side o f East
Lake Brantley Drive. The commission said
residential professional zoning requires that
a specific use — such as a real estate,
lawyer's or accountant 's office, all low traffic
generators — must be planned for the parcel
before the rezoning ran he granted. The
owner may return with a specific request
within six months.
• Granted a change In zoning from
agriculture lo very light industrial lor nine
acres at Ihe southwest comer of Airport
Boulevard and Fifth Street and approved a
change In Ihe land use plan from general
rural lo industrial as requested by John and
David Wall on behalf of owner. T.H. Hall Jr
The approvals were contingent upon
plans for Ihe development of Ihe property
Ix-lng brought back to the commission for
review and Ihe owner donating a 50-fool
right-of-way for Airport Boulevard. The
owner was also required to Improve Fifth
Street along the boundaries of hts property
and to use Fifth Street to enter Ills property
He musl also provide a lOO-foot setback,
and 50-foot landscaped buffers on the south
and west sides o f the property.

J

day and all of peninsula Sunday.
Mostly mild lemjx-ralure* except
A R E A F O R E C A S T : Today seasonally warm north Friday.
sunny, High mid 70s. Wind Lows In the 50s north and 60*
northwrst 10 to 15 mph. T o ­ south except around 70 Kry*
night clear uml rrx»l Low around Highs In (hr 70* north and 80*
50 Wind light and variable
south except low lo mid 80*
Thursday sunny and warmer. north Friday.
High around 80 South wind 10
A R E A READ1NOB (0 a.m.J:
lo 15 mph.
temperature: 60; overnight low;
5 1 ; T u e s d a y 's h ig h : 7 1 ;
B O A T IN O F O R E C A ST] St
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet oul 50 barometric pressure: 30.12: rela­
ntllr* — Wind northwest around tiv e h u m id ity; 42 p ercen t:
15 knots backing to west and winds northwest at 12 mph;
decreasing lo around 10 knots sunrise: 6:13 a m . sunset 6 4 4
later today. Wind southwest IO p m .
T H U R S D A Y TIDESt
to 15 knots tonight and Thurs­
day. Sea 3 to 5 (eet offshore D aytona Beach: highs. 7 00
decreasing to 2 to 3 fret tonight. a m . 7:21 p m : lows. 12:27
a m . , 12 4 9 p . tn . ; P o r t
Mostly fair.
C anaveral: highs. 6:52 am .,
EXTEND ED FO RECAST)
7:13 pm .: lows. 12:18 a m .
Partly cloudy Friday then a
12 40 p m .; B a y p o rti highs.
chance o f showers or thun­ 12 04 a in.. 12 36 p in.; lows.
derstorms mainly north Salur- 6 38 a m.. 6:56 p.m.

degrers

Merger*' A Imrlv laniard
Hawy Porn. OrengeClty
Mery A TaMllg. Orongo City
Franc'kJ Ktnm CHWon

MelenWJ SiilX'-to- W-rto- P*&lt;»

9

Deputies have Ihe name of a
suspect who may have stolen the
1981 Ford Escort of Debra I)
Jones. 28. o f 1151 Jackson St..
Oviedo, on Sunday or Monday.
The car Is worth $5,000. a
sheriff's report said
Jim m y LV Wilson. 30. of 7224
Abbey Lane, Winter Park, re­
ported to deputies that Ills 1980
T o y o ta picku p truck w orth
$4,500 was stolen Irom his
home on Monday.
A $150 power saw and a $50
drill wrre slolrn from a con­
struction site at 1515 Trucwixid
Drive, Fern Park, bclwcen March
29 anfl Tuesday, actordlng to a
report filed wllh deputies.
A $320 torch set mid other
bails were stolen (rorn Ihe vehl
rle o f Leroy A. Taylor. 23. of
Rmilr 3. Box 740 Sanford Miller
Road. Sanford, on Saturday or
Sunday, a shcrlfTs report said
Edward J Harnrr. 76. o f 2701
Sandlakr Road. Longwood. re­
ported to depu ties a $300
microwave oven was stolen from
hts home on Monday.

E i v n i n g Ilc m J d
lU S P l i l l n o i

Wednesday, April J. IWJ
Vol. 77, No 191
PubllkAed Daily and lender, eicagt
Saturday by Tbe laniard Herald.
t»c Mb N. French Ah ., laniard.
F la l i m

HOSPITAL NOTES
Cans at Flat Me Bagtanal Hetyaal
Tu n d e r
A D M IltlO N I

been a rre s te d 111 S e m in o le
County on a chargr of driving
under the Influence:
—Irwin Nell Sperling. 2H. of 907
Italian! St., Altamonte Springs,
w as a rre s te d ul 4:01 a m .
T u es d a y a fte r hts ear w « s
c lo c k e d s p e e d in g on U .S .
Highway 17-!f2. Sanford
—Victor Charles Ruskavlch. 70,
o f 5 10 J a m am I n r R o a d .
Casscllx-rry. at 2 15 a in Tues­
day after Ills car was clocked
traveling 15 inph on slate Road
430. Casselberry He was also
charged with driving i&lt;x» slowly
B U R G L A R IE S ft TH E FTS
A thief ttxik three sets of
kitchen cabinets with a total
value o f $600 Irom a home being
built at 956 Forest Ridge Court
*3 C . l-ikc Mary. March 30 or
31. according m a n-jxiri con­
struction manager C M Raker
(lied with deputies The Items
tx-long to All America Construc­
tion, Casselberry.

tecend Clan Paitege Paid at laniard.
Fiende urn

D llC H A S O Il
f ll« M Xing lem o rd
M g s SgggwWgcK Beltane
Chad J Crenterd. I M l M ary
J im o iH B ro *n , Orange City

atarm

Jama* ana Melania J W im em ien. a bear
bey W inter S a ri

Hama Delivary. Weak. |l.t«j Mams.
M. Hi I Mcnlbi. IN Ul t ManIM.
UZ Mr Vaar. HIM By Mail: Waab
It Mr Menlk. U N , &gt; Mentht.
Itt Mr » Mentbt, 111 Mr Vaar.
MM
PWeaa (Ml) HI Mil.

�City Wants Clubs To Pay
For Sanford Welcome Signs
The Sanford City Commission
Is searching for a civic club to
spearhead a project that would
provide welcome signs at five
major Inroads Into the city.
At Its Monday w orkshop,
com m issioners told C om m is­
sioner John Mercer to try to find
a club that would be willing to
lake on the project. The club
could work with other civic
organizations to raise the money
for the signs The city would
then put up and maintain the
signs. The cost of the signs has
not been determined
Mercer said the Sanford Lions
Club asked him to request the
commission to pay for the signs,
which would read "W elcom e to
Sanford" and have the logos of
major civic clubs attached to
them.

City Manager Warren "P e te "
Knowles said It would be "m ore
appropriate" for the clubs to pay
for the signs than the taxpayers.
But Mercer said. " I f we do It
we’ll know It’ll be done right."
He said one such sign on
French Avenue on the city's
outskirts Is poorly maintained
The city would do a belter Job.
he cotflended.
Mercer said he would try to
find a sponsor and report back to
the commission In a month
The city has two welcome
signs that were erected by the
Community Service Club — the
one r r French Avenue at the
southei.i edge of the city and
another on Seminole Boulevard
on the northwestern side of the
city limits.

Space Burial A Big Seller
SPRINGFIELD. Mass. |UI'I) A local funeral home Is running
n e w s p a p e r ads o ffe r in g to
launch the ashes of the dead Into
a 63 million year orbit In space

and I he owner says I he response
has been "trem endous."
The Frank M. Forastlcre A
Sons home began running the
ads last week lor the service. In

Evening Herald, Senlord, FI.

1st A n d P a lm e tto Lidit
V
To Be C h an g ed To Frisher
Th e truffle ligh t ni the
Intersection of First Street and
Pa lm etto A ven u e w ill be
changed to a flashing yellow
and red light to allow traffic to
flow more smoothly.
The Sanford C ity C om ­
m is s io n a i I t s M o n d a y
workshop session agreed lo
change the light at the rec­
ommendation o f City Manager
Warren "P ele” Knowles, who
said the light Is "an Interrup­
tion of smooth-flowing traf­
fic."
He said drivers often have
to sit and watt for the light to
turn green even though there
are no cars going through the
Intersection.
Knowles said the light Is an

exam ple o f ( traffic light
hampering trai r flow Instead
of facilitating li
The com ml* in agreed to
change the llg to a flashing
yellow beacon ring east and
west on Flrstptreel and a
flashing red aeon facing
north and sot on Palmetto
Avenue.
Th e light as originally
Installed been te It provided
for an antic! ted left turn
lane off First 5 eel. according
to Mack LaZt iby, a private
en gin eer an form er c ity
planner. But lie Downtown
improvement ’rojcct elim i­
nated the jx&gt;s' itllty of adding
left turn lam he said In a
memo to Knot rs

which finger-sized, gold-plated beginning tn I i7. he said
The capsuf would orbit the
cylinders containing ashes of
crem ated rem ains would be Earth once ev v two hours and
launched into orbit 1,900 miles 40 minutes an would remain In
orbit an esllfi led 63 million
above the Earth, Forastlcre said.
orbit decayed,
The cylinders would be laun­ years before
ched In capsules containing the The space I rial would cost
r e m a in s o f 1 0 ,0 0 0 jjeo p le about $3,900

Wedneiday, A p ril J, IM S—1A

LEE'S MEAT
27th St. i 17-92 Ph. 3234)180 Sanford
PINE CREST SHOPPING CENTER (N U T TO JEWEL T)
OPEN MON. THURS. 9 4 , Ftl. 9-7. SAT. 9 4
CASH A CARRY - WE ACCEPT FOOO STAMPS
Prices Good Thru April 9

"V

BONELESS

&lt; m

z q

&lt; M

ftO

CHUCK R O A S T ...................................* 1 * 1
BONELESS CALIFORNIA

CHUCK R O A S T ...................................* 1

r

BOSTON BUTT

PORK ROAST . , ................................9
............................ 9 9 *lT
COUNTRY STYLE EXTRA LEAN

_

e

H

c q

PORK R IB S ........................................ * 1 ■
e’tr‘
COUNTRY SAUSAGE ? T T . 1 7 Y '.$ 1 ° S
WHOLE

r

r

LEAN

£ m AO

LEAN HOT or MLD

&lt; a i Q

FRYERS ..................................... , . . . 5 9 l

BOILED BAM ..................................... * 1 6I

ITALIAN S A U S A G E ..........................* 1 4 l1

Osteen Woman Pleads G uilty
To Check Fraud At Sun Bank
By Deane Jordan
H erald S ta ff W rite r
An Osteen woman charged
w ith b ilk in g Sun Bank o f
Seminole County out of $6,500
by dr (jostling cheeks from a
closed account Into a money
market account has pleaded
guilty to depositing checks with
Intent If) defraud
Sheila Daniel ('lark. 33. could
receive up to a year In the
county Jail when senlenccd May
10 by Seminole Circuit Judge C.
Vernon Mize Jr.
Sberlirs Investigators reported
(he woman opened a money
market uccouni at Sun Bank In
downtown Sanford by making a
$•1,000 cash deposit on Sept. 25
Through Dee. 12, she reportedly
made numerous transactions at
various Semlnolr Count; Sun
Banks, using thal money market
account to guarantee checks
drawn on a closed uccouni at
F irst F ed eru l o f S e m in o le
Courtly, n shcrifrs report said.
Ms. Clark was arrested Jan 24.
In other court action, an Or­
lando man who tried to outrun
sberlirs deputies trying to arrest
him (or using an Invulld credit
card pleaded guilty to forgery
and ultrrlug a forgery.
William Edward Slctnhllbcr.
40. entered I he plea before Mize
who set senicnelng for May IO.
He could receive up lo a year In
Jail on each count.
According 1u court records, the
manager of Radio Shack. Butler
Plaza. Casselberry, called the
sheriff's department on Sept. 14
and reported a man was using
an In v u lld c r e d it c a r d to
purchase merchandise.
W hen the man heurd the
manager calling the sh eriffs
office, he ran arross the street —
slide Hoad 434 — Into the All
Slide Building There, deputies
located him und alter a short foot
chase, jiluccd him under arrest.
He reportedly had several
credit cards with him and alter
hr was removed from the patrol
car. credit card rrcrlpts were
found crinkled In Ihc seal.
In exchange for the guilly
(ileus, the slate agreed not lo
prosecute a charge of grand theft

against Stelnhllber
In a third case, an Orlando
man pleaded guilty lo possession
of cocaine stemming from an
arrest Nov. 17 made after his car
broke down and police arrived lo
help.
Garrison Adrian Gould. 22.
could receive uj&gt; lo a year In the
county Jail when senlenccd May
10 by Mize.
According lo court records.
A lta m o n t e S p r in g s p u llc e
slopped lo assist a motorist In
distress and noticed drug para|&gt;hrrnalta and partially smokrd
marijuana cig a rette s In ihc
vehicle.
When Ihe olllcers sjwilted the
contraband and searched the
vehicle, they found more I ban
20 grams o f (nil. more drug
j&gt;araphernalla und cocaine.
Other rases heard:
— Evelyn Hlvcra Hcnibert. of
IH16 Lincoln Court. Sanford,
arrested Jan. IB for shoplifting
tn Sanford, pleaded guilty to
grand theft. Mize set sentencing
for April 26. Ms. Rembert. In
rustody. could receive up lo a
year In Ihe county tail.
—Timothy Summerlin. 25. or
116 N o r t h m o o r D r iv e .
Casselberry, arrested Feb. 4 fol­
lowing a disturbance at his
h o m e , p l e a d e d g u i l t y to
obstructing an olTlcer with vio­
lence. He Is scheduled to be
sentenced April 26 by Mize und
could receive up lo a year In Jail.
—Daniel E. Brewer. 43. of Or­
lando. arrested Oct. 20 alter he
carried a concealed weapon Into
a lojdcss bar. was sentenced by
Mize lo 3 years probation and a
$250 fine. He was also ordered to
complete 120 hours o f commu­
nity service.
—Dawn Elaine Barnard. 20. of
303 E d g em on A v c . W in ter
Springs, arrested Sept. 26 was
sentenced to 2 years probation
and a $150 fine fur stealing a
$2,000 check from her employer
and depositing It tn her personal
bank She was also ordered by
Mize to inakr restitution, jxiy Ihe
Public Defender’s officer $175.
complete 120 hours o f commu­
nity service and write a letter o f
apology.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice Is Hereby Qlven...The Following
Reclaimed Color T.V.'s Will Be Made
Available To The Public On A
First Come, First Served Basis

LIQUIDATION OF
COLOR T.V.’s
9 0 DAY GUARANTEE ON PICTURE TUBE
SPECIAL 10" G.E.
COLD* $ 7 g 9 5

SERVING A ll MAXES...
WHY RENT WHEN YOU
CAN BUY AT THESE PRICESI

♦ 9 9 ’ 5 TO
*1 6 0 °°

BACARDI RUM
SILVER OR DARK

m k*9
{xewj

7

750 ML

323-4664

W ALKER’ S
VODKA

SOUTHERN
COM FORT 86®

SILVER or A M B ER

750 ML
t A.N.

SANFO RD

OLD THOM PSON
BLEND
RON RICO

99

'• M r
SALE ENOS APRIL 30th
d fa
2621 1 SANTORO A V I • CORNER SANTORO AVE. k LEMON ST
SALE CONDUCTED BY MQTEL TV SALES

NOPEASOHAL CHECKS

4 *

7S0 ML

All SETS CftflRID »Y DOTH TECHNICIANS

1.5

3s9
6
1.75 LITER PART SIZE

99

ttiM : Am o . To 25”

lySae: Modem. Spanish,
lady Amedcan. Etc.

SUITCASE

LORD C A LV ER T
CANADIAN

Ir o n * : RCA. 0 1 ZEMTH,
MAGNAVOX. mVAM A, ETC.

Types. PortoWa.
Hoot Modvts

* BIER &amp; WINE SF.CIALS
&lt;3LL0 W INE
H D M ILW AU K EE

iv

v r.m.

r H O N E m S ^ R I M lS lS O

|£ 3 9

1

99
S

T

49
Ut«r

USHER’ S
SCOTCH

£ 9 9

npCN DAILY t A TO 9 P.M.

EV A N W ILLIAM S
BOURBON

— -c r

99
6 '

Uter

i - -w, •. 4. .......

*«■ »—

V m M 10 *

1•» j#«* 4L **
*-®***d»f # d

41* %

*

�%

Even in g Herald

DICK WEST

(USPS 4IMI0)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Arra Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Wednesday, April 3, I98S—4A
Wayne 0. Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director
llnmr Delivery Wrrk. • ! ID, Month. 54.7ft, 3 Month)*
• 14 25. 0 Months. *27 00 Year M l IJO Uy Mall W«*k
• 1.50. Month. M OO. 3 Month*. • l « 00 BMonth*. 53X50
Year. *00 00
___________________ ____________ '

Never Td Soon To Maneuver For Leadership
WASHINGTON lUPD - Cte o f Ihe hazards
endured by members o f Ongreas Is never
knowing when their funnybones might be
twanged.
Rep, Danny Russo's riBlbfc obviously were
plucked the other day whe he received yet
another phone rail listing hpothetlcal condi­
tions under which a fellow laglver might seek
a leadership post In two years.
Just In time for April Fool Day, the Illinois
congressman composed a Dear Colleague"
teller In which he called attetlon to all House
Democrats. Including hlm.sT but excluding
Speaker Thomas O'Neill Jr., -Mass , as poten­
tial candidates.

Designer
Cigarettes ?
*

T h e news from th r Departm ent o f Health
and Hum an S ervices w as. on the whole. Hood.
I h e u vrn igc A m e r ic a n 's lilt* exp ecta n cy It
In creasin g — a fact that m an y w ould attrlbut?
In no sm all part lo a g rea te r awareness o f th i
role healthy habits p la y In a healthy life.
M ore people ex ercis e regu larly — a boon ti
m an ufactu rers o f sp orts equipm ent and gear.
P eop le are p a yin g m o re attention to Ih e r
diet — which op etis d oors to u ndream ed o'
m a rk ets for p u rveyo rs o f lood.
F in a lly, people are sm o k in g less, some thln|
that, unlike the o th e r factors, sp ells o n l)
m is e ry for Ihe tobacco Industry.
T o counter this, the tobacco Industry li
g o in g to great len gth s to hvt&gt;e Its product/
C on sider R.J. R e y n o ld s T ob a cco C o 's last
m o ve. K ltz cigarettes, designed by Y ve s Saint
L a u r e n t fo r t o d a y 's fa s h io n - c o n s c io u s
w om an :
"O u r ob jective Is to m arket a n ew brand
w h ich w ill becom e the new Mlnmlnrd o f
stylish n ess In the c ig a re tte In d u stry." says
K .J. R eyn old s' president. G erald II. L on g.

At last count, Ihe partisan lleup stood at 251
iTrmocruts, 182 Republicans id two vacancies.
So Russo had a lot of franking Ido.
I don't know whether he apreclatcs someone
else explaining his Jokes but I evert hcless point
out Shat a fruit basket-turn-air situation was
created by O'Neill's Impendlngetlremcnt.
Although " T ip ,” as he 1 widely known,
actually doesn't slep out unt the end of the

possible O'Neill successors "who possess the
aforementioned qualities." Similar claims were
made for the other caucus mrmbers. also listed
by seniority, for the posts of majority leader,
majority whip and caucus chairman
But each Hat was preceded by an admission
that the qualities of the designated Democrats
were "not so high a quality as the qualities" of
Democrats on the higher lists.
"Perhaps." he concluded, "you have already
been contacted by some of the above mentioned
candidates, perhaps you have been contacted by
A LL of the above mentioned candidates.
" H o w e v e r , i f a ft e r due d e lib e r a t iv e ,
thoughtful, deep and pensive consideration, you
should determ ine — without any outside
Influence, but In the privacy of your own room,
chamber of abode — that none o f the above
exhibit qualifications of Ihe aforementioned
qualities, or If any of the above mentioned
members rem ove themselves from consid­
eration because they believe that they fall lo
exhibit the qualifications of the aforementioned
qualities - VOTE FOR ME MARTY RUSSO.
FOR ANY OF THE ABOVE."

SCIEN CE WORLD

EDUCATION WORLD

Potato
Chip
Rx

Training
Or Black
Magic?

ft

By Jeannln e E. Klein
RUSTON. La, [UPI| - In a site
with a passion for horse raclg.
Louisiana Tech offers studentl a
S a y s a vic e p r e s id e n t for m a r k e t in g :, degree In equine science that n"S m o k e r s are s e le c tin g brands that m ak e a clurles hands-on experience In
training thoroughbreds for te
sta te m e n t.”
track.
T h e r e 's nothing v e ry radical about that
“ We teach everything and iye
T h e Idea that co n su m ers buy Into Im a g es experience from conception all ie
e v e r y th in ' they m ak e a purchase Is th e way to the race track." said p c o rn e rs to n e o f e v e r y bu ild in g that lines fessor Jim McCall, who heads te
equine program — the only oneof
M adison Avenue.
Itn kind In tlie* nation.
W h at Is startling, th ou gh . Is that A m e rica n s
Tech's Stallion Station provlcs
a re still gullible en ou gh to let such cig a rette tile lab facility for teaching. It's in
murh like any other th«roughb:d
advertisingap|M*al to them .
training stahlr except Terli si inlets
Y et they app a ren tly are. One ol th r Jarring
do all Ihe breaking, training ad
n otes In the I IMS rejMirl w as the fin d in g that racing themselves — with facUy
lu n g can cer deaths a m o n g IJ S w om en are on s u p e r v is io n a n d the o w n n '
th e rise, with sm ok in g d irectly to blame.
permission.
The public Is charged a mlnlmm
T h e r e 's nothing v e ry stylish In n h a ck in g
115 a day lo keep horses at be
co u g h , and absolu tely nothing sophisticated
tint Ion, und McCall said owners re
in su ccu m b in g to th e ra va grs of can cer or
'Irtuully ' begging to get In."
heart llIwuM '
M*art ot the program's succi
Just how lo n g w ill tt lake A m erican s to
or lo MrCall, nil Arkansas1‘ natft
fig u re lid s out?
'lib a soft drawl, who drvcioprdi
ftlque "breaking and trulnln|'
let hod. The technique, also know
* tackless I raining. Is a process t
hlch a trainer uses body languap
•develop trust In ihe horse.
"It takrs about nine months y
W ith p eop le s u in g o v e r a n y th in g and
hrn but not that long to uh o s p ita ls m a k in g s o m e Iragle and w ellIreland." McCall said. "A bore
pu hllcl/ed m istakes. It's uni su rprisin g lo
Uiully will do what you want till
iie a r Dial a New Y ork co u p le wants to pay for
I do. but you have lo understate
th e u p b rin gin g o f an "u n w a n te d " dau ghter.
Iw a horse thinks. Horses are i
Hrlan and S u za n n e O 'T o o le cla im (h r
lid .mliii.tl and arc very sensltlv
(body expression."
s t a le ’s highest court sh ou ld decide what sort
\ltrr Joking several monlha t&gt;
o f d a m ages they are en titled to after g iv in g
itlrrsland the horse, Ihe trainer *
b irth to K elly A lin e M arie three years a g o —
It this case a student — upplla
a lleg ed ly u flcr Mrs. O 'T o o le was assured that
wut hr bus learned and mimics tlf
she w as sterile.
line lo iiiunlpulalr Us behavior. I)
II the O 'T o o le s w ere disheartened h&gt; learn
ung specific hand or body m of
eCrtls. Ihe Iralnrr trlls the horri
doctors, In llirlr la w y e r 's words, failed " l o
wit it is expected lo do.
c o n s ig n their d a u g h te r to o b liv io n ," w c
When you're dealing with ul
w o n d e r how K elly A n n e Marie will le d w h en
atrial, you've got to learn b
she Iso ld enough lo kn ow about the law suit.
cuxlst," McCall said.
3 liellevcn horses umlersland lit
novelInil communication murl
&gt;M*rr Ilian |x-oplr do. He llkena tl&gt;
shit movements such as twltchltg
anyrbrow or wiggling u llgure b
lhiv|&gt;r of movement another hori*
wild use In a pasture.
L e tte r * to the ed ito r n r w elcom e fo r
►Call developed Ihe technique !|
pu blication. A ll le tte r s must be signed and
19*
while teuciilng at the Untvers!
Include a m ailing address and. If possible, a
ly Maryland Hr wus grrrtrd a
telep h o n e num ber. T h e Evening H erald
llrsjy skeptics
re s e rv e s the right to ed it letter* to ovoid
F quoted an old cow horst
lib e l and to accom m odate spare.
trukr as saying. ” 1don't care what
thuguy says, he's working black
map."

Baby's Surprise

Please Write

BERRYS WORLD

current session two-year session, there already
Is a scramble for leadership positions up and
down the line.
Thus far. most of the maneuvering has been of
a provisional nature. Even so. Russo was
amused.
His tongue-lncheek letter to members of the
D em o c ra tic Caucus, w h ich m akes such
assignments, didn't specifically mention that
the 99th Congress only was organized tn
January.
But. as he pointed out. "It Is never too soon for
thoughtful reflection on our leaders of the
future."
So saying. Russo brought to the attention of
other caucus members "a carefully screened list
of those Individuals that I believe exhibit the
qualities, the commitment and the dedication to
our Instltulon. our party and our nation so
necessary for the success of ourselves, our
future and our children.”
(Members of Congress tend to speak and write
In a rather florid manner. Ergo, the above
quotation la not terribly untypical |
Russo then proceeded to list, by seniority. 58

WILLIAM RUSHER

Cuomo, Retooled
NEW YORK 1NEAI - As rrgulur
readers of this column know. I keep
a particularly sharp eye on New
York Oov. Mario Cuomo. He fooled
me once, and the second time will
be my fault.
In his 1982 race for governor.
Cuomo was displayed In television
commercials surrounded by his
large and handsome Italian family,
bragging about his long drvollon to
the "fam ily values." Well, we ull
know what those are. don't we?
Then came Cuomo's Inaugural
address, and he dropped the other
shoe. The "fa m ily " he had been
talking about. It turned out. was
"the family of New York" — all 18
million o f us — nml under the new
governor's expansive plans for state
aid of vurlous sorts not n single one
of our little brothers or sisters was
to be overlooked or slighted. The
New Deal returned with a ven­
geance to Ihe New York of the
mid-1980s.
I wasn't especially surprised,
therefore, when Cuomo set the
D em ocratic co n ven tio n In San
Francisco on Its ear last summer
with a brutal attack on Ronald
Reagan und his administration. It
was the old Politics o f Envy, rancid
and u n g ry . d e liv e r e d w ith a
passionate conviction that hadn't
been lavished on those themes since
the depths of the Great Depression.
America today, Cuomo charged,
was far from the "shining city on a
hill" that Mr. Reagan envisioned
On the contrary, he said, "this
tint Ion Is more 'A Tide of Two
C ities.'" in one o f which "m il­
lionaires" got "tax breaks" from the
first Reagan administration, while

In the other a mother wus "denied
the help she needrd to feed her
children." The San Francisco Dem­
ocrats waved their little flags and
shrieked with glee.
Hut now 1988 looms ahrud. and a
certain amount of retooling Is bring
done on the political chassis of
Mario Cuomo. Mark II. so to speak,
has moved to thr right. In an article
In The New Republic, reporter Fred
Barnes trlls us that Cuomo now
aspires to be known simply as a
"progressive pragmatist."
In the words of one close Cuomo
assoctalr. "His heart Is on the left,
hut his wallet's on the right." Aides
poult to various speeches and public
papers over the years In which
Cuomo did Indeed take relatively
conservative positions on certain
Issues, notably crime. (He Is. how­
ever. pledged to veto again and
again the death penalty bill aimually passed by the legislature.)
Anti what about that speech out
In San Francisco? Aw. shucks, that
wus Just a little bit of campaign
oratory. "H e did what hr had to do
to get Mondale elected." rxplulns
Alan Charlock, a friendly pollllcul
scientist. (Not that tt elected him )
Certainly Cuomo makes no bones
t.bout the wide gap between Ids
raucous campaign style und what
he regards as his commendably
moderate record as governor. "You
campaign In poetry, you govern In
p rose." Is his w inning way of
putting It
According to Barnes. Cuomo's
political advisers think that In
lorrlgn policy they have a hole card
Ihelr man can play whichever way
looks smartest In 1988.

By U nited Press In tern a tion al
C hips fo r potassium
P e o p le ta k in g d iu r e t ic s for
treatment of high IjUmxI pressure
often have to make surr they gel
plenty of potassium In ihelr diets,
since the drugs often drp lrlc body's
supplies of the mineral
O n e d o c to r, w r it in g In I lie
Conaullunt magazine m v s |»ii.iiu
chips art purtlcularn rich In potuv
slum. About 3,5 ounces i &gt;i
chips supply lour times ihe potass)
uni In the sunn* weight ol orange
Juice.
Better yet patients are happy lo
comply with potato chip prescrip­
tions.
One suggestion lor heart patients
and anyone who Is suit-conscious
m ake sure the rh ljis are low
sodium
T o b a cco and Cancer
C ig a r e tte sm oking has been
linked to bladder cancer, but evi­
dence on pipe and cigar smoking,
snuft dipping and tobacco has been
mixed
A new study from the National
Cancer Inslllule has lound pipe ami
elgar smokers may face a slightly
greater chance — 20 lo 40 percent
greater — of developing bladder
cancer than non-smokers, hid smifl
user* and lot Micro i hewers are not
at Increased risk
Th e researchers cautioned the
pipe and cigar smokers might uni
be as much al risk as the statistics
Indicated because In general. Ihelr
earner rales were unrelated lo the
amount of tobacco they used and
how long they had used It,
T h e researchers' conclu sion
"W h eth er typical elgar or pipe
smoking has caused bladder cancer
remains unclear.”
Leas Is More
H istorically, thr approach to
treating ulcers, which alter t alfcet at
least 4 million Americans, has been
to reduce stomach ar id as quickly
as possible Now. doctors are taking
the "less Is more" approach
Doctors have found prolonged.
Intensive suppression ol stomar h
acid may actually be harmful, said
Dr. Seymour M Sabcsln. director ol
gastroenterology at the University
of Tennessee Center for Health
Sciences
Since thr leading mrdleations
have been shown to heal ulccis
equally well. Saheslti said hr prefers
the one that least suppresses slum
arh acid.

JA K ANDERSON

Defector Helped Crush Iran's Communists

* Do you tak e this punk..."

B v Jack A a d srso a
and Dais Van A tta
W AIINGTON - A true spy story
worthnf John le Carre can now be
told, s the tale of a rising young
KGB gent who defected to the
Brltlg and brought about the
tiloodYxtlnetUm of Irun’s commu­
nist \deh party s few months
later.
The;ntral figure In this story of
Intrlgiand betrayal was Vladimir
A n d r y e v lc h K u z lc h k ln . a
37 yeai|d KGB major operating
out o th e S oviet em bassy In
Tchraj Fluent In Farsi, the lan­
guage Iran. Kuzlchkln had been
recruin at 28 Into Directorate S.
the mi secret of all the KGB
dlrrctotrs and thr one responsible
lur r iiu n a g r . s a b o ta g e and
assasaktlon around the world.
Assl|rd lo Tehran In 1977.
Kuztchn helped In several communlst-fTurts to overthrown the
shah Vne succeeded. But when
ihe Ayollah Khomeini's Islamic
lundairuallsts seized power early
In IU7fTudch leaders, with prod­
ding fro Kuzlchkln, declared thetr

unswerving support for the revolu­
tion.
Khomeini never really trusted thr
Iranian communists, but he used
their administrative expertise In
middle-level government positions.
Just as he accepted Soviet KGB
udvlsrrs to help his own Intelligence
service.
Despite two promotions while In
Tehran. Kuzlchkln grew disen­
chanted wdh the KGB. In early
1982. he contacted Ihe British and
became a double agent. He was
given a radio for transmitting secret
rejions to his new bosses.
In June 1982. things got too hot
for Kuzlchkln, and he defected to
thr British. We don't know his
w h erea b o u ts from Ju n e until
October, but In the latter month he
was finally spirited to London lor
extensive debriefing by British In­
telligence.
It was a stunning coup for the
Urttlsh — the first known defection
of a stall officer In Directorate S.
And lik e any c le v e r defector.
Kuzlchln had brought along his

"pussport" lo the West; two trunks
lull o f documents on the Soviets'
total domination o f the Iranian
communist party,
Some of Kuztrhkln's documents
detailed Sovlrt-Tudch plans to over­
throw Khomeini — by assassina­
tion. If necessary.
The British showed a talent for
manipulative treachery that would
have made George Smiley blush.
They secretly turned the Informa­
tion over to Khomeini.
Khomeini put the purloined KGB
information to deadly use. Late In
1 9 8 2 , he b e g a n a r u t h le s s
crackdown on the Tudch party. In
January 1983. Radio Tehran was
boasting of widespread executions
of Tudch members — os many as 22
In a single day.
In May 1983. Khomeini tool: a leaf
from Stalin's primer and produced
Tudeh party leaders to confess
publicly that they had been spies for
Moscow. The party's secretarygeneral. Nureddln Ktanuri. outdid
himself, claiming to have spied for
the Soviets since 1945.
On May 4. Khomeini summoned

Soviet Ambassador VII K Boldyrev
and gave him a list of 18 embassy
personnel who had been IdciiMItcd
as KGB agents. They were given 48
hours to leave Iran
The Soviets didn't have lo ask
who was responsible for their dip
lomatic embarrassment and the
Tudeh party's disaster. They knew
It was Kuzlchkln.
T h e KGB had c le a r ly been
stunned by Kuzlchkln's driertlon
They treated It with absolute silence
— no rlxtm* of kidnapping, no
protest to the British, no demand to
speak with the defector. The KGB
apparently hoped lhat Kuzlchkln
would keep his mouth shut If he
were not subjected to public pre­
ssure
But Kuzlchkln didn't keep quiet.
And the result was an tmprrsafve
triu m ph for thr British secret
service: the total destruction of a
Soviet-directed communist party In
a key Middle Eastern country,
Footnote: A British Embassy
spokesman said. "W e don't discuss
Intelligence matters ol this kind."

�ESTABLISHED 1*04

a

THURSDAY
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
APRIL 4 - 5 - 6

I

r

1K

amu

rs

• . 4i

m

g§j S
.

K3

to 9
[ ^
! ■

HOT D O G S
CO K ES FOR

1

3
H

I

if
\fi X

i’S
|
Wtw*- ■t| ’*1 r.

and

EVERYONE

No Mailer Whether you're Interested In
Buying Furniture Or Not, We Want You To
Come By And Enjoy Refreshments And Get
Acquainted With Uel

OW N

* d lfSSf ’E R S O N / ' U « D
B

o c Ic o c

V

a

" R w ir o R E

^C T/o /y

L ett lo right: Gary G o n term an , Mark R u s il. Julie W illie, Joe Ervin. Jerry Myers

Badcock Is Home Owned
And Operated By
Julie &amp; Ardell Willis

50%

Famous Double
GUARANTEE

O FF

So i .U . ik * •* T* »r

M*m ,

O N

1*i L h rkat

fcr r*»* leeel dealer

S E L E C T

LAMPS

hr * • e»4*»«w
Carr*'**'*"-

ESTABLISHED 1904

OPEN
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9 a.m. - 5:30 p.m
FRI.
9 a.m. • 7 p.m.

H O M E F U R N IS H IN G C E N T E R
FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, FLOOR COVERING, HOME ENTERTAINMENT
2 3 0 6 FRENCH A V E .

PH. 3 2 2 -8 2 4 0

SA N FO R D

�»

1

SPO RTS

*A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Rams Pick Up
Another Ailing
Arm In 9-7 Loss
By Rob L t r U
Special to the H era ld
ORLANDO — The eighth-ranked Claw AAAA
Lake Mary Rama are struggling and Just one
glimpse o f Tuesday afternoon's contest with
lowly Oak Kldge would have Indicated why.
The Pioneers roughed up an already ailing Ram
pllrhlng staff en route to a 9-7 upset In the second
round of ihe Colonial Classic at Colonial High.
However the loss, which drops the Rams
record to 16-5. was not the bad news of the day.
Starting pitcher Neal Harris became the second
hurler to develop a sore arm . Joining 7-0
sophomore Anthony Lazsalc. Lake Mary Is also
without standout Mlkr Schmlt, who Is down with
mononucleosis. Meanwhile, Oak Ridge upped lls
mark to 7-13 behind the pitching of southpaw
llrcnl Abell.
"I have no feeling," stated Ram Coach Allen
Tuttle, with a sign "My pitching staff is ... Well,
now we have two sore arms and another one out,
Harris complained of a sore arm in thr fourth
liming. I had to use the third baseman (Kevin Hill)
who hasn't pitched before. He cam e In and did a
good Job. I Just hope we can gel it back together
by Monday when we face DelRnd.
"When you come out here and your pllrhers
not throwing strikes. It's hard to get up. We
should have won. We're a much better tenrn than
they are."
Tuttle plans to throw Eric Hagen at Dclund.
which Is one game behind the frontrunnlng Rams
In Ihe Five Star Conference race.
Thr game began well for Lakr Mary with two
runs In ihe opening frame. With two out center
llelder Stoll Underwood singled and was pro­
mptly brought In on u long home run to center
Held by catcher Rod "C .J," Metz.
However, the Plonrrrs got three of their own In
their half of the Inning A walk, a hunt hit. and a
sacrifice pul runners on sernnd and third, paving
Ihe way for a three-run blast by Ron Englermn
over thr 320 foot sign In Irft field to makr It 3 2.
The lead was short lived, though, because the
Rams came hack with (lure In the second Inning
With one out, two errors and a hit loaded die
bases for Shane Lrlterlo, who tilooprd a single,
seorlng Hill. Underwood followed wllh a double lo
left center Held, chasing Danny Hrldgcs and Ryan
Lisle home for a 5-3 advantage, Metz was
Intentionally walked lo load the bases, but Abell
Hliut thr door, getting (wo ground ball outs to
stem the threat.
Undaunted, the Pioneers roared right buek lo
knot the score In their half of the second. Harris
got Ihe llrsl batter out. then walked two and
balked them lo sreond and third base. He struck
■mi thy next butter. Jnmlc Quirk, but yielded u
sharp single to right field, scoring Ihe game tying
runs.
In Ihe third Inning. Oak Ridge look the lead for
good, literally siealing a run. Twn walks, a siral
and an error by Metz on the thrfi put runners first
and third with one out. Then when Ihe runner at
llrst. James Hurst, attempted to steal second
base. Met/ fired through to second, allowing the
I lie gn ahead run toscorr.
Oak Ridge uddrd two In the fourth Inning, as
ll.uris lefl Ihe game, and one In the fifth to build a
H-fl lead Meanwhile. Abell was handcuffing the
normally hard-hilling Rams. After giving up flvr
Ini's m the opening two innings, hr settled down
and yielded | i i m | flvi singles Ihe rest o f the way.
In ihe seventh, though, the Rams tried lo conic
hack Three straight hard singles by Lazsulc, Ron
Nathcrson and Hill made It 9 6. Hrldgcs came tip
ami hit ground ball, torclng Hill out at second hut
scoring Nathcrson to draw luikc Mary closer.
However, Lisle ripped a grounder lo second
baseman Hrtan Harris leading to u game-ending
double play,
Underwood, who contributed three hits to snap
a season.long slump, suggests he and Ills
Irammsles may have experienced some overconlldrncr, resulting In their current sluggishness.
"Right now everybody Is so Uickudalstcal." staled
Ihe senior center llelder. "I think In some games
we expected to win automatically. This loss
might get us up. Everybody was taking games for
granted, hut I think w rllcom e back "

S c o t! U n d o rw o o d
slapped a double and
two singles Tuesday
against Oak Ridge
but the Rams lost,
97.

Wednesday, April ), IHS

Odom's Grab
Halts Shogren
By S u n Cook
H era ld Sp orts Editor
Lyman's Derek Llvem ols put a quick end to
Eric Shogren'a consecutive hit streak Tuesdaynight but the senior right hander will be the first
to tell you catcher Jtm Odom deserves most of the
credit.
Oviedo's Shogren. who had 1U hits In his last
10 official at-bats. tried to bunt a high Llvem ols
fastball In the first inning but popprd a foul ball
lo the right of the plate. Odom reacted Instantly
and after a couple steps made a head-long dive to
grab the ball Inches from Ihe ground for the out.
Shogren was attempting to tic Lake Mary's Rod
“ C .J." Metz' state record of 11 consecutive hits.
Metz broke the existing record of eight stralghi
hits earlier this year when he stroked 11 hits in a
row. Shogren'a run at the record Included two
walks while M etz'skein was a perfect 11.
With the suspense over, Lyman used a strong
five Innings by Llvem ols and a six-run fourth
Inning to post a 10-7 victory over the Ovlcdoans
tn an Inter-county baseball game at Lym an High
School.
The victory was the 18th In 22 games for the
ninth-ranked Greyhounds who host Trinity Prep
Thursday at 7 p.m. Oviedo, which had won four
In a row. fell to 8-14. The Lions travel to
Altamonte Springs for a 7 p.m. game with Lake
Brantley Thursday.
Oviedo, which relies heavily on Ihe speed o f lls
first four hllters, took a 2-0 lead Into Ihe bottom of
the third Inning with some aggressive base
running. Lester Cabrera w-alkcd to lead off the
second and stole second before Llvem ols struck
out John Lowrle and Bobby Uradlry. Senior Mark
Hofmann followed with a liner up the middle lo
M#r«!d Ptwios by Tommy Viocont
score Cabrera for a 1-0 lead.
lit the third, sophomore Mark Merchant, who
Reggio Smilh, F irs t Federal's right fielder, powerless to do anything. Shawnie Riggins,
stole his county-leading 26th base In the first,
gropes lor home p late, knov/lng it has lo be rear, w aits for the action to subside so he
walked and moved to second on an errant
around somewhere. Railroaders' pitcher can get back lo Ihe plate. F irs t Federal plied
Llvem ols plckoff attempt. When the ball trickled
Scot! Seslack, left, spols Ihe ball but Is up a lopsided victory in Ihe season opener.
away from Odom on the next pitch. Merchant
dashed to third and then scored when Odom
threw the lull Into left field.
Lyman tied the game In the bottom of the third
against starter Craig Duncan. Tfie Lions' arc
right-hander had retired the last five hitters until
he walked Odom to open the third Dale Stevens
moved him to second with a sacrifice bunt lo set
the table for Kyle Brubaker. The senior second
sackcr drilled a double to deep left center lo chase
By Chris F ls tc r
Rinker pulled to within 3-2 In
home Odom Brubaker then moved to third on a
H erald Sports W r ite r
the bottom of the third and
wild pitch before Mike Henley delivered the
B a s e b a ll
•foe W ig g in s' g ra n d slam
broke Ihe game open with five
deadlock with a rope single to left. Henley rapped
runs
In
the
fourth.
RBI
singles
homer and a three run triple by
three singles and walked to continue his torrid
by Angelo Cash. Perkins and
Alonzo BnindUlge highlighted a
two runs In thr top of the first.
hitting over the past few games.
Grayson
highlighted
the
Inning.
13-run first Inning Tuesday
O'Nrul led off with a walk.
The Greyhounds sent 10 batters to the plate In
Rinker added two more runs In
night us First Federal opened the
Bernard Sparrow was hit by a
the fourth for thetr six-spot, knocking out Duncan
U I8 5 1 San lord Little National ) p itc h a n d . w ith o n e o u t.
thr fifth lo make the final 9-3.
tn the process. Clint Baker lined a douhlr »o left
L ea g u e season w llh a 2 4 -4
" F a m o u s " A m os S p a r r o w
c e n te r lo open the Inning. John B an e's
Grayson
wound
up
with
I
I
thrashing ol the Rullrnudcin al
walked lo load the bases. Jim m y
groutidball moved him to third and Odom's
strike outs for (tie game and six
Fort Mellon I'ark.
Bailey and Phillip "D uke" King
scorching double Into the right Held pushed
tie
gave
up
Just
Ihr
one
w
a
lk
s
,
First Fedrral hod (list six tilts
Until walked lo force In the two
Lyman uhead. 3-2. Stevens beat out an Infield hit
( i l l and only tw o walks after Ihe
In the game, hut look advantage
tuns, Grayson then settled down
and Brubaker walked to load the bases.
llrsl
frame.
King
took
the
loss
for
of 16 walks to stoic thr bulk ol
amt struck out the last two
O viedo coach Howard Mublr then pulled
D.A.V
lls runs.
hitters lo end the lulling.
Duncan In favor o f Lee Watson. A wild pitch
The llrsl three hitters lu the
scored Odom before Henley walked to reload the
iMitlom of the first drew walks
bases. Llvemols reached on an error to push the
for First Federal and lead off
lead to 5-2. With Paul Alegre at the plate.
hitter Andrea Williams scored on
Brubaker came home on a passed twill Chris
a wild pitch Wllh one out.
Brock then reached when second baseman
B ru n d lttge stepped up and
Jim m y Barrett dropped his pop fly In short rlghl
clouted Ids triple to drive m
field to chose home two more runs for an 8-2
Shawnie Riggins. W iggins ami
bu lge,
Mike Dilliou Three more runs
T w o errors, two stolen bases and an Infield
scored before W iggins cam e
single by the speedy Shogren gave thr Lions two
hack up and unloaded Ills grand
more runs In the fifth to pull them within 8-4.
slain fora 11-0 lead.
Llvem ols departed at that point on the chilly
Flrsl Fedrral pul the litiishiiig
night. The curvrballlng senior finished with 10
touches on wllh 10 runs in I lie*
strikeouts und two walks. Just one of thr four
I m i I I o i i i ot the third. Alton Dix­
runs wasramrd as he Improved his record to 7-2
on's grand slum homer provided
The Lions made a belated run In the seventh for
the (Inal lour runs
three runs Hofmann opened the frame with an
Ulxim was also (}te winning
Infield single and Randy Ferguson, recently
pitcher for Fttsi Federal as he
promoted from the Junior varsity, lushed a base
allowed live hits and si ruck out
hit. One out later. Merchant hammered u double
seven Terrance Hill Ird ihe
Into rlghl center to chase home both runs
Rallroadrrs with a two-run dou­
Shogren was next and Odom got him again.
ble
Overstrvet Jammed him Inside und the senior
D.A.V. LOSES OPENER
center fielder popprd the ball In foul territory to
Itrlan Grayson, a standout lor
the right of the plate. Odom made another diving
Rinker the past two years, got
grab for the second out. Sophomore Tony
tils final year ol Lillie Major
Betfiowrr kept the rally alive with u sharp single
League play oil to a line start
to left to score Merchant for a 10-7 game.
Monday as he tossed a one-hitter
Cabrera then hit a liner over the bag at third
and had a pall ol hlls lo lead
but Llvemols spruwlrd to his rlghl and speared
Rinker to a 0-3 victory over
the ball with a superb lunging catch to end the
D.A.V. (Disabled American Vet­
game.
erans) at Westside Field.
LIO N TALES — Although Shogren'a hilling
Grayson, a member ol last
streak went by the wayside Tuesday, the
year's Little National League All
strong armed senior drew somr oohs and aahs
Stars, shook oil control problems
with hts defensive skills.
In thr first Inning ami allowed
On one occasion In the fifth Inning. Overstreet
only a second liming double lo
tried to score from second on a single by Henley
Wesley O'Neal the resi o f the
Joe W iggins, First Federal's slugger, picks on a high pitch but Shogren fired a strike to the plate to nab
way.
Overstreet for the third out.
(or his grand slam in the first inning.
D.A.V. opened the game wllh

Wiggins Slams Railroaders

G ra y s o n 's 1-H itT er P ro p e ls R in k e r P est D .A .V ., 9-3

Mark Mance: Lake Brantley's Championship Ingredient
Without a doubt t lie class of I tic* field
In high school buys tennis this year Is
Lake Itiuulley High School. Having
Just completed an undefeated season
with a glliiertug 13-0 record und
winning ihe recently completed Five
Slat tournament. Lakr Itruntlry nowsets Its sights on ihe upcoming district
and then the state tournament.
t he w i n n e r o f th e d i s t r i c t
automatically qualifies lor the state
tournament, tn Gainesville, and Lakr
Brantley looks like the odds on favorite
lo make the trip. Alter all. the Patriots
have beaten all ol thr contenders
lather handily amt actually seem to Ire
getting lM-iirras the season goes on
Last year coach Prank Gooch took
over die boys tennis team and strug­
gled through a so-so season finishing
with an H-H record. Even though the
record was only lair. Guoch Itad laid
die loumlatlon (or a quality program
amt knew dial lieiter things were tn

store lor tils leant All ol die players
that played Iasi year returned lo play
on this year's team and all hail worked
very, very hard to beeunte belter
tennis players

Larry
Castle

lit tail, most o f die players on this
year's team practice twice u day. Once
wllh the team, usually at Sanlando
Park and then with pros David Carter
and Mlek Andrews at their tennis
academy. That's a lot of tennis but it's
the only way to ever develop top tennis
players and a top tennis program.

Herald Tennis

— m t o __
machines dlls year und Gooch, who is
also assistant varsity basketball coach,
credits diis as |&gt;urt of die reason tils
team has made tin* rapid improvement
tt has made
All ot the players returning Irout last
year, all of the hard work, all of the
experience — it looked early on like
Luke Brantley was going 10 tre In for a
good year but one very significant
thing happened that changed a good
t r a in I n t o a v e r y , v e r y g o o d
team jm-i haps even a great tcai t.
Dial one Ingredient was In llir form
of a nationally ranked player who

Gooch rralt/ed this early und en­
couraged tils players to put In lots of
court lime. With the kind ol players
l.ake Hraudry has it's not hard The
players realize what It takes to excel
ami urr more than willing (o rxpend
dlls dine and rllort to reach the level ol
excellence
To hrlp the players in practice and
In their Individual drills, thr Booster
Club

purchased

two

new

bull

if

/

«r

i

y v

■*

&lt;w« 4 a

moved to Lake Brantley from Houston.
Texas. Mark Mance Is ranked No. 18 In
the U S. tn boys 18 and under singles.
He ts a high quality player, that super
kind of player dial any team must
have tf tt Is going to win champion­
ships
Mark Mance Is not only a quality
tennis player but ts a quality young
man. He, tn the words of his roach, is a
rpilrt steady and very dependable
person. Hts manner on and off the
court Is outstanding. Hr Is a nononsense. dedicated tennis player,
Wtlhout a doubt he has been a very
[mslUve tnfiuenre on hts trammates as
well us area high school tennis In
general.
Of course, Mance ts player *1 and Is
13-0 for ihe regular season. He ulso
won the *1 position at the Five Star
Tournament and ts favored to win the
district.
The No. 2 singles Is handled by
Richard Brail, the only senior In the

lop five. No. 3 ts 1‘ctcr Bolus, who had
a 9-1 regular season record and won
thr No 3 [msitlon at die Five Star. No.
4 Is Craig Bourne. Craig was 100
during (h r regular season and also
won the Five Star at hts position.
The No. 5 singles was split most of
the year between Kevin Greensteln
and Jim Young. Both of these young
men did a fine job an won lots ol
valuable [mints for the team Greenstetn Is also an excellent wrestler. Now.
that’s quite a combination
The No. I doubles team o f Mance
and Brail was 10* I fur the year und
won the Five Star, and the No. 2 team
of Balus and Bourne was 13-0 for thr
regular season and also won the Five
Star.
Congratulations to coach Frank
Gooch and his fine team. Best of luck
in ihe district, state and years to come
wllh inelr program.

�Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI.

Wednesday. April J. I * M —7A

Seminoles Rout Coach Brauman's Old School, 100-37
By Chris F ilt e r
H erald Sports W r ite r
I’A L A T K A — While coaching at
f’alatka. Ken Hrauman and the Panlhers pounded plenty o f opponent
during his successful rrign So. It
wasn't surprising when Hrauman s
new scliool. Seminole High. Journeyed
to 1‘ alt.ika and beat up on the
Panthers.

Seminole won all but three events
Tuesday cn route to a 100-37 dual­
meet victory at Palatka.
J u n io r distance standout Hilly
Penlck was the lone double winner for
the Tribe as he won the mile In 5 32
and the 880 In 2 02. Larry Cosby took
second in the mile (4:46) and Alan
Seward was second In the 88012 08|.
Frank Harnett won his specialty, the

Sutton Says
New Job Is
Nation's Best

a. IU m

MOST
CASU
or 750 ML
IMPORTID

I

CASE OF 12- 104.95!

CHAMPAGNE

2.79

W 1NI

I BUY 10
" Bonus
^ • o n in n
PRICES GOOD
APRIL 3 -9

1

R ED . W H.

—

750 ML

VICT0RI
SPUMANTI

3.99 750 ML

CASE OF 12-47.50

-

MICHELOB
PABST

a

tm nn'm

7 67 EA RTCS 31 95

WIN I

i.

K e g B e e r Vi &amp; V« b b l s .

SUITCASE. 24 - 12 02 CANS

24-12 02

&amp;B JIMP,
LU E

CANS

A B C B E E R 0"
A L E . R eg or Light
K O N IG S B A C H E R
Germany » Finest Beer

n
ft

j a

b

S C O TC H

18.49!%
;

"I'm flattered and honored to

-2 .0 0 K m

1 6 .4 9 mi

K e n tu c k y

D

I S

C

O

U

N

T

L

I Q

U

O
SALE

R

m ic e

CASE
M ic e

LITER

4 .9 9

5 9 .5 0

G I L B E Y 'S V O D K A

UTER

5 .5 9

6 0 .9 5

R O N R IC O R U M

LITER

6 .4 9

7 7 .8 0

HARVEY S SCOTCH

LITER

6 .9 9

• 3 . SO

S E A G R A M S G IN

UTER

6 .9 9

• 3 .5 0

ALM AD EN B R AN D Y

UTER

6 .9 9

• 3 .SO

C A N A D IA N M IS T

UTER

7 .1 9

• S .9 5

F IV E F L A G S G IN o r V O D K A

1.75 LTR.

8 .6 9

S 1 .9 S

BUY BY TH E CASE &amp; SAVE
V O D K A . G IN . R U M

size

mm

POPOV VO D K A

1.75 LTR.

9 .4 9

S 6 .S O

C A L V E R T G IN

1.75 LTR.

1 0 .4 9

A 3 .S 0

F L E IS C H M A N N ’ S B LEN D

1.75 LTR.

1 0 .6 9

0 3 .8 0

H EA V EN H IL L B R B .

1.75 LTR.

1 0 .9 9

O S .S O

R IC H &amp; R A R E C A N .

1.75 LTR.

1 1 .4 9

6 0 .5 0

m

H A R V IY ’S

LAM
M
ED

|
■ —r . . I 1

CHAMPAGNE

A M A R IT T O

10.99““

MIX ANY 4 -IB ."

SOUTHERN
COMFORT
M ’ PROOF

6.19 !%
-1 .0 0

»fm r ■ *.

5 .1 9

nun

S t.

i

.b u n «

La Belli Lambrusco
'83 Ueblraumilch-S. Konigin
'83 Lieblraumilch Gorgen
Anne de France (Red. White)
F. Reh Lieblraumilch
French Red. White-Nicolas

4 .3 9
4 .9 9
4 .9 9
4 .9 9
5 .4 9
5 .4 9
5 .9 9
6 .9 9
6 .9 9

Gallairi Bordeaux '82
Lancer's Rose
MiteusRose
P a r t a t Km

6 .9 9
m

w a r m in g g if t * .

7 5 0 ML

E A S T E R W IN E
G IF T B O X E S

76 Pmportcr Domherr Beeremos-Kiutlititl
76 Dtidciheintr Kieselberg Au-liuwsisJvtn
63 Erdener Pnlji Aiilett-Biick. Prietteutiiiir
63 Wicheshtimer Bohlij Aus Birklm Wolf
76 Wiekeler Hittiipnig Am Johienishop
83"Midoiu Aiiltie Vilckiekeri
83 Ockftntr Bockiteie Aoslcst Or. Fischer
'83 Berakaittr Kirlutliy Au-REH
'82 Btrticl Binknttl AmGorgei
83 Forttir Kir ckteituck Spit Bmcrmet-Jordii
'63 Wicheibtimr Gtmaptl Spit-Bartlis-Woll
'83 Eittl thicker Rintimerhofterj Spil-Tyrtll
S3 Wiwtrier Htrrteberger Spit-Dr. Flicker
‘83 Ocklentr Bockitin Spal-Dr. Flicker
83 Rodctkiiacr Serf Schlotiberg Spit-Cnmitiji
'63 Niersteiier Oelbtrj Spat. Hrpl
83 Sckerzhotbarftr Spat.-Hone Donkirchi
'83 Jofciniibtrger KJiu Spif-Jokmltkof
'83 Joicpkitoltr Spat-Kiiulititt
'83 Erkicber Sliisiaorjti SjuL-Aeypkinei
‘83 EltvillarMSMtheri SpiLLjsdgrifkeuca
'82 BenkuleJ-Catur Ctrdiielihtn SniL-Uckl
'83 HitteibeiBir Wiiulkrtiiei Spet.-eiseimiiuii
'83 HetteihiiMr Wiutllmaei Spet-Schoehori
‘83 Hitteahtiaer N m knani Spil-SiM tn
'83 ReitiUiltr Beikia Spit Stiitiweiejeter
'83 Serriper Vogcltaog Spet-StulidoniM
'82 Berttck Bcrakutel Spat-Gorpti
'83 Ayltr Lapp Spitleie Buck. Koovikl
63 Pietporlir Michelthcrp Spatlete-REM
‘83 Nieriltiatr Duitil Spat REH
'83 Erdee Trtppckea Spit -St. Jekeiaiibot
82 Pieiparler Goldtroptckee SpaL-Sorpta
'82 Pieiparter Goldtroptckee Spil-Bacchn
‘82 Berakeetiter Batfstnba SpatGorges
63 Pietporlir Mickeliker) KikBiccku
‘82 Erdaatr Treppckee Rii-fiorgea
‘83 Pieiparter Micketib«r| Kib BEH
83 Scklett Vollradi Kab. Mat. Grtit
'82 Pieipertir Goldtroptckei KabScklou Kostya
82 Berikiitii^aeiir Wiiiieetteii Rife. Ucfet
'83 Erkacher Steienoqti Keb-Kiyphiuti
‘83 Niertteiair Rekkach Kab -Heyi
83 WecheahtiMr Hcckkachtl Kil.-Barklia-Wolt
83 Faritcr Miriesfartii Kab -Berklia-Wilt
83 NldOll)’' UebtriuBilck|l 5LTt&gt;Vilckaa9w|
'83 Madam Uektrinulck-Viickeikari
13 Zeller Sthirzi KatiVilcktikerf
13 pieiparter Micketikary-Scktau Ktatyi
83 Zetler ScWrimkiti-S Koatfis

Maat In waadan k a i a i

RINEAU BORDEAUX z in s . french
CHATEFLEUR
3 an. frercm
BSGPARTAGER 3BTURWCH
NICOLAS
3 in . french
FR EN C H
Gallairi Bordeaux Blanc Sec
Imperml Red &amp; White
Anne di France Red &amp; Whiti
Brucker Blanc de Blancs
'82 Pouilly-Fuisse'-Cheviliera
'82 Macon VillagesBonnivii
'79 Chat. Lascombes
7 8 Chit, liicorab ei
'81 Chit, lascombes

6 .9 9
9 .7 5
8 .9 7
8 .5 0

750 ML
3 .9 9
2 .9 9
2 .9 9
3 .9 9
1 2 .9 9

5.99
19.95

2 2 .9 5
2 2 .9 3

'82 Blmc de Blancs-Deaeiei
de Siinrebotae
...........................................

4 .9 9

'61 Cabernet Sainrignon-DoaiiiedeSmekuai 4.99
3 .9 9
'82 CotesdeRoussillonVilliges Nicolis

83 Entri Deux M ersNicolis
'83 Vouvray-Nicclas
83 Bordeaux Blanc Moelloux-Nicolis
'82 Macon Blinc-Nicolis
‘82 Maison BlancSt. Veran-Nicolis
7 9 Chit. Liminceau-Nicolij
'81 Chitiaueeuf du Pape-Nicolis
'82 Saulirees-Nicolas
'84 Beaujolais Nouveau-J. Vercherri
‘83 Chablis-J. Vercbsni
'83 Beiojolais Garelle-J. Vercherre
'83 Beaujolais Villioes-J. Vercherre
'83 ChissagneMonfrachet-J. Vercherri
'83 Pulignylontrachet-J. Vercherri

CALIFORNIA

3 .8 9
4 .9 9
3 .9 9
6 .2 9
5.9 9
3 .7 9
7 .9 9
6 .2 9
4 .9 9
9.93
4 .7 9
4 .9 9
13.95
18.95
J750M L

7 9 Ziofandel Chateau Diana
7 8 Cabernet SauvigiooArroyo Sonoma
‘81 Chardonnay-Potier Valley
‘82 ChardonniyScbastiini
Cabernet Sauvignon-Sebastiani
Chenio B liic-Sibistiaii
Johannisberg Riislioo-Sebastiaoi
Pinol Noir-Sebastuni
Cewurzlriminer-Sebasliini
Zinfindel-Sebistiaii
Pieot Noir BlancSibastiani
White ZiiliBdel-Sutter Home

4 .2 9
6.9 9
4.9 9
6.29
5.99
4 .4 9
3.29
4 .9 9
5.49
5.49
4 .4 9
5.99
6.2 9
White Ziifiedel-Btriegir
ABOVE WINE IS ONLY A PARTIAL SELECTION OF AVAILABLE WINE

’84 BEAUJOLAIS

8.99 COST

IMPORTED

7 5 0 ML

Jacques Bonel Ex. Dr)'. Cold Duck
Henri Marchant Ex. Dry. Pink
Freixenel Carta Nevada Brut
Gold Seal Ex. Dry. Brut or Pink
Prodis Asti Spumante
Henkell Sekt German Ex. Dry
Becciro Asti Spumante
Charles Fournier Blanc de Blanc
Domiin Chandon
Linson Black Label

GERMAN

6-1202 BUS

A S O V f M i l IS ZOOM

Arizona coach Lule Olson,
who was tentatively offered Ihe
Job before Sutton but couldn't
reach agreement on u contract.
Alubum a-UIrtnIngham coach
G ene Harlow. South Florida
coach Lee Hose and form er
Kentucky assistant Dick Parsons
were nlso Interviewed for the
|MMl.

SALE]

SALE

MOULIN ROUGE

t r ia l) n

(U H in ila iQ M I

BRUT OHEXTRA OUT

ta-xlngiun.

the new

CARLO
ROSSI

CHAMPAGNE

Hall, who compiled a 297-100
record In 13 season alter re­
p la c in g the 42 -year co a c h
Adolph Hupp, said the program
should continue to pros|&gt;er with
Sutton at the helm

coach." suld Sulton. who was
accumiumlrd at an afternoon
news conference by his wife,
three sons and mentor Henry
lira "llelleve me. I would have
crawled all the way lo Lexington
lor this Job.”
Until finally receiving a call
(rout Athletics Director C liff
Hagan, who was coordinating
I he search for a new coach.
Sutton said hr was not hoj&gt;rful
of getting ihe Kentucky position.
" I didn't apply and I mid Cliff
yesterday that I didn't rrully
think he'd cull us." said Sutton,
who compiled a 260-75 record In
I I years at Arkansas.
Sutton, who played for Iba at
O klu h u m a S ta le and la te r
courhrd with the three-llme U.S.
Olympic team coach, was cred­
ited with bringing Kazorbacks'
basketball up lo the level of
fo o tb a ll at Ihe F a y e tte v ille
school.
In 1 9 7 8 . S u tt o n 's te a m
advanced to Ihe Final Four,
before losing lo eventual na­
tio n a l ch am pion K en tu ck y .
Sul Ion was named UPl's coach
of the year that season.
"W hen you talk about Kenlu ck y. y o u 're talking about
basketball." Sutton told about
200 members of the media at a
news conference. "It's the only
Job I'd leave Arkansas for. It's
the No. 1 coaching Job in the
country, including the NBA."
A rk a n s a s ' 13 losses th is
season were the worst since
Sutton’s arrival at Arkansas
from Creighton In 1975. In hts
previous 10 seasons, no Sut­
ton-coached Razorbacks' team
lost more than nine games In
one year.
Sutton's first official move as
coach was to convince associate
coach Leonard Hamilton to stay
with Krntucky. whlchld suc­
cessfully.
Hamilton Is regaided by many
as one o f the best recruiters In
Ihe country and Is credited with
b r in g in g stars Sam B o w ie .
Kenny W alker and R ich ard
Madison to UK.
Sutton said he haa not yet
signed a contract, e and the UK
Athletics Association had agreed
to a five-year pact In principle.
Sulton said he thought his
coaching philosophy, utilizing
an aggressive man-to-man de­
fense and a deliberate offense,
was not much different than
Hall's.
" I don't think our philosophies
are that different from the way
Kentucky has been playing the
last two years." Sutton said. " I f
you win. the fans don't care how
you play the game."

Wi

THANKS TO OUR LOUNGE
CUSTOMERS A THE ABC EM­
PLOYEE CHARITY FUND FOR
THE $9148 60 DONATED TO
EASTER SEALS.

KORBEL

"T h is is the only Job I'd ever
ta k e." Sutton said Tuesday,
after It was announced he was
replacing Joe H Hall on the
Wildcats' bench.

Ik - nam ed

120 high hurdles, with a 13 H clocking
and the fleet-fooled senior was second
In the 220 dash at 22.0. Senior
teammate Cliff Campbell won the 220
at 2 1 8 and sophomore Earle Martin
was third at 22.7. Martin earlier won

EASTER

T h a t o ffe r cam e and the
49-year-old Kansas native ac­
cepted. leaving the Kazorbacks'
tradition he created for u Ken­
tucky tradition that was built
lieforr he was (torn

Sutton, who was mentioned as
a (Missthlc successor to Hall but
was not Interviewed until Mon­
day. was offered and accepted
the job Just before Monday's
NCAA tournament lItIr game In

T r a c k / F i e l d

the triple Jump (45-6‘ sl
The 'Notes also won all three relays
Tuesday. The 440 relay team of
Campbell, Dcron Thompson. Davis
and Barnett turned In a 42.9 Ken
Tem ple. Dexter Jones. Davis and
Cosby teamed up to win the mile
medley with a time of 3:49 and the
mile relay leant of Pearson. Illltery.
Cosby and Martin also ran a 3 49.

AMERICA ’5 LARGEST WINE M SPIRIT MERCHANT HAS THS LOWER EVERYDAY PRICE. . . SAVE UP TO 40%

LE X IN G T O N . Ky. (U P I) —
There was only one Job In the
land that could lure Eddie Sut­
ton away from Arkansas, where
he built a baskrtball tradition
that yielded nine straight NCAA
appearances and an average of
23 wins u year.

"In stepping down. I didn't
want to let the program down,
hut with Eddie. I see nothing hut
great days ahead." said Hall. 56.
"W ith the naming o f Eddie
Sutton, this Is a great day for
Kentucky tMskclball."

the 440 dash with a tin.- ol 52.6 and
Herbert Hlllery was second »n 55.5
Anthony Hall took the shot put with
a 44-11 and Chack Thomas was third
at 36-3. Thomas also won the discus at
117-8. Sop h om ore J e r r y Parker
cleared 6 0 to win the high jump with
Leo Peterson third at 5-10. Peterson
a lv) look second In the long ’ |ump
121-5) while Alvin Jones was second In

NOUVUU A
- W

.

O

M IN IA T U R E S

M IX E R S

* *
. W

IS O »

SOUTH'S UUIO* ST
SC LECTION

IliSHCOfTEE. (IN. RUM.VOOlUk. IUM
IUM. CAJUN. SCOT. lACAIOt. HNU
MIOONSVOOKA
TUQUEIATtH
101QIUM
EJUU.TTill? tOUIICM
CAMAOIAM1010CAIVUT
MAIT1NTV.V.O. SCOTCH

.59
.69
H

.99
.59
.75
J9
.99

•

S N A C K S

G A L L O V E R M O U T H sw eet or dry

750 ML

V99

S E V E N U P on D I E T P E P S I

2 LITER

99*

mti11 B L O O D Y

LITER

M A R Y M IX

M I L K G U S T A F S O N lofat

GALLON

C I G A R E T T E S ALL REG. A KINGS

CARTON

S T

M A C A D A M IA N U T S
C R U M

OF COCONUT

B EER NUTS

5 0Z.
15 OZ.

1.29
1.99
8.99
2.99
1.49
1.79

cooo n x * . A m a

HOUSlOf
STUART SCOTCH

(000 MON ArCIll

RIUNITI
LAMBRUSCO
2 . 7 9 750 ML
UBTMK1MTMUS/CSMB
SAMFOftO

Hwy W -U SOUTH o

t y l m is

LONOWOOO
t r . U N C A R 4M

• . ALTAMONTE

Mwy «T W O N C B tO O

c ir ^ n iu ii£ L 'a is T ij|

C A IU lH M Y

H*y 17 MAT AM

MEt

�*0.

I A —Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

V » .

Perez Is
Still Red
For Rose

Wednesday, April 1, l t d

Old Days
Hear That Whistle BlowirT

i

NEW YORK lUI'I) - Long
b e fo re e x p a n s io n , tra v e l
nrross three time zones. 26
team s, th e M ajor League
Players Association and Peter
Ueberroth, baseball prospered
In a world bounded by Boston
In the Northeast and St. Louis
In the West
It wasn't until after World
War II that night baseball,
expansion and plane travel
brought sweeping changes to
baseball, St. I&lt;ouls was no
longer the gam e's Western
oulpost.
In 1957, th e. New York
Giants and Brooklyn Dodgers
lumped across the continent
to San Francisco and Los
Angeles, respectively, and
America perhaps coinciden­
tally, crowned a world cham­
p io n , t h e t r a n s p la n t e d
M ilw aukee B raves, In Its
heartland.
"There's no stopping the
future," as Yogi Berra says
and baseball Is bigger and
better than It was In the
Toonervllle Trolley days of 10
teams pluylng mostly day
games and (ravelin' Ihr trains
Travelln* the trains. Can
anyone brought up on modern
b a seb a ll u n d e rs ta n d the
meaning o f those words? Cun
players and newspapermen
who /Ip from city to clly In Jet
planes comprehend the dif­
ference In the crus? Have they
ever wondered why baseball
has a greater collection of
human Interest anecdotes, by
far, than any other sport?
Whrre, one asks, did the
newspapermen get them?
Thry got them travelln' the
trains. T h ey got them by
living with the players. By
sleeping In the same Pullman
ears, ruling together In the
dining ears, pluylng cards.
|M&gt;pplng bofferoos. sitting up
all night In lire parlor car.
making the 32-hour trips from
Boston to St. Louis, constantly
talking and arguing busebuil
and getting in know their
subjects In a way no other
n ew sp a p erm en or w om en
have been able to do In any
utlwr sport before or since.
L H Itr fla p s a m o n g the
players * nnd newspapermen

United P re ss In te rn a tio n a l
Clncinnali confirmed Tuesday
that at least one more heart of
the "B ig Red Machine" con­
tinues to beat, even If the legs
don't pump quite the way they
used to.
Tony Perez, who teamed with
Reds manager Pete Rose to win
back-to-back world lilies tn the
mld-70s. had until yesterday
been classified as an "In vitee"
but signed a 1-year contract.
Player-m anager Rose, who
plans to play first base part-time.
Intends to use Perez mainly as a
plnch-hllter this season, a l­
though Pcrrz can be expected to
start a few games at first when
Rose derides to play manager
fulltime.
And should both tire. Nick
Esasky. who saw action at first
last year. Is more than ready to
flit In.
Esasky, who hit .193 In hts
flrst full major-league season last
year, knocked In three runs with
two singles Tuesday to lead
Cincinnati to a 7-6 victory over
the Minnesota Twins
The Reds scored three runs In
the fourth Inning and two tn the
fifth off Tw ins starter and loser
John Butcher to take a 5-0 lead.
The Twtns counlrred with four
s ix th in n in g runs on RandyBush's ptnch-hlt grand slam off
starter and winner Jay Tibbs
Elsewhere. Cleveland clob­
b e r e d O a k la n d 1 1 -6 .
Philadelphia defeated Kansas
City 4-2. Pittsburgh topped
Houston 6-4. Detroit ripped St.
Louis 14-2, C alifornia beat
M ilw a u k e e 4 -2 . San D ieg o
nipped C h lra g o 6-5. Boston
rdged New York 21 In a game
hailed In Hie seventh by rain,
San Francisco outlasted Seattle
7-3 and Detroit was routed In Its
evening game 14-1 by Toronto
Montreal vs. Los Angeles and
Texas vs. Atlanta were rained
out.
Mlkr Hargrove and George
Vukovtch each bad two hits and
three RBI to lead the Indians.
V e t e r a n A 's s t a r t e r R ic k
latngford was tagged for seven
nins tn three Innings, further
Jeopardizing his spot wllh the
club.
Garry Maddox collected three
hits and th e P h illie s took
advantage o f three errors In their
triumph over the- Royals George
Brett hit tn hts 10th straight
game for Kansas City.

Baseball
were easily resolved. Flayers
.resentful of something that
had been written often found
themselves having breakfast
with the author the next
m orn in g. P o te n tia l feuds
usually ended by the (line
coffee was served. Th e players
and reporters saw themselves
In a way their modern coun­
terparts cannot.
Some may urgue that the
newspapermen becam e too
much a part of the team.
There's some truth to that but
the point can be overdone.
The newspapermen kept con­
fidences. There were personal
things they didn't write about
stars. Is It really news some
hanky pank will occur when
30 virile young men are away
from home for I wo weeks?
Sleeping arrangements were
the same with every club. The
lust three cars, one a dining
car, were reserved for the club.
Regulars and starting pitchers
were assigned lower berths
nnd subs, relief pitchers and
news reporters upper berths
The manager was entitled to
ihr drawing room und no case
o f a refusal has ever been
recorded.
There were always two or
three guys who couldn't sleep
on the trains — Just as today
there arc guys who luttr to fly.
They sal up all night talking
and who knows bow much of
the lore of the gam e was
p r o d u c e d d u r in g th e s e
nocturnal seances as the train
sped through darkness?
At least the trains were
air-conditioned. Some o f the
hotels were only beginning to
Inslull air conditioning In the
lair 1940a und summer tem­
p eratu res in W a sh in gto n .
II.C., Cincinnati and St. Louts
were Mining Lou Gehrig, for
e x a m p le , u sed t o o r d e r
buckets of Ice cubes, soak his
tied sheets In them and then
wrap the sheets around' him.
Home wonder If the practice

T r a v e l i n ' t h e t r a in s w a s t h e o n l y w a y t o g o f o r t h e b a l l p l a y e r s o f o l d .
Getuway day presented un­
usual problems lor the rrjHirtrrs The guys who worked lor
m orning sheets tiled their
stories via Western Union
from the trail parks Bid then,
as now. clubs lied cities like
bagmen, sometimes us little us
an hour after a game. The
a ftern oon paper reporters
didn't have time to write and
file their stories before the
train was scheduled to lake
litem to the next town
The solution for this pro*
hlrm required consultation
with the club's rood secretary,
whose authority approximated
that of Caesar, rite trick was
lo find a station .it which the
train was scheduled to stop lor
15 minutes and wire ahead lo
W estern Union to have a
messenger meet the train for n
dropoff o f the reporters’ copy.
Ollrn such a dio|M)ll could be
mude only nt 1 nr 2 u.m.

didn't contribute to the d is­

It was the Job u( the desig­
nated n pm ler In stav sober

ease that killed him.

i

and or awake so he could
tnakr the dropoff. Today's
reporters use portable video
display terminals which pul
them, when plugged In. In Ihr
newspaper's city rooms. In the
old days, the flower o f Am'erf*
ran baseball literature often
was delivered to a nondescript
Western Union messenger at
some deserted station In Midd|r America at a time when
honest men and women were
sleeping. These were "the
good old days?"
When 40-odtl men travel
together, oir and on. from
spring training In March to the
end of the season lit September. there ore txmnd to be
a million laughs and nil equal
number of problems. Why
hullclohs Insisted on catching
tin- llrst train out of town (like
(Mixing promoters) will never
lx- understood But they did
and Ini one day some 60 years
ago to a famous story suitable
to bring Hits ixmlulgli- tub* to
an end

It seems that the New York
Yan kees were lied In the
s e c o n d g a m e of a
doublebeadcr with the St.
Louts Browns tn St taiuls this
Sunday. The clock atop the
scoreboard showed tt was 6
p.m ., and the scoreboard
showed the score tied at 5-5,
Itabc Ruth picked u bat out of
the rack and started for the
plate.
"F o r heaven’s sake. Babe,"
y e l l e d M a rk R o t h , t h e
Yankees' road secretary. *'Wr
ain't got much time. Our train
leaves at 7. If we don't make
It. we'll lx- In this swrathox
until midnight."
"L in e up (he taxi cabs." said
Ruth, “ here's whrre we all go
home.**
Ruth hit the next pitch onto
the right Held roof, the cabs
arrived at Union Station with
a few mlnulrs lo spare and the
Yankees were soon rolling
iicrosn the Indiana lint lands,
homeward bound.

Flannery: Tijuana Trafficker Who Borders For The Poor
YUMA. Arlz (UFI) — A day doesn't go
hy that some drug trafficker looking to
outsmart U S. Customs gets nailed
trying lo sneak that flrndlsh white
(xiwiler I n s id e one of our Ixirdern.
W r hear about thosr w ion gdorrs
frequently enough.
But how com e hardly anyone has
heard of that big Irague ballplayer
operating cn m plrlrly ihr other way
around, lugging such staples as milk,
bread, rtcr und beans across the border
lo Irrd as many hungry lm|Kiverlshrd
Mexicans as be possibly ran.
The reason you don't hear all Ihr gixxl
Tim Flannery has lx-rn doing for so
many of Ihr |x&gt;verly stricken In Tijuana
Is simple enough.
lie doesn't talk uImuiI It.
"Ordinarily. I'd rather not." says the
Sail Dlcgn Padres' 27-yenrold backup
lullcldrr and plnch-hllter, "b ill these
people can use all the help thry cun gel.
Any Itltlr bit I cun do for liirm makes inr
very happy. I love doing It.
"A lot of fixwl here In our country gels
thrown away. W r pick It up und bring it
down there In feed the poor jieople.
"You should see the nearest jinspltul to
them. It's culled Sacred Heart und the
last time I heard. It didn't even have one
pint or hlixxl or one X ray machine.
These |x-npb- have no money so they
can't get any help."

M ilton
Rlchman
Flannery, senior member ol the Padres
In terms o f his length of service with the
club. Is describing the section In Tijuana
(-ailed Colonial Rcforma. an urea which
makes Skid Row look like Park Avenue.
"Most of these |&gt;eaplc were homeless
and lived In the streets before," Flannery
points out. "T h e government wasn't
happy about them doing that because
they were hurting tourism, so they were
herded way hack In the hills
"A ll of them are forced to live In
cardboard shacks. It s terrible The way I
look at tt. I've been blessed more than I
deserve. I was lucky to hr lx»rn on this
side of the Ixirder. They weren't. When
you think ubout It. that's just an
accldrnt of birth. People are people It
doesn't mutter where they were born."
Flannery Is a professional ballplayer,
lie's good at wind he does, tilling a
reserve role with the Padres, and the
whole country saw that for llsrll on
imltouul TV last full when lie came up
with a couple of key hits In tin- pluyolU

* * * * * * * * * * *

Bergman Leads Lady Lions
Past Yellow Jackets, 10-3
By C h ris Pla ter
Herald S p o rts W riter
LKKSHURG — Cathy Hrrgimm
was the leader Tuesday And her
Irummaire lollowed Every time
Bergman led o '*
* inning
Oviedo scored as the ,.uOy Lions
claimed u 10-3 victory over
Leesburg's Ludy Yellow Jackets
In Orange Belt Conference ac­
tion
The Lady Lions Improved to
7-1 In the conference wllh the
win und 10-7 overall
Oviedo look a 2 0 lead In the
top of the first when Bergman
rruched on un error to lead off
and Jessica Hiadlcy drew u
walk. Frau Foster followed with
a single to drive tn Brrgmun und
Fnster scored on Mlkkl Eby's
single.
Leesburg scored ull three of Its
runs In the bottom of the first
The game rem ained 3-2 In
ixesburg's favor until Oviedo
broke II open w llh three runs lit
(be fifth and put the game on Ice
with five In the seventh
In the fifth. Bcrgm/m led off
with a single, Foster singled und

with the Cubs and then connected salrly
in Ills only pinch hit appearance against
the Tigers In the World Scries.
All ibis was a follow-up to his best year
In the majors, one In which he fushioned
a ,273 llgiuc In H6 regular season games
and hll .313 in those games hr started.
Flannery gets a little embarrassed
whenever anyone characterizes him as
some kind ul Good Samaritan Mr
doesn't think of h lt U M - ll a s one although
that’s what he actually Is,
A native of Tulsa. Okla.. and resident
ol Encinitas. Calif., which Is about 25
mlli-s liom the Mexican border. Flannery
was getting ready for a workout In San
Diego In January ol 1!IH3 when he saw
trucks Ix-lng loaded wlllt all sorts ol food
st oils and building materials.
Curious atxiul tt. lie Inquired about the
i&gt;|&gt;rrat Inn The man overseeing tt was
Terry Caster, who runs a contracting
business in Sun IHego. Caster told
Flannery lie fell sorry over the plight o f
ihe poor In Tijuana and was voluntarily
tnicking supplies to them
Flannery liked the idea and asked It he
could help also Caster said sure What
Flannery Is doing now Isn't anything
reallv entirely new lor him because Ills
father. Raguu. was a preacher In the
Disciple of Christ Church und when Tint
was Mill in Junior high school, he'd help
him build missions tor the jxtor.
A

J

hr

BEST PRICES
BEST SERVICE
T R Y US!

Of SANIOBD

3 0 9 0 a. O R LA N D O D R . (H W V . 1 T - S l)
PH. 123 s e a s
SA N FO R D
MON. T H R U PRI. B OO A .M . T IL S P.M.
S A T . BiOO A.M . T IL S P .M . C L O S S D SUN

Bergman stored on a single by
Chavis. Both Foster und Chavis
cuuir uround to score on Eby's
single. Eby had three RBI's for
the game to rulxe her teamleudlng total to 24 for the season.
In the seventh for Oviedo.
Hergmun singled to leudolT and
Bradley followed with a two-run
homer down the left field line.
Foster. Chavis and Eby all
singled to load the liases and two
m orr runs scored on sacrifice
flies by I lee iter Beasley und
Jodie Switzer.
Switzer also did a One job on
the mound for the Ludy Lions us.
with help from Ihr defense. she
allowed Just two hits alter the
first inning.
F o r O v ie d o o f f e n s i v e l y .
B e r g m a n . B ra d ley . F o s te r,
Chavis and Eby hud two bits
each. Oviedo returns to action
next W ednesday lit a n o n ­
con feren ce gamr w ith Luke
Hruntlry.

MILE WARRANTY

ns on n.

— T h e E xpos sent r ig h t­
hander Fred Brrlnlng and out­
fielder Max Venahle to the
minors. They were acquired
from San Francisco last year tn
exchange for Al Oliver.
— The Mets und Cardinals
sw apped g o o d -fie ld , n o-h it
shortstops and inlnor-leagur
p it c h e r s . N e w Y o rk s e n t
shortstop Jose Oquendo and
pitcher Mark Davis to St Louis
for shortstop Argents Salazar
and pitcher John Young

* * * * * '* * * * * * * ^ * * ^ *

ffH i

Softball

Essentially, Flannery Is an Infleldrr.
not a missionary. Still, without having in
do u big selling job oil them, hr has
Influenced Houston reliever Dave Smith
and two of his own teammates. Mark
Thurmond and Dave Oravccky. to pitch
In and help.
"Some o f ihr sights you see cun hardly
lx- drscribcd. We went down to Tljuanu
one day when the ruin was really coming
down hard and we saw a ladv living tn u
rardtxiard shack with her four kids
They luid no shelter or anything nnd
they were Just silling there tn the mud
with a little river running past them,
"It look us awhile, hut we built a place
for them to live. A little house. When wc
told the lady It was hers, she sturtrd to
cry. Winning the pennant last yeur the
way we did was a wonderful Icrilng. tun
the frrling I got Irnm wh.il we did for
tli.il poor Ia inlly will last with me a lot
longer."
Nuturally. Flannery would like to tx* a
regular starter with the Padres. He
realizes his situation with the Padrrs.
howewherr he has little chance of taking
a s ta r lin g Job aw ay from G a rry
Templeton ut short. Alan W iggins ul
second or Gralg Nettles at third, and
readily accepts his role because he
knows he has the re«q&gt;ect of his leammnlra. For what he docs off the fas well

In player moves around the
league:
— Oakland sent first baseman
Danny G ood w in lo m inors,
guaranteeing Danny Meyer a
spot with the A's lndeldcr Mike
G.illego was also told be made
the club.
— T h e Padres announced
D ove D r a v c c k y , w h o * b u s
bounrrd fx-tween the bullpen
und starting rotation the last two
years, will begin this year as a
starter. Lingering pain In the
right-hander's elbow prevents
Dravecky from throwing every
day.
— The Pirates ugrred to a
5 year contract wllh Irlt-hander
1 .«r r y M c W i l l i a m s . T h e
31-yeurold starter was 12-11
with a 2.93 ERA last season.

24.000 M ILE WARRANTY

PREMIUM RETREADS
• LOOK

K E 2

MILE W ARRANTY

[M IC H ELIN ]

40.000 MILE WARRANTY
IMPORT S O I S T t IL RAOULS

• RUES

coupon

’ i TIRE
* [ROTATION

cooson
00
*2

^ CAM a IICKT T0VCSS

'•

S T O U T S * * 1 * 8 9 ^ "ItH

CAiTvtmc rm
T .T T T J r .T T X T .T T T T t T K

*

* *-

* ■!" * *

ji

W HEEL
ALIGNMENT

*9Me”
•

ji" BRAKE S P EC IA L
«•'

ji'~:r^rL.soQ99ij
!!:£ Z £ .- £ r

J

J

-------- CO W O N ---------- 1

HEAVY DUTY
SHOCKS

�Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

s w in g s

H*tiCm**'
w**e«r* - « r* « d#
ffetif C$ec*« k.afl’tr*

I*

*A*4S4f *4C**-*C..or 4 |, m
Efr-TOT 4 3« 1 * 1 1 ) 0
Twill Is f *) ■

J•* - ESMHCAA
IP# Bm iOAArtl*

Although not related. Wyatt and Jackson Smith proved
to be a potent connection Tuesday as Seminole Communi­
ty College's Raiders upended St. John's River. 9-1. In
Mid Florida Conference action at SCC.
Wyatt Smith, a freshman pitcher, mowed down St.
John's on three hits while Jackson Smith led the offense
with two hits, one a double, and four runs batted In.
Michael Cloutier added two hits and drove In three runs
while Ken Looperalso had two hits
The Raiders gave Wyatt Smith a 4-0 cushion In the
bottom of the second and the 5-11 righthander was
touched for Just one run In the top of the fourth. SCC put
Ihe finishing touches on with three runs In the seventh and
two more In the eighth.
SCC. 5-6 In the conference and 19-14-1 overall, returns
to action Thursday against Central Florida CC at Ocala. Si
John's now stands at 2 9 In the conference and 15*19
overall.

or
an O

the

HEAD

u' p z a

nooy.

PA,EVENT "C L U tiH E A Q
“ USNE3J-* 3
TA A TIN
CONSCIOUSNESS**
5TAA
. Q_ e»ACH .s
“
U * Y O U R E V' ----E S ON T H E

t *-*■*"* idsmw(wi -r
oes :* ns*** 81
(NCIS'S frowsoM
* .MB ISId** &gt;1
l * U SIllD w TI
N w l f W-o •*
3*1*48' ( W IMS')t
►or-*-* l)f TWM* 111
• •IMIIM I tlKM

?i
K n it * ,
* a is * e
lH H W C -M I T i
IK I S
i k U 'r t U ’t d
is
t a i l s u '11411MB 111*1117'*
m ih - i i o * n
iH O iC sa i
is is is
* S IS
as
a it tt n s . ' m i n s f n &gt;ii i s a
oo ; n i n a
M m -v h i ns
i l r f 'H w
IB I S I S
■L * »
Mat
iKi B

IINU **-1

anrlMM ' iiii. b tDMima
•b» m» - viH ii a
iMkvi
l « i* ) «
1*4*. IM
M il
irevuM
is
an i i x i 'nn a s. riiiii dim
l1»rK4- 1140 Ml)
l l 'l 'w
1. 7B IB
iC7**p*pi*M&gt;
is is
IB
omnia ' an sb r am mm
M i II III Ml « m
I I I 4«*
UM. CMT74M,48JM■
m&gt;K»-Vt4.( II u
inaaH-Mrlak
is -. is
1&gt;XMi&gt;&amp;7**
is III
1* N
)■
a at) MS. ' Ill M4I4. t 17)1 IMaa
h'Stt IWofTW*
inrta- 1 1 1 i t
llt r iiiu

ts

lie*

is

C-7BH»4*g&gt;»*■■,* 4,0^,4, tw,

4-r**)»-*So iBTt •*&gt;&gt;
V ..... 0*711
Wt-tt'LTS o*T3**wr Ffwt 0*74

MtMtilOts.

v ifp * t- CMPof. 7 |S

liXnlTrtil

Up 1-174 •’ ,41*0 4 7 ts
OSM S l&gt; ««t*o | ,
W ^ t»*t-4 **«4 rt ) S t s

'*117* t- Mrs Jtnt, I B t m

4*4** ,

'rtrtkri f« &lt; I)A

i ifeilirit* iit a ta ii

l‘
rt P ^ *S rf*4
••Hr Pi« J ■ $ Hi
f i i « it AitaA'a a* »* i'
*:I*i 1 ■ » " !

uiiiiuiiiiM i

Mtsts

«
T-ir-jfi*
CH«ip
Ot*m*
Crkree

'K.USCt-Sopot* -/■X* 'T-10W) SFOlSSlf** *
X* ••PfOlKV ITLrt 0^1

Hr* 1*1
ewena
* «M ff
W e
■•RAM City
f*w*
a ie d
VrtWiPI
M v
HATiOGAilUOUl

USFL
UHiTIO HATH lOOfUU IMOVI
(•Iter*CewNhrwi
* l t Pit Pf PA
III ID *#! "t
Te*np* let
*j • **' -••m
Wo Jff*t
in nunit
•Ar-pf i
111 us i) &gt;n
te^^n
Hi nr mm
j«*liepiP0ie
m id V4i in
O tn*
l«« Mnm
•vtHrnCe^Hraxm
KjuiW
n« nimin
Or***
in m m m
AriM
e1• m tun
Def*«e»
•H HA'D'H
*w*tr4
MIJOI 0
W* Artgse
Ml IB IViff
La* kypm
til m u

*
n
•*H f f l
^ 4 *^ 4
R4«RHP»
‘ • tt*
•nmaltm
AA^rtr*#
V* Lave
p
lp A | | ^ | M «te tla M
t m ilM h t a »l

147 Two (III
So—*7 1 S » W 4 I f S
W W llt H W

Jtrlsn-14S7CM4*7,11 «

CMotPI S Tlr*tp* I t s

im A-xjswx •%Mar-sa a'
Uec* t$ntrH*\t%m)

l. s s y s s S l t P t p S o s I S t s

:

rt

ifml

T«m *

ml t

■Niki l ilT * U«W4
lirahii Cffy rt
ai
l l »
N$wl«$A «* Hr* » » »
Hk

BASEBALL

V r o 1- Ttomn't | s t ,

toa*« in! \ 4

Tarpvki 14

WWl Will
!H * i,,) p» L p l|-

-t i t * SCt-ftr* 1 11)0
&gt; -»'* 7-ltv/50 I xp* wwt s c04tv&gt;1 n7 *

It

i
a*td 1 Oaa «
C» Hra-a* $
U H N r i 1 CKggfi lA lll

»*0*7&gt;ll )N I BtS

S t lM t f M 1 t i m i
lU r s s tllT l

aim us. a nil s s t i i i i i is s

V«» fim c iii t

IthtsPHMSI 11 s

V l i t * I &gt;77* Jarif. I

»

$ cfcA*f* urn 1 u-%*^

4

* S | 4474 1)

'* ■ * • 0 0 * 1 0 * &gt;t-W1
0 ' HSUS 11 O -Wry-1

f $w»v«ai

U"

M V * I 4*4 1)

».*!•*1TOtrKrf I

NOISIIIMM
4-1ST HtnSt 11441

With the victory at McNtchols
Arena — which halted the Nug­
gets' 20gnm r home winning
strrak — law Angeles. 56-19,
clinched the Western Confer­
ence's best record, assuring It of
the home-court advantage In all
conference playoff series.

+t

P
t ►RM'or »
* * * * * * 4 4 IHEMC h J
D t-* ' U 'lt J ! I m ]
| Hr. t f t U '

1 ts

4 1 -sst t l «

NHL

is

f

’Sot'gprXts S7W4 ) Sts

0 0 -1T * (o w i lit* o*)t

is is

An o

U N T IU

U P ANO
A IM E D A T
TH E TARO S1

C V jf l S S tlW fW 7 * &gt; l » I * n r w i i « « l It -O
1 * 0 * ( J ) H l C :« o i f 1 |i

t*-oorW 4 l «

e&gt;Al l .

E

TO HELP VOL)
0 0 t h a t on
T E E - SHO-+S ANO
P O T T * . SET
THE KALL'S
N A M E -----SjOE
TO PSlO

IM Tss* Ittl

)s

Itw H M S l

00
1
OP THE^ O
O*
LC
IM T M tR
K t l P THEM
IT VANISHES.

'■tI 4I*toi . 11)0
i n « in win ' 1 |«
f 4HSSS F*»iurs» 1 ’ Ml *»

)B

O n 4]n s . n t M M s . t i » i n n i s
• » &gt;k i - i n d u b
Iw
IIj i n
ITS I S I S
H H n lw i
is is
IM K Iv In
IS
S I 'I I B B 't i l l &gt;414 T lU I I W S
M r »- H it US
IG w tlla *
IS (S I S
IMtfttWCtu
IK t S
is
a m i s s m r o s T iiiiiin s
M f M - I X D n *7
• 4 «| £ s -t «
IIS TS IK
■C sw i
i f* n s
&gt;*.*,
is
O IU IItlB 7 II tl TIB t il 4)1711 •
f 'M - u i mi
l(M t k i* a r
14S I S I S
I I N t P-k -b
IS IS
IK M Ia O V
IS
a m i s s * m in is m i l l iu «
n &gt;kt- t it i n n
l « * f iriW f
i s is i s
lis t )a * *
iB t s
U llC M W
IS
01) IIn s . F II I I S S . t i l H D i lB
•S ' * » - I W O II4)
-Vs-t —
MS « S &lt;S
’
)S I S
I I m Tw
ts

The Lakers, who have fended
o f f th rea ts from P o r tla n d .
Phoenix. San Anionlo and Utah
during their reign atop the
Western Conference, defeated
the Denver Nuggets 118-104
Tuesday night to deflect yet
another challenge.

TO

7- p* * p 4 &lt;£ inputr

WASHINGTON MJ1TI — Thr sponsor of a bill (kissed
Tuesday by the Senate Commerce Committee said the
measure giving the NFL power to block teams from leaving
their humetowns "re-establishes order out o f chaos" In
professional sports.
The bill, approved 10 6. would give the NFL and several
other professional sports leagues limited antitrust exemp­
tions in the areas of franchise movement and revenue
sharing, and allow Individual leagues to establish
guidelines for restricting owners from moving their teams
If It finally becomes law. the measure would apply to the
NFL and U.S. Foot lull League, and basketball, hockey and
soccer leagues — but not baseball
Sen. John Danforth. R Mo . who s|&gt;onsorrd Ihe bill along
with fellow Missouri Sen Thomas Flagleton. a IXemocral.
said the legislation "re-establlshrs some order out of what
has become chaos" In professional sports leagues.
Danforth said NFL Commissioner I’ele Roselle hud
assured him In a letter that, should the legislation pass.
Uozclle will recommend NFL owners "consider favorably"
expansion by two teams by 1988 or 1989.
Ro/clle told Ihe Senate Judiciary Committee last month
that thr league has no plans for expansion until all
franchise and antitrust litigation. Inrludlng a suit by the
USFL, is cleared up
A skeptical Sen Hob Hasten. R-Wls., said of Rozelle's
expansion promise. " If you believe that letter. I've got a
bridge to sell you."
The Missouri lawmakers have particular Interest In the
question because three Missouri teams
basketball's
Kansas City Kings, the St. Louis Cardlnuls football club,
and hockey's St, lands Blues — hnve been fingered as
(H)sslblltles to shift operations elsewhere.
The Danforth measure requires specific guidelines be
considered in approving franchise relocations, such as the
move o f the NFL’s Baltimore Colts — In the drnd of night —
to Indianapolis last year.

U n ited Press In tern a tio n a l
For the fourth straight year,
the Los Angeles Lakers have
proven they're the best o f the
West.

NBA

SOKC

N e w Law To Establish O rd e r

nwnv

THE toALU.
'A E Q u i n t l y ,
t h a t WILL p r o d u c e
A L9"r»AAL SWAYING

too m u

MOClfT

L

M
H 1 H*
&gt;ne **
tf n
»lt IT
u n mi
11tf ■
tin ■
&lt;)u m
n n •*•
n ii at
III 4m
&lt;11 4»
mi m
•l H O)

)■

***** •%

fa
a* P

«• Cw#
I mkA

•*

'■

IM M f*m it **ewxr^i# *• Ot *vje

&gt;*• 1Vf m

1*

Tar*r^

#*

Fi$ 1 i i *

n PvH«ii •&lt;La4tMn$ * * '■»

»«

,Hi
4f&lt;l

Sm

rt OatM •* PVn

v-i ) a t ) «
rt

Ilk sM N

M lip a
Wt

V

HI
Ij* HI
M K 18)
i ll 1/1
' l l VI
11&lt; 81
1)11 14]
• Q IN
11 1) 4*
11 * &lt;*
I U 81
111 8*
ID 18

.t Ceeriand r T**a*

0 * 9*

rt

£$y.t 1 * a«"
(All

»'

(*t

U**t$TAoa a*

Hr. V«rh (U l «t It

t II f m

Pi#

iWMai Urdt
n AUn*a •» Wti!
Ha‘ Pa
&gt;t la* kHfmm at Va&gt;«
»4
Hr.

in

Hu

r«

|zjgHw«w», Pit,
H.ialF|H* n II
fi|
( r t I N 'i

Wmi&lt; Pit

P+m

ft

a*

Lm

CHK$V*

(All

e mmeSs &gt;t A««$n at
ftA
«i l n «
City

fig,

at V

Aidifll

a*

«• P«t

The laikers have won 14 of
lheir last 15 games. 25 of Ihe
last 28 and are one o f ihe few
NBA clubs not intimidated tn the
Mile High City, winning their
last eight games at Denver
Los Angrlrs. which won 13
gam es by an average o f 17
points tn March, found Itself In a
tight game for a change. The
Midwest Conference leaders led
83-75 wlih 82 seconds left In Ihe
third quartrr,
Reserve Bob McAdoo scored
15 of his 20 paints tn the final
(x-rtod to rally ihe Lakers, and
the result was more o f the same,
alter all
Los Angeles outscored Denver
34 18 In Ihe final quarier to win
easily, with McAdoo scoring 10
(mints In the Oral live minutes of
the period lo |&gt;ut Ihe winners
ahead to stay.
Flscwhcre. Milwaukee slopped
Boston 109-103. Cleveland deleuted W ashington 122-107.
Philadelphia downed Atlanta
102-91. Phoenix beat Seattle
119-109. C hicago beat New
Jersey 108114. Detroit topped
Indiana 124-121, Dallus beat
G o ld e n Stutc 127-121 and
Portland bested Houston 127I 13.

Yankees' Trio 4-Hits Dodgers, 9-3

P h ila d e lp h ia H onors W ildcats

Th e Yankees broke a 3 3 tie
with six runs in the lup of the
fifth and went nn In claim a 9-3
victory over the Dodgers In
Altamonte Little League Senior
Divisio'i action.
The Yanks took a 3-0 lend In
tlie top of the second tail the
Dodgers battled thick to lie tt
with two runs In tlte second and
one in the third Bui six walks
and two errors in tin* fifth led to
the Dodgers’ downfall.
Rusty Swain, John Kelson and
C ory Prom com bined for a
four-hitter for Ihe Yankees wnli
Kelson getting the win. Mitch
Shattolook tin loss.
Prom ami loti Metzger had
two hits and one RBI each for Ihe
Yanks while Derek Olrrn was 1
lor 3 with two Kills, Jim Krcnier
and Warren Woodard hud two
lilts each to aeeonnl (or all of the

PHILADELPHIA IUP1I — Kollle Masslmlno looked in need
of a nice warm bed from all the celebrating hr nnd his
Vlllanova team did after winning the NCAA basketball
championship.
Even after flying from Lexington. Ky., to Philadelphia
International Airport Tuesday, busing to Center City and
boarding a flatbed truck tor a 10-block lunch-hour (Minute
through downtown streets, he found his umpteenth
"second wind."
Before u crowd that packed JFK Plaza for a rally
honoring the Wildcats, the bleary-eyed coach began Ills
speech:
"It's really a pleasure and an honor for me and my
team..." — his eyes lit up and his voice suddenly rose In
volume - "...TO BE THE Cl IAMPIONS OF THE NATIO N!"
"T h e y did It." Masslmlno said. "Th ey shot 79 percent
(from the field). I told you when we left school on
Wednesday that we were going to have a herkuva party.
They did a herkuva Job and they won the national
championship."

Tyson Scores Ligthwelght TKO

Baseball
Dodgers’ olTense,
In Major American Division
play, ihe Tigers plekeil up a pair
of victories, 9 7 over the Indians
and 13-3 over the Yankees, lo
raise their league-leading record
lo 7-1on the year.
A g a in s t th e In d ia n s , an
rlghi-run foil rill paved the way
for tin- Tigers. Chris Jackson
had two doubles and drove In
three runs lo lead the way while
Pablo Abreu and Billy Moore had
one Kill each. T.J. Gulfrlda had
a single and triple lo lend the
Indians.
Against the Yankees. John
Jump had a (Inc day al thr platr

Penske Team Enters
Five Cars In Indy 500

ATLANTIC CITY {CPU — Lightweight contender Darrel

Tyson scored Ills 14lh consecutive victory with a
third-round technical knockout over Gerardo Venzor
Tuesday night scheduled lO-round bout.
Tyson, of Washington. D.C.. Improved to 19-1 with 10
knockouts. He floored Venzor. of Mexico, with left hooks In
each of the first two rounds.
Venzor. 17-7 with 17 knockouts, still foaggresslvely but
complulned of a broken right hand In his comer. Upon
examination, ringside physicians slopped the bout as the
bell sounded to start the third round.
Tyson, ranked only 17th by the World Boxing Council, a
big payday last month when former World Boxing Council
Junior lightweight champion Hector "M ucho" Camacho
withdrew from a scheduled bout In Las Vegas. He owns a
non title victory over U.S. Boxing Association rhampion
Jim m y Paul, who will challenge Harry Arroyo for the
International Boxing Federation title Saturday.

INDIANAPOLIS |UP1| - Three

driver.
Mrars w ill hr making his
veteran drivers were nominated
Tuesday for five cars entered In eighth Indy U|i|»rai.mcr. He's
the Indianapolis fiOO by the coming back from a crash Injury
formidable Penske team, which ihat forced him to miss the final
has won four times at the lamed live races on Iasi season's cham­
pionship circuit.
oval.
Unxrr. a veteran of 19 pre­
D efen d in g rh am p ion Rick
Mrars of Bakrrsflcld. Calif., was vious IndUiu.qxitls chases, won
named to drive for Penske. as the race three limes before
joining the Penske team two
were former winner Al Unser Sr
o f A lb u q u erq u e. N M., and years ago.
Sullivan has been in I wo
Danny Sullivan of Louisville. Ky.
Another entry was rcccivetl previous huly 50Os. but failed lo
from Foray 1lie Racing of W heel­ go the distance In either.
So far. 48 cars have hern
ing. Ill . with Howdy Holmes of
Ann Arbor. Mich., listed us Ihe entered for the May 20 race.

Bauer Upsets No. S Teltscher
CHICAGO (UPI) — Mike Bauer, a relative unknown,
wants to learn how to breakdance. Juan Farrow, a real
unknown, wants to learn how to break Into the professional
tennis circuit's top 100.
Bauer, ranked 58th In the world, came up with the first
upset Tuesday In the $315,000 Grand Prlx tournament In
Chicago, beating No. 5 seed Eliot Teltscher 5-7. 6-1. 6-2 In
a first-round match.
Farrow, a former champion on the Junior circuit and
three-time singles champion In NCAA Division 11. was the
first real surprise of the tournament, taking No. 3 seed
Andres Gomez to three sets before losing. 7-6 (7-31, 4-6.
6-3.
Top-seeded John McEnroe and No. 2 seed Jimmy
Connors play their first-round matches tonight at the
University of Illinois Chicago Pavilion.

TH E ADVANTAGE VA
RAISE YOUR STANDARDS O f RIDE
AND TLREORMAHCE.

1 --------------

E i u 'Q o a a u c n S
*

Longwood Freedom Bank teed off with 25 hits en route to
a 18-5 thumping of Lake Mary 1 Teer Lab In Seminole
Pony Baseball Pinto Dtvlson action at the Five Points
complex.
Crts KlelbJ and Scott Jones each hit long home runs to
lead ihe Freedom Bunk hit parade. Kllebl also added a pair
of doubles and a single and drove In four runs for the day.
Bubba Lamb added to the barrage with three triples and
five RBI's and Matt Knox added two singles, two doubles
and drove In three runs.

R A D IA L M U T h T E R R A IN m ;
GIVE YOUR TRUCK RACE PROVEN
PERFORMANCE.
9rmMmt« mmpam

with four hits, including n home
run and a double and live Rills.
Terry Brown wan 2 lor 2 with a
homer. Chuck Lam b was 3 for -I
with a double and Kevin Morro I
for 3 wllli two R ill’s. Lamb also
pitched five Innings or shutout
lull, sulking out 10 and giving
up only one fill, a single by John
Peck.
In Major D ivision National
League play. Tara Calvin's fine
fielding play at second base gol
the F!x|&gt;ns out o f a liases-loaded
Jam in Ihe bottom of the sixth as
the FIxpos field on for a H-6
victory. For Hie game. Calvin
rohl&gt;ed Itie Dodgers o f lour fills

2i RACING DAYS LEFT
WE CLOSE MAY 2

NIGHTLY 7: SO P.M.

In Rookie League play, thr
Angels scored nine run In thr
lust two Innings to break open a
close game en route to a 21-12
victory over the Tigers

((loop! tun.)
HAT.:MM. WO). SAT. i f w

PLAY THE EXCITING A HIGH
PAYING"PICK 8" 4 "BIG Q"
THUM FAIR
GRANDSTAND ADM.
FOR LADIES
Visit our two climate
controitod clubhouse* lor
. your tine dining end
entertainment pieeeure.
Clubhouse reeervettone

WHATEVER THE
TEMPERATURE

e

TRA N E

831-1600

Sanford-Orlindo
Kennel Club

WaalltaMron Canttal
Air CondltlonsrlHsal Pump
Won't Lat You Down
E M m ■ ■
W
A L h

North ol Ortendo.
Just Off Hwy. IM tf
Ml *a* Trial ta
Sorry No Minora

P L U M B IN G S
H E A T IN G INC

Itlltf llrtlftf tf Ax*

iwUlii

Prt lit «U1

WE
BUY
M O R TG A G ES ...
We also m ake 1st and 2nd mortgage loans
on Residential or Com m ercial Real Estate
up to $100,000.
Personal loans are availab le Including
Revolving Credit Line.

» -

Freedom Bank Thumps Teer Lab

TWtJ H flO lT
or= LETTING TOUR. EYE3
TA.9CK fcflC K WITH
THE CLUtoHERQ A3 IT

Bittm
CfMOMMFM

ktv Ws
101ttt
» ) « - tv**
FN
Us Lwnrt
tw%i in
Hr* TH

Sm ith Connection Lifts SCC
Past St, John's River, 9-1

a

r*3 e «a v to
0
W «l_ U IN TO

PREPS

TUBE

Lakers
Best O f
NBA West

Play Bettor Golf with JACK NICKLAUS

SCOREBOARD

W rdnrtday, April J, l U S - t *

T/A

------------ 1
H IG H T E C H ~ T vt MAKE CAMS yCRJXlRM&amp;
RAD LALS
i

r
A

O

K

T
MON

M il

i m
I) S 10

:
SAT

M

A

II f&gt;1Ci

3 2 2 - 7 4 8 0

1

2 4 13 , S . F r e n c h A v e .
*■

SA N FO R D

R

,

T

Family Credit Service*. Inc
* A * jt B &gt; la r y u C S lG M n s a C «p ia &lt; )W n

AT&amp;T

O w anuNm r
|
G a l l in g ’

mw w r

fce* 4k*e —» a*e•an

tit

ON S.K 4)4. NEAR 17 92
In The Perk Square Shopping Ctr.
Longwood, FL 32750

J-aLti

NUVM icon,

831-3400
1 ,L a

'

l

'

*

a

« «

�» »v

10A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. Wednatday, April ), IMS

...P e t i t i o n
Continued fro m page 1A
The petition contends the
shopping tenter would Increase
traffic In the surrounding resi­
dential area and endanger the
children who wulk to and from
tfie school. It also states the
i " c o m m e r c ia l a t m o s p h e r e "
would breed crime and "nttrnct
an element not normally present
In our neighborhoods."
Th e center.would also "tempi*'
students to skip classes, the
petition contends.
(hit above all this, Ms. Lee
says, Is I he group’s overriding
concern thal a significant ret reulional area will tic plowed under
by "nnolhcr shopping cenler ihe
j city doesn’ t need.”
"T h is public owned property
should lie protected find pre­
served for the use ol the public
as set forth In the future land use
elcmenl of the Comprehensive

Plan of the city of Sanford
ralhcr than the financial gains of
certain individuals or corpora­
tions..,,” the petition slates.
But Huber said Ihere wouldn’ t
be as much protest If people saw
the "q u a lity " or ihe project. He
said lodny he has spoken to
eight residents nround the lot
and explained the plans hr has.
Others have refused to talk to
him. he said
" I t ’s a first-class shopping
center. It’s like nothing that’s
hern built In Sanford." Huber
■aid
f'lannlng and Zoning Commis­
sioner C.H Franklin, who Is also
assistant principal of Sanford
Middle School, said today the lot
would not deprive students of
recreational areas. He also said
development of the property Is
Inevitable.
” 1don’ t think It should remain
a field. ” Franklin said However,
hr said If the residents can show
him why the project shouldn’t
go on the property, i U vote no

warehouse construction at thr
silt* “ I think we can come to a
reasonable compromise.” she
said Under courtly policy, a new
Continued from page 1A
Srhnremnn. however, thal she request for rezonlng of the parcel
would took favorably on a re­ to industrial cannot be filed wllh
quest tor a planned mill devel­ the county for one year But ihe
opment which would also permit Sc finer man a can request re*

...County
!

U.S.Keeping The Pressure
On Japan To Open Markets
WASHINGTON |UPI| - The resolution Is similar to one
adinlnlslratlon and Congress are passed by the Senate unani­
keeping Ihe pressure on for a mously last week.
The State Department said
b ro a d o p e n in g o f J a p a n ’ s
Tuesday Japan has agreed to
markets In U.S goods
The Semite Finance Commit­ simplify technical standards II
tee Tuesduy approved a bill applies tn IIs Imports of U.S.
d im ting Prcsldcnl Reagan lo telecommunications equipment
retaliate against Imports Irom within 60 days. Japan also
Japan within 90 days unless It agreed to have American com ­
panies soon represented on Jap­
further opens Us markets lo U.S
anese bodies I lint set these
products.
The I louse passed 394-IB a standards
Those were two In a lengthy
irsohillort urging Reagan lo lake
: action In reduce tin* U.S. trade list of steps the United Stales
drllell und In respond In unfair w a n t s J a p a n to l a k e In
Japanese trade pruetlrrs The telecommunications trade.

W oifinger Speaks Against Killer's Parole

on it.”
Plans call for the center to be
surrounded by a 6-foot high wall
State Attorney Norm W oif­
and sidewalks. Huber said. The
inger Is In Tallahassee today to
property will be landscaped on
speak against the possible re­
twill sides o f the wall He said he
lease of a eonvlclrd killer
would enclose the center's three
According to John Grlrsbaum.
dumpsters with block walls, a
chief assistant state attorney.
concern o f the residents he
W oifinger Is opposed to the
talked to.
parole o f Ronnie Davenport.
As for drawing truants. Hotter
said because the project Is not a
“ convenience store” type center.
It won’t attract students from
across the street. The sidewalks
will make travel safe for students
and If he Is required lo put tn a
Continued from page 1A
traffic light he'll do It. he said.
car." said Smertlson.
Huber said French Avenue Is
Commissioner Perry Faulkner,
already heavily traveled and the
who voted against rejecting
center would not be adding any
Powers' proposal and had pre­
more traffic to It.
viously favored offering him
He said other benefits of the
81 0 .0 0 0 salary, refu sed to
center lo the area Include Im­
comment on why he voted as he
proved drainage and (he addi­ did or how he fell aboui Terry
tion of the property back on the being considered for the posi­
rlty's tax rolrs. He estimates the
tion.
center would pay $60,000 a year
Commissioners ugreed that
In taxes to thertiy.
Terry, who lives in Winter Park,
— R ick Brunson
but owns a house In Longwood.
Is dedicated to thr city and has
done a good Job us city clerk and
zoning to another category, such
f i l l i n g in for t Ik &lt; it &gt; a d ­
as ihe planned unit development
ministrator In his absence Terry
that Mrs. Christensen suggested
said whether thr job would
All four of the commissioners require his living in the rily
present voted against I hr Indus­ would be utte of the Ihlngs he
trial rrquest.
would have lo discuss.
In Ills Inter, Sturm said he
Police Chief Greg Manning was
recommended that both the
named or ling administrator til
change In zoning and the land January until someone could lxuse plan be approved. He said found to fill the vac ancy letl by
thal an casement on the perime­ the resignation o f former city
ter of Ihe property could Ik * adm inistrator David Chacey
deeded to Ihe county to assure
Manning has said In the past
that vehicles from the property
that he does not want the
could not go through Sky Lark
administrator’s Job on a perma­

...C o n s i d e r

Davenport was convicted o f
killing a Scousmnor woman in
1976
Grlesbaum said the residents
o f the com m unity In north
Brevard County, including the
victim 's sister have asked W oif­
inger to speak against Daven­

nent basts. Chacey. who had seaman recruit, serving In (lie
been with the city for 10 years, Navy from 1948 to 1976 He ts
was paid an annual salary of married and has three chlldrrn.
Terry graduated summa cum
834.290. Terry receives 824.064
laude from Florida Southern
a year as city clerk
Just In case Ihe city should C o lle g e . L a k e la n d , w ith a
make Terry an offer und hr bachelor of science degree In
should agree to accept. Manning business adm inistration and
made It clear hr does not plan to personnel management, second
sub as city clerk. "1 want II in ;i class o f 345. Before going to
known. I don’ t do windows ant) l w ork fo r th e c it y he w as
won’ t be acting city clerk." he employed as manager o f the
training program at DavCar. Inc.
said.
The commission will also lx*
The 55-year-old retired U.S
Navy lleulenant commander was inerting with department heads
tilled as eltv clerk In June 1080. at ilte Friday work session to
He worked his way up from discuss mid year budget needs

Business Insurance?
O n e m im e says it b e s t.

T TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
it

Ph. 322-0285
8 257S S. F ren ch A ve ., S a n fo rd
% A u to -O w n e rs In s u r a n c e
I t f r . H mith

• And pupils residing in the
Sandlewood and Meadows Ridge
s u b d iv is io n s lo tr a n fe r to
Longwood Elementary.
U n d e r (h is p r o p o s a I .
Woodlands would have a pro­
je c t e d e n r o llm e n t ol 745.
Longwood would have 763, and
Altamonte would have 715 studenta
A copy of each of the proposals
Is available lor I i i s | m* c H o i i al the
Seminole County School Hoard
office, 1211 Mellonvllle Ave
Sanford.

...S c h o o l s
Continued from page 1A
• Students living in the area
south of Sctnlnnln Boulevard,
west of U.S. Highway 17-92. cast
of Lake Howell Road anti north
of statr Road 436 tn attend
Altamonte Elementary
• Students living In Windsor
Mannor. Moorings and Harbor
Isle subdivisions to
attend
si hnol at Altamonte as wrll

port’s release. Woifinger Is state
a ttorn ey fo r S e m in o le and
Brevard counties and went lo
the stale capital Tuesday.
The Parole and Probation
Commission were to meet early
t o d a y , a n d W o i f i n g e r ts
cxplccted to return tonight

( jr

H ii- iim .

t i n . n z n ir u « « i t a l l .

FREE S P IN A L E V A L U A TIO N

ALL MtuiAMCt mtcxeixn

WARNING SIGNALS OF PINCHED NERVES
Frequent H eadaches
Low Back or Hip Pain
Dizziness or Lass of Sleep
Num bness ol Hands or Fool
N ervousness
N eck Pain or S tilln es s
Arm and Shoulder Pain
Craliutnn Include. Posture Anziyus, Fmtion le t Short

le M M i- s iid iA s a M
iMl . . Til NT 4X0ANf OTHIHF|l&gt;v&gt;hMlttONyBlI *0A .ifMINt »* , » MKi«t rOMruSt »0
P4f C.4NCIL PAIWIN’ 0« »( &lt;•( MPOXSIO»OX P4.VINI »0« *Nf OTNIMSIRVICI II4U N4
tion on T . in u t N * a —cm a . in r o n u io .&amp; 4 n is u K o r ‘ so s i ' - in n
o r *M»OH

D'Nt* 10 tmi t o v i x n i u i K t ion t u t t . i t s in v ic t i u u « u n o u on

Congress Moves Swiftly
To End Jobless Program

CALENDAR

W E D N E SD A Y. A P R IL 3
p hi , open, speaker.
Oviedo AA. H p in., closed.
Seminole County Dog Fanciers
Assn,, M pm ,. Casselberry Se­ First United Methodist Church
WASHINGTON IIJPI) - Bow
Overealrrs Anonymous, open, tug to threats o f a presidential
ttlor Center, 200 N, Lake Triplet
Drive.
7.30 p in . Community United veto ol mi extension ol hcnrllls
M ethodist Church. H ighw ay
C O P E S u p p o rt G r o u p of
lor 340,000 jobless Americans,
S e m in o le Arrm -*7iH 0 p m , .
17412. Casselberry
eongrcsalonaf leudrrs tire swlftlv
F R ID A Y , A P R IL S
Seminole C oim iiuiilly Mental
moving a bill to phase mil the
Health Center. Cranes Roost
Central Florida Klwanls Club.
program, whleli they say will
Ofllt e Park. Suite 377. Pelican
1 30 u in . F lo rid a F e d e ra l
likely tx- signed
Building, Altam onte Springs
Savings and Mian, State Road
rite D em ocratic-led House
First and third Wednesdays for •136 at 434. Altamonte S|&gt;rlngs
Tuesday quickly approved legis­
S em in ole Sunrise K lw anls
! families and caregivers of long­
lation lo gradually end the*
term inrtilnlly disabled. Free of Club. 7 a m . Alt port Hrslm.rant.
supplem ental unem ploym ent
Suntord
charge.
program, which provides federal
University ol Central Florida
P a ren ts W ithou t Partn ers
payments to people who have
Conumtnlly Symphony concert.
rtilF party. 9 p.m., Lake Monroe
run out ol state imemployinctii
H p m . . First P r e s b y te r ia n
Inn. Highway 17112. Sanford
checks
Thr measure was sent In
.Church, Orlando. Free to the C'mimrv music and dancing. Call
ltie Senate, wtierr lloor action
' public.
904 734 6637
m old come as early as today.
T H U R S D A Y . A P R IL 4
T a x h e lp w llh AAR P/tR S
F A A A ccid en t P r e v e n tio n
trained volunteers. 1230 p in..
‘The voice vote In lire I loose
Program Aviation Safety Educa­ Casselberry Senior Center. 200 came only hours alter the Ways
tion Seminar. 7 30 p m . Bkyjxirt
N, L a k e T r i p l e t D r i v e .
and Means Committer and the
R estau ran t B an qu et R oom , OasaellK-rry.
Republican-led Senate Finance
Saulonl Alt (Mitt Sponsored by
Free Income lax help (or re
Committer troth (ejected |&gt;lans
litres, 9 a in lo I pm .. Sanlord
t South Seminole Flying Club
In extend tlu- program, ojiting
Flee to thr public
Cham tier of Commerce. 400 E
instead to track the $180 million
Fits! St . Sanford. Through April
Suntord Jaycees. 7:30 p.in..
phaseout
15 Hrlng copies of last tax
J u y c e r b u ild in g . 5 th and
Cotigtrsslnn.il leudrrs — truth
return, forms for the current
French. Sanford.
Republican and Democrat —
Sanford A A. 1201 W Flrsl St..
year and other relevant materi­ were united 111 luvor o( a phase
5 30, closrd discussion, and 8 als
out, arguing tlr.it President
Reagan was certain lo vein
anything more generous.
The plan would allow no new
recipients beyond this week, but
The South Seminole Flying Airplane, and Stepping up to a
would Irt those currently In the
Club will sponsor Us next uvla* Complex Airplane
jrrogram recelvr the checks they
Hon safety M-tnlnar Thursday at
Handout publications on each
have coining Without any Irgts
7 30 p in in the Sky port Hrsiuulatlon. benefits lor all recipients
runt banquet mom at the Sun- Him w ill be available Dour
prize* will tn- given away and
would end with the checks being
fort! All pot I
The ptogi.im will Include three rrlrrshmcuts served Ttie meet­ sent out next week
ing Is open tree to the public.
"I think It’s safe lo say there
Hints Pi opr Her Operation and
tins at least been a signal Ihul It
Th e next sem inar al thr
Cate. Tukcofl Performance Con­
would Ire acceptable" to Reagan.
siderations for the Single Engine alrjMtrt will tie In-Id May 2

a A M t A N P O R O P A I N C O N T R O L C L IN IC
TO
O P C H IR O P R A C T IC , IN C .
8 P.M.
2471 8. AIRPORT BLVD. — SANFORD
■ * ’
SANFORD 323 S783
* At Utuat Thtp Srmcr It FACE ORLANDO 84B0349

1

A via tio n Safety Seminar Thursday

* i. *-

R 4 M

l 1 I 1 i t t. *.

H o u s e W a y s a n d M ean s
Chairman Dan Husinikowskl.
I) HI said If tin- |iauel approved
an e x te n s io n . 11 w ou ld tie
' 'e x le n d in g in p eople raise
h o p e " House Speaker Thomas
O’ Neill vild llte phaseout Is the
only tiling that’s going to txslgnrd."
W ltlie House s|Hikesmau Larry
Speakes said while the a d ­
ministration Is lulklng In leaders
about the matter, "our position
al the moment lsop|)o*ed "
Tin- program, which provides
additional Jobless beiirllls lor
about 340000 people who have
used up their 26 w erks of
regular state payments, rxplrcd
Monday, A person tn thr pro­
gram receives between eight and
14 weeks ol additional checks,
depending on the Jobless rale In
tile recipient's slate.
The Democrats’ three-month
extension plan — estimated to
cost about $430 million — would
have allowed current recipients
to recelvr the checks they are
due. and would have given
either four or eight weeks of
checks to new recipients

Don’t Miss It...

Sanford Appreciation Week
A P R IL 22 * 27
Special Tabloid April 2 4 In The

Evenin g Herald
300 N. French Ave., Sanford

322*2611

( T u lliu s

m r m b e r ol S econ d S h ilo h
JONES M. "S O N N Y ” Q1LL
Mi Jours M "S o n n y " Gill, 46. Missionary Baptist Church.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e h r r
ol 4(X) Locust Ave.. Sanlord.
died Tuesday ui Central Florida husband. Curlix J r . two sons.
Regional Hospital. Saulotd Born Crelz J. Illllsmutt and Darrin
August 24. I D3H in Laurel Hlllamun. Sanford; three daugh­
C reek, W.Va., he m oved to ters, Jeanette. Autanrit and
Sanford Itom their In 1965 lie Pamela Hlllsmau. all of Vcru
was a Rapid Delivery Service Beach, m o th e r. Mrs. J u lia
truck driver, a inrmlter ol Hie O'Neal. Sanlord; (our sisters.
Longwood Trntrcosl.il Church Edrll Turner. Delorls Grant.
and the Moose laxigr. Sanlord
Barbara Williams, and Annie
Survivors Include two daugh­ Mar Lockett. Sanford; three
ters. Tracy Gill. New Zealand. brothers, W esley O ’ Neal Jr..
Tummy Sloakuk. Reynoldsburg, Leon and LuVrrn O’ Neal. San­
Ohio; mother. Grace Phillips, lord; and six giandchllilrrn.
Wilson -Flchelbcrger Mortuary
Sanford; three hroltiers. James,
Mary Esther. Fla.. David. El Is in charge of arrangements
Cajon, C ullf, Robert. Chariotlesvllle. Vu.; one grandchild
G ru m k ow F u n era l H om e, Funeral Notices
; Sanford. Is tu charge o f ar­
rangements.
SILL. JONIf IONNT"
M n. Vcrnell Kelly. 44, of 1610
Persimmon Ave.. Sanford, died
Monday at Indian River Memori­
al Hospital Bom Dec. 24. 1940
III Sanlord, she lived In Vrro
Beach for 11 years before re­
turning here three months ago
She wus u nurse's uldc and

despite Home argum ents last
week Hull a limited extension ol
l Ite program would Ite a way Ur
stand up tu Reagan

Let’s Hear
It For
Sanford!

Fluwcrn For A ll Occasions

AREA DEATHS

V E R N E LL K E L L Y

Senate Kepiilillcim leader Kobeil
Dole said
" T i l e ch oice Is e ith e r lo
shnwlMuii with Miuirthlng more,
nr get a trill signed with some
tiling less
added House (•()!'
leader Robert Michel ol Illinois
D rm ocrallc leaders agreed,

- F g n e i l w c y i i n S ' M ) Jon#»M Vwv-y
GUI. 44 »l «U0 l « M l A r . . fenSxd. *S o OtaU
T a u U y a tll h» TSwrydAy i t I p m • •
Gramkfe* Funaral Ham* (lva*al » lth ISa
H«» Huts G rant artlctAttng Z iW xM n a y
csll a l ts . lunar al hema today I 4 and 1 *
p m G ra n W m Sunaral Mama in cM rga
H I L L V. V I B N I I L
r« n a &gt; tl ta rv k a a tor M r t Varnail s a lly . 44.
at l i l t P artlm m on A y , . laniard. »So d a d
Monday w ill ba Said at I p n Saturday at
Itia la . und IS tkdi M itatanary ta p s a l Church.

i

tn» Airport Hlvd . laniard, alts lha Ray
Wtllta i Pop. pallor m charg, Burial ta
(ollo-« tn Rattlaan Camatary Calling Soon
•or tr&lt;4ndt mil S 14 yin today at ISa
thapai WIlMn ClcSalbargar Mortuary in
charga

/ U iJ iJ w J
UU 1 frOadi &gt;

OAKLAWN

323-1204

HUNT HOtfJMCJfT CO

FUNCHAL MOMCVCfMTtRY

MSflAV YARD

Our comply ia Fonaral Moisa. al our
camatary, makaa dtlftcuN Umaa m i *

Hary. 17-82 — F*m Ptrk
F h .tt* a $ M

444 At Msakart M
Im N U C M tn in M t
IU-4JU
iaotarWlaka Mary
FraZMr Saa

Gene Hunt. Owner

WINDOW &amp; DOOR
GUARDS
THE BEST PRO TECTIO N
A G AIN ST IN T R U D E R S !!!

FUNERAL HOME

FREE
INI I. ISrk tT.

Funeral directing cannot be
regarded as fust another "job . " It re­
quires dedication and a sense of con­
science . . . and W. L. Gramkow has
both of these.

GRAMKOW

ESTIMATES
SANFORD. HA.

W.L. GRAMKOW LFO

3 2 3 -2 6 0 0

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

J ,
•►* ►»*

4

�PEOPLE
Evening H«r»ld, Sanford. FI.

C ook O f The

Wednesday, April 3. IH J - IB

W eek

You Are Invited . . .

MAUNDY THURSDAY
COMMUNION
SERVICE

Combining Homemaking With Career All In
A Day's Work For Nurse And Single Parent
Hj Dorothy G ree n e
H erald Correspondent
Combining single parenthood
with a career In the 1980s Is a
commonplace occurrence, hut
making It work Is another mat­
ter
Karen Scudder. our Cook of
Ihe Week, is a woman whose
determination and drive have
helped her raise two sons and
pursue a career In nursing while
still maintaining her hotnemakIng skills. She attributes much of
her Intcrset in cooking to m em o­
ries o f her childhood summers
spent In New Orleans with her
maternal grandmother.
" I ’ve always considered my
g r a n d m o th e r an e x q u is it e
gourmet cook," Karen recalls.
"S h e really had alt the French-CaJun-Creole recipes, and
they were superb, but leaching
wasn't her strong point and
what t didn't learn from her. I
learned from Jusl striking nut on
ttiy ow n ."
At home m Sanford's Sunland
Estates, Karen runs a tight
schedule that seems quite hectic
at limes. She has 2 sous. Jimmy.
18. and Kevin. 13. but she
somehow finds the time to hake
a batch of cookies or a Moravian
Love Cake for a bake sale.
Karen's love for nursing comes
naturally to tier "Mother started
out as a research botanist for the
U S D A ." Karen re m e m b e rs ,
"until we moved to Southern
Florida Since there wus no
research facility In that area, she
went Into leaching biology after
ta k in g fu rth er e d u c a tio n a l
courses."
"Dart was a volunteer fireman
all hls life," says. Karen, "and
even started the Pompano Beach
Highlands Fire Dept, with hls
little 1950 MG ronsdsler. It was a
riot. A garden hose, a rake, a
M i f l U Ptoete try T im m y Vlm cm il
broom, a fire extinguisher, and u
K a r o n S c u d d e r t o k o s c o o k ie s f r o m o v e n
shovel — that was It — all
attached to hls little roadster. Listening to the scanner for fire tr r e d N u r s in g P ro g ra m at
And that was Pompano Beach calls became a way ofllfc."
Daytona Beach Jr. College afler
Highlands llrst fire department.
Karen started In the Kegis- moving to the Central Florida

............. S A L E

F R I. &amp;

Easter Toys &amp; Baskets
Stutters
1 0 % O ff

o h

4

4 1 9 Park Avenue. Sanford
Childcare Provided

ol

- r f l
Don't Forget
The Shoes!

ALISON
Stylish, Comfortable. Easy
Care Shoes. Available In White Leather. Pink
Leather And Black Patten.
&lt;

208 E. First St.
Downtown Sanford

322 0 2 0 4

x v r ;
r»i 11

T rie d m an ’s

Sotn.tr.

Selected Dresses
2 0 - 5 0 % O ff

EVERY FRIEDMAN'S DIAMOND
HAS A WRITTEN CERTIFICATE

1 Disavowal
Glume

Anlluua
MyU

Drawing For Easter Bunny

t.lu a lf r

$79
* I Wlatl

Wtlghl

Saturday April 6th

Mr East Wt Slr.«t
Sanford. FIs.
311 MM

$/&amp; Q
U 7

M a a 'iH

TrU

*1 9 9

fy u t S cu tfiv u i 7 * * *4 ty u a t

W EE K ID D S
FASH IO N S

TH IN K IN G
EA STER ?

« th O N L Y !

W c Design &amp; M ake Pageant Dresses To O rder And Seam tress
Available For That Special Design &amp; Alterations.

7 4

FIRST UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH

M t Carat

SAT.A P R I L 5 th

Imported Sport Jackets &amp;
Madras Pants20% O ff

area with her family, but had to
withdraw when her first son was
born During hls early years.
Karen worked as a lab techni­
cian In the Entemology Lab at
Ihe Agricultural Research Center
on Celery Avenue "w here 1spent
some time rearing worms and
moths, feeding, counting and
weighing them," she says.
When Karen's marriage ended
In 1974. she returned to nursing
school and earned her licensed
practical nurse degree As a
single patent with two young
children at hom e. Karen at­
tended school during the day
while working as a dispatcher .it
night for a security patrol com­
pany based In Orlando
- Afler graduation In 1975. site
began working In a nursing
home and with only a year of
experience, she became assts
tant charge nurse on the 7 to 3
shift, "and that's something you
don't walk Into fresh out ol
school." says Karen, proud ol
her profession " I'v e tried sever­
al times to leave It and try
something else, but 1 always go
back to It." she says Karen
presently works for a nursing
registry which fills stall positions
In area fnrllltles on an "as
needed liasls" doing sjm-c I.i I care
nursing in Intensive Cure Units
Karen's 11 p.m. to 7 a.in. shut
seems to work very well for her
while the boys are still young
and at home. After Kevin Is off to
school In ihe m orning, you
might hear Karen talking on her
CU radio as she unwinds after a
See COOK. BB

Thursday, A p ril 4,
7:30 p.m .

eg

.e C &gt; ° 'CC

t'a' l/HCarat*

Hours;

Solitaires
In l4Kt, tml.l

Mon Frl. 10 5 30
Sat 10 3
&lt;•

Vnur Chute*

AS

s129
In. la ilti

W e d d in g Hands in lO K t, G o ld

ijd ,.

lUrnm

1/

la d y '.
4mm

*39
££,' *49

It’s Easter
at

*S5» *59

O nyaanJ
D ia m o n d

S/\Q

F K IL D M A N 'S IN V IT E S YOU T O O l'K N Y O U R O W N P K K S O N A L C IIA R O IJ A C C O V N I

Sanford Plaza
Altamonte Mall
Winter Park Mall

•M/iikinf • Max L’ntaur BUou
o u l lq u r

3 2 3 -4 1 3 2
tit W. F irtl Str— t
Downtown Sonford

M

i

l

».si t a ia n

M l m i h i im i h i w a ll.

iiiu

n i.

iii

nn

» r r .iu iw \r r

yiaunMiUMiiiiMti cum w .N tiu u «u i)

�JB— Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

W adnalday. April J, IM 1

French Classic Desserts
Laced With Rich Am aretto
Carry On Regal Tradition
Nothing tyals a llme icstfd
rlf-ivrl whlrh hax Ix-cn modified
to perfection. One example Is the
Ha ha ati Hhum. a tradlllonal
French dessert cake which hax
undergone nrvcral centuries of
flavor enhancemenl
The latest recipe Improvem in i, a new liqueur taste. pro­
duces perhaps the most de­
lectable heir to the "b a b a "
lineage yet -• Haba au Coconut
Amaretto.
The baba originated in Poland,
and a r c o r d ln g to Its c o n ­
noisseurs. wan first made with
rye flour and Hungarian wine It
then "m igrated" to France dur­
ing the reign of Louis XV. whose
father-in-law, exiled al Nancy,
itmuard htmself by (touring a
liqueur on a take and xrttlng II
afire. Having hern an avid reader
of "T h e Arabian Nights," he
culled his s|M'clalltr "A ll Haba "
King Louis and his In-law
would ftave been delighted to
lanle the most recent version
made with coconut almond li­
queur. The velvety Coconut
A m a retto seeps Inin a rich
sponge cake that's zexly with
cllriis Whipped cream made
wlili the cordial crowns it all
This dessert, perfect for drop-ln
company, hints awhile. In fact,
the longer the baba soaks In the
liqueur the heller It tastes.
IMalslns may be substituted for
currants In the recipe.)
Another scrumptious classic
(It for a king Is Amari llo Cheese
Pie. Th e scent and tasle ol
OcKyper Amaretto make it the
most elegant of cheesecakes
Lastly prepared a day In advance
and chilled. Ibis delicious di­
ssert features a graham cracker
crusl and a cream cheese filling
decked with glistening, golden
apricot halves
Desserts ol royalty pleasing
ancestry like the balm and the
cheese pie become more noble
with the addition of such It
queurs as Amnretlo and Corouul
Amaretto. Serve one ol these
violations on dessert classics
and carry on lire regal tradition,
B A B A AU COCONUT
A M A R E TTO
Vs cup rlrtrd currants
5 t a b le s p o o n s C o c o n u t
Ainaretio
" j cup intlk
'*i cup hiattrr or margathie
1 package |' » mini e) dry yeasl

2 I a b I e s p o o ns C o c o n u t
Amaretto
In small Ixiwl of electric mixer
combine heavy cream and Co­
conut Amaretto; beat until suit
jieaks form Yield; 2 cups
A M A R E TTO CHEESE PIE
i baked 0-lnch crumb crust
I ra n ll pound) aprlcolx
1envelope unflavored gelatine
2 8-ouner packages cream
cheese, at room temperature
cup DeKuyper Amaretto
Pour syrup frurn apricots Into

a measuring cup. add enough
water to measure I cup. In small
saucepan mix gelatine with Vi
cup syrup mixture; let stand 1
minute. Cook over low heat,
stirring constantly, until gelaiine
Is dissolved In small ixiwl of
electric mixer bral cream cheese
until smrxilh Gradually beat In
Amaretto, gelatine mixture and
remaining Vi cup apricot syrup
Pour Into prepared pic shell.
Chill until firm Arrange apricot
halves over lop of pie before
serving Yield One O-tnch pic.

Liqueur gives velvety taste to sponge cake that's xesty with citru s.

IDairyl
Pillsbury Big Country Buttermilk,
Buttery or Country Style

Biscuits............. 2 cant 99*
Dairi-Fresh

Sour Cream.......... cuV 89*
Dairi-Fresh

Half &amp; Half............
Land O Lakes Lightly Salted
Sweet Cream Quarters
Easter is a lim e for so many special things
Like gelling together with family and friends And lor
that special Easier feast, you'll find
everything you need at l*uhlix llappv Easter*

Butter.................... c.n *199
LAND Q LAKES Wisconsin Cheese Bar Mozzarella
or Sharp
irp Cheddar
C

Shredded
dd&lt; Cheese . %%* $129
Maggio Skim Milk Cheese

OPEN EASTER SUNDAY
REGULAR SUNDAY HOURS
Ducklings................... r $109
Swift Premium Canned

•COCONUT A M A R E TTO
SYRUP
I cup water
' « cyo sugar
1 medium orange, mqierled.
sliced
Vs lemon. uit|ieelrd. sliced
Vs cupCiKonul Amaretlo
In medium saucepan combine
water and sugar llrlng to tmlllng
over high heat; stir uniil sugar Is
d is s o lv e d
A dil orange and
lem on slices
Reduce heal
Simmer tuitll syrup is reduced to
about I -VS cups, cool Remove
citrus slices Sltr In Coconut
Amaretto. Pour over warm tuba
Yield About 1-H Clips.
• « COCONUT A M A R E TTO
W H IPPED CREAM
I cup heuvy cream

Cottage Cheese ...

$179

IGroceryl
Breakfast Club White

B read.................2

loaves

89*

Breakfast Club Brown ‘n Serve

Rockingham

R oiis..................... 2

Roasting Chicken......

59c

Publix B eef— Government-Inspected Boneless

Almost Home Choc. Chip,
Oatmeal Creme. Peanut Butter
Creme or Vanilla Creme

Shoulder Roast.......... s? *167
Publix B eef— Government-Inspected
Key Club S te a k ......... tr *297

Almost Home Apple, Blueberry,
Cherry or Iced Dutch Apple

Sandwich
C ookies.......................... 1«9
Fruit S tic k s .......... "UV‘*1 B8
Almost Home Fudge *n Nut

Brownies...............,&lt;U%OI«169
Keebler

Town House
C rackers.............. '2*V 91”
13-oz. Pecan Sandies or
12-oz. Chips Deluxe

Keebler Cookies .. 7? *129

Lamb For S to w ..

Lay's 7-oz. Reg., 6.5-oz. Bar-B-Q.
Sour Cream &amp; Onion or Unsalted

U.S.D.A. Choice Lamb

Lamb
Shouldor Chops
Round Bone
Chops ....

Potato Chips....... pt? 99*
THIS AD EFFECTIVE:
THURS., APRIL 4 THRU
WED., APRIL 10. 1905

Swanson Clear Bool or Chicken

Broth.............

14 5 o i

. Fresh Pork

can

Heinz

Boston
Butt
&amp;

Gherkins Pickles.
Self-Basting (Broth
Basted), Broad Breasted
Gov’t-Inspected, Shipped
Quick Frozen, Evisc.,
U.S.D.A. Grade A
(7 to 9-Lb. Avg.)

Publix Turkey
per

Lager or Light, In 12-oz. Cans

Old Tap B eer....... *1”

Everyone's Favorito

Bakers

Macaroni Salad,...

Chocolate Flavor
Chips....................

lb.

p*»

Beet or Pork, Large

»i&gt; »
i

Bar-B-Q
Sandwich............ 7«? *2 ”

Reynolds

Swift Premium Fully
Cooked Either
End or Whole

Smoked
Hams
per
lb.
r

99*

Oven Bags........... p*« 89°

T urkey Dinner

ISeafoodl
Dressed Smelts

$289

Fresh Fillet of

Flounder............

IS' *3°®

Freeh Frozen

Bay Scallops....

* ' »4»»

Fresh Frozen

Cod F illet..........

V 92t9

Large Shrimp . ..

•S' * 7 "

Mt. Dew, Reg. or
Diet Pepsi Free or
Reg. or Diet

12-oz. cans 12-pk.ctn.

$449

Dinner include* • 9 lo 10-lb H outa o l S««ford
tix**» . 4-lb* of d*lK iou» d rttu n g (your choic*),
t quart o t g ib i*t gravy A 4-lb*. o f gr*«n bean*
Sarta* 13 lo 13 paopl* May b * tsquaalad
•ithar hot A read* lo *4 l that day. o i cold with
halting tnalrucUon* m tiudad tor hosting al
homo.

Peeled &amp; Develned

Reg. or Light Beer

3-liter
bottle

from the Deli!

Fresh

Polk, Highlands, Orange, Lake,
Seminole A Oseeola Co.

Pepsi

f

Ricotta Cheese.... 3lV *309
Dairi-Fresh Small or Large Curd.
Schmierkase or Lowfat

Hostess Ham.............. «» *979

2 lat&gt;lrx|&gt;4M)ii* sugar
VS teas|&gt;ooii sail
1 1 leas|MMin grated lemon (rer-l
T eggs. Ilghlly beaten
2 cups Ilnur
In small Ixiwl combine cu r
nulls and Cot-unul Amaretlo: let
stamt TO minutes In small
saucepan, scald milk, add butter
and silt until inched Pour Into
large trow!, cool lo lukewarm
(150° lo I lf&gt;°F | Sprinkle yeast
over milk mixture, sth until
dissolved Slh in sugar, sail,
lemon peel. eggs, currants and
Cm om it Ainaretio In which
ciirrunts were soaked Add lim n.
lu ai until smooili Cover let risc
lu warm place until doubled In
bulk, iibuul 1 limit Heal down
with a wooden spoon; tuin Into a
g ieased and Homed B-cttp bnndl
pan Cover, let line In a warm
place until doubled, about 50
minutes Hake III a T50*F. wven
.15 minutes or until cake tester
Inserted In center comes out
clean Cool on wire rack 5
minutes Turn nut ol pun. cool
15 minutes Meanwhile, prepare
Coconut Amaretto Syrup* He
linn liatia to pun Poke many
holes In tnilia with a skewer or
long lined lurk (iradually pour
syrup over India until syrup Is
completely absorbed Let stand
2 hours. Invert onto serving
plate, wrap with plastic wrap
and allow to stand overnight
Serve with Commit Amaretto
Whip|M-d Creum* *

S-|3B

ph g

Maggio Whole Milk

Swift Premium Gov’Mnspected,
Shipped Quick-Frozen, Evisc., U.S.D.A. Grade A

P u b lix

S oi

Mozzarella............

Goers

$479

(Limit a Please, With Other
Purchases of $7.50 or More,
Excluding All Tobacco Items)

$1795
k;-\

each

Spiral
Sliced H am ..........

•2 "

Just In Time for Easter!
Multi-Colored

Easter Eggs........

M*»

Tasty Cheese

Colby Longhorn... » 79*
Fresh-Baked Pumpkin or

Apple Pie........... r

M 7*

Fresh and Flavorful

Dinner R olls........

79*

Assorted Publix
Promium Brand

Rhine, Reg. or
Light Rose' or Chablis

Ice
Cream

Paul Masson
Wine

half
gal.
w /V .

f

(Comet with Cole Slew A Baked Beantl)
Honey Kut (half or whole)

$019

1.5-liter
bot.

A

$489

�Chutney Dressing
Gives Different
Taste To Salads
Crisp, crunchy irxturrs and
Juicy flavors make salads a Joy to
cat. Making a salad is a creative
experience and onr that adds
more nutrition to the dally diet
You may combine a variety of
Trulls, legumes, vegetables, meal
Or fish for an entree or shir dish
Fruits, especially, go well wllh
basic salad greens Merc grapes,
apples and peanuts make sur­
prising company 'or spinach A
different dressing is chutney.
Serve with com or bran mull Ins
for a filling luncheon snack

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI

Tips To M ake
Easter Egg Hunt
Fun A n d Games

I ctip red grapes, halved and
seeded If necessary
1 apple, diced
/cup dry roasted peanuts
2 tablesjtoons chopped green
onion
1 tablespoon loasted srv im r
seeds
Chutney dressing
Tear spinach Into blte-sl/e
pieces Toss wllh grapes, apple,
peanuts, green onion and sesa­
me seeds Toss wllh dressing to
coat well This kllrhen-teslrd
rrclpe makes 6 servings (Nole
use favorite grapes in season nr
in l x s e v e r a l v a r i e t i e s . )

C RAPE S 'N ‘ SPIN A C H SALAD
1 pound liesh spinach

Chutney D ressin g; Combine 3
tablespoons oil 2 tablrspoons
white wine vinegar 1 tablespoon
(bopped chuincv
'« tcas|&gt;oon

Assorted Colors,
Attractive Single

Bouquet

Orchid
Corsages

$

4

9

each
for

9

To make sure \&lt;nir Easier Fgg
hunt Is all fun and games, keep
these lips fn mind front the
" ir ic iii F.unih Circlemagazine
• Use only fresh, clean, un­
broken eggs To hard-cook eggs,
place, eggs in single layer In
saucepan add cool lap watei to
cover eggs hv I " heal to almost
trolling, simmer wlthnul txuling.
10 minutes Remove eggs with
slotted s|Kxm in bowl o f cold
water lor 5 mimics Kcfrlgerntr
im m edlaiely
use within one
week Hard-cooked eggs can Ire

Combinaton salad packs nutrition

Fresh Cut Flowers
Arranged In A Special

each
for

Wedneiday. April J, 1US-JB

each eurry powder, salt and dry
mustard and dash Ixiitled hot
|M-pper sauce Makes about (j
cup

In Bud &amp; Bloom,
Single Stem

Publix Milk
gellon m t

Lilies

$499

6-inch
pot

I Sr 10« I II IN I e * M id*
St .m
5A S i # A**-'KM* •

I

$6 "

»*•*•
•**
/ ---------------------- &gt;
lira iL l.itl Fluh I .i ,«i1&gt; A

Publix. The Easter place
for plants and flowers.

Fresh As

Assorted Colors, In Bud and Bloom, P o tlo d

Gloxinias, Hyacinths,
Tulips, Mums.............. Mr $5 "
In Bud and Bloom, Beautiful Large

Hydrangeas............... Mr *7 "

removed from trulgc and left .11
room irm prntturr lor up to 2
hours
• To empty eggshells: Pierce
|Hiiiilrtl rmi o f egg with large
sterilized needle Then make .1
lugger hole |h I .it rounder end
Carefully move needle around
inside egg to break yolk Holding
egg over howl blow through
smaller hole ill! egg is empty
Rinse mil shell thoroughlv and
lei dry
For a hunt dial won t gel out
ul hand, fam ily Circle suggests
• Choose a dale and loeallon
(preferably adjoining yards —
remember someone has to hide
all die eggs!) Then decide on the
amount von wish to spend
You'll need aboul 100 eggs ( h-i
10 children, plus prizes, clioco
tale bunnies and lolli|Nips mils
•Uorvliooks — your choice!
• Use a c o m b in a tio n ot
hard cooked deeorated e g g s and
plaslle ones III led with Jelly
hearts and assorted candles
Decorate Ihe shells with nontax
11 111,11 kers stencils, slickers or
kits available at local stores
• On die day ol Ihe hiinl. hide
1He eggs mil doors on the pro
pern Flay U salt- Family Circle
notes dial hard cooked eggs
should not lie iiuislde lor more
than 1wo hours
• Divide die children Into
groups according in age Tile
child who Muds the most eggs
wiihm an allotted nine wins
prizes lor Ills her group Follow
with telreshmelils
• II it tains You'd he amazed
at how mam hiding places their
are m a house, even in a laudly
room alone

In Bud And Bloom. A ssorted Colors P o lle d

Tulips and Hyacinths...

r

Mr

$1"

F resh Crisp Iceberg

Lettuce

49

large

head

^ p T T fT n it ^ h o It r

Jumbo
Biscuits

0

G pl pfcg

Spring picnics, complete wllh
chirping lords, budding trees
and crisp tresh vegetables and
fruits, are u dellghl nrr matter
what die weather.
Alter Ihe Jug of wine, fresh
bread and c h ees e naturally
follows die main course: Asjiaragirs Seafood C ltef Salad using
( r 1s p • I r n d e r s p e a r s o f
Washmgliin asparagus
Th e blanched and chilled
sjicars are wrapped In rerl or
green pepper rings and sil atop
crisp Iceberg Irltu cr nrxl In
((Hiked shrimp, smoked salmon,
hard conked eggs and sliced
fresh mushrooms A creamy
dressing eornpleies die meal

___ ,, Juicy

ig a g S ''- - ■n

where
shopping is
q pleasure
7days
oweek

Zesty Yellow

warmth u&lt; spring And
time lor a bounty o( tender
pioduee fro m I’uhhx Vuu II find
th in g you need .it the peak
a! Iredmess because at I'uhlis. (lie produce is as
Iresh as the new1season

r

( io« On l jtioii

Oaken Angef FUfe*

Coconut

Z esly Sun World Brand

Green Onions............. ft 59°

It's tfie littic things t/uit
make the differenceat I 'ublu.

Florida Crisp

fresh

Carrots......... 2 ^39° 5 b". 95c

Made From Concentrate,
Publix Brand Chilled

i J o y o u s I t i s s o w r W is h e s
I m m H ih lix .

Fresh Tender

Asparagus

Min ili%
J* m u .*l "I ItaM tu i
I nl III* si Ix n m h o f h.i|*fri(it

in vmii Vili r tilt h

Orange
Juice
64-oz.
size

Ida Red Apples....... 3 bty 99c
Cooking Onions.... . .. 3 b»g 49c
Florida Grown Flavorful
Fresh Mushrooms..... mV #179

SALEL

It's lime for the gentle

$^49

rutin
MMMIS

per

TM| RiG*»

lb.

TO
OUANTlTHi
%OiO

White Grapefruit

Idaho
Potatoes

1.°S-€99
baa

Florida Ripe Sweet Fresh

S traw berries

M

THIS AD EFFECTIVE:
THURS., APRIL 4
THRU WED.,
APRIL 10, 1 9 8 5 ...

OPEN
REGULAR
SUNDAY
HOURS
ON
EASTER.

32 of boI

Dinner
Napkins
SO cl [i* J

Aluminum
Foil
IS »q II loll

This Ad CU*ct&lt;«* Al That* location* Onl,

SANFORD PLAZA,
SANFORD

per
pint

Keg O
Ketchup

$&lt;f 4 9

All P urpose,
G e n u in e Size A
Florida Sweet Juicy Seedless

Tomato

^^^Troi*n
Ptrxtppt* SlitMb

Dole
Sorbet
pm l t in

For Your S tra w b e rry S h ortcak e, Publ ix

Dessert Shells

p**

69c

Sun Giant Brand (W h o le , Chopped. Sliced, Silvered)

Shelled Almonds....... 'W *1M

LONGWOOD
VILLAGE CTR.,
LONGWOOD

Publix

Salad
Sparks
Picnic

X

When purchasing, select long,
straight spears with closed,
i (impact lips There Is no dll
Irrcnie In leuderiipss lietween
slender and thicker stalks m il
irary to popular Irellrf Seleri
spears ol a similar thickness so
Ihey will cook In di&gt;- same
atnoiml ol lime
ASPA H A U U K SE AFO O D
CIIEP S A L A D
12 oz tresh asparagus s|&gt;r.irs.
( leaned and trimmed
H 12 cleaned lorn Iceberg
lettuce
2 hard conked eggs, peeled
and rpiurlrred
10 / cleaned, rooked shrimp
-I oz smoked or kljiperrd
salmon skin unit hone removed
2 oz Ire s h illu a liro o m s,
cleaned and sliced
parsley sprigs
green |&gt;ep|&gt;er rings
tllanrh a sparagu s for 1-2
minutes, chill I’laee lettuce In a
large ImiwI or arrange on four
large salad plates. Divide aspar­
agus s|»eurs lulu four bundles
and place a green |&gt;ep|&gt;er ring
around each bu n d le. I’ laee
bundles over let luce. Arrange
shrimp, salmon and egg evenly
around asparagus Garnish with
sliced mushrooms and parsley
sprigs Servr wllh Creamy Salad
Dressing Four dinner servings
CREAM Y S A L A D DRESSING
•it up dry mustard
V* Up eurry powder
1 Tbsp sugar
A tsp sail
2 Tbsp dour
V5Crold water
le g g
U C vinegar
2 Tbsp butter
lA C sour cream
Mix spices, sugar, sail and
flour In a small howl Whisk cold
water Into spices In lop of
double holler, combine egg ami
vinegar. Sllr In spice mixture.
Cook over trolling water, stirring
c o n s t a n t ly , u n t il m lx lu r r
thickens. Add b u tler. Chill
dressing When cold, stir In sour
cream

�&lt;&gt;— Iv tw lw f H tr tld . Santoid, F I.

W td iw sd iy , April t

Most Family Histories Reveal
Some Treasure, Some Trash

IM I

Chicken Calcutta , a
splendid choice for an
elegan t main dish,
can be made In a
skillet In minutes.
Sections of succulent
orange and toasted
almonds are added at
serving time.

Brunch Becomes Institution
T h e w eekend brunch h&amp;a
become an institution A de­
cidedly ra.Hual gathering, brunch
la held at a late hour to free the
morning for Joggers, crossword
puzzle addicts and late sleepers.
Dress is apt to be Informal, and
food and drinks are taken at a
leisurely pace.
Starling ofr wllh a pin tier of
chilled orange Juice from Florida,
delicious drinks are available for
all lastes. With a Jigger o f vodka
for a Screwdriver or a dash of
Curacao and n splash of Cham­
pagne to make a Mimosa, orange
Juke, whether straight or mixed,
gives a refreshing vitamin C
boost that starts off a brunch
with style.
Chicken Calcutta Is a splendid
choice for an cleganl main dish.
Made In a skillet in minutes, II
can easily be kept warm for.late
arrivals. Strips o f chicken breast
are sauteed briefly, spiced wllh
red pepper and onions, and
simmered In a heady mixture o f
chicken broth fragrant with orange Juice, curnln and curry.
Before serving, sections o f suc­
c u le n t o ra n g e and to a s te d
almonds are added.
For ttiose who like a dramatic
presentation, a puffy om elet
mukca a grand Impression. Most
cooks don't realize how easy an
oven omelet is to prepare, uml
you get exlra points for serious
cookery. It's belter to use two
skillets to make two om elets for
eight than Increase the size o f
the one large omelet that feeds
four. Egg whites, beaten wllh
cream of tartar, create the pufl
when the omelet rises In the
uven. It's topped with un orange
sauce flavored with cnrttainom
and vanilla, for a light hut
satisfying brunch dish.
Good brunches m r»n simple
but delicious food und good
c o n v e r s a t i o n . E nJo y t h e
end-oMhe week celebration In a
relaxed atmosphere and taks
advantage o f easy to make and
serve one-dish meals
C H ICKEN C A L C U TT A
4 tablespoons vegetable oil,
divided
I pound bonrlrss. breast of
chicken, skinned and cut in
strips
I large onion, ehop|&gt;ed 11 cup)
1 red pepper, cut In Julienne
strips
1 rib celery, sliced ('A cup)
2 iublr spoons (lour
2 teaspoons curry powder
44 teaspoon salt
Vt teaspoon ground cumin
I t lras|KKiii prp|KT
1 cup chicken broth
W cup orange Juice Irom
Florida
2 oranges Trout Florida, peeled
and sectioned
U cup sliced almonds, (ousted
Cooked rice or pally shells
In large skillet heal 2 tablesltoons oil; saute chicken until It
turns while; remove und set
aside In stime skillet heal re­
m aining two tablespoons oil;
saute onon. red pepper and
celery two minutes. Stir In flour,
curry powder, salt, cu m in and
pepper. Cook one minute. Grad­
ually add broth und orange Juice
Cover. Simmer 10 mlnutea. Add
cooked chicken und orange seclions. Stir gently until heated
thruugh. Sprinkle with toasted
almonds Serve wllh rice or In
buked pally shells.
YIELD: 4 servings
I

puffy omelet w ith

ORANQE SAUCE

!
!

H (urge eggs, separated
Ik cup orange Juice from
Florida
V* teaspoon errant of tartar
IMnce of salt (optional)
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
2 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
Sour cream (optional)
In small mixer bowl beat egg
yolks until thick. Gradually udd
orange Juice. In large mixer bowl
beat egg whiles with cream uf
tartar and salt until still, but not
dry. Fold yolk m ixture Into
whites In a 10-Inch skillet with
an oven-proof handle, heat oil
and butter together Four hi egg
m ixture. Cook over m edium
heat until bottom is golden.
Place skillet In a 250* F. oven.
Hake 15 20 minutes until eggs
puff and mixture Is firm. Re­
m ove from oven Mukr a I-Inch
deep cut scross omelet, slightly
off renter. Fold smaller part over

larger pail. I urn out uniu plat­
ter Spoon Orange Sauce over
lop Sene w llh tour cream. If
desired,
YIELD; 4 servings.
•O RANG E SAUCE
3 tablespoons brown sugar
2 tablespoons corn March
1 teaspoon ground cardamom
Ilk cups orange Juice from
Florida

Yt teaspoon vanilla
3 orangrs Irom Florida peeled
and sectioned
In medium saucepan rdmblne
s u g a r, c o rn s ta rc h and
cardamom. Gradually add or­
ange Juice. Heal, stirring con­
stantly. until mixture bolls and
thickens. Snr In vanilla and
orange sections.
YIELD: About 3 cups.

DEAR A B B T : ' Missing Link '
w ro ie : " M y c h ild r e n , now
m iddle-aged, are demanding
that I write a ’ fam lly history, as
I've had a very successful, col­
o r fu l l i f e , h a v e t r a v e le d
exten sively and have many
grandchildren. I have avoided
doing so beccuse I was Illegiti­
mate and had a very unhappy
and h u m lllu tln gf childhood
Should I confess all to the entire
family and brazen It out? As for
friends, I doubt that they would
rare. I'm nearly 75 and have few
contemporaries left."
My husband assumed ' Miss­
ing Link" was a woman, and I
assumed It was a man. Who ts
right?
TANYA
DEAR T A N Y A : You are. In­
terestingly enough, my readers
were alm ost e v e n ly divided
concerning m y ndvlre. I said.
"It s a rasclnnttng story and part
of their heritage. If you fear that
your famly will think less of you.
you're wrong. They will proba­
bly think more o f you.*'

D ear
Abby

Here's a typical letter from a
reader who agreed with me:
D EAR ABBY: Thank you for
advising "Missing Link " to tell
his life story. A year before my
father died. I was able to con­
vince him to tape-record several
long conversations we bad con­
cerning his life. Although he
died a very wealthy, self-made
tnan. be Miked for hours about
his failures. Ills disap poin t­
ments. his regresls and the
lessons he had learned over thr
years. (His successes had been
well-publicized.)
I had h I s m o n o Io g u c
transcribed Into a book, and I
adcled appropriate pictures. I
plan In give them lo his grand­
children nexl Christmas. This

will be a gilt that money can't
buy.
Pass this Idea on. Abby. So
much history Is lost forever
because most people are reluc­
tant to admit their human fall­
ings.
NO LIN KS MISSING
DEAR NO LINKS: Head on Tor
an opposing view:
D EAR A B B Y : You advised
"Missing Lin k ." the 75-year-old
woman, to go ahead and write
her memoirs — the bad with the
good.
You must have a screw loose.
If I were to tell rhr true story of
my llle. the rattling ul skeletons
In my closet could hr heard In
the nexl county.
I have been a prostitute, a
drunk, a con artist, a felon and a
drug user Fortunlely I was able
to leave all that behind me.
II I ever write my life story,' I
wouldn't wanl anyone to read It
until after I am dead. And I am
H ill V &gt;&lt;&gt;

MISSED NOTHING
IN NEVAD A

^
We Invite You To Come
C elebrate Our Recently Rem odeled
M arkeL.Bigger &amp; Better To Serve You

Just In Time For
Your Easter
Menu
Shopping

MEATS

7 GREAT
DAYS
W e d . April 3
Thru Tues. April 9

MEAT MARKET — FISH MAR
DELI and CHEESE STORE
OPEN EVERY DAY EXCEPT MON. 8 A M • 5
IN REAR OF VILLAGE FLEA MARKET
1500 FRENCH AVE.
321-2398
inpm tL SANFORD

D E L I ~
Premium G rade

Extra Lean • DoVallo Brand
’“The Very Best"

SAVE

*1.50
EACH

BOILED $ 1 4 9
HAM . . . * 1* 7b

/ SAVE L

LARGE
SHRIMP

Sliced To Order
Oven Roasted - Boneless

TURKEY
BREAST

...?269
Lb.

Sliced To Order

WHOLE

Each
limit 5 W ith
A n y P u rc h a s e

W E C A R R Y A N EX TEN SIV E
LIN E O F D O M E S T IC
A N D IM PO RTED C H EESE
Imported

BIG EYE or
BABY SWISS
CHEESE . . .

$24?J

TURKEY
BREAST
Fresh
U.S.D.A. In s p e c te d

GROUND

BEEF
5 Lbs. O r M o r e

REGISTER FOR

DRAWING

1st P R IZE-2 5 LB . B O X
EX T R A L O . R O C K SHRIMP
2nd PRIZE O V E N ROASTED
TU R K EY BREAST
3rd P R IZE-1 D E V A L L E
B O IL E D H A M
ho ruacKAji i
NMDMO! M rn

ItOHM

U.S.D.A. Choice Extra Loan

SAVE

40 *
POUND'

GRO UN D
ew e
C H U C K ......... M
3 Lbs. Or More

WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF MEAT
BEEF - V E A L - P O R K - L A M B

Lb.

FREE

*1.00
-POUND

Individually W rapped

CRAB $ 4 9 9
STICKS*
ib
5 LB. B O X .............. $14.95
Extra Large

U.S.D.A.
&gt;
Choice-Boneless L POUND

CHUCK
ROAST

R O C K SHRIMP
IN 5 LB.
B A G .........
25 Li. BOX

Lb.
. . $ U 9 LB.

SANFORD’S SEAFOOD CENTER
We have Our Own Fishing Boat...
S eafood Fresh From The Water To You
OYSTERS - SHRIMP • FISH - CRAB - CLAMS

�•..Cook Of The Week
C ontinu ed From IB
bupy flight shift CB buffs In »he
Sanford area all know her as
Coffee Bean.” a handle which
bespeaks the kind of beverage
■die favors most. A hearty laugh
and a cheerful altitude have
always been two o f Karen's
wrong points.
Single parenting sometimes
means having to supplement
your Income with extra work
and Karen has tried her hand at
selling vacuum cleaners and
wiling Items at flea markets, and
is presently a distributor for a
food company which packages
prepared foods In retort pouches
that have a shelf life expectancy
of up to 25 years In some cuses.
These pouches are especially
c o n v e n ie n t fo r c a m p e rs ,
backpacking and fishing trips.
In fact." Karen says, "sonic
workmen place them on their
, t-nr engine or dushboard and let
them warm up and. com es
lunchtime, they've got a hot
lunch. They are fully prepared
meals not dehydrated. " This is
only one example of the many
products which are marketed
basically as convenience or
. emergency foods.
f " I l'» strictly a matter of time
and en ergy." says Karen, "but I
love to work with ceramics and
liquid em broidery." A cookie Jar
In Ihc form o f a tree stump with
adorable little animals peeking
out at you is almost always filled
with Karnc's homemade cookies.
In the Spring. Karen enjoys
putting In a small garden Just
outside her kitchen window. "1
don't know how much luck I'll
have this year." she says, "hut
I've started some rose bushes
a lo n g w it h b e ll p e p p e r s ,
tomatoes, parsley and n fewstrawberry plants. I do a lot of
frrrzlng and sometimes I’ll stop
at n roadside stand and buy a
bushel o f corn or other fresh
vegetable and blanch It then
freeze It for future use, It's a
tlmcsavcr." says Karen.
"Mother Is a good basic cook,
but I gol most of my Inve for
g o u rm e t r o o k in g from m y
grandmother," Karen says. "H er
Gumbo Is heavenly. She allrd It
Okra Gumbo, hut as far as l‘ m
concerned, it's Shrimp Gumbo.
It has shrimp and crab, and she
always used som e ham for
flavoring. It look forever to
make, so I use a simplified
version."
Karen remembers going lo
New Orleans and "do nothing
but pig out on Creole cooking.
Grandmother would go Into the
kitchen and Just whip up all the
Crrolc dishes, it was fantastic."
Although her family Is spread
out Into other states now. Karen
says, "It all siurtrd In New
Orleans. We had some of the
best lim es there, especially
during Mardl Gras The family
had a summer home on the
other side of tak e Ponlc'hartraln
In Mandrvllle and we'd go there
for picnics and on weekends."
From her uncle's second floor
olllce window on Canal Street In
Nrw O rleans. Karen recalls
"hanging out the windows" with
her cousins lo watch the Mardl
Gras parades.

With a big smile on her face.
Karen says " b a s ic a lly I ’ ve
a lw a y s b e en k n o w n as a
Pollyanna. There's no point In
letting life get you down. Just
pick up the pieces and go on. Pul
one foot In front o f the other and
keep on going without looking
down."
Along with her New Orleans
grandmother's Gumbo. Karen
has added some favorites o f her
own Including an elegant Black
Forest Torte for those with rich
taste buds:
INDIAN FRIED EG G PLAN T
I medium eggplant, peeled
and sliced
1 cup flour
I tsp. taking powder
1 tsp. salt
l cup milk
V4 cup salad oil
Mix all Ingredients together
well, Dip eggplant slices lnlo
batter and fry tn hot grease until
golden. This Is a good batter for
fried onion, okra or mushrooms.
GRAND M O THER'S O K R A
GUMBO
1 slice ham. 14 in. thick,
approx Vi lb.
2 medium onions
2 pods garlic
1 bag frozen okra, approx. 1V4
lbs., cut
1 can tomato Juice |! pt. 1V1
oz.l
1 quart water
1 tablespoon cooking oil
2 cubes chicken bouillon
2 cubes beef bouillon
l can (6 oz.| select white
crabmeat
1 lb shrimp, cleaned
1 Isp. Ihytne
I tablespoon parsley
'A tsp. salt
■A tsp, black pepper
Dash of red pepper. If deslrrd
Dice ham and rook for a few
minutes In a tablespoon of oil.
Add onions and garlic. Saule
w ith bam u ntil unions are
tender. Add tomato Juice, water
and cook on low heal for 15
minutes. Add okra, bouillon
cubes, thyme, salt and pepper.
Cover nrul aim me unother 15
minutes. Add shrimp that have
hern cleaned and devclncd. Add
crab meat, removing any bone
tissue and separate. Simmer
another 10 minutes. Serve over
mounds of cooked, fluffy rice.
Serves 0-8.
FLU FFY DU M PLING S
I cup sifted flour
1 tsp. taking powder
Vi tsp. salt
Enough milk tn make u soft
dough
Mix all together, loll 111 flour
and place on top o f rapidly
bolting liquid. Cover and do not
peek for 15 minutes. Good with
chicken and gravy. Makes about
u dozen good sized dumplings
RICE PUDDING
1 cup cookrd and suited rice
2 cups milk
2 eggs
Vii cup sugar
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
1 cup raisins
Pour milk over warm rice.
Beat eggs and sugar together
and add lo rice. Add vanilla and
raisins. Hake at 350 degrees
about 00 minutes nr until knife
Inserted In center comes out

JAY’S HAIRSTYLING DEN ‘
c o o * ’ 0 ’ * £ a 4 tv i

S

U

Co^ o /v

CARE FREE
CURLS...........*37.50
CHILDREN
Under 1 0 . . .'3 5 .0 0
REUX0R
TOUCH UPS .*1 7 .5 0
WITH COUPON ONLY

FULL SERVICE SALON

Expirra 4 4 M

"'Haircutting A
S ty lin g At It" Best"

Walk In. Always
W’rkwne

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

100% Cotton Cups

clean.
M O R A V IA N LOVE C AK E
1 p a ck a g e Duncan H ines
lemon cake
4 eggs
1 pkg. lemon Instant pudding
mix
44 cup oil
H cup water

for

100% Comfort
Cross Your Heart

Grease and flour a 13x9 inch
taking pan. Put all Ingredients
Into a large bowl and beat al
medium speed for about two
minutes. Bake In a 350® oven for
•10 minutes or until done.
While cake Is taking, make
Icing:
2 cups powdered sugar, sifted
2 tablespoons melted butter
VS cup lemon or orange Juice
Mix all together until smooth.
As soon as take comes out of
oven, pierce all over with a long
lined fork. Spread Icing over hoi
cake, one spoonful at a time,
working it into the performu*
Hons so that It sinks In complete­
ly Let cool and enjoy.
T H IN AND CRISPY O A T M E A L
COOKIES
l lA cups butter
2V1 cups oatmeal
l Vi cups sugar
4 tablespoons cream
1Vi cups flour
4 tsp. taking powder

F r o m Ptaytex

NOW
ONLY

$9.99
Now Available At

'W tc u w e l fla c a &amp; k M '&amp;

Stone
211 E. FIRST ST.. DOWNTOWN SANFORD

322-4712

CHECK OUT
THESE

EXCITING
VALUES!

1 fR k

1 tsp almond extract
In a large pan. melt butter und
cool slightly. Add oatmeal and
mix together, then add rest of
Ingredients and mix well. Drop
VI teaspoonfuls onto ungreased
cookie sheets and take at 350°
about 18 minutes, or Just until
edges start to turn golden. Store
In airtight container. Mukrs 7-8
dozen rookies.
B L A C K FOREST TO R TE
Cske:
Meat oven lo 350®. Brush sides
and bottom of four 9 Inch round
layer cake pans with bulirr. Two
layers may ta baked al a lime. If
desired. Measure Into large m ix­
ing bowl:
14s cups unslltrd all purpose
flour
144 cups sugar
I '•« tsps. taking soda
I tsp salt
VS tsp. taking powder
41 cup butter
4 squares (I oz, each) un­
sweetened chocolate, inched and
cooling
1V4 cups water
1 tsp. vanilla
Beat at low speed to blend,
then taut at medium speed two
m inutes, scraping sldrs und
bottom of taw I often Add three
eggs. Beat 2 minutes more. Pour
Vt o f the tatter (about 1 cup) Into
each pan. Layers will ta thin.
Bake 15 to 18 minutes or until
wooden pick Inserted Into center
comes out clean. Cool slightly
und remove from pnn, then cool
thoroughly.
CHOCOLATE F ILLIN O :
Melt I Vi tars sweet cooking
chocolate (4 oz. each) over hot
water. Blend In 44 cup butler.
Stir In VI rup chopped toasted
almonds
CREAM FILLIN G :
Beat two cups whipping cream
with one tablespoon sugar and I
tsp. vunllla. Whip until stiff hut
do not overheat.
TO FINISH TO RTE:
Place bottom layer o f cake on
serving plate. Spread with VI the
rhocolutr filling. Add Ihc next
layer and spread with Vi the
cream filling. Repeal the layers,
ending wllh cream filling on lop.
Do not frost sldrs. Using vegeta­
ble peeler, make chocolate curls
with remaining VI bar of sweet
chocolate to decorate top. Re­
frigerate until ready to serve
This torte freezes well.

Wednesday. April 1, IH 5 - S B

ALL ITEMS A PWCES EFFECTIVE THURS, APR 4 THRU
WED. APR 10 1966 QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

LIGH TN
LIVELY
COTTAGE

BREAKSTONE

SO UR
CREAM

■ so™

$169
24-OZ

1&amp;OZ

SEALTESTl
COTTAGE

LIG H TN .
LIVELY

LARGE OR SMALL
CURD

ALL VARIETIES

$159

6 PAK
30OZ

24-OZ

BREAKSTONE

s i 89

SEALTEST
DIPS

RICOTTA

FRENCH ONION

OR GUACAMOLE

; jw v u tw * m

$J49
&amp;OZ

1&amp;OZ

Show Your Loved Ones You Care, With Flowers!

Remember April 7th Is Easter Sunday
Beautiful Spring
Flowers Arranged
In A Weaved
Basket!
Cash &amp; Carry
Only

323-5227
3 D A YS ONLY
• T H U R S . • FR I.
A «AT

M ? aster
Dresses

* 6 "

50%°fL
Save An Extra 20%
On Our Large Selection Of
GEORGETTES-JACQUARDS
LUCNSCREPES-C0TT0NS

Discount Is Off Our
Already Reduced Prices
Giving You Savings Of Up To

50% OFF
Juntor-PMMa-MUayLarts-Vi biaas

B igger V alors On B e tte r Quality '

Stem St S*44f
non sat .
n o * 30

/

2 1 2 E. First St.
Downtown Sanford

S

%

Sanford Flow er
Shop
" Q uality S e rv le t Since 1 9 5 6 "

2 0 9 E. Com m ercial Ave.
D ow ntow n, S anford

32 2-182 2

\v
I

�»B —Evening H *r» ld , Sanford, F I.

Wednesday, April J. It»5

Make Calcium Connection To Help Avoid Health Problems
Mont people are aware of the
And since women tend to live in their tiO's have required new hypenenslon. Including heredi­ against hypertension.
particularly for post-menopausal
Importance o f eating xerudbly
longer than men, and bone loss dentures three times as often ty. obesity, smoking, lack of
ft o w M u c h C a l c i u m I % women That's about 2H rups
anti choosing from Ilie four food
Is a normal purl of ihc aging after the age erf 50 as women exercise stress and diet. In terms Enough?
milk, plus abour three ounces of
groujw for overall flood health
process, Ihe risk for women of who did riot have osteoporosis.
cheese or equivalent calciumHow can we avoid these
of dirt, we have mainly pointed a
Util did you know that maklnfl
d e v e lo p in g o s te o p o r o s is Is
Studies show that aland 25 finger at excess sodium as the
crippling health problems or rich food,
the "calcium connection" In a lv»
greater
million Americans are complete­ culprit in high blood pressure
In a nutritionally balanced
slow down lheir progress If wr
ennentlal to a nutritionally sound
Alveolar Herne Imss May Affect ly toothless. There is no nerd to But scientists are now discov­ have them? The Recommended diet, about iw olhirds o f the
txxly and Important In helping to Teel h
lx- pari of Ibis statistic, and erin g that Intake of o th e r
Dietary Allowanc e of calcium Is adult RDA for calcium will come
prevent several health problems,
Aceordlng to some medical making sure we consume ade­ nutrients may have an Impor­ BOOmg/day for an adult, approx­ from dairy products — two
such an osteoporosis, alveolar
experts, bone loss In the Jaw quate amounts of calcium In our tant Influence on blood pressure
servings a day The other food
imately 2** cups milk However
txrnr loss and hypertension?
(alveolar bone loss) may Ire an diets may help prevent it
to help In the prevention of groups — meal, fruit-vegetable
as well
Osteoporosis: Brittle Bones
e a r ly w a rn in g s ig n o f osHypertension
A number of studies show that osteoporosis, many researchers and grains, normally supply the
And Aging
teoporosls. Women In their 6 0 *
Hypertension Is a major health a low Intake of calcium Is as well as the Consensus Confer­ remaining one-third of the re­
As adulls, between the ages of ofirn suffer from continued loss problem In ilils country and Is associated with increased blood ence of ihe National Institutes of commended amount o f calcium
30 and 40. we will begin to lose
of bone from the Jaw after teeth an Important lac lor In heart pressure. Some medical scien­ Health on osteoporosis, have lor an adult.
bone — It's a natural process
arc lost, whirl) m ay lead to poor
disease There arc- many reasons tists believe lhal consuming suggested increasing calcium
Consulting your doctor Is ad­
However, when we don't get
fitting dentures A recent study
wtiy almost one oul of five adequate amounts of calcium
Intake above the BOA — up lo v is a b le before m ak in g any
enough calcium In our diets, the shows lhal osteoporotic women
A m e r i c a n s u f f e r f r o m life lo n g , m a y help p ro tec t
1 0 00 to 1 5 0 0 m g / d a y — dietary change.
lx&gt;dy lakes the calcium It needs
from our bones. If Oils condition
p rrs ls ts . b o n es w ill e a s ily
fracture from normal, rvrryday
activities T ills Is called os­
teoporosis, literally, “ porous
hones" — n disease affecting 15
million Americans
Osteoporosis generally afflicts
white, middle-aged women and
the elderly. Symptoms are back
pain, and the resulting unbrail by. unattractive "dowagers
hump" — a back deformity.
Other sym ptom s arr fractures of
the wrist and hip
how C a lc iu m Intake A nd
LIMIT-2
Women
PLEASE
Women are more susceptible
to osteoporosis because they
have lo w r r calcium Intakes
BUTT PORTION......... i*7 9 ‘
throughout life, and experience PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY, APRIL 4 THRU WEDNESDAY. APRIL 10. 198S QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
Z' Cosh '
times In their life when bone loss
y
Cash '
y
Cash 7 Cash '
Cash '
Increases Being more weightD ividend
Dividend
D
ividend
D
ividend
D ividend
conscious than men, women
often follow dirts that may be
unnecessarily low In calcium
PANTRY PRIDE
ALL PURPOSE
Pregnancy and breast feeding
PANTRY PRIDE
may also tukr their loll on
calcium reserves, II Ihr diet is
not ader|iiutr in ralrluni. At
menopause, txmc loss arrelerairs, and women ultrn do not
C3&gt; OFF LABEL)
make up for this loss by In­
REGULAR OR EXTRA CREAMY
240Z BTL
creasing their calcium Intake.
12 PAK
DOZEN
3 LH HAG
&amp;OZ FROZEN

SHANK PORTION

HICKORY

SMOKED
HAMS

r

BIRDSEYE

YELLOW
ONIONS

DINNER
ROLLS

Pie Gets
Cheddar
Topping

3
WTO. OM m r o CASH
GMWMOtIHTWCAII

Homemade plrs arc dilllcult to
resist. Mere Is a different cherry
pie — It comhlnrs prepared
cherries with Ircsh pear* and
apples. T h e crilst Is rnrtrhed
wllh Cheddar cheese Serve hoi
wllli Ire cream, plain yogurt or
Cheddar cheese slices on top It
also Is good cold

W e Sell ( 1.S .D A Choice Beef!
GROCERY'

TIIHEK F R U IT S CHERRY PIE
•A cup shredded
Cheddar
cheese
I
package- (10 ounces) pic*
c rust mis
1 cup whole red maraschino

■j* ,

2 '/‘j cups sliced, pared, ripe
(rears
2 ‘.‘i cups sliced, pared, baking
apples

|*&gt;*i*'‘

WMOtl k ir n c i

CORN

HYGRADE WHOLE

t«ciixAHunN(MAir

$J49

300

-

NIBLETS

MR. BIG
PAPER
NAPKINS

lables|MM&gt;ns Hour

3 ta b lesp o o n s m araschino
cherry syrup
2 tnbles|&gt;ounH melted butler
or margarine
tY teaspoons nutmeg
Dash of salt
In a medlum-sl/e bowl com ­
bine cheese and plr crust mix.
Prepare according In (rackage
directions Wrap In plastic wrap
and chill. II desired
On a lightly lloured surface,
roll oul hall ol ihr pastry to an
11 tilt h circle, Line a 9-Inch pic
plate with rolled pastry
HrIdgerutr with remaining pastry
until ready to use
In u large trowl combine trulls
In a small trowl. sllr together
flour, maraschino c-berry syrup,
hotter, nutmrg und salt Add to
(rolls and loss lightly wttli u
link Turn Into prepared plr
plalr
Boll out remaining pastry Into
an I I Inch circle Wllh knllr nr
pastry whrel cut mil It) strips.
It-lireIt whit- each Moisten edge
of shell slightly wllh told water
Arrunge 5 strips across tilling
Press ends lo rim Place re­
maining strips across llrst ones
at rigid angles to make a lattice
Press ends to r'm Fold overhang
of lower crust over ends of strips
Flute edges

Niblets

gS&amp;

cherries

2

W ESSON
O IL

COOL
WHIP

LARGE
EGGS

COUNT

BONELESS BEEF

SMOKED

1202 CAN

789

BONELESS
&gt;INNER HAM

RIB EYE
frl1r raROAST

j i f f 'V

CORN MUFFIN M IX 4 **v 1 .0 0
w j u t . HAMSUROCT. h o i

OHAOS)

^

un

VLASIC RELISH ........ .«* .6 9
0RAPE J E L L Y ........... ^ 1 3 9

POUND

£

.8 8

SLICED

DOLE
PINEAPPLE

BREAKFAST

CJSJSMll CHJNft OH MJCtD

BACON

isriw on AJKi PAC*j

2CK5Z

79

JtNNft O UQWT A DARK

WITHQRAVT PACKET

TURKEY
U10A TORCMOICf
k m u » u u i a m i t e»a

r£

so t

BORDEN CREMORA....... 2 .5 9
AOYAi. UJMON MUIMUUf PWMX OH HO BAAE

SAVE SI 00 PER LB

SAVE GO PER LB
PLANTATION
HICKORY SM O KED

MKJOtN V/Uirr HAMM rONUMAi I OAHMN MtH9l

SALAD DRESSINGS

WHOLE
OR HALF

PER

I y e T t^

AS 2 .9 9

LAMB LEGS

$J39
c w m BROWN * U R V l

NOUUA *11/ OR /Arms

CUMMRLANOOAF

S A U S A G E " ^ T *1 .9 9
MVGAAOf H A l, Mao* ID BONUtSS

ks ,3 .9 9

UADA IDF CHOC* OOMtSTC

12-OZ PKG.

i. 2 .3 9

SAUSAGES

■SS1.49

MAiMUNt A COO.tr)

1*1.99 SHRIMP

^ 1 .9 9

SAUSAGE .. J i .89 ^ R K E Y

1 .9 9

DINNER HAM

mORAOt *URf FORA

JUMtOXlDW

C H E E S E C A K E .......... ..&lt;*1.29
fUOONQ on ISC

FROZEN

ROYAL FILLINGS . . . . u« .3 9

Hake til 425-degrre oven lor 40
to 45 minutes ur until Irntt Is
tender und crust Is golden. Cool
on wire rack. This kllchrti tested
rrii|M* makes ti to Hservings

*tu w t o on crunchy

CHEESE DOODLES .

*0,1.19

PANTRY PRIDE

*o,1.29

VEGETABLES

WW NATURAL, BaASOUC OR HOME IRKS

COTTAGE FRIES

OUT CC«N OR MUlD

10OZ
FROZEN

2/$l

D A IR Y / D E L I
MRS. FILBERTS
.
AGAR
MARGARINE rOfSgSigfc- CANNED
QUARTERS
1 HAM

1&amp;OZ

BM08ZY1 40, IKIOX

COB CORN

«a 1 .4 7

TAONCAMA

TREE TOP
APPLE JUICE

$ ]3 9
6402

STOVE TOP
STUFFINGS

89

ORANGE
MNA SIXTH* AFFIX OR U/TO.

,K“1 .1 9
mat,

APPLE PIES m ^ 2 .9 3
MM

DOLE

m . ORAM*.

. . . m a n 1 ■4 7

C R ow urr a u v m m o

y o o u r t SSS
MMOUM. RJCXD .X *

. a *&lt;*1.00

KRAFT AMERICAN

MBA. OR BUF

r a iftiftr *

FRANKS

ball
FARR

...

won

FWX

OOCAA MATO. U X O W A T OM

1.00

FANTWY NBOS 1*02

CINNAMON ROULS____ 00
r&lt;*

REDO! W IP ............. 1.20

BEEF BOLOGNA oar
W Q — m H U M H M

DEU PICKLES

ja r

SUMAVAM) MCA. OR « .

SMOKEE LINKS wo.

SANFORD 29*4 ORLANDO ROAD ZAYRE PLAZA AT THE CORNER OF 1 / « * ORLANDO ROAD

I

�Microwave Magic

Leg Of Lamb
Highlight Of
Easter Dinner
U.S.D.A. GRADE A
NON-BASTED
t.

Broad
Breasted

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI,

Leg of lamb Is frequently the
M id g e
•■highlight" of the Easter dinner.
Fresh lam b Is a somewhat
seasonal meat, with the choicest
M ycoff
young lamb most plentiful and
Home Economist
reasonably priced during the
spring. Frozen leg of lamb from
Seminole
New Zealand Is available year
Community Cotlegr
round l have used this type and
found It to be of good quality
The best ways to determine w ith lamb C loves of garlic
the age of lamb are the color of which have been peeled and
the meal, size and condition of Inserted In the meat and rose­
the bone The spring lamb meat mary nibbed on the surface Is
should be pink, the bones porous one selection that enhances the
and red. and the average weight flavor of the lamb
When micro roasting a leg ol
of the leg Is 4-5 pounds
A small leg o f lamb wilt lamb a micro thermometer or
microwave tender. Juicy and oven probe Is most necessary
nicely browned A larger leg Place the roast lleg) on a roasting
needs to be cut and the shank rack with the fat side down
half and sirloin half microwaved When micro roasting a shank
end the leg bone nerds to lie
separately.
Almost any herb goes well shielded with aluminum foil

The thermometer or probe Is
inserted Into the meatiest area ol
the roast, at least one Inch away
from the bone The removal time
for medium doneness Is 135°F
If m icrowaving wllhout a ther­
mometer or probe the cooking
time ts 9-13 minutes per pound,
starting with 100% power lor the
first five m inutes and 50%
power for the remainder of lim e
Turn the roast once alter hall the
gpoktng nine At the desired
doncncss
r r m o v c I rom
microwave oven, lent wtth loti
and allow to stand 10 minutes
This will complete the cooking
and equalize the temperature
II you like to marinate lamb
before cooking, try thtsrombina
lion of Ingredients

LIMIT-2
PLEASE

Turkeys
v Cash D ividend

Special

S p e c ia l

Special

-v Cosh D iiid e ru l

H E L L M A N N ’S
m ayo n­
n a is e

PANTRY PRIDE

BREYERS

GALLON
MILK

ICE
CREAM

QUART JAR

2% LOW FAT

HALF GALLON

O PEN

ALL FLAVORS

SUNDAY
(NORMAL STORE HOURS)

Shop Pantry Pride for Quality &amp; Savings!
PRODUCE

2 for 1 sale!
2nd set of
color prints

|

FREE!
FLORIDA CRISP

FRESH

JUMBO
CELERY

F LO R ID A
ST R A W B E R R IE S

$169

3

STALK

PINTS

FRESH

FLORIDA

CUKES
CELLO

FLORIDA
CARROTS

EWno In your cofur film lor
dawSoplng and printing at
tw tegular pries
Gat • M ccnd sat of
print* FREE

3/$l
c
49

59

D’ANJOU

„ „

c

YELLOW
SQUASH

69
c
49
LB

FUMOA

SNAPBEANS .......

La*6 0

GREEN ONIONS....... 3*~o«1.00

CtLLO

FRESH RADISHES

to t

AU

J

Jt

.1 4

%
ossa, tx i l a o n i x m a i m s
twnwQ ruts u m i p i moo w t c am no i h o n o r

&gt;tc 44 hour u fv k *
OFFER EXPIRES APRIL IQ, 1965.

BAKERY

CLOVERLEAF roll. . 2 *21.09
PANTRY PftOI

KING SIZE BREAD . 3 icJwtx1.49

PAHTWf Pf«C* HAMDUHilM04t

HOT DOG BUNS ... 3 ,£1.49
H EA LTH &amp; BEAUTY AIDS
6 4*K
O
0Z
/t

.B

FLORIDA

.

tAMTy FiAnr on

c

E A T IN G
PEARS

.

• Satri borttertess prints
• Prints am dated

ROME APPLES............ 3 .£ 1 .2 9

$149

CREST
TOOTHPASTE

REGULAR M»NT ORQCl

4®!*
M V DAWS
lotio n on o r
OH 4&lt;v 1S « U 6

auHBtotx tonon

t

|$299

BEER
OLD
MILWAUKEE
BEER

6 PACK
1202 CANS

$J69

BfGULAfl OH LXjHT

IN THE DELI/BAKERY STORES ONLY
COUNTRY PRIDE

FRIED CHICKEN
ifl met SATtXL

4 BREASTS 4 THOnS

HOLIDAY EASTER

BUNNY
CAKE

4WV42V4UQS

$ 3 5 9

TURKEY
BREAST

OOCCNI/T B 1 J W

LAYER
CAKE
&lt;tOJQ*Y CASTtA

CUP
V CAKES
CINNAMON
BUNS

SMOKEDSLICED

A.

$ *» 4 9

6 /*l69
6 /*l39

^

OOACSTC

SWISS
CHEESE £ £ &gt;

6"
$229
$

$ 2 8 9

WTCMENFBBM

COLE
SLAW

FTXSH BASED

TORPEDO

ROLLS

LEAN

BOILED
HAM

kZ c

6 89
/

*

PEPSI, DIET
PEPSI. MT. DEW,
PEPSI LIGHT OR
REG. OR SUGAR FREE
PEPSI SUCE OR
PEPSI FREE

----------- .------- f _

)C »$ vm i ■ n j ocwirt m m m o m io m t m m

)

I

LEMON M A R IN A D E

cup lemon Juice
cup oil (vegetable or olive)
2 cloves o f garltr. crushed
2 bay leaves
'.y lcas|&gt;oon thyme
1-i teaspoon salt
' « tcas|KM&gt;n pepper
Combine all Ingredients and
pour over lamb
Left over lamb can be vised In
this rice ptlal.

RICE P IL A F
1cup uneixtked long gram rice
2 cups water
I tublcspoon Instant chicken
lx ml IInn
' j Icaspoon Stilt
11 cu pchopped onion
' i cup chopped green |x-pprr
1 clove garlic, m in crd
I tablespoon o liv e oil
'* icas|xxm taragon leaves
1&gt; i 2 cups cooked lamb, cut In

I inch cubes
Combine rice, w ater bouillon
and salt In a 2-quart casserole,
co ver M ic ro w a v e on 100%
power 5 minutes, silt Recover
It e d u r r p o w e r t o 5 0 %
Microwave 10-12 minutes Let
stand while preparing vegeta­
bles C om bine onion, green
pepper, garlic, anti oil In a
I quart measure Microwave on
UX)% power 2-5 minutes, or
until jiepper Is tender Stir In the
tarugnn and lamb Flutl lltr rice
with a lurk Remove hall of I hr
rice from the casserole and set
aside Spread the lamb mixture
over the rice In the casserole
Top wllh remaining rice Covet
II «• d u c e p o w e r I o 5 0 %
Microwave 3 (&gt; minutes, or tintll
healed through
l.cll over lamb can hr the
liases lor another meal hv ad­
ding vegetables and rtrr or
noodles as extenders This laxly
dish will serve lour
LAM B A N D ZUCCHINI IN
TOMATO SAUCE
P j 2 cups cixikcd lamb, m l In
1 inch cvilx-s
I medium zucchini, cul In
1 inch cubes
l can |Hotiucesl tomato sauce
1 can |4 ounce) uiushrixiiu
pieces
I table spoon brown sugar

10 LBS &amp; UP

s Cash Diindend

W idnesday, April J, 11W—

6 PACK
120Z CAN

$179

I Ix iv le a l

1i teaspoon basil
1• teaspoon salt
1&lt; teaspoon lemon |x*p|&gt;er
Combine all Ingredients In a
2 qu art c a s s e r o le
C over
Microwave on |(M&gt;% |x&gt;wrr lot 3
minutes Reduce |Mtwrr to 5(J%
Microwave H-12 minutes, or un­
til zucchini Is tender, slitting
tiller hall ol the ctxiklng time
Serve over rleeot noodles

Fix A Hot
Sandwich
In Minutes
A lint sandw ich from Ihe
microwave can liecome a quir k,
easy meal Use Hit hillnwlng
guidelines Irtun the itan&lt;|uel
IThmIx lest Kin liens In help you
prepare sandwiches with case
• MrmI sandwiches call t*c
m icrowaved on high or lull
| h i w i i A snlldwlr h with a dell
tale lugrcilleiil such as eggs,
should be prewired on a lower
|xiwct selling Check your oven
uianular lurer's r imklxxik lor (lie
exart selling
• When h ealin g a whole
sandwich, wrap in mlcrowavra
hie paper towels to prevrnl the
top Iroin drying oul and thr
Ihit Iran ol the sandwich from
iM'iomlng soggy
• Using tlry or day old bread
oi l&gt;ui»s In ihc microwave will
mil only freshen Ihrm but will
also help prevent soggiiiess
• Ural sandwlchs Jusi until
they led warm In the touch.
Overhralerl bread or buns will
become rubbery anil lough very
quit kly
• Sandwich lillitigs can l»e
marie t|iilt kly in Hit microwave
I'hen p l a c e th e p r e p a r e d
sandwich in the microwave to
melt cheese, heal loppings and
the bun
Now Iry this hot sandwich
ready in live ttilmilrttor less
HOT IT A L IA N SANDWICH
I package (5 ut.| cooking' hag
Salisbury steak with gravy.
I hawrd
1 slice onion
2 tuhlespoon, catsup
Is teaspoon crushed oregano
Iravrs
I hard roll, halved
I slice |1 o z .) m ozzarella
cheese
In small microwave safe howl,
combine Salisbury steak wllh
gravy, onion, catsup and o r­
egano. Heat, covered on HIGH 2
to 3 minutes or until mixture Is
hoi uml bubbly, stirring once.
P la ce o n e h a lf of roll on
m icrow ave-safe plate. Spoon
Salisbury steak mixture on top
Top w llh ch eese. Heal, un­
covered. on HIGH 30 seconds to
I minute or until &lt;herse melts

�■B —Evening Herald. Sanlord, El.

BLONDIE

W ednrtdey, April ], m i

by Chic Young
wwa TS

by Mori Walker

BEETLE BAILEY
WELL, WE'LL JUST PROP
SOME LEAFLETS TELLING

THE BLUE A R «Y 15 PROPPING
LEAFLETS TELLING U6 TO
StlRREM PER, SIR

THEIATOSURREHPER/

THE SlPE THAT WINS TH IS
MANEUVER WILL BE THE ONE
WITH THE BEST PAPER SUPPLY

THE BORN LOSER
'W

by Art Sanaom

t 6GE5CME,'j

STUHNIUG

by Howla Schnalder

EEK A MEEK

THE. LAST CF THE Gf?£AT^)
DtFKIT tPE*JDEJ?S ^ '*&gt;

L CAW SMELL A CREDIT T
DWSIOO A MILE AUJAV J

Those Fancy Machines
Won't Remove Weight
DEAR DR. LAMB - My friend
likes her women’s health club
because Ihe machines do all (he
work. The electric-powered sta­
tionary bicycle pulls the feet and
legs around on Its pedals. One
m a ch in e's re v o lv in g rollers
massage the fatty areas o f the
thigh, supposedly to break up
the fat so II can be carried away
by the bloodstream. Three-piece
tables manipulate and jiggle Ihe
body white the person ties down
quietly. Do such machines have
value for a physically unim ­
paired person who wishes to
have a slender figure and firm
muscles?
DEAR READER - If you have
lo pay so much to join such
clubs that you have less money
fo r fo o d , t h e y c a n h e lp .
O therw ise. I consider them
almost useless. If you don't exert
any effort yourself, you will not
do any physical work and will
not use any calorics. You will not
develop a strong muscle unless
you use It. That does not mean
having a machine do the work
while the muscle rests.
There Is no reliable evidence
In dicatin g that rollers that
massagr fatty areas eliminate a
single calorie of fat from the
body. Fat Is not broken up
mechanically, anyway; Ihe fat Is
mobilized because of energy
demands o f the body.
Steam baths or devices that
cause sweating only eliminate
body waler. Thai ran dehydrale
you and will decrease your body
weight temporarily, but II won t
remove any calories of body fal
DEAR DR. LAM B My
h u s b u n d h a s Just h a d a
diagnosis o f temporal arteritis
confirmed by a biopsy. What can
you Irll me about this rare
disease? Will taking a low dose
of prednisone for an Indefinite
period lower his Immunity Ur
respiratory and other diseases?
Can diet or exercise play a pari
In his recovery?
DEAR READER — An early
diagnosis of temporal aricrltls Is
very ttn)&gt;orlant tiers use early
trealmenl can save a person’s
eyesight. T h e disease Is an
Inflammation of arteries. Since

the temporal artery Is frequently
Involved. It has been called
temporal arteritis, but because
Ihe inflammation can involve
many other arteries. It Is now
called giant-cell arteritis. This
term Is based on what Is seen
under the microscope. Because
Ihe artery that supplies Ihe eye
itself may become Involved, this
3 English collage
4 Compass pomt
1 frtn ch womvn
5 Nearsighted
person
(»bt&gt;» |
5 Burrowing
6 Yours and mine
•mm«l
7 Ream
9 Clwsr
B Intensify
12
«v»nt* 9 Mrs Chsrtes
13 Chirwt*
Chaplin
currency
10 Ramnning
14 Ovtr (post.)
11 Author Gardnar
15 Flsmsituowsr
16 Big book
17 Foottull Issgua 21 Allow
(»bbf |
22 One (Gar)
18 Monsury unit
23 Horse lood
o t Jspsn
24 Biblical
19 Romrn goddait
charactar
Ot plsnty
25 No mot#
20 Having wirgy
26 Aim
22 Scottuh unels
27 Habraw lattar
23 Sing lawn
2B Troy's I owkJw
24 Sputt in
29 Emit eoherant
Motism tors
light
27 01 touch
30
Formally
31 f »rth » satellite
32 Butta
32 Oive Out
35 Opal
sparingly
33 MouwOoW god
34 Cbllesn Indian
35 Catchas
36 M ika untidy
37 Piggish
39 Accounting
tarm
40 Openings
41 Vetch
42 Msrkel place
45 Harem
apartment
46 Poverty-war
agancy (sbbr.)
49 Wava |Sp)
50 Rular
53 And nol
54 Unwrap
55 Happy
56 Printar's
mealuras
«*
57 Monocli
56 fermanting
%J
agenl

Dr.
Lamb
d is e a s e can cause su d d en
blindness The way to avoid this
Is to control the Inflammatory
process In Ihe artery. If possible.

Scurf tour questions to /&gt;r
U im b r .O A n 1551. Radio CVh
Shin on. You fork .V V l(X)lf&gt;
Answar to PrtviouS P u llle

ACROSS

DOWN

44 Rowing tools
45 Smelting

36 First copies
(abb*.)
36 Becausa ot
39 Ssndanc us
41 Paradisst
42 First rats &lt;2
wds I
43 Catch

*

Chamber

46
47
48
51
52

Unctuous
EquSI (Fr |
Wave (Fr)
Unclose Ipoet I
Scrambled —

SB

1 Unruly crowds
2 Baast ot burden

(c)i»SS i&gt;v hi a

WIN AT BRIDGE

by Hargreav** A Sailers

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
O

a_ r M

kn.,

iv i^ ihuaa.

lAA &lt;30173(3 TD
&gt;
ILLUVUNATE THE
G AKPEM AFTER
PARK

GO I CAN WATCH
M Y PHLOX F T Mk3MT'

W HAT ARE W

rUANNlMG TO
D O W IT H A L L
T H O S E cTAK/PLES,

M R .R J N W Y *■

by Warnar Brothers

BUGS BUNNY

O nlV A CvVA’ZV W A 3 8 IT
WOULD "TEACH A FA l COM ’
I D STEAL CAWVVOTS.

wide awake declarer should go
set. no matter what his guess Is
oil the high card position of Ihe
first black suit he attacks Me
nei-ds to make Just two assump­
tions: East would have opened
the bidding wllh two aces In
addition to the heart K-J. and
Wesl would also have opened
with two aces In addition to ihe
diamond K Q
Suppose declarer leads a spade
to dummy's Jack, losing to East’s
queen. Back comes a spade to
West's arc. but now declarer
knows that Ihe club ace Is with
East, and he will hope that East
does not have the club queen.
Suppose Inslead that South
plays a club to dum m y’s king,
losing to East’s ace. Now he Is
certain that East can’ t hold Ihe
spade ace. and South will play
Ihe spades correctly.

M&gt;HTII

i rat

♦ KJ

V | )t
6 A 9 ■7 5 a
♦ KJ

WERT

EAST

♦
v
•
*

4&lt;f 10 1 3
* KJ
aj
44)71)]

A 7$ 2
t.
Kgiust
q 105

SOLTI I

♦ sis

F A Q lo 9 7 3 2
4 I

♦ it
Vulnerable East-West
Dealer East
Wr«i

W ih

Kaa

South

r i*&gt;

I’am

14

I'm i
I'iu

I ’a u

I 'i u

I'a u

t»

Opening lead 4K

HOROSCOPE

ifc 'm ..-■r
FRANK AND ERNEST

By Jam es Jacoby
Let’* talk about a conservative
bridge game Today’s auction
actu a lly started w llh th ree
pauses. We might have to wait
until the next century to find a
cast of characters that would
pass on those cards In the flrnt
three |»onlikma. But that Is what
happened.
North did open In fourth scat.
And previously timid South hid
four hearts. That Is not a hud
contract. Me needs to find some
cards right, or guess them right.
Declarer won Ihe opening lead
with dummy’s ace. Thr favor­
able Inca lion of the K-J of hearts
enabled South lo druw I rump In
Iwo leads. Now what? It appears
l hat Ihere are some guesses to
he made In Ihe black suits.
I find Ihls deal Interesting
because there Is no way lhal a

What The Day
Will Bring...
by Bob Thav«B

YO UR B IRTH D AY
A P R IL 4. 1QSS
Although you prefer lo operate
Independently, you will do quite
well In partnerships in ihe year
ahead. V'uluable alliances will br
established for a specific ob­
jective.
A R IE S (March 2 1-April 19)
Avoid learning up with anyone
today who thinks In petty terms.
You need associates who can
Inspire you to do things on a
grand scale. Major changes are
In store for Arles lti the coming
year Send for your AatrnGraph
predictions today. Mail S I to
Astro-Graph. Box 489, Radio
City Station. New York. NY
1001(3. Be sure to stale your
zodiac sign
TAU RU S (April 20-May 20)
Results will be rewarding today
In career situations where you
exercise your own Judgment.
When you rely on the advice of
others, you could go adrtft.

ANNIE

GEM INI (May 2 1-June 20|
When socializing wllh (nils to­
day. say nothing uncomplimen­
tary about a mutual friend who
Isn’ l present. Your remarks will
be repeated and distorted.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 221
Lady Luck will be supportive of
your efforts today In situations
where you are unselfishly trying
In h rlp o lh e rs . as w ell as
yourself.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If you
expecl tolerance and consid­
eration from people you’ll deal
wllh loday. you must make II a
point In overlook Ihe lllile things
they do that you find annoying.
VIROO (Aug 23-Sept. 22)
D on’ t be hesitant to spend
dollars today If It can earn you
more. A Utile seed money might
be required to prime the pump
lor something larger.
L I B R A (Sept. 23 Oct. 23)
Listen to the thoughts and
suggestions of companions to­
day but don’ t discount the quali­
ty of your own Ideas. Chances
are your Judgment is keener

than theirs.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 Nov. 22)
Something you play a minor role
In may prove beneficial loday.
Lady Luck will do the heuvy
work.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov 23 Dec,
21) Life seldom offers sure
things: you’re well aware of this.
Fortu nately loday. how ever,
your hopes will be based upon
rrullsllc factors.
C A P R IC O R N |t)rr 22 Jan.
19) You're a belter doer loday
than a thinker, Once you spring
tnlo action, any self-doubls that
plague you will be brushed
aside.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan 20 Feb. 19)
Something you're presently in­
volved In has far greater poten­
tial than you may realize. Take
time to review your Immediate
circumstances.
PISCES (Feb, 20-March 20)
Financial conditions are pro­
mising for you today, so don't
settle for small returns If you
have un opportunity lo go Cor
something larger. Think big
,I
■•
A
.......... ........................
:

by Ltonard Staff

by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS
SVfKYRAY

VDOCUM 0UT
TXWEANPWrT

4

&lt;4 V r

S*i' » Y* *"

r :

*’ * i /&gt;

% * t
% % * *■*

x~* c T *

ir*3 P «i*e v i

�TONIGHT'S TV
_

W E D N E S D A Y _____

a aoannat /cheat* tycoon
X O DrHASTV To am Sa* a a la
•or «i an o• deal Adam emocantty

CVtMNQ
600
tX X Q X O N C W S
(M ) j e t t e r s o m
B
(101 MACMCIL 7 LEHRCR
N cw tnoun
O (B) WELCOME BACK. ROTTER

1?

6:05
Q be ve rly m o j i u j a

mad by Aryan* lo maai Sammy Jo
ai M*a York Man* atng g a to
&gt; a c Daa and n*r *a*-r**p*ci g
11 (M l OLANCY
B (Ml COMBLEAT cw. be AT AMO
SULUVAN RnMgor*
meant
Pnc* and Aaim inch— alar m m*a
parody ot a poeuar maiodrama tat
ai a Carman tatong riaag*
1(700
(7. O HOTEL A raaocatad adnaaa
• ampaoyad at ma koMi . a aoman
ado mdaraam coamanc angary
Warn* a Haaon about tnra beauty
Orratn* mama a cnauttour &lt;jrvan
kiiurycar g
5t (Ml MOEAINOCNT NEWS
B IB) POUCE WOMAN

6:30
11/O
C M NEWS
&gt;
( D O ABCNEVYSg
CV) ALICE
(t| OOOO TIMES

£

8:35
52 OOMER PYLE

1005

700
® BALE OF THE CENTUFIY
5 0 p M MAGA2NE Catt-raOtar-barg O* Oynaity , an undertour Ol th* Or**t B*&gt;'&lt;•&gt;
Mm •
IT; O JEOPARDY
0 (M l TOO Cl.081 row COM­
FORT Mol waning mor* chddran.
8*nry * k u i w
* &gt;*t*cto-

10:30
11 (Ml BOS NfWHART

11.00
B ( D ( D O ( Z ; O hcw s
II (M| BENNY HAL
ffi (10) TOOAY M THE LEQ1SLATORE
CD (f) NQHT GALLERY

QD(&lt;oi auttam coonri ami a.

1105
n
MOW On* uaaon Vaara
B C." (IMF) Jotoi Rctiardaon. Raguai WaicK A pratoaionc pan d

JCA
OD (E) ONE DAY at A TIME
7:05
12 SANFORD AMO ION

a man* mm brother
Rom laadartNp ol toa paopa*

7:30
a QD ENTERTAINMENT T0NKSHT
Featured Tyn* Defy IK* mod**ng
prol***ion a m m ito*
(J) O WHEEL O l FORTUNE
CD O
*100.000 NAME THAT
TUNE
11 (V.I BENSON
(S (O ALL M THE FAMILY

11:30
B ® TONIGHT Hoat Johnny Caraon Scheduled Donald O Cormor
actor Joa Panny
® O TAB
(7 o ABC MEW* toOWTUNE
11 (M) SANTORO AND SON
CD 1*1 TWiUOHTEONf

7:35
12 A U M THE FAMILY

1200
®
ffi
11
(D

8:00
a
(D MKJMWAY TO HEAVtN
. Jonathan and Mart i&gt;t—i to a am*«
HcoMoae anger a crooked gamWar
; and a young gel who dream* ol a
y muK career lA|g
_
CHARLES IN CHARGE
. YWui*&lt; CM
CKanaa and m* cMdran art
; Duty mating summer plana. Oram
. pa arm—# tor anal mgM become a

isra"

6 :35
H funttmeifro

2

6 :4 5
0 rrEWTTNESS DAYBREAK
(101AM WEATHER
7:00

S ® TODAY
(£ 3 c ss m o r m n q new s
&amp; O OOOO MORNP4Q AMEMCA
O (SSI f u n t s t o n e s
110) FARM DAY

(!) HEATHCUFT

7:30
51 (IS) TOM ANO JERRY
(E IW )SESAME STREET□
(D It) MSPfCTOR GADGET
7:35
12 I DREAM OF JEJUPPE

8:00
51 (SSI WOOOY YYOOOPECKER
(DKISUPERFMENOB
6:05
12 BEWITCHED
0:30
(U (S() PINK PANTHER
(D (101 MISTER ROGERS (R)
Ol HI fat aTbcrt
8:35
12 I LOVE LUCY
a
1
1

000
( OtVORCECOURT
O DONAHUE
O SARNASY JONES
(SS) WALTONS
|W SESAME STREET g
l » PARTRIOOE FAMILY

12 MOW
9:30
O ( LOVE CONNECTION
(D l » HERTS LUCY

J I (Ml I LOVE LUCY

Q ( TIME MACHINE
HOURMJGJLDNE
SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
(SSI BO VALLEY
_ (10) ELECTFSC COMPANY (R)
OHO MAYBERRY R.F0

10:00

100

S

1

10:30

d I SALE OF THE CENTURY

O

1:05
12 CANCER TOOAY

O FAMILY FEUO
(Ml S-l-1 CONTACT (R )g
OK)REAL MOCOYS

1:10
(D O MOW It Thing* War* Ddtaranf ( I t t t l Sul anna pieaneti*
Don Mcxrry

2:00
51 (M l BIZARRE
2:05
12 M O W Slag* Fright |l»S0l
Jana Wyman. Manana Oainch
2:30
( ! ) O CSS NEWS tPOMTWATCH
51 (U)OUNSMORE

THURSDAY
MORNING

6:30
t l ) O E / R Cory anocka IK* amargancy room Hall *K*n |K*
pruiaaaaa nor toy* tor Dr Sfwmlaid
(R|

i j (JS)FOPEYE
12 FVNTRAE (MOM-THU)

1230
O (h LATE MONT WITH D A W
LETTIRMAN Scheduled

3

605
12 MOVIE WmcKaaiar 7J |1»S0)
Jama* S la m Snaaay Wmlar* A
man a pruad nil* a alolan and K*
» a l » tor a lo go ItoougK many
Kanda bator* a a rttnnad

7 O ABC NEWS THtt MORMNG

9:05

MOW The Young S*
&lt;agat |1 M I| Bud Lkncaalar. ShotWmiara
(SS| HUMANITY SPECIAL
a ) (I) the aveng er s

( l (M| DALLAS
- B (101 OaSCOVER THE WORLD
' Or BOEtsCE Featured an FAA laat
cl naa aaunar salat r toahxaa alaao
daprlvalion. laaar ay* angary mon
aay language computer I-raya. a
perpetual mohon macton* g
d ) (•) MOVII WmcKaaiar 7 T
(t»50i Jama* Slaaarl. Shartoy
Wmiara A man a pruad riAa ia
alHan and K* a ala tor II lo go
through many hand! Oatora it ia ia*

J O CM EARLY MORNING

_a
a

O MAOMUM. A L
O THE SAINT
(M) RHOOA
(I) ACUAK

® a

■(7l U FALL QUY Cad and Ho m
puraua a baajumpng murder auapact to Haaaa and draco— mat
; tody Kaa laaan n lor* aim tom (A)

6:30
O X NEWS

7:15
ffi (SOI AM WEATHER

12 CANCER tooay

•

5:00
51 (JS| NEWS
12 ITS YOUR BU8P4E&amp;S (MON)
11 CHILDREN'S HJNO (TUI)

11:00
O ( WHEEL OF FORTUNE
I n PRICE W RIQHT
1 o TRIVIA TRAP
11 (St) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
ffi (Ml WE'RE COOKING NOW
(MON, WtD-FRT)
ffi (M| TOOAY IN THE LEOlSlATURf (TUE)
( D ill f a m ily
1105
12 CATUNS
1130
Q l ( SCRABBLE
if: o RYAN S HOPE
ffl (101 FLORIOA8TYLE (MON.
WED-FRI)
1135
12 LUCY SHOW
AFTERNOON

52 AORKULTURB USA. (FRO

M 0
O S i AD IK* aiutlaripg Ciaudma
bagm* to* 1*^ ". AaA ratnn* lo Juda* to Pa temfcontad a«n Hared
Agnpoa a (Daman Thomaal png*.
Vatarto* a biac&gt;maaa&lt; by Maaaa*
na (Janmlar OM NI Agnppma (A.a
Qardnar) acnama* lo maa* Haro
(Amtwny Andraaal amparor lAari 4
o is t g
111 O MOVIE Oaad Man Oon I
Waar Plato (1M7) Sian* Martm
Racnal Ward A Kard boAad prrvata
ay* ancountari IMOa Mm cKaraclari add* m.aal gating m* daam o*

5 25
® O HOUYWOOO ANO THE
STARB (MOtt, TUB. YHU, FWq
5:30
O ® T* COUNTRY (TUC-FRI)
52 JMMY IWAOOAFrr
B
I
(7
1!

Evaning Herald. Sanford, FI.

N ew m an S ta rtin g
D rug Film C enter

600
'D NBC NEW* AT BUNRM
O M0RMN0 STRETCH
O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
OS) OOOO DAY)

12:00
0 ® MIOOAV
I (S lT O M W S
TT (SE) EtWYTCMEO
ffi (1C) NATURE OF TtKNGS
(MON)
ffi (Ml MASTERPIECE THEATRE
QUO
J(I0)UY*TERV1(WED)
0(131
(DUO) NOVA (THU)
ID 11C) WONOERWORPCl (FIB)
Q) IS) MANNOI
12:05

(D id JIM BARKER

12:30
( I T SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
1 O YOUNG ANO THE REST.
O LOVMQ
OE) BEVERLY HAJJR.ua

I

1-00
0 IT DAYS OF OUR UVES
1 O A U MY CHILDREN
0 OE) OlCN VAN DYKE
83 (101TAX EREAK ES (MON)
II0)M OW (TUE)
(101 CONGRESS WE THE PEOPLE (WEOl
(D 1101 AMERICAN FLATHOUSF
(THU)
ffi (M
(10l FLORIDA HOME GROWN
MB
(DIE) M O W

S

1:05
n mow
1:30
IT O AS THE WORLD TURNS
11 (SE) GOMER PYLE
ffi I TO) CONGRESS WE THE PEO­
PLE (WEOl
ffi |Ml PAPWNO CERAMCE (FRI)

200
O T&lt; ANOTHER WORLD
t O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
I I (SS) ANOY OR^FTTH
ffi (10) THE MAGIC OF MU ALEXANOCRfWEDI
ffi ( M) JOY OF P AJNTINQ (FRI)

B IG G EST SH RIM P
SA LE OF THE Y E A R

LOS ANGELES (UPI1 - Actor
Paul Newman has pledged 81.2
million to establish a research
center at USC designed lo bring
logeiher filmmakers and other
media specialists schooled In
drug abuse prevention.

JUMBO . $85,? LARGE . $69?
R »g

The money will be channeled
th rou gh the Scott Newm an
Foundation, created by Newman
alter his 28-year-old son. Allan
Scott Newman. * died of what
police termed an accidental
overdose of alcohol and Vallum
in 1978

*

•- *'

hoaring. nKicK *111 ba hold in
ih* City Hall. IM Waal Warran
A * * , Long wood. Florida, on
Monday ih* »th day ol April,
IMS. portal may appaar and ba
hoard *im raapoct lo Ih* pro
pond Ordlnanc* Thla hoormg
may b* eonlinuod trom lima to
lima until tmal action la lokan
by Ih* City Commiaalon
A copy o# Ih* p'opoiod Ordi
nonet ia potiad *1 tha City Hall.
Long oaad Florida and cop al
or* on til* mlh Ih* Clark at Ih*
City and i*m * may ba inapoctod
by th* public
A lopad record at d ill m oiling
ll mad* by Ih* City tor It*
convonane* Thla record may
not commute on odoouato r*
card tor pnpeaaa ol appeal tram
a daemon mad* by Ih* Cam
m illion nidi raapoct to th#
lor ago-ng mattar Any par ion
oiaMng to amur* ttvat an ad*
quota record at th* proceeding*
1a malnlamad ter appallal*
purpeaat la adrlaad to mok* Ih*
nacaaaary arrangamanla at M l
or bar oon aipanaa
Dato mil tend day ol March.
A 0 IMS
CITY OF LONGWOOO
Donato L Tarry
City Clark
Publllh March H l April I

CITY OF
LOMCWOOD F LOR I DA
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARINO
TOCONSIOIR
ADOPTION OF
AROAOSEDOR Dl NANCE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by Ih * C ity at L on gn eod .
Florida. IKal IK* City Cam
m inion will Hold a public (war
mg to conudar anaclmanl ol
OrdinancaNo all anllliad
AN ONOINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF L O N G W O O O .
FLORIDA. AMENOING OROI
NANCE NO *W BEING THE
COM PREHENSIVE ZONING
ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
BV REVISING SECTION M l
DEFINITIONS (STRUCTUREI
BV A M E N O IN G S E C O N D
S E N T E N C E TO 0 E L E T E
WORDS “ BUT DOES NOT
INCLUDE UNROOFED SUR
F A C E S P R E P A R E D FO R
S PO R TS'. PROVIOING FOR
SEPARABILITY. CONFLECTS
AND EFFECTIVE DATE
Sato Ordmanet naa piaead on
Ural raodmg on Marcb II. IMS.
and Ida City Commltalon arlll
contidar warn* lor Itnal pauag*
and adoption odor Ih* public

Legal N otice
INt

Dll) IFI
FICTITIOUS NAME
Njllc* It horoby gliron dial w*
era angagad In bvainot* at )00
Concord Or . C tta a ib a rry.
Samlnolo County. Florida under
Ih * M c l l l l o u t n a m e o l
CASSELBERRY VETERANS.
INC. and Ihal « * Inland to
ragnlar aaid name «tl»K th*
Clark ol tho Circuit Court.
Samlnol* County. Florid* In
accordant* «ith th# proylttom
ol In* Flcllltoui Nam* Statute*.
Is ml
Saciion *41 OF Florida
Sia'utat IMF
/t Jama* B Snyder
Sac Treat

PublishAprils. IB. It. S4. Iltt
OEE IS
IN THE C IB C U IT COURT
OF TNE EIGHTEENTH
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
OF FLO R ID A.
IN ANOFOR
SEM INOLE COUNTY
C A SIN O b * IMS CA 0* K
PAULA B A IL E Y , t/k -a PAULA

BOAIT.

Ptalntld.
•a

RALPHG BOALT.
Oatondanl
NOTICE OF SALE

f*

IIB

Ciitleme

Mullet, Trout,
Bass, Catfish,
Fresh Water
Brim

K e l l y ’s F is h &amp; P o u lt r y
to e S O W O O D L A N D B L V D
D L L A N D FLA

(H a y

IM 1 I

(

9 0 4 ) 73 4 -5 4 15

FA M O U S R EC IP E
W E E K L Y S P EC IA LS

S

3 05
U BUGS BUNNY ANO ERIENOE

WEDNESDAY
FAMILY SPECIAL

330
ffi (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
ffi (I) PETER ANO THE MAOC
EGG (MON)
f fi (S) DIG (TLB)
f fi (I) A FAMILY CIRCUS EASTER
(WEOl
f fi ID POOCHIC (THU)
ffi (S) VELVETEEN RABBIT (FRI)

|COUPON|

Eight Piece
Thrift Pack

Three Piece Chicken
Dinner

• F&gt;e&lt;t« Bf i^ d e n &gt; •» •" »»"Mui Net -ps • CbmrIf| C8k I» r
WNlBd f(H4t (KbK I O* ary
»&lt;1|| flf Bw« 8f&lt;WiMB BtdS 4SIRS
B"4 hot kesh M ini' s

I ptocaa Meotoa* toa*n t amo*a *•&lt; **' Cmmby Ctockaa
muaK m«N** polaioa, a-to y i . T ,&gt;**• • Iai« ,in ana t
•ai IraiK *&gt;*&lt;»«

3:35

$6 9&gt;

12 HECKLE an o jecxle
4 00
a 0D u t tle house on the
PRAJRff
CD o STAR TREK |MON. WEDFRr
® O D^rRENT STROKES (TUE)
® U MERV ORJFtiN (MON. TUE.
THU. FRI)
QD O ABC AFTERSCHOOL (WtOI
11 (SSI BCOOBY OOO
ffi (10| SESAME STREET g
(S| HEATHCLIFF (MON-THU)
(S) ROBOT MAN t FRIENOS
(FRI)

4 9

SANFORO
1*05 French Ay*
(Mary 17 • !)
JJJ JES0

4:35
12 FUNTSTONES

CASSELBERRY
41 N Mary 1f t ]
S1101S1

1
1

SUMNYUND WHOLE

SUNNYLAND WHOLE

SM OKED
HAMS

S M O K ED
PICNICS

- 9 9 *

1

FLORIDA PREMIUM
C0L0 HIST

Legal Notice
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
p u r*v * n t to a F trial Judgment ol
M o rtg a g e F o rad oaur* data*
M a rch 71. INS. and *n )*r*d in
C a t* No 14 n o ] CA 0» K ol Ih*
C irc u it Court ot Ih* Eighlaanih
J u d ic ia l C irc u it In and lo r
S a m ln o l* C o u n ty . F lo rid a .
• herein PAULA BAILEY, l/k /a
P AU LA BOALT It Ih# P laintltf
and R ALPH G BOALt i t Ih*
Oatandant that I Mill a*M to Ih*
highaal a-to b a il b-ddar tor taah
at th * SaminoN County Court
houa* North Park A»* . San
lord . F lo rida at II no a m an
A p ril II . INS Ih* toltoeing
daacribad proparly at aal torlh
In aato |udgm *nt. to e il
L o t I I . B lo ck B ME AO
M AN O R . Unit Four, according
to tho P la l ttwcool recorded in
P lot Book I I Pag* M. ot Ih*
p u b lic re c o rd * o l S am lnol*
County Florida
D A TE O Ihia 1st dar ot A pril
IN t
(C IR C U IT C O U R t SEAL)
O A V IO N BERRIEN
C lark ot C ircuit Court
B r Diana K Oak toy
Deputy Clark
Publish A p ril 1. I* IN t
O f t TO

CASSELBiRRY
41 N Hoy it v:

111 0151

8 9 *

10 LB. PAIL PORK |

U S D A. CMOICt B ( ( r

OX
T A ILS

W HOLE
FR YER S
j
CQC
18. s / J

C H ITTER LIN G S
PAIL

99°

••

* 5 .9 9

—

PORK CHOPS....................................... ....

t 4

llttl lltl Mion

CHICKEN BACKS

AA

..............3 in ^ 1

•amac rack

tuoaiar

...........68c

NECKS .............

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

GROUND BEEF...........................................u * 1 . Z u CHICKEN WINGS
( I I U rom ttA tl

BOSTON BUTT

...................................u

9 9 c

lUOkll

f AMI T PIC* row

NECK BONES. TAILS. FEET or EARS
ffi (101 MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
f f i ( Ml ART OF BEING HUMAN

C0UNTBT CMCK|h

TIP T 0 P ...H 0 M E O F Q U A LIT Y FO O D S A N D M EA TS

430
I f ) O CBS SCHOOL BREAK (TUE)
51 (SS) HE-MAN ANO MASTERS
OF THE UNIVERSE
f fi (S) WORK ANO MINOT

o

,

fa m o u s J fc c tp ft

SANFORO
ItOS French Ay*
(Mwy 17 EJ)
M l MSO

COOT by dec kin

4^C
12 n iN T ST O N a

5:00
Q It) NEWLYWED GAME
(J)
THREE'S COMPANY (MON.
WCD-FRn
m O LET S MAXI A DEAL
11 (SS) DUKES OF HJU2AAO
tlMMIOCIANUS(UON)
f f i (TO) UNOERSTANONQ HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
f f i (10) NEW UTIRACY AN *4TROOUCTWN TO COMPUTERS

'

fa m o u s ff c c ip c ^

3

121

Legal N otice

Cookin Good
FRYERS
£Q&lt;c

V A R IE T Y O F
FILLET O F
FISH

WINGS .............

it 4 8 c

LEGS

CHUCK STEAK................................ u * 1 . 3 8

SUG AR
•m* t i t M e n u

9 9 c

................« 4 8 e
9 9 e

SOUL CHARGER SAUSAGE

CHUCK ROAST................................ it s 1 . 2 8
• LG tAA

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

Ml. M l O* N il

C90KMM lf

MtITAM

5 8 c

BACON ............................

CUBED STEAKS.............................. i* $ 1 . 9 9
U IB A

4 8 c

110*1 y

H i t A cao«ct Mir
V IS A CMOKI Mir

Legal Notice

Rag IS

O YS TER S IN
S H ELL

" I don't know a time In history
where It's so Important for the
young people to see things with
clarity." hr said

300
O ® SANTA BARBARA
J O OUlOtNO LIGHT
(7 O OENERAl HOSPITAL
51 (M ) BUGS BUNNY
( 10) FLORIDASTTLE
(S) VOL IRON, DEfENOER OF
THE UNIVERSE

SR RR

MED.v.$49?.

Newman said lie evtslons the
center as "the largest clearing­
house for Dims about drug abuse
In the country.

2:30
( T O CAPITOL
11 (Sfll GREAT SPACE CCASTER
ffi (TO) PAUL NOEL FKJRP40 HI
CAME TO DANCE (TUE)
ffi (M l MAOC OF OR. FAINTING
(WtOI
ffi (10) MAOC OF DECORATIVE
PAJNTltra (FRO

Wednesday. April ). IYSJ-YB

t i l 01

B EER

IMK1

MMTAM
MU MUM

(AM

itv
AC

MU

5 9 c

t i t tAA

a iit y

Marl AM U K lK A ItO tl M O MAat. M i l l VIA.
C0MI mmrt MTAIM1 r o w a M m
N l k M l M m i L l f M 140
I M CAM
Ol X
u m a r u a i trvtt t i n u n i
PO C

TOILET TISSUE

G R A IN R I C E * . b u t H
1 .0 3
MAfTMTTT
CA
4 A
DETERGENT . . ai e, p..
maa M u tu a l
a. — c

IE U l

7 7

PAKR TOWELS ,* * .* * .

21*1

GENERIC
B LEA C H
*44 M

ruvtvt 4

4 .-,..7 9 '

SHORTENING
l ic it rAIWA
lIKST
rA m

FOR D I S H E S .................n o .

UL

0 9 C

.9 9

UMliC

P O T A T O E S ..............1 4 * am b y
6*MIK I M
P
t J M P

*1.19

H

ICE
C R EAM

FLO U R

4 .6 9

2 a m i $2 . 9 9

u 0i

PRODUCE

. . ‘ 1 .2 9

69c
DELICIOUS A P P LE S 99e
WHITE POTATOES
99c
I U EAE MBIUN

«% l| ^

YELLO W ONIONS

TOMATOES....... Nic- S r i

1 IB EM SB. I f B

,7 9 c

FRUIT PUNCH . .
N M I4N t a il.

LARGE EGGS

t

Mr IM

1 .9 9

IU .U 4

IvtWNka

BREAD.............. . . . - 2 / 8 9 '

2 LAS. 1 W U T

I EI P4Ttm«

MARGARINE

TSUPERMARKET
IP-TOP

1 1 0 0

...............3 / ’ l
W e s t

r

1 3 tl

PO TATO ES
*
W t M S IB V t I M
5t7

1.00

RMNf
TO LIMIT QUANTITKS

S a n fo r d

Q u a lity I S ervice I S a v i n g s !
FOOD STAMPS WELCOME
FULL LIRE OE NIC FB00UCIS

PRICES GOOD
FROM
TNUBS . A P B tl 4

W (0 . A F B Il 10

Ir jR o v d T h — t f l
v jn o j

V\UA TWINI

99c

B4t H I ML 1
WALT D lU
firrSs M
is in

Hnocchio

But Actuss

SALLY FIELD
PLACES IN THE
HEART
IE

The Whole Town Is Talking About The
Everyday Low Price Of Poppa Jay’s
For Only
" 6
C A U .ro u .rB u
I A N * 4 1 IM I

Better ‘N’ Backyard Burger
A 1/4 Lb. Of 100% Pure Beef

jay’s i||
2

w b e r r tUv c h o ic e is x m u r*.

99

Ph. 3 2 2 -9 2 1 2
2 5 0 1 Fre n ch A v e .
S a n fo rd

i
&gt;

w

�1SB— Evening M en Id, Sen lord, FI. W tdntw ley, A p ril 3, IMS

Legal Notice
C ITY OF
LONGWOOO. FLORIOA
MOTIC« OF
PUBLIC HEAPING
TO CONSIDER
ADOPT ION OF
PROPOSFD ORDINANCE
TO WHOM IT M A T CONCERN
NOTICE IS HEREBY G IV E N
l i f IN * C H e e l L o n g w e o d .
F ie f id * . th a t &gt;h# City Com
mission *111 held • pubiK te a r
Ing lo io o ik N* enactmen* el
Ordinance No *B*.anMi#d:
AN OROINANCE OF THE
C IT Y OF L O N G W O O D ,
FLO R IO A . AMENDING ORDI
NANCE NO 4fS AND ALL ITS
A M E N D M E N T S OF S A ID
C I T Y . S A ID O R O IN A N C E
B E I N G
T H E C OM
P R E H E N S IV E ZONING OR
OINANCE OF THE CITY OF
LONGWOOO. FLORIDA SAID
A M E N D M E N T C H A N G IN G
THE ZONING OF CERTAIN
T E R R IT O R Y FROM INDUS
TR IA L PARK (I I) TO COM
M E R C IA L . GENERAL &lt;C I I ,
P R O VID IN G AN EFFEC TIVE
D A T E , R E P E A L IN G O R D I
N A N C E S IN C O N F L 1C T
H E R E W ITH
L
*
g
a
I
:
i t io » x » n s B 0000*0
The W e il K I M M
of IN*
SE'e e l in * SW 'k/bl Section 11,
Township M South. Rang# X
E n l lying South et Longwood
P alm Spf &gt;ngt Rood end North of
S f * t * R oad 414, S a m ln o l*
County. F lo rid *
B olng rnoea g * n * r * lly d *
sc "b e d a* IN* land on th* if H d*
o f SR 0 4 . appforim atoly 400
t* * t E of th * Intersection of W
W arron Ava w ith SR 414
Said Ordinance o a t placed on
firs t reading on March II. IMS.
and IN* C ity Commistlon w ill
c o n ild e r ta rn * lor linal p a ite g *
and adoption after th* public
Nearing, which w ill be held In
the City H all. US W ei' Warren
A r e , Long wood. Florida, on
Monday, th * *th day of A p ril.
A 0 . IN I. p a rtia l may appear
and be heard w ith raipacl to th*
proposed Ordinance Thli hoar
ing may be continued from tim e
to lim a until final action l i token
b y th* City Commission
A copy ot th* propowd Ordl
none* l i po lle d at ll&gt;* City H all,
Longwoort. Florida, and to p ie t
* r * on t il* w ith the Clark of th*
C ity and te m * may be Impacted
by the public
A taped record o l th li meeting
la made by th* City lor Itt
convenience T h li record may
not c o n ililu te on odequato r *
cord for p u rp o e tt of appeal from
• daemon m ad* by th* Com
m in io n w ith ra ip a c l lo Ih *
loregoing m a ile r Any penon
w lih ln g lo ensure the I an ad*
d u a l* record o l IN* procoadlngi
I t m a in ta in e d tor appellate
purposes l i advHad lo m a lt th*
n a ta tta ry arrangam antt *1 h it
or her o w n a ip a n t*
D a l* t h li llt h day ot M arch,
IMS
C ITY OF LONGWOOO
Donald L T a rry
C ity Clark
P u b llth M arch 14 A p ril 1. INS
D EO 14*

CITY OF
LONGWOOO. FLORIDA
NOTICE OF
P U BLIC H E A R IN O
TO CONSIDER
ADOPTION OF
PPO POSBDOROIMANCI
TO WHOM IT MAY COMCBRMI
NOTICE IS HEREBY G IVEN
b y Ib a C ity e t lo n g w o a d ,
F lo rid a , th a t Ih* C ity Com
m illio n w ill hold a public hear
ing lo contldar enactment ol
Ordinance No MS. entitled
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF L O N G W O O D .
FLO R IO A AMENDING ORDI
NANCE NO 4ts AND ALL ITS
A M E N O M E N T S OF S A ID
C IT Y , S A ID O R D IN A N C E
B E I N G
T H E C OM
P R E H E N S IV E ZONING OR
DINANCE OF THE CITY OF
LONGWOOO FLORIDA. SAID
A M E N D M E N T C H A N O IN G
THE ZONING OF CERTAIN
T E R R IT O R Y FR O M R E SI
D E N T IA L . M U L T I F A M IL Y
(M )) TO COMMERCIAL. OF
FICE ( C I I ; PROVIDING AN
E F F E C T IV E D A T E , RE
P E A L IN G ORDINANCES IN
CONFLICT HEREW ITH
le g a l Lnl IM and W a ll 's of
Lot 11* Town of Long wood
according la Ih* plot tharool a t
recorded In Plat Book I, Paget
IB through I I , ol Public Nocordi
o l Samlnol* County. F lo rid*
B alng m o r* g e nera lly d*
aenbad a t 141 E a tl P in* SI
Said Ordinance w ai placed on
lira ! reading on March II. l f t l .
and in # Clfy Commission w ill
consider sam * lor I In* I paisag*
and adoption altar Ih* public
hearing which w ill b* held In
•h# C lly H all. US W ail War tan
A v * . I ongwood Florida, on
Monday. Ih * llh day el A pril.
A D , IStS. p a rtia l may appear
and bo heard w ith raipacl to Ih*
proposed Ordinance TNit hear
Ing m ay be continued Item lim a
lo llm o until I Inal action Is token
by Ih* C lly Commission
A copy a* *N* proposed Ordl
no m a l i pos'ed al Ih* Clfy H all.
Long wood Florida, and capias
o r * on III* w ith th* Clark of lira
C ity and sam * may b* im pe ded
by Ih* public
A loped record o l Ihls mooting
Is m a d* by Ih* Clfy tar Its
cenvomanc* This record m ay
not consllluta an adaguat* r t
cord tar purposes of sppaal from
a decision m od* by Ih* Com
m in io n w ith ro ip o d lo Ih *
foregoing me lia r Any parson
w ishing to ansurs that on ad *
q u e l* record el Ih* proceeding!
I t m a in ta in e d lo r appellate
purpoaai I t adviiod to make ih *
necessary arrangonw oli a l t i l l
or her own aipans*
Data this l l i h day ol March.
ISOS
CITY OF LONGWOOO
Donald L lo r r y
C lly Clark
Publish M arch 14 A pril 1. l f t l
D EO 141

Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT,
EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN A N D FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO BS H1C A IB P
IN THE MATTER Changing
N am * of RICHARD THOMAS
MICHAUD
I*
R ic h a rd T homas
w a lb a v e n
AMENDED NOTICE
OF ACTION
THE STATE OF F L O R IO A TO
TH O M AS HANS M IC H A U D
I Address Unknown!
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T I F IE D lh a l K E R R IE
K N iF F IN W ALBAVEN h a t file
a P tlH lon In th* C ircuit Court of
S am lnol* County, F lo rid * lo
Chang* Ih* name o l RICHARD
THOMAS MICHAUD to RICH
AR D THOMAS W A L R A V E N ,
and you a r t required fo ta r v * a
copy of your written datonsos. If
any. an FRANK C WMIGMAM
ESQ UIRE, of STENSTROM .
M t i N TOSH, J U L IA N . COL
BERT i WMIGMAM. P A . A l
ta rn o yi tar PaTlllorwr, w hot*
o d d re ti l i P o ll Office Bo&lt; d ig .
Sanford, Flo rid* 1JFF7 I MB, and
f it* th* original with Ih * Clerk of
Ih * above ily la d court on or
bo lo r* A pril II. IMS. o fh o rw ii* a
default and ultimata |udgm anl
w ill be antarad changing th*
name a t demanded In Ih * Pali
Hon
WITNESS my hand and of
tid a l teal ol told Court an th*
ll h dor ef March. A O IM I
(SEAL)
D A V ID N BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
By V irginia Jack ton
Deputy Clerk
Publish March 1], 70, V , A p ril
I. IM I
DEO IF
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H I EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AN DFO R
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO Bt *#* CA*4 0
C VERNONMIZE, JR
DIVISION G
IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF
JOHNNY L JOHNSON.
Pol II irnar /H utband,
and
LEONA JOHNSON,
Roipondanl/W II*
NOTICE O f ACTION
FOR DISSOLUTION OF
M ARRIAOE
TO LEONA JOHNSON
107 Calendar S lrtal D orchotlar.
M a is a c h u ia lli
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O TIFIE D lh a l a P etition tor
D issolution o t M a rrlog o h o i
boon tiled and commenced In
Ihls Court ond you a r t required
lo tarv# a copy ol your w ritte n
d a l t n i a t , If any. lo I I on
CARM INE M BRAVO. ESQ . ot
CARMINE M BRAVO. P A ,
I4S0 Slat* Road 414. Longwood
S prings Professional C antor.
Longwood. Florida 17110. and
III* th * original with Ih * C lark of
th * above ily la d Court on/or
bolor a A pril la. IMS. otherwise *
dalault w ll' b* antarad eq e ln ti
you tor the raltal prayed tor In
th * Petition
This Notice shall b * published
one* each weak lor lour 141
c o n t o c u llv * w i a k i In Ih *
SANFORDHERALO
WITNESS my hand and th*
seal o l said Court a l San lord
Florida, fh li Tint day o l M arch.

IMS

(CIRCUIT COURT SEAL!
O A V ID N BERRIEN.
A t C lark. C IR C U IT C ourt
SEMINOLE County. ElorId
By Dorothy Notion
Deputy Clark
Publish March ]l, A p ril ], 10,

II. INS
OE D l H
F IC T IT IO U S N A M f
N olle* It hereby given that I
am engaged In b v tln a ti a l Idea
N H ay
I I t l . Longw ood,
Samlnol* County, F lo rid * under
Ih * IfcllH out name o l BENOIT
ENTERPRISES. INC . and lh a l
I Inland lo regular to ld name
w ith Ih* Clerk of th# C ircu it
Court, Samlnol* County, F lor Ida
In accordance w ith Ih * pro
vision* o l Ih* Fictitious N am *
Statutes to w ll Section SSI Of
F lor Ida Statutes If f I
/ * / L o r # ll* P Hanoil
Publish March TQ &gt;7 A A p ril 1.
IB. IMS

OEO iso
FIC T IT IO U S N A M f
N olle* It hereby given lh a l I
am engaged In business a l 14F7
A ir p o r t B ir d ., S a n fo rd .
Samlnol* Ceunty, Florida under
Ih# llc lllle u t nam# e l THE
LIQUOR GAROEN. ond lh a l I
inland to ragtime said nam *
w ith Ih* Clark al Ih* C ircuit
Court. Samlnol* County. Florida
In accordance w ith Ih * pro
vision* o l Ih* Fictitious Nam *
Stoluta*. to w ll Section gas ot
F lor Ida Statutes ItSf
IM Linda Nolllas
P ubllth AAanh JO I f A A p ril 1,
IB. IM I
DEO 144

Legal Notice
legal Notice

INTHE CIRCUIT COURf
OFTNE IBTM
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INAND FO R
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
C ASINO BSBIBCAABE
IN RE THE M ARRIAGE OF,
PETER A BAGSMAW.
Pytlliorwr,

ALICE O RE IL L Y BAGSHAW.
Respondent
NOTICE OF ACTION
T O : A L I C E O RE I L L Y
BAGSHAW
Bov in Castries. St Lucia
Island
WEST INDIES
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that on
action tor dissolution of mor
rlogt hot boon tiled against you
and you ora required to tore* a
copy ot your written datanwt. If
any. to If on FRIEDMAN A
FRIEDMAN, P A . Attention J
OON FRIEDMAN. Petitioner'!
eHomey, whot* oddrosi it P 0
Bo&gt; f t I. 117 W o n Church
Avenue, longwood. Florid#
17F1B. U S A , on or bolor* April
74, IMS. and III* th* original
with th* Clerk of this Court
either baler* aarvic* on Patl
ftoner i attorney, or Immodiata
ly thereafter; other wll*. a da
laulf will b* antarad against you
•or ih* rsllef demanded In Ih*
Complalnl or Petition
DATE Don March 77. IMS
DAVEO N BERRIEN. Clark
of me Court
By JoonBrlllonf
Deputy Clark
Publish March If April 7. 10,
IF. INS
DED IFF

IN TN E C IR C U IT COURT
IN A N O F O R
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISIO N
FILE NO *1417 CP
IH R E : ESTATEOF
SALVADOR RUIZ.
Oacaasad
NOTICE OF
ADM IN ISTR ATIO N
TO A LL PERSONS H AVIN G
C L A I M S OR D E M A N D S
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E
ESTATE AND A LL OTHER
PERSONS IN T E R E S T E D IN
THE ESTATE
YOU AR E H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D l h a l I h * ad
m inistration ol th* osloto of
SALVADOR R U IZ, d e ta in e d
Casa No BI417CP. Is pending
In tho Circuit Court lo r Samlnol*
C o u n ty , F lo r id a . P r o b o lo
Division, th* a d d ra n o t which Is
Post Offlca Draw er C. Sanlord,
F lo rid*. I7FFI
Th* par io n * I representative ol
Ih * a s la l* are Y V E T T E H
WENDT, w hot* address I t 401
Blue Jay Larw. Satoltlto Beach,
Flo rida UP 17 and EDW ARD
PAHON whot* address It 11IF
Olmstasd Avenue. B ro n i. New
Y ork I04SY T h * hom o and
oddrosi o l Ih* personal ro p r*
s a n lo llv o 'l a tto rn e y o r * sat
forth below
A ll parsons having cla im s o*
demands agalm t Ih* t t t a t * * r*
re q u ire d . W IT H IN T H R E E
MONTHS FROAA THE DATE
OF THE FIRST P U BLIC ATIO N
OF THIS NOTICB, tw flta with
ih* d a rk *4 m * abwv# court *
svelitan tto tam o nl of any claim
or demand lh*y may ho v* Each
claim must bo Ih w ritin g and
m u ff indie*!* Ih * basis tor Ih*
claim . Ih * nam * and o d d ra ti ol
th# creditor o r h it agonl or
a tto r n e y , and Ih * a m o u n t
clalmod II Ih* claim Is not yat
due, Ih * data whan II w ill
bacons* du* shall b* staled II
th* claim Is contingent or unit
Outdated. Ih* n a tu re of Ih*
uncertainly shell b * stated II
the claim Is locurod. Ih * socurl
ly shall ba d e s c rib e d
Th*
claimant m a ll de live r lu fflcta n l
coptot ol Ih* cla im to Ih* clock
to anobio th* clerk lo m a ll on*
copy la ooch par tone I rapro
tentative
A ll persons inta raitad in Ih*
a ita l* lo whom o copy of this
N olle* o l A dm inistration hat
Loan m a ile d a r t re q u ire d
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
FROM THE DATE OF THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS NOTICE, to III* any ob
1actions they moy have lhal
chaiiang* ih* va lid ity o l Ih*
riacadanl t w ill. Ih* qualiflca
Horn si th* p o rto n o l ro p r*
I t n t a l l v * . Or Ih * v *n u # or
lu rltd ic lta n o l Ih * court
A LL C LA IM S . DEMANO S.
AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO
F ILE D W ILL BE FOREVER
BARRED
D al* of tho firs t publication of
IMS N olle* ol A dm inistration
March IF IM I
YVETTE M W EN D T. A t
Person*! R epresent*!!.* ol Ih*
E stata ol Salvador Run
A T T O R N E Y
F OR
PERSONAL RE PRF
SENTATIVE
Irving Nalhanton
Post O tflc* Bos 44 Cocoa.
F lor id* im &gt;
(101101* 1144
Publish March IF. A p ril 1. IM I
OED I t t

FICTITIOUS N A M I
N»flc# I* hereby glean lh a l Ih#
undartignad IS engaged in b u ll
n a il at a ll Palm Springs D rlv*.
Suita 111. Altamonte Springs.
Samlnol* County. Florida 11701
under Ih* fictitious nam# o l
BARTER CENTER, ond lh a l I
inland to la g iH rr said nam *
w ith Ih* Clark kf th* C ircu it
Court. Samlnol* County. Florida
In accordance w ith th * pro
visions *1 Ih* F H tlllou* N orn*
Statutes, ta w lt Section B it OB
Flo rida Stoluta* IMF
HENNESSEECORP
/ * Robert I Hannas***
P u b llth March |J A A p ril 1, 10,
IF. IMS

DED lit

FICTITIOUS N A M I
Nolle# Is hereby given lh a l |
am engaged in b v lln a s i a l 110*
L in d e n Rd , W in te r P a rk .
Samlnol* County, F lo rid * MFW
under th# llc tltlo u l name ol
FIU R IO A WATCH MANAGE
MENT SERVICE, and Nsal I
inland to ragtator said nam*
with ih* Ctark *1 Ih * C ircuit
Court, Samlnol* County. F lo rid *
in accordant* w ith Ih * pro
v liio n t o l Ih* F ictitio u s Homo
Stolutos. to w ll Section to t os
F lo rid * Stalutas ItS f
'M Carlos F Mandate
Publish A p ril L ig. IF. I k IMS
OEE IB

IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
O F T H E C IT H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN A N D F O R
SEM IN O LE COUNTY.
FLORIOA
CASE N O .B M in CAOe P
FEDERAL NATIONAL
MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION.
P la in tiff.

| OPA&amp;XJATtHteH.A M * .

CLASSIFIED ADS
Sem inole
322-2611

H ERBERT L LOWERY and
P A M E LA S LOW ERY, his w it*.
Dofandants.
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE BY
CLERK OF
C IR C U IT COURT
N olle* Is hereby glvon th * l iq#
u n d e r s ig n e d A r t h u r M
B e ckw ith J r C le rk o l th *
C ir c u it C o u rt o f S o m ln o lt
County. Florida, w ill, on Ih# lath
day of A p ril IMS. o f II 00 A M ,
al th* Wosl Iron! door of Ih*
Samlnol* County Courthouse in
the C lfy of Sanford. Florida,
oiler for sal* and sail a l public
outcry to th * highasl ond bast
bidder tor cash, th * following
best "b a d p roperly situ*lad In
Samlnoto County, fw rtd a to
wit
LOT IF. TW E N TY WEST.
ACCORDING TO THE PLAT
THEREOF AS RECORDED IN
PLAT BOOK I*. PAGE M. OF
THE P U BLIC RECOROS OF
.S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
Fl o r id a
pursuant to Ih * fina l dacraa of
fortelosu r* entered In Ih* c a t*
pending In said Court, th* style
ol which I t FNM A v H o tte r! L
Lowery and Pamela S Lowary
WITNESS m y hand ond ol
Hclal tool o l said Court this i l l
day of A p ril. IMS
(SEAL)
DAVID N B E R R IE N
C LE R K O F THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By O lan* K Oakley
Deputy Ctark
Publlth A p ril 1.10. IMS
OEE I t
IN THC C IR C U IT COURT
OF THE EIOH TEEN TH
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN A N O F O R
S IM IM O L t COUNTY,
FLO R ID A
CASE NO. H U H CAOt G
UN ION W A R R E N SAVINGS
BANK.

CON6HKAT BABiPOC
ASPn m s T0rCU&gt;USMU
OPOAfH&amp;CALflANT'

8:30 A.M. ■5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

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

2 1— Pe rso n a ls

25— Special N o lic e s

I w ll not b * responsible tor any
d e b ts In c u rre d by enyone
other toon myself as of March
IB, IM ) A ry **ta r Holley_____
S PR IN G IS THE TIME IO
B U I L O B IO B U S IN E S S
THROUOH LIT TLE ADSI

25— S p e c ia l Notices
B a llo o n M o&lt;jk
1 0 ) 11)0400
SEND A GIFT
..... WITH A LIF T I

_______BALLOON
______ BOUQUETS
.. .........W* Deliver I
F t r i e i r y reeson eeory too sen

CELEBRATE
A BIRTH!
M r Start's v ltlf
makes tar a litatim *
* f memories, glfls A *111
Coll Lind* 111 SHF
a AAARV KAY COSMETICS •
Skin care and celar Hair
CONNIE .......................,177 F ill

TWO A IR LIN E T IC K E TS Or
lando to DstreR* or Grand
Rop'd*. Michigan SIS each
Musi ba utad A p ril 4 Call
171B4F7

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
Child car# by lie nursa Lunch,
snacks D klly acflviltas Aga »
A over Weekdays tem tp m
Lake M a ry 177 Hit_________
Far tandar. laving A qualify
c h ild c a r*, c a ll A C h ild 's
W arm 777 B47I________
SUNLANO ESTATES
Child car# my home avporl
•n ca d day school loochor
N utritious meals, tancad yard,
large play a’ as Agas I thru
17 Monday Ihru Friday a AM
to a PM Lois of TLC Call
177 717*

33—Real Estate
Courses

W ILLIE SORRELLS, at al.
Defend a n ti
NOTICE OF ACTION
STATE OF FLORIDA
TO B a r b a r a A n n H a y t i .
M a ltaull* A Sorrails, Banni*
La* Mon loom ary and W illi* R
Montgomery W lios* residence
Is unknown
You o r * horby ro q u lrtd to flta
you answer or w ritte n dtlonias.
II any. In Its* ahxrvt proceeding
with Ih* Ctark ot thlo Court, ond
•o ta rv * • copy Ihoroof upon Ih*
P t o ln t lf r * a tto rn e y s , whole
name and o d d r a n appears
hereon, on or te to r* Ih* )rd day
ol May, IMS. Ih * nature ol to ll
proceeding balng o l u l l tor
forte losur a of mortgage agam il
to* fo llo w in g date "b e d pro
party, to w ll:
L o l 1 0 . B l o c k A ,
WASHINGTON OAKS SECTION
TWO. according to Ih* Plot
thereof o t recorded in Plat Book
lk. Paget to and BF of Ih* Public
Racords of Samlnol* County.
Florida
II you tan to III* your Onsw*,
* r w ritte n batonset In Ih* above
proceeding, on P to ln tlll'l *1
lor nay. a dagault w ill ba antarad
agam il you lor to* &lt;*n*t da
mended In I ha Complalnl or
P e titio n
D O N E ANO OR
DERED AT Sanlord. County ol
Samlnol* Stata o l Flo rid*, to ll
7*to day o l M arch, IM I
(SEAL!
O A V ID N B E R R IE N
CLERK
By Joan B rllla n l
Deputy Ctark
Publlth A p ril }. 10. 17.14. IMS
D EEJ1_____________________

Ttank ing *1 getting *
Real Estate License?
Jam us et evr Career Night
April l«1fi F tafP M
W* oiler Free Tuition
end contmieus Training I
Call Dick ar Vicky tor datalls
we **44 jm iB * . Era f t * lose

★

\

M A X

I

Kv ratal f tar Ida , Inc
f# Years I»p*rlancet

55—Business
Opportunities

NOW

AFTERNOON PAPER ROUTE

That we have
your
attention
Asa ctasHlladadvertiser Into*
IV B N IN O H tn A L O .

INCRBASB lha RBADIRSHIF
• f yavr ad by yslng slarsl
D iva awr talas reps a cell *•

U N ITE D STATES DISTRICT
COURT M ID D L E DISTRICT
OF F L O R IO A O R L A N D O
D I V I S I O N C O U R T N O .:
B4 BBS C Iv O r l IB U N IT E D
STATES OF AM ER IC A. Plain
t ill, v l LU C ILL E WILKINSON.
D e fe n d a n t!* )
N O T IC E OF
SALE N olle* I t hereby given
lhal pursuant to * Final Deere*
o l F o re c lo s u re a n lt r o d on
March II . IMS by Ih* abov*
an tlllo d C ourt In th * ibovo
ta u t*. Ih * undortlgnod United
Stales M arshal, or on* of h it
duly su th o rlio d d o p u h tt. w ill
soil Ih * p ro p e rly tllu o lo In
Samlnol* County, F lo rid *, da
scribed a i Lol 1. and Ih* North
III 1**1 o l L o l 4, Block B.
A L IE N S FIRST ADDITION TO
WASHINGTON HEIGHTS. *c
cording to Ih * plot Ihoroof * t
foe or dad In P lot Book 1. Fog*
l l . ol th* Public Records ol
Samlnol* County. F lo rid *.
*1 public outcry to to* highasl
and b a il bidder lor cash al 11
• clock noon on Moy t. IMS ot
to* W att door e l lha Somlnotn
County Courthouse, Sanlord.
Florida Oalad M arch II . IM )
RICHARD L COX. JR . UNIT
ED S TA TE S M A R S H A L ,
M I O O I E D I S T R I C T OF
F L O R IO A
ROBERT W
M E R K LE . U N IT E O STATES
A T T O R N E Y , M ID D L E OIS
TRICTOF FLO R ID A
Publish M arch 17. A pril 1, IB.
IF, IMS
D t p »rr____________________
FICTITIO US N A M I
NoMcs I t harsby given that I
am engaged in business *1 701
Hays D r , Sanford. Samlnol*
C ounty, F lo r id a u n d e r Ih *
llc lllle u t n o m * o l RUSSELL
E N T E R P H IS E S /C R f A T IV E
EXPRESSIONS and lhal I In
tond to register said nam* with
lha Clark o l th * C ircu it Court.
Seminole County, F lo rid * In
actor done* w ith ih * p v w N iw tt
ol In# F ictitious Nom# Statutes,
to w ll Section MS 0* Florida
Stalutas IMF
IM Sandro C Russoil
Publish A p ril 1, 10. 17,74. IMS
o i r IF

S*L

322-2611

* C fA lL

FOR SALE Phene 171 D a ta lle r 1
Own a baautoui children's shop
O ffe ring lha lala tt In fashions
•Hoalth T#« *lio d *L#vl *Chic
■Jordach# -B utler Brown and
m a n y m o r*
F u r n llu r *
a c c e s s o rie s an d to y s by
O a r b t r and Nod A W a y
tie.soo oo to i l l . too oo m ciudat
b *gl nnlng Inventory Spain
le g fla lu r tl grand opening
promotions and round frlp
airier* lor two Pratflga Fosh
Ions Ml ITtOHf

7 1 — H e lp W a n te d
A crylic Applicators needed to
apply protective coaling on
cars, boats and pianos t ) to
$11 par hour We tra m For
work M Sanford # '* * coll
TompoBU BB* F i l l
AOMIN ASSISTANT
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
Principal of national firm d*
sires an asslsatant who l i
intotogent Sensibto. w ith good
skills starting salary I D 000
Never a I t * I

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774-134*
Assistant Maintenance manag
a r E xperience p re fe rre d
Apply In person Monday thru
Friday. • AM to 4 P M Sanford
N u r s i n g H o m o . BSO
Me I lor-v HI*
AVON Hiring S m iling Facetl
Fell A pt hme C oll immedl
a I t It I 777 f i l l e r 77) 101*
CRT
Date entry e ip e rw n c * tor per
manenl position* Never a
too!

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
______ 774-134®
G E N ER A LO FFIC E CLERKS
LP»rf Tim e!
M u si
w ith
pa rt
II* .
feel

h *v * a lik e experience
typing for perm anent
lima 7 day* each week or
Mon thru F r l Never a

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774-1348

HELP WANTED:

CUSTOMER G R E E T E R w ill
fu lly ram Good pay Start
now Full tlm * SFB 4100
TRUCK DRIVERS local or long
ha u l W ith or w ith o u t r ig
Excellent pay Call * rs 4100
C O M P U TE R O P E R A T O R S
Good Pay Scale! Secure post
lions Call |F I 4100
TRADESM EN
a l l phases
E xcellent pay S ta rt rig h t
away I f f 4X»
Tired*1 J*b Hunting?
Call Fvtures, they can helpl
They have le t's to apamngt.
many a l l no eape-renev
naadad Call tar Into
SFB4MB
OE BAR T MANOR nuw hirin g
too* lav noon I * a PM shill
In stitu tio n a l expectance or
xnowladga ol dials nacassary
Apply M N Highway IF *7
J M B t ___________________

F l l l s r . w e ld a r t . f o r s to o l
fabricating shop S* to IF par
hour to start bosed on oaporl
anc* Call TH 0700___________
FLOOR BUFFER- Permanent
pa-f tlm# position To help
clean retell store Mornings
lr*m 7 to I X AM 4 days
neck E t c
fo r r o llr t d .
samI retired person ST* St 17.
# AM fqSPM _________________
fu tt/P a c t flm *
iwerm g se cre ta ry* Expert
a n te p r e f e r r e d , b u t n e t
required C a llllU b S t
G irl Friday wanted tor small
manufacturing and wholes*!*
business M ust have pleasant
telephone personality and be
abi* to h a nd'* customers
on# on on* Salary nagoflabta
Contact Bob Rowe, Cypress
In far national H I 7470_______
CRUISE SHIP JOBS! Great
income potential A ll occupa
lions For info rm atio n | ] t ] f
F47 BSTOexi IM
AVON EARNINGS W O W III
OPEN TE R R ITO RIES N O W III
l i t IDS or 177 Ok)*
HOU SEPAR EN TS C h ris tia n
sheilor tor abusad A troubled
teens 1 4 *10 **________ ,
INSTALLER................... t* SI**
W i ll ( r e i n f T h i s g r e e l
established CO needs to hire
now Wants Ia s i trw rgenic
parson Plenty D T I

Employment
323-5176
1111 French A re
LABORERS Strong reliable,
general labo rer* needed Im
mediately D itta ra n i locations
Phone and transportation a
must Never a lea Apply

KELLY SERVICES
660-2339
LABORER.... ........ . la SFO*
Lava lha outdoors? This com
pony could ba 4 U ' A ll around
general duties Fun crew.

Employment

323-5176
1)71 French Av*.

ELECTRICIANS Top Helpers
tor Area P r o u d Top Pay!
Good Banaflts! Far Appt ta ll
I 11* 07M o r 1 111 4111 be
iw aenhr* at F A M to 4 PM

M aid lo r S a tu rd a y s . W inter
Springs M u si have references
A Irensportatton see pel*
M E D IC A L
TRANSCRIPTIONIST
Must have knowledge o l medical
let mi nology Salary com men
sural# with experience

TEMP PERM PERSONHEl

774-1341
MORTGAGE LOAN
PROCESSOR
Commercial m ortgage Experi
•need w ith good secretarial
skills Sklery commansurnat*
with experience

1EMP PERM PERSONNEL
774-1348
NURSERY C H E M IC A L SPRAY
O PE R A TO R . E x par lanced
H IB nr to s ta rt le t SSFO

Something has clicked A n d h &gt;u want to con tinu e sour edu cation . W h ere will you get the
money? C o n slJ er the A r m y College FutsJ. If you Qualify, your tw o-year college education (60
semester hour*) can help yssu accumulate up to 120,liXT m a twn-yrnr rnlictm rnt. A n d you can
enter the A r m y w ith a p ro m o tio n
W hile you’re gettin g lice money fot College you ’ll hr team ing a valuable dull. You can chooce
from a variety o f skill* useful to the A r m y tnat could k id to a « ivilian career
Y o u 'll alw i h a v e R c o u p le o f yrB is t n e x p e rie n c e th e c u i t r m r n t a n d a d v e n tu re o f tra v e l, d oin g
new things and m eeting nrvs people
The pc'lm: th e A r m y has lots o l ways t o help you make the m in t o f your tw o college years.
Find out how. C a ll your local A rm y h o . tuner

CALL/COLLECT/VI3IT: 305-323-4500
Sergeant First Claes Juan B . Lugo
Sulla 7, Kirk Plaza Com mercial Street Sanford, FL 32771-1214

_____________ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAM B L ____________

Shopping For A
New Or Used Car1

m a m a

toU &amp; cvse '
^
/

W AREHOUSE W ORK
Im
m edial* Will tra in A lio Gen
eral Laborers *FS 4100

71 — H e lp W a n te d

MAKE THESE TWO COLLEGE YEARS
REALLY PAY OFF.

tan caa alw ays find ta t
bast daafa la lh a E a rn in g
H tiald ■C la s s ifie d seefton.
Raad F rid a y '* Exan/ng H tiald
lor lh a b a it aafacfloat.

E ven in g H erald
Add \w rx b l e e a r b t t r x x v
S x x l x r d . I ta rid a
Itl- M II

4

B usm en Capital S10.00B to
I t 000 000 and over P C Bov
. : i u w r f r P R . ! 1'* - ; ? : ? —
NEED A
"W H A T C H A M A C A L LIT" OR
i*TMINOAMAOIO,’f
ADVERTISE FOR IT W ITH A
WANT AO!

OFFICE HELP no experience
needed Good s ta rlin g pay
F u lltim e CallaFB 4100

Plaintiff

tw e m tn tA
w ets
MAJCAOJW W C- ofSAT.ZK*
W N PAO &amp; C T'
A IM *)'
c— v

b Hn*
3 coniocutiye tins** SIC a ling
7 consecutive times 52C a line
10 cgnt«&lt;iiti*B times 46C a lino
Contrict Rites Aiiilabt#
3 Linos Minimum

VI

M S Q taoepio

/

RATES

1 t in s * .......................... 67C

HOURS

BY G ARRY T R U D E A U
(TlW nOUTHtSVW
uanpgYM A CK xM ext

O rlando - Winter Park
831 -9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

VS

D o o n e s b u ry
IfA N H O N tY . m JU S T M P A
UHSCCMUSAnMMWJW

4 1 - M o n e y lo L e n d

�71—Help Wanted

NEW ACCOUNTS
CUSTOMER SERVICE
O ur Sanford oftn# It Making an
individual to w ort w ith our
custom ers In Mw H r * A tcoinvti department Previous
rolatod aiparlanre knowtedg*
o t banking w rv ic t* and pro­
d u c t * . an d t i c t l l t n t in
to r p a r to n a l th ill* a r * ra&lt;b»,r*d . p lo t typing M ilts
Sun Bank o ffrrt a salary com
m a n tu r o tt w ith e ip e n e n c *
• nd a c h a lle n g in g w o rk
•nvlrorvm vnt To app'r p la n t*
com plete an application at our
Samoran Branch otfic# Jos
E a t! Sameran. Farn Park

SUN BANK
An Equal Opportunity
Em ployer M /F /H /V
F E O IR A L . STATE. A C IV IL
JOBS
NOW A VA ILAB LE IN YOUR
A R E A CALL M l t M k t i o *
FOR IN FO 14 HRS

NEEDED:

INSURANCEANALYS
Good pay Fast premetiani
a im
O FFIC E GAL......... .....t o s ia T f
Outgoing partsnallty w in* I In
vbleea/lig h t typing Room lor
. . pdvancamant

Employment
323*5176
ISIS French Aye
PERSONNEL TRAINEE
W ill tra in to tcreen and in
tervlew applicant! Require! )
y e a rt oftlca etpenence High
degree of Intelligence, energy
and d a tira lor career and

TEMP PERU PERSONNEL

KIT *N’ CARLYLE ; by Larry Wright

W—Rooms lor Rent
Oirittian Aptt | Hemet
TV kitchen, laundry, m aid ISO
■ * u p O l 42) MM an aaia
F urn ithed and U nfurnished
m i Gay hr Place
________ Can M2 M il_________
M tto iy D t c e r a t t d R oo m s
ttf/w k or monthly rata
Kitchen pri,,ledges. homey
HBOA moral O l aall
SANFORD Funvm ed re o m t by
the weak Reatonabia ra ta t
Ma*d tervice Call JJ1 4ICf
S t PM 4H Palmetto Ava
SANFORD, S eat w eakly 4
Monthly ratat U til Inc eft

7rn?~----- *«vaLU4Lmj.

y f o r k in g Managar
to handla
J, v d *4 y oparalion ot Temporary
H alp Company M u tt have
S uparvltory tip e rie n c *. avail
o r o a m ttd . high d rg ta a ot
anargy, and datira c a rte r w ith
grow th Call Cal la or Jar I

774T34I
Phone Work
No aipananca nacattary w ill
tra in No ta la t i t 00 an hour
plot bonut X I aw M il_______
PRODUCTION FE A ION N I L
SANFORD
Auto P a rtt Ra
buIldar Call I t ) 4474
RECEPTIONIST
For a io cu tiv a oftlca M u tt ba
good ty p lit A protattlonal In
appearanca N e v e ra l**!
TEMP PERM PERSONNEL

774-1141
lan d sc ape

l a b o r e r i-

V aiid d riv e rs llcanta Start
Ing pay t ) M par hour M3
B IS
Ro o f Tn o c r e w w a n t e d
H a le In anted rooter na *d t
local craw tor lutvra work
Call waakdayt or avenlngt.
k ■
1 904 7 )4 J i l l o t
JJ01 I f 4 1441____

SARDEl GRINDER
Need tom kona to oparala a
ttr o k a ta n d a r In C y p ra tt
Clock F a ctory E ip a rla n ce
h e lp fu l but not n a c a tta ry
C y p ra tt International, I a In
d u ttrla l Park. Sanlord Fla
R i m ___________________
SECRETARY
Shorthand and word presetting
a m m l Immediate part lim a
p o tilio n In Laka Mary Flaa
able Ito urt No lee Call A bietl
Tem porary Service# U I INO
SECRETARY..____ ___ M M +
P ro la ttio n a l appearance could
la n d yaw i h l t anal T y p
m g /a n a w e r p h o n a t C ra a i

Bottl

Employment
323-5176
tSTI Francb Ava
SH IPPIN G RECEIVING
Reliable, ttrong with good at
titude Permanent and tempo
re ry pot 11loot Never a leal
TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774-1141
Super
m arket
eiperienced
ca th le r Afternoon th ift end
weekandt Apply In par ton
Park and Shag ISth and Park
Saa managar_______________
TEACHER P art lim e AM Day
C ar* E iperienced Prefaced

TO IMP______ _________

TECHNICIAN- RpRi tile ratio
ration No tiperlence nocat
vary Will train Eitontive
travel AAutl have own front
portallon Hwtband 4 wit*
"* a y T7T 13H

73—Employment
Wanted
ON THE SPOT PORTABLE
W E LD IN G Farm, ranch ra
pairt. trailer hifchet M l If4*

Lake M ary Prefetttonal mala
w ill th e re 1 bdrm . 1 bath ip iit
plan w ith ratpontiabla per to r
kapper w k M W t __________
L O N O W O O D . M a la t a a k t
m a tu re fem ale to share 1
B drm Lafcafranf home Call
U » saag
W ill the re r * t tor ad Victorian
WOO m« kncl w tililw t H I AJB4

RIDGEWOOD
ARMS
APARTMENTS
1-2-3 BEDROOMS
S! Air ta n * *1 O t* r ' 3 2 0

MOVE IN 'SPEGALS
o \ SELECTED UNITS

3 2 3 6 4 2 0 or 3 2 3 6 4 3 1

A ir conditienar, *000 STU MS
Freater eheil I cubic f t . |TS0
Ml m e
Uied W atheri P a rti A Service
tor Ktnfnares________ M )*44)
MOONEY APPLIANCES
WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
IM USE F IR S T S !
___________ 111 tail____________

127-Office Rentals
VERT DESIR ABLE I otticai
available M u tt tea to apprt
ciato Only u » per mo M2
Mft

1B3—Television /
Radio / Stereo

Fern Aptt tor Senior C H Iiant
H I Palmetto Ava
J Cowan No phone C ant
L o r a ly t b d rm
C o m p la lt
privacy SSS par week p lu t
USO ta c u 'lty d a p o tit C all
37) *437 or 33) ?T4t_______
MAKE YOURSELF AT HOME
In a completely turnlthe d ttu dto
apartment Single tto ry liv in g
• t 111 bet) Sound controlled
w a ll! Built In booacatev da
cor wall covering A lto
J
Bdrm available
F I*iib i* leatet
* Senior C tttjen* discount
Sentord Court A pertm entt
_______ 111 Jl&lt; 1
STUDIO COTTAGE " Adjacent
to fam ily horn* For w orking
tingle Utitihet included Lake
front U30 p&lt;ut 1300 dapotit
Eat neighborhood, rater
■ ■- .. 1 _______________

AjMtfflMNlit tor r#g&gt;* ful 00 &lt;•
week 1300 SO Dapotit M l 3tla
attar S 00_______ _________
BAMBOO COVE APTS
to# E. A irport Bird
E ttN ncy UtS. I bdrm U IS . 1
bdrm tlM par month M l
*430. 13) *4*1 J\ Oltcount tor
Senior CHIiant
Canterbury i t t h t C fo s tin p
H M fm , I Of J b*th Corvdo t
Pri wit* Pi Imb A Ci rpof 1
W iih if 'D ff if Hook up
B llw ttfu l Countr y W ftm g
Children tm all p«1t w tlto m td
!*&lt;?«•# c if i f «n d it coynl
111 It ll

b d rm 11 halh U n fit

R AM 1LIW O O D 1 STORY with
tparkllng peel I Huge ttene
hrypiacei C altw drei C eilingti
AH the • i t r a i l A itum a ne
a a t l lf y ln g l A lm a t t n a w l
M7*SM
CALL M A L L -.„...„........ M l 1334
C O M M E R C IA L IO N IN O I
Bdrm M i l bath Cant heal
and air. garage I Brick BBQ
and eahel Fenced yardl Bar
m living raem l V44 M4
CALL MALL.........„ ........ 12)1/74

CALL HALL

M —Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

HURRY Oily « F«w L if t t
S iN U r d l l i i B ra n d n«w

LO V E LY T R E E D CORNER
LOT R tcenfly remodeled 1
BOrnt Kama w llb fa m ily
reaml Clean and cared tori
Eety te rre tl M/.Sto
CALL NALL.................

New a iie c le te t w entadl W ill
tram tor a rewarding
U R EAL ESTATE C A R E E R II

323-5774
N U H W V 1/41

NEW HOM E
V&lt;FY*wood Dr loch Arbor A r n
) Bdrm * 1 b «fh . t « t In
bitch«n. cwkb cab in **!, lor m il
dtfting room, fir*plac*, p*ckl-*
Uni vaulted catMngt anargy
pachaga Many othar ailratf
You hava to *## 1o a p p ftcU U
Opan haul# Saturday and
Sunday 12 to 5. othar tima! by
appointment

PHONE 3731463
For quality craftmanthlp and
competitive prlcet let ut price
autyauri

1

k rttA rd

porch, w iih o f «nd d ryor, m int
blind! Friwi I4M a mo
to ta le d on Oob A m , o f P ith
Or tehtnd Do if y U u m n
B ritish A tn g fic in Really
_______ w i m ____ _____
LUXURY APARTMENTS
P in lly A A dult! W ftlM
PoollfdG 1Bod room i
M i i f i r f#v« A p o rtm o itt!
m m t
O p u Ow P —A i d i
RIDGEWOOD ARMS A m
I Bdrm UM a 3 Bdrm 1)40
1 Bdrm t4M
M l *430
______ a or 131 *4*1 a
____
Spec lout 1 bdrm . lakefront.
pool tonnlt Adult! No Pett
1)3) mo 33) 0/42 Jo tee
I and 3 bdrm Alto furnlihed
efficiency from t/S week t3M
depotll No pelt Call M l aSOf
t/ P M 411 Palmetto

DELTONA Lake tronl 1
Bdrm . 2 both home twlm
and llth from your own bock
yard Lergo tcreened porch
withlovoly view 141.0*0
WALL ST C O M P A N Y,..M l SOUS
I n v t t lo r t D rea m
) b d rm / l
both. Ilka new A t lin t* a t
SSS00 down, to J / I &gt; intoretl
reto, U M 31 PI per mo AAutl
quality SV4 408 **3 3*41
Long wood 1/4 too b u y l a pool
heme ) b d rm t . Iivtnq end
fam ily roam Large ireed let
M g y t IR f A l i u m o P H A
Owner w ill deal *44 00ft

^ 3 7

A
l 10U N((D
All
Ilf KNOW
n REAL ESTiri

«

STENSTROM

101—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

R EA LTY-REA LTO R

O R O V E V IIW New home 1
bdrm I bath. 1 car geraqa
No pett U41 mo D a y t M l
131* Evet 1/4 441/__________
H.ddan Lake 1 Bdrm I bath.
Cant Heat and a lt tw o mo
p lu t te c M l l»/ l avanlngt
H ID D EN lA K I
] b d rm . 1
bath, tp lll plan b lin d ! appn
ancat. caning tarn P att con
tidarad E vat l i t * 3 3 ) ______
a a a IN DELTONA a a a
a a HOMES FOR R ENT a a
a a 1/4 1414 a *

WE LIST ANOSELL
MORE HOMESTHAN
AN TO N I IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY

★ LANDLORDS ★
Tired of the heedechetf Lat u t
m anage your r e n ta l p ro
pe rhat P rolattional low c a tt
tervice M l MM Call anytim e
United Sale! Artec la ta t. Inc
Prep Mgml Ole.. Reeder
1 bdrm on Sum m erlin Ava
F ir i t . la tl and d a potit ra
NwNadw/ratorancat M l «4M
] bdrm 1‘ ib a th Fenced yard
Children 4 pelt OK *4M me

105—DuplexT rip le */ Rent
B E A U TIFU L 2 bdrm I bath
carpet, appliance! tcreened
pane launW r W t D i M M
SANFORD DUPLEX 1 bdrm
l&gt; t bath U M me . U M te c u ri
tydeooait Naaet* ka&lt; 411/

Mini WlfthOUSdS
M B A Up..........................J A M O d
STORAGE TR AILERS
Far an Nto cantlrectton. etc
W i l l i Satoi. H I t / * 4 1 2 l4 *to

117—Commercial
Rentals

Sanford's S ilt s L t i d t f

SHENANDOAH^
VILLAGE

&gt;100 O FF
SECURITY
DEPOSIT
« : 323-2920

Lie Real Ettat* Broker
1*4* Sentord Av#
Moving to N C 4 m u tt ta ll
b a to n F H A a p p r a lta l ]
bdrm . i bath, new kitchen,
bath. root, carpeted, tire p’ece
fenced back, c a rp o rt Im
modi a t* ac c uapanc y ' U1 NO
4 Bdrm , I bath completely re
novated Ua.iO*

321-075? Eve 322-7643
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
Gro review 1 bdrm 3 bath dbt
garage, appi u * TOO
Sualand
1 b d r m / 1
bath S p a tia tt/Appliancet
Owner a t t i i t U i 000
Sunland
3 b d r m l
bath Appl rw ath a r dryer
Doll houte US *00
Caenty 1 b d rm ’ l i t bath
qualifying II I m tg U I 000

Tutkow tlla 3 Ac rat I) bdrm i
pool4 barn TERMS IIUOOO
C atta lberry Only M000 dawn 4
bdrm Ib a lh Dbl w idam abil*
including land U T.M0
Dalian* Duplai
3 b d rm 'liy
bath TERMS f/1 000
E n t ir e 'll* 1 b d rm /) bath k
c e ti to St John t Owner w ill
a i t t i t IMS 000
Enterprlt* Vacant lend Irum
111.M0 up Owner will hold!
1 bdrm 11)t bath
Appl US, 000 Owner ant lout I
Laka Mary 1 bdrm/IV* both
appl Only 113 000
IANDST0CK BROKERS

U5-37B2_______ tortiMd.
HAPPINESS IS_____
A K E Y T O A N E W HOME I
PINO IT HEREf
Im m e d ia ta o c c u p a n c y 4
bdrm /1 b ath
U N FH A
attumabl* Owner llnanclng
13*4/ ma 1*1.400 U ) 3»4l
Sanlord Owner will twlp linanca
ttaoau t convert abN home: 4
bdrm., 1 belht or horn* 4
mother in lew apt Attumabl*
4 't mortgog* UAOOO M2 M il
Sentord N k * 1 bedroom ham*
with living room, dining room
pan*led family room, laundry
room, workttwp Call tor In
formation M l 110* or 114 4U1
441,400, er be*l after__________

U N S C L IIV A B L II I b d rm . 1
bath town homo w ith cant
heal f air. great ream eat to
klfchM . parch. U4.4M.

lANFORDt 1 Bdrm hem# Hall
acr* ♦ / . brick lirapiaca.
larga room * beautiful decor
E acalton l condition Jult

aOBN EVA OSCEOLA RD a
ION I D FOR M O BILES!
1 Acre Countr y tra c t!
Well traad an paved Ad
M % Dawn It Y rt »II1 X I
From II* .ta e l
II yau a r* leak mg «*r a tec
ceaitof career to Reel Etiata.
Stent tram Realty H leaking
tor yav Call La* Albright
today at H I M M Evening!

m- an.

322-2420
l l a l i P u b . ta n ta rd
4*1 U . M ary Bled LB. Mary

GOCVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS
M IU lM N T
• a do 11 I Family
Sec Ilona
• W O C unnw ctionc
• C oble TV. Poof
• Short Term le a a e t

i, 1 1 a. « * , t a. i x
1505 W. 25Mi 1L

l A f | « t N *«

t

D u d M o b il*

Horn* D iilg i m th is h i t .
Famine* ..........,*....„...A d vltt
I H w y 1141......... ...... M l 130*
1*2) C ypra tt 11 • a* Newly
r r modeled M u ll be moved
11300 Call M ) 1)43
2 b d rm
tc r t tn k d p i l l a ,
carport. AC. utility ched
Aduitt. no palt Park Av*
Mobile Park 111 IU I
f l REACH TO W NCRAFT
24 * 44 3 bdrm . I bath In
pa rk, fenced tot M l AIM
’l l Concord 14ava Adult tec
•ton Carriage Cave SI4.S00
__M M 4 S I_Jaavejn etta2 ^^^^

15?—Real Estate
Wanted

163—Waterfront
Property / Sale
Sanford I Acre 3 lot! U t 000
W M eliciow ikl. REALTO R
M ))4 g j
ST JOHNS RIVER Near Da
bary, on 100 r *00 Daap w a it'
vballAaapttc C a 1 IX » a f/a a n

181—Appliances
/ Furniture
Old chillerobe. lacking mirror
w a rd rob* door * I IS, twin
b a d .fro m *, m a tlra u Ilk *
new,IIS Tall m*t*l kitchen
cabinet. doori.US 111 MM.
attar « PM
________
•tern M l YYARRANTIBO.
BARNETTS.... CASSELBERRY
U b l l l l ........................... I X W I
a RENT TOOWN#
Color T V i . itoreo*. waiheri.
dryer*, refrigerator, treater*
furniture, video recorder!
Special tit week* rent 4*4
Alternative TV 4 Appt- Rental!
la y re ! Ibepplwg Cantor
M l MM

235—Trucks /
Buses / Vans
t i l l Oatiun camper lap Main I
fancy bul Hi d/pend*ble&lt; MS0
M2 2MI Celery Printing
11*0 Ford 14 ton pick up dump
truck New painting uphai
itory, fun* up and front end
aiignmant Apple p&lt;e candl
tian Your* tor 14)00 Dump
truck teat-ire alone ll worth
U O W aday » S S3* 32*1
14*2 Ford Bronco XLT New
tire*, brake! ihacki I W0 and
takeover payment* M1/3U

'75 AMC CantBfd UnitH
223—Miscellaneous
GARDENING TIME II HEBEI
PLANT AW ANT A0
WATCHTHE CASH GROW
R E A D Y TO IN S T A L L . * 1 "
HIGH 6 A LV A N IIE D CHAIN
LI NK FENCE
DRI VE
THROUGH GATE. ) WALK
OATES ALL ACCESSORIES
BETTER THAN NEW Ml
*»M A P T E R IP M _________
Rebuilt K IR B Y / IM * fb 4 up
Guaranteed Kirby Ce
M IW l it SI 1U Sail

T.V. and T.V. parts for sal*
Call C.A Farina at ) ) l l t )t
is - PANASONIC COLOR TV
1100* new 3 yea r! old A U in g
MO* firm 133 Ma*____________

1?3—Lawn &amp; Garden
RIOINO SNAPPER MOWER
WOOD BUSTER
__________ 13104U_____________

1??—P*ts &amp; Supplies
FREE TOSOOO MOM 1 1 Part
pi* bull, boat? A tiff i, JJ1
g q y ________________________
^
I

* cyl. autom atic w / db4a vanity
v iw r t. M iae arglnal m ttoi
I tea Down Caih * r tra d * A
law monthly paym ent!
*4* oaso ...................... *** ****

83 EcmsoIim Van. 15,000 00
ar b a it a tto r....M ) 1414 attar I M

235—Motorcycles
dnd Bikes
•21 HONDA 40*
4 c y l . goad ceod
MOO t a lk m 1444

R E S T A U R A N T E O U IP . lea
m achine BUNN Spat cat
ta*m#k#r. m
griddle M "
Char broiler 404 /)! *14/
Satellite TV Sytlemi
Complete All you need !00\
Financing Na money down
M M* 00 Univer tel l i t 1/44

14/4 DODOE 14 F l
M IN
MOTOR HOME MUST SELL
BY APR IL Mlh H I 1411

231-Cars

243-Junk Cars

213—Auctions

241 —Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

AUCTION IV E R Y F R I NIOHT

L &amp; E AUCTION

Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
NATIONAL AUTO SALES

IM Sanford Av«
CONSIGNMENT! WELCOME!

373-6553

•TZ L T D U *0 Down
' f l [lodge S W SI0* Dawn
'M Im p jlA it'CNJ Down

FOR ESTATE
Com m trcto! er R ttld a n lla l
Auction* 4 Appralialt Call
Ogtr* Auchan Ml solo

1170 S. Sanford 321 4075
Cat W ie p fin f* Sava y««r iho«
Itjr f w r f Read 1ft# W *nt A Ji

217—Garage Sales
A r* you getting Divorced tre n i
/erred Forecloted* Needq u k k
*aie» Call Pale M l 4 t*/

’ l l PLYM O U TH DUSTER 4
Cyl . re built engine power
Good rend M l 3411___________
I I PONTIAC PHOENIX
Llkanew 4.U*ml M Y *
M3 Tali

BUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
From l i t to M« m mar*
_____ Call U t l e i i m - e it l
TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk A
U ved car *. truck* 1 heavy
equipment M3 S44*
___
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
J U N K C A R IA N O T R U C K I
CBS AUTO PARTS. 141 4MJ

*wIttl Iwyt*

* DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION ★

Frt 4 Sat 111. Na aarly bird*
All the M ea l p le l beeki.
bucket!, keby everything 111
Hidden Lake
__

Hwy f t . . . ...
I E • • 8

OARAGE SO P U LL THERE'S
NO ROOM FOR THE CART
CLEAN IT OUT WITH A
GAR AGE SAL E AOI
M U LT I PAM ILY- A L IT T L E
■ I T OF E V I R Y T H I N O
IATUROAY ONLY 14M I
ELMAVE . NEAR 1/th It
Yard Sale Frt., A * r ll 1. on t i l l
4*. 4th dftveway an rig h t pett
Richmond Ava l i t * III T Rain

1976 CAMAR0

Da yto ag CVeaih

*2 3 0 0

H B td l I • • • I !

PUBLIC AU10 AUC1I0N

1974 GREMLIN

Every Wad N ito a lliM P M

&gt; *8 0

* Where Anybody *
* Can Buy or Sell I *

1969 JEEP
WAG0NEER * 1 0 9 3

Far mart detail*
I *04 111 1)11
D tbary Auto A M a rin* to t**
A cre*! the r iv * r . top al h ill
IT4 Hwy 1/ 41 Debary U4 4144

I

e a YARD SALE a a 1/4) Path
Ava th it Saturday tram 4 AM
. to M to * * rty M rd i ptaaaa__
* FA M ILY SALE 1 ridin g lawn
mower*. 4 bicycle*, children I
c lo th e * a d u l t * c l a t h * * ,
knlcknack*

1980 DATSUN
WAGON

1980 DATSUN P/U

DISCOUNT
tO
AUTO
SALES

TRUCK

Baby Badt, I tr a lla n . Ctothai.
P laypem . E lf. P aperback
Bee kt 111* 1 // M ) 4104
NEEDA
"W H A T C H A M A C A L L IT " OR
" T H I M O iM lO lO " f
ADVERTISE FOR IT W ITH A
WANT ADI

*2 9 9 3

1983 CONCORD

WE FINANCE

21?—Wanted to Buy

'2 9 9 3

OIL WAGON ' 3 3 0 0

• I t Maltlhu M*4 dawn
*1* M averick Lew Owww
1)41 French Ava
IM IU I
14)1 D ella Royale AC 4 dr hard
top New paint, radial f lr t t .
brake* Tun* up Battary Law
m l I prav owner | t o / | or
beyt after. M M V tk
t* n v w
S/M er b a it alter
1114*11

SANFORD
MOTOR C
A M C JEEP
SUB S F r g n c h A v * .
I l l 4111

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

IM P A C T B O N O M O N E V I
10 44% 1 Bdrm . I bath wall
kept horn* only U I *00 Call
tor delailt

W ILL B U ILD TO S U ITI YOUR
LOT OR OURSI EXCLUSIVE
A O I N T F O R W IN S O N O
DEV C O R F. A CENTRAL
FLORIDA LE A D E R ! M O R I
HOME FOR LESS MONEVI
CALL TODAY1

HOMES

Need C rib ! Playpem Baby
fw r n lt u r * . c lo th in g Goad
Price* After &gt; PM
111 S/*J
PayingCASH tor
Aluminum, Cant Copper
B r a n L a id Newipaaer
G ia n G old Silver
Kokomo Topi. 411W t i t
IS go Sat V I M ) MM
W ANTED DEADOR ALIVE)
R otrigeeaton W aihari
Pryor* .............
Ml 41*4

SPRING TIM E
TIME TO PLANT TOURSILF
INA HOME OF YOUROWN!

SPECIAL 1 bdrm , 1 bath heme
with aal to kitchen. Itrepiact.
paal. p orch . | * c . ten d
*44,4*0

NEW HOME 1 b d r m , 1 both
homo. E a a c ■ I I v a
neighborhaad groat team, oat
la k lfc h a it . t l v d y ro a m .
HUM

G r e d o r v

No

ATTENTION INVESTORSI 1
U n lit ta u ih S a n to 'd only
I ) / 0OO Larga down or re
•Inane* ewenar w ill help

CALL A N Y T IM E
New OftKa Building
C F R H an w ell Flrtt St
Totally decorated ready lor
occupancy 4*4104131 tq ft
Ml 1411

BATEMAN REALTY

JUST LIKE NEW I bdrm . I
bam heme w ith e e l to kitchen
Frethly painted. Now caret!

A IN 'T IT C U TE ! 1 bdrm . I&gt;t
bath homo Sunken liv in g
ro o m , o i l In k itc h e n .
hrepUce. cant heal 4 air.
ITS. M l.

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

231-Cars

STRAW BE R R IE I Large A
plentiful You or we pick
dally Quantity dilcOunt*
Other vegetable! BOB BALL
Hwy 04 1 mi W Leeiburg
U Pick Stt awbarnat
fuel Thur la t 4*1* Haittr Art
•Mk/4t..................
Mt *U t

GE wild i t i i * con tele Like
new U M or be lt otter M u ll
i * * 1 Abiolutely no c a ll! after
II M t * * / / _______ ____

141—Homes For Sale

21?—Wanted to Buy

221—Good Things
to Eat

COLOR TELE V IS IO N
Ztnim l l " color conieto teiavi
lion Original price aver taoo
balance due MW Caih or take
over payment! ot US month
NO MONEY DOWN Still tn
warranty Freahom atrlat.no
obligation Call M l M*l day or
night.

EFFICIENCY APT Furnll/vd
no pelt no tmell children
ITT 1as*______________________

r/*raauu wucaw
5 M O B tctyo w o o d A . o
S a n fo rd

Ofhc* er R eta il South Sentord
Aye
I egg to J IM tq ft
RUSS tq ft T o tally rettored
Brick Building M l ISIS
I I I ! French Ava
1100 to it
Store Front W ill remodel tq
tenentt tp a c lllc a tto n t l too
per month M l TtlS_________

77—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

113—Storage Rentals
♦1—Apartments/
House to Share

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

GARAGE SO FULL TH E R E 'S
NO ROOM FOR THE LART
CLEAN IT OUT W ITN A
GARAGE SALE AOt

774-1341
PERSONNEL MANAGER

Evening Herald, Sanford, f l . Wednesday. April ]. 1445—I IB

117—Commercial
Rentals

SANFORD • Rental
My bath u o o m a

1 Bdrm .

C A LL AN YTIM E
REALTOR M l 4441
__ WE N E E D LI SUNOS*

1215 VIAHERMOSA
I bdrm / 1 bath, quality built
• a id lim b e r heme, apprea.
IM * *q. It. under * ir i Mgh
•a a rg g * • ! * • * , daap w ill.
M*4t. p riva cy tone*. I U M N
Frarw 14*1 MwvMaaH,
p e w e tl i pare4 4ml.
to Lawgweed M arkham Rd .
thee l m l la Via Her mate
Huabey Realty
*41 * m . ...........

REALTORS
m m i

143—Oul Of Slat*
Property / Salt
Oeeave l a acre H am atit** or
p e M bla Mob, i t Ham* Slta*
U 0* down. M i l l 4S par month
* T e a ri n o M l total
OISCOUNT FOR CASH
COUNTRT W ID E REALTY
Bag. I E B ro ke r.......... M l M l!

14?—Commercial
Property / Salt
COM M ERCIAL SPECIALIST
LA K E B U R Y REALTY
R E ALTO R ____ ______ M l MM

151 — Investment
Property / Sal*
CASSELBERRY- I acre toned
PR I M t 00* W M a lklo w tA I
XEALTOR
1M /**1

157—M obil*
Homas / Sal*
CARRIAGE COVE Adult ~
Man. l bdrm . I bath earner
tot. lanced ST 00* H i t * M l

To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

Accounting A
Tax Servict
P rete iitenel Tea Eapertl Pre
p e rt, my e lite* ar re ar heme
Beal price !: I I
l i A II* .
U n g S ll Calf otter * - n * M 7 1
l a i accouniant M year* a ip *
rla n c* W ill prapara •*■ ** In
y o u r horn* Personal and
sm all b o sln eil 3M I M

Additions A
Remodtllng
REMODELING SPECIALIST
Wa Handle
The Who*# Ball Of Waa

B. E. LINK CONST.
322-702!
_^^nacm^reaabl^_^
Appliance Repair
F * * t A Fair S irvlc*
A 'l Brand* at Malar Appliance!
W ith * * Oay Guarantee
C A S A P P LIA N C I
Q » G fy ............. .............. MB Saab

Alter** Appiixnci Senice
14h r. la r v K * N* (a fro Charga
IT ye. ta p MA 1441. II4 N 1 1
F a t l. d a p tn d a b i* a p p lla n c t
w rv lc a Mot* m»|or brand!
W a rra n ty i t r v l c * fo r
W h lr lp * * l, A m a n a ,
K alvindtor. Hqtpemt Ale hie y

&gt;&gt;AgMlOTjc#^V;MI&lt;ll«l&gt;^ ^
Building Contractors

ADDITIONS R EM O O I LINO
B ill SirIppCustom Builder
S letoLtc
RROOHSM

&lt;55-7411
Carpentry
R IM O O IU N G

MHIII/1M

.

R E PA IR IN G

144 1)4 111/

Cleaning Strvlce

O Dining
T S S SR**nk
n E B4 SNed
3 7 T*14RM»
SnfaACbM r. US ITT U M

MAIDS- Te -Order
Ciaaniuieii W m il T* OndUnatt
Caff fiat haIpar* I
Gvartntaad S an k * La

CAUNON! 3350400

Painting

Electrical

Home Repairs

RESIDENTIAL W IRINO
Indeer/ Owtdeer L t*h h n *.
Service Upgrades. Anythin*
■ Metrical Free l i t i m a l t i
Since 1*3*1 Call
T a m 'i Elactflc Sarvtc* I I I 1/14

M jin to n jn c # ot All ty p tt
CAf pent? y pAinfing plumbing
ArwJ elec fric JJ1AOA8

Firewood/Fuel
T R IE S IR Y IC E A F IR IW O O D
FOR SALE CALL A F U N
4 P M M l 40b*

General Services
O rIM W i l l * ' C i m m i r c l l !
M a n ia * Haw** Painting and
M a rti V t t r t *4 E aptrtonct
RtaianabM 111 tear
S A N TRANSCRIPTION
Medical T ra n te riptien
111 MM

Handy Man
Carpentry, Ptembmg. Electrical
Yau Nam* M l.............. Free ( i t

Landclearing
GENEVA LA N D C LIA R IN O
Lai and Landciaaring,
fill d irt and haulm *
Call 144 S fM e r U * S3SI
LAN D C LEAR IN G
F IL L DINT BUSHOGGINT
CLAY A SHALE IM 14TJ

ACC LAWN SERVICE
Mamttnanca Sodding Pruning
Ciaanin* Ihalihm g Fartilmn*
Fred E iffm a to t........ .....W IT H
Lawn Memtonanc*
Landscaping Bush Hog Mowing
_____
144 )Otl
____

LAWNS MOWED A TRIMMED
H i I t ll

__________Mi-mi__________
■ ap. Itandymen, Rat RaliabM
Fra* E *i m m t any job B e il
R a t e jM I b llt C a llA n y llm *

Health A Beauty
TOW I R 'l JE AU TV SALON
FORMERLY H er H a lt* Beauty
Nook S lf E IttS I 171 ST4)

Home Improvement
C allnr i
A Bamadalin*
Na Jab Tan Small
l i t Bur tan L a m . U n ta r*

_______

M cC L U R I 4 HUNT- Ramadai
In*, carpantry, ca b ,n a il 44*
lob loo small M l • Ma
Plumbing. F *lnlm g . E la e frit
Carpentry Den t See It/A u k 4 a ’
IQ yr* I q _______ B 4L M&gt; *M1
Screen l a w n . A lum inium sid
mg futters. carpnntry, can
c rtia . pqtwa. ra pairs Fraa
E U im ato*
Lk
H tH J *
THOMAS 4 T440AAAS. Mama
repair, cka n m *. la w * t* r a
Cad M l MM

Homo Repair*
R e p a ir* and
ramadalin* M* |*b to* small
Ceil M3 teal

c a r p J n t ir

Cfmstiin Bf».

Serving Central Fl# for IS yra
n lth carnplei* quality pelnl
Ing service# O vality a Musi
S pecialw allcaafin* I I I #411
W A llP A P IR IN Q
FAIN TIN G
Rtie r ancat............Vary Raliabi*
i i i 4 ti t / x la*
t u n a it* /

Paper Hanging
FAPERNANOINO
Any typa wallcavarmg

Lawn Service

Spring Yard Clean up*

★ TONY C ORINOw
PtotnsHHUl Custom Peinlin#

J*.
j

C a m p IfU L i r e Cate

lU M k W lifts
323-4401
Masonry
4 E A T 7 S k r e t ( ^ ^ n * « ^ u * ! it y
aparahon Palm*, drivew ay*
Day* M l U M I v e * M3 IU I
O H Ruby Centre**
Hews* lle b t * C k lr ti * P altoi

Nursing Care
OUR R A T E S A R IL O W E R
Lebavtow Nursing Cenlyr
*1* I Secand S I. lania rd

in am

Painting
C A LV IN A TOM I
Haw** Painting 4 Wall Paper
V n tb v y motor to ll
W *supplytobar T a S A V ls u

________ m i n i

w ill
paint your Ham* ar ■uatneu
die GAm 'Our problems to l
WE CARE Quality work. »
yra a ip M2 30*/ L k cant

....................M l 1*44

Plastering
a A LL Phasaaa* p la ifffin g a
Rapair, Slecca. Hard Caet.
Li mute tod A rk b M l m i .
Are | W i F la a rf Tben 1*0
e th a rl a l yeur service fhreugh
Want Adsl
_______

Plumbing
P ivm bM f Service
Rapair a Rapiac* a Ramadai
a Fra* E stim atat a llJ M d d a

Pressure Cleaning
PRIVATE 4 M O BILE HOMES
COMMERCIAL

&gt;4* mi

Secretarial Servlet
A LL S IC R IT A 9 IA L ANO
WORD PROCESSING SVCt
Natary PwbtK
Oualily Werb
Raatanabfy P tkedC a ll Anytime
lillM t^ ^ t/H V M a tla r r e r e

Tile
S caH m ann I I I *
P r ia iu r *
C le a n in g C e ra m ic . V in y l
Akbastoa A ll Phate* P C
B rick H orn** Businaawa
F r m E H N a a w a b i^ n ^ ila ^

Tree Service
E C H O L S I A ll SERVICE
Free Estimates! Low Prices I
L k anted m w rad - MJ 7374
" LatR w Pretou tonak A# t r .
JOHN ALLENS LAWN 4 TREE
Dead h e * removal L k B ins
F r a e tt l M l JJdd

�I J B — Evening Herald. Sanford. FI

WadnaMSay, April ]. t«|J

rarlrb ird

«

coupon

ra rU 'b in l

coupon

|Z 'tk -z - 11 i

J-j

STAR KIST IN WATER

-.W HITE MEAT TUNA '!
C

yl StarKrtf

coupon !

w

PRICES GOOD
APRIL 4-6, 1985

[J 1 1

LARGE EGGS

■

-

S W IFT PR EM IU M

VALUE ( I
&lt;0
1*1

CANNED HAM

I I IT

1
mu mu housi
ALL
U*II»US
m
i minus

3 LB CAN

I

fa

-

COFFEE

$1” afsJ

Mill MIMAS

Dine cmm

M AYO N N AISE

SUGAR

BUIT CIOCIEI
All Mill!I(S

SHAMPOO

RAISIN BRAN

CAKE M IXES

STUFFING MIXES

G R O U N D BEEF

POTATO SALAD

COFFEE

CEREAL

COFFEE

Ham buruer
Helper

CAKES

$139

n **.

uRs iia c h c o

o' K l F H I I l H(J

FLOUR

SAVE 90

GOLD MEDAL
FLOUR

SAV E 70&lt;

MlCKOR* S w i f t B O N t lI S S

W O BRAND U S CMOICC
B i f f CHUCK B l AD I

SMO«IO WMOLt IULLV coomo

BUFFET
HAM At!

CHUCK
ROAST

POLE BEANS
&amp; SNAP BEANS

SAVE 70

SA V E 86

ECONOM Y ■«
PORK CHOPS

S A V E 70*

COORS
BEER

$&gt;179

$189
Franks
COM PAUSSAVl

3
i;!

Ui lL

IOO‘ » P U R I t LOR IDA
TROPICANA GOLD N PURI

ORANGE
JUICE

1 1r«TM i 1 ■
1 1 5 5 *H

$169

i
kuj
r* l

Michelob

(C M P M A SAV[

c o r n u i sav [

C O M P A U i SAVl

S A V E 70

Vi 0 HH ANU GMADC A
N ON IUS?I D

BROAD BREASTED

TURKEYS

\

E-Z CARVE
RIB ROAST *

Y ENDIVE. ESCAROLEf
f or ROMAINE V

WHITE
POTATOES

SOUR
CREAM

$0591
Mushrooms
S A V f 21

SHERBET or
&gt;ICE CREAM

$129

I

69‘

t

Cheese

COM!All UAH

C O M H IliS A V t

GREEN GIANT
CORN

LeSueur Peas

Onions

SUNBELT
TOWELS

IN G LEN O O K
WINES
V4M44

mi

$

9 9

TURKEY
BREAST

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152118">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, April 03, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152119">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152120">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on April 03, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152121">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152122">
                <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;, April 03, 1985; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152123">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152124">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152125">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152126">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="15245" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="14859">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/58bff7c3d73d137d577d0d0c16212c89.pdf</src>
        <authentication>2c0d9b535e146a360608e23279dd4963</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="152117">
                    <text>County Sets
Sights On
Oviedo Site
For Library
By Donna Eatea
Herald Staff W rite r
Seminole County commission­
ers are expected to authorize
negotiations today to buy a
five-acre parcel across from
Oviedo High School for Its third
library site.
Director of Services Jo hn
Percy and the county's library
advisory committee have re­
commended the county buy the
five acres southwest of the In­
tersection of state Road 420 and
Aulla Avenue. Just one mile west
of Oviedo's downtown, for Its
O v ie d o -T u s k a w llla b ra n c h
library. The tract, known ns the
Uluelle .Jenkins property. Is also
near the Intersection of stale
Hoads 420 and 4 19.
The commission will take up
the matter after Its 7 p m. public
hearings
Percy called the tract's loca­
tion excellent. The only problem
Is the $250.(XX) asking price, he
said.
An apprulsal of the property
shows Its value to be $162,500
and Hint Is the price that will be
sought In the negotiations.
Percy told commissioners the
tract has 660 feet of frontage on
SR 426 and Is about 330 fret
deep. A library site of about 2.5
acres Is needed, but the owner Is
hot Interested In splitting the
property, Percy said.
If negotiations fall through a
second site, know n as the
Lawton parcel. Is being consid­
ered. This site has 10 acres und
the asking price is $575,000
The property fronts on SH 426
between Lake Jessup Avenue
and Lawton Avenue, about .2
m ile f r o m th e c e n te r of
downtown Oviedo laiwlon Ele­
mentary School fronts to the
south.
Percy said discussions huve
been held with tuith the city of
Oviedo and the Seminole County
School Hoard about whether
cither would like In buy u
portion of the 10 acres If the
county acquires the |iarccl.
He said the city of Oviedo Is
Interested, but does not have the
money oil bund to buy part of
the tract.
In the meantime, the county
stair and the llbrury advisory
committee working with library
architects. Rogers, Ixivelock A
Fritz Inc. of Orlando, have set a
construction schedule for the
five libraries lo be built Irom the
$7 million bond Issue authorized
for the facilities In an October
1964 referendum.
Construction of the Sanford.
Forest City and Oviedo branch
libraries are lo tie completed for
opening In 1987.
The county already bus u site,
purchased for $130,000 from
Mama Hunt. Immediately north
of the present Sanford llbrury for
the new H .000 square foot
library. Th e Forrst Clly and
Oviedo brunches are lo huve
Sec L IB R A R IE S , page 8A

Fo£ Longwood_ Job

P o w e r s ' P r ic e
S a id T o o H ig h

Officers Told To Get In Shape
By Rick B ru nson
their officers In the next two to
Herald Staff W rite r
three months. l*ollcc Chief Hen
Sanford’s police officers and Hutler, In a memo to police
firefighters will lx- huffing und officers last week. Mid the pro­
chugging soon — getting Into gram Is long overdue and told
sbajx- to make sure they are up t h e o f f i c e r s to p r e p a r e
to the physical demands of their themselves for It.
|obs.
Hutler has not decided what
The police and fire depart­ type of fitness program he will
ments ure expected to start use but he told the Sanford City
physical fitness progrants for C o m m is s io n at Its M onday

workshop that he was studying
programs used by the MlaniiDadc police force and California
lllghwuy Patrol.
He M id one will Ik- chosen that

Is suitable for the police and fire
departments.

"Most of the problem with
most of m y men Is weight."
Hutler told the commission. He
See S H A P E -U P , page 8A

By Jane Caaaelberry
Herald S ta ff W rite r
Mayor Harvey Smerllson has
called a special Longwood City
Commission meeting for tonight
to consider the hiring of William
T . Powers os city administrator,
but four of.the five commission­
ers have already said they plan
to reject Powers' counter offer
and look at other options
City Clerk IXm Te rry has been
mentioned os a possibility. The
meeting will be held at 7:30 p in.
tonight at the city hall. 175 W.
Warren Ave.
“ As far as I'm concerned, he
(Powers! can go lukc a hike."
M id Smerllson. "H is demands
are really unreasonable."
On Monday the city received a
three-page rountcr offer from
Powers, assistant city manager
and finance director for the city
of Perry, accepting the city's
835.000-a-vear salary offer, but
adding some other stipulations.
Powers. 42. had asked for
$40,000 with a $5,000 raise
after nine m onths when he
appeared before the commission
on March 22. when the commis­
sioners agreed he was tnelr
unanimous choice. Hut In .'Is
written offer to him. Ihc com­
mission offered $35,000 with
future Increases negotiable.
Smerllson M id he was furious
when he learned Friday that City
Commissioner Perry Faulkner,
who had favored offering Powers
$40,000 a year, had contacted
the Jon candidate Tuesduy by
phone. Smerllson It wus un­
ethical for Faulkner to contact
Powers on the city's behalf.
Faulkner, who voted ugalnxt
h ir in g Powers at $ 3 5 ,0 00
because he favored offering
$40,000. said today he had only
called Powers lo reussure him ol
his continued support and had

In billioni ol dollars. Including shipping costs

The U S. trade deficit
with Japan war $37 1
billion in 1064 - a 71%
Increase over 1063

ttae
*Cstimsiad
BOUftCC 0$$$rim$«M of Commute

t tll

lO K ^ O IUPII — Prime Minister Yasuhlrn
Nakasone. whose political fortunes are Increas
•ugly Hcd to his ability lo defuse trade tensions
with the United States, told the Japanese
parliament today he had made a "Judgment" on
easing trade restrictions on telecommunications
equipment.
Although Nakusone did not elaborate on the
nature of his "Judgment." the Kyodo news
service, quoting government sources. Mid he was
referring to a decision to simplify technical
standards for telecommunications equipment.
The prime minister, seeking to Juggle conflict­
ing pressures from Ihe United States and critics
at home. M id he had broken a deadlock In Ihe
key area of telecommunications trade during the
weekend trade talks with U.S presidential envoy
Gaston Slgur.
The United States has been particularly
anxious to see steps that would ease the entry
Into Ja p a n 's recently deregulated telecom­
munications market by U.S. firms.
Nakasone’s attention, and his political fortunes,
increasingly have been dominated by the Issue of
trade w ith the United States, a source of
mounting tension us Japan's bilateral trade

City Eyeing Exclusive G arb ag e Franchise

Growth Top Issuo As
Legislature Begins
T A L L A H A S S E E (U P I) T h e Florida
Legislature today begins a GO duv legislative
session that Is expected lo chart the state's
growth Into the next century
As the Constitution provides for the first
Tuesday after the first Monday In April, the
House and Senate were called to order at 10
a.m. and Gov. Hob Graliam's “ Stale of the
State" address was sciu-duled an hour later.
G r o w t h m a n a g e m e n t a n ti m e d ic a l
malpractice have been debated for months In
committee, and u series of bills on both topics
- hangovers from past sessions — are pending
In Ihe House and Senate. Another top Issue of
Ihe session, treatment and prevention of child
abuse, to ltd over from the Dec. 6-Tsrssion.

bake Mary City Manager Kathy
Rice M id the proposal would solve
several problems and bring an end to
a year long experiment with "capital­
ism" In the garbage marketplace.
Thursday's vote will end a series of
events that began In January of 1984
when the city's lone garbage collec­
tion agency. Better Garbage, asked
Lake Mary for an exclusive franchise.
Then three other companies. World
Refuse of Altamonte Springs (a sister
company of Ace). Industrial Waste
and Danjohn requested an opportuni­
ty to bid on the franchise.
Mrs Rice said the city commission

then decided lo open the marketplace
In Lake Mary a n d allow garbage
companies to sign Individual con­
tracts with citizens. But after a year.
Mrs. Rice M id that method has
caused several problems. Including;
• Confusion from residents on how
to get garbage collection.
• The deterioration of city roads
from as many as five trips a week by
the various com panies' garbage
trucks.
• And regulating Ihe rates com­
panies can charge for garbage coffertlon.
See OARBAOE, page 8A

Sanford Cleanup Blitz 'Terrific'
Sunlord city commissioners
were uchlng Monday after they
picked up trash along Seminole
Boulevard during the city's
weekend cleanup blitz. Stooping
und scooping up irash wus hard
work, the coimnlsaloners M id at
their Monday workshop.
"It was amazing how much
traeh wus out there." Commis­
sioner John Men er said.
Mayor Bettye Smith, rubbing
her arms, sold she had sore
muscles.
Hut Ihe commissioners took a
"n o puln. no gain" attitude
about the venture. Sunford Is
sparkling a bit more today

1

-A lo y o r Harvey Smmrllson
not discussed the negotiations.
He M id that the contract drawn
up by Powers was "very pro­
fessionally done" but did not
Indicate how he would vote.
S m e rllso n was quoted In
another newspaper M ylng "It
seems be (Faulkner) promised
the man a $-10,000 Mlary behind
closed doors and how he's trying
to make good on It.” Faulkner
M id for the good of the city he
wouldn't pursue the matter.
" I know I didn't do anything
wrong so I’m nol going lo pursue
It any farther." he M id.
Powers counteroffer siatrd he
wants a definite commitment by
the city for a $5,000 Increase In
six months after his proposed
starting dute of May 1 plus
periodic cost of living Increases,
lie ulso wants two weeks vaca­
tion the first year und three
weeks a year thereafter. At
p r e s e n t , th e L o n g w o o d
personnel code a llow - three
weeks only after 10 years with
the city. Should the co omission
give In to this stipulation it
would mean passing an ordi­
nance to amend the policy.
Other Items spelled out In
Powers offer Include the city
|&gt;aylng Ills moving expenses. Its
part of Ills Florida retirement, a
$30,000 term life Insurance poli­
cy. cost of his unending the
Florida la-ague of Cities and
Florida Clly/Counly Managers
See POWERS, page 8 A

Nakasone Breaks Market Deadlock

A m e r ic a ’s m o u n tin g
tr a d e d e f ic it w ith J a p a n

By Roger Simmons
The lone company which knew
Herald Staff Writer
about the proposed ordinance was
A (imposed ordinance which would Ace Disposal Servlre of Orlando. Ace
ullow Lake M ary lu aw ard an Marketing Director Andy Amroso
exclusive franchise for Ihe collection maid he lias been one of the people
of garbugr took three of the four pushing for the one-company ar­
waste collectors that servr the city by­ rangement.
surprise.
If approved. Ihe ordinance would
R e p re se n ta tive s of S e m in o le establish provisions for the granting
Garbage Service of Sanford. Danjohn of an exclusive franchise for collect­
Services und In d u stria l W aste ing residential und com m ercial
Services, both of Longwood. were not waste, give Ihe city power lo approve
aware of the ordinance that Is rate Increases, and make garbage
scheduled to come before city com­ collection mandatory.
missioners during Thursday night's
Residents now can dispose of their
meeting.
own garbage.

‘A i for as I'm
concornod, he (Powers)
can go take a hike.
His demands aro
really unreasonable.'

because of the massive cleanup
e ffo rt.

Along with the commission,
members of numerous civic and
h o m e o w n e rs o rg a n iz a tio n s
fanned out across the city Satur­
day und bagged trash strewn In
creeks, ditches and roadways. Il
was the wrapup of the city's
month long "cleanup, fixup,
palntup" campaign.
Mercer said Ihe campaign,
especially Saturday's blitz, was

“terrific.
The combined effort of Hoy
Scout troops, civic dubs and
Individual citizens made the
event successful, he Mid.

Mercer said he didn’t know
how many people participated In
the drive but estimated the event
got wide community support.
Some of the groups did not
com plete th e ir designated
cleanup a s s i g n m e n t s and have
planned lo return In the next few
d a y s to finish the Job. he M i d .
And even though March was
"cleanup m onth" Mercer M id
there Is Mill work lo be done.
"It was a great success and a
good start. But there a still a lot
of trash In Sanford left to be
picked up." he said.
— Rick Branson

surplus has risen to about $37 billion last year, a
record
The Prime minister previously said be will go
on television to ask the Japanese people for their
understanding as be seeks to resolve Ihe problem
With Ihe U.S. Congress threatening protec­
tionist measures unless Japan opens up key
markets to U.S. competition. Nakasone has
ulreudy promised to work out a new package of
market-opening measures by April 9
Hut the prime minister, with a less than firm
hold on his ruling Liberal-Democratic party, has
come under some criticism, most recently from
party vice-chairman Susumu N'lkuido. for his
handling of the Issue.
Some Japanese polltlcul and business leaders
feel Nakasone has already made too many
concessions lo the United States
A Cabinet-sponsored panel, meanwhile, was
p u llin g Ihe finishing touches on a package of
propoMls for future trade reform.
Government sources said a study |ianel headed
by former Foreign Minister Saburo Oklla would
recommend a program lo Ihe Cabinet under
which domestic markets would Ik- opened to
See J A P A N , page 8A

-

%
■ f i n

Action Reports...... 3A
Bridge........
Calendar....
Classifieds..
Comics.......
Crossword.. ...........6B
fln.ir 75UUT
Aiihv •.
1R
UCOf
Deaths.......
Dr. Lamb... ...........6B
Editorial....

a

e ra

v
i -

Florida..........
AQ
Horoscope.....
Hospital........ . . 2A
Nation............ ....... 2A
Dzuytla
1R
Sports............ .....5-7A
Television.... ...... IB
Weather........
8A
World............. ........BA

Dining Out Is
NEW YORK (UP!) - Most women would
prefer s Broadway play and a restaurant
dinner to having sex. but a clear majority
opted for wrx over a World Series gume. a
random survey showed.
The telephone poll, released In the New
York 1‘oat Monday, represented Ihe views of
533 men and 487 women from Ihe New York
City area, called between Feb. 2A and March
II.
Of the women who responded. 61 percent
would choose a dinner In a fine New York
Clly restaurant lo having aex and the same
number would prefer seeing a Broadway
show. But. Ihe poll found GO percent of the
women would prefer sex rather than attend
a World Series game.
As for men. thetr responses to the poll
were simple and unequivocal. They would
prefer aex to a play, a dinner and a baseball
game — even Ihe World Series.
•f

�J A -E v » n ln g H»r»M , Sxntsrd, F I.

Tusntzy, A frit 1, IW »

T a x i n g T h e R ic h

N A TIO N

Democrats Call It Fairness, Not A Tax Hike

IN BRIEF
|

Pan Am A verts Strike
But Some Workers Angry
W ASHINGTON fUf*I) — Flight attendants reached a
tentative accord with Pan American World Airways and
avoided a strike hut union activists condemned the
contract and erirouraged rank and-file members to reject It,
The union and the company declined to reveal terms of
the settlement, announced Monday after 27 hours of
non-stop bargaining on behalf of about 5.500 flight
attendants. The accord averted a threatened strike against
the financially troubled airline.
One activist, calling the contract "garbage.” said Pali Am
would Immediately begirt laying ofr 3.500 flight attendants.
A Pan Am spokesman Initially "ealegoribally denied" the
charge but later said "around 3.000" flight attendants
“ will not be needed."
The spokesman attributed the reduction In stafT to a
29-day ground workers strike that ended Wednesday, not
in negoilatlons with the (light attendants.
The tentative ugrcemrnt also Includes a controversial
two tier wage scale under which new employees perma­
nently remain at lower rates of pay.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Calling their plan
more a matter of fairness than a tax hike, a
group of House Democrats Is pushing to
raise Income taxes by at least $15 billion per
yr*r — but only for corporations and the
wealthy.
"Th e people In the country are crying out
for something like this." said Hep. Charles
Schumer. D-N.Y., the sponsor of a bill to
Impose a minimum tax on Individuals and
companies with adjusted Incomes of more
than $100,000.
"We're all concerned that tax Increase has
a bad name." Schurncr said Monday. "Hut
this Is not a tax Increase In the eyes of the
country. This Is fairness."
Rep. Marty Russo. D H L said: "One of the
things this Isn't Is a new tax Increase. ... It's
a way of seeing that people not paying their
share pay their share."

The plan, which has 26 co-sponsors,
would toughen the way corporations and
Individuals compute their adjusted gross
Income and Impose a 25 percent m inim um
tax on those with adjusted Incomes of more
than $100,000. For individuals between
$70,000 and • 100.000. the minimum tax
would be gradually phased In.
Although the sponsors released some
details, aides said an actual bill was still In
the working stages.
Growing attention Is being paid to com­
panies that have made huge profits but paid
no taxes (or In some eaes actually received
refunds). Schumer and Russo circulated a
list of 65 companies — Including several
major defense contractors — which, be­
tween 1981 and 1983. each made more
than $36 million In profit but paid no taxes
or received refunds.

"We have a $220 billion deficit." Russo
said. "Something needs to be done to raise
revenues."
Both Schumer and Russo believe their
plan could be an alternative to the more |
widely discussed tax simplification bills,
which are all designed to be revenue neutral
— not significantly raising or lowering the
amount of tax revenue collected.
Meanwhile, two House subcommittees
Monday examined other measures that
would add taxes to discourage certain
hostile corporate takeover attempts that end
up not being successful, but often provide
enormous profit for the corporate raider.
"We're trying to put enough of a tax on tt
... to more or leas take away" the advantage
of a questionable hostile takeover attempt.
Sen. David Boren. D-Okla.. said.

W id e s p r e a d
V ir u s L in k e d
T o L e u k e m ia

Hefner vs. Bogdanovich
LOS ANGELES (UP!) — Playboy publisher Hugh Hefner
has accused director Peter Bogdanovich of seducing the
13-year-old sister of Playmntr of the Year Dorothy Straiten
and using her as a "pathological replacement" for the
murdered actress-model,
llrfner's allegations — which have been rumored for
months — were made during a news conference Monday at
which he denied accusations In Bogdanovich's book. "The
Killing ol a Unicom." that the publisher led Straiten Into a
llfestylr that rrsulted In her death In 1980 by her estranged
husband.
Los Angeles police Iasi summer Investigated the
allegations that Bogdanovich had sex with the girl, and
talked to Ihr alleged victim uud her parents as part of the
probe, but decided not to file charges. Cmdr. William
Booth, a department spokesman, said Monday,
Hefner also said that anxiety over the director's
accusations In the (took caused him to suffer n stroke
March 6.
In n prepared statement following Hefner's news
conference, Bogdanovich, who has ndmlttcd being In love
with Straiten said, "hi my opinion. Hefner sells sexual lies
every month This one about Dorothy's surviving family Is
just fils latest."

Refugees Gain Legal Relsdency
United Press Internstlonal
Victoria Contreras, a 102-year-old Cuban refugee who
Joined the 1080 Muriel sealift, shouted "Viva Hengan" as
she became the first Marlel refugee to gain legal residency
status In the United Btntcs.
Contreras, one of (lie oldest of the 125,000 Martel sealift
refugees, was granted legal residency Monday after an
Interview with the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization
Service. She Is now eligible to apply for U.S. citizenship.
In Florida. 89.901 Marlel refugees registered during the
Initial signup period of Ihr adjustment program In
December and January, said Virgil Sululs. an assistant INS
district director.
Under Ihr restrictions of the Cuban Adjustment Act of
1900, the law by which most Cubans become legal
residents, a criminal record or a history of menlul disorders
could prevent applicants from gaining legal resident status

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Grand Jury Indicts 14
In Gas, Oil Lease Fraud
MIAMI (UPI) — A federal grand Jury has charged 14
people with selling worthless gas and oil leuses on federal
land to about 160 investors, defrauding them out of $1.8
million.
A 31 count Indictment returned Monday charged the
defendants with conspiracy and with one to 30 counts each
of mull fraud and wire fraud In the operation of u Miami
partnership. Alaska Oil Leases.
The Indictment alleged that beginning In August 1983.
the defrndunts made fraudulent representations to In­
vestors to promote the sale of oil and gas leases on U.S.
government-owned land In the Denulul Block In Aluska.
The Indictment sold Investors were told that they could
sell the leases to oil companies for large sums of money,
that the land normally was reserved for oil developers who
secured leasing rights through competitive bids, und that
oil exploration was expected to begin there within six
months.

Prosecutors To G et No Help
MIAMI (UPI) — The head of Ihr Miami U.S. Attorney's
Office, which Is in the nutlon's busiest federal court, has 94
assistants to handle nearly 5.000 pending civil and
criminal cases, but there urc no plans lu expand the staff.
The olllce, currently headed by U.S. Attorney Stanley
Marcus, faces an Increasing workload, stocked with drug
tnil lie king cases, and the upcoming addition of three — If
not four — new Judgeships.
The U S Attorney In Manhattan, home of the nation's
second busiest federal courthouse, boasts u regular staff of
130 on the payroll.
Alice W. Wampler 111. who was suceeded by Marcus us
Ihr southern district's lop federal prosecutor, had 62
nsslsluut U S attorneys when hr returned to private
plot Ik e In 1982.
"It was terrible," h r said. "There was no way we could
keep up with the cuseload und they wouldn't let me hire
any additional people."

HOSPITAL NOTES
Cm I x I rwrts* a*sWMl Hms O«I

w an

Unlsr*.

A O M IttlO N t

Markin A Dsrnsti
Stanch* W ! &lt; • • &gt; «
William C MuH s im m it

Chad J. CrsoXoil. U i M « (

Esril Ofsgorv.tsXaMsor

D llC M A S O I t
le u

I

t'S M

AtsnsO Oandrca
M s ts m i A. Tartar. OsOsry
OwfcyS tsndrsnl. DtUsns
William Qargan W im n . Dalton*

m

rwwr.Tnv»«ius

DstsrsS A O rronl and Ss * t tirl. Iw U tr*

Kc m L tuM m dM iW r.Unier

HartM

Squeeze Play
T ra ffic was backed up for miles around
m idd a y Monday as cars tunneled through
one open easlbound lane on Interstate 4
d urin g resurfacing of the highw ay. The
backups, once rea ching B miles during
F rid a y 's rush hour, are expected to continue

OvTi

for another 2VT months. According to
Florida Highway Patrol statistics, there has
been an Increase In the number ol 1-4 fender
benders by motorists trying to bypass the
congestion and drive on the emergency lane
or medians.

New Jail Addition Expected
To Be Completed By June *87
By Donna Rates
H erald Staff W riter
If everything goes aa planned, Seminole County
nhmild have n new $12 million Jail addition and
renovated existing facilities by June IUH7.
Dale Ncdcrholf ol Wulaon A Co. of Winter Park,
architects for the project, told the county
commission Monday afternoon that hlsln on the
work are scheduled for opening May 13 with
(dans tor construction and ((-novations slated Tor
completion by the end of next week
The slide Dr purtment of Corrections must
approve I lie plans lx-lore the project can be let Tor
bids.

Nedcrhnfl said he expects 20 25 general
contractors In bid on the work
The construction and renovations nrr to lx* paid
for from the receipts of a special one cent sales
tux authorized by tlx* voters In the November
1984 election to be levied lor one year.
The taxes Is expected to raise $13,2 mil Iton. A
portion of the cost of renovating the Seminole
County courthouse Into u purely Judicial building
Is also to lx* paid limit these revenues

The Jail addition, which will triple the Inmate
capacity from 236 to 736. la to be of modular
pre-cast concrete design, recommended by Sheriff
John Polk and patterned alter a facility recently
hullt In Pinellas County.
The addition Is to have five octagonal-shaped
pods of two stories each branching out from a
central cure. Each pod will house about 100
prisoners in two-person cells. Medium security
spare for 200 prisoners and m inim um security
spare for 300 will be provided.
Water and sewer service, food preparation area,
laundry facilities, storage, medical care and staff
support facilities In the core of the addition arc
designed to he sufficient In size for the ultimate
1,000 Inmate capacity expected by the year 2000.
The ceils are to be factory built of pre-cast
concrete and Joined together In pods at the site.
Architects have said pre-casting will reduce
maintenance and security problems. The pre­
casting technique will allow cells to be built with
only one ceiling Joint made from an epoxy mortar
which Is harder than concrete.

Man Faces Year In Lewd Act Case
A 34-year-old Altamonte Springs man charged
with two countn of sexual battery has pleaded
guilty to committing a lewd and lascivious act In
front ol a child. In a second separate plea, a
Genrv r utlumry pleaded no contest lu possession
of more than 20 grams of marijuana
Seminole Circuit Judge C. Vernon Mize J r. set
May 24 for sentencing Gregory Vincent Parrott of
685 Enclno Way, He could receive up to a year In
the county Jail.
According to court records, the female victims,
one 14 and Ihr other 11, reported to Seminole
County shertlt's Investigators that they were
ssautlrd In Parrott s home In September or
October of 1982.
Parrott, a crane operator, was arrested Jan. 9
und ts free on bond while awaiting sentencing

In the second case, Richard Weasels Vass, 44. of
Cemetery Hoad, pleaded no contest to possession
of pot.
Vass. who described himself as a self-employed
attorney, entered the plea before Mtze who set
sentencing for May 10. Voss could receive up to a
year In the county Jail.
According to court records. Seminole County
drag task force ugents raided Vasa' property Sept.
12 and found a crop of about 40 pot plants.
The ugents reported that they were tipped o(T to
the pot crop, which was growing near Cemetery
Hoad. Geneva, by Seminole County range and
water d rp u tlri. Some of the plants were up to 15
leet tall and the entire crop weighed about 100
pounds.
—Deane Jordan

SAN DIEGO (UPI) - Up to 1
million Americans may be car­
rying a-virus believed to cause a
form of leukemia and a cancer
researcher says their number ts
g r o w in g because of blood
transfusions, sexual contact and
family closeness.
D r . W illia m H a zc ltln e of
H a rva rd University told an
American Cancer Society semi­
nar Monday that people Infected
with the H TL V I retrovirus stand
a 1 In 100 chance of developing
adult T-cell leukemia.
T-cells are while blood cells
that are part of the body's
Im m u n e o rd ls c a s c -flg h tlu g
system.
" H T L V I Is.spread by very
Intim ate contact." Hazcltlne
s a id , " p r im a r ily b y blood
transfusions, sexual contact and
long-term familial contact."
H T L V 1 Is a cousin of the
H T L V HI retrovirus, the Immune
suppressive agent linked to the
deadly acquired Immune defi­
ciency syndrome, or AIDS.
Th e H T L V l retrovirus was
first linked to adult T -c e ll
leukemia In the late 1970s. but
Harvard University studies now
suggest It may also be linked to
other forms of cancer.
"O ver the past year m y labora­
tory has been Investigating both
the H T L V 1 and the H T L V III
viruses." Hazcltlne said. "T h e
goal of our work Is to develop art
u n d e rs ta n d in g of ho w the
v iru s e s affect the im m u n e !
system's master control.
"It ts now speculated that the '
H T L V I virus can shut down the
human Immune system much In
the same way that the H T L V III
virus renders AIDS victims de­
fenseless against disease.
"O u r advances In (he past year
show a unique biological pro­
perty of the H TLV I and H T L V III
viruses and their nblllty to re­
program a key component of the
cell's genetic machinery."
Apparently, once a victim Is
Infected w ith either v iru s ,
genette material In the cell Is
"reprogrammed" and all original
In fo rm a tio n In the cell ts
"pushed out." he said.
"Even though a person Is a
carrier of the H TLV I. that does
not mean he'll develop a mallg n a n c y ." H azcltln e said.
"Studies show that close faintly
members have Immunities to
the virus and never develop
cancer."
T h e H T L V I retrovirus is
common In many parts of the
world, particularly In .Japan and
the Caribbean. Adult T -c e ll
leukemia Is uncommon In the
United States.
Some scientists theorize that
the virus originated In Africa and
was transported to the Far East
by Portugese sailors several de­
cades ago.
Researchers at Harvard arc
now trying to develop vaccines
against both H TLV I and H T L V
III retroviruses.

Chamber Group Backs Widening Of SR 419
By Rick Brunson
Herald Staff W rite r
Stale Hoatl 419. with Its win­
ding. snaking path through east
Seminole County, needs to Ire
lour-tuned and straightened out
so It Is salrr und provides Lister
entry IntoSanlord.
That's the view of the Greater
S a n fo rd C ha m b er of Com
m erer'* Roads and P rldgrs
Committee
The group met last seek and
made the four-luiilng of state
Hoad 419 from slat'- Road 434
cast to Tuscawllla Hoad Its top
lobbying priority.
C h a m b e r president J a c k
Horner says the four Lining Is
needed to more effectively tie the
growing Ovlcdo/Gcrrva/Wlnler
Springs area lulu Sanford, the
county scat.
"Tha t Is Ihe Iasi road Into thr
county srui that needs to be

four-laurd." Horner said. The
road Is an Important link for
commerce In both arras, he
added.
C o m m itte e cha irm a n C a l
Conklin said thr twisting nature
of the highway also makes It

unsafe.
The eom mltlrr wilt work with
county and state Department of
Transportation officials and
provide Information about the
road In Ihe hopes that It will be
widened.
The committee, which In ­
cludes prominent members of
the engineering business and
members of the Sanford City
C o m m issio n and S e m in o le
County Com mission, use? a
lio n -a d v e r s a r ia l, p o s it iv e
approuch to Influence highway
decisions. Horner said. It also
seeks to cooperate with Lake

Mary and other Seminole clllrt
on highway policies.
"The committee gives Sanford
a voice In roads affairs In a day
when there is little money (for
roads)." Homer said.
Other road projects the com­
mittee Is endorsing or want to
see materialize are:
• Extension of stair Hoad 419
from U.S. Highway 17-92 east
I n t o 0 v le d o . 1n c l u d ln g
rights-of-way for four-lanlng.
• Extension of Lake Mary
Boulevard from Interstate 4 east
to state Hoad 46 and renaming it
stale Road 415.
• Extension of state Road 46A
west front Sanford to Interstate
4
• F o u r -la n ln g A ir p o r t
Boulevard.
• Improve stale Road 427
from Five Points south.

• A major road connection
fro m S anford across Lake
Jessup to southeast Seminole
County and northeast Orange
County.

�Evening Herald. Sanford. Ft.

Tuesday. April J, 1 H S -J A

P o lice S e a rc h e s O f V e h ic le s S till M u d d y Issue
W ASH IN GTON (UPII — Th e Supreme Court,
splitting 4-4. has sidestepped an opportunity to
clarify when police may search automobiles
without a warrant.
The tie vote was the seventh In the past week
that found tit** nation's highest court upholding a
lower court ruling because Justice Lewis Powell
did not participate in deciding the case.
Powell was absent for three months while
recovering from surgery for prostate cancer and
apparently has decided not to vole In any case
that was argued during his absence. This has
[rsulted in the deadlocks on several key cases.
Including the car search case that Oklahoma
o f f i c ia ls h a d h o p e d w o u l d r e s u lt In
"stralghtfoward. workable rules'' for police.
Also Monday, the Justices agreed to hear

appeals by Japanese television manulacturers In
the long-running dispute over dumping T V sets
in the United States. A federal appeals court had
cleared the way for trial on charges Japanese
companies conspired to dump low-priced sets In
the United States In violation of federal antitrust
law.
The 15-year-old case began in 1970 when
Zenith Radio Corp, and another Amertan m anu­
facturer filed suit against seven Japanese m anu­
facturers alleging a conspiracy to drive American
T V makers out of business by selling television
receivers and other electronic goods at artificially
low prices in the United States.
In other action, the court:
— Voted 8-0 to reinstate the conviction of a San
Francisco man because the government proved

Hey Buddy, Turn That
An Altamonte Springs man —
who re p o rte d ly threatened
another man with a knife during
a dispute over a loud stereo has
been charged with aggravated
assault and released from Jail on
$2,500 bond.
l-orcn Allen Brown. 22. of 221
Mallard St.. Altamonte Springs,
lold Altamonte Springs (Ktllrr
the man pulled a knife and
placed It to his throat after
Brown had complained about
the man's loud car stereo, a
(Killer report said.
Brown broke away Irom the
man and ran Inside the Bombay
Blcyele Club. 525 E. slate Road
436, Altamonte Springs, and
came back outside with three
friends who chased I tic suspect
away, the rrport said.
The incident occurred at about
1:30 p in. Monday and Brown
called police to the scene. Police
spotted a suspect In front of a
nearby restaurant at about 1:50
p m He was identified by Drown
and other witnesses, the report
said. Th e suspect reportedly hud
a knife In his possession when
caught.
Phillip U. Pinkney. IH. of 849
S. Wymorc Road. *35C. has
been charged In the case. H r Is
scheduled to appear In court
April 22.
ES C A P ETR Y
A 27-ycar-old Winter Park
man nabbed by Oviedo police on

E A R T O EA R
A 46-year-old man who re­
portedly threatened to slash a
Longwood man's throat "from
ear to ear" during an argument
has been charged w ith ag­
gravated assault and Is being
held In lieu of *5.000 bond.
Longwood police responded to
a disturbance call at 855 Georgia
Ave.. Longwood, on Saturday
and were met by Mark Petersen
who told them that during an
argument the suspect had held a
knife to hts throat, threatened
him and then fled, a police
report said.
Longw ood police Issued a
bulletin on the suspect to other
police agencies and Sanford
police captured the man at about
9 p in . Saturday. The man was
turned over to l.ongwood police
and Jailed, the report said.
Gary Carl Demas. no address
given, has been charged In the
case.
F IR E C A L L S
The Sanford Fire Department
responded to the following calls

Action Reports

Monday
— 7 58 a m ., *37 t-akr Monroe
Terrace, rescue. An 83-year-old
w om un w ho hud d iffic u lty
breathing was taken to the
hospital.
— 9:59 a.m „ 612 Sanford Ave..
rescue. Rescue workers assisted

uioy one pan oi a twu-pail indictment charging
insurance fraud.
— Dividing 4-4. upheld Indiana's right to put a
suspect on trtal for dealing In both marijuana and
illegal prescription drugs, even though he signed
an agreement to return from Michigan to Ik - tried
only on the marijuana charge.
— Agreed to decide whether a police officer
illegally coerced a defendant into making a
confession by promising him psychiatric help and
telling him he was not a criminal
— Will consider whether the stale of Michigan
Improperly refused to deduct child care expenses
when drlerm lng welfare benefit levels and
eligibility.
The failure Of the high court to decide the
Oklahoma car search case left Intact a state

Stereo Down!'
p a ra m e d ics In lo a d in g an
H7-year-old w om an into an
ambulance for transport (o the
hospital
B U R G L A R IE S &amp; 1 H E F T S
Two pickup trucks were bur­
glarized beiwccn Saturday night
and Sunday morning In (he
parking lot of the Cavalier Motor
Inn. 3200 S. Orlando Drive.
Sanford.
In the lirsi Incident. Wlllts
Hitchens. 50. of New Castle.
Del.. rr|M&gt;rtrd to Sanlord (roller
that someone entered hts Ford
pickup through the camper shell
and then climbed through the
rear window. The thief stole a
citizens hand radio, a scanner,
knife, translator radio, clothes
and tools with a total value at
*-112
In thr second Incident. David
Hull.will. 45. ol Princeton, rrported the driver's side window
of hts pickup was forced open
but no Items were missing:
A thief entered a Ford LTD
parked at the Sanford Flea
Market. 1300 S, French Ave..
Sanford, and stole a woman's
handbag worth $346. according
to a (Miller report. The purer
belongs to Ta m m y Goss. 19. of
Whites Tow n. Ind
DUE A R R E S T S
The following persons have
been arrested In Sem inole
County on a charge of driving
under die Influence.

— James Everett Medlock. 43. of
14 3 0 S e m l n o l a B 1v d . .
Casselberry, at 9 50 a m. Satur­
day on U.S. Highway 17-92 after
a m otorist Bagged dow n a
highway patrolman and told him
the suspect had driven Into her
car.
— Francis John Dies, 60. of 651
DrooVsidc Drive. Maitland, at 6
p.m. Saturday after his car was
involved In an accident on Lake
Howell Road.
— Steven John Ashley. 26, of
i»06 Bishop Drive. Altamonte
Springs, at 10 10 p.m. Saturday
at 708 Beverly Drive afler his car
was involved In an accident.
— Author Raymone Klelnc. 35.
of 7th Street. Chuluota, at 11:44
p .m . S a tu rd a y on C e n tra l
Avenue. Oviedo, utter lie failed to
dim hts car's headlights and was
following another vehicle too
closely.
— Robert Kent During, 32. of 105
Garrison Drive. Sanford, was
Jailed at 3:41 a.m. Saturday utter
lie was found asleep In hts car.
which was parked In the middle
of Poln sett a Avenue. Sanford.
The car's motor was running.
— Krill Alan Doversplkc. 27. ol
502 Bradshaw St.. Sanford, at
4 45 a in. Saturday uflcr he was
found asleep In his car which
was |&gt;arkcd In the Intersection of
U.S. Highway 17 92 and Lake
Mary Boulevard. Sanford. The
car's engine was running and
I hr vehicle wus In grur.

S t a g g e r i n g M a n ★ Fires
T r y in g To H a il T a x i
* Courts
F a c e s J a il T e r m O n M a r iju a n a C h a r g e

Veterans Leaving Seminole Employment

The United States Coast
Guard Auxiliary Flotilla 41 of
Lake Mary will offer a 7-week
course In boating skills and
seamanship starting April 15.
Classes will lie held from 7:30
to 9:30 p m. Mondays and
Thursday at Luke Mary High
School, Pre-rrglsiralton will
be April I I at 7 p.m. in Ihe
multl-pur(M&gt;sc room
Subjects covered will In­
clude safe boating, boat han­
dling. tra llcrln g . piloting,
marine engines, navigation
rules and aids, weather,
m a r 11n s p i k e and r a d io ­
telephone procedures. Gradu­
ation certificates ure awarded
upon successful completion of
the course taught by auxiliary
officers.
There Is u nomtanl charge
for text and work hooks. For
fuither Information, contact
Commander Carl Carlson at
323-9416. or Russ Mcgonrgal.
322-5588.
Flotilla 41 Is also enlisting
people Interested In Joining Its
ranks to assist the Untied
States Coast Guard, promote
boating safety, administer
public education programs,
and provide courtesy marine
examinations. Graduates of
the course are eligible to
apply for membership.

NOTICE AND APPLICATION FOR
ALTERNATIVE PAYMENT OF 1985
REAL ESTATE TAXES BY INSTALLMENT
Section 197.0155, F.S. ellowt an ellernitive plan for payment of rail ettate ta x i. A taxpayer
who alaett to pay taxes by thr Instillment method lhell make payment) bated upon «n ani­
mated tea which thall ba equal to tha actual taaee levied upon the property in the precedin'
year.
THE PAYM EN T SCHEDULE SH A LL BE AS FOLLOW S:
Firtt Instillment Paymant:

N
0

T

Second Initallmant Payment: One quarter of the total eitimatrd ta x i ditcounted 4W%. Pay­
ment thall be made not later then September 30, 1915.
Third Initallmant Paymant:

One quarter of the total eitimeted te x t plut on* half of any
ed|uitmtnt punuant to a determination of actual tea liability
ditcounlad 3 V Paymant thall be made not latar then De­
cember 31, 1985.

Fourth Initallmant Payment:

One quarter of the total animated laatt plut one-hell of eny
adjustment punuant to a determination ol actual tea liability.
No ditcount. Paymant thall ba made not latar than March 31,
1986,

I

C
E

One quarter ol the total animated taaei discounted 6%. Pay­
ment thill be made not later then-Junc 30, 1915. A taxpayer
mutt make the firlt initellmrnt payment in order lo participate
in thit plan.

If you have not received an application to pay 1985 tixes by initallmant and it it
your intant to exercise your rights undar this law, than pleas* complete the appli­
cation below and mail or file with your county tax collector prior to May 1 ,1985.
The absolute deadline for filing the application is April 30, 1985. Any application
ftied after April 30 will not be considered. The postmarkon application mailed to
the tax collector shall determine if the application was timely mailed. Additional
application forms may be obtained from the tax collector’s office as lislad below:

N
0

T
I

C
E

Mail completed application to: _____r TfiflY RAY JR__________ Tax Collector
T o F j x DRAWER E
SAKFOPD FL 32771
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

D C T A C H _________________________________________________________

IT YOU DESIRE TO PAY 1985 TA X ES BY IN S TA LLM E N T. PLEASE SION, D A TE , COM PLETE PROPERTY
ID E N TIFIC A TIO N NO. ANO RETURN TH IS APPLICATION TO Y O UR C O U N TY TA X C O LLE C TO R PRIOR
TO MAY 1, 1985. UPON RECEIPT, TH E T A X C O LLECTO R SH A LL M AIL Y O UR FIR ST N O TICE OF PAY­
MENT DUE, W ITH INSTRUCTIONS IF Y O U HAVE NOT RECEIVED YOUR FIRST N O TICE BY JUNE 15,
1985,C O N TA C T TH E TA X CO LLECTO R S O FFICE.

CALENDAR
TUESDAY. APRIL 2
Sanford AA. 5:30, closed dla
cuaalon. and 8 p.m.. open dls
cusston. 1201 W. First St.
Hebos Club AA. noon and 5:30
p.m.. closed. 8 p.m.. step. 130
Normandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean A ir Keboa Club, noon,
dosed.
24-Hour A A group beginners
open discussion. 8 p.m.. Second
and Bay Streets. Sanford.
17-92 G ro u p A A. 8 p .m ..
clo se d . M e ssia h L u th e r a n
Church. 17-92 and Dogtrack
Road.
Overeaters Anonymous, open,
7:30 p .m .. Florida Power &amp;
Light. 301 S. Myrtle Ave.. Sanfont.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL S
Full Gospel Business Men's
F e llo w s h ip I n t e r n a t io n a l
breakfast meeting. 6:30 a.m..
Holiday Inn. State Road 436 and
W y m o re R o a d , A lta m o n te
Swings. For details call 6564255.
W h ite H o u s e C h a lle n g e
Forum, which will address ways
entail businesses and nonprofit
o rg a n iza tio n s can work In

B o a t in g S kills
C ourse O ffe re d

N O T IC E

★ Police Beal

drunk
The bag ol
contained more than 20 grams of
A Mall fund man who was stopped
by driving
a policeand possession
marijuana
paraphernalia
marijuana, according to court records,
officer because he was staggering
across and
a
ran out ot the
parking lot trying to hall a taxi liascharges
pleadedreportedly
gu'lty
In other court action, an Orlando man arrested
policeofstation while being
to possession of more titan Oviedo
20 grams
In that city on charges of burglary and grand theft
fingerprinted, but he was caught
marljuama.
after police raided his house has pleaded guilty In
about
400latkrs
yards away.
Donald Harold Walls. 19. of 3-D
Twin
to burglary.
PoliceCircuit
reported Seminole
stopping County
the
Manor, entered the pica before Seminole
In exchange for thr plea, the state has agreed
man's
car
after
It
took
a
quick
Judge Dominick J. Salfl who set June 13 for
not to prosecute a grand thetl charge against
turn
from
Avenue onto
sentencing. Walls cotdd receive up
to a
yearCentral
In
Ralph
Robert
Sandlewood
Court.
Oviedo,
andMain. 26.
the county Jail
According
almost
spun out of control atto court records. Main voluntarily
According to court records, a man
was weaving
surrendered In Seminole County authorities after
about
10
30 pS.m. Saturday.
across the Kmart parking lot In Fern Park. 431
a
sene 11 ofwith
his home by Orlando police on Nov. 27
charged
U.S. Highway 17-92. searching for a The
i*t*i- man
when was
n
revealed
loot taken from homes at 603 Fellowship
DU1
and
making
an
Improper
deputy saw film and Investigated. The incident
Drive and 2504 Tahoe Circle in Seminole County.
occurred at 3 :1Ha.in. on Nov. 17. turn. After he was searched and
Recovered
were Items Including Jewelry, u
marijuana
and
drug
parapherna­
When the officer approached the man. he
computer
and
saxaphonr.
lia saw
reportedly
smelled a strong odor of alcohol and
a clear found, the drug
charges
were
added,
a
police
Circuit
Judge
Robert B. McGregor set May 3 for
plastic bag containing what appeared to be
sentencing. Main could receive up lo a year In the
marijuana sticking out of the report
man'ssaid.
Jacket
Jail.
— Deane Jo rd a n
When the man county
was released
(KX'krt.
f r o m h a n d c u f f s to be
fingerprinted at the police sta­
tion he reportedly broke free and
ran out the front door. Three
police officers chased and re­
Jusa said.
ts paid
Seminole Is losing two of Its veteran
employees
captured
him. the report
A *28.657 annually. The stale (rays
80added.
jterrent of the salary while the county pays 20
— County Engineer Bill Bush and
Cooperative
charge
of escape was
Extension Manager Frank Jasa — to retirement.
Dennis James percent.
Click. 27. of
Meanwhile,
Bush. 64. who has worked for the1923
county
since
Park
Ave.. Winter
Park,Public Works Director Larry Sellers
has
posted
the county engineer's Job seeking
June 1. 1962, la scheduled to retire
on
the
23rd
was released on 81.000 bond. He
applicants.
anniversary of his employment. June
1. whileto appear
ts scheduled
In court
Salary range for the Job is *35,859,20 to
Jasa. 55. Is retiring June 28. Jasa
April has
15. been
*50.128. Bush's salary In *46.072.
Seminole's cooperative extension niauuger In the
Sellers asked com m issioners today for
county's agriculture department since since
permission to hire the new county engineer 11
March 10. 1969. 16 years.
weeks prior lo Bush's retirement.
The county expects Jasa's replacement will be
"Th is period will permit u smooth transfer of
recommended by Ihe stale three weeks prior to
Information on all the projects to which the
hts retirement to give the new manager an
engineering division Is currently assigned." he
opportunity for training before taking over the
said.
— Donna Estes
Job.

appeals court ruling that overturned two narcot­
ics convictions on grounds the Oklahoma City
police failed to obtain a warrant before searching
a suitcase In the trunk of a car and a box on the
front seat.
The tie vote leaves tntnet the ruling of
Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, but does
not make law that would apply to similar
situations In other states.
The case arose when reacting to a tip. police
went to search a car parked In a motel parking
lot. Police had probable cause — or belief — that
Illegal drugs would be found In thr containers
llut the Oklahoma court held that police could
not search the entire car without a warrant
because the poller only had reason to Iwllcve they
would find the drugs to the containers, not In the
rest of the car.

partnership for more effective
community services, 9 a.m. to
noon. W yn d h a m Hotel Sea
World, Crystal Ballroom.
Central Florida Blood Bank
Seminole County Branch. 1302
E. Second St.. Sanford. 9 a.m. to
5 p .m . F l o r i d a H o s p lt a lAltamontc Branch. 11 a.m. to 7
p.m.
Free Income tax help for re­
tirees. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m .. Commu­
nity United Methodist Church.
2 8 5 U .S . H ig h w a y 1 7 -9 2 .
Casselberry. Bring copies of last
tax return, forms for the current
year and other relevant materi­
als Through April 15.
Sanford Klwanla Club, noon.
Sanford Civic Center.
Casselberry Rotary breakfast.
7:30 a m .. Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive.
Financial advisory service for
senior citizens available by ap­
pointment. 1 p.m .. Casselberry
Senior Center. 200 N. Lake
Triplet Drive. Call 8 3 1-35a I , ext.
264.
Medicare help for seniors. 10
a.m . until noon. Casselberry

Senior Center 200 N. Triplet
Drive. Casselberry.
C O P E S u p p o rt G ro u p of
S e m in o le Area, 7 :30 p .m ..
Seminole Com m unity Menial
Health Center. Cranes Roost
Office Park. Suite 377, Pelican
Building, Allam unlc Springs.
First snd third Wednesdays for
families and caregivers of long­
term mentally disabled. Free of
charge.
University of Central Florida
Com m unity Symphony concert.
8 p in .. Plrat P re sb yte ria n
Church. Orlando. Free to Ihe
public.
THURSDAY. APRIL 4
F A A Accident P revention
Program Aviation Safety Educa­
tion Seminar. 7:30 p m.. Skyport
R estaurant Banquet R oom .
Sanford Airport. Sponsored by
South Seminole Flying Club.
Free to the public.
Sanford Jaycees. 7:30 p.m..
J a y c e e b u ild in g . 5 th a n d
French. Sanford.
Sanford AA . 120L W. First St..
5:30. closed discussion, and 8
p.m.. open, speaker.

^

T O BE C O M P LETED BY T A X P A Y E R

I hertby m*ke application to participate In the install­
ment payment plen lor the 1985 tea yeer.
S IQ N A T U M

^

Property I. D. No. —
Letel Description et It Appeall on the 1984 Tie No­
tice Receipt:

O A T!

AeeriM

P*i«nt NemMf

h ttu Mat

N O TIC E
Florida Law requires thet your ettlmeted text mult be more than *15.00 In order to participate In the Install­
ment Peymenl Pten, If ypgr estimated taietfor I H I ere $85.00 or less you d» not qualify for tfsli plan.
You mutt make the hut initellment payment not later then June loth in order to pertlcipet* In thli plan
Once you hive elected to pertlcipet* In the installment payment plan by timely payin' the first payment you era
required to continue participation for the tea yair. If you elect to discontinue pirticipetion you will not be en­
titled to receive the discounts provided by Law. Intuilment oayments that become delinquent thall be oald with
tha neat tnsUtlrr.ent payment. Discounts shall not be allowed on delinquent payments.
OITACH

If you have any questions, please contact the Tex Collector's Office at the followin' location(s):
6 TROY RAY JR
T IT

AMftH

P**»e N vne er

ML

X

m ------F.XT M 7 Rg fit?

�E v e n in g H e ra ld
(USPS 411 1M)
300 N. FR EN CH AVE . SANFORD. FLA 32771
A rra Code 305 322-2611 or 8 3 1 0993
Tuesday, April 2, 1985— 4A
Wayne 0. Doylt. Publisher
Thomat Giordano. Managing Editor
Melvin Adkint. Advtrtiiing Director
Home Delivery: Week. 11.10, Month, 81 75: 3 Months,
814.25: 6 Month*. $27.00: Yrar. 851.00 tiy M.tll Werk.
»1 W). Month, 80 fJO :i Month*. SIHOO O Month*. 832 50
Yrar. $6000

G e ttin g

The L ead

O u t P r io r ity

1

Leaded gasoline Is looking m ore and more
dangerous. N ew liralih studies show that lead
In the blood — even In m ln u lr roncenlratlons
— can cause not only brain and nerve damage
that scientists have know about for some
time, but also high blood pressure, trailing to
heart disease and strokr.
And now new rvlron m cn tal studies are
showing that ulrboriir lead, s p rw rd out hy
vehicles using leaded gasoline. Is a major
nource of this health hazard. Despite the fact
that new vehicles since ILF73 have had to be
designed for unleaded gas sold In tills country
Is still leaded.
T h e E n v iro n m e n ta l P ro te ctio n Agency
(E P A ) estimates that 16 percent of drivers
who are supposed to use unleaded gas are
cheating and buying the cheaper, leaded fuel
— and the cheating rate Is rising
It's a situation that could n ’t be left to take
care of Itself. Both the Individual driver whose
older ca r w ill ping without lead additives, and
the d rive r of a new car w ho ca n save 7 cents
to 10 cents a gallon by Illegally fueling up
with leaded gas. have loo m u c h Incentive to
Ignore the broader public Interest.
And there's no way for the rest of the
population to avoid consequences of their
neighbor’s actions. O n ly by m a kin g leaded
gas unavailable ran the p u b lic's health lx*
adequately protected.
T o Its credit, the EPA — despite the Reagan
adm inistration's lalsse/ fnlre inclinations —
has now com e to precisely that conclusion. It
has ordered the amount of lead allowed In
leaded gas to he rnt by 5K) percent fiver the
n rxt y r a r . And It has put the gasoline
refineries on notice that It Is likely to ban
traded gas altogether In 1PHH.
T h e new rule will not be painless. T o
produce lead-free or reduced-lead gasoline,
w hile m a in ta in in g the necessary octane
levels, requires extra refining and. thus, will
raise the price of that fuel.
In addition, the extra relln lug produces
highly volatile. Iliough lead-tree, by-products
that, If refineries are allowed to m ix them
back Into gasoline, can Increase other kinds of
air pollution. Once Ih r lead problem Is solved,
therefore, either the federal government or
the states w ill have to attack the resulting
smog problem , probahlv b y enacting addi­
tional regulations requiring refineries to limit
the vo la tility of their gasoline and requiring
that gas p u m p s he rqutppcd w ill) fume traps
that prevent air pollution.
H u t th e d a n g e r of le a d In the a ir
o ve rw h e lm s these other concerns. Th e EP A
estimates that In 1986 alone. Its new lend rule
will prevent 5.000 heart attacks and 1.000
strokes am ong those most alfected hy It
(white m e n between the ages ol 40 and 50).
That result — and the sm aller hut similar
benefits to other population groups — Is
w orth the few pennlrs extra per gallon that
the new rule w ill cost some consum ers And It
Is w o rth the extra smog controls that may he
needed In Its wake. T h e E P A has done Just
what It should have.

Please W rite
L e tte rs to the editor are welcome for
publication. A ll letters m ust he signed and
Include a m ailing addreas and. If possible, a
telephone num ber. T h e E ve n in g Herald
reserves the right to edit letters to avoid
libel and to accommodate spare.

IN TALLAHASSEE

Growth, Malpractice Big Issues For Legislature
By W illia m Cottcrclt
TA LLA H A S S E E . &lt;UPI| — The 1985 Florida
Legislature convenes today wtth two big Issues
from past sessions — controlling population
growth and solving the medical malpractice
dilemma — dominating Its 60-day agenda.
Senate President Harry Johnston, D-Wcst
Palm Bench, and House Speaker James Harold
Thompson. D-Qulncy. were to rap the opening
gavels at 10a.m.
Gov Hob Graham gives his "State of the
Slate" address an hour later, outlining the
growth plans and priorities of his 814 billion
state budget.
Physical preparations for the legislative
session have been In place for weeks Presession committee meetings were held each
month since the special legislative session Dec
6-7 on child care, clirus canker and repeal of the
unitary tax. Nearly 1.200 bills were filed — 707
In the House. 480 In the Senate — and 2.559
lobbyists, or about 16 for every legislator, were
registered last week.

Besides growth and medical malpractice,
lawmakers will debate Graham's 814 billion
budget proposal, which includes no new taxes
but would increase fees for state services —
including a 12 percent college tuition hike —
and Issues like raising (he drinking age.
mandating seatbelt use In cars, setting up a
state lottery and Imposing a 5-cent deposit on
. beverage containers.
Florida became the nation s sixth largest stale
last year, topping 11 million population, and is
projected to be growing at the rate of 788 new
residents per day. By the year 2000. stale
officials expert Florida to have more than 15
million residents — the equivalent of the entire
state of Georgia moving south.
House Majority Leadrr Jon Mills of Gainesville
has Introduced a sweeping growth-management
bill that would forbid use of public funds for
construction of "Infrastructure" — such as
roads, sewer systems — on barrier Islands It
also make It easier for citizens to sue local
governments to enforce local planning re­

quirements. and mandate tougher building
codes on the coastline.
Another hangover issue this year Is medical
malpractice, which was the focus of an
unsuccessful constitutional amendment cam­
paign by the Florida Medical Association last
year. A task force appointed by Graham
recommended an arbitration system for settling
malpractice claims, possibly setting a contin­
gency fee scale for lawyers. But a separate
proposal by powerful Senate dean Dempsey
Barron would shift malpractice from the ton
system to contract law.
Barron. D-Panama City, last year tried to
move malpractice out of the adversary court
system and Into an arbitration method similar
to w o rk e r's com pensation. T h e Medical
Association has been fighting with the Florida
Bar and Academy of Florida Trial Lawyers over
malpractice — doctors saying extreme Insur­
ance rales are driving physicians out of the
state, lawyers arguing that any financial limits
would deprive Injury victims of their due.

ROBERT WALTERS

SCIENCE WORLD

Shuttle
Returns
To Duty
C A P E CANAVERAL (UP1| - Five
astronauts, an engineer and Sen.
Jake Gam of Utah plan to take off
•itKiiird l tic patchcd-up shuttle Dis
j'u ve ry Friday tin a revamped
mission to pul NASA's disrupted
launch schedule back on track
Th e blastoff, which will come on
the fourth anniversary of the first ,
shuttle (light, will mark only Ihr
second mission since November
because of a scries of technical
p ro b le m s lhut h a ve m ade a
shambles of the space agenry's
planned launch a month schedule.
Th e major objective of the fiveday flight Is Ihr launch of two
&lt;om im inlrallnns satellites. The
crew also plans to perform a series
ol medical experiments and play
with a variety of toys for a Him
documentary to demonstrate phys­
ics principles In terms children con
understand.
Discovery will lie carrying two
satellites that were to have hern,
launched scjtnruiely In March — a
865 million communications satel­
lite owned by Tclesnt Canada,
which was to have been launched
from Challenger, and a Navy relay
station already scheduled (or Dis­
covery.
Landing Is scheduled lor April 17 at
tin Kennedy Spare Center.
At the controls will tie command­
er Karol Bobko and co-pilot Donald
Williams Their crrw m atci are Rhea
Scddnu, Jeffrey Hollman. David
Griggs. McDonnell Douglas engineer
Charles Walker and Garn. Re­
publican chairman ol the Senate
Miibconillllllrr Ilia) oversees the
space agency's budget.
W illi the exception of Walker, the
same cirw plus Patrick llaudry of
France had been scheduled to take
otl |*cb 20 aboard Challenger.
Th e Might was delayed Into March
because ol problems repairing the
ship's heat shield till system and II
ultimately was canceled because of
trouble with a 8 1OO million tracking
satellite that was to have been
carried Into orbit
T o salvage an already light
launch schedule, the National
Aeronautics and Space Admlnlslra­
ttan decided to railed Discovery's
planned March 22 launch urn!
combine two|&gt;ayloads Into our,
Walker, who llrw aboard a shuttle
In September. Is on board to operate
a refrigerator-sized drug refinery for
a second lime to produce usable
quantities of a top-secret hormone
Ills company expectr to lead to a
new Ihr saving medicine.

Defining
The Poor
Difficult
W ASH IN GTON INEAl - The Hi
ble says "ye have the jx&gt;or always
with you." but It doesn't offer any
guidance on how to Identify them —
and therein lies a problem lor
welfare specialists, demographers
and politicians.
The federal government's official
standard for measuring poverty,
which has not been substantially
revised for two decades, ought lo lxupdated, argues Courtenay Slater, a
former chief economist at the
Commerce Department
"The present llxcd standard I*
tiased on purchasing jkiIterns of
1955. when the average family
spent one-third of Its Income on
food. Today the proportion is less
than 20 percent." she notes til The
J o u r n a l of the In s titu te for
Socioeconomic Similes.

ROBERT WAGMAN

Running Start On '88
W A SH IN GTON INEAI - ll looks
os If Vice President George- Bush Is
trying to pre-empt the 1988 Re­
publican presidential nomination —
and It's making Jack Kemp. Bob
Dole. Howard Hakrr ami other
hopefuls nervous.
In addition llicre's mounting evi­
dence that President Reagan will
supjiort Bush as his heir apparent,
although that support may he
Indirect.
During the 1984 presidential
campaign. Bush crisscrossed the
country, declaring Ids unreserved
support ol everything Reagan did nr
said since entering the Oval Ollier.
Bush look a lot of flak for his blind
loyalty, and It was predicted Butt II
would come (jack lo haunt him by
15)88 However. Insiders say that
tills unswerving support made
Reagan “ very comfortable" with
Bush and convinced him Ittal Bush
would l»c the best jm-im jii to con
llnue Reagan's policies
Many Republican Party jjollllc.il
e x jie rls believe that Reagan
signaled his tacit siq&gt;]Mirt ol Bush’s
presidential amhUUms when he
allowed photograjihers to jihotograph a private Bush Reagan lun­
cheon. This followed Bush's return
from the 14-day. 2 9.00 0 mile
Journey that took him from the
refugee camps ol sub-Saharan
Africa to the Moscow funeral of
Konstantin Chernenko, then to

Grenada. Brazil and Honduras.
Those photos landed on j&gt;agc 1 In
ticwspa|M-rs across the country. To
political Insiders, lids means that
even If Reagan doesn't endorse
Bush formally |he has said he'll s|i
out the 1988 nominating proeessi.
he'd be hujrpy lo have Bush succeed
him
Another major sign was the fact
that Reagan allowed Bush, rather
than Secretary of State George
Shultz, to t&gt;e I tie hrst U S official to
confer with Mikhail Gorbachev. The
Moscow trlj&gt; gave Bash a prime
position on network news shows
and In news stories about the
funeral. This has given Bush a
"world leader" status that none ol
his Republican rivals t an hope to
match
Bush has overhauled his stall —
dearly with the 1988 presidential
bid In mind. Ills new chief of stall Is
Craig Fuller, who previously was
Cabinet secretary In the While
House Bush's new deputy chief ol
stall and policy director is Frederick
Khedourt. a key deputy to Office ol
Management and Budget director
D a v i d A. S t o c k m a n
By late s|jrtug, say sources. Bush
plans lo (arm a political action
committee that will help congres­
sional candidates in the midterm
campaigns and serve as a base for
Ills 1988 hid.

The government's olllclal poverty
standard was formulated In the
mid-1950s hy Molllc Orsliansky. an
official with the Social Security
Administration. Although the Itg
ures are adjusted annually lo reflect
changes In the cost of living, the
basic formula has not t»ern revised
lo reflect fundamental shllts In
*&lt;x:lal and economic patterns during
Hie |iast 20 years
The result: In I tie lute 15)50*. the
jMiverty threshold for a family ol
lour was 49 perrent of the median
Income for all families of dial sl/r
During ih r past decade, however,
that flgurr lias dropped lo 33
percent.
One o( the most sit Iking In
consistencies In the fedrral standard
Is the eonlhetlug treatment of Ihr
Iwo haste types of means-tested
benefits provided to the j*xir — cash
paym ents, w hich account lor
slightly more than 20 jjcrceut of all
assistance, and non-cash or in-klnd
bcnrMls. which account for Just
under 80 jx-rrent of all welfare aid
When Individuals' Incomes are
calculated to determine whether
they officially qualify for assistance
to the poor, cash payments are
Included but non-cash assistance —
such an food stamps, housing sub
sidles and medical aid — areexcluded.
Many experts argue that those
In-klnd tieneflts ought to be "cashed
out" or assigned a dollar value
when assessing a potential welfare
recipient’s standard of living — but
there Is considerable disagreement
over what formula to use

JACK ANDERSON
BERRY'S WORLD

tsssa**

"Why must you always SHARE ’ something with
me? Why can 't you just TELL me something?"

In Pearson Tradition, Successor's Tapped
W ASHINGTON - For 54 years,
this iicwHjM|M*r column has soughi
to |&gt;rovldr Am ericans with an
ullcrnullvr to I he official version ol
events, to champion the cause of the
Voiceless Instead of the doinlnuol
and the hcl|)lr»a us against their
exploiters, to uphold the public's
right lo know and control ralher
than Ihe official's prerogative to
conspire and conceal.
These goals were passed on to me
by the lute Drrw Pearson, a lighter
with a Quaker conscience, cunlankcrous In joint but gentle In
person, who founded Ihr column In
1931. He viewed Washington as a
nest of subm erged causes to
chronicle, organized frauds to
rxjtose. |jolltic.il pretenses to un­
mask and diplomatic Inlrtgurs to
dissect.
He lived In an atmosphere of
combat, of shoot tog and being shot
at, of exjxadng villainies and being
despised for It. There was u hard­
ness tienealh his gentle exterior —
not the hardness that has to do with
cullousuess or selfishness, but the
hardness that steels a good man to
do what must be done.
Drew also developed a capacity lo
leap over the government b.urlrrs
that stand between an accusatory
irportrr and the leading public. Hr

I

shunned the jHilitleuI conviviality,
easy friendships and social en­
t a n g l e m e n t s t It a I I n h I b 11
s tra ig h tfo rw a rd r e p o rtin g in
Washington.
H r got hold ol embarrassing
documents that had been classlllrd
to conceal them from the public. Hr
could not t&gt;e lnt!rv&lt;dutrd by gov
ernment olflrlals. libel lawyers and
pressure groups who sought at
times to exercise veto power over
disclosures that w rrr damaging or
offensive to their Interests
Drew had a dream that the
column hr had developed would
become a bulwark that would sur­
vive his death, a voice thul would
never tie stilled. With this In mind,
he made me a partner and sliarrd
the byline with me
He took InMnttc pains to impress
upon me the moral objectives of the
column. During Ihe years dial 1
have been un my own. whenever I
have strayed from Ids standards, 1
always ere Drrw shaking his pro­
fessorial head In gentle reproof.
Today, the column upjtcars to be
at the pinnacle of Its Influence. It
has led a campaign against gov­
ernment waste that has amused
millions of supjxjrlers; It has pro­
m o te d a fast - s o u rin g Y o u n g
Astronaut orogram to prrjiure our

young profile for the high-tech age
And It lias continued to jiry behind
thr scenes for the news that others
miss or refuse to print.
So this Is an appropriate time for
me. In the Drew Pearson tradition,
to choose partners, to groom them
as I was groomed and to extend thr
life ol Ihe column for unothrr
generation. All my associates arc
qualified: the shame Is that there
Isn't room for all their names on the
byline. So from my stall of Inv r hi igallvc reporters. I have selected
Dalr Van Alla and Joseph Spear
who. hereafter, will share Ihe byline
with me. Of course. I will remain In
charge.
Van Alta has the Imagination and
boldness eventually to take over the
Icadrrshlji of the column. He also
has a gift for digging out facts that
art seemingly inaccessible. Van
Alta has tracked stories across all
seven continents: he has been
nominated five times for Journal­
ism’s lop awurd. Ihr Pulitzer Prize.
He did the reporting for me that
focused thr first national spotlight
on C IA renegade Edwtn WUsun. The
columns brought a warning that, in
retaliation, a selt-conlesscd assassin
jilanned to kill Van Atta. I exposed
thr murder plot, and the next day

the man skl|jjicd the country.
Van rtttu's ability to dig out
embarrassing secrets has made him
an Irritant to the CIA. which keep*
an active Mle on him The FBI also
has un ongoing Investigation l » seek
hts sources
Sjx-ar, who tor nearly a decade
has hern my editor, has the tough­
ness and courage to act on his
belter Im pulses In the worst
weather. He has been a crusader
who. among other stories, u n ­
covered the FBI surveillance of
American celebrities.
Last year. Spear published a
book. Presidents and the Press: The
Nixon Legacy, which was a labor of
love. Here's how he explained it In
the preface:
"I love Ihe First Amendment and
all It stands for. ... Ours Is a
government of the people. We ore
the sovereign, those who work In
government are our servants. W r
have a tight to know what they ore
doing....
“ Journalists worry loo m uch
about their popularity: It is Inher­
ently a lost cause. They should
simply report the news and raisr
hell — as fairly, accurately and
responsibly as they can. ... It Is nlcr
but not necessary lobe liked."

�SPO RTS

3 M u s k e te e rs La n c e H o y as
Rinker, Rebels
Close To Deal
I’rcp baseball Is no longer
played In Sanford Memorial
Stadium but fasi plich softball
may be In the stadium 's
future.
The Evening Herald learned
Monday that Wes [linker. who
lease*, Memorial Stadium from
the city, and Marge Ricker,
manager of the Orlando Re­
bels. will huddle this week and
Iry to Iron out an agreement to
i i s &lt;- Memorial Stadium as the
Rebels home base for fast pitch
soft hull .
Moth parties said the deal Is
almost complete.
Ricker said she didn't feel It
was appropriate to comment
on the proceedings at this time
tail the legendary coach said
the Re tads' stadium — C.L.
Varner In Orlando — will be
torn down after this year and
the Rebels are looking for a
place to play.
R ic k e r, w h o has been
coaching softball for over TO
years, said this season will
probably be her last as a
manager. The retired Orange
County School teacher will
remain active In the Rebels’
administrative duties, howev­

L E X IN G TO N . Ky. (UPI| — Honor was calling
Vlllanova's Three Musketeers louder than history was
beckoning Georgetown
The three seniors on the unheralded Wlldrals — Ed
Pinckney. Dwayne McClain and Gary McLain — talked
a good game when they enrolled at Vtllanova four
yean ago.
On Monday ntght they played more than a good
game, carrying the Wiideals to a 66-64 upset of
Georgetown for the NCAA title.
The threesome hud cards printed as freshmen to
identify themselves as The Three Musketeers and
boasted of becoming an NBA expansion team. They
made a part that one day they would play in the Final
Four... but It appeared they had run out of lime.
The Wildcats lost In NCAA regional finals In 1982
and 1983 and they were second-round lasers In 1984.
Their pact appeared hollow when Vtllanova finished
Ihlrd In the Big East this winter, suffering 10 overall
losses and being seeded No H in the Southeast
Regional for the 1985 NCAA Tournament.
Hut those three seniors would not let No 2 Michigan
stand In their way In March. Nor would they allow No.
7 North Carolina or No. 4 Memphis State to slow them
down. And finally, there was Georgetown — the
defending NCAA champion and the No. 1 rated team In
the country.

Basketball
Rolllo Mosslmino's 2 Magic Words, Soo 6A
Vtllanova roach Rotlle Massimlno. whose Wildcats
bad fallen to Georgetown twice already this season,
predicted his team would have to play a perfect game
Monday night to beat the Hoyas for the NCAA
championship And guess what?
In front of 23,124 fans at Rupp Arena, a national
television audience and some disbelieving historians
who had already placed Georgetown among the great
college basketball teams of all time. Vtllanova played
that perfect basketball game — shocking the Hoyas
and allowing Pinckney. McClain and McLain to finish
as champions
T h r Wildcats sank an NCAA Tournament record
78 6 percent of their shots |22-of-28| and also hit
19-of-23 free throws In the second hall to deny
Georgetown n [dace In history as the N C AA 's tlrsl
repeat champion In 12 years.
"It's not a miracle to me." said Pinckney, who was
named the tournament's outstanding player after

collecting 16 points. 6 rebounds and 5 steals to win his
head-to-head confrontation with Georgetown's AllAmerica Patrick Ewing "I knew we could win all
along," he said
Pinckney was Joined on the all-tournament team by
his two fellow Musketeers and Vtllanova guard Harold
Jensen, who came off the bench to score 10 of his 14
poms In ihc second hall Ewtng was ihc IHth member
of thr all-tourney tram with 14 points and 5 rebounds
In his final college game.
David Wingate sank a leaning 14-fool Jumper to give
Georgetown a 54-53 lead with 4 50 remaining. The
Hoyas then tried to put the game Into the deep freeze
with a spread offense but Billy Martin's errant pass
gave Vtllanova the trail back with 3 30 left
Jensen canned an 18-foot Jumper w ith 2 1 1
remaining to put the Wildcats in (he lead for good at
55-54 Pinckney then stripped Wingate of the bull on a
baseline drive ami converted 2 free throws on the
ensuing foul to make It 57-54
Vtllanova hit 9-of-l2 free throws In the P.nal 90
seconds. Including 4 by McClain, to build leads of up to
5 points and the final score was as close as It was
because Georgetown's Michael Jackson sank an
unrontcslrd layup with two seconds to play.
"Nobody thought wc could do It." Massimlno added,
"hut l d id."

Adcock,
How ard
Raise
Roofing

er

We had 35-40 schools ill
our winter camps this year."
salt! Ricker. "II we go to
Sanford, we can expect at
least that many again. They
s|M-nt one-quarter to one-third
ol a million dollars while they
were here
(linker said he has been
trying to lure the Rebels to
Sanford for the past two yeurs.
lie said the relocation ol the
Joe llrlnkman Umpire School
and the Flo rida Baseball
Schools to Cocoa makes the
move that much easier.
II the deal Is worked out.
Ricker said fustpllch softball
will be in the works al the
stadium nine months of the
vrar Along with the stadium
playing surface, the complex
a ls o has an adjacent field —
/inn Beck — which would also
Ik- converted to a fast pitch
soli ball Held
'We h a v e n 't reach an
agreement." said Rlnker. “ It's
99.9 percent sure lhat II will
tie faslpltcb soli ball al the
stadium and Zlnn Beck."
D i - s p l l r t h e m o v e to
laslpltch softball, Rlnker said
some baseball will still be
played ut lbe siadlum
Eric Shogrcn. who has 10
hits in Ids last 10 official at
hols, will pul bis streak on the
line ion iglit a I Lyman against
either D rrck Llvernols or
Byron Overstreet Game time
Is 7 p m.
Shogrcn Is shoollng lor the
11-consecutive hit record of
lake Mary's Rod “C .J ." Metz
established earlier this year.
S h o g rcn , a Heel senior
center llelder, singled his Ills
last al-bal Saturday. March 23
against Father Lopez. On
Tuesday. March 25. Shogrcn
tapped three straight singles
and a d o u b le a g u ln s t
K is s im m e e O s c e o la . O n
Wednesday. March 26. be
singled twice and walked
twice against Orlando Evans.
On Frid a y. March 2U. he
collected three stralgh singles
against Jones
"Eric is really concentrating
a lot at plate." said Oviedo
roach Howard Mable. "H e ’s
slaying within himself and not
overextending .”
M a b le s a id a l t h o u g h
Shogrcp hasn't faced a pitcher
the quality of Llvernols or
Overstreet during the streak
he feels he'll tie up to the task
tonight. "B o th are better
overall pitchers than we've
seen." said Mable "Llvernols
has a good fastball and curve
while Overstreet mixes his
pitchers real well.
" B u t Shogrcn does one
thing real well. He makes
contact, he's going to put ball
In place somewhere, some­
how."
Mable said he believes the
pressure on his senior slasher
Is ertrrm e but his teammates
have helped out. "Nobody
brings up the streak but they
always encourage hltn after
each hit." said Mabie. "I'm
sure he feels the pressure, who
wouldn't? The streak is some­
thing tic's really shooting for.
I'm sure there’s a lot of
pressure from his own mind.
This Is a phenomonnl streak.
Just like Mrtz hod. He's capa­
ble of breaking It,"

Mtf«w ?*■«■ i»t Ttmiiif V w w i

Monday wasn't the most ideal day lor a season opener. These baseball Ians, however, came prepared.

Ball Motor Reverses Lumps, Rips Rotary
By Chris Plater
Herald Sports Writer
Since Its birth Into the Sanford Junior
League. Ball Motor Line has taken Its lumps
the past two years. Because It has been one
of the weaker teams. Ball Motor Line taut
had trouble keeping players on the team
and It has also had plenty of coaching
changes.
Ball Motor Line, skippered by J im Lucas
this year, took a giant siep forward Monday
night when It shelled one of the strongest
teams In recent years. Rotary. 17-5. In
Junior League opening-day action at Chase
Park.
Three veterans who have stuck with the
team ore second-year players Kevin Nathan.
Ronald Cox and "Steady" Eddie Charles. All
three were Instrumental In Monday's victo­
ry
Ball Motor Line broke a 2-2 tic with u
six-run explosion in the top of the second
Inning. Key hits In the frame Included a
two-run double by Cox and a wo-run single
by Lynnerd Williams
Ball put the game out of reach with five
runs tn the top o(V*e third and four more in
the lourth. Big hits tn the third Included
Charles' RBI single and bases loaded walks
by Wiliams and Carlos Smith. Charles.
Nathan and J im Lucks had clutch hits In
the fourth.
Cox and Lucks combined to throw a
four-hitler at Rotary. Tim Hampton took the
loss.

Baseball
Leading the seven hit Ball Motor Line
attack were Charles and Nalhan with Iwo
hits each. John Hendricks walked four
limes and scored four runs. Carl Easterday
had a pair of singles lo lead Rotary al the
plate.
RAIN HALTS 2ND JUNIOR OAME
Another team lhat hasn't fared well the
[&gt;asi few years Is Elks. Just when Elks
seemed to be turning things around against
Moose Monday, the late-night rains came
and stopped the game with the score tied at
5-5 after six Innings
Aller two scoreless Innings. Moose took a
2-0 Irad In the third as Jeff Derr socked an
RBI single and the second run scored on an
error Elks came back with three runs In the
bottom of the Inning with Von Eric Small’s
double leading the way.
Min im - took advantage of live walks to
score three times tn the fourth for a 5-3 lead.
Small scored on a liases-loaded-walk In the
boitom of the fourth to pull Elks within 5-4.
Mike Mrrthle then took the mound lor
Moose and shut down the Elks In the fifth
Inning Meanwhile. Small did an excellent
Job on the mound In keeping Moose from
extending Us lead.

Eddie Charles, left, and Ronald Cox
helped Ball Motor Line lum p off to a
good start In the Sanford Junior League
Monday. Both had key hits as Ball
Motor, a perennial doorm at since it
entered the league, shelled Rotary,
17-5SmaJl struck out the side In both the llflh
and slxtl. Innings and Elks catne bark to tie
It at 5-5 In the bottom of the sixth. Willie
"Sugar T e x " McCloud ltd oil with a walk
and. one out later, consecutive walks by
Steve A lm a n , Blake S m ith and Paul
St.tckland forced In McCloud with the tying
run. Mcrthle struck out the next hitler lo
end the Inning. Then the rains came and the
game was called

By Chris F ilt e r
lle rsld Bports W rite r
Huy Adcock and Ersklnr How­
ard combined for a two-lilt ter as
defending Sanlord l.tttle A m rrl
can League and City Champions
Adcock Pooling opened the 1985
Sanford Recreation baseball
season with a I I I rout of
Seminole Petroleum Monday
night at Wrstslde Field.
Th e Adcock hats hacked the
two hurlers with a 13-hlt of­
fensive attack Adcock Roofing,
which returns (our starters olf
last year's championship team,
jumped out to a 3 0 leud tn the
ilrsl, added four runs In thr
second and lacked on seven
more In thr third to put thr
gamr out of reach
In the bottom of the first.
Howard led oil with a walk and.
one out later. Tony Chavrrn
smashed a double to drtvr In
Howard John Rough followed
with a single to drive In (.'havers
lor a 2-0 lead. Al Hrown, who
drew a iwo-otil walk, scored the
third run on a single oil the but
of Arthur Polk
In Hie second, key hits In­
cluded Rungh's RBI single und a
two-run double by Brown. Big
hits In the seven run third In
eluded a two-run double by
Adcoc k, mil scoring doubles by
Polk and Rusty Keeling und RBI
singles by Howard. Chavrrs und
Courle Williams.
Seminole Petroleum scored Us
lone run In the top of thr fourth
when Marlon Knight walkrd and
scored on a single by Harvey
Sutton. James Livingston hud
the only other hit for Petroleum,
B U T C H ’B TO P S A T L A N T I C
In Little American Lcugur
action Thursday al Fort Mellon
Park, an 11-run fifth Inning
lilted Hutch's Chevron to a 13-3
o p e n in g -d a y v i c t o r y o v e r
Atlantic Bunk.
Butch's Chevron took a 1-0
Irad In (lie bottom of thr first
when Jell 1triton! led off with u
walk and scored on a two out
double off thr bat of Bernard
Eady.
Butch's came hack with a run
In the bottom of the second as
Eric Washington led off with a
walk, stole second, went to third
on a wild pitch and scored on
another wild pitch.
Allantic Bunk bultlrd back to
Be it ut 2-2 In (he third when
John Jones belted u triple to lead
off and scored via a wild pitch.
Neither trunt scored In the
fourth frame und Atlantic Bank
came on In Ihe top of the fifth to
lake u 3-2 leud. With two outs,
Keith Myers singled, moved to
second a wild pitch and scored
on Johnell Brcwlngton’s double.
But Atlanllc Bank's pitching
went sour In the bottom of the
firth, paving the way for Butch's
Chevron. Mull Wllk und Harvey
Clinger both reached on errors to
start off the rally und Eady
followed with an RBI single
Washington walked to load thr
b a s e s and both Clinger und Eady
scored on wild pitches for a 5-3
lead.
The roof then caved In on
Atlantic Bank us eight straight
walks enabled Botch's to Lake a
12-3 lead and the game ended
bccuuse of the slaughter ( 10-run)
rule when Jetry Tanner’s double
scored Eady with the 13th run.
i
/

�*A— t w in H&lt;wM.

FI.

Ta— day, April 1, « M

S P O R TS
IN BRIEF
Lake M ary M eets Oak Ridge
in 1st Colonial Classic Test
ORLANDO — Oak Ridge knocked ofT Auburndalr. 4-1.
Monday to advance to the second round of the Colonial
Classic again*! I,ake Mary'n Ram*. Game time Is 2 o'clock
today at Colonial High School.
Lake Mary coach Allen Tuttle said he was undecided on
whom would pitch for the Rams today. "We have a lot of
guys with sore arm s." Tuttle Mild. "It will depend on whom
Is healthy." Probably Anthony laiszuk- or Neal Harris
In other game of the Colonial Classic Monday. Winter
Park stomped Winter Haven. 10-3. Bishop Moore nipped
West Orange. 2 -1. and Boone nudged Osceola. 5-3
Elsewhere tonight. Lyman hosts Oviedo In an Inter­
county matchup Oviedo senior Eric Shogren has hit In 10
consecutive official at-bats. He Is one shy of Hrxl Metz' stale
record set earlier this spring.
Lyman coach Hob McCullough said he will pilch either
Derek Llvcrnots or Byron Overstreet. Oviedo skipper
Howard Mablc said he would counter his his best,
righthander Craig Duncan.

'F a t R a t ' J o h n s o n G i v e s M i d d l e t o n
NEW SMYRNA BEACH - By scoring a
popular win In the 50-lap End of the Month
late model Championship. David Rogers and
the Wayne Densch Budwrlser Firebird made
li seven wins a row on Saturday night at
New Smyrna Speedway.
World Scries of Asphalt Stock Car Racing
Thundercar Champion Stan Eads, sporting
a "For Sale" sign on the Humphreys and
Watts' Gold and Silver Exchange Firebird,
with power by Ja rk Tant. took the 30-lappcr
End of the Month Championship event for
that division.
Hounding out the top five were Tom m y
Patterson. Jeff Blehr. Ben Booth and Jerry
Smith.
The extra dlstance/extra cash event for
the street stock division went to 17-year old
Casey Hawthorne. Driving the Kar Supply
Mustang, Hawthorne came out on top of a
contart-ftlled battle with former State
Champ Bill K inky who barely held on for
second, as a flat lire almost cost him that
spot.

Sonics Improve Lottery Chances

Milton

U nited Press International
The Seattle SuperSorilca lost a game Monduy night, but
Improved their chances of "earning" a spot In the NBA
lottery — where a club has a onc-ln-seven chance of
making Georgetown's masterful center Patrick Ewing Its
No. I pick In the NBA Drufl.
Seattle, with Frank Brlckowskl playing for Injured
All-Star center .Jac k Slkmu. dropped a 127-116 decision to
the Houston Rockets.
Brlckowskl. a rookie from Penn State, shot l-for-7 for 3
points, but did (day well on defense against Houston
counterpart Akecrn Olajuwon. limiting blm to If) |M&gt;lnts.
Obviously Brlckowskl Is no Ewing Few are. And
wouldn't the Sonics love to move the fMont-ll Slkrna to
l&gt;owrr forward next year to make rcxmi for Ewing*?
Seattle, losers of six straight, fell to 30-45 and arr 1
games behind Phoenix In the battle for the eighth and llunl
Western Conference post-season lierlh. a battle whose
"w inner" gets the honor rtf meeting the lain Angelrs Lakers
In thr first round ollhcplayoffs
Ralph Sampson hit Just O of-21 shots from the floor tml
connected on 10-nl-12 foul shots to lead the Rockets The
7-4 power forwurd scored 7 (joints In the final 2 lA minutes
lokrep Scuttle at hay.
lit tile only other NBA game Monday night, the Hawks
played like they want no part of Ewing, whose lloya* lost
to Vlllunova In the NCAA championship game. Atlanta,
behind 27 jailnts by Dominique Ws, defeated Detroit
114 1 IB

Rlchman

Grand Prix: Davis Tops Davis
CH IC AGO (Ill'll — Scott Davis and M.utv Davis share
more than a surname They tmili dislike lacing each other
on the tennis court
Mondny, Scott Davis. 22. outlasted unrelated Marty
Davis. 26. In a match lasting more than two hours, 8-7
(7-5l. 6-3, 0-3 to advance to the second round of the
•315,000 Grnud I'rlx tennis tournament at the University
of Illinois Chicago Pavilion,
T h r tournament Is sponsored by Volvo.
The only other sertlrd player In play Monday was No 7
seed Tim Mayotte, who outlasted tournament qualifier
Nduku Oitl/or of Lagos. Atgrrla. 3-0, 6-4. 7 0 |7-5]
Top-seeded John McEnroe and No, 2 seed Jim m y Connors
won't play until Wednesday
In other action. Terry Moor outlasted Francisco Gunzulcz
4-6. 6-3, 0*4 Moor said Gonzalez' big serve forced him to
slay on the baseline, where hr does not like to play.
In other first-round matches. Hubert Green of Boston
defeated Greg Holmes of Danville, Calif.. 6 2, 6 4: John
Sadrl of Charlotte. N.C. drfrulrd Todd Wllsken of Carmel,
hid , 8-4. 7-6 |6-4): Joint Fitzgerald of Cummins. Australia,
defeated Ben Testerman of Knoxville. Term.. 6 2. 7 6 (7-4)
and Iliad Ulllx-rt of Piedmont. Calif, defeated Chip Hooper
of Sunnyvale. Calif.. 6 -1, 6 4

Connlck Expects 3 M ore Arrests
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — District Attorney Harry Connlck
expects Indictments Thursday from a grand Jury ln&gt;
vrsllgalltig charges of point shaving by Tula nr University
iMsketbuli players
Connlck said he expects two or three more arrests.
Including at least one Irookumkcr and one student.
"W e re pretty narrow In the scope of the Investigation
now." Connlck said Monday. "We're concerned rigid now
about llnlshlng the Investigation and going back In the
grand Jury on Thursday and wrapping I his up.”
Three players. Including NBA prospect John "Hot Rial"
Williams, and three other Tulane students were arrested
last week on charges lliry fixed two Metro Conference
games In February. A sus|iectrd professional txmkmakrr
was also charged.
For the first time. Connlck confirmed Immunity from
prosecution had been granted to Clyde Eads and Jon
Johnson, troth senior forwards, for their testimony to the
grand Jury last week

Gunslingers Bombard Breakers
PORTLAND. Ore tlJPI) — T h r San Antonio Gunslingers
found the nr I tilery they missed earlier In the season, and
bombarded Portland 33-0 Monday night for thr second
worst driest In franchise history.
Last year, the Breakers, playing then In New Orleans, *
lost to the Philadelphia .Stars, 35 0.
Sun Antonio, which had lost three straight game*..
Improved Us record to 2 4 behind the passing of Rick
Neuhelsel, who threw lur 152 yards and two touchdowns,
connecting on 13-of-l7altcmpta.
"W e have u lot of confidence In Rick." said coach Jim
lutes, "He's a great quarterback unit he proved It tonight."
Portland quartrrbuck Malt Robinson was Intercepted
three limes, Including what hr said was thr first pick oil o(
one of his screen |Kisses since he turned pro eight years
1 ugo. Robinson rnded up with only 42 yards on 5-of-ll).
while his replacement. Doug Woodwurd. was 2 for 0 and
; 32 yards and one tnlrrcrptlon.

Stewards Suspend MacBeth
:

Rogers Runs Off 7th Straight

H IA LEA H |UPl) — S ir wards at Hialeah race course have
susjieitded Jockey Donald MacBeth 10 days for his ride In
the Flamingo Stakes Saturday In which C h irrs Crown was
disqualified for cutting In front of Proud Truth and
Stephan's Odyssey.
Stewards Joe Anderson. Dee Wade and Pete H acka said
Monday MacBeth was disqualified "for failure to keep u
straight course" with Chiefs Crown In the home stretch.
Chiefs (Tow n finished llrmt but Proud Truth was
awarder! the victory because uf thr disqualification.
MacBeth said be would not appeal the suspension, but
cuilllmtrd In Insist the disqualification was not warranted

D r iv e r 's D o o r P a y b a c k

Auto Racing
After going by early leaders Joe Middleton
and A m o k Doval. Rogers, who started In
sixth spot, was ont the point for good by tap
seven. LeRoy Porter, fighting an Ill-handling
car. held on for serond,
Third to sixth were Bruce Lawrence,
Bovat. Middleton and Bill Posey. On lap 40.
Middleton was nailed In the driver's door by
Harold "Fat Rat" Johnson. "Payback* are
hell." said Johnson after the race
Jerry Symons. Jeff Beau and Ray Symons
crossed the line Inches apart to finish In that
order In the four-cylinder finale.
L A T E M ODELS
F l t l t i l Qualifier Oartd Roger* Orlendo. I I J3S *e&lt;
End of fSe Month Chempionthip (JO lap*) t D m d Roger*
Orion*) I LeRoy Porter Orlando 3 Bruce Leerrente,
Dei and 4 Arnold Bovat, Fort Pierce. S Joe Middleton So
Daytona * Bill Potey. Rockladga: 7 Harold John ton
Sanford. I John M atter Port Orange t Bill Oremoviih,
t4e* Smyrna Beech IS Du*e Southard. Me* Smyrna Bearn

Lap Laadert
Robert 7 30

Arnold Bovet

I

Joe Middleton l a

David

THUNOERCARS
Fettett Quainter Stan Ead* Titusville. t» S3 tec
First heet II lap*) I Ead*
Second heat I I lapt|-t. Je rry Bur bough Me* Smyrna
Beach
End a the Month Chempionth.p i » tap*) t! S'*" Ead*.
Ttlutvlda, 3 Tommy Patter*on, Scotttmoor. 3 Jett Blehr,
Deltane. 4 Ben Booth. Deland S Jerry Smith. Cocoa a
Je rry Reery Orlando, 3 Mai Petty. M im ti I MerV Sill*,
Orange City. * Richard Proule. Orlendo 10 Robert Lyon*.
Davenport

STREETSTOCKS
F irtt heat It lap*) I Bill Klniey. Ottaen
Second hoot (* iap*l I Mike KiAtaniak Longeaod
End of the Month Championth.p 130 lap*) t Catay
Hawthorne. Sanford. 1 Bill Klniey Otteen 3 Boo Collin*.
Orlendo. a Marc Klniey. Otteen
I Junior Simmon*.
Sanford a Let Clark. Orlando 7 Eddia To.at Apopka I
Mika Kubaniak Longwood a John Hake. Longwood 10 Ken
Marten. Orlando
FOUR C Y L IN D E R S
F irtlh a a t Itla p tl I Bobby Saar* Ot'een
Second heat la lap*) I BUI Martin Sanford
End ol the Month Champ.onthip i l l taptl I Jerry Symon*
New Smyrna Beach 1 Jatt Beau. Rockledg* 3 Ray
Symon* New Smyrna Brach 4 Billy Hooven Orlando S
Curti* Miller. Sanlordi 4 Jim m y Treverthen Nrw Smyrna
Beach, 7 Jack May*. Tavarnler. I Kaith Perry M im t f
Ray Martin Sanford 10 Jeanne May Ownbv New Smyrna
Baach

Massimino Says
‘Don’t W o rry,'
Wildcats Didn't
LEXIN G TO N . Ky.. (UPII- All ye of little
lalth take a good long look at valiant
Vllluiinva's first-time ever NCAA basketball
champions today.
By all means, I imi. herd the last two words
their coach told his wife before he kissed her
gfKidbyc.
It was tlntr for Holllc Massimino to go to
work, to pick op tils Wildcat players and
lead them Into tile lion's den. Rupp Arena,
wliere unconquerable Georgetown, the na­
tion's No I team and a 9 1-2 jkiIi i I favorite,
wus waiting to chru them op. The moment
of Inilb was al hand.
Mary Jane Massimino. the of the Wildcats'
coach, realized II bad been an emotionally
trying day for him ulreudy even though It
was still a lew hours before game lime.
Early In thr morning, tie trail gotten word
that Alex Srvrranrc. 79-year-old former
Vlltanova roach good friend ol Masslmlno's.
bad collapsed In his room at a local hotel
and trad died of un ujipurent heart attack at
the hospital.
Severance, who was here try special
Invitation, coached the Wildcats for 25 years
Ix-lwrrn 1936 and 1961 led ihent lo 413
vlclorlrs In that period. When they were told
of tils death. Massimino and the rest or the
tram look It very hard.
Oil top id that, no one was giving thr
Wildcats any chance at all against the the
Hoyas Not "99 percent of lire people In the
country." not any ol ttic big baskrlliull
mnvrn* like Al Mi Gulrr or Billy Parkrr. not
any of (he oddsrnakrrs.
Massimino knew all thal when tic was
leaving for the game. Nonetheless, tie had
only but two departing words tor tils wtte.
"Don't worry." he told tier.
T u g McGrow once said "y o u gotta
b r ik v r ," and nobody believed In thr
Wildcats more their roach Kolllr Massimino.
who wanted lo hr a baseball player when he
was a kid and whose favorite wus scrappy
Eddie Slanky,
Massimino must've known something no
one else knew because tils Wildcats played
the gumr uf their lives, as close lo a per fret
game as you can get. In u p s e llin g
Georgetown. 66-64, tx-lorc 23,124 stunned
i i m i believers,
The Wlldcuts shot out thr lights In jmlllng
(tie rug out from under the Washington.
D C. favorites. They made good on 22 of
tlietr 28 shots from the field to set un almost
Incredible NCAA shiKitlng record of 78 6 per
cent. They ulso connected on 22 of their 27
throws Irom the foul line for a sizzling 8 1.5
percentage.
To give you a Ix-tirr Idea of how el«*se the
W tldrats came to that perfect game
Massimino had said they'd need, that 78 6
record of theirs wiped out the previous one
of 67.4 set by Ohio Stale In I960 w hen the
Buckeyes, ledy by J rrry Lucas, hit on 31 for
46 to crust) California by 20 (minis.
What It comes down to ts that even with
their record shimltng. the Wildcats were
only two points better than lb : Hoyas. who
were out-bustled and never really able to
solve the Vlllunova dele use during the
contest.
"I think we beat one of the greatest teams
In history," Massimino suit! when tt was all
over. He won't get very much argument
there.
Dwayne McClain's two foul shots making
the score 65-00 with 18 second* left turned
out to he the ones that sunk the Hoyas and
Harold I'ressky added the winners' final
point with 10 seconds.
The Wlldcuts set another record alter the
final buzzer. For rcstacy and Jubilation.
They hugged euch other and chanted over
and over. "We're No. 1. We're No. I!"
"You bet we are." alllnord little Gary
McLain. "Isn't It crazy."
H r kept scanning the noisy cheering
crowd looking for his mother.
"Where's my mother at. where's she al?"
hr krpt trying to look over those In front of
him. "I wanna tell her we're No. I,"
Massimino didn't do much celebrating He
looked |&gt;ale ami drawn und had to alt down
In the midst ol all thr celebrating.
"Are you all rtght. Holllc?* u worried
member of Vlllunova'* staff asked him
solicitously.*
"I'm fine." he oderrd reassurance "I'm
okay. Don't worry."

H#» aid iPHoto 117 To mm * Vine on I

Frank Barnett dips a hurdle en roule to
a win at an earlier meet this year
Seminole track coach Ken Braumann

said his prize hurdler has made up his
mind to attend Arizona on a track
scholarship this fall

B arnett Selects A rizo n a
— C am pbell Sifts O ffers
Ily Sam Cook
H erald Sports Ed ito r
Frank Barnett has pretty much made up
his mind Clllf Cumpbcll 1* still sifting the
offers. I liar's the situation for Seminole
High's two outstanding Irark |x-rlormer* as
the April 15 signing dale* nears for prep
performers
Seminole track coach Ken Braumann said
Barnrtt, one of the nation's tx-st hurdlers, l*
expected to sign with Arizona when the big
day finally arrives In 13 days
"Frank wants In gn out of stale," said
Braum ann. "A rizon a's assistant (Mike
Glltx-rt) was In Tampa over the weekend to
watch him (at the Florida Relavsl I'hry'w
been recruiting him since early In the fall."
The muscular senior didn't hesltule lo put
on a show for tils lulurr school He blazed to
a 13.6 lime In thr 120 high hurdles to win
dial event and set a meet record. Barnett
also ran u leg id thr 880 yard relay train
which posted the fastest time In the U S
thlsyeurat 1:27.22.
Arizona, which ts rom|&gt;etlng against
Auburn and Mississippi for Barnett s
service*, tx-cume aware of the sensational
senior through Braumann'* connection with

Track/Field
Arizona's head women's coach. Chris Mur­
ray Murray was the assistant track coach at
Iowa State while Braumann was In Ames
Camphell. meanwhile. Is undecided I hr
llect-footrd 440-yard dash specialist said
earlier Hits year lli.u In- would alv&gt; like lo
play college football He was a gifted
running hack lor the Seminole's gridiron
team hut didn't have tutu h him king
support last tall
Campbell, who ran an awesome 46,1 440
split lo anchor the mile relay leant** win
Saturday, Is being pursued by Florida,
Florldu State. Mississippi. Auburn and
Kansas Braumann said he still has to visit
Kansas "('till will make op his mind pretty
s4kju ." said Braumann "Probably utter he
gix-s to Kansas, lie'll probably go loan out
«»t slate school but he's not derided yet."
T h r Srrninolrs host the Seminole County
Track A Field championship* Friday. April
12 The Five Star Conference t.
follows
on April 19 at A|&gt;opka T h r district meet w ill
be April 26 al latke Howell

MVP Pinckney Cuts Up Ewing
LEX IN G TO N . Ky. IUPI) - Ed Pinckney,
the N C A A tournament Most Vuluablr
Player, waved scissors In thr air. anxious to
cut down the nets symbolizing Vlllanova's
national championship.
The scissors could hardly have been as
sharp as Pinckney and his Vlllanova
teammates who shot a record 78 6 perrrnt
from the field Monday night to upset heavily
favored Georgetown 66-64 for the national
title.
"T h is wus not my greatest gam e,"
Pinckney said after oulsrorlng Patrick
Ewing 16-14 lo emerge from the shadow of
the Hoyas All America center. "T w o years
ugo In tny sophom ore y e u r versus
Georgetown 1 had 27 points and 22
re bounds."
"They are very physical and you urr
always aware of Patrick Ewing "
Pinckney, a 6-fool-9 senior from The
Bronx. N.Y.. shot 5-of-7 from the Hour —
slightly under the Wildcats fabulous average
— and 6-for-7 from the free throw line.
Ewtng. a 7-0 center likely to go first In the
ujx'omtng NBA draft, credited the Wildcats
with playing "an cxeellent game. They w rrr
slacking back on me more than they had In
the past."

Basketball
Ewtng, who led Georgetown to seven
victories In nine previous Big East mat­
chups agulnst Pinckney ami Vlllunova the
jwst four years. Indicated he didn't think the
loss in the title game tiad dethroned the
Hoyas as the best team In the nation
"W e might not have won the ballgamc,
but I still think we re No. I ." said Ewing,
who applauded slowly us Plnrkney collected
his championship watch.
On this night however, tt wus Pinckney
who cut down the victory nets.
S E V E R A N C E M ISSES H IS G A M E
L E X I N G T O N . K y. (U P IJ - Form er
Vtlbinovu basketball coach Alexander "A l"
Severance never lived to view the game he
waited a lifetime loser
Severance, who coached the Wildcats
Irum 1936 lo 1961, died Monday at his
Lexington hotel room of an apparent heart
attack, about 12 hours before Vlllunova took
the court for Its national championship
victory ovei lop ranked Georgetown, lie was

�Tv«*d«y. April

Evening H*rsM, Sanford,_FL

Fister
Hrr»ld SporU

PONTE VEDRA IUPI) - Besides raking In lots
of green. Calvin Peete and D A. Weibring shed
some blues with ihclr efforts In the Tournament
Players Championship.

Tribe's Defense
Needs To Catch
Up With Offense

Peete. who shot a final-round 66 Sunday to
finish at 14-under par 274. exorcised some media
demons who have been hounding him despite
nine previous To u r victories. In earning the lop
prize of $162,000. Peete muzzled his critics and
won Ihe most prestigious tournament ever
captured by a black golfer.

You’ve seen on the T V or heard on the radio
ihe Subway Subshop commercial where the
Cyndl Laupcr look-alike Is handed a styrofoam
hamburger box. She says. "No. no. get that
away."
Well. It seems that's the same thing the
Seminole High softball team’s defense says
when a ball comes Its way.
In three gam-* last week, the Lady Tribe
made a total r', 29 errors. Still, the Semlnoles
came away with one win. 9 6. over Lake
Mary's Lady Hams despite making 10 errors In
that game. Seminole then dropped a 9-5
decision to Apopka but Just two of Apopka's
runs were earned The roof caved In on the
Tribe the next day though when Lady
Brantley capitalized on 10 errors to roll to a
14*2 victory.
Although the Tribe did come out with that
one win. coach Beth Corso realizes that her
learn can’t keep playing that way In the field
and expect to be competitive.
When It comes to hitting. Seminole Is us
strong or stronger than a lot of learns In the
area with a lineup that Includes the county’s
leading hitler In Janet Hauck The blondehaired senior Is swatting the ball at an
Impressive .559 clip
Seminole has a 2-4 record In the Five Star
Conference but has a chance to finish at 5-4
and 4*4 In the district. The Lady Tribe’s last
three opponents Include Spruce Creek. Lyman
and Seabreeze "We are capable of winning
those three games." Corso said. "We ll have a
lot belter position In the district lournnmrnl If
we can win those games."
Currently, Lake Howell has the conference
lead at 6-6 but DcLand and Apopka are right
behind at C-I Mainland Is 5*2. Brantley and
I-ake Mary are 3-4. Seminole Is 2-4. Lyman 2*5
and Spruce Creek 1-5.
Lake Howell still has to contend with
Apopka. DcLand and Mainland In-fore It can
claim the conference lllle...
For everyone who could locate Ihe West
Orange Girls Club. Saturday's West Orange
Invitational Tournament was well worth the
trip.
The two Seminole County learns. Lake
Howell and Lake Brantley, went In different
d ire c tio n s In Ihe to u rn e y w hile Hon
"Gardenhlre" Gardner, father of Lake Howell’s
slugging first baseman Ava. went In Just about
every direction except the correct one.
Gardner suld he drove over 70 miles and
couldn't locate the field, Gardenhlre Is a
m u itm a n and form er A ir Force pilot.
Thankfully, he's a rellred flyer.

” 1 don I know who started those things about
nu- not bring able to hit long amt not being a good
puller." said Peete. who had eight birdies and
two bogeys Sunday. ” 1 think I’m a great putter.
You don’t win 10 Tour events without being able
to p u tt.1 also feel I bit the ball far enough oil the
tee to score. Maybe 1 don’t carry the ball as far as
some of the longest bitters, but when we go out to
find It. my hall's usually right next to the others."
Weibring. who finished three shots behind
Peete despite a standout 09 In the final round,
pockclrd $97,200 He also has his skeptics,
except Weibring whiners don't limit ihclr criti­
cism to specific pary* ol Ills game He's heard Ihe
knocks all too often.

T u b -M a s te r

O ffe rs

C a sh

Giving away money should never be dif­ Tub Master President Jack Roberts said his
ficult, should It? TubM aster, an Orlando organization has committed to a nationwide
based manufacturer of tub enclosures and sports program. Tub M aster has over 5,000
skylights, has had some difficulty In that dealers and If one of those franchises will
area, however. Mickey Norton, middle, was commit to sponsoring one half ot a youth
only too happy to oblige Tub M aster's Jane sports team (baseball, softball, basketball,
Dane, left, and Gordon MacLeod when they tootball, etc.), the home office will pick up
offered the green stuff. Norton, the director the rest ot the tab. "W e're helping to Insure
of the Inter-County Basketball Association, the future of community youth sports by
said his league was used as a pilot program providing Incentive among our dealers to
by T u b M a s te r and he received $1,200. sponsor a team ," said Roberts.

Trump Wants Due For Signing Flutie
(or comment.

NEW YORK (U P II - New
Jersey Generals owner Donald
Tru m p believes he did a lot lor
the U.S Football League when
h r signed Doug Flutie to a
mult I-million dollar contract
Now. says Tru m p . It Is firm* the
USFL did something for him. •
In fact, the millionaire owner's
representatives Insisted Monday
that the league's 13 other
owners had made a private
agreement In which the Generuls would Ire ‘ partially reim­
bursed" for the cost of signing
the 1984 H e tsm a n Tro p h y
winner.
"When a guy goes out and
spends more money than a
player Is worth, he expects to get
partial reimbursement Irom Ihe

Football
other owners." sold John Bar­
ron, a vice president of Ihe
Trum p Organization
“ Everybody asked Tru m p to
go out ami sign Flutie." Barron
added.
Tru m p eventually agreed to
pursue the all-lime leading col­
lege |Kisscr "for file good of the
league.” Barron said, and finally
signed him to a five-year con­
tract worth between $5 and $8,3
million.
“ He probably would have done
II (signed Flutlcl anyway." Bar­
ron said of the Generals owner.
Tru m p could nol be reached

SCOREBOARD
M

* * * Try* tOw fl Cf* 9 * #«

I

•Aerxft )l « im I m * la*w-a I I 14
U1 « k « w h l
M*rc* 11 - U v-uN Lor*,

T
f I i 4 »n 4 i f T¥
AUTOBAflftC
l» m * fVPH HAtCAl

lUtm iu

Vximm v*e*

»•"** 'R*er**. UCLA
M IN I

A#fd I - &amp;•**« AMAC 1 ».«.
tia
*#» 1a Mr***
lA
mum
Aprita - JuioruADwt? Os*4*s. i *
(MBS
April m- C*4ar*pDor*,
Ge* I
&lt;%ua«

U* - UU C*«fi Hit tft#*r«nft«
I I*

-

It N

J*«» ftrfwMB

Who* it

C*f Ht*

E ?mu
1 ■ » » - U V l U* M m
ik

\

- ttfl
*■ *$ m i » l (

W m * W*

D«ti v* » a*- m&lt;MCtixtK'rar*W+
D«Mm entfU r f rant
GTMAAITICS

'111* - (tAH.
fen#*?•*«(«**•***9*

'*¥m

M0C1 IT
’ ■ » » - U1A. UK

#*tr«firtlan|rt lit!
■ t l lT iiN L
I« m — UIA An

f

H O R S ES
••asmOartf *»&lt;«
Nwim *•*•*s «■ihsii 1 Own
«■OwtM Em «*, *Mm* SS &gt;«t
■■■Mis naH
'• I -

SA M W &gt; 6*«l»Mm

1

V w saa Im M
&gt;•* * U’
-*»* */.*» I
v a a n a is iiw a H

&lt; - l u l l a i l l l i * . U^V-wm t

' 'i - n l ’i a M M
'«* J&gt; w- tew iwi am* 1 •**
1x a

Mmi*&gt;- P«rM*Own GMNirwn ' S

m S -7 A

Peefe. Weibring
Exorcise Demons

Chris

TU B E

j ,

• M UtU
« iff *n&gt;
•Rm W*

*1
IIA

I Im *

Be** Car#

mui Wif; ff

Apr ' I - U**« *8.14 D rH W*'e Arwfa. 1

BASEBALL

• l
T At let#
If t I I I
Cheap
” &lt; tl
14 M m
Apr 1 tt - I at G rin 1 i r s r d I ’%
II
«
t»a
fftee T*rl
tl 11 in
Aprrt |7- Oar*y Tr*. CWtM CW* l
tj 11 m
t*M
t) H
M II eJI
PR EPS
■ e»se« Off
lilt •»
W
*e
II II
jACMOMW Uf IU” ) - The f&lt;ar*a
«
0
m #NP *ert ¥ betaCkt1' r §*
A II
It ie
CUtlAAAA
A IS
I Cw h i Ten
tf •
■ATfOSAUtAMI
J hm p
Left*
'
■ l At
I WwB Iw r*
HI Lea Affwi
U t jfti
« Tampa
U|
Mem
IA « m
I UM «v&lt;ft
HI I n Trt
• v\
It
A T»mpe &gt;fArsM
te I
U u m
1 Ft IMrfcie itM
U) Cft-Ufi
II
f Ml
RftueiMpft-ft
A LaM Mery
He
C •&lt;
1T l lei
t U i f s tf Lv*ea
IM
Ur f«M«i
It II a
4 Akpew Uv*rti|e
HA
Ur rup
tt n 4A4
Newer ^ 1 1 ***«»
NAern. ( A *
'H
a
w
s
f
t
P
1
n
11 4D
Orieada leeae, CM*M , A«*i*pip
t
1* IM
IT!
aneMAam !ar « m4s
C*vW
Mm»m&lt;
• « Jftt
‘rpi-Aa l » e Mar* laaftari
i
11 HI
Wc’*eet« Heea
orenpa f e »
«ga4mai |a«MHaiitM
jBrtamr-M rnvim Apple T*Npe i t *
and T»mp«am

Swc* S - Tw"*a S*f Ow*r l e w V i

marts 4
( « v « n -e a w I s
lia lS n e M
Sa t;' 1) - Vw &gt;eaa law* l * s 11 s

t aa iwastKOnawaw

Satta a - (* , Ww» W w s n I VMM*
I ■» » **«•«&gt; 1 a
S o rt S - I w w
a i a e I ’a.

t«

IM
iik n itn
* * ! « » - H E II If
I f MWi I m W
|1M 1M 1 )
r w jw
11 m i a
IC c iw t
IM
g i i r i s K . r iin iK M r n f ii i.i n M

enaMat f tM ta i (ALU

t i g fan
IK llM lC '
W !*l

IM

IM t o
IM IM
.M

gilllllM roll MM lllfllKM
IM w -M I MU
Ifir-MMfm
4M 10 &gt;0
1»
Vw
ll 1
10
IMi Okiwiki
0 nil 11 m n nu an 1 'llfi MU
N h i 1* 11 * * 11, | M M

1 H I Ml

HUM CwnwwiKIfM
111 IIu
ll*Ml*r'H
IIK IM IM
IVrtS
IMIM
IOSwMIVC
IM
t n i i o M r it iiM M . i u i i i h m
III,•»-*!* MM
10
io m * i *«mwm
im •
)M 10

IMlMtlM
10
0 11*1 MM. r 11*1 tOM I 11*11
UM0. kMOmi'tllMMIKt talllia
t-IM * H* tU W JII

NBA
iu*c
lit In*"* IM
t t llllf ‘1 *1*11

lllla M llll
r*H M M »il«l* 1'*M« 1 0 * *

i » « r « mciwwwm 1 a**
O w n II I-Mw* 1 a i m
•w*mrw, MCW*c*11 ,»
I M &gt; | ! S * n i M I fl*m
l * IMwtMCIwww I Op m

a i la Lnpaw,t

M ib p m k
»aad«llaD«p)
OpiaPAfcarPI

U,*nnap.,i*|&gt;
CwwMlawV** M0*m
nmM m r*m*M M0 pm

IHLIT CaMBthba

•lOaepULIt
SeafrpcMM14CbPM 4
CatapBAi «*mi I
Ae^aert 1 leetaa I

U S FL
VMftli i u i i i *001*1*1 n a v i

SOKC
DiW -tSI It*
1 Dm ,VUr ?
)p *n

itv a lU M I

&gt;■

i a IM
i « im

I*

• a n iM i r 0 n ■ * t a m i »• m
H &gt; » - 11 D MM
IM fU N w i
MM IM IM

i t m h i Xm
IfV M

tm 1 1
IM

•ihimm. ran M to iu M M

00 (I II KM

Moose Sponsor
T h e Sanford Lodge 1A51, Loyal O rd e r of
Moose, continued Its trad itio n of com m unity
service this year b y sponsoring a J u n io r
L e a g u e baseball te a m In the S a nford
R e c r e a t io n D e p a r t m e n t L e a g u e . J e f f
Monson, recreation superintendent, accepts
a c h e ck fro m J u n io r G o v e rn o r R a lp h
G a rc ia . Moose team opened the season
M on d ay against Elks.

IH M S n W M
IM IM IM
lU U M M W t
E l l i
W lw lM
IM
• II U M M r a ilM M I t O l t lM IK
M w -U itltn
iiiW U M
MM IM IM
io m c iw
&gt; a im
IM lM lO M
IM
9 U I 1 MM r il l l S M . I I I M l B l M
» I W » - VM.M K M
IM H H N M
im im im
10m Ol
’ ■ )a
TCMwl Jtttn
IM
o n o iu k r a iiM b T a in ia M
M IW - V M I KM
la T it w M ,j
MM MM IM
i IM U mm
m m im
IKWIM i Om
im
0 I M M M r MM M M M M U U M M
KM
IW W IM *M
&gt; • IM &gt;M
IM M C l H M M
i m &gt;m
IV m m S *
g u n iiM . n u m K n w t iM K

Thc Inter, according to Bar­
ron. said In essence, "Are ihrsc
owners going to live up to the

Wrlbrlng and 1‘rric at least have each other to
offer encouragement.
"The man Is a machine." said Weibring of
Pccle, n native of Fort Myers. Fla . who will enter
the Masters In nine days with two 1985 victories
under his black cap "Please don’t write anymore
that he can’t putt In bnskelhall terms, I tried to
apply a full court prc-ts against Calvin Sunday
and he klnda went In the four corners on me
Every time I gave him a little punch with a blrdlc.
be lumped back with a great shot of his own."
Peete said he never fell In a commanding
position, despite a lour-shot lead with four holes
remaining
With the kind of heat D A Weibring put on me
over the back shir, no Irad Is big rnough with No,
17 corning up." said Prrlr. referring te Island
bole that cost him a double twjgey-5 Saturday.
When I went out on Sunday morning. 1 figured
11-under would win. hut Ihe way D A played, I
couldn’t make enough birdies."

agreement'?"

Weibring. whose only Tour victory come when
be outlasted Peete In the 1979 Grind Cities Oja-n,
was tMilh proud and erestfallen after his (rest
simply was not good enough.

Myles H. Tancnbautn. manag­
ing partner of the Baltimore
Stars — last year's USFL chantplon — refused In say bow much
the other owners were expected
lo reimburse Tru m p , adding
that Ihe agreement was "a
private mailer for the people In
l he lenguc".

"I have to admit my llrsi reaction Is I'm pretty
disappointed." said Weibring. "I guess I should
la- thrilled alNiut the number ol dollars I Just
earned, but I was trying to win a golf tourunment.
I Iel i I had a big win coming up and I didn't think
alter all this time I'd still Ik* harking to win
another tournament. I still want to win very
badly One thing I'm certain ol. though. I didn’t
lose Ihls tournament Calvin Peete won It."

Hopeful Blue Jays
Acquire M atuszek

41*1111 it r i m

IMIlWI—VI* C It 0

( 1 I I I it if* •* i t 11 111

LHlItCJUIllABUl

iia rta is a ie a i

vu.0 mi
IM IM IM
1C IM

*
tImW/wrr

But last week be sent a letter
to USFL Commissioner Harry
Usher requesting Ihe agreement
Im* Drought up ut an owners'
Hireling In Ihe near future.

"Saturday night I was watching a basketball
game on cable television and Ihe station gave a
report on the TIK.'." Weibring said through
clenched teeth "T h e guy said I shot a 32 on the
front side but I got back to my own game on the
back nine with a 40 Aller a while, those things
klnda mb you wrong."

U. Inmnm a Sr«M •
Ifeinlpp. Ip r ll «
UM lim n I in

M Ck'cno I pm

NHL
«• ( m i III*
t M lllf '* l i n n
U M IlM ltT )
it m ip p

/i h

1 Mpm

nciKIMC M Ml Irpn f m
rwOwWMMT itwwi 1■) 1
M n Jn p M K U w l l p n
H u m M Im M p m M 0 pm

U n ite d P re o o In te r n a tio n a l

The last lime the i’hlllrs made
a lair spring irudr. Ihe Tlgera
were grateful.
Th e Phillies Iasi March traded
away left-handed reliever Willie
Hernandez along with Dave
Bergman for John Wockrnfuss
and Glenn Wilson and tile rest
was history. Hernandez won thr
Cy Young award with 32 saves,
hrlplng Detroit win Ihe World
Series.
fitfiladrtphta Monday unloaded
John Matuszrk and three minor
leaguers lo the Toronto Blur
Jays, a team hoping lo follow the
Tigers' pulh (rum Ihe A L East
title all Ihe way lo Ihe world
rhamploushlp,
Matuszek. 30. was traded for
shortstop Jose Escobar, out­
fielder Ken Klnnard and relief
pitcher Dave Slfipanoff. He
hulled 248 with 12 home runs
and 43 Mill In 101 games for thr
Phillies Iasi season, alter missing
43 days with a multiple fracture
of the middle linger on his right
hand.
Because of Matuszcks slow
start In spring training. Phillies
manager John Feltke picked
riKikle outfielder John Russell to
Ik- his regular first baseman.
Escobar and Klnnard will Join
Ihe Heading Phillies of the East­
ern la-ugue and Shlpanoff will be
assigned h* the Portland roater
In the Pacific Coast League.
Many clubs spent the day
adjusting their rosters with one
week left before April 8 Opening
Day. Among (be major moves:
Boston waived pitcher John
Henry Johnson: Montreal placed
pitchers Charlie Lea and Gary
Lucas on Ihe 21 day disabled
list: and Texas waived Infielder
Jim Anderson and catcher Ned
Y .» t — once thought of as the
heir apparent lo Jim Sundberg.
Elsewhere Monday. Toronto
downed Montreal 5-4 In 10
Innings. Ihe New York Mets
blanked Pittsburgh 4-0. Min­
n esota beat H o u sto n 4 -2 .
Milwaukee defeated San Diego
6-3. Atlanta pounded the New
York Yankees 0-1. Oakland
shaded Seattle 6*5. the Chicago
C u b s edged California 7 -6 .
Philadelphia nipped Ihe Chicago
While Sox 3-2. San Francisco
pounded Cleveland 14-4. Detroit
topped Toronto 8 8. Cincinnati

Baseball
overtook Kansas City 6-5. anil
Balfitnore caught Boston 3-1
Fred Manrlqur doubled In Hon
Shepherd In thr lOlh Inning lo
lift the Blue Jays. Vance Law
had a two-run homrr anil fiirrr
singlrs for the Expos.
Ed Lynch strengthened Ills bid
lo Join file Mels' starling rotation
wllh five scoreless Innings New
York learned third baseman Hay
Knight, who hud shoulder sur­
gery In November, may need an
additional operallon In rrmove
chlps from Ills elbow tie may
miss us much us six weeks of
action.
Frank Viola blanked Houston
for six Innings and had two hits
and an KHI (o lend thr Twins.
The left-hander, who allowed
nine hits In seven Innings, hail a
streak of 24 scoreless Innings
pitched broken In (lie seventh.
Third baseman Gralg Nellies
eomrnllled two rigbth-lnnlng
errors to let In two runs and
Cecil Cooper belled a two run
homer In the ninth lo help file
Brewers. Eric Show pllrhed
seven scoreless Innings for San
Diego.

RACING
NOW!
NIGHTLY 7:30 P.M.
( IiO M p t B u n .)

MAT.'. WON. WtD. SAT. 1PM

PLAYTHE EXCITINGA HIGH
PAYING "PICK8" &amp;"BIG0"
THURS. F M I
0RAN0STAN0 ADM
FOR LADIES
Visa our two CHmstt
oontrottsd ciubhousM lor
your I idm dining and
sntMnsinnwnt pisaauro
ClubhousM nwarv snoot

8 3 1 -1 6 0 0

Sinford-Orlindo
K
ennel Club
North ot Ortando.
Just off Hwy. 17-B2
M IN Dm* l« 4 lags'*
Sorry No M inors

THE ADVANTAGE M

RADIAL MUD TERRAIN VK

RAXSf r o UK STANDARDS Of HIDE
AMD nnrOAMANCE.

oivc youh rmicx h a c z p h o vim
PEArOAHAMCL

Goodrich

.\» K TIIIK MAIIT
®s 3 2 2 * 7 4 8 0 •
mon

rm

jo

sat

0

J

00

2.4 13 S. FrentlA A ve.
• * SAN FO RD

41**

%» | - * ■-« *

1

. . * 0 x1

Om xnuNm
C alling "

�M — I w w I i H H i w l d , l i i r i i r t , F t.

T w i l i y , A p r il 1, I t B

W O R LD
IN BRIEF

HCA M erger Designed To Cut Costs
N A S H V ILLE. Tenn. (UP1) - Officials say
the 96.6 billion merger of the Hospital
Corporation of America and American
Hospital Supply Corp. will help hold the line
on health rare costs and pave the way for
further expansion.
The merger, announced Monday, creates
a holding company with combined revenues
totaling 11 percent of the Gross National
Product and was the fourth largest In U.S.
corporate history, officials said.
The merger, however, m ust be approved
by stockholders of both corporations, the
Federal T ra d e C o m m issio n and the
Securities and Exchange Commission.

Hijacker Seizes Jet
For Ransom And Publicity
BEIR U T. LEBANON IUPI) - A Lebanese hijacker said he
was seeking publicity when he commandeered a Middle
East Airlines Jet with 75 people aboard and demanded 930
million for southern Lebanese guerrillas.
The sky pirate. Identified as A ll Kesrwanl. took over MEA
flight 368 Monday while It was en route from Beirut to the
Saudi Arabian city of .Jeddah, saying he was carrying a
small bomb and a pistol.
He turned himself over to Saudi Arabian authorities
shortly after the Boeing 707 touched down at .Jeddah. No
one was Injured In the Incident.
The spokesman said Kesrwanl had demanded 930
million lo help fund a Lebanese resistance movement
against Israrll occupation troops In southern Lebanon.
The spokesman quoted the hijacker as saying his action
was "a publicity stunt" designed to dramatize the plight of
Lebanese living under the Israeli occupation.

French Hostage Released
B EIR U T. Lebanon |UPI| — Th e second of four French
nationals kidnapped In l&lt;ehanon last month has been
released, the French Embassy reported today.
An embassy spokesman Identified the man as Gllles
I’eyrollcs. the 32-year-old director of the French cultural
renter In the northern Lebanese port city of Tripoli, who
was kldnap|&gt;ed from his Itome on March 23.
The spokesman would not comment on a Beirut
newspaper rrport that I’eymiles' release was secured by
IhcSiillte Amid militia of .Justice Minister Nublh Dcrrt.
There was no word on who was holding Peyrolles or how
he was freed.
Peyrolles w h s the serond of four French kidnap victims
lo be released. The first to be freed was Danielle Perez, a
secretary at the French Embassy In Beirut who was
abducted from Moslem west Beirut on March 22.
Prrcr. 34. was set free March 31. but her father. Marcel
Carton, the 82-year-old chief of protocol at the embassy
who was kidnapped with her. remains In captivity together
with Marcel Fontaine, the Frencl vice consul, who was
snatched In west Beirut the same day.

H C A chairman Don MacNaughton called
Ihe merger "one of the most positive things
that has happened In some time" to future
health-care costs, which he said have not
exceeded the rate of Inflation since October
1983.
"W e have had to become more cost-

conclous. and this merger Is a way to
address efficiency and p ro d u c tivity ."
MacNaughton said.
HCA spokeswoman Debbie Meredith said
one goal of the merger was lo make health
care "more cost cfflclent for the patient." •
"We're assuming that the supplies we will
be purchasing will be at a much lower cost
and the savings will be passed on to the
patient." she said.
H CA owns or manages 422 facilities in the
United States — Including Central Florida
Regional Hospital In Sanford and South
Seminole Community Hospital In Longwood
— and owns or manages 30 facilities In eight
foreign counfrles. officials said. A H S C
supplies thousands of hospitals thoughout
the world.
Corporate officials. In announcing the
merger, also talked about their desire for
further expansion.
"We would like to enter Japan someday."
MacNaughton said at corporate head­

has a w o rK o u t room w ith
weights at Its French Avenue
headquarters but Butler said
only 14 officers use It regularly.
Mayor Bettye Smith said Ihe
police department's equipment
should be sufficient but C o m ­
missioner David Furr said the
city should provide more. He
argued that If the city Is going lo
require the officers to be In
shape It ought to pay for the
means to do It. Farr said the
police departm ent's existing
•-qulpment Is about half what Is
needed.
Once the program Is In place,
the officers should participate
when they want on their free
time. C om m issioner Robert
Thomas said.
Butler disagreed saying. "I
believe we'll have to make It

mandatory: that's the only way
It will work."
Fire Chief Thom as Hickson,
also at the meeting, said to force
the firefighters to exercise would
provoke "rebellion ' He said If
the commission provided the
equipment the firefighters would
take It upon themselves to gel
Into shape.
Since neither of the city's two
fire stations have facilities.
Hickson said the firefighters
would have to use the police
department's workout room.
Farr suggested that the com­
mission probe Ihe possibility of
adding a gym facility to fire
station *1 on French Avenue
und that the police and fire
departments muke the program
Interesting by waging some
friendly competition.

Butler said he plans to have
the officers exercise and chart
thetr progress by squad.
There are no height or weight
requirements for city employees.
City Manager Warren E. "Pete"
Knowles said, because such req u lr e m e n ta h a v e been
c h a lle n g e d In c o u r t . T h e
entrance of women Into police
and fire departments made It
virtually Impossible to require a
uniform height or weight, he
said.
But he did suggest that Ihe
departments set goals for Indi­
vidual officers and firelighters.
Butler said the program would
tie In place as soon as a suitable
one Is found. He. Hickson and
Knowles are expected to work
out the details In the next two to
ih rrr months

9.000 compared to Longwood's
12.000. The salary of former
Longwood city administrator
David Chacey, who submitted
Continued from page 1A
his resignation under pressure In
Association annual meetings, Deceml&gt;er. was 934.290 a year.
dues to the International City Police Chief Greg Manning ts
Managers Association, health In­ receiving that amount In his
surance for his fa m ily, un current rapacity us acting city
automobile for city business und administrator.
driving to and from Ills residence
Smrrllson said. "I don't think
to the office: a 43-day written
notice on termination of con­ Ihe cost of living Is more than 40
percent higher In Longwood
tract, and 90-day severence pay.
Powers agrees the city ad­ than Perry. You would have u
ministrator should live In the tough time convincing me that
he couldn't live at the style tie Is
city.
accustomed
with that m uch
Ills sulury In his present Job Is
9 2 4 .8 0 0 plus benefits, but more thun he Is now being paid.
Powers suld the coot of living Is I would not vole to hire him on
higher In Longwood. He has the basis of his demands."
"He's asking for more than I'm
been with Ihe city of Perry for
lour years. It has a population of willing to accept.” Commission­

er June Lormann said. "I am
disappointed that he did not
want to tuke this chance to
advance and prove himself. We
offered him u good |&gt;ackagr and
u chance to Ire a city manager."
Commissioner Ed Myers said
In hl« demands Powers was
using u double standard quoting
thr the personnl policy to back
up some of them while others
were contrary to the trolley, lie
said he was not In fuvor of
signing the contract as proposed
by Powers.
"There's no way I In good
mind could offer Powers what tie
wants without his huvlng expe­
rience as a city administrator."
Commissioner Larry Goldberg
suld. "Our city needs somebody
now and It would mean another
3 or 4 months If we readvertlse.

One consideration Is to hire
someone from within the city
staff — not Greg (Manning). As
to Payne, (city m anager of
C r y s t a l R iv e r , w h o w as
runner-up) I don't know ut this
point."
He added that there ure sever­
al options If thr commission
rejects Powers' pro(&gt;osal. They
Include:

...$hape*Up
Con tin ue d from page 1A
said a few officers who were
examined recently by u city
physician were as much as 50 to
100 pounds overweight.
Police spokesman Officer Keith
Wright said last week the pro­
gram Is needed because police
work Is not Just paperwork and
riding In a patrol car — It can be
very rigorous, such as chasing
suspects on foot.
“ T h e y need to at least keep up
with them (suspects) and not
give up after a block." Wrtght
said.
The program also "lets the
citizens know they have some
In-shupe cops." he said.
The police department nlready

...P o w e r s

Subway Security To Stay Tight
TO R O N TO |UPI| — Police smashed suspicious packages,
evacuated bus and rull stations and forced riders off a
subway train In a massive search for a tximb an Armenian
group threatened to detonate In the city's transit system.
The threatened attack by the "Armenian Secret Arm y for
the Liberation of Our Homeland" never materialized, but
(Mtllcc took no chances and thousands of |&gt;coplc stayed
away from buses and trains
Police planned lo resume Ihenpcrutlun today.
Toronto's police department tased a "public ulert" last
Friday, warning the city's 15 million transit users to be
wary of suspicious looking objects.
The nlert came after Ihe Royal Canadian Mounted Police
received n communique from the Armenian group,
threatening to explode bombs along Ihe 800 miles of
transit lines If authorities did not release three men
charged after n March 12 attack on Ihe Turkish Embassy
In the rupltal of Ottawa.

25 K ille d In H o te l F ire b o m b in g

...G a rb a g e

TAIN AN , Taiwan (U l’ll — A fire that may have been
sparked by revenge-seeking guests raced through a hotel In
the southern city of Tainan, killing at least 23 |x-ople and
Injuring nine, {aillce said.
Police said 18 Ixxlles had been recovered from the hotel
and rescue workers were searching for more. Seven of 18
Injured |&gt;eople taken lo a nearby hospital later died. No
foreigners were among Ihe victims. (Nillce said
Investigators quoted employees of the lnq&gt;erlal Hotel as
saying five people drove past the holrl In a taxi ut midnight
Monday and threw several flrcltombs Into Ihe concrete
building through un open gale.
The motive for the attack was not known. police mild, but
several guests had threatened to retaliate earlier In the
evening alter becoming Involved In a brawl with members
ol Ihe hotel management

Continued from page 1A

Frank W illiam s, owner of
Seminole Wastr. said he op­
posed t h r p ro p o s a l u n d
expressed dismay at Ihe concept
of un exclusive franchise.

Mrs. Rice suld Ihe city com­
"Th e y (city commissioners)
mission then decided tooprn the
marketplace In Lake Mary und reully don't know what the hell
allow garbage companies to sign th e y're d o in g out t h e r e ."
Individual contracts with citi­ Williams said He added thut un
zens. But after n yeur. Mrs Rice e x clu sive fra n chise w o u ld
said thut method has caused compound the problem of "sorry
service" that some residents
several problems. Includlng• Confusion from residents on now get from other companies.
how to gel gnrltage collection.
Williams suld that If the ordi­
• T h e deterioration of city nance was upproved he would
roads from as muny as live trips bid on Ihe laike Mary contract.
a week by the various compa­
Pat Thornhill, general munugnies' garbage trucks.
• And regulating Ihe rates er of Industrial Waste, said his
c o m p a n ie s cun ch u rg e for company does not serve that
many customers In t.akr Mary,
gartuige collection.
Mrs. Rice said un exclusive but still expressed concern over
franchise would help eliminate t h r p r o p o s e d o r d in a n c e .
(host* problems und help the city Thornhill said that since he wus
get th r best service at the lowest not familiar with the proposal he
could not say whether hr would
price for Its residents
Representatives of the four support it.
companies providing garbage
"I can see pros und cons." he
service In Ihe city hud varied said.
opinions on the proixmed taw.
Thornhill udded that he would
Jeff O'Connor, general manag­
attend Thursday night's meeting
er of Danjolm. said his company
to gel more Information.
has alreudy expressed Its Inter­
The commission Is scheduled
est In an exclusive franchise und
would be In fuvor of the ordi­ to meet ut 7:30 p.m. In city hall.
158 N. Country Club Road
nance.

WEATHER

quarters tn Nashville. "We sre an Interna­
tional company, but they IA H S C ) are a
larger International company than we are.
Japan Is a very difficult country to get Into.
They've got 2.000 employees tn Japan —
they've already got a toehold.
"Even though the number of hospitals
that will exist Is ^ Unite number, therr ts
still u long way to go as far as the number of
quality hospitals we could acquire, he said.
Edward Gordon, an analyst for the New
York securities firm of Pnidentlal-Bache.
said the merger will give the new holding
company an extra 91.8 billion In borrowing
power for possible acquisitions.
HCA. which was founded in 1968 by Dr.
Thomas Frtst and his son. Dr. Thom as Frist
Jr., and businessman Jack C. Massey. Is
now ranked 13th among Fortune 500's
largest diversified service companies and
cornered six percent of the market of
non governmental hospitals In the country.

• Offer thr Job to the other
finalist Payne.
• Cull In some of the other
applicants.
• Advertise ugaln for more
applicants.
• Get names from Sunford and
Seminole County from their lop
10 list.
• Offer the Job to Munnlug or
City Clerk Don Tc rr\ .

for tlie Lake Mary library rnuy be
u spot donated to the county
near Luke Mary High School.
The Cassrlbcrrv main library
Continued from page 1A
Is to have 25.000 square feet:
I-tike Mary 8.000
12.000 square feel each
No site has been designated a
Th e Casselberry and Lake
primary one for negotiations In Mary libraries ure to open In
the Foreal City urea
1988
The county bus two libraries,
The Casselberry facility, to be
the main library. Is to be built on one In Sanford at the former |x&gt;st
a five-acre site on thr Oxford office on First Street und the
Road extension, north of SR 436. o th e r In S e m in o le P la z a ,
being acquired by the county for. Casselberry The Sanford library
a little more than 9300.000 from Is to be con ve rte d lo ada group of builders, headed by mb^iatratlve offices when the
Norman Rossmun. And the site new facility is built.

...Libraries

...Japan

m arkets In four target In ­
dustries: telecommunications,
electronics, forestry products
und medical equipment und
pharmaceuticals.
S om e Ja p a n e se o ffic ia ls
maintain thr U.S. trade deficit Is
caused less by restrictive Japa­
nese |x)ltces than by the strong
U.S. dollar, lackadaisical market­
ing efforts by U.S. firms und an
Amerlcun reputation for poor
quality products.
Both sides have agreed that
even If thr U.S. met Its market­
ing grails In the four target
sectors, the deficit would only be
reduced by uboul 910 billion

Continued from page 1A
tulles — Northwest wind 13
foreign
competition over five
knots today and tonight tiecomyears.
lug light und vat table Wednes­
day. Sea 3 lo 3 feet. Arcus of ruin
A story In the J.i/jan T/rnrs
and a few nhowrrn mostly south
suld thr panel will urge free
toduy und tonight
market access for foreign grxxls
EX TEN D ED FO R EC A STi
In all murket sectors except
G e n e r a lly fa ir T h u r s d a y
those affecting natlonul security
Hemming
partly
cloudy
Friday
such
us f(xx! und energy.
The National Weather Service
then a chance of showers or
Th e panel's report, com ­
predicted atxive normal lent|&gt;erthunderstorms mainly north hall
missioned m onths ago. was
at ores today In the Weal, with
S a tu rd a y . Cool Th u ts d u y
expected to be released April 9.
highs In the &lt;K)h In southern
morning then a slight warming
The panel will take Into ucCalifornia Record highs were set
trend. Lows Thursday 40s north
count U.S. requests for access to
or tied Monday at eight locations
on the West Coast uml In und 50a southern Interior,
Florida. Wintry weather clung lo warming by Satmduy lo upper
Ihe easlrrn hall of the United 50s north und ncur 70 south.
Illghs Thursday In the 70s then
Stutes. prompting Irost warnings
Friday und Suturday averaging
for Nut tit Carolina, northwestern
up|M-r 70s north lo low und mid
South Carolina and northern
HOssouth
Survivors Include his wife. Thelma Ingram. Longwood: 18 s i s t e r s , M i l d r e d C a r r ,
JOHN L. ROBINSON
Arkansas. Light Hurries dusted
A R E A R EA D IN G B (S a.m.):
Fulrby;
two sons. Alan K.. San­ g r a n d c h ild r e n ; tw o gre at­ Horscheads. N.Y., Georgians
Mr.
John
Lloyd
Robinson.
57.
the Great Lukes und unit hr in
temperature: 60; overnight low of 2 0 0 H u n t C lu b U l v d ., ford. Rev. W udr H. III. Lenoir grandchildren.
Kovuc. Orlando. Harriet Gore.
New England.
All Faiths Memorial Park. Buffalo. N.Y.; Flora Reed. Bath.
5 8 -. M o n d a y 's h i g h : 8 2 : Longwixxl. died Sunday. Born in City. Tenn.; two daughters. Alice
A R E A F O R E C A S T : Mostly tnirometrlc pressure: 30.03: rela­ Mayfield. Ky.. he moved to Petree. Sanford. Ann S. Murkcy. Casselberry. Is In charge of N.Y.. Celts Ross. Maine. N.Y.:
urrangetnrnls.
two brothers. Krnneth Barkley.
cloudy und cool with the chance tive h u m id ity : 77 percent; Longwood from Frankfort. Ky. In Taylorsville. N.C.; two brothers.
winds:
northwest
ut
8
mph:
ruin
VICTORIA E. SNYDER
1983.
H
r
was
a
maintenance
Dr.
Wilson
C.
Singletary.
DeBath. N.Y.. Henry Barkley. Cor­
of showers decreasing to 20
04 Inch; sunrise: 0:15 am ., man and u Protestant.
Mrs. Victoria E. Snyder. 46. of ning. N Y .
Itonu. Dr. Richard C. Singletary.
jiercent this afternoon. High
sunset 0:44 p.m.
Survivors Include a son. John Vancouver. B.C.: a sister. Edith 789 Hlllvtcw Drive, Altamonte
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Funeral
lower 70s. North wind 10 to IS
W E D N E S D A Y T I D E S : L. J r .. Flint. Mich.; daughter. Farmer. Washington. D.C.; one Springs, died Sunday at Orlando Home. Forest City, la In charge '
mph. Tonight fair und cool. LowRegional Medical Center. Born of arrangements
Daytona Beach: highs. 0:10 Mrs Elizabeth Tlllet. Frankfort. granddaughter.
upper 40a Light north wind.
a m . 0:20 p.m.; lows. 11:32 N . Y . : p a re n ts . L lo y d u n d
Brlsson G ua rdian Funeral Nov. I I . 1938 tn Bath. N.Y.. she
Wednesday sunny with little
u . m . . 1 2 :0 3 p . m . ; P o r t Elizabeth. Altoona. Flu.; • sister. Home. Sanford. Is tn charge of moved to Altamonte Springs t
temperature change High low to
from llammondsport. N Y. In
mid 70s. North lo northeast Canaveral: highs. 0.02 a.m.. Mrs. Nancy E. McDonald. Lex­ arrangements.
0:21 p.m.: lows. 11:23 u m.. ington. Ky.; two grandchildren.
1964. She w as a licensed F u n « r a l N o t lc *
wind lOto 15 mph.
RAYMOND W. SKIDMORE
practical nurse.
11:54 p.m.; Bayport: highs.
B u ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Fu n eral
Mr. Raymond William Skid­
B O A T IN O F O R E C A S T t St.
11:11 a m.. 1200 p in.: lows. Home. Forest City, ts tn charge
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e h e r S I N O L IT S S V .W A O I K .
more. 80, of 1041 Hamilton hu sband. R ic h a rd G .; two - fu n * m l M r .tftt tor Was* H
Augustine to Jupiter Intel out 50 0 02 a in .6:14 p it:.
of arrangements.
ol I I I K Faurt* 11. Vantor*. mt*o toad
Ave.. Longwood. died Friday at d a u g h te rs . D e b ra Ja c o b s . *1.
WADE H. 8IN0LETARY
V/"day »tllS * a f l l # m Wadnatday at Firtt
South
Sem
inole
Com
m
unity
A p o p k a . C h r i s t in e W e bb . B*s*i»l CNurcri «im n* a** Saul Mur**.*
Mr. Wade H. Singletary J r.. 62.
ailing Sural to I m r M X Camatory
of 812 E. Foul a St.. Sanford, Hospital. Longwood. Bom Ju ly Lyn d e n . V s .; son, Michael airm
Vi-.,after as am Tu n s a y at m* Britten
died Sunday at Central Florida 10. 1904 In Addystoti. Ohio, he Snyder. Orlando; mother. Esther r un#ral Ham* cH***l B ritto n Furwral
Barkley. Altamonte Spring*. 8vr Ham*, a Guardian i ha**', to cSarsn
Regional Hospital. Sanford. Born m oved to Lo n g w o o d fro m
Cincinnati In 1963. He was a
Dec.
16.
1922
In
Sanford,
he
was
a L*e»u
uw
un
P m m pupltltant s rvyrd M By «wm **rt oi
a lifelong resident. He was a retired Janitor and a Jehovah's
PI* P r o r s i
U S wwcSteis**
to* Atjfvrw / A n o t l*ften irf I n urifte* C W S n
F J o w r r s F o r A l l O c c a s io n s
P s U w U .U f t
... I S
Mb
t r t rtp rp tp n itim ***** d M W p r in t « t Of
member of the First Baptist Witness.
4 tS U S
m*4 mpmutp Mar Inter Outer malts H CA
Survivors Include hts wife.
Church,
past
president
of
the
(Sana* WvwfAatX IS* 4tt Prrc** d» no# H w p w t V asty ......... ISto M t e s U
Seminole County Sportsman's Dorothy; three sons. Raymond.
..............................
i«
i«vs
terlvte* r* i«W m o r* i» m « i * m
»c «c «r»
M MW
Srd At*
Association, an Army A ir Corps P o r t O r a n g e . W i l l i a m ,
PteMSy..
-------- » t e
uncSwvwe
AllftAtK K98I
veteran
of World War II. and longwood. and Ronald. Orange
, I .. .
ft* *
tt'4 S t )
- *
tn u iiiiiu w
....
its
in* owner/operator of Ihe Singletary Pork; two daughters. Rosemary
rira l
U L
AW •
Rltterskamp. St. Petersburg.
tu n Sana*
O S U K te M
Star Id* Patter
Electric Co.

N A T IO N A L R E P O R T! Balmy
weather that madr San Fran­
cisco warmer than San Juan and
gavr Oakland. Calif., its hottest
day In 13 yrurs continued In the
West today, while u storm that
dumped 10 Inches ol snow on
New England drilled olf lo sea.

AREA DEATHS

STOCKS

dlolltns’
m o u ro r
323 120

9^1 »

(

�E v e n in g M a ra ld , S an ford . F t .

T u e s d a y , A p r il 2. 1 U J — I B

Readers Quizzed On
Homosexuality Facts
D E A R
A B B Y : Several year*
ago you ran a " T e s t Your
Knowledge of Homosexuality"
quiz. Will you please run It
again? Thank you.

Dear
A bby

R .M .O .. H O U S T O N

Here It Is:
How much
do you know about homosex­
u a lity ? Mark the follow ing
statements "Tru e " or "False."
— Homosexuals commit more
crimes than straight people.
— Everyone Is born straight,
but some become gay because
they have been seduced by a gay
person early In life.
— Y o u can a lw a y s te ll
homosexuals and lesbians by
the way they act. dress and talk.
— If a person Is gay, no
amount of thriapy or motivation
can change him.
— Boys raised by domineering
mothers and weak lor absent!
fa th e rs u s u a lly t u r n Into
homosexuals
— G a y people can never
become mothers or fathers.
— Homosexuals are more In­
clined to molest children sex
ually than heterosexuals.
— If u person has one or two
sexual experiences with some­
one of the same sex. he Is gay.
— The American I’sychlatrtr
Association classifies homosex­
uals as "sick."
— Homosexuals can be legally
D E A R R .M .Q .:
D E A R

R EAD ER S:

married to each other under the
law In the United States
— Most homosexuals try to
co n v e rt young people Into
brrom lng gay also
— Children raised by. gay
parents (or gay people! usually
become homosexuals
themselves.
Mow did you score?
If you marked all 12 state­
ments "False." you are very well
Informed.
If you marked nine or more
statements "False.” you are
fairly well Informed
If you marked four or more
statements "Tru e ," you have a
great deal to learn about
homosexuality, because all of
the above statements are false!

lie's a model husband In every
other way. but I am exhausted
from all this lovemaklng. I feel
like a prostitute who has to
deliver on demand, only I'm not
getting (&gt;ald for It.

D E A R A B B Y : I am 46 years
old and niv husband Is 44 We
have been married two years —
his third, my second. My pro­
blem Is that this man Is Insatinblr In the bedroom! lie's l»een
this way ever since we were
married. He wants sex at least
three times a dav On weekends

by a rapHt a*lar dM»*rmg a ipMcn
atacoaaga (R ig
11 (M)OUNCY
ID (10) WORLO AT WAR

(VfNMQ

10:00

600
t* (M l JCFFER30NS
0
(101 MACNEll / lEMRER
NTWSHOUft
(1) IS) WELCOME BACK. ROTTER

(D o UOONUOHT1FTO Medd*
and Dadd • mtoNonanl win a co*
Nclion agancy taada warn M o mtarnational inlrtgu*
1 1 (Ml MOCPf NOCFTT NEWS
0 (Ml TOOAY IN THE LEOISLA-

605
11 BCYIRCYMIUBJUICS

d ) (•) POLICE WOMAN

6:30
O ' D nscncw s
&lt; 1 ) 0 c m n ew s
} u ABCNfW Sg
11 (14)At ICC
d l it I o o o o n u t J

1005
12 w ove v*n«r&gt;*d (Pan l o l l )
I11F01 a»»«*d WVNnart. Sly* AuU#y TK# s v « i n l btOnapprng ol a
(vaaidantM adeam la bMraad on a
lorrgn po-aar

635
12 OOMER FYLE

1030
I t (Ml BOS NEWHJLRT

700
Q 4 BALE OF TH* CENTURY
$ O KM UAOAZWS Playboy t
c w .r r.u or »&lt;• Ym &gt; tna looMagh
p o a w i o « AuttfaM i coaat
&lt;7 U JEOPARDY
1t (SSI TOO C 1 0 U FOR COWFORT An4ra» a tw in by a m i x *
grandr"ot*t*r axing on* o* U u &lt; « *

1100
O ' 4 ) 3 : O 0 O NEWS
M (M)BCHHYHtLL
(D (*0| DAVE ALIEN AT LARO*
CDdlMOMT QALLERY

0 « S 0 7 O sews

Once a day would be plenty for
he Insists It's not
enough for him I vv.nit to be a
Rood wife, und I'm afraid If I
deny him he will go elsewhere to
satisfy himself What ran I do? I
don't want to lose him.

me. but

E X H A U S T E D IN P A L O A L T O

Look ut
the facts: Your husband's sexual
nppetlte far exceeds yours, but
you continue to deliver on de­
mand like an unpaid prostitute
for fear y o u 'l l lose h im .
Meanwhile, you're exhausted.
My dear lady, you must tell
your "model husband" how you
feel. If you lack the courage, see
a counselor who will surely call
your husband In. since hr Is part
of the problem. You need to be
assured that your feelings are
every bit as lm|&gt;ortant as his
And he needs to know It. too if
you married lor love, perhaps
you have the wrung man Ami if
hr married lor sex. (terhaps he
has ihr wrong woman.
DEAR

705
t2 SANFORD AMO SON
7:30
• &gt;3) INTENTXJMUfNT TOFNOHT
rM ix e d P«0Nm or lop WOON*
pool and pfatari end on aitanaa*
art* agont Nwo liancfwd
0 O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
0
O
HOOOOO SAME THAT
TUNC
IT (111U N IO N
d l IS) ALL IN THE FANS. V
7:35

12 a l l FT TH* FAUST
800

■ 3 ) A. TEAM Rcenanc* Moaaont*
f t* Mr WxdOCA end ■ baaot *X

bom • group OF rad lag bdgnty
hgn|«F| ;;
d) O
LUCl* ARFiU SHOW
iPtamtaral Ptyciiorngial D&gt; Jana
lucaa (Lucia Amail uaa to baianc*
nat laai pacad paitonai Ha — m i*a
p»o*a«nonj&lt; damandt ol Noi magaAtao Tony Roborla

7 ) O ITE W m rC S S DATBREAK
(M l OOOO DA Y1
'i NEWS
d ) (D AM BARKER
6 :3 0
Q 4 NEWS
(Tj_ Q CSS EARLY WORMFrO
NEWS
d ) O ABC NEWS THIS UORMMQ
?T (M IP O R fTE
12 F’JNTIME (MOFi-THUi
6 :3 5
12 FUNTB4S (FR()
6 .4 5
7 a f TEWI1NCSS DAYBREAK
(!) (10) A M WEATHER
1 .VKJ

0 ( 101 NATURE OF TMINOS
0 (B | ONE DAY AT A TIME

IKOW

njM

Ln

0 O THREE S A CROWD Jock
waM taory maana a.aJataa to SgM
a boa n nail# ramoaal pncaa only
M dwcoaar mar M&gt; Bradlofd n a y
Wo diagonal plant Q
1 t ( U ) DALLAS
8 ) I SOI NOVA A ian** ol tna laiaai
raaMrcR on acid raw locuaaa an
dacRmng loimia damagad aton*
abuclxM and poAitad h a m lR)CJ
CB (f) MOVIE Oamn Yinaaw
ItfSEl Tab iSMar O w n Vat don
W «i a ama iwp bom in* dm* an
agmg taaatll Ian baconai a
-Jiamwonarw banptaynr
60S
*2 COUSTEAU MISSISSIPPI RE­
LUCTANT ALLY Jacguaa Cot alaau
■adMi and MOWS ol Wo 4400-mao
bom aa ongwa w » a Owl or Mat.
CO Q

•30
0 O JSFFER40N4 bi on oa-ox
promobonat ban* Oaoiga and Na
N EBN w I Mr C x » L -^ *m anampr
lo drn* aacn ettar ox at Ocamaaa
7 O WHO I T 0 SOBS T Saaaaig
•naan lama T«ny So m a aoap
oommaroal but amds X ) min *
&gt;aa» and a g X h conaoanc* |R|g

•00
0 3 ) A A Pax nvroaily &lt;
Oaam n wo N n b al ho lorwar at-

11:30
O ' 4' TOFPOMT Hoat JoFHtny Car­
ton ScbaPuMd B B King
( J O TAX)
J O ABC NSYYS M OHTUNE
11 (MIBANFOROANOBON
a a : t w x jo m t i o n s
12:00
0 a f a ll OUY A mtpM Flabaout taagrtrnartt bacomaa a complat atbtgua aitan Con Ssacba a
I IN (Rl
a : o th e sapyt
Tt (MIRHOOA
OMDKCUAK

12:10
12 WORLD OF AUOUBON I An mlann** anti Waflat OorbR* and a
pro*M or pNWaar an»»onm*nlaaar
Racnai Caraon
12:30
0 0 LATE MONT WITH DAVIO
LfTTERMAN ScRadiAad Jbn B*
MN
I t (M il LOVE LUCY

0 0 ) TOOAY
0 O CBB M 0 R M M NSW*
0 O OOOO MORMNQ AMERCA
11 (141 FLINTS TONES
0 (1 0 ) FARM DAY
CD (II m e a t m c l if y
7:1 5
0(101 A M WEATHER
7:3 0
I t (M l TOM ANO JERRY
0(101 BESAME S TR tE Tg
0 (1) PFBRCCTOR QADOrT

E X H A U S TE D :

1:10
0 O COL UMBO bi aaartn 0F a
w**ng body CoAimbo Rai a waaano buadwg pylon dug i « al Hugo
aipanaa 10 INo cKy &lt;R)
12 MOVE One* Botoio I Oo '
( IbSSl JoNn Ooraa UraiAa Andraaa

8.0 0
I t 04) WOODY WOOOFECKER
0 (4 1 BURS RFRMNOt
80S
U SEWTTCHED

130
(U (U )t C T V

2:00
I t (M l BIZARRE
2:30

J Io CSS NEWS MQHTWATCM
l t ((M)OUNSMOKE

i

2:4 0
0 O M ove No Woy Our* (1I7JI
A aw Dawn. NcKard Coma
3 :1 0
12 UOVe Com* F* Th* C i « '
|ib*U Jawaa Cagnoy CNgYoiwg
330
U (M ) TAASR-Y AFFAIR
4 .0 0
1| (Ml FATTY C X M

JJ(M|P1NR PANTHER
(C liTIU M T E R R O O IR E lR )
d ) (SI FAT AtSCRT
8 35
12 I LOVE LUCY

• 00

905
• 30
0 4 LOVE CONNECTION
O It) HERE S LUCY

1000

8

10:30
0 4 SALS o f t h e c e n t u r y
’ U fam syfeuo
0 1W| S -2-) CONTACT |R| Q
01*1 REAL MCCOYS

11.00
WHEEL OF FORTUNE

RKSeFW HT
S PTRWLE
tr a p

t (Ml U O H T e ENOUQM
110) WE'RE OOOKMQ NOW
i (M l TODAY M THE LB M LA ru re (t u e )
( B i l l FAMSY

(P in j m B ig
0 O w o v e -OiNry
(Pranaaia) AnWony line* Ir*.

5.25
H OUYW OOO A W TT
BS0N.TVe.TMU.PRE

5 30
0 r « COUNTWt (TUBARS

0

0

4:00
L fTTU HOUSE ON THE

0

O

STAR TREX (MON. WED-

( I i D 0MF-RENT IT SOKES (TUE)
0 O MERV BFBFFIN (MON. TUE.
THU FRO
0 O ABC AFTERBCHOOl (WEO)
1T (S4| SCOOBT 000
0 |1O 1 U S A M B TR Cn g
(4) HEATHCUFF (MON-THU)
III r o b o t m a n I f r m n o e
(FRO

8

405
n ru N TE TO N E S
4:30
( l i O CBB SOFOOLIRtAK(rUE)
H (M l HE-MAN ANO MASTERS
OF THE UNTVEREE
0 m MOMR ANO MMOY

(MON.

1139

12-00

si

IM) BEWITCHED
1 0 NATURE OP TMMDE

ID (M
IK l MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUB)
_____
(I) «0| MYTTIRY1 (WED!
® HO) NOVA (TNU»
g ) IWIJ Y O NOERWORM (FRO

120
Q PERRY MASON

1230

Mar aid Phola by Daana Jar d a "

'A Princess Remembers'
Reviewed For £ 5 0 Chapter
Mrs Duuiilc Logan reviewed
the autobiography "A Princess
Itemcmbrrx The Memoirs of the
Maharanl of Jaip ur." written by
the Maharanl and Santlia lirma
Hau. during the March meeting
of (he KpMlnn Sigma Omleron
Chapter ol the Sanford Woman'*
Club al the home of Mr* Hnlph
Austin Smith
Mrs. Logan took members
Lark In time to I lie- dav* ol
Hilinptliou* palat e* and gill let
mg splendor that was cu*tomary
In I lie live* of I he Maharajah* of
India. Gayalrl Devi, daughter ol
the Maharajah ol Cooch llrhar.
was lx&gt;rn In a pal.it e maintained
by 5&lt;X) servant* She shot her
llr*i panther Irom the hark ot an
elephanl when *he was 12 year*
oltl Her* wa* a fabulous life,
filled with royal pilvllege* a*
well a* royal discipline and
training.
Mr*. Logan noted that, even
then, strong willed women were
emerging In India Gayulrl's
mother had married for love
wlilt li was considered a "very

dubious ami risky Western idea,
not to be trusted In the hand* of
young people " Gayalrl. herself,
m arried for love when she
became the Ihlrtl wife of Ihe
Matiara|ah of Jaipur
Following her marriage to Jal.
a* he was called, she en|oyetl a
glamorous mh i.i I life anti was
listed as one ol the world's most
b e a u t if u l w o m e n . H ut as
Maharanl of Jaipur. *hr went f ir
beyond the usual activities
expected ol her anti Inimdcil it
progressive schtHil lor girls, was
very ftiitccssful In |hiI!IIch ami
became an aggressive leader in
the women's movement In Indio
Even alter Ihe death ol her
beloved husband In ITI7t). she
and her lamtly continued dicli
eflorts lo Improve the lot ol Ihe
Indian people
Mrs Logan considered dil*
Ik ink panicu'.tf v timely because
ol ihe current Inlrrest In Indian
|Militics ami history
Follow ing Ihe social hour
during which refreshments were

J O I S T S MAXIAOSAL
1t (M l DUM B OF HAZZARO
(C 110| OCCANUB (MON)
0 110) UNOSRBTANOMO HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUS)
0 ( 0 NSW LITERACY AN M TROOUCDON TO C0MFUTSRS
IB ( 10) U0NSV FU ZZU (T&gt;M
0 1 0 AMT 04 BONO HUMAN
(4 0
0 0 HARRY OATS AOAM

505

I'hr Leisure Tim e Program at student plan anti develop a
Seminole Com m unity Collegt- quality wardrolH- ol coordinated
aimoimt e* that lilt- following clothing In colors whit It arc ln-st
classes will liegln during Hit- lor him
C O I. O R A N D S T V L E
week of April H. "These classes
are self-supported by student •WORKSHOP (afternoon class) —
fees at noex|H-nse to Ihe taxpay­ T w o three-hour sessions which
er." according lo FAy C. Drake. will i-over personal color analy­
CtNirdinator of the Piogram. Keg- s is. m a k e u p s e le c tio n and
Islratlons are lM-lng accepted In application Icclm qlurs. Class
enrollment Is limited lo six so
the Keglslrar's Ollier at S( (
F L O W E D A l l J4 A N G E M E N T that each student may Im- given
(morning and evening classes) — as m uch personal atirndon as
Designed lo inlrtHluce the dif­ possible.
ferent floral design techniques.
|D F l o y d T h e a t r o a |
Students will gain knowledge ol
requlpmrnt an I imiIs u s they
T W A TWIN I.
mma
work with fresh, silk and third
t
mmi »|| AU W ill
flowers.
WALT D U N IV 4 |
50}
SHOI4T STOI4Y W H ITING FOR U y ( M
DEGINNERS (evening class) This course is designed to ac­
quaint Ihe aspiring writer with
/Best AcIims
•« •«
the basic techniques of writing
SALLY
F
I
ELD
with emphasis on theme, plot,
scenes, rharartrrtzatlun. anil di­
PLJVCES IN T H E
alogue. Marketing of material,
H EART
USE
writing the query letter, article
writing and l&gt;ook reviewing will
M u rp h y •
Im- int iinlet) In die course.
C O LO R A N D W A R D R O D E
•BEVERLY
WORKSHOP FOR MEN (evening
HILLS COP”
class) — During the first class
MOV 1)1 AND 0/1
377 17)1
session, each m an will hr
analyzed to determine tits Ih-«I
"P0UCE n i LOME WOLf
colors The aim of the second
McQUADI
ACADEMY YA
session will hr- to help each
M l is CHUCK MOftftlt

:: Rnocchio

t M

rv-gita ^ ptrtt)

) 10 IM0SRSTANOM0 HUMAN
■SHAYX5C. (TUB)
tc ( 0 NSW UTIAACT AN BITROOUCDON TO C0M RUTBM

C L IN IC

FACTORY
AUTHORIZED

RAZOR REPAIR
TUNE-UP
SPECIAL
C U A N . O il

$2

PIUS
WARft

m il (STIMMIS

END E0IUST

NORELCO • R EM IN G JO N
SCHICK • SUN BEAM
E L TR 0 N

WEDNESDAY

APR IL 3rd
10 A M to 3 PM
MEDC0 PHARMACY
2701 0EIARD0 DN
SANfORO. FI
122 5060 - 3215702

s

FAMOUS RECIPE
WEEKLY SPECIALS
WEDNESDAY
FAMILY SPECIAL
Three Piece Chicken
Dinner
I F*aaaa K paMaa bra*" Faawaa Aa rtu * Cwarlr* CNttaa
ab a * a i i N F la n in i m4 p i * .
a** ala* an* a
ma brat MaaoM

$949

|c o u p o n |

Eight Piece
Thrift Pack
I Btaaaa •» pal*a" araaa Faataal a*.-aa- C a a a t D a t a
a*. #41 r*&gt;* Iitaaaa al an» •** p**a al at* M i t f i aaa aaata
aa* bat baaabaaMia

$ f i 95
Sfhnousfadpc]
COUNTtl O 4C K 0

9:30
}(

IIKIItKl
S IIW IK

? ff —

O U A V S IT TO SSAVSR
) 4 t 0 4 i r s COURT
I U 'A 'S 'H

served by the hostess and cohostesses. Denial) Wells nnd
Florence Monforlon. die meeting
was rallrd to order by Lourtnc
Messenger, art lug chairman in
Ihr absence of I’at Foster 14cqulrenients lor full membership
wrre reviewed anti lla/cl ('asii
reported that she now has her
mrmlH-ishlp certificate.
Members present were Esther
Penn. Estelle Davis. Hminlc
Iaigait. l.ourlnc Mensengei. Dolls
llarilman. Melba C’tKiper. Denial) ;
Well* Virginia Hurney. Derry
Harris. Jean Marcel. Tem pa Parks Ed yllir George. Louise
Hayes lllll Glelow. lla/cl Cash
Florence Monforlon. Corlnne
C.impliell and Kale Nash

Leisure Time Classes

40

SOO

0 1^S E A R C H PON TOMORROW

i

(D (10) MADC OF DECORA TTVf
PAJNDNQ (FW)

0 3 ) NEWLYWED SAME
0 a THREE'I COMPANY (MON.

□m ow n

(Mi te w s
rrS T O U R i
CHSORENSFLJNOfTUB)
AORC JLTURE U S A (FRO

(1 O CAPITOL
IT (M l OREAT SPACE COAETER
0 I )0) PAUL NOEL nORPTO HE
CAME TO DANC* (TUE)
(D IMF) MAQJC OF OS PAMTSEO

11:30

RYAN'S HOPS
(«0| P U M O A S m S

d MOOAY

500

200
Q &lt; ANOTHER WORLD
( T O ONE LJFI TO UV1
J j (M ) AMOY OFWFTTH
CD 110) THE MAOrC OF SSL ALXXANOER (WED)
0 (10) JOY OF PAJNT1NQ (FRI)

439
12 F U M TS TO 0 S

11.06
O CATUN E

WEDNESDAY.

1:30
a ) O A* THE WORLO TURNS
1* (M l OOMER PYLE
(D 1101 CONOR*SS W* THE PEO­
PLE (W ID)
0 I *C) PAJNT1NQ CERAMICS (FRf)

3 35
12 HECKLE ANO JICKLf

4 tw it m a c h in e
HOUR MAQA2ME
S A U V JESSY RAPHAEL
t (Ml EK1 VALLEY
)&lt; 101 ELEC TR C COMPANY (R)
I (S|MAYBERRY R F 0

O LUCY SHOW

1:05
12 w o v e

8
3

12 M o ve

4 :3 0
U (SS&gt; DOFBS DAV

S

3:30
( 10) MMTER ROOERS (R)
(II PETER AHO THE M A U L
EDO (MON)
ID D * ) (TUE)
IS) A FAUST CIRCUS EASTER
OWED)
CD (S) p o o c h r (T h u i
0 (SI V t l VET U N RABirr (FRI)

: (M)WALTOaaE
) (10) SESAME STREET £J
1 (S) PART RSXM FAMSY

n

4' PATS OF OUR LIVES
O a l l m y c h ild r e n
(M l 0ICK VAN DYKE
( 101 T AA BREAK M (MON)
( 10) MOVIE (TUE)
110) CONGRESS WE THE PEO­
PLE fWIOl
fD (10) AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE
(THU)
CD |10) FLORKLA HOME DROWN
(FRD
(B io w ove

3 05
12 BUQE SUNNY AN0 FRIENDS

DIVORCE COURT
I D DONAHUE

4 :2 0
0 O W O V« Jacob Taa-Tao
Mama TF* HoodM Fang ( I f 711
A*i Sanaa. SNpFian Roa*nbwg

100

O
(T
It
d)

300
O 4 SANTA BARBARA
(X O o u o m a lk jh t
O Of H I SAL HOSPITAL
(M ) BUDS SUNFfY
(W IFLO R C A S TTII
(SI VOLTROK OtFENOER OF
THE UFPVERSS

g 3Q

O

$

( I O l o v .n o
(M l BEVERLY HSLBSLJES

230

7:3 5
12 1ORCAM OF JCANNIE

100
® o w o v e visaga Or Th*
Oawn*d |1SS0I Oaorga S*ndwa
Barbara Sli*a*y
11 (Ml LEAVE (T TO BEAVER
Q l (S) THE A VENDERS

Joan Hopkins, from left,
d ir e c to r of th e M is s in g
C h i l d r e n ' s C e n t e r I nc . ,
Longwood. receives a check
from Betty Jack, president of
the Beta Sigma Phi City
Council, w h ile Brenda
Elswlck, chairm an ol the
a n n u a l BSP V a l e n t i n e
Chai r t y Bal l, presents a
check to Lois Smith, repre
sentlng the ISIS School. Or
lando. The two groups re
ceived the profits, nearly
$1,000, from the February
ball which annually supports
deserving non protit organi
tatlons.

we spend the whole day In bed. I
though* he would eventually
slow down, but his sex drive ts
as strong as ever.

T O N IG H T S T V
TUt SPAY

Boll Profits
Assist Youths

aXW TSTOBOON

SANFORO
ISM Francs Ar*
(Mwy IF 97)

C AS S ELB ER R Y
41 N. Mary 17 S3
BJ1 O l t l

S A N FO R O
&gt;04 Francs A r
(Mary 17*1)

m Mso

CASSELBERRY
41 N Hwy 17*1

U1SIII

�2 B -E v »n in g Hr raid, Sanford. FI.

Toeiday, April 2, I f l l

We’ ll Bring The
Best In Decorating
Right To Your Home

, Treat your tell to loach where the cook
•hope delly.Knjoy old faablon flavor of
'n a tu ra l Ingredient* Individually
i prepared la our owa kitchen.

CUSTOM DRAPERIES - BEDSPREADS
WOVEN WOODS MINI BUNDS •VERTICALS
MfPET •VINYL WALL COVERINGS

FREE ESTIMATE
NO OBLIGATION

322-3315
322-7642

Tm Room01BROWSER S BARN
150 W . Jastup A vf., Long wood, Florida
(One Block North o f P.O. on CR 427)

Lunch Served 11 A.M .-3:30 P M.
Tuesday thru Saturday

• PUT TOUR BUSINESS ON TH f

H e r a ld A d v e r t i s e r

M0VI •

A D V E R TIS IN G

A D V E R TIS IN G

319 W. 11th ST. SANTORO

N O W O P E I\
W ATCH &amp; JEW ELRY REPAIR
and mim/M
PAWN SH
OP
*w+~

VOLKSHOP

Spedallting In Service A Part* For
W .'t, Toyota and Datiun
( Corner 2nd a Palmetto)

P H . .1 2 3 -1 3 2 7

214 S. Palmetto Avt.
SANFORD
PHONE

7109 S FRCHCM AVE.. SANfORD

•

Coff 322-2611 Horn!

E v e n in g H e r a ld
A D V E R TfS IN G

8 3 1-4 6 6 1

In lfci«nr«« Sirwr |l#51

JAM WHIPS

Prepared by Advertising Oept. of

TH E RUNCIBLE SPOON

DCCORATING
OCR

P h ilip i

Business
Review

•
il Ixugn • Cuuom Wiirli
• llr^trirr Anllf|iir Jrvnlry • Role* Hr pair
• Cine k • W ill h Mrpair
• King Siring Slnnr Selling
a Fine .Jewelry Sale*

321-0120

PT Kit COID A inn* ’ IHTWt CtOCMI t WiTCMt • Cm

N O W OPEN A T OUR
NEW LO C A TIO N

SEMINOLE VETERINARY
HOSPITAL
fto MUMCWN 0VM. DW A C V I M

• C o m p te lo Votorlnory iervtcot
• V two« Antmoli
• Dtogneaftc provonttto m e d ia n *
d a o tM ry a eurgory
• tpoctoffy in Internal modtclna

322-8465
m i w um it
I

a. AAA

Robert Eland, one of Volkshop's VW specialists.

V WPPY

LARRY'S

STOREWIDE
PH. 323 9421

NEW&amp; USED MART

11$ Sanford Ave

tPrice S a le
iV

f

Affm I fMWJ AP*H 8

S

I

econd

mage

Sanford

3224132
Wa Buy And Sail Top Quality
Furnilura, Antlquos, Appllancoi
And Tools

rrTy-y.
I nKm-I
- Jt

CONSIGNMENT CLOTMINO
Ifth SI. A 17 92
SANFOftD

WE SERVICE ALL MODEL PORTABLE
KEROSENE HEATERS

UNIVERSAL
SATELLITE TV
WHh AR
U TV
jm m

COMPUTE STSTEM
INSTALLED
roil AS 4* ^ 8 4 Par
unu as

*3 6

100S FINANCING AVAILABLE

TO QUALIFIED BUYIRS

M

T
* ---------------

eT tZ Z '

# 0♦
- ----- - --

■r
**■•»

• ASHAMED OF
YOUR HARD TO
CLEAN TUB?
• OR JUST WANT TO
CHANGE COLOR?

•• &lt;** marlece ywi lal M l m a t H Im I Wm * are U I IrKlaa
rf IM (M l »f nyLKtmwl, Mt | yurt « tfn , Jup klfkt at*

Volkshop Offering Special
This Month For VW Bugs
If your Volkswagen "Bug" has spring fevrr
bring II lo I hr V W specialists at Volkshop In
downtown Sanford to grt Its jx-p restored. Take
advantage ol the April special on tunr opt. brakes
and mulllrrsfor VWn
Call 321-0120 or come t&gt;v for estimate as prices
bary depending on I be model or year
Owner Marvin Wright and bis experienced
Irani of technicians at 2 I t Palmetto Ave. also
Hj&gt;e&lt; l.ill/e in Toyota* ami Dalsumt All of tlielr
work W guaranteed
Volkshop s|&gt;celalUrH In engine and Ir ana-axle
rrtmildlng for Toyolas and IJiilsuiiH as well as
VWs Tlicy also do lubrication anrl oil change and
rejwlrs on brakes, from etids, transmissions and
exhaust systems.
As always Marvin will give you a tree estimate
and ear Inspection for any drfccts It might have,

"We only charge for flxln1. we don't charge for
lookin'." he said.
Volkshop Is dedicated to keeping your vintage
Hug" looking and running Its best If your VW Is
showing Its age. the folks at Volkshop can
completely recondition and refurbish II from thc
grourul up for only a fraction of what a new car
would cost. Tills Includes tires, paint Job. new
engine and brakes
If you arc one of those car owners who likes lo
do fils own repairs, you will find tpiallty TreuhafT
and Bosch parts. Continental tx-lts and hoses, and
Cnstrol motor oils, for Toyolas. Dalsuns and s
Volkswagen
Volkshop is open Monday through Friday. H
a in. to 5 p m. Call lo make an appointment for
your car.

70 m i l liniNMCI M tllCTIOMCl
197 Hay. 17 92 N.
Cettelbeiry, EL

831-5744

PLAY SMART TOYS
EDUCATIONAL TOYS A MATERIALS
FOR PARENTS, TEACHERS A STUDENTS

“ We Sell Education:
The Toys Ju s t Make It F u n ."

851 E. S.R. 434

8 3 4 -T O Y S

PARK SQUARE PLAZA
LONQWOOD, FL

win

MV*» »Hf I4U 1 K r-l#

1AP »t IMI C.H1

“ B A T H Q E N IE ’V ebT fCacL.nS
CALL COLLECT (305) 295-1044

THE
F U R N IT U R E H O U S E
1MB N O R T H H IG H W A Y 11*1
S O U TH O F F L C A W ORLD
F IR S T T R A F F IC U O H T
N O R T H OF H IO H W A Y CM A C R O S S F R O M H A N O T W A V

NEW-USED FURNITURE
ANTIQUES
1 WRV LITTLE MAftMUf-lOW PMCtS '4 ^ 7 ?
1 tR *
LAYAWAY WE DCUVEII
- M * , CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME
3U *
OPEN ; DAYS A W EEK 111 10*1 r. _ ) _

BLAIR A G EN C Y

/ t c n iJ

SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
SR 22’a FILED

&amp; U lc t @ a n t
t rfrbrmtlng ihil.1h.uut
630 Rivarvltw Ava.. Snnlord
if — wAcr•** From141?82
Contortion! To Oo*n!own ionlortf)

ALSO INSURE MOBILE
HOMES, MOTORCYCLES
HOMES, REC-VEES

323-2005

Serving Sanford lor 27 feet*
OPEN M ON THRU FRI 9 S

Mon. Thru Frl
• AM tod PM

••CALL BLAIR AND COMPARE"
3 2 3 *7 7 1 0 or 3 2 3 *3 8 6 6

ACRES

.;

lalaat Cat lk,«.|k lfTun Ot 1ft

2510A OAK AVE. SANFORD
Cornar of 5 Park Ave 4 Oak

HAPPY
■

Sp*ctrntrml RtnOaoaiai h tfw tiD it Fntaavt.
KkotN C IM HI t a l l l i l t , Ti vttponaten (0 w t

m v i k a ii

rtortsiocai •cPtooli plug tpwcia! tummor K H n t t ort*

grim tor 6 t J y«*&gt;

PGRAVELY

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES
Wa alto maka 1st and 2nd mortgage loam
on Ratldanllal or Commercial Real Estate
up lo $100,000.

|Amt lilt ta t Ua&lt; Im •» U

■Ml mmm M l &lt;w Mm mm MM iii . m

Senkarik Glass &amp; Paint Co., headquarters for paint, glass, and mirrors.

Big April Paint Sale At
Senkarik Paint And Glass
Fo r y o u r s p r in g
paint up flx-up pro­
jects. take advantage of
the April sale on lienjamln Moore Paint at
Senkarik Glass ft Paint
Co. ui 2 111 Magnolia
A v e . In d o w n to w n
Sanford
They arr offering 25
percent off on Moorr's
exterior house paint.
Muorgard latex with
luster, Moorglo latrx
wilh a soft gloss (great
for palming trim and
exterior doors!), and
Moor wood e x te rio r
stuins
H c n ja m ln M o o re
mukrs the finest paint
products at everyday

FREE S P I N A L E V A L U A T I O N

Personal loans a rt available Including
Revolving Credit Lina.

F r»q o «n l M « * d a c h « (
L o o Back 3 1 H ip F a n
D i i j i n « i t or l o s s or S i« « p
H . m b n t i t ot H a n d s or Faa
N ar&gt;ou*n«at
Nock Pam or S lrttn a ta
Arm and S k o u ld tr Pam

tirtiiSH ktM x Vmtun InNm Ra
rtsa tsl Usd U| ImL Utrl Ira ImI

k*t TiA brtk 0«l*i

MON. FBI. B - l i M . . . SAT. H
2/19 M IL E NORTH OF I d

■ t4lk* «AM&gt;a*»t IT*- 1* IP
MIPOSMil WJM»«*«**’ &gt;A| milNu
•a* (MCh &lt;*HNs' jp M « «M M |lc«l4* M S ' *t)MM l fjfbll lilM U IU4M4
*«MS » ’M4'm*’ 9»~c» 4 • » ASI it aBfbkAt 0# » t . *-•— *ft -CMM of HtrtN

Family Credit Services, Inc.
A kAauury a css dmoeja CaperaKm

1414 S. ORANOE BLO'SOM TN A IL

Phon«
SALES -

422*7951

SERVICE -

PARTS

ONSAiM. ncaa ire i
Is nta Fare N» w
fi

ttrae

Cb

S!

CAU

MARVIN scan, MGR.

831-3400

you an overall estimate
of materials you will
need for the Job.
They also carry a full
lin e of n a t io n a lly
fa m o u s Sanf or dm a n u f u c lu r e d Pen
P ain ts, M rL o sk e y's
Man o' War Ultra Sjrar
Marine Varnish and
H o p e ’ s two-step
rnrthod of instant rcllnlshlug Hope's refinisher removes old
finish with no strip­
ping. palnl brushes or
sandpaper. Follow up
with a finish coat of
Hope's Tu p g Oil
Senkarik carries a
lu rg e s e le c tio n ot
wallpaper designs Ineluding photo murals
and grass stock from
which to choose.

* AWING SIGNALS Of PMCMD WIYIS

SAVE *5 1 1
0 G R A V ELY OF ORLANDO

prices, say owners
J e r r y a u d Eddie
Senkarik Senkarik has
had a reputuilon for
more than 35 years for
Irlrndly reliable service
and quality products.
Senior citizens who
are members of the
American Association
of Hr tired Persons are
always eligible for a
discount on paint und
palm sundries, such as
brushes and rollers.
The Scnkarlks art
always glad lo give you
advice on painting and
will even go out to your
h o u s e to d is c u s s
special paint problems
you m ay have and give

JUU*»0U4

ft • *9-1NEI lifn l MMsai*«N fiR^^W a'

• S A N F O R D P A I N C O N T R O L C L IN IC ,
O F C H IR O P R A C T IC , IN C .
(i 4 M 10 h P M f Oh ' 4 Vlrtk P,S D .,
7 « n s AisFoxt * l vo - s k s r o s o

UVIOIO m ini

a r , J(

-it VM lktlnuiltll OilUOOUItH

1

Senkarik specializes
In all type* of glass
Including desk and ta­
ble tops, custom resi­
dential glazing, glace
replacement, shower
doors, storefront com­
mercial and auto glass
replacement.
S e n k a r i k has
customized mirrors for
w a lls and ce ilin g s.
They stock Plexiglas In
four thicknesses.
T h e y have art
supplies for beginner
and professional artists
In such quality brands
as Grumbacher. Della.
W ln so r-N ew to n and
Llqullex.
Call on Senkarik at
322-4622 for all of your
paint and glass needs.

MADAME KATHERINE
PALJ4-CARD-CRY9TAL BALL READtNQ

w
l omgwooo

IW5)
£95-7005
X M n ia
KM NS'

H E L P F U L A D V IC E O N A L L
A F F A IR S
•Ufl •LOVE •MARRIAGE •MJSMESS

KOI W BUSINESS FOB SO YEAKS
M PRIVACY OF MY HOME
HOURS 8 AM •9 PM 7 Day* A W««fc

1 n o w Norm of boeteagk r».
la ta raTm ^io M ca ” n
VOTED BERT PHVSK FCMt 1*84 BY
CEHTRAL FLORIDA SCENE MAOAZME

1 r*f m sms txm a*

I

�Evening Herzld. Saiderd, Ft

Business
Review

Evening Herald

Call 322-2611

• P U T ro u)

B
U
SIN
ESSO
N

MOVE •

A D V E R T IS IN G

* SALES: u n m a t

H e r a ld A d v e r t is e r

l

*

crouirr.

a tK V Ilc .

cars

*

Including
• HM Tip.

.
■ l « Xtwtlnfl
. MMUtu*.,
•l » h A
Tint* .
• t * w Tr**tm**l»

M7 W. 25lh St

fLOW ERS FOR EV ER Y
‘" t
OCCASION AND BUDGET
” We Welcome Commercial Accounti"
NOW 2 LOCATIONS TO SCRVI YOU
44
BIB S. SANFOKO AW.
U K I MART
SANTORO

■

Children enjoy tree house at Happy Acres
For more Informa­
tion. call the director.
Ela in e LaK ochc. al

» ! » « » i m . l N C l .HO M W V C I IH U M O W C U U H O l l COUNT*

A «««

D o n \ 1 iji* rs
glats ‘tTUrrior

32:1-2005. Give your
child the opportunity
to Ik happy al Happy
Acres.

HEARING TESTS
SET FOR SANFORD/
CASSELBERRY
AREA

Sm Cor* ...........1J f .95
M*d C a r t .........15*95
Lg Car*
ITB.fS
l#• r*HN« Warranty ly
C I K M OK Co

Electronic heirm | t n t i will be
(nen tree i t the Onnje Hear,n|
Ax) Ctn 2701 S Orlando Or, Sin
lord (Monday only) end 120 S
Hey 17 92 Cimelberry, Monday
fn d iy git* eeeii W Cimitemon
md B Fuhet. tertilied by the Ne
trorul Heennt Aid Society will be
i t thete offices to perform the
tn ti

323-7272

PAC
N’ SEND
304 Eitt ComnurcUl StSanfart

NEW HOURS

PACKACIKG
CUSTOM BOXES
FOAM MOLD
SYSTEM
GIFT

Anyone aho bei trouble hearing
or undertttndin| n welcome to
h«w e tn t uunj (he M in t elec
tronre equipment to determine bn
or her pedicular k m

WRAPPING

Mon&lt;Uy-Frid$y 9:00-5:30
Saturday 9:00-5:30
PmfmHotuI Fariaglrig And

[yftyone should here e hearing
tn t et least once e year rl there
n any trouble at all hearing cleat
ly Iren people now «eanti| a
heanni aid or thoia who hare
been told noth in | could be done
for them can Imd out about the
latest methods ol hearing
corrections

SHIPPING
PACKAGING
SUPPLIES
Ftl'IT 0*MAS

Shlpftinx Service

CM'Miwrt tm tin iKittw knmi TM C*r**r frt« Fi*t OWk*

S B fljjtffig

1} f ?

EXTRA
WIDE WIDTHS

l//RANGE

" W e ’vo A d d e d 1000's O f Pairs"

J E R R Y 'S * 7 .7 7 P L U S S H O E S

DAVE'S UPHOLSTERY]
• FURNITURE • BOATS • CARS
large Selection of Material
Quality Worhmanihtp
Free Estimate*

Free Pickup

And Delivery

490 N. 17-92
NvK't To Sobik't Sub Shop

LONGW OOD, FLA.
(305) 862-1600 .
M o n .. F r i . l oo AM

a 00 PM

ALAN'S
*-

anT

^

s

3 2 2 -5 7 8 3

W INDOW S Cuelom Made Drape. MlnT or
Micro Blind*
FLO O R S Vinyl Xenllle. Wall lo wall Carpel.
Area And Sraldod Ruga
W ALLS Wallpaper, And Bordere By Weverly
TASIES Cwtlem Uide I Knee loth* And hecemelt
B o ll A Chair Slipco.er* A Reupholtlery __
Cuelom Made Oecoreloe Pillow*

radiators

I m Iw *

S S ns

rCOMMlKIAl
• nont cw»m * Bussitss
• MOBill reals • oruiOt

usuuiicr

101 I. tel BT. Suite til

B R EA KFA ST S P EC IA L

AllenISc Bank BMf

AT BOTH LOCATIONS

Sanford. FL «771

305/323-0400

to oeosa

m

. £4m im all occasions

• n meoes sa tetAMa tocum

NOW SERVING PltlME RIB. FRESH SEAFOOD 1
STEAKS ALONG WITH THESE 0IPNER SPECIALS

m u n m ts n rs c la s u c s on ly

For E very Heaton and E v e ry Season

P.O. BOX 17* - SANFORD, FL H77J

Ready For Easter?

-sun imt Mucarissu

SAUTEES CALVES U V D B M H D .......... *4.95
HAWAIIAN CfNCtfN M N N D ..................*5 .5 0
STEAK M P D U L (F lrt H p a il MNND *0-75
M M ilB S TW fD FLOUNCE* M M U . *4 .9 5
CLASSIC 1MHWP M N O .................. .'.* 7 J 5
SWSN x t m k m m e * ............................ '5 .9 5
8Y M M N N D .......................................... *5.50

^

Wo Deliver Bouquets ef Balloom
"Seven Deyt a Week"

TELEPHONE
QUOTES WELCOME
cau3220501

II MAM S A S TUI t wee

nioi

- C A L L A N Y TIM E -

ItA O U U T M A M I
• OACOATUXA
•lU M M H U V O O O

tar w.ueaa
(M l) H i -i a i t

• TA1ATA NO(MOM
• MATIC TtCMMaPBO
. FAMVAT WENOftA

tear t u t irea

We Have The Supplies
For All Of Your
Easter Crafts:

SA N TO H U

A&amp;%

it

ZAVRE PLAZA
***** ■** A irea

1 )M U «

(•0*1

EQUIPMENT SALES, RENTAL REPAIRS

AIR, TRIPS, ADVANCED A SPECIALTY CUSSES

— ^
&gt;

a# IB AM - 7 PM - *AT. I AM •• PM
M B M U M U * BP BM TBACM M U

L22 3441

^

- ,-►+** l a x i MAR T BLVO
L AX F MAR T »1 A

121S42S

NU

MARKET

. e u e r u M i • aaerau
u s v r s#n

PAMWAT M T MAT U U ' 4

9

! *

Morns

DAY &amp; NIGHT GRILL
JUNE * TINA I1M4ZIOOwner*

I MB Front* Are. - tenter*

Joseph Welnsenfeld. T r. to David Servlunsky.
T r. all of the Glens al Coulry Creek, $100
David Servian sky. T r, lo Cynihla A Trunchldu.
Ids H2 A H3, The Glens at Country Creek,
$ IH.(XX)

Murk Flndura A William S. Frost to Danlell J.
McNamara. A Thom as K McNamara A Wf Nancy
L. Un. 52. Sandy Cove. Corn! $52,500
It. Vlncr Herd. J r A Wf Lucille lo Jumes It. Ford
A Wl Pamela N . Ll 2. Hlk Iff Falrlane Esls. Sec. 1
Kepi. $24,000
W.L. Kirk A James C. Gainer lo James C.
Gainer A Kuth K . Lis 17 A IH. Illk ff. 3rd Sec.
Dream wold.» 100
M It. Ormbrtnk to S M. Chesser A Wf Angles, Lt
5. Ulk 2. Hanover Woods. BI74.700
Rut.aid S. Dratch A Wf Betsy lo Dale D. Chance
A Wl Carol J .. Lt 333, Wilder Springs Un. 4.

Kuth Ann Johnson A Hb Konald II. to Kuth
Ann Johnson. Un. E. Bldg 3. Suusalllu Cond. Ph.
I. $100
William J . Weller. Jr. to Kellh III Lemieux A Wl
Catherine. Ll 6. Blk A. North Orlando Kanches.
Sec. 3. $30,000
Barbara G. Smith lo John F. Naglee A Wf Mry
C. Lt 34. Blk 2. repl Sh 1 A 2. North Orlando
Townslte 4th Addri. $45,000

SANFORD

COM PLETE S C U M CERTIFICATION

Joseph Welnsenfeld. T r. lo Durham J . Tanner.
Lt 110 The Trails al Country Creek. BIH.000
.Joseph Welnsenfeld. T r. to David Scrvlunskv.
T r ull ihr Trails al Country Creek. $ IOO

David A. Lively to Inter-Am Constr. Corp. Lis I,
2. A 3. Hlk U. rcpl Lk Mobile Shores. $37,000
A J . Lively J r. A Wf Hedy lo Inter-Am Constr.
Corp.. Lis 4-10 Hlk B. Kepi. Lk Mobile Shores.
$54,000

IIA

0 'Ol CHRISTO'S FAMILY
J iC
RESTAURANT

Joseph Welsenfcld. T r lo Itotierl Benitez, Lt 7
The Trulls at Country Creek, *H5,7(X)

$88,000

FREE AIR ON SUNOAY H A M -4 PM
two RESTAURANTS
CHRISTO S CLASSICS
iar wi s t firm s trf c r

Hucker Homes. Inc. lo Jackson Thomas Homes.
Inc Lt 2ff, Country Down* I’h. II. B26JKX)

Jesse Itundrstvedl A Wf Helen F lo Steven A
Janlsrh A Wf Constance, Lt 172. Oak Forest. Un
Tow H. $8IMXX)

B a llo o n M a g ic

BUD BAKER
NKW LO C A TIO N

i soot. Noeee pent oe
out* a prices oacon
Af M
| oe sausaoi toast 4 JILLV BoW

• partt hits

"Say It With BAlloons,,

Insurance Agency

C W R IS T O '5

15% DISC. C©

1231702

•um

msuuJKi mn

711 FRENCH AVE.
322-0235
SANFORD

AU WOM GUARANTIED
1 DAY URYICf

MEDC0 DISCOUNT
DRUGS

REALTY TRANSFERS
». 9130.000

OPEN MON.THRU FRI. 14
SAT. a sas

170 S. Hwj. 17 92
Ctwef t erry
114*77*

B y Tom Towetee
SALEM . Orr (UPI) — A dozen yearn ago. Oregon
adopted the toughest land-use planning law In
the nation — a legal blueprint outlining the future
for 36 million acres of private property In the
stale.
Environmentalists, civic planners and some
legislators wanted laws to prevent uncontrolled
urban sprawl, particularly In the populous
Willamette Valley where lush farmland butts up
against cities.
Critics called the legislation communism, social
engineering and an unconstitutional elTort by the
stale to tell property owners what they enuid do
with their land. They tried to repeal It three limes
at the ballot box. hui failed.
The blueprint was supposed to have been
finished three years after the law was approved tn
1073 But It has taken 12 years. $200 million and
a lot ol hard work by loc al governments
By the end of June. Oregon's 36 counties and
243 cities arr expected to have recrtvrd state
approval of plans that will govern Oregon
development from now until thr yrar 2CXX)
The criticism continues, but thicker* sav the
law is starting to jury off and has become the
cornerstone of Oregon's efforts to wean Itself from
the ups and downs of a timber-reliant economy
by attracting stable high technology Industries.
Gov. Victor Atlych has used the land-use
program lo lure Japanese electronics firms lo the
state, promising I hem h|k‘c 1ITc Industrial sites for
their plants that are near affordable housing and
recreation, yel free from confrontations with
angry homeowners
The governor credits land-use laws tn part for
decisions by NEC America. Fujitsu America anti
other electronics firms to locate In Oregon II was
also a major pari of his pitch to General Motors
Corp to locale Its new $5 billion Saturn car
manufacturing plant In Oregon
"Th e land-use planning process has been worth
It tiecause we have assured ourselves that we can
grow econom ically and still protect our
livability.” Atlych said. "No stale 111 I he union
except Oregon cun make thal statement.'*
Farmers and ranchers still have mixed opinions
aUiut the land use program
"You talk lo 12 farmers and you'll get 12
different opinions, hui it you travel Irom Portland
to Eugene you'll see a Im of agriculture land thut
Is still agriculture land." said Polk County farmer
Jim Smart. "Without land-use planning II would
all la- strip development.”
The plans adopted by the local governments
give each of Oregon’s 36 million acres ol prtvaielv
owned land specific designations lor use In­
cluded In ihose plans are nearly Iff million acres
of laud set aside for exclusive lartti use and
another 13 million acres designated for forestry.
Of tlit- rrmalnlng laud, the plans confine most
major development to iirtx.an and suburban city
limits and (u a surrounding urban growth
boundary, Strict designations have licrn applied
on where housing, commercial and Industrial
development can lake place.
The law also set up the Land Conservation and
Development Com m ission, a seven-member
panel ol land-use czars who have passed
Judgment on whether each of those plans have
met a stringent lH |x)tut state test
In addition to protecting Iwrm and forest land,
the components of that test Included a massive
grassroots citizen jiartlripatinn program, protec­
tion of scenic areas, air and water pollollon
controls, the availability of housing cortimcnsu
rate with Income levels, access lo sewer and
water, protection of estuaries wetlands. t&gt;eucties
and rivers and preventing development on
geologically unsound ground

Dennis It Weaver A Wf Kaieo lo David C.
Tam m A Wf Candy K . Ll 35ff Winter Springs Un.

R A D IA T O R

HEARING AID CENTERS

212 E. 1st St. Downtown Sanford

We Feature Complete In Huuae Computer Service

im ,&lt;n e h s p e c i a l s

Paint

Product*

ACE AUTO

322-5721

GYRO SANDWICH!

HUNCH AVt
SANFORD FLA 32771
Don 321 2160

Has The Paint Products
For All Your Needs

the tree heanni test will be |rren
Monday thru frider - this weeh
at the Casselberry once and Mon
day at the Sanford location Call
the number below and arrange for
an appointment, or drop in at your
conremence

EASTER PU M PS

Atlantic National Bank Bldg
Suite 602
Downtown Sanford
Call For Appointment

"

T

»e
"R*r \

Comar Bth Strost fc 17-92
Sanford. Florida

COLBERT &amp; SH ALETT

f AMUUa

Senlord

P h o n e 3 2 2 -5 0 6 6

RUSTPRO OFING

1305) 323-1137

(.

Tel. 322-8711 J

amtf ntttr o.w

W in d o w T in tin g A n d
Q u a k e r S ta te R u s tp ro o fin g
TINTIN G

“

UNISEX HAIR STYLING

Professional Car Care

M od 2 Dr »............M BS
M od 4 Dr »............S» *5
5m Wogom
78 OO
Lg W ogooi . . . at.OO
Full V a n 'i ___ 1 00.00

&gt;|

H A IR N O W

.
^

P rep ared By A ccountants

raumic

SANFORD

WE DO IT ALL

2701 1 Ortan in Or.

TRY OUR

^

.*•!». If. ln»W •I.«* Trim.

INCOME TA X RETURNS

m e t AM

830-6688

in v e n t

RENTALS: N ? ‘ MT

Celebrating Ch ildhood Is
The Slogan At Happy Acres
grees.
S p e c ia l program s
available for all age
groups Include:
• K indergarten pre­
paratory class for four
year olds
• B efore and a fler
s c h o o l care and
Summer Day Camp for
children 6-12
• Infant and loddlcr
care iri the renovated
facility.
Happy Acres guaran­
tees you and your child
a positive and pleasant
e x p e r ie n c e . W h e n
comparing quality and
service, you will find
Happy Acres' fees very
reasonable They are so
sure of ihelr program's
e x c e l l e n c e , that
enrollees during April
will not have to pay a
registration fee.
Happy Arres Is now
owned by Mary Mize,
who has been directly
Involved In child care
In San lord for nearly
15 years.

321-0741

A D V E R TIS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

O n r o f S a n fo rd 's
oldest and nicest child
care c ent er s,
established In 1954.
has changed owner­
ship. The new Happy
A c r e s ’ s l o g a n Is
' ' Cel ebr at i ng
C h i ld h o o d .” T h e y
believe learning by
young children comes
through love and play
and what happens In
lhe first few years of a
child's life determines
the foundation for the
future.
Happy Acres has ah
open-door policy for
parents along with a
m onthly newsletter
The well planned dally
educational program.
Includes Spanish and
computer skills, field
trips, and special visi­
tors. H o t, balanced
home-cooked meals are
served fam ily style.
The playground Is a
child's dream— over an
acre of play equipment
and a tree house.
Happy Acres oilers
pre s c h o o l v is io n ,
speech anti hearing
screenings, fingerprin­
ting. and two yearly
basic skills evaluations
They have lheir own
extensive library in­
c lu d in g c h ild r e n 's
books. movies and re­
cords and cassettes
E d u c a t io n a l o p •
portunlllcs for various
age g ro u p s d u rin g
April and May Include
a train ride, a picnic, a
visit to the zoo and
Illu r S p rin g s Slate
Park, skating. Ixrwllng
and a movie theater.
Educational activi­
ties revolve around a
proven prugram enIII led ‘ ‘ B r i d g e -t o H e a d i n g , ” w h ic h
f o c u s e s on a n
environment that en­
courages and supports
h e a lth y e m o tio n a l,
physical and Intellec­
tu a l g r o w t h
H u p p y A c r e s Is
slate-licensed, open 6
a.in. lo G p m. Monday
through Friday.
C h i ld r e n fro n t six
weeks to 12 years may
enroll. The managein t-n i’ s c d u ra llo n a l
background Includes a
Master of Science degrer in C h ild Care
A d m in is t r a t io n , a
llachrlor of Science In
Elementary Education
and two Child Devel­
opment associate de­

Oregon Toughens
Its Land Use Law

Jim
L a sh ’s
B lu e B ook C ars

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

Tuesday. April 1. »*BS— J »

rh. 3234»73B

Sabal Point Dev. lo Deccatrxlnr Constr. Corp.
Ll 11. Sabal Trail al Sabal Point. $47,000
Same " Lt 10. $47,000
Same 'L l 17. $47,000
Winter Spgs Dev. to A.K. Clark Builders. Inc. Lt
54. Bear Creek Ests . $67,000
A K. Clark Uldrs. lo Kobcrt C. Steger A Wf
Mlchrle, Ll 54. Bear Creek EaU.. $67,000

* \

\

�&lt;&gt;— P w ilu j Hin id , Sbftfpfd, FI.

Tw— day, April i , ltM

Legal Notice

Lack O f W ater, Experience
Contributed To Mine Deaths
S A L T LA K E C IT Y
(Ul*1| — ((paring* on
itip cauap of a fire timl
klllrti 27 coal miner*
Indicate (he mine hud
clpcirlcal problem *,
lacked waler to fight
i lie blare and readier*
were nol experienced
e n o u g h lo o p e ra te
crucial equipment.
The Mine Safely and
Health AdmlniKlration
released tran scrip ts
Monday of the testimo­
ny of 14 witnesses
taken In the first five
days of hearings In
Price, Utah. Into the
Dec. Iff. II»84. fire that
killed 27 people In the
Wllbcrg mine.
•Jeff Itichetil. it m ain­
tenance mechanic for
Emery Mining, which
operates the m in e
a b o u t

I I S

Honing “all day long.”
He also said power
breakers kicked open
several limes but were
turned back on and
several phone* In ihe
mine were nol work
Ing.
Jo h n T u r n e r , a
com pany Inspector,
said he arrived at the
mine less than an hour
after Ihe fire started
and found water pre­
ssure problems on fire
lines.
"They have very lit­
tle. if any. water pre­
ssure on the water line
they were using here.”
he said.
Fred Talton. a feder­
al m ine s a fe ly In ­
spector. lesllfled Ihe
rescue effort tii.il was

m ile s

southeast of Salt I-tike
city, said the electrical
system was malfunc-

Your Houto
Nood Paint Job?

D oom

In o b se rva n ce of
Private Property Week
April 2B-May 5, the
S e m in o le C o u n i y
Board of (traitors will
be holding Its fourth
annual Paint A-House
Project.
M e m b e r*

o f

th e

Ixturd will, In an effort
lo help som e area
homeowner, paint the
exterior of a house In
S e m in o le C o u n i y .
Selection Will Ik *on the
basis of financial need
a n d o th e r c o n s i d ­
eration*. The deadline
for entries Is April Hi.
Any S emIn o Ie
C o u n ty h o m e o w n e r
who feels lie or she
would like lo have Ills
or her home considered
lor the project may call
the Seminole County
Board of (tcullors office
al 009-IB77 to receive
an application by mall.

Legal Notice
SEM INOLE C O U N T Y
SOAR D C F
C O U N TY COM M ISSIONERS
NOT 1C I O F
r g » U C H I A ll INO
AFRIL11, IMS,
I I iM A M
I he Not'd nt County Com m it
lionett ot Seminole Couniy,
Flo rid*, will Sold • public
touring to consider th* follow
Ing
I R O U S T IT A K R R MM M l - A I Agrlcullur* Ion*
Raqueit for * Borrow Pit
Permit on ttio Nly *00 ft ot Lot
*0 . W*ttt Form. P B 0 . Pg to
ll* tt l l y I I It), In SacNon
1111 J0 . loro lod ot Iho South**1 1
r or nor ot Contor D rive ond
Suns*! Dr Ir* (D IS T I)
Tbit public Mooring w ill tw
hold In Room W IJ0 ot Itw
Lorn InoI* County Sarvkat Build
Ing. 1101 I Flrtt Stroot. Lon
lord. Florid*, on April J ], Itgj.
ot 10 00 A M . or oo u o n thoro
ottor asposubi*
WHtlan comments tllod with
Iho l ond Management Dlrot tor
will bo contldorod Poroont op
poor Ing ot Iho public Flooring
will b* iw t'il I lot ring i m ty bo
tonllnuod from llmo to llmo ot
lound rwcotury F urthor dolollt
available by colling n t IIJO
Col 001
Poroont oro advised that. It
•hoy doc Ido lo oppool any do
clown modo *1 Ihlo hoorlng. Itwy
will rwod o rocood ot Itw pro
(OOdlngo. ond. lor ouch purpot*.
tlwy moy nood to Intur* thol *
verbatim ftcord ol Iho procood
ingi II mod*, which rocord
Inrludoo IM foillmony ond 0*1
donro upon which Itw oppool ll
to bo boood. por Soc Hon 7*0 |IM.
F lor Ido Statutes
NOAH DOF
CO UNTY CO M M ISSIO NER S
SEMINOLE C O U N TY ,
FLORIDA
BY ROBE RT S TU R M .
CHAIRMAN
A tT E IT
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
Publish A pril}, INS
D I E II
F IC T IT IO IU IN A M E
Nolle* ll tortby glvon thol I
•m ongogod In bullnoi* al 100
Orow Annuo Von lor d F I J J tll,
Samlnoto Couniy. F for Ido under
Ih o 1 1c 111 1o u i n o m o o f
Agop* t u r n i n g C o n lo r ot
Control Florid*, ond thol I
inland to rogltlor M id nomo
with O o rt ol ttw C ircuit Court,
bominol* Couniy. F for Ido In
accordant* with llw provltton*
ot IW FldiHoui Nomo Staiuta*.
To Wit iodlon bob 0* Florid*
buiufoi in t
DionnolloW Alooondar
Publlih A pril}.*. U . U . m t
DEE I

Legal Notice
N O TIC E O F A
P U B LIC M EAR IN O
OF P R O P O S E D C H A N O E L
A N D A M EN D M EN TI
IN C E R T A IN D IS TR IC TS
AND B O U N D A R IE S OF
TH E IO N IN O O R D IN A N C E .
ANO A M E N D IN O TH E
F U TU R E LAN O USE
E L E M E N T O F TH E
C O M P R E H E N S IV E PLAN
OF T H E C IT Y OF
SANFO R D. F L O R ID A .
Nolle* It horoby glvon thol *
Public Hoorlng will bo hold *1
Iho Commltiton Room In IW
CHy H*M In llw City ot Soniord,
Florida. *1 7 00 O'clock P M on
A p ril }&gt;, l * u , to consldsr
chongot ond omondmonti lo IW
Zoning Ordinance, ond omond
Ing IW Fulur* Land U u El#
m tnlof IW Comprotwflilvo Plan
ol IW City
Soniord. Florida,
ot follow*
A portion ol thol certain
propo'ly lying bolwoon u S
It t j IFronrh Avonuol ond Elm
Avonuo ond bolwoon Wot! Illh
Slroot ond W otl Itlh Stroot It
propotod to bo ro toned Irom
SR IA (Single Fam ily Rotldtn
11*1 Dwelling) Olstrlct to GC 7
IGowral Commercial) D ltlrk l
Sold p r o p e rly bolng more
p a r t ic u la r ly ds s c rib e d ot
lollowt
Lott XI through 7* ond IW
Eott on* hall ol Iho rotated
alley obulling Lo ll I t through
M. Amended Plot ol Orange
lltlghlt. Plot Book a Pago It.
Public R tco rd t ot Somlwlo
County, F lor Ido
All portlet In Inlorttl end
clllltnt thou l.o ro on epporium
ly I*bo Word *1 u l d hoorlng
By order ol Itw City Com
million ol Iho City ol Sanford
F lor Ido
ADVICE TO TH E P U B LIC II
* per ton decide! to oppeel a
decision mode with retperl to
any mailer contldered al IW
above mooting or hoorlng, W
may need * verbatim rocord ol
llw prccoodingt. Including tw
lottlmony ond ovldonco. which
rocord It nol provided by IW
Clly ol Soniord I F S 70* 010)1
ti N T im m , Jr
Clly Clerk
Publlih April }. I}. |*||
DCE I)
S B M IN O L I C O U N TY
BOAROOF
CO UNTY COM M ISSIONERS
N O TIC E OF
P U B LIC H E A R IN G
A P R IL 11. ITBli
I ** P M
TW Boord ol County Commit
tlonert si Somlool* Couniy,
Florid*, w ill hold o public
War Ing to contldor IW follow
Ing:
I. B A R B A R A L I I L E
B A D I I I S ) 40T E - A I
Agrlcullur* Ion*
■ Appeal
ogolntl IW Board ot Ad|utlrwnl
In denying * Spot 1*1 Etcopllon
to pork * mobile homo on tw W
*S ol Lot U. Block B . ond IW S
70 II ol IW E ly ol Lot U, Block
B. Loko Morrwy Arrelfoi. PB II,
Pg 14. In Soclkm 14 X I 11. on tw
Wotl tide ol Herrwy Height!
Rood fo mil* North ol Jungle
Rood IOIST SI
Thlt public hearing will W
Wld In Room W IN ol IW
Somlnol# County Sorvlcot Build
ing. 1101 E F lr tl Slroot, Son
lord, Florid*, on April } ] , IMS
it t 00 P M . or ot toon Itwreol
’or *t potllbl*
Wrllton commontt lllod with
IW Land Management Director
will be contldered Pertant op
peering *1 llw public hearing
will W W ord tfoorlngt moy W
continued tram llmo to llmo at
fount, rwcotwry Fur IWr dolollt
ovollobl* by colling 111 1110.
Cal 041
Per torn oro odvlted thol, If
•Wy dor Ida to appeal any dt
cl non modo *1 Ihlt hoorlng. IWy
will nood * rocord el Itw pro
toodingt. and. tor ouch pur pate
IWy moy nood to Intur* IhoI *
verbatim rocord ol t w procood
Ingt It modo. which rocord
Include! IW tetllmony ond tvl
dene* upon which ttw oppool It
to be bated per Section TOO 0101
F lend# Statutes
BOAR O O F
C O U N TY CO M M ISSIO NER S
S EM INO LE C O U N TY ,
FLO R IO A
BY R O B E R T STU RM .
CHAIR M AN
A T TE S T
D A V I0 N B E R R IE N
Publlih A p r il}. 1*BS
D I E 10

finally hultr-d Dec. 24
w as h a m p e r e d by
equipment problems.
” 1 think It was prob­
a bly ine xp e rien ce d
people.” he said. “ I
don't think we had
m a c h i n e s that
malfunctioned lo that
e xlrm ."
E m e ry spokesman
Dob Hcnrie claimed (he
accident had nothing
to do with effort* lo
break a production re­
cord.

Legal Notice
C IT Y OF
LO N C W O O O , FLORIDA
N O TIC E OF
P U B L IC H EAR ING
TO CONSIDER
A D O P TIO N OF
P R O P O SC D O R D IN A N C E
TO W HOM IT M A Y CONCERN
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
by Iho C lly of Longwood,
Florida, thol IW Clly Own
m illion wilt hold * public W ar
ing to contldor onoclrwnl ot
Ordinance No Ot*. entitled
AN O R D IN A N C E OF TH E
C I T y OF LO NG W O O D.
F L O R IO A . C R E A T IN G A
PARKS A N D R EC R EATIO N S
A D V IS O R Y BOARD OF TH E
C IT Y . D E S C R IB IN G O UALI
F IC A T IO N S ANO TER M S OF
M E M B E R S . JU RISDICTIO NS.
POW ERS AN O PROCEDURES
FOR TH E BOARD, R EPEAL
ING A L L O R DINANCES OR
P AR TS O F O R DINANCES IN
C O N F L IC T H E R E W IT H .
P R O V I D I N G POR AN E F
F E C T IV E O A TE
Sold O r dinar*# wot plocod on
tin t reading on Monday. March
II. IMS. ond tW City Com
m illion will contldor tom* In'
tinol pottage and adoption ottor
tW public htorlng, which will be
Wld In ttw City Hall, 171 W til
W a r re n A v o . L o n g w o o d ,
Florid*, on Monday. IW 1)th
day ot April, IMS portiot moy
appear and bo W ord with r*
Ipocl to t w propotod Ordinance
Thlt hearing may be continued
Irom time to time until final
action It token uy IW City
Commlttlon
A copy ot IW propotod Ordl
none* ll potted *1 t w City Hell,
longwood Florida ond copiet
or* on til* with IW Clerk of tw
City ond tom* moy be Impeded
by tW public
A taped record ot Ihlt mooting
It mode by tw City tor lit
convenience Thlt record may
not contl Ilute on adequate ro
cord lor purpotot ol oppool Irom
* dec It ion mode by IW Com
m in io n with rotpoct to Iho
loregoing metier Any portan
w Ithing to tnture that on *d*
quote rocord ol t w proceeding!
it m aintained tor oppollol*
purpotot It odvltod to mok* IW
w c o tM fy arrangement! ol hit
or W r ownoiponte
Dot# thlt ?7nd day ol March.
A O IW
C IT Y O F LONGW OOO
Oonold L Terry
City Clerk
Pubtlth A p ril}. t**t
D E E tl
C IT Y OF
LONGW OOO. FLO R ID A
N O TIC E OF
P U B L IC H EAR ING
TO CONSIDER
A D O P t ION OF
P R O P O SE D ORDINANCC
TO W H OM IT M AY CONCERN
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by (h e C lly ol Longwood,
Florid*, (hot IW City Com
m illion will hold 0 public hear
mg to conikfof enactment ot
Ordinance No to* entitled
AN O R D IN A N C E OF TH E
C IT Y OF LO NG W O O O.
F L O R ID A . PRO VIDING FOR
R E S T R IC T IO N S . P R O H IB IT
ING A N Y IN D IV ID U A L FROM
O B ’.IG A T IN G TH E C ITY OF
L O N G W O O O . FLO R IO A . OR
ITS R E S O U R C E S W ITH O U T
C O M M IS S IO N A P P R O V A L .
P R O V ID IN G FOR CO N FLICTS
A N D E F F E C T I V E DATE
Sold Ordinance wot plocod on
lin t reading on Monday, March
IE. INS. ond tW City Com
m illion will contldor tome tor
tinol package *nd adoption alter
tW public hoorlng. which will be
Wld In IW Clly Hall. I l l Wett
W a r re n A v * , L o n g w o o d .
Florid* tin Monday. IW lith
day ol April, IN I. portlet may
appear and bo Word with re
tpec t lo IW propotod Ordinance
Thlt hoorlng may be tonllnuod
tram tlm* to tim* until final
action It token by IW City
Commlttlon
A copy ol IW propotod Ordl
nonet It polled ol ttw City Harr.
Longwood. Florid*, and capiat
or* on til* with tw Cltrk ot t w
City and tom* may be impacted
by Iho public
A taped rocord *1 thlt mooting
ll mad* by IW City tor Hi
convenience Thlt record moy
not conttllut* on adequate re
cord tor purpoeet of appeal from
a dec ik ■ mod* by tw Com
m illio n with rotpoct to th*
loregoing mattor Any pe'ton
withlng fo antur* foot on *dt
quota record ol IW proceeding*
it m aintained tor ippellol*
purpoeet it odvlted to mok* ttw
n tc e tu ry arrangement! al hit
or her own eipence
Date thlt n n d day ot March.
A O IN I
C IT Y O F LONGWOOO
Oonold L Terry
City Clark
Publlih A p ril}. INS
D E E II

NOTICE
Th e St Je4w* River Water
Management D ltlrk l hoe re
cu re d on application tor Can
tumptlr* Wotor Lit* from
J U M P IE RUN P L A N TA TIO N
INC . P O BOX to*. SANFO R D.
F L 11771. A p p lic a tio n
41H70143AU. on 11/11/44 Th*
applicant pc opmat to withdraw
S4S M GO at G R O U N D W A TER
F R O M AN U N K N O W N
A Q U IF E R VIA 1 E X IS T IN G
W E LLS FO R C ITR U S to w rv*
IS o c / tltl In Somlnct* County
located In SecHon SO. Townehlp
XI South. Rang* ) l Eott
A D U O A AND SONS INC.,
P O BOX l t » , O V IE D O . FL
»7AS. Application 71 11741 N A N .
on 1/1/U T W applicant pro
pot*c to withdraw 40 M G O of
G R O U N D W A TE R FR O M TH E
f l o r id a n

a q u if e r

v ia

55—Business

Legal Notice

m

E X IS T IN G PUMPS FOR SOO b
P U B LIC SUPPLY to tor** n
i c r o ( i ) In Somlnolo County
locotod In Secnon Id. 17, It A JO
Township 11 South. Hong* 11
Eott
C H A R L E S R CLONTS. P O
BOX 4*8 OVIEDO. F L 17741,
Application (M 1 7 017IAU. on
l'1/RS Th* applicant propotot
lo w ith d ra w
I I I M G O of
G R O U N D W A TE R FROM TH E
F L O R ID A N A O UIO ER V IA 7
E X IS T IN G W ELLS FOR C E L
E R V fo torvo R o c r* (l) In
Somlnol* County located m Sec
lion )1, Toumthlp l l South,
Rang*It Eott
W IL L IA M R CLO NTS. P O
BOX 4*0. OVIEDO. F L T374S.
Application 73 1I70I7JAU. on
171/RS Ttw applicant propotot
to w ith d re w
t i t M G D of
G R O U N D W A TE R FR O M TH E
F L O R ID A N A Q U IFE R V IA 10
E X IS T IN G W ELLS FOR C E L
E R Y fo torv* 40 ocro(ft) In
Somlnol* Cawrty located In Sac
lion Id. Townthlp 11 South,
Hong* 11 East
Ttw Governing Board ot fo*
D lt lr k l will l*k* action to ortnt
or deny t w oppllcolton(t) no
tooner than 10 d i r t from th#
dot* ol foil notice Should you be
Intorottod In any ol fo# llltod
application!, you thould contact
t w St Jehnt River Weter Mon
ogomonl D ltlrk l al P O Boa
&lt;47*. Polotko. Florida 1X70
141*. or In porton ot lit offlc* on
S lo t* H ig h w a y lOO W a t t,
Polotko. Florid*. *04/1X1331
W r lt lo n o b |* ctlo n to th*
application moy tw mad*, but
mould be received no later than
14 d iy a Irom th* dot* ot
publication Written eb|*ctlont
mould Identity tw objector by
name and oddrett. ond fully
describe tW objection to foe
application Filing a wrltlon
oblection doot not onfitto you to
0 Chapter IX . F tor Ido Statute#.
Adminlitrotlv* Hoorlng Only
thoe* portent whot* tubttonllol
inte rtill or* affected by fo*
application ond who Ml* a pet I
lion mooting IW requirement!
01 Section X S X I . F A C , moy
obtain on Adminittrat|v* Hear
Ing All tlmoty tllod wrltlon
objection* will be pretonted to
IW Board lor Itt comlderatlon
In li t d e lib e ra tio n on th*
application prior to ttw Boord
ilk Ing *c I ton on me application
Donnit* T Ktmp, Director
Olvktonot Record!
St John! River Water
Manege man! O ltlrk t
Publlih April M R ]
D E E 10

C IT Y OF
L A K E M AR Y. F L O R IO A
NO TICE OF
P U B LIC MEARINO
TO W H O M IT MAY CONCER N
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by t w City Comml!!lon ot fo*
City el Lake Mary Florida, that
laid Board will hold * public
Waring at 7 JO P M . on April
II. H U . to
Contldor * Potilton to do**,
vocal*, obortdon. dlKontlnuo,
due 1*1m *nd to ronounco any
right ot th* City ot Lak* M ary. *
political tubdlvltlon. and IW
public in ond to th* lol towing
inscribed right ol way. to wit
T h a t p o rtio n al th* 40'
right ot way ot Groontool Lon*,
running E o tt from th* NW
corner ol Lol *0 to fo# NE
r or nor ol Lot 40. Groontool b
Wilton Su4idlvltton. *1 recorded
In Plot Cook 1. Pag* M. ot tw
Public Rocordi al Somlnol*
County. Florid*
Th* Public Hoorlng will b*
W ld In ttw City Hall. City ot
la k * Mary, Florida- on ttw ttth
day ol April. H U . ot 7 X P M .
or Ol toon thereafter Ol potii
bto. *1 which time Intorottod
portle* tor and pgalnit th«
recommended requott will b*
W ard Sold Boor b n may b*
continued hem lime to tlm*
until * recommendation li mod*
by ttw City Com million
TH IS N O TIC E iholl tw potted
In three ||| public pfocei within
th* City *1 Lake Mary. Florid*.
*1 t w City Holt within u ld City,
end pub I lined In ttw Evening
Harold. * rwwipopor ot ganorol
circulation in IW City of LoA*
Mary Florida In two weekly
Hiuot *1 tooil l l dayi prior to
Iho •toreta'd hearing In oddi
tton. none* moll be polled In Itw
area to be contldered *1 tooil II
I da yi prior to fo* date ot fo*
public hoar mg
A taped rocord ot foil mooting
ll mod* by tw City lor Itt
r convenience Thll record moy
not cenatltut* on ode quote r*
cord tor pur pout ol oppool horn
a doc inon mod* by fo* City with
rotpoct to IW tortgoing matter
Any per ton aiming fo enour*
fool an adequate record ot fo*
proceeding* li maintained tor
•ppeiloto purpotei ll odvlted to
moka ttw rwceiiory arrange
montt at hit or her own eapente
C IT Y OF
LA K E AkARV. FLO R ID A
l%l Carol Edwerdi
City Clerk
D A T E D March77. H U
Publlih March X . April 1. H U
D E D IPS

A F F ID A V IT
UN D ER F IC T IT IO U S
NAMR S T A T U T E
S TA TE OF FL O R ID A
CO U N TY O F O R AN G E
The undartignod. undar oath.
MY*:
I Thto tmtrumant l i being
taacutad tor fo# pur pot* ot
complying with Section *c) 0* ot
Florid* Stotuto*
I It It ttw intention of th*
unde-ugned to engage In a
but (nett enter priie under fo*
flctlttatt nemo of TO W N A
C O U N TR Y F L Y IN G S E R V IC E ,
located al I M N Highway
177*3. Maitland. Florida. 337)1,
In fo* City el Maittond. County
el Somlnol*
1 Aflac hod horoto and modi a
party Itwroof It * newspaper
Proof of Publication as required
by sold Statute
4 Twee interested In said
enterprise, and fo* eaten! ot foe
interest ot ooch. Is os follows
N AM E OF OWNER
Coppola/Brown. Inc
IN T E R E S T
140%
SIG N A TU R E
W A Brown Vk* President
ADDRESS
X 4 0 N 17 tl.
Maitland. Florid*. 33711
Sworn ond subscribed to be
tore m* at Maitland. Samlnot*
Couniy. Florida, this Itfh day of
March. t*U
Denis* M Brown
Notary Public,
Statool Florida
M y Commission E epires
May 14. I M
As rsfarrad to In Paragraph ).
above. Proof ot Publication ol
foil mention lo register li filed
herewith pursuant to t w pro
visions of Section M ) 0* ot
Florida Statutes
A TTA C H PRO O F OF
PUBLICATI044
Publish April 3.», 14. 33, I N )
DEE *
N O TIC E
Ttw St Jehnt River Water
Management District has ro
cetved an application tor Con
tumptlv* Wator Us* ham
SEM IN O LE SOCCER C LUB .
IN C . P O
B O X 111.
L O N G W O O D . P L S I M 0.
application f l ll t a i M A N . on
n ilM U TW applicant proposal
te w ith d ra w .177 M O D of
G R O U N D W A TE R FR O M TH E
FLO R ID A N A Q U IF E R VIA 1
PRO PO SED W E L L S FOR A
R E C R E A T IO N A R E A A N D
P U B LIC SUP P LY to sorv* X
a c r a l!) In Samlnot* Caunfy
located In Sort Ion is. Township
H South. Rang* W E a it
Th* Governing Boerd of IW
District will tab* action to grant
or deny tw sppllcollondl no
sooner than X days from th*
date ot foil notice Should you be
intoreitod In any of foe listed
applications. you Should contort
fo* St Johns River Water Mon
ogement District at P O Boa
147* Palatka. Florida 1X71
I4X, or In poraon at It* oltlc* on
S la t* H ig h w a y lo g W e st.
Polotko. F tor Ido, KM 37)4131
W r illa n o b je c t io n to th*
application may tw mod*, but
thould b* received no latoc than
1* day* fro m th* data ot
publication Written objections
mould Identity ttw oblector by
name ond address, and tolly
describe foe objection to to*
application Filing * written
objection does not entitle you to
a Chapter IX . Ftortda Statutes.
Administrative Hoorlng Only
those pea sens chase aubetentloi
interests ore effected by toe
application and who fit* a pell
Mon mooting fo* requirement!
ol Section X ) X I . F A C . moy
obtain on Administrative Hoar
ing All tlmaly tllod wrltlon
objections will be presented to
foe Board tor It* consideration
in ll* d e lib e ra tio n on th*
application prior to fo* Board
lak ing action an tW application
Dennis* T Kemp. Director
Division of Record*
St Johns River Water
Management District
Publish April 1.1*U
DEB*

NOTICB
UNDER F IC T IT IO IU S
NAM E S T A T U T E
TO WHOM IT M A Y C O N CE R N
Notice ik Wreby given fool to*
undersigned, pursuant to to*
’’ Fictitio u s N*m * Statute'*
Chapter iota*. Florida Statut*.
will register with fo* Clark ot
t w Circuit Court. In and for
Sammoto County. Ftortda. upon
receipt of proof Of fo* public*
Hon of this notice fo* tktlttoua
noth*, to wit Callahan AMS
under which w* ore ongogod In
business at 1*Q Atlantic Drive In
to* Clly Of Fern Parb. Florida
Thai fo* party Interested In
said business antorprls* I* as
lot tows
ROLLASON E N G IN E E R IN G
A M A N U F A C T U R IN G CO M
PANY
By Chari** H RoUoton. II,
President
D a te d at C a s s e l b e r r y ,
Sem inal# C o u n ty. F lo rid a .
March IS. H U
Publish A p ril}, t, 14,11. 1*U
DEC I

F IC T IT IO IU S N A M I
Ne»‘c* it hereby given foal I
am engaged In butinoM at f t )
Douglas Avenue Altam onte
Springs. FI )&gt; FI 4 . Semi nol*
C o uniy. F lo rid a undar H it
flclllla w s nam e at C h a rlie
Lansing. CPA, Chartered, and
foot I inland to register Mid
name with C toft *1 fo* Circuit
Court, SomtnoM County. F tortd*
in oc car dance with t w pro
visions *4 fo* Fkllttou* Nomo
Statutes TpW tt Section SOI*#
Florida Statute* l*S7
Charles W Longing
Publish April 1. *. 1*. U , l* U

DEI 4

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 Ur m
....................... 67C * lino
HOURS
3 constd/Tiv* times 61C $ line

1:30 AM. • 5:30 M l.
MONDAY tkni FRIDAY
SATURDAY 5 8soa

7 coitsecutut timos 52C a lme
10 cdRsactrtie* Urns 46C a line
Cantract Ratal AraHaMa
3 Lines Mrm m um

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

15—In Memorlam

IN M E M O R Y OF OUR
M O TH E R
M A R O A R E T B JOHNSON
It loom ! lib* ewly yet terday w*
boord yeur veto* and law yaer
tmito W r rwtee yaw ** much
Yaer children and grand
chrldrm

21— Personals
I wit not be retpomibi# tor any
debt! Incurred by anyon*
other than my tall a* ol March
te. H U Ancestor Hottoy
IP R IN O IS T H E T IM E TO
B U I L D B IO B U S IN E S S
TH R O U O N L I T T L E A O ll

27— Nurwry A
Child Care
Child cor* by Ik . nurt* Lunch,
trackk Dolly activities Age I
b Over Weekday! tarn k m
Lob* M ary M M X
For lander, loving b ovality
child core, coll A Child’!
world m a « 4 ^ ___ _________
S U N LA N D E S TA TE S
Child cor* my home up*'*
•need day school teacWr
Nutrittoue meal* fenced yard
largo ploy oroo * g » l t thru
17 Monday thru Friday 4 AM
to * PM Lott of TLC Coll
m ItX

3 3 - Real Estate
Courses

30) 1110400
.........SEND A G IF T
..... ...W IT H A L IF T !

_____ BALLOON

Thin*Ingef getting*
Real Eitat* Liconeaf
Jam v i at awr Carter Night
April lath t i e f PM.
W* alter Free Tuttwn
and centinleus Training*
Call Dkh or Vichy ter detail!:
l*f*M* 333 33M Ev* 77*11)4

............BOUQUETS
...... W i Ootlverl
For getry region every tea tan

CELEBRATE
* BIRTH1
Mr. Stork’s visit
makes ter a lifetime
*t me merles, gilts A sill
______
Call Linda m a ilt
* M A R Y K A Y C O SM ETIC S a
Sk m car* and color flair
C O N N IE ...................... . 1317714
*
★

Kaye* at Ftortda , Inc
I t Yaart Eapartancal

55— Business
Opportunities
AFTERNOON PAPER ROUTE
FOR SALE Phono lit Ittla ltrr )
Dealership. X 1) hr wee* 1700
to ) » 0 guar a Hired weekly
income Small guaranteed,
rafundobl* deposit Call col
loci l » S I **) 1177 or (MSI

*♦) 111)

★

Legal Notice

★

F IC T IT IO IU S N A M E
Notice It hereby given that wt
are engaged in business at 411
E d w in St W inter Springs.
Seminole County. Florida 11X7
under the Mctlttou* name ef
Chambliss Electric, end foot w*
Intend to register M i d name
with Clerk ol too Circuit Court.
Seminole County, Florid* In
accordance with tw provisions
ot the Fictitious Nam* Statute*.
ToW lt Section M ) 0* Florida
Stotuto* 1*17
Donald W Chambliss
Kotolaon M Chombtisi
Publish April 1. » It. 71 I N )
D EE 7

★
NOW
That we have
your
ittantion
A t a ctattlttod advertiser In fo*
E V E N IN G H ER A LD .
IN C R EAS E th* R EA D ER S H IP
of your ad by using starsl
04v* our sales raps a call at

322-2611
TW O A IR L IN R T IC K E T S - Or
lando to Detroit or Grand
Rapids. Michigan S7J each
Musi be used April 4 Call

3114471_________

NEED A
■■w h a t c h a m a c a l l i T ” o r
" T H IN S A M A O It " )
A D V E R TIS E FOR I T W ITH A
W A N T AD L________________

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
Netk* It hereby given foal w*
*f* engaged in business at 117
Grovtwood Avenu*. Soniord
Sam Inol* County. Florida 13771
undar th* fictitious ham* of
CDC'S, and that I intend to
register M id nam* with tw
Clark ot Iho C ircuit Court.
Sam mole County. Florid* in
accordant* with fo* provltton*
ot fo* Fkllttou* Nome Statutes,
tow it Section MS OS Florida
Statutes 1*57
I V C Dennis Cochran
IM JoonnoCochren
Publish March 11. tg, M A April
1. H U
DED n
F IC T IT IO U S N A M I
Notice It hereby given fool I
am ongogod m butinot* at )7ls
M l c h a l l t L a n a . S a n fo rd .
Somlnol* County. Florida 33771
undar fo* fktlftout nam* ot
W ONDER W O OO FARMS, and
that I inland to register Mid
nom* with th# Clark at fo#
Ctrtufl Court. Somlnol* County.
Florid* in accordance with fo*
provisions o&lt; th* Fictitious
Homo Statutes to w it Section
MS Ot Florida Slatutos IWt
IM Marsha E Enaor
Publim March M 4 April 1, f.
14 I N )
D E D 171

N O T IC E O F A
P U B LIC H EA R IN O
OF P R O P O ie O C M A N O E S
AND A M E N D M E N T )
IN C E R T A IN 0IS TR IC T1
AN D B O U N D AR I I S OF
T H E IO N IN O O R D IN AN CE.
OF T H E C IT Y OF
S AN FO R D . FLO R ID A
Notice 1* hereby given that e
Public Hearing will bo W ld a*
IW Commission Room in IW
City Moll In fo* City of Soniord.
Ftortda ot f 00 o'clock P M on
A p ril 11, H is . to consider
changes and omentpTkontt to IW
Zoning Ordinance ot IW City ol
Soniord Florid*, a i follows
A portion of Art L o w ond a
portion ot that certain property
lying *1 fo# Northwest corner ot
IW Intersection ot Lake Mary
Bouioverd and A rt L a w It
propotod to b* reionod from AD
I Agricultural) District to RC I
IRettrktod Cem rwrclol) Olt
Irlct Said property being more
p a r t i c u la r ly d t te r tb a d a*
tottows
Th* North JO* 71 toot ol tw
South 741 41 lee I of tw East
70* 71 feel of th* Wett 741 tost ot
Government Lot 1, Section M.
Townthlp X South. Rang* X
E a s t . P u b li c R e c o rd s al
Sammoto County, Florida
and
A rt Lon*
Land Porcal 773.
So* Recorded Crucial five ordl
Book I R E Peg* 171. Public
Rocord* ol Saminot* County,
Florida
Ail parti** In interest and
till tent snail have an apportion
hr to b* hoard at M id hearing
By ardor el fo* City Com
mission of th# City ot Soniord.
Florid*
A O V IC E T O TH E P U B LIC II
o porton decides to eppool a
decision mod* with respect tp
any mattor ccmt.dared al fo*
above mooting *r hoorlng. W
moy nood a verbatim record of
fo* procood'ng*. Including fo*
testimony and evident*, which
record I* not provided by fo*
City of Soniord (F S lM E lU l
M R Tam m . Jr
City Clark
Publish A p r il}. I t H U
D E E 14

A.

Doonesbury

BY T A R R Y TR U D EA U
airnesr, M£ 60 OK CUNAMY,

N t&amp; tF b p W

M '
U N U tS O U R M W

3MV. iMt H6U9U CUTA UJNb

600010 M

m i cousins.

11M6A60 THAT YOUCMJBUOV

I (h , a a r
\
N / S ik a w

A n A iu fvo H vm o e a m o N

o p w w / a w
B tS H A r lO U M

AHXWUSQA

m a tta /ru #

H A N D O U TS '

if n e G O im m w iv r m r t p
v s A &amp; a x m rc ru ft, h a h w

v

usAoe. ip o tn m to m
UPS ID
is
Ttu t r
uab

JM M A N P A K M V
flA K T M M T O O *

U H -H JH .
O F C O U K S t,
V0U6A0U
M AM W A

Shopping For A
New Or Used Car?

SOtThAT'S
A m i OF
u n m

MAN-

Tew *o* alwo/t Find lb*
beat deaf* Its the Eveoing
Harare s Clasaltire act ftort
Rr*e Friday'■ Evening Fferofd
For Ibe boat oafoeffon*.

Evening Herald
M B S a n k I re e e b I t e e e r
ij iiiMi■jell w

111-Id 11

•

*

Own * beautiful children * shop
Ottering fo* latest In fashions
-Health Tea -Irod ’ Lovt *Chk
■JordocW -Buster Brown and
m any m o r»
F u r n it u r e
a c c t t s a r it * and toys by
G a r b e r and Nod A W ay
It 4.too X to SI7.n o » includes
baginning inventory train
ing Daturas grand opening
promotions ond round trip
airtoro tor two Prestige Fesh
ion* X I m 4327______________

Al—Money to Lend
Business Capital I X .000 to
11 .000,000 and over P O Boa
1411 Winter Pk Fla 33740

7 1 - H e lp Wanted
Acrylic Applicators waded to
apply protective cooling on
cars, boots and pianos U to
111 par hour Wt train For
work in Soniord art* call
T o r n p o m iM 71)1
Assistant Maintenance manog
*r E aparlo nct preferred
Apply in person Monday thru
Friday. 0 A M to a PM Soniord
N u r s i n g H o m o . S)0
Mqitonvllto
______________
AVO N Hiring Smiling Focesl
Full A pt Irma Call immadi
atotyt 133 )* H * r 7111*34
Coo* needed to prop*'* Wed
nesdoy night suppers at local
church lor I X people Lunch
room eiperlenc* Wipful Call
I X goal
______________
C R U IS E SHIP JO B S ) Groat
income potential A.I occupa
lions For intor me I ion 111])
7 0 M X oet IN ______________
AVON KA R N IN O S W O W III
O P E N T E R R IT O R IE S N O W III

m mi acme*!*
D o b ary Manor new hiring LPN

25—Special Notices

Balloon
Mock
- (Alt SAPPY* - m

Opportunities

or RN tor dey ill Ift Apply so
N Highway 17 *3. or coll
*0**4 3 * ________ ____
OE BAR Y MANOR now hiring
cook tor noon to I PM shift
Institutional taparianc* or
knowledge ot d w 't w ctS M ry
Apply *0 N Highway If *7.
DaBary
__________________
F i t t e r , w e ld e rs , lo r sleel
fabricating shop to to 17 per
hour to start based on etpen
ence Call 337 0 X 0____________
FLO O R B U F F E R . Permanent
port lime position To W 'p
clean retail start Mornings
from 7 to ♦ » AM t days
wees
E a c to r r e tir e d ,
semi retired pm tin 47* J ill.
S A M to ) PM

�Evening Herald. Sanlord. FI. Tuesday. April 1, 1H I — 5B

71-H elp Wanted

7 1-H elp Wanted

Fu ll,P a n tlm* tolaphon* an
•waring m c rataryi Erpari
p r a f a r r a d . but nat
raqulrtd Call 37) S»S*

T E A C H E R P a n tuna AM Day
Cara Eipariancad Pratarad

Girl Friday war-mf tar (mail
manufacturing and nlxlauai*
M ,n« i M in t h a n plaaaanl
fttaphont paraenaiity and ba
kfci* to handto c ottoman
ora on ora Salary nago'iabt*
Contact Bob H eat. Cypraai
totarnalto nal,H I X X I
G E N E R A L O F F IC E CLERKS
I Fart Tim a I
Mut&gt; tiara olflca aiparitnct
alto typing for parmanant
parttlma 1 day* aach - a r t or
1) I. Mon thru Frl Mayor a
too1

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774 -114 1

HELP WANTED:
O F F IC E H E L P no aipartooca
naadad Good tu n in g pay,
Full tlma Can a n ooc
W A R EH O U S E WORK
Im
madiatt Will train Alto Gan
a 'a lL a b o ra n H I OQO
C U S TO M E R G R E E T E R will
fully ram Good pay Slarf
now Full tlma Aft 4)00
TR U C K D R IV E R S local or long
h aul.W ith or without rig
Exultant pay Call 11*000

123 two

TE C H N IC IA N - Bath tlla rati*
ration No np arlancr nacat
*ary w ill train Entonslvg
traval M utt hava own Irani
portal.on Mutband 4 wit*
ebay m t m

the sun is out
ANO

C O M E TO

LU XU R Y A P A R TM EN TT
Fam ily 4 Adultt SacStan
Paotilda. 1 Badraomt
Manor Cava Apartmantt

AAA EM PLOYM ENT

______ Opt* Oa WaaBoodt.______

spring is here

O E N E R A L O F F IC E ........ to I m
"A ll around" offtca thlllt R
naadad hara Fllin g /lig h l
phona w o rk
C a i u i l at
motphara'
ACCTS R E C C L E R K ,___S IX ♦
Good wllh ftgjrat? It lha antwar
*• r * t " Itilt company naadt
you naw Accounting wllh
light oftica taint
*
BiAtoly par tonality gall you thlt
ona1 Phonat word pcocattlng
Slabia company

C O M P U TE R O P ER A TO R S
Good Pay Scalal Sacura poll
tiont c*ita n ooo

323-5176

TR A D ESM EN
all p h a ia t
Ercaltant pay Slant right
away i l l 4X0

IN V E N T O R Y C O N TR O L Sift 0
Navar ba ttuck bahlnd a dtt*'
Fatt pacad warahouta Blua
laant |ob

Tlrad af Job Hunting?
Call Futuraa. thay can halpl
I hay Kara ix 'a fa apanlngt.
many with na a ipar lanca
naadad Call lay Into
4 I S 4 J M _________
H O U S E P A R E M T S C h rlillan
af-altar lor abuaad 1 troublad
laani Ir t SOW
____
LA B O R E R S Strong rallabla.
gcnaral labortra naadad Im
madiatfiy Oltfarant locations
Phona and transportation a
mutt Navar a laa Apply

RELIT SERVICES
6602339
LANDSCAPE LABORERS
Valid d rlva r'i llcanta Siart
mg pay SJ SO par hour IT)
HU

E L E C T R IC IA N S Top im part
for Araa Pro|act Top Pay!
Good Banaflltl For Appt call
l m 0140 or I l) | 4)11 ba
twaanhrt off AM to 4 PM

★ LA N D LO R D S *

D R IV E (/ W A R E H O U S E ..!* STM
FC L Local warahouta naadt
g o o d d r l v a r who h a t
iigto-vltory capab.lillat Good
advancamani
MGR T R A I N ! ! .............. fa MM
Do You Hava a Salat Ability!
Th lt company It raady to train
tha right parton Ratail a plut

)

L A B O R E R S ___ ___________ SIM
R U good with your hand* and
want to work? Local company
want* to hlra ASAP Knowl
of wend a plut

* TOO WANT TO LIST *
Ducauni Faa 1 Wkt. Salary
Law t l aa Ragittratian Fta
a Na Faa Until Hirad a

bdrm on Summartin Av*
First, last and dapotil ra
quirad w/ ralavancat 121 *401
1 bdrm l i t bath, Fancad yard
Chlldran 4 patt OK SiSO mo
m nat

105—DuplexTriplex / Rent
B E A U T IF U L 1 M m I both,
carptl, •p^liafxtv Kf9#f*»d

b*(to*touftdfy mo 311 nsj

774-1341

7741344

NEEDED:

PART TIME HELP
Eacallaal appartunlfy far fha
tyfurt M U f O t
___
P a r t t lm a
d a ta a n lf y
boo* araping IBM PC aaparl
anca raquirad Call Harrtotl
Coo* J T 0 S »
P E R S O N N E L TR A IN E E
Will train to tcraan and In
tarvlaw applicant! R tquirti )
yaart Ptflca aiparlanca High
dau'*a of Intalllganca. anargy
and datira lor caraar and
growth

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774-1141
Phona Wotfc

Chninan Aatt. a Hamat
TV. kltchan. laundry, maid 1W

w* up ori an um/to «ai&gt;

t u r til thad and Unlurnlanad
H U GaylaPlaca
_________ Call m MSI_________
Laka M ary prlvata room In
hema M utl ba nontmoklng.
ra tp o n tla b la lamala Call
Monika, tv* Ml f it ! day
m k h i _______________
N lc a ly O a c a r a ta d R o o m i
lil a i
or m onthly ral*
Kltchan prlylladgat.
MBO 4 moral i l l t i l l
S A N FO R O Furnlthad roomi by
th* waak Raakonabt* ratat
Maid ta rvi(* Call m*S0&gt;
S f P M 4IS Palmatto Av*
S A N F O R D . Raat waakly 4
Monthly rata* Util Inc aft
N O Oak
Adult! 1 141 n a i

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
Farn. Aptt tor U t w CltUant
111 Palmatto Av*
__ J Cowan too Phona Call!
L o v a l y t b d rm C om plat*
privacy 1*0 par ***k. plut
S1S0 tacurlty dapktlt Call

i n t u i p m n a t ________

No aipartanca nacattary Will
train too talat Sf 00 an hour
pim bonus JOS art i)* i_______
P R O D U C TIO N P ER S O N N EL
S ANFO R D
Auto Parti Ra
buitotr C a l i n i i t i l ___
R E C E P T IO N IS T
For aiacutiya otflca Mutl ba
good typist 4 prolauional In
appaaranca Navar a laa I

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774-1141
* SALES RECEPTIONIST*
Train It caraar mmdad and a
datira to halp paopla Wa eftar
growth, talary. 4 bonut Call
Cotlaan at A A A E mptoymant
_______ 17) H74 too laa I_______

SANDER- GRINDER
• oparat* a
ttrok* tandar In C yp ra tt
Clock Factory
E* par lane*
haiplwl but not nacattary
Cypratt Intarnatlonal. 14 In
dultrlul Park. Sanford. FI*

m u k _______________

M A K E Y O U R S E L F A TH O A .E
In a complataly furnlthad ttudto
apart man I Smgl* ttory living
at Ift bail Sound ton trot tod
wallt Built In book (a tat. da
cor wall covortng Alto
1
Bdrm avaitabto
Ftoiibto tonal
San,or Clfitantditcounl
San lord Court Apartmantt
m l
______
S TU O IO C O TTA G E Ad|ac*nt
to family ham* Far working
tingto Uniittot mcludod Laka
Iron! u x plut 1X0 dapotil
E tc
nalghborhogd. rafar
anca* m 4X1

m

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
Cuitarbarj Fl the CmsiAp
1 Bdrm , l *r 1 b*M Cawda't
Prtaatt Falla 4 Carport
Wasbar/Dryar HaaAup

cttaawtdltcaowt
HI 1*ll _____

S H IP P IN G R E C E IV IN G
Raliabto. tlrong with good at
titud* Parmonant and tompo
rary potlitont Navar a faa I

TEMP PERM PERSONREL
774-1141 ______
Sugar
mark*?
atpartoncad
cathtor Affamoon ihllt and
woakandt Apply in parton
Park and Snap lSth and Park

H U R R Y Ooty a Ftw Laftl
la n ia r d
tka Braad now |
bdrm /l hat* UntN leratnad
pare*, watbar and dryar. mint
blind*
Fro m M l* a a t
Lacatad an Oak Av*. *t Park
O r bablnd Dairy Oman

BottsA ARMnCM l l ,*t|
*i* -iift

GENEVA GARDENS

SHENANDOAH^
VILLAGE
&gt; 1 0 0 OFF
S E C U R ITY
D E P O S IT
rV rw u u w Ic M

R

I IA T W M T
• A du lt 4 Family
• W / D ConnoctMkn*
• Cabl* TV . Pool
• Short farm l oo*a*

3 2 3 -2 9 2 0

u n .iN .ik .iA
*NW **—

LNUN 4

1 M B W . 2Mfc S t

SANFORD

Santoro l/wnar will h*ip Hnanc*
ipaoout convartabl* hom* 4
bdrm 1 balh! or hom* ►
mothtr In law apl Aitumafeit
*'tmortg*ea IM -O OCU l W ll
SANFORO 1 Bldg lalt with
traai, graat naighbarhaad.
canvikltnl t* tch aa lt and
thappmg Ottarad at H IM *
and H I M*

MMHwyP Y l........ ......111 SIX

IN V E S TM E N T M IN D E D
Fram* Duplaa on doutoi* lot
G ro u a t Ovor U00 mo Cony*
niant location tone* and many
a itra t Pricad *1 only Uf.SOO
Battor call to taal

CALL BART
REAL E S TA TE
R E A LTO R
U l f*»*
L A K E M AR Y ) b d rm .. I4y
balh. appllanc** Claan at a
pin U l . W
LANOSTOCK B R O K E R S

_______ m i f u ____
Long wood 174 *00 buyt a pool
hom# 1 b d rm i. living and
family room la rg * bawd ,0I
M o v * In i A t i u m a F H A
Ownar will d**l 4*u poaa

NEW HOME
Vinwevood Df L©Ch Arbor Art*
3 B drm , 7 b a lh « « t tn
kltchan oak cabinet* formal
dining room, frtptoc# p*ddto
fant. vtultad C*Htrvg» *n*rgy
patfcaga AAany
aefrat!
You haw to ta* »o appr«&lt;iat*
Opani houit Saturday end
Sunday 12 io !» efhac ftm at by
afNWfntm-tnt

PHONE 323 B463

at a iv o iv *

STe

m per

toaw otllc* Building
naar
C F R M on watt F lr tl St
Totally dacorttad raady lor
occupancy X4 to4111 sq II

A T T E N T IO N IN V C S T O ftlt 1
U n lti toufh Sanford only
117.00Q Larg* d o «n or ra
tinanca. owantr w ill ha ip

Ottlc* or Ratail South San lord
A va
10*0 lo 1140 Iq It.
A l l iO/aq It Totally rotlorod
Brick Building B l 1*11
1*11 Franch Av*
1200 tq tl
Star* Front Will rtmodol to
tonanlt tpoclflcallont 1100
par month B l I t ll

IM P A C T BONO M O N E Y !
IQ 9 t\ I Bdrm
\ bath wall
kapl homa only US 000 Call
fur dalaiii

________ B l Itll________

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL

HAPPINESS Ik ..........
A K E T T O A N E W HOM E I
F I N D IT H E R C I

Hambtaevood No monty doam
Im m ad lafa o c cu p a n cy
*
b d rm J bafh
f }\ FHA
atlumabfa Ownar financing
1709 mo I?: *00 *47 2941

93— Rooms lor Rent

Co-mm»ftij»l mo* kgany* &amp; *p9# *
fncgd with good McrtlirliBl
Hn1111 W i r t com m#nt urniil •
with OBp«nonce

141—Homes For Sale

Lifftst New...1...Used Mobile
Home Deaiei in this Aria

Mini Watihovsn

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
M O R TG A G E LOAN
PROCESSOR

141 —Homes For Sale

127—Office Rentals

IA N F O N 0 I 7 Bdrm . homa Half
acra ♦ / , brlch flrapiaca,
Urga roomi. baauffful dacor
Cecallanf condition J u t !
U4 00C
SANFOND
Nantal, 1 Bdrm
( Mi bafh |ej0 mo

V E R Y DESIR AB LE 1 otflcat
availabl* Mutl ta* to appr*
clal* Only D M par mo 121

WALL I t C O M P A N Y 1111*01
San lor* NIC* 1 badroom hom*
wllh hong room dining room
panaiad lam.iy room, laundry
room, work thap Call lor In
formation 111 U M or 114 i l l )
14) top or bail of tor
SPRING T IM E
TIM E TO P L A N T Y O U R S E LF
IN A HOME OP V O U R OWNI
SWIM TE N N IS
N**l 1 bdrm /J balh hom* with
wallad tacunty NIC* yard
carpalt. air. paddi* tan* 1
garagat clubhout*. ovartuad
pool and Itnn 111our It

CALL BART
REA L E S T A T E
REALTO R
111 M X

8765 VIA HERM0SA
) bdrm / 7 bam. qaallfy built
%4j !mI timber home, appro&gt;
1M9 M) H under atfj high
energy valve*, deep well.
tepfK iar»a. ewtfom wood cab
knelt, p riv ity tent*
1119 009
From I 4 af Mwy u n i l .
f t eretf epproR 4 ml
to tengwood Markham Rd .
then 1mi to Vfa Mermota
Huihey Realty
R I A L TORS
941 &gt;499
t »ening% 111 7US

143—Out of Stale
Property / Sale
Oanava 1 « acra Momatitot or
potubl* Mobil* Horn* Sliat
I SCO down, t r i ll as par monlh
• Y u r t 110 suo total 10%
D IK O U N T FO R CASH
CO UNTR Y W I D E R E A L T Y
B*e. R.1, Brabar............ m m i

149—Commercial
Property / Sale
C O M M ER CIAL I P E C I A U S I
LAKEMARY REALTY
REALT OR
111 fit*

Familial

A

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION

A U C T IO N E V E R Y FRI NIGHT

Where Anybody *
* Can Buy or Sell! *

L &amp; E AUCTION

For mar* detail*

a

i m m iin

Debar y Auto A Marine Sale*
Acre** t*e river, fee el Kill

174Hwy 179| Debar?—AMd

FOR E S T A T E
C o m m e rc ia l or R ttld .n lia l
Aurtlont A Appra,ult Call
Dali t Auction 131 SaJC

Adultt

5* *

2 1 7 — G a r a g e Sales

ll f l C ypratt 11 • id Nawly
rtmodaiad M utl ba movad

sixo Can 131 i74i

2 1 9 — W a n t e d fo B u y
Baby Bedt. Stroller*. Clothe*.
Playpen*
Etc
Paperback
Boob* ] ] I 4J77 J77 4*94
NEED A
W H A T CMAM At A l l IT " OR
* * T H I N G A M A G I G 1"
A D V E R T I S E FOR IT WI TH A
W A N T AD'
Need Crib* Playpen* Baby
f ur ni t ur e
clothing Good

163—Waterfront
Properly / Sale
Sanford 1 Acre 7 &gt;«*% U ! 000
W M alic tom tk i R E A L T O R
122 m i
I T . JO H N 'S R IV K R Near Oe
bary ©n 100 i 6Q0 tiw p *#ter
nenb%aptfc Can JOS 477 M il

DISCOUNT
AUTO
SALES

WE FINANCE

G A R A G E SO F U L L THE RE S
NO ROOM FOR THE CART
C L E A N IT OUT WI TH A
G A R A O r SALE AOf

1 bdrm
i t r t t n t d ptllo
carport. A C . ulIH ly ihrd
Adullt no part Park A rt
Mobil* Park 173 3*41
'tl Cancard ItiS * AduP » c
lion Carr lag* Cov* i U SOO
131 SYS I Laava maiiaga_____

.........04*tom Batch

(v a r y Wad Hit* tt I M PM

213 —Au ction s

3736593

91 — Apartments/
House to Share

Mutl hara hnowladga of madlcal
larmmology Salary com man
turatt with taparlanca

MwyX

500 Sanford Av#
C O N S IG N M E N TS WELCOME*

113—Storage Rentals

1)7—Commercial
Rentals

★ DAYTONA AUTO *
★ AUCTION A

R ID IN G S NA P PE R MOWER
W O O D BUSTER
&gt;3) *41*

CA RR I A GE C O V E Aduli t*c
2 bdfim 2 bath cernt*
U!
1* 000 I7»4fl m
MM

For quality criffmamhlp and
compatttiw pricaa t«i u« prica
Out y our naw homa

S T O R A O I TR A ILE R S
Far an tit* conttraction, ate
W ilt* Salat Ml t i g
111 afia

Car Lhaapmgf Sava yaur lha*
toaihan R.ad tfw Want Adi
tor Bait B uy!)_______________

193— L a w n &amp; G a r d e n

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

2S21 TRENCH AVE.

m 4 u p .............................m *4 M

1120 5. Sanfofd 321-4075

Call C A Farina al 111 it:*
3)’ PAN ASO N IC COLOR TV
11000 new 1 yea rt old A tiling
IW0 firm J22 10*9

m x x _________

I Bdrm U X a iB d rm 12*0
1 Bdrm 1410
12) M X
a or 12) *W I a
S A N FO R O I Bdrm . I barn apt
nlc* naighborhood air csnol
tioning S7S0 mo plut 1200
dapoalt Call John Ml SO*
I and 1 bdrm Alto furnlthad
othc toney from SfS waak U X
dapotil too patt Call B ) 450)
S-f P M t i l Palmatto_________

Tlrad of to* haadachatt Lot ut
m anag* your rantal pro
partial Protattional tow coil
tarvlca B t 14)1 Callanytlm*
Unttod in k Attactotot. Inc.
Prop Mgml 0&lt;v , Ritltor

Laka Mary Protattional m iia
will thara ) bdrm 1 bath tplll
plan with ratpontlabla parton
lad par wb D i a f t t __________
L O N G W 0 O 0 M a la ta a k t
matura lama, a to thara )
Bdrm Lakalrtnt homa Call
l)a saaf
_________
Will thara rattorad Victorian
hem# with rtiponaibt* parton
1)00 mo Inc i utlmiat 1)14X4

Maid lor Saturday!. Wlnlar
Sprlngt M u tl ha»a rafarancat
A frantporiallon »f* 0 n *
M E D IC A L
TR A N S C R IP TIO N IS T

T.V. and T.V. parts ( of salt

r e c e p t i o n i s t ..______ stag

F IL E C L E R K -------------------- m g *
T h lt p r o lt t t io n a l company
naadt high anargy parton to
Ilia and a n tw a r phonal
Barwflft and advancamanll

tr L T O t t o t Dawn
'TTD o d g a S W U X Dawn
'i t Impala f i x Dawn

SI » 1 K ir

Oitrvn 10 acra parcti ♦ told
Only t 1*11 Improved Good
a c tttt Good malar 14*00
down 13It par mo I X ODD
0 Jaltory Garland Raaltor

RtKENOOO ARMS APTS.

G R O V E V IE W Now hom* )
bdrm . 1 bath. I car garag*
too p*tt 1141 mo Ooyt I D
U l* . Evat 1ft 4*lf
____
M,dd*n Laka 1 Bdrm l bath
Cant Haat and alt 1100 mo
pluttac m W E tunings
H ID D E N LA K E 1 bdrm
J
bath tplll plan, bilndt. appu
ancoi. calling Iant P itt con
tldarod E vat M l t i l l ________
a a a IN O IL T O N A a a a
&gt; a MOM 1 1 F OR R EN T a a
_______ a a 11414)4 a a _______

Bad lifflit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
"ATI0NAL AUTO SALES

GE tolid tlato contot* Lika
naw S IX or bail ollar Mull
taa! Abtototoly no call) alto'

153—AcreageLots/$ale

mm*

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

2 3 1-C a rs

1®3— T e l e v i s i o n /
R a d i o / S te r e o

C A S IE L B E R R V - 1 acra yonad
PR I US 000 W Mahctowtki
R EA LTO R
M l ItU

Apartmanf tor rani US 00 a
waak *700 » Dapct t » H i t
attar i go____________________
B A M 4 0 0 COVE APTS.
M * E . Airport Atvd
EHtoncy O M I brpm O i l . 1
bdrm 030 pov monlh M l
M X H I MB I 1% Ditcounl lor
Samor Cl b u n t

SHINING

TOR A BOUQUET
Of FOBS

151— Invesfment
Properly / Sale

9»— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

't t Metlibu MOO deem
fO M avrruk Leer O t«n
1l i I F r*n&lt;lii Awe
_1t t 1*95
1971 Deha Royale AC 4 dr herd
*op New paint, radial lire*
breket Tune up Bailery Low
* m( 1 prev owner 11071 or
b»*t offer D t e e i i _________
1971 v w
tfseer bail t»Nr
1714011
»1 P L Y M O U T H DUSTER 6
cyl
rebuilt eftgine power
Good tond 123 74H
*t) P O N TIA C PHOENIX
Lika ne* 4 114 mi U S00
777 7414____________

-

Paying C ASH fOT
Aluminum. Can* Copper
Bra** le ad Ne*%peper
G la tv Gold Silver
* Ohomo Toot 919W Ilf
&gt; &gt; ODSAt t i i n noo
W A N T E D DF At) OR ALIVE f
Retrtgerafert Wither*
Dryer*
III i m

181 —Appliances
/ Furniture
Air conditioner, 4000 BTU |4)
f reefer cheif i cubic ft I I SO
m 2934 _______
Old Cf tfferqbe, lociing mirror
war dr obe door I US , twin
be d, f r ame m a t f r t t t l i l t
w w flS fall rrtflai 4lie hen
cabinet doort US 172 12J7
after * PM

221 — Good Things
to Eat
5TRAWBERRIE1
l »r gv b
plentiful
You or we pick
dai l y Quantity di'icounl*
Other kegetabie* BOB BALL
m a , jm j ml W Lee*bur|
U Puk Strewberrte*
Tue* Thur Sal 4910 Mailer Avt
12) 974'
911 9491

Reconditioned Appliance*
hem *9* W A R R A N T S 1 0
BARNETTS
CASSELBERRY
9)9 1111
1)0 541)
•RENT TOOWN a
Color TV*
tfereov wither*,
dryer* refrigerator freeier*
furniture, video recorder*
Specie! 1*1 week* rent fN
After native TV A Appl Rentef*
lay re* Shopping Center
277 *000
lived Wether* Part* 4 Service
ter Kenmoret ....
17) 9447
M O O N E Y APPLI ANCES

223— M is c e lla n e o u s

Ati l SON AAAIE N FU R N ITU R E
211 U S E FI RST ST
127 SA77

183—Television /
Radio / Stereo
COLOR T E L E V I S I O N
/emth IS”" color (Offltqlt1tflevt
Hon O f lg ina( price over ItQO
balance due ilia Cath or !«kt
Over payment* of g )) month
NO M O N E Y DOWN Sfill in
warranty Free 'home trial no
obligation Ceil Ail S2V4 day or
night

G A R U E N I N G T I M E ISMEREt
P L A N T A W ANT AD
W A T C H T H E CASH GROW!
R E A O V TO INSTALL. I I ”
H IG H O A I V A N I 1 E O CHAIN
LINK FENCE
ORIVE
T H R O U G H O A I E . I WALK
O A T E S A l l ACCESSORIES
B E T T E R T HAN NEW 111
N U t r i E H l PM
Rebuilt KI RBY/ Bl It 49 A up
Guaranteed Kirby Ca
214W H i St t n *449
R E S T A U R A N T EQUIP Ue
machine. IllUMM I pot cot
lawmaker
U
giuldie. 19"
Char broiler 404 7719142
Satellite TV Sy»1#m*
Complete All you need 100%
2 Inane Img No mcvwy down
t l &gt;99 00 Universal!)! *744

235-Trucks/
Buses / Vans
1971 Dat*un, camper top it am 1
fancy buf If* dependable! I9*C
&gt;22 7SB! C t l f Y Prinbng
1490 f ord J 4 ton nick up dump
truck New | nbng uphol
*ltry tune up and front end
alignmattl Apple p*t Cbndl
lion Youft lor |4W0 Dump
true k feature alone1 I* worth
170 00 a day IDS 174 774)
1497 Ford 'Bronco ALT Mew
tire* brake*. «fid(|l 1100 and
&lt; r ?■.ri p-l ya1‘iT'fi,11 J21 7711
'79 JLMC Concwd U n iiltd
Acyl automktic w/ffkN &gt;anlly
« , VOr» M.kM affinal m ilt!
!SM Daon/Caih N ti*&lt;l* A
too manfhly pcymtnli
•to ex*
..............I X X X
'8 3 Etonoling V m . 59,000 00
m b r it o lll.
I II I l l U l l u j j O

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
I f f ! DODGE II FT
MIN
M O TO R HOME MUST SELL
RV A P R IL ISth t i l 1*11 ____

243—Junk Cars
B UY SUNK C A B S B T R U C K S
f iim llf ls U IM iM r i

caff m u x m «n i__

TO P Dollar Paid tor Junk A
IIw d t kr t ffucki kfwkyy
aqulpmanl 111 Stoll
W E P AY TO F DOLLAR FOR
JU N K CARS ANO TRUCKS
CBS A U T O PARTS 3!) )&gt;*l

CALL A N Y T IM E
BEALTOIV &gt;27 4tfl

t *f*

CONSULT OUR

WE N I ED L IS TIN G S !

141 —Homes For Sale

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie Real EtUto Brakar
2444 laniard Av*
Moving to N C 4 mutt tall
b a lo w F H A a p p ra lta l
I
bdrm /l balh now kltchan.
bath, root carpatod. Iiroplac*.
fancad back carport Im
modiitooccuapancy S3). WO

i

:

h

a

» U TOU NKD
TO IRON
IN I t U ISTRTE

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

STENSTROM
REALTY'REALTOR

To List Your Business-

SanlMd’i Sales Leader
4 Bdrm /l bath complataly r*
novatad 144 XIO

321-0759 Eve 322-7443
BBAND NEW
1 Bdrm C 0 Cant Air and h**l
Raady to mov* In Dr I v* by
*04 locutl and buy tor only
141*00 Murry I M l *00

CALL BART
R IA L E S TA TE
R EA LTO R
________ M U R

MORE HOM ES TH A N
ANYONE IN N O R TH
SEMINOLE C O U N T Y
Wa v* gal HI t bdrm . I balk
ham* wltk • bd rm plan
Cawtrtl haal/alr. Lg uraanad
parch, taoetd yard M l to*
C anvtk itnl I bd rm / l bath
ham* ctot* I* tchaal A thap
pmg Kittkan fully aquippad
with pantry Cantral haal-alr
Ul.***
la tl tar you 1 bdrm /l bath
Kama with wot bar. calling
lant. ctntrtl Naat/alr, tat In
kilchaa O rttl buy US.M*

HALL

1*|f« mt

N t l lk
It H i l t 11*94 9(1

H U O E I I T O R T I * Bdrm «
bath. In Cavalry I Oahi. palm*
and fruit Iraatl Maw 4-1/1 ton
pump I Haw 1*1ar hat watar
haaltr i Duvkia tldad brick
ftraplac* 1*’ a I t ' tcraan
parcbl
Baaatilal
Vtowl
Unbaliavabto MB.***
C A L I H A L L ...............
m »ff«
F H A VA SPRCIAL. Low
p a y R ta a ll la w m a a tb l*
paymantl I Bdrm barn* to
Met tocattoal Call tor data ill I
OM* S U M
C A L L H A L L .................. 1UI114
S P A R K L IN G C L E A N P O O L
B IT S TH E MOOD FO R T M It
C O U N TR Y T Y P E t Bdrm .
b a m * to a c r a , l a n c a d ,
a u a m a k l* . a t g a a llly la g
martgaga SHAM.
C A L L N A L L ................... m Iff*

CALL HALL

Tha Natural 1 bdrm / H » balh
ham* In cairntry ( t l la kltch
aw I rthar lata plat nurtary
buunan May ba purchatad
taparitoly It*.laa
B U T NOW
CHO O SE FR O M
M ANY U N O E R CON
ITR U C TIO N I 1 Bdrm . 1 bath
hamat with cantral haat and
air, tpMtout ctotati. evttom
craftad aabtoata. much m art I
Starting tr*m 14*.to*
LOTS OF CHAR M ) ) Bdrm 1
bath ham* mt* tat In kltchan.
grM t raam paid la lant. la rft
p a n l r y , m a t h a r ln l a w
guarttrt. wall papar. nautrtl
brow* car pall AIL***

W ILL BUILD T O S U IT ! YO UR
LO T OR OURSI E X C L U S IV E
A O EN T FOR WINSONO
DEV C O R P . A C E N T R A L
PLORIDA L R A O I R I M ORE
HOME FOR LRSS M O N E Y I
C A L L TO O A Y I
a G EN EVA O S C E O L A RO. d
lO N I D F O R M O B IL E S !
I Acrt Cpwntry tract*
Wall trtad an pavad Rd
Oman I* Y r t a t IT X I

Pramsiajaai

tr*4* tor • rowardtwg
U R E A L E S TA TE C A R B IR M

323-5774
*4*4 HWY If W ________
H E R A L D R IA L 1ST A T I AO S
A R ! P IO P L I M O V !R l.
C H IC K T N I RBAt TO R ADR
A N O IN D IV ID U A L L U T IN G S
T O O A Y I_____________________
In v a tla ri Draam ] b d rm /l
bat*. Ilk* now A* llttto a*
SIMS dawn. W U S mtorotl
rat*. U U 71 PI par m a M utl
quality 114 too 1*1 X 4 I

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

we l iit a n o ie l l

It yav art Making tor a tut
catkirl tartar to Baal (tla to .
1torntram Raally to lathing
tor yaw Can Lai
today at t i l i n g
&gt;11 M U

Accounting 6
Tax Service
Prafasttoasl Taa E ig a rll X *
to rt, my affttt ar yuur ham*
Bail prtoat ( I
X . A SI*.
laag-S ll. Call a lla rt- Fla m i
Tat accountant H yuan tap*
(lanca Will prap*'* &gt;*•*• m
yen) ham* Parsonal an*
•mall buainau T X tU a

322-2420

N4* I Par*, laalard
X I Lk Mary Btod Lk Mary

Landclearing

Painting

O I N E V A LAN O CLEAR INO
Lol antHand (laarlrtg,
fill dirt, and hauling
Call sa* ta xo r m I Ml
LANDCLEARI NG
( I L L DI R T . BUSHOGGING
C L A Y A SHALE 11)1*11

PiofnsiOAil CusteiR Painting

Firewood/Fuel
T R E E S E R V I C E R FIREW OOD
FOR S A LE C A LL A FT E R
a P M 13) fOU

Additions 4
Remodeling

General Services

REHOOCUK SOCIALIST

S A M TR A N S C R IP TIO N
Med ice) Tremcriptiee
» &gt; 1422

Wa Hand la
Th* Who)* Ball Of Waa

I. L LINK CONST.

322 7029

Spring Yard Ctoaa ap

Car gantry, pfumkang, I Metrical
You Nam* I lf ________ Frto I If

Appliance Repair

I l f Ha&gt;torman. R tf Ralixl*
Fraa Eal rnotl any |ob Baal

_______ m i &gt;*/

Ulittl Anuli naye fwnAre
H k r. laratoa Ma l i t r a Charga
if yr. tag. U » s x i , siagtM
F a il. BBBBR!g*lg appllaixa
x rv k a Mott malar branch
W a r r a n t y l a r v l c a far
W hlrlpaa l, A m a » a.
Katrina tor. Hatpam* AXhiay
Aggtxnc* 1 T V . M l l l « l

Building Contractors
AD D ITIO N S R IM O O I L I N O
•III sir lag C u t tom Buitotr
SiatoLK
RROOJIM *

IK-7411
Carpentry
R ( M O D I L l N O .... R I PAIRING
Rafaraocaa........... Vary Raiukt*
m * f t i/ X M * -----------f f t m i u r

Cleaning Service
la w

Sato * Oaafr. Ut. m » X

UAID5- Ta -0(6n
C ltk kllaxi to M i l T * Btotix aa
Baryte*

Law Rato)

CALL N0N133*4404

Lawn Service
AC E LAW N SERVICE
Ma infant n&lt; a Sodding Pruning
Cloaning Thatching Fartillllng
Fra* Eaiimatas
Ski I f l l
Lawn Mainiananc*
Lartoac aging Ruth Hog Mowing
H ! SOM___________

LAWNS MONEO 6 TRIMMED

Handy Man

F Inoclng Availabl*

• H*M Sit W

CALLANYTIM E

Electrical
R E S I D E N T I A L W IR IN 0
lotoar/ Outtfaar LtgM.ng
Sarvlt* UggraBat. Aayfhlx
Etartrxal Fra* I fftmalai
S.nca IYXI Call
Ta m 'i Ito cfrK Sarvx* 111 III*

___

^atoa^^U^CaMAnjhm^

OuttLiAR I m -

C A N 'T U S ! ITf
WHY K I t P I T f
S E L L W I T H A WA N T A0

Home Improvement
^ RemedelMnf
Na to* Taa Small
I I I Burton L a x . Saotor*
____________ tll-UM___________
Plumtolng. Painting E tortrk
Car gantry Own I Sn* Ilf Aak Ral
IB y rt j u g
RAL 331X41
Scrtan Ranmk. Aluminium SIR
mg, guttort. car pantry can
craft, gal lot. rapalrt Fraa
Etllm ato* ... L k
H i i*F«
TM O M A I A THOM AS Ham*
n g * !r, ctoaafag. law* la rt
Call M l M X

'J 1

Com gifts L i r a Cr ib
RfASOflAbif I f t R l

3234401

Health A Beauty
TO W E R 'S B I A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y Harrtotfa Ratuty
Nook SI* E lit St m SJJ3

H S lH I

Masonry

Paper Hanging
P A P IR H A N G IN O
Any X X walkaatrlng

............. n s ia x

Plastering
• A L L Plaaaaa*) Pit ator tog •
Rapaw. Mucca. Hard Caat.
tfnaatalad Rrkk. H I EXE.
Ar* you a Flaarf Than toll
afkara at yaur x rv k a through
Wan) Ada I

Plumbing
Rapalr a Raptaca a Ri
• Fraa ■altosatoa a

UW&lt;Oradtow__^WMiM

H tm i

H urting Care

Secretarial Service

OUR R A T E S A R ! L O W E R
Latov law Hurting Cantor
f If I Sacand SI . I

A LL SECRETARIAL AN D
W O RD PROCESSING SVCS.
Natary Pubfk....... Ouailty W art
Rt a u n t My PrkadCaH Anyfanaa
111 I X ) .......... Vtoa/ Mattorcard

m»n?

Painting

a of ail Irpat
Car pantry gatnflng. plumbing
artoatocfru n ) MM

G A R A G E SO F U L L T H I R I 'S
N O ROOM FOR TH E C AR T
C L E A N I T OUT WI TN A
GARAGE S AL! ADI

Call M IM AS

W A L L R A P IR IN O ...R A IN T IN O
Rytarancaa
. Vary Raliabto
l l l f f l l l l R f ........... W n i l H !

P R I V A T E A MORI 11 fkOM RI
COM M ER CIAL

R taairt a“
to* fob too small

CARPENTER

W irin g Cantral Fla tor IS yr*
with rompiato quality paint
mg tarvicaa Qualify a Must
Spaclal n a ilcaaltng i n M i l

B E A L Carver!to ) man gratify
opart Han Paltot. d n x w a y t
D a y ! 131 m i E u t ! M&gt; i n i
D H f a k y Cane rata
Haat* H a t ) a Dr lu x a Fall*!

C A L V IN R T O M S
t X u x Painting A Wan Fapaf
Yaw Buy malarial!
Wa supply labor T t SAVE S U
m mi
_______
r will
paint yaur Horn* or ButlrtoM
ale G lu t four probtomt lg Vt
WC C A R E Qualify aw k. M
y rt ta p TV m l l k card

Hom a Repair*

*T O N Y C O R IN O *

Pressure Cleaning

Tile
S c a t l m a n n Tl l a
’ rta a v ra
C la a n in g CaraffllE, V i n y l
AabaSXa All P h a m P C i
Brick Hanx* Buaingaau
Fraa (a f Raaaanabto n t a / r i

Tree Service
■ CHOLS T B I I S ER VIC B
t r w E atimatoal Lm* R r k x I

Lkanaad/inaurad/ R ) H it
JO H N A L L IN E LAWN A T R I I
Dead Ira* ra.-na.ai L k . Rina
Frataaf EH i m

�•¥

I'

*^

** 1 ‘ %r■&gt;"».

t #

*B— Evening Herald. Sanford. Ft.

BLONDIE

Tuesday. April 3. IMS

by Chic Young

Personality, Behavior
Are Affected By Stroke

by Mort Walker

B E E T L E BAILEY

by Art Sanaom

T H E BORN LOSER
6LACY5, EVtKY TIME 'CU WOVE TV&amp;
aR.'CUHCCLE WTW IMEMMQDRl

by Howie Schneider

E E K &amp; MEEK

D EA R DR LAMB - A friend o!
mine had a stroke, and when I
talk to her she seems to have a
good memory but very little
control of her emotions. She
cries easily and she was never
known to cry before. Also, she
laughs almost beyond control. Is
this typical of someone after a
stroke'?
•
DEAR READER - It happens.
Not everyone who has had a
stroke has the emotional pro­
blem that you describe, but It is
not rare. Emotions are as m uch
a part of the brain s function as
are m o ve m e n t and speech.
When certain areas of the brain
are dam aged, emotional re ­
sponses will be changed. Per­
sonality and behavior also can
be changed.
That Is why the minister's wife
may be shocked when her
formerly gentle husband uses
foul language and becomes
abusive. Th is Is one of the most
difficult things for the Immediate
family to rope with and to
understand.
In addition, many stroke pa­
tients experience a depression
after a stroke. This Is u n ­
derstandable. and It should be
treated as a depression. The
sudden crying spells you de­
scribe m ay decrease In fre­
quency and the patient m ay
regain m uch better control of his
emotions.
Strokes are common, but
many of them can be prevented.
The things one can do to prevent
heart attacks are the same
things one can do lo prevent
strokes.
DEAR DR. LAMB - The front
half of m y nose has become
quite red the past six months. A
skin doctor said that my condi­
tion was telangectaslas. In which
small blood vessels seem lo
shoot out In oil directions, lie
said that W .C. Fields was an
example of the condition In the
extreme. I resent this compari­
son. since I do not drink at all
DEAR R EA D ER - My sugges­
tion would be lo see a different
dermatologist. Ask your family
doctor or county medical society
for o recom m endation. You
probably have rosacea Those
small blood vessels can be ob­
literated with electrical cautery,
which In painful but effective.

Dr.

Lamb

S e v e re ly d e f o rm e d noses
(rh ln o p h y m a l can even be
operated upon to remove excess
enlargement and reshape the that causes the blood vessels to
dilate may be a factor. Th is
nose.
Most dermatologists believe Includes coffee, tea. hot bever­
t h a t a r e g u l a r c o u r s e oT ages. spices and alcohol.
tetracycline or other antibiotics
Early adequate treatment may
helps to clear up many of these prrvent progression
conditions.
fjciul tour questions to Dr
This condition occurs In peo­
ple who have never had a drop of L i m b /’ &lt;&gt; /lot 1551. R.tcflo City
alcohol In their life. Anything Sl.ltIon Nett fork ' 1 iOOIff

ACROSS
1 Donkey t cry
5 Actrtta Bal-o
8 H.llvd# (Scot I
12
Raton

florid*
13 Gloria m
•■ceitr* —

14 Hsctno l&gt;th
15 Ka'Ol#"*

lantern
16 Malay »o*
17 UnrU of sour '
18 Intormodittt

(•aw)
20 Tint knotted
fsbnc |comp
wd|
22 Oriental
24 Contesting
28 Attacking
dovics
32 Sl'ppory
33 Ntwts
35 Sou*
36 Oirk
37 Baby’s toy
41 Stamlik* part
42 Weird
44 Manly
48 Spaadari
sound
52 Adam s

Anawer to Previous Puwle

9 Musrcal p pa
10 Helper

11 Instance list)
19 Horse &lt;sl.|
21 Madeot |sutt|
23 Integrated cir­
cuit (ebbr|
24 fipenenced
person
25 Measure ol
time
26 Actress Chase
27 Russian veto
word
29 Undershirt
30 Region in
Morocco
31 Treed
34 Regard
38 far (prat.)
39 Room to move
40 Sound of
hesitation
41 East Indian
weight

43 Vines
44 V«e president

50 Rivtr in
Normandy
51 Scruff hair
54 Rather than
(poet)
56 Mild oath. In
Britain

45 Regarding (2
wds I
46 Laugh
boisterously
47
ot Wight
49 King David's

grandfather

(H I

grandson

53 Ckmat* nv#f
55 Vaunt
57 Pertaining to an
ag*
58 Measure ol
land
59 Sicilian latent
60 father (Fr I
61 Okay
62 Act

DOWN
Banal (abbr I
Wanda'
Highest pomt
Mouths |s! |
Cruises to
Im&gt; inactive

6 Teachers
qrnup (abbr )

7 Of an artery
8 Nuon pel
Reboro

44

4%

44

4?

W
M
so

Idtsas U .

m

a

WIN AT BRIDGE

by Wurner Brothers

BUGS BUNNY
uer h £R g o .\

we
0 0 2 INC?

i~ T
rfi? r

B y J tm c a Jacoby
Any bridge player ran cash
out (hr tricks In his long suit on
defense against no trump Hut It
lakes expert foresight to refuse
to takr an available fourth trick
against three no-trump. That
was what happened In a recent
train-of-four match
At one table the bidding was
as shown. West led the king of
hearts. When he continued the
suit, his side look the first four
t r l r k s . N e x t t he ki ng of
diamonds was played. Declarer
won Ihe ace and played out all
five club tricks. Eventually poor
Wrst hud to either unguard the
spades or throw the queen of
diamonds away, so Ihree no­
trump was made on a squeeze.

' The bidding was the same at
the second tabic, with the same
opening lead. At trick two. a
heart was continued lo (he ace.
and a third heart was played,
won by West's 10. Without
cashing the fourth heart. West
now tabled the diamond king
Declarer won the ace and
played out all the clubs. Just us
at tabic one. but now defendrr
Wrst was able lo discard his
lourth heart on Ihe fifth club,
t h u s p r e s e r v i n g bo t h ( h r
diamond queen and the spade
suit control By not playing the
lust heart winner. West gave
himself an extra card to play at
the end, thus a voiding the *
squeeze

N o n T ii
♦ K4S12

« I IV

T il
♦AJ
♦ Q J 7*
EAST

W EST
♦ q J * *(
v k g 10 5

*1
» A J 43

♦ K g to

tu rn

A 1

454 1
Mi l T i l
♦ A 10

V 974
♦ 547
♦ A K t o« a

Vulnerable Kasl-Wrvl
Dealer West
Wr»t
North Citl
South
1+
I’au
I'm
74
I'au
I'a u
7N T
♦
I'au
Pm
Pass
1 NT
l‘sa&gt;
Opening lead VK

HOROSCOPE

—

What The Day
Will Bring...
by Bob Thavat

FRANK AND ERNEST

WS’L-L HAV5 T O
/* A h ?

AFT

£ ° U N P

i

A L L ..........I

E P

TH EY
Fa

»T

tee?

l l in g

THe

o ff

ep&amp;.

H
«

}

by Jim Davit

GARFIELD
HERE l AM.GARFlElP THE CAT.
POOAAtP TO SPENP TH E R E 6 T
OF AAV PAVft IN THIS S T O P lP
M A IL BOX. WHAT A CRUEL
T W I S T OF FATE

Y O U R B IR T H D A Y
A P R IL S . 1988
Several Influential contacts
you've developed will be work­
ing on your behalf In Ihe year
ahead. Th e y 'll open doors for
you that you couldn't budge on
yo u r own.
ARIES (March 21 April 191
Fvrn though you may feel anx­
ious and uneasy about some­
thing another Is doing for you
today, you'll be better off If you
stand back and let this person
use his ow n methods. Looking
for romance? The Matchmaker
set can help you In your seurrh.
To gel yourm, mall 42 to AstroGraph. Box 489. Radio City
Station. New York. NY 10019
T A U R U S (April 20 May 201 Do
not suffer In silence If you need
assistance from others today.
You have several dear friends
who will be happy to try to make
life easier for you.
OEM INl (May 2 1-.June 20| Be

optimistic when Involved In a
competition today. Th e odds are
tilted In your favor, so con­
centrate on winning, not the
opposition.
CA N C ER (June 21 -Ju ly 22) In
your ambitious undertakings
today you might be u trifle slow
getting your plans Into gear.
However, once rolling. Ihe re­
sults will be Impressive.
LEO (July 23 A u g 221 Your
first Ideas may not he your best
ones today, so be prepared to
make adjustments In case they
don't work out. Your second
thoughts will be m uch wiser.
VIROO lAug 23-Sept. 22) Do
not be an Impulsive buyer today.
Instrad. lake ample lime to do
comparison shopping. It will
take some real digging to find
bargains
LIBRA ISept. 23-Oct. 23) In
your one-to-one relationships
today, people you'll be Involved
with will take their cues from
you. If you're easygoing, they'll
respond likewise.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 Nov. 22)
Someone you know on a friendly

Itasis m ay be In u position today
lo pull a few strings for you that
could give your carrer a boost,
Rrqucst his aid.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Put friendship above your
personal urnblllons In carrer
situations today. Don't do a ny­
thing that ruutd cause someone
who likes you to think leas of
vou.
C A P R IC O R N |Dec. 2 2 -Ja n .
19) Today you must be careful
nol to ju m p lo conclualons
brforr all Ihe farts are In and
analyzed. Your early Infonnatlon
could be either limited or dis­
torted.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 10)
Your possibilities for personal
gain look hopeful today, pro­
vided you fully develop the
opportunities presently available
to you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Things In general should work
out fortunately for you today bul
this won't be due to luck alone.
Good things will happen because
you’ll use your smarts to get
what you go after.

by Laonard Starr

••'If

f t •f

V

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152108">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, April 02, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152109">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152110">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on April 02, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152111">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152112">
                <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;, April 02, 1985; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152113">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152114">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152115">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152116">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="15244" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="14858">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/e02d5f0411cb9a747166d05ba5f9e095.pdf</src>
        <authentication>7d1cf412069d2d30db415c0432ab9c60</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="152107">
                    <text>77th Year. No. 185 Wednesday, March 27. 1985—Sanford, Florida

4

Evening

Herald

(USPS

481280)

Price

25 Cents

N e w W e lls To B e C ity 's H e d g e A g a in s t D ro u g h t

By Rick B rn n ion
Herald S ta ff W riter
To make sure Sanford won’t
run out of water four more
wells will be drilled at the
city ’s Oregon Avenue well
field.
The Sanford C ity Com ­
mission voted Monday to pay
lor the wells with money from
lnq&gt;a(t fees. They will cost
between M 7.000 and $50,000

each The commission also
approved spending $5,573 to
finish work on the existing well
at the well field.
Workers today were laying
pipes that will connect the well
to the city’s water plant. That
well, along with the four new
ones, will bring the number of
wells at the field to five.
City Manager Warren E
"Pete” Knowles said he antici­

pates each new well will pro­
duce about a million gallons a
day. That would boost the
city's water capacity to about
12.5 million gallons per day.
Knowles said It Is difficult to
determine when the new wells
will Ire operational. Bids have
to be taken and contracts
awarded before construction
begins.
Because of recent low rainfall

levels, water demand has been
running at about 7 million
gallons a day. putting a strain
on existing supplies.
Knowles said lack of rain ran
boost w ater con su m p tion
about 20 percent. When It
rains, nature takes care of
watering lawns
The situation Is not critical
but Knowles has ordered the
water pressure to be slowly

lowered until the area gets
more rainfall.
T h e city did get som e
breathing room lust week
when the area received about 4
inches of rain.
“ The rains this week helped
tremendously." Knowles said
In addition to providing
water for Sanford, the city
s e r v e s L a k e M a r y , th e
Midway-Canaan area and the

Tuskawilla Projects Vetoed

112-Count
In d ictm en t
Says G E
B ilk e d U .S .

Homeowners Score
Against Developers
By Donna Eatea
Herald S ta ff W riter
ll was a victory for residents of
the Tuskawilla-Bed Bug Lake
roads urea when, after three
hours of public hearings, the
Seminole County Cnmmhtslon
turned down three proposed
developments near their homes.
The residents presented the
same arguments they gave the
county’s plunulng ami zoning
commission last week — Red
Hug Lake Road and Tuskawilla
Road a re now Im p o s s ib ly
lammed with traffic, schcals are
already overcrowded, the area
doesn't need any more commer­
cial development, development
Is Imparting water and sewer
service. The planning and zon­
ing commission earlier voted to
recommend two of the three
projects.
B u t C o in m I s s I o n e r B ill
Klrrhhoff made the most con­
vincing arguments against the
p la n s . W ith P u b lic W orks
D irector Lurry S e lle rs and
('o u n ty IMa n ni ng D ire r lor
Woody Price In the audience,
Klrchholl asked a series of ques­
tions
lie asked Sellers almtil the Red
hug Like Road Tuskawilla Road
In te rse ctio n and how It Is
classed
Sellers said II Is classed " E .”

'Ho (Kirchhoff) is
one bravo soul.'
m ean in g more v eh icles go
through the Intersection of the
two two-lane roads than It was
designed to accommodate and
drivers have to sit through two
or three changes of lights at the
traffic signal during peak traffic
hours.
He said an " E " Intersection Is
one In which drivers feel trapped
and frustrated by the Inability to
move. Of Red Bug Like Hoad.
Sellers said It Is carrying more
vehicles than It was designed to
carry now without considering
any further development
Kirchhoff questioned Price
about how much commercial
zoning the comprehensive land
use plan envisioned for the area.
Price said 25 to-30 acres Is
recommended In the plan and
"well In excess of IOO acres"
already has been rezoned for
commercial development in the
urea.
Kirchhoff said he had listened
to the homeowners at the hearmg He asked when was the lust
lime Impact fees to developers
had been changed In the area
and was told Impact fees were

M other, Kidnapped Son
Reunited A fter 10 Years
HOUSTON (UPI) — A babysitter watching
television recognized the baby picture of a
youngster missing for more than 10 years,
ieadlng to a tearful reunion with the mother
the boy thought was dead.
Adam Michael Hick* was 17 month* old
when hi* father. Michael Hick*, abducted him
on Oct. 9. 1974. For year* Marta Jo Smith,
with the help of police and private In­
vestigators. searched for her son.
The 12-year-old boy wo* reunited with his
mother Tuesday In Houston, three month*
after contacting Child Keyppers. a Lake Worth.
Fla., firm that searches for missing children.
Elizabeth Smith, an attorney for Smith, said
a hearing was scheduled today In San Antonio
to determine If Adam can return lo Colorado
with hts mother.
J o Ann Currier, president of Child Keyppers.
said Adam's purents were divorced In Denver
when he was a baby. His mother was awarded
custody, with his futher receiving visitation
rights
Michael Hicks took hi* son one weekend and
never returned. Denver police looked for Adam
for three years before giving up the search.
But In January. Smith saw an advertisement
for a missing child on a Denver television
station. She called the toll-free number,
explaining she too hud a missing child. Could
they help her?
They said chances were very slim of finding
a child missing more than four years, but put
her In touch with Currier.
With only a photograph of Adam at age 16
months to go on. Currier printed posters with
his picture and biographical history on them.
She also lUmed a television segment that
showed Adam's baby picture.
A day later. Currier got a phone call from a
woman In San Antonio, who said she was
Adam’s babysitter for two years. She said the
same picture that appeared on TV hung In the
family’s living room and the child's name was
Adam Hicks
Hut. she added, she had not seen the child
for more than two year*.
Adam was Ister located In Houston.
"T h e school counselor at our request
brought Adam from the classroom." Currier
said. "They talked about his mother. He said
he would like to meet her sometime. The
counselor asked. ‘Would you like to meet her
now.’ and he said, ’y es."’
Elizabeth Smith said the youngster "was
quite pleased to meet his mother, talk with her
and leave with her."
Currier said Adam's father had told the boy
his mother was dead, A Denver police
spokesman sold charges could be brought In
Colorado against the father.

«&gt;ci eight years ago and haven’t
l&gt;een changed since
Impact fees are the fees devel­
opers are asked to voluntarily
commit to pay for the Impact
their development will have on
roads, schools, fire service and
sheriffs department service.
To the complulnts from the
residents that so much commer­
cial development Is being built
that doesn't uppear to be eco­
nomically feasible and Is muklng
their area unuttrncllve. Kirchhoff
said (hat often projects are not
going to be economically feasi­
ble. but are built as lax shelters.
He also said that the residents
have put the commissioners In
the |K&gt;sltlon of defending develo|&gt;ers and that II Is going to t&gt;c
more ami more difficult for them
to continue doing this.
"I hope they are going lo start
listening." Kirchhoff said of his
colleagues. "I like to see good,
orderly development. Sometimes
If wc say something Is pre­
mature. the developers will come
bark with n better development
plan. I hope the commissioners
will look carefully at this and not
grunt the request."
Kirchhoff s remarks were met
with a burst of applause from the
a u d ie n c e o f a b o u t 2 5
Tuskawllla-Red Hug laikr restSee SCORE, page 0A

H*r*M rs*«« fey T»mm» VMwwrt

Snake Stalker
Ten-year old J a y Culver of Hidden L ak e provide* a valuable
service for neighbors — catching snakes. Here he poses with
a 4-foot, 5-Inch w ater moccasin he shot with a pellet gun. But
he doesn't alw ays kill his prey. A non poisonous black racer
he caught for Don Brown, 223 Pine Winds D rive, was
release^ in the woods. Jay Is the son of Jim m y and M arla
Culver, 304 Loch Low Drive.

3 Down, 1 More To Go For MX
WASHINGTON (Ul’ll - President
Hr.ig.in'* pressure has driven home
three congressional Victories on the
MX missile but opponents t&gt;elleve
they have one chance lelt to run down
the controversial program
Last week. Reagan went to Capitol
Hill and successfully lobbied senators
to vote twice for Ihc MX. This week,
the administration had buses bring
IOO House members to the White
House for more persuasion
The arm-twisting worked as Reagan
won a narrow House victory Tuesday
In u 219 213 vole authorizing $ 1 5
billion for 21 of the 10-warhead
weapons In fiscal year I9H5
The House's decision brings this
year's light to a final ballot In that
chamber, expected Thursday If the
MX wins, production continues If It

loses, the missile would be dead for
this year.
The House Tuesday bought the
argument of Reagan and others,
among them chief U S arms negotia­
tor Max Kampclman — brought t»ack
from Geneva. Switzerland, for lastintnutc lobbying — that the negotia­
tors need the MX to help win Soviet
concessions.
But House Speaker Thomas O'Neill.
1) Mass., u leading missile opponent,
saw the vote differently
"Today we approved the concept
Tomorrow we look at the price lag."
he said, referring to arguments that
the ultimate prtce tug on the missile,
taking In silo hardening, will exceed
$40 billion.
"T h ere reully Is a tremendous
chance to turn this around In the next

couple d a y s." said opponent Ed
Murkey. D Mass
Al the White House. Reagan called
the vote "un Important and tinmlslakablc signal of American unity and
resolve" to the world
"America has sent a message, loud
and clear, that we back our negotia­
tors and we will continue to do so.' he
said. "Today's vote was a vote for
peace."
The MX will stay on the congressio­
nal agenda. Reagan has requested $-1
billion for 4H missiles In fiscal 1986. a
figure many members said was sure
to be trimmed as u condition of
support In the latest round of voting
As he did Iasi year. Hcugun got
much help In saving the MX from
Rep Les Aspln. D-Wls.. the chairman
of the Armed Services Committee.

Road Issue Stalls W OFL Plan
To Relocate In Lake M ary
By Roger Simmons
Herald S ta ff W riter
Plans by Orlando television
station WOFL. Channel 35. to
build a new broadcasting facility
In Lake Mary were delayed
Tuesday night when Ihe city’s
planning and zoning board
tabled the station's preliminary
proposals until Its April 23
meeting.
The motion to delay action on
ihe station's request came after
It wus learned the Lake Mary
City Commission did not take
action on a road that would
provide access to the land WOFL
has In mind for the station.
Lake Mary City M anager
Kathy Rice said the proposal to
build Skyline Drive was tabled
by city commissioners Thursday
because they did not receive all
the Information needed for the
project. She said city engineer*
did not have an opportunity to
obtain all the data needed before
the meeting. The commission
decided to delay voting on the
project until Its April 4 meeting
William Taylor, a consultant

Indian Mound Water Associa­
tion near tne eastern edge ol
Like Monroe.
Lake Mary Is building Its
own $ 1 4 million water plant
with Its first phase experctcd
in be in operation In De­
cember.
The 23-acre Oregon Avc
well Odd was acquired last
\car In the midst of the EDM
water contamination crises.

for WOFL. told Ihe planning and
zoning board that If the con­
struction of Skyline Drive I* not
approved the station might
change Its plans to move to Lake
Mary.
"T h e station has In their
contract that the roadway must
be under constuctlon before they
purchase the property." Taylor
suld.
Planning and zoning board
member Buzz Petsos said since
the city commission has yet to
discuss the construction of
Skyline Drive. Channel 35's
proposals should be tabled until
they do. The board voted unan­
imously to delay decisions on
ihe station's requests until the
April meeting.
WOFL came before the plan­
ning and zoning board with two
proposals
First, the station wanted ap­
proval for a 3 section division of
a 20-acre parcel of land along
Interstate 4 near Lake Emma
Road The land is owned by
Triangle Park Trust and WOFL
lias an option to buy a five-acre

tract on which It hopes lo build
the station's new headquarters.
Second, the station wanted
approval of a preliminary site
plan that outlines the placement
o f th e s t a t io n 's prop osed
$4 million. 2-story building on
the five-acre parcel. Besides a
34.CXX) square loot building, the
site would also house a 200 foot
broadcasting tower and two sat­
ellite dishes.
Jim Doyas. chief engineer for
WOFL. said he was disappointed
with the board's decision. But
Doyas agreed with the planning
and zoning board that the city
c o m m is s io n 's d e c is io n on
whether to approve Skyline
Drive Is critical Hr said Channel
33 would not build in Lake Mary
"If we can't ge, »o the site."
Doyas also said that board s
decision to delay the project
might force the station to obtain
an extension on Its option to buy
the five-acre plot. "But It’s been
extended several tim es and
could be extended again." he
said.

PHILADELPHIA IUPII - A
federal grand Jury has charged
that General Electric Co cheated
the government out of more
than $800 0 0 0 on a $47 million
defense contract by altering
employee lime cards without the
employees' knowledge
The n ation's fourth-largrxt
defense contractor, a current GE
employee and a former one were
accused In the 112 -count In­
d ictm en t. II convicted, the
company could face up to SI
million In lines.
Alter llie Indlcimenls were
announced Tuesduy. GE re ­
le a s e d a s t a t e m e n t s a y lug. "There was no crim inal
wrongdoing on the pad of GE or
Its employees "
The company said It was
confident ll could work out all
the Issues arising Ifom Ihe case
and said ll was willing lo
reimburse the government lor
any Im proper charges that
might have been made
The Indictment charged GE's
R e-Entry S y stem s Division,
localrd In Philadelphia and King
of

P r u s s ia ,

had

a

s e r ie s

of

contracts wlllt Ihc Air Force to
replace existing re entry vehicles
on Mlnulemun Intercontinental
Ldllstle missiles with a new.
iqulated vehicle.
The project, known us the
MK-I2-A program. Included
contracts for lest equipment and
related computer software pro
grams needed to Insure Dial the
missile and Its new components
would function pnq&gt;crly If actu­
ally launched.
One ol the MK-I2-A contracts
(or lesi equipment was a Used
price Incentive contract, which
meant that all costs over an
agreed-upon celling could not lxpaid by the Air Force but had lo
Ire absorbed by Ihe company
This agreement was known as
the "second buy contract."
The Indictment charged that
between Ja n I I960 and Apr ll
1983. GE defrauded Ihe gov
■rniiient by claiming more than
$H00.(XX) in non reimbursable
overrun lalror costs on the "se c­
ond buy contract" by charging
the costs to other government
contracts.
The Indictment charged that
time cards of re-entry division
employees were altered without
Iheir knowledge.

TODAY
Action Report* .....5A
BB
Bridae
Classifieds...... 10.1 IB
&amp;B
8B
IB
Dear Abby......
Death*
6A
Dr. Lam b.......
8B

Editorial......
F lo rid a .....
Hospital.......
Nation..........
People..........
Sports...........
Television
W eather.......

3A
IB

The Seminole High School girl's softball
team committed 10 errors but still
managed to upset Lake M ary Tuesday
9 6 See S P O R T S , page 7A

Judging By Its Cover...
WARWICK. H I. IUPII - School officials
have banned a booklet on the metric system
because the cover shows a buxom bikiniclad woman and lists her measurements In
millimeters
George McLaughlin, director of secondary
education for the Warwick school system,
said the 11-year-old booklet was deemed
"offensive and discriminatory" after an
ungry parent complained.
"W c came to the conclusion that by
today's standards It Is at the very least
offensive." McLaughlin said. "There are
many other things that can be used In Ihe
teaching of metrics.”
w m m m ^ rn m m y

�tI

were selected from approximate­
ly 3 0 0 nominees the station
received.
Mrs. Morris said that she first
found out that she would be
nominated for the award about
two months ago! While at a
themselves to help others and meeting of the PTA. Seminote
surely deserve to be thanked for C ou n ty S u p e rin te n d e n t ol
that commitment," said Nlckl Schools Robert Hughes told the
S a r n c r , Com m unity Affairs council that he was nominating
Director for WCPX-TV. channel Mrs. Morris.
G. the local sponsor of the
An Inch-lhlck packet of letters
JefTerson Awards program.
praising Mrs. Morris was pres­
Ms. Sarncr said that Mrs ented to the Jefferson Awards
Morris and four others, none of selection committee. One of the
those from Seminole County. Irlirrs. written by Hughes, said.

1 A —Even in g H ir a t d , Sanford. F I W ed n esd ay, M ir t h 37, I H J

Seminole PTA President
Receives Jefferson Award
Jeanne Morris, president of the
Seminole County Parents and
Teachers Association, was one of
five people wlto received recoglntlon for public service with
a Jefferson Award.
The awards, presented by the
American Institute for Public
Service, are a way of recognizing
people "w h o dally give of

when she found out she was a
winner, "I was really excited."
she said.
Besides serving as president of
the 10.000-member Seminole
County PTA for the past two
years. Mrs Morris is also a Girl
Scout unit coordinator serving
Lake Orlenta Elementary School
and a member of the Lyman
High School Local School Advi­
sory Committee. She has done
volunteer service for Hospice,
the Legal Aid Office and formed
M d iTls."
True to form. Mrs Morris said a committee to explorr adding a
she was In Tallahassee working morr extensive art program at
on an education com m ittee Lake Orlenta.

"Her countless and significant
contributions to education In
Seminole County have been In­
strumental In Improvement* In
curriculum, citizen Involvement,
facilities. Instructional materials
andm anytuher areas." In'said.
"Named after the one who gave
so much to make life more
meaningful and m ore beautiful
for all ol us. the Jefferson Award
w ould be a meaningful w a y to
recognize the efforts of Jeanne

Jean n e M o rris

BASEBALL
GLOVES
Reg. UP TO $24.99

C L E A R A N C E .... C L E A R A N C E ....

SAVE in 50% HARDWARE&amp;AUTOMOTIVEspecials
™
Iv
W
r n n t i n i l A C
.... t u n i m
u e s

/V

SELECTIO N S INCLUDES: SOCKET SETS, METAL TOOL BOXES. PLIER KITS. COMBINATION WRENCH
SETS, AMP JACKSTANDS. HEAVY DUTY TIRE PUMPS, AIR &amp; OIL FILTERS, CAR WAXES &amp;
PASTES....ALONG
.. .ALONG WITH MANY MORE ITEMS AT GREAT SAVINGS!

Sale starts Wednesday, March 27th at these participating stores:

2670 Orlando Dr., Sanford, Florida 32771
H

EAGLE S T O R E S HAVE LiEEN SOLD

SALE

SAVE

i

l

*

1

7

T.’ H W M f l

�•t»

t . .—I

Poll Results Not Even Close

NATION

Evening Herald. Sanlord. FI.WodnoMUy. March 77, IH J -J A

WEATHER

W a te r C u sto m ers
B ack Flu o rid atio n

IN BRIEF
Sanctuary Movement Members'
Concern May Get Thom Jailed

A poll of Seminole County
water customers on whether
fluoride should be Injected Into
their water supply Is In and
those who responded voted more
than 3-1 for fluoridation.
R o s e a n n H u n ter o f th e
county's environmental services
department said Tuesday that
2 . 2 2 9 o f th e c o u n t y ' s
8.000-9.000 water system cu s­
tomers filled out the ballot
printed on their February water
bills. Of those responding. 1.716
voted for fluoridation while 513
voted against.
Ms. Hunter said the results of
the poll will be formally reported
to the county's utility steering
committee at a 10 30 a m m eet­
ing April 12.
Members of the committee
Include C om m ission er B ill
KlrchhofT. chairman, and Com­
missioners Sandra Glenn and
B o b S t u r m , C o u n ty A d ­
ministrator Ken Hooper. County
Attorney Nikki Clayton. Deputy
County Administrator for devel­
opment and Planning Director
W oody P r ic e and A c tin g
Environmental Services Director
Cindy Wright.

BROWNSVILLE. Texas (UPI) — Fifty congressmen have
asked a federal Judge for leniency In sentencing the first
two Sanctuary Movement workers for transporting
Salvadoran aliens In defiance of Immigration laws.
Jack Elder. 41. director of a Homan Catholic sponsored
refugee shelter In San Benito. Texas, and layworker Stacey
Lynn Merkt were to appear before U S District Judge
Fllemon Vela for sentencing today.
Llder could be sent to prison for up to 30 years and fined
928.000 on a six-count conviction for conspiracy and
landing and transporting three Salvadorans last November.
Mcrkl. convicted twice In the past year, could receive up
to five years Imprisonment and be fined $10,000 on her
conviction for conspiring with 'Jlder to transport the
Salvadorans, plus another 9 0 it. ys In jail because Vela
revoked her probation Tuesday.
The Sanctuary Movement Is a loose network of 180
churches that have declared themselves religious
sanctuaries for Central American refugees
Courts have ruled that the United States has an
overriding Interest" In controlling Its borders that
outweighs Sanctuary Movement members' claims that
Immigration laws violate their freedom of religion to grant
sanctuary to the downtrodden and persecuted from Central
America

Congressional Report Blasts NRC
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Nuclear Regulatory Com­
mission Is plagued with management problems that have
led to a decade of regulatory (allure, says a congressional
report In a scathing assessment of the agency.
The 10-month study by the House Appropriations
( ommlttee staff criticised several asperts of operations at
the NRC. which Is responsible for the licensing and
regulation of nuclear power plants.
The rr|&gt;ort Issued a three-pronged attack of the NRC's
five-member commission charging It is hamstrung by
distrust, the near-equal authority of any commissioner to
contest any NRC action and a misunderstanding of roles,
responsibilities and authority.
The report alsocrltlclxed the NRC for:
—"A costly lack of discipline" In often needlessly
requiring a nuclear plant licensee or applicant to do
additional analysis or plant structural changes
—Regulatory umhlgulty and excesses
—Not using "whatever accomplishments" have been
made In Its research program to prndurr changes In
regulatory requirements

The committee authorized the
poll last November At that time,
county H ealth and Human
Services Director Dr. Jorge Deju
said he was "about 95 percent In
favor of flu o rid a tio n ." The
county's health department
cu rren tly provides fluoride
treatmem for 5.000-6.000 ele­
mentary school children on a
regular basis upon request.
Dcju said the stair will provide
funds for the equipment to Inject
llunride Into the water supply
and will pay all operating costs
for the project during the first
two years
Alter that the county utility
system would have to pick up
the lab for fluoridation There
are no estimates available on
those costs
The county provides water for
u n in c o r p o r a t e d a r e a s o f
Seminole County plus some sec­
tions of Casseli&gt;erry and Lake
Mary.
C o m m is s i o n e r B a r b a r a
Christensen has said before the
county begins any fluoridation
program. II It ultimately does, a
publlr hearing on the matter will
tie held llrst
—Donna E ite s

AREA FO REC A ST: Today
m ostly su n n y and a little
warmer with high around 80.
Wind southeast around 10 mph.
Tonight fair and not as cool with
low mid 50s to near 60. South
wind increasing to 10 to 15 mph
by morning Thursday mostly
sunny, breezy and wanner with
high In lower 80s Wind south
15 to 20 mph.
BOATING FORECAST: Si
Augustine lo Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — Wind southeast 10 lo 15
knots today becoming southerly
and Increasing to 15 to 20 knots
tonight and 20 knots Thursday
Sea 2 lo 4 feel today and 4 to 6
Icel tonight Increasing Thurs­
day. Mostly fair
E X T E N D E D F O R E C A ST :
Partly cloudy Friday becoming
mostly cloudy with a chance of

showers or thunderstorms north
Saturday, spreading to south
Sunday. Rather warm but cooler
north Sunday. Lows averaging
mid 50s extreme north to 60s
south but low 70s keys. Highs
mostly In the 80s but 70s north
Sunday.
AREA READINOS (0 a.m.):
temperature: 64; overnight low:
5 2 . T u e s d a y 's h ig h : 7 6 ;
barometric pressure 30 37; rela
live hum idity: 72 percent:
winds east at 7 mph. sunrise:
6 22 a m . sunset 6:4 0 p.m.
THURSDAY TID ES:
Daytona Beach: highs. 11:58
a m .. 12 21 p.nr.: lows. 6:13
.» m . 6 : 0 9 p . m . : P o r t
Canaveral: highs. 11:50 a m .
12:13 p m.: lows. 6 04 a m . 6 00
p m Bayport: highs. 6 08 a m .
3:57 p.m.; lows. 10 36 a m.. —.

SEMINOLE COUNTY
RESIDENTS
CH ECK YOUR MAILBOX THIS C O M IN G WEEK
FOR YOUR C O P Y OF THE
SEMINOLE COM M UNITY C O LLEG E
SUMMER TERM SCHEDULE.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF

■vaci

Lewis: Teeth Needed
In Anti-Fraud Laws
TAMPA (UPI| — State Comproller Gerald Lewis says his
d etrim en t faces two major problems In the fight against
fraudulent Investment schemes and the Legislature will be
asked to correct them.
Lewis told a news conference Tuesday his department Is
hampered by lack of adequate legal authority to require
subpoenaed company records be provided promptly
enough for Inspection, and lack of resources to effectively
monitor company operation*.
He said the Legislature will be asked to pass a bill which
would expedite receipt of such records by giving the court
the (Miwrr to order a company to stop business unless the
records arc provided Immediately, or as a last resort. Jail
company officials.
He said under existing law. the state can subpoena
records but companies can delay the process for months
through rourt challenges, while continuing to do business.
Lewis said the Legislature will be asked to fund six more
positions within the Division of Securities, three of them
financial examiner analysts, one a fiscal assistant and two
clerical.

Sales Tax May Attract Navy
PENSACOLA (UPII - In the latest fusllade In the ongoing
battle to attract a Navy battleship group, a northwest
Florida county commission voted to ask the Legislature for
a I cent sales tax to pay for dredging Pensacola Bay.
The Escambia County Commission Tuesday voted 3-2 to
seek legislative approval for the sules tax. that would
generate an estimated $12 million to 916 million during
the year It would be In force. That money, plus promised
funds from the stale, would pay for the 936 million
dredging Jot).
The tax. however. Is contingent upon the Navy choslng
Pensacola from among the six Gulf Coast ports vying for
the group that will Include the USS Wisconsin, a World
War 11-era vessel the Navy wants to reactivate.

STOCKS
Them guololient proceed tr member* at Fiona* F n o
the Helienel Auodi'xm «/ietvrihet Deeter\ a
ere repreten'e'rt inter deeter print et el F Ik P ro g ratt
mid morning (otter liter debtor mertett Bn
chenge throughout the dor Print do net MCA
Hugnoc Supply
Include retell mettupmert derm

l*'«

Atlantic Bonk
6erneI! Bank

M orrl ton I
MCH C o rp

n ns
m o ion
________ re »w
....... m w

i* i* %

------JBVt MN

on

..—.MW

Pint FKtelity SAL

HOSPITAL
NOTES
Twrttt
ADMISSIONS

a t

ion

~,.jrb I7W
M

CeeSrel Ftertea

a

.......... ISW it**

MN

E v e n i n g H e r a ld
MMpItol

iu s p s

«st rsoi

Anyone can give you an IK A. lint arc
they giving you ways to make every dollar
work to its full capacity? We do. And we’ll
custom -design your IRA with any or all of
these options.
M O N E Y M A R K E T IRA : A Inghyiclding account for the short-term investment
o f your funds. T h e interest rate changes with
current market rates. Miur hinds are never
locked up in this account, and additional
deposits can be made at any time. A mini­
m um deposit ofSIOO qualifies you tor money
market rates.
jK -M O N T H VA RIA BLE KATE IRA:
Extremely high rate ( a full 1% above our 6 month C D rate with an 8% per annum
m inimum) that is subject to weekly changes.

Funds are in this account for an 18-month
period, and additional deposits can be made at
any time. SUM) m inim um .
1 1X1 D -R A T E T 1 M E D E PO SIT
ACC( )U N T S : Lock some or all of your funds
into various high rates for differing lengths o f
time with maturities from 3 to 6 0 months.
S I,000 m inim um .
S E L F -D IR E C T E D IRA ; A combination
M O N E Y M A R K E T IRA and D IS C O U N T
B R O K ER A G E SE R V IC E to buy and sell
stocks anil bonds at your discretion, and at
commission discounts of up to 70% less than
full-cost brokers.
put your IRA fund to work at full
capacity. Visit any Atlantic Bank or call our
toll-free financial hotline, 1 -8 0 0 -3 4 2 -2 7 0 5 .

Wednesday. March J 7. lf$ J
Vol 77. No 1$)

Atten B OviBury

Published D aily sad Sand er, aacapl
Saturday By The la n ia rd Marald.
In c. MB N. FrtetcB Aue.. la n ia rd .
F la . m n

O lIv sR Kinder
Mary C. Ranttc*
Me r r F William*. Deltona
Peggr M latte * le k » Mary
Hornot C MlMn. Loko Mary

'

Sacand CUM Potla«a Paid at la n ia rd .
Flo rid a m n

DISCNABOBS
Chart** ( Bwrko*
Naomi J Janet
Mary L . StmmpMn
Chariot Klmlnoci. Deltona
e relyn X at Motet. Deltona
O Lynn l . Spentor . Qottona
Lavra A Scott and BoBy girl. San lord
Brenda L SancAtl and baAy hoy. DoNona
Tommie K B om and baby bay. Bam Park

• %•

a*

Hama D e live ry : Week. SI.IS ; Month.
M M : ) Month!. Sie.XSj » M onts*.
Sir M i Y e a r.S S I.M . By M a ll: WaaB
S I.M l M aalh. l i t e r 1 M antb*.
S it .M i t M aatkJ. S Il.S B j T a a r .
SM M .
ISM I m » u .

Atlantic Bank
The Best Bank Around
Atlantic National Bank o f Florida with IIS Branch Office* Statewide
M em ber F l ) L

�1

* ... \

Evening Herald
(U IP S 411-3*0)

3 0 0 N FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322 2 6 1 1 or 831-9993
Wednesday, March 27, 1W5-4A
W ayn * O. D o yle, P u b ltih a r
T h o m at G io rd an o . M anaging E d ito r
M olvln A d k ln t, A d v a rtiiln g D lroctor

Home Delivery: Wrrh. *1 IO: Month. M 78: 3 Month*.
• 14 23. fi Month* &gt;27 00: Year. *51 00 fly Mall Week,
• I .SO; Month. $6.00; 3 Month*. $18.00;6 Month*. »32 SO
VrarSPOOO

Leaning
On Mexico
MrxU-un authorities. recovering It seem s
from a series of false starts, at last closed In
on those who kidnapped and murdered U.S.
drug enforcem ent agent Enrique C am arcna
S a lazar last m onth. T h e apparent progress In
th e ra s e and the fact that som e of the ch ief
s u s p e c ts arc th em selv es M exican police
officers underscore two Important realities
affectin g future U .S.-M exican relations.
First, the now-aggresslve efforts by M exican
au th o rities to resolve the C am arcna case
d em onstrate that the government of M exican
President Miguel de la Madrid is, In fact,
sensitiv e to diplom atic and econolm c pre­
ssu re from W ashington. S o sensitive, In fact,
that Mexico officials are willing to endure the
scand al of having to arrest and charge som e
of their own police for the murder o f a U.S.
governm ent em ployee.
W hat Is more, President dc la Madrid Is
tacitly acknow ledlng the extent of drugrelated corruption within the Federal Ju d icial
P o lice and the F ed era l S e cu rity Police
especially. That helps explain the growing
role of the Mexican arm y in trying to disrupt
the ram pant drug trafficking In several
M exican states
W hich brings us to the second reality so
starkly Illuminated by the tragic C am arcna
ca se . Officials of the U.S. Drug Enforcem ent
A gency had It right m onths ago when they
w arned that police corruption In Mexico was
destroying any hope o f curtailing the flow of
drugs com ing north across the Ixirder. The
DEA could not have been surprised that six of
th ose charged In the C am arcna case In recent
days were Mexican police and that a seventh
was a form er policem an.
It Is this evidence of widespread corruption
In ih c m iddle-echelons of Mexican police
ag en cies that should Im- particularly wor­
risom e to the adm inistrations of Presidents
Heugan and de la Madrid. It m eans that Mr.
de la Madrid, who has won fair to good m arks
for attacking corruption, cannot cud the
collaboration between drug traffickers and
police In Mexico sim ply by replacing a few top
olfteluls.
Bill the deeper the corruption bought and
sustained with drug m oney, the more reason
W ashington Inis for keeping the pressure on
M exico City In do som ething effective about
II. lirlnglng Mr. C um arena’s kidnappers und
m urderers to Justice would Ire only the first
step. Any effective counterattack ugulnst the
drug traffickers and their police accom p lices
w ill r e q u ir e s u s t a in e d p r e s s u r e fro m
W ashington.
Choosing Ihc right sorts of pressure und
applying them In just the right am ou n ts will
call lor very cureful Judgm ents, to be sure.
Stem m in g the tide ol cocaine, heroin and
m arijuana Mowing Into the United S ta te s from
M exico Is an obvious American Interest. It Is
not, however, the only or even the most
im portant American luterrsl In M exico these
days. The health o f Mexico’s econom y, (In­
stability ol Its jxdltlcal system and M exico's
role In Central A m erica each transcend the
drug problem.
More Immediately, the Heugan ad m in istra­
tion must take cure lest Its prodding on drug
m atters be seen as a form of political
Interference Just us seven of M exico's largest
sta tes prepare for gubernatorial elections.
That could Ituckflrc to damage a conservative
opjxtslllon building at local und state levels
ugulnst M exico's ruling Institutional Revolu­
tionary Party,
So. U.S. pressure on Mexico for progress In
the drug wars must be ImiIIi deft and discreet.
Hut unless It Is also firm and sustained, the
sorts of crim inals who murdered Enrique
Cuinurcnu will be breulhlng easier soon
enough.

B E R R Y S WORLD

DICK W EST

H azard Lurks In Innocent- Looking Egg
WASHINGTON (UP!) - 1 am grateful lo the
Agriculture Department and the magazine
Dynamic Y ean for pointing out some of the
safety hazards associated with Easter, which Is
coming up a week from Sunday, or April 7. to be
precise.
Anyone who has been Injured by an Easier
egg may not need to be reminded of the safety
rules, but the rest of us tend to take Easier more
or less for granted.
We may Ignore the perils that possibly are
lurking In hard-boiled colored eggs, or overlook
the fact that underdone Easter hams may be
teeming with trichina parasites.
"Trichinosis results from eating pork that
contains trichina parasites and has not been
fully cooked." the department advises
So be certain not to eat any raw ham this
Easter.
An Agriculture press release explodes a
number of well-entrenched myths, such as the
notion that dyes used to color eggs may be
unsafe.
I take this to mean It s the shell that causes

Indigestion, not the dye. Eat fewer egg shells
this Easter and you should have no need for
Alka-Seltzer.
The department also notes that bacteria can
"multiply dramatically If eggs are lefi at room
temperature for long periods."
Dynamic Years agrees that eggs not re­
frigerated after they have been hard-boiled "can
become a sources of staphylococcal food
poisoning.”
In other words, don’t hide Easter eggs In
out-of-the-way places where they likely won’t be
found until the next day. Or the next week. Or
the next Easter.
You surely don’t want any dramatically
multiplying bacteria around your abode, do
you? My advice lo anyone planning an Easter
Egg Hunt Is to make certain all are found In a
reasonable length of time. The eggs, that Is.
If a few hunters are lost for several days, well
that certainly heats trichinosis.
But what, you may well ask. about eggs that
have “a greenish coating on the yolk?"
Not to worry. The department assures us that
"harmless green discoloration Is a natural

rhemlcal reaction betweeen sullur In the egg
white and the Iron In the yolk.”
If. on the other hand, the ham sandwiches you
might find in the rrfrlgerator after Easter have a
greenish coating reminiscent of that seen on
General Grant’s siatuc. better look for another
kind of leftover.
Neither the magazine nor the government,
alas, deal with the types of accidents that are
likely to occur at public Easter Egg rolls of the
sort held on the White House lawn.
Be warned, however, that hard-boiled eggs
rolling down grassy knolls at high rales of speed
can cause nasty bruises and contusions. Direct
hits may even cause sprained ankles.
And errant children rolling down grassy
knolls at high rales of speed are even more of a
menace.
Fortuantely. President and Mrs. Reagan will
be spending the holiday at their California
ranch, so they will be well out of the line of fire,
so to speak. However, any pedestrians who visit
the Executive Mansion on Easier Monday
should be aware they will be slghtserlng at their
own risk.

ROBERT W A G M A N

AN TH O N Y H ARRIG AN

Export
Controls i
Feud

Listen
To The
Producers
NEW HAVEN. Conn - I visited
Yale University (his week to debate
trade Issues with Dr. Jam es Tobin,
the Nobel Prize winning economist
who served on the Council of
Economic Advisers In the Kennedy
a d m i n i s t r a t i o n . L ik e m o s t
economists, liberal or conservative.
Dr. Tobin Is a slrlcl free-trader. He
Isn’t botherrd by Ihc flood of foreign
goods, 1 took the position In debale
a I Ihe Yale Political Union that
current U.S. irade policies are
having u devastating effect on
Ainrrlcun Industry.
The debate look place only days
after President Reagan announced
dial the U.S. would lift restrictions
on Japanese automobile Imports.
The day after the debate, the
Chrysler Corp. announced that It
would not expand unto production
In die USA und would start buying
more automobiles from Japan for
sale here.
Ironically, on the trade Issue the
President Is heeding the theorists
Instead of the people who are
responsible for creating Jobs and
profits Only days before Mr. Reagan
announced whal Sen. John Danlourth (R MO) has described us a
"unilateral concession to Jap an ."
Robert A. Stranahan. Jr.. Chairman
of Ihe Champion Spark Plyg Co,,
pleaded with Ihe President not to lift
the quotas. He charged that Japun
"has successfully deslroyed much
of our Industrial base by outright
sabotage wlih their government
subsidizing many products" He
asked Mr. Heugan "Why not listen
to the producers In this country who
are responsible for creating Jobs und
opportunities Instead of the academ­
ic community which hasn’t the
slightest Idra whal has mude this
country operate successfully?"
The economists lor Investment
houses ure gelling the picture even
It the White House Is not. The chief
economist for E.F Hutton prrdlcts
dial the Imports surge will cause
economic stagnation In the United
Stutes In the second half of the yeur
Is unyone In the president’s office
listening to E F. Hutton?

JE F F R E Y H A R T

WASHINGTON INF.A) - Recently,
the news has been full of reports
that critical U.S. military hardware
and technology Is being diverted to
countries that are forbidden to have
It This allegedly Is occurring
because U.S. agencies are lax In
enforcing laws that prevent such
Illegal transfers
One story stated that 87 Hughes
helicopters were Illegally shipped lo
North Korea and that Customs
Service officials did nothing to
prevent this — although they were
aware of ll for more than 18
months. In another story, a high
government official charged that the
Soviets have been given technologi­
cal secrets due to lax security In
num erous governm ent d ep a rt­
m ents. Including Defense and
E n e r g y and the N a t io n a l
Aeronautics and Space Administra­
to try lo evade Ihe suction lube. It
tion.
appears to open Us mouth at the last
These revelations are shocking —
moment. Abortion proponents are
Vet ihe reason these slortes are
saying a) that since It does not have
upjx-nrlng is a story In Itself, and It
air In Its lungs II cannot really
Involves one of the most biller
• e ttu i. and h| that tU neurological
power batilrn In recent m e m o ry .
system has not develojied to the
The accusations are linked by a
point where It can feel pain. Well. I common factor — the Commerce 1
don't know altotii these fine jrolntx.
Department:
hut no one can watch the movie
— ll was Commerce Secretary
without understanding that some­
Malcolm Baldrtge who claimed that
thing very serious Is going on there.
the Soviets had benefited from lax j
Under some circumstances. In my
security.
opinion, abortion may be the least
of several evils, but we should know
— it was Commerce’s Inspector
whal we are doing In a clear-eyed
general whose report, leaked to Ihc
way.
Washington /'ost. accused Customs
3. Is a communist regime really
ol falling lo stop helicopters from
accejuable In Nicaragua? The ma­ going lo North Korea.
jority of the Democratic Parly are
— Finally, lor the last three years.
advocating |&gt;ollctrx that lead to just
Commerce lias waged a near-war for
such it conclusion. My information
greater authority over administer­
Is that the Reagan administration
ing -sport controls and Investigat­
has Informed the Soviet Union that
ing violations
any advanced military aircraft In
troduced Into Nicaragua will InUnder the Export Administration
blown up. So far. Moscow lias taken Act, Commerce can grant smite, but
ihls thrrat seriously But tin- ail
not all. export licenses The Defense
ministration Is also pursuing a Department controls export licenses
policy ol military and diplomatic lor weapons; Treasury grants finan­
pressure tli.u inis a good chance of cial licenses, and Its Customs
altering (hr nature of the Managua Service Is In charge of |iollclng und
regime
Investigating violations. Commerce,
If I were a liberal, I certainly however, wants to centralize and
would not want to Ire placed in the run the entire opr-radon
|H&gt;*lllon of defending Crntral Amer­
The power dispute has become
ican communism, i could do a
1
b e tte r Job of defending germ rxtremely bitter
A Treasury official gazed out of
war la re. or even busing.
his window ut the Commerce Depa r t m e n t b u i l d i n g a c r o s s
Pennsylvania Avenue, saying. "1
P le a se W rite
guess It's a good thing that Com­
L e tte rs to tbs editor arc
merce does nol huve enforcement
welcome (or pabUcatlon. All
types authorized to carry weapons
lottora moot be signed and
— otherwise, there might be a gun
Inclndo a malting ad d rass
battle m the middle of Pennsylvania
and, if possible, a telephone
Avenue,"
number. The Keening Herald
Disputes like this are often settled
re se rv e s tbe right to edit
In ihc Oval Office — but for now. the
le tte rs to evold libel and to
While House is steering clear and
accommodate space.
leaving the decision up to Congress.

3 Propositions

A lew years ago I appeared
regularly on a CBS show called
Spectrum, matched with a liberal,
the wit and columnist Murray
Krmpton. For these weekly bout*
the rule was dial we would alternate
In suggesting topics of Interest to
disagree on. One week. I suggested
racial busing for school integration.
In defense of which Murray did his
best. After the show, he lurnrd lo
me and said. okay, next week you
defend germ warfare.
That, lu fact, did not come lo pus*
— but I rrcall It liecuuse of the
extraordinary rhetorical situations
today's lihrrul* have been reduced
to. On three of the most prominent
Issues currently under debate the
left I* defending three propositions,
which 1 myself certainly would not
want to Ik- forced to defend in public
debate, viz:
1. That Mutual Assured Destruc­
tion Is preferable lo Reagan's Star
Wars missile defense proposal.
2. That the felus. In fact, docs nol
scream.
3. That u communist regime In
Nicaragua Is acceptable.
lu lite abstract, every weapon that
man lias ever devised has been
countered by another weapon...
technology moves on, und It Is
Inevitable that a system neutraliz­
ing the ICHM will al some point In­
feasible My own Information Is that
A lle n S i n a i , e c o n o m is t ut
(here hove been startling technotog
Sheurson Lehman Brothers reports
leal break!hrougtis within Ihr just
that production Is moving out of (he
few years that bring that point
country. Unquestionably, without a
much closer It Is with Ihe prospect
change In trade policy. American
In mind that the defense may I k manufacturers will be forced to
o v ertak in g the offen se where
relocate plunts to Mexico, the Far
missiles ure concerned that Presi­
East und elsewhere.
dent Reagan gave the go ahead on
All this seems to disturb the Star Wars.
2. That Silent S cream movie Is
academic free trade purists not at
all. Perhaps they are too Isolated causing all sorts of trouble. Using
and Insulated from reality. The special electronic techniques. It
reality amounla to factories shut shows fairly clear lmagrs of a fetus
down und working people on being alxirted The felus does look
like a small human being It seems
welfare.

JA C K ANDERSON

Agencies Battle Over Disposal Rights

" W ill, doing In co m e fa x Is a lot like doing sixthg ra d e story p ro b le m s you don't u n d ersta n d . "

WASHINGTON - Poisonous
chemical wastes are piling up by Ihe
ton every day In the United Stales,
und burning the toxic stuff at sea In
giant Incinerator ships Is thought by
muny experts to be the best solution
to the growing problem.
But officials of the Maritime Ad­
m inistration complain that the
Environmental Protection Agency
luis deliberately discouraged com|x-iltlon in the putentlully lucrative
incineration Industry by favoring
one company overall others.
Maritime’s Immediate concern Is
u $55 million loan guarantee it gave
to u rival llrtu. which will need EPA
approval to operate Us ships — and
to repay the loan.
In Its zeal to protect the Interests
of Its anointed company — and
others that might want to enter Ihe
field — Maritime has wrapped Itself

In the flag EPA's chosen linn,
Chemical Waste Manage men l, uses
foreign-registry Indue rut Ion ships
for its EPA-appruved waste burning
research In the Gulf of Mexico.
" T h e term s of the proposed
sj-cdal permit to Chemtcul Waste
Management. Inc " for Ihe Gulf of
Mexico Incineration
.—re very
prejudicial to one company con­
d o lin g o c e a n -in c in e r a tio n
technology In the United States with
foreign flag ships." stairs a Mari­
tim e m em o o b tu ln ed by my
asso ciates Corky Jo h n so n and
Dunuld Goldberg,
The company th at Maritime
backs. At Sea Mnc.. Is building two
Incinerator ships In this country,
and will operate them under the
U.S. Hag.
Maritime officials also savaged
EPA for ullgedly writing Its draft
Incineration guidelines with special

focus on the chemical PCD — of
which Chemical Waste Manage­
ment lias a huge stockpile In an
Alabama waste dump.
The EPA’s “subject strategy." a
Maritime memo charged, "propose*
an extensively time-consuming,
redundent. burdensome. Inefficient
und expensive research maze Into
which only the most well-heeled
o ce a n in cin e ra tio n firm with
particular interest In burning PCBs
would dare venture."
The memo led little doubt that
Chemical Waste Manage me nl was
the well-heeled firm 11 had In mind.
The suspicious Maritime officials
also claimed that EPA set out lo
sabotage tbe Inter-agency board
that favored a speeded up program
to build U.S. incinerator ships. And
at least one EPA scientist supported
this view

Noting that EPA replaced one
consulting firm that had been
w orking on re g u la tio n s with
another that was "nol familiar with
the Incineration at sea process." the
EPA official wrote: "ll appears to
have been another effort lo discredit
the board."
The official added that EPA re­
searchers familiar with the program
hud been taken off the task force.
This prompted an outraged re­
sponse front Maritime, saying: "It Is
ludicrous that the EPA work group
Is not utilizing the romblned expe­
rience and talents of (these repre­
sentatives)."
Footnote: An EPA spokesman sold
Maritime officials were no louder
th an "a n y o n e e ls e " In th eir
expressions of concern over EPA
permits issued to Chemical Waste
Management.

�Even in g H e ra ld , Sanford. F I.W e d n e sd a y . M arch 17, I t t i —JA

It Took 4 Y e a rs, B ut M a n J a ile d In B o a t M o to r T h eft
It took time to track It down.
v&gt; there was probably a lot of
miles on the outboard motor that
was reported stolen In 1981.
Two men have been nabbed In
connection with selling and
possessing the motor. One was
arrested In Seminole County on
Tuesday and another man who
reportedly had the motor was
charged In Voulsla County on
March 7.
The Florida Game and Fresh
Water Fish Commission officer
who made both arrests reported
recovering the 25 horsepower
motor when he arrested Joe
Sterling tn Volusia County.
Sterling reportedly told the
officer he bought the motor
about a year ago from an
Altamonte Springs man. Sterling
said he paid around $200 for the
motor, which had had Its wiring
cut and serial number removed,
an arrest report said.
The officer tracked down the
suspect who allegedly sold the
stolen motor and arrested him at
ills home at I) a m . Tuesday.
The man reportedly told the
officer he bought the motor from

a man he met In a Sanford bar In
early 1981. He paid $300 and
the transaction was made tn
cash with no receipts given, the
report said.
Donald Edward Dletsch. 49, of
5 5 0 Iris Road. A ltam o n te
Springs, has been charged with
dealing In stolen property In the
case. He was being held In the
Seminole County Jail In lieu of
$8,000 bond.
BURGLARIES &amp; THEFTS
Firearms. Including at least
three shotguns, were stolen from
the hom e o f Eugene Paul
Kuprockt. 55. of 2491 Island
Drive, Longwood. on Monday.
Deputies reported the Items hayc
a com bined value of about
$1,800
Two stereo speakers with a
combined value of $300 were
stolen from the home of Darby
Neptune. 31. of 313 Sandpiper
Court. Casselberry, between
M arch 22 and M onday, a
sheriffs report said,
Items worth about $1,200.
Including a battery charger, a

Home Phones For Business
Use Defeated; 150 Persons
'Violating1 Existing Law
Saying ll would lx* lrn|xjsslblr
to enlorce, the Sanford Ctty
Commission has voted 4*1 to kill
a proposal which would have
allowed professional business
people to operate from their
homes using ihelr telephones or
written means of communica­
tion.
Tin* defeat came Monday on
the heels of tlit* Planning and
Zoning Commission's 6 0 rec­
ommendation Thursday lo deny
the proposal.
Dubbed the "resirlcled home
o ccu p a tio n " am endm ent. It
would have let physicians, at­
torneys and other professionals
living In residential ureas to
operate their business from their
homes using "written or verbal
contact" only. No products or
m a te ria l would h av e been
allowed to be processed at the
p e r s o n 's hom e u n d e r the
amendment.
Proponents have said the
amendment was needed to make
legal a practice that is already
occurring In about 150 homes.
Opponents say the amend­
ment would lx* Impossible to
enforce lx*eausr the city can't go
into peoples' homes to make
sure ihey urr professionals uml
are using their phones prupcrly.
It was on the Issue of enforce­
ment Hull the proposal was
dashed al Monday's commission
meeting

"A s tar as I'm concerned It's
ImjKisslble to control the thing,"
Commissioner John Mereer said.
Commissioner Milton Smith
agreed, saying It would lx* Im­
possible for the police lo patrol
residents’ phones.
It Is the commission's Job.
Mercer said, to protect the public
from such Intrusion,
Hul Commissioner David Farr
countered that It Is also I hr duty
of the commission to protect the
property rights of others He said
the proposal would do that by
letting people use their homes
for businesses as they wished
He said the issue was not phone
use but home use.
"W e’re hung up on the phones
and the phones are not a pro­
blem ... It has nothing to do with
telephones," Farr said. "What
this change would allow Is for
someone to operate a business
out of their home.”
During public d iscu ssion ,
Robert Keith, of 808 Clinton Si.,
Sanford, said ihr amendment
would “ water down" the zoning
regulations covering residential
areas and allow businesses to
creep In.
"We can't enforce It; we can t
pollre It. That’s my real pro­
blem." Keith said.
No one from the uudtcnrc
spoke In favor of the proposal.
—Rick Brunson

Rash O f Accidents Pushes
Year's Death Toll To Seven
The year's traffic death toll In
Seminole County climbed to
seven In the past two days with
t hree separate accidents.
Three men were killed In­
stantly Tuesday at 8:33 a m.
when Ihelr eaatbound Bronco
was struck head on by a semitractor carry a load of sand.
The 70,000-pound rig veered
from Its wesbound course on
state Road 46. east of Geneva,
when Its front driver's side tire
blew out.
Killed In the wreck were
Uronco driver Gary Rubin Miller.
34. of Orlando: David Andrew
Chorba, 21. also of Orlando; and
Jam es F. Karnes, 25. of Prlncetown. W, Va.. according to the
Florida Highway Patrol. All three
worked for an Orlando architec­
tural firm. Slottlcr. Stagg and
Associates Michael Thigpen. 57.
of Rocklrdgc. driver of the semi,
received minor Injuries.
No charges have been filed.
In a n o t h e r f a t a l i t y , an
HO-yeur-old Oviedo woman died
about 12 hours after she was
Involved In a one-car accident In
Oviedo Monday.
According to an FHP report.
Minnie W illiam s, of Doctor
Drive, was a passenger In an
eaatbound ear that left the right
side of stale Road 434 about
1:15 p.m. The driver over com­
pensated and the vehicle ca­
reened across the road and
smashed Into sonic trees, the
report said.

Ms. Williams did not appear
hurt after the accident but was
admitted to South Seminole
Com m unity H ospital,
Ixxigwood, where she died early
Tuesday, according to an Fill*
report.
The c a r 's d riv er, Maggie
Brown. 6 5 , of Oviedo, was
charged wllh careless driving
She was unhurt.
In a third accident, a Sanford
man was fatally struck by a car
as he tried to walk across U S.
Highway 17-92. Casselberry.
Monday night.
William E. Poffrnberger. 55. of
4536 Marquette Ave.. died about
2 hours after the 9:35 p.m.
accident near Seminole Plaza.
Casselberry police said Poffenberger was walking across
the highway from the west side
when he was hit by a car driven
by David Thomas Clssel. 48. of
65 Tradewinds Road. Winter
Springs.
Clssel was not Injured, No
charges have been filed, ac­
cording to police.
Becau se of P offenberger's
extensive Injuries, he was flown
by helicopter rather than trans­
ported by ambulance to Orlando
Regional Medical Center where
he died around 11 48 p m.
—Desna Jo rd an

KEEP YOUR
CITY CIEAN
The Sanlofd City Commis­
sion has dsclsrsd the month
of March as “Clean-Up"
month for the City of Sanford.
The Senford City Commietlon urges ell resldente lo
Join In Ihla effort end keep
“The Friendly City" e cleen
end boeutiiul city.

U n ite d W ag

MARCH '85
"CLEAN-UP MONTH"

spray gun, a sander and a
grinder, were stolen from a
trailer In a fenced yard on Rand
Yard Road. Sanford. The theft of
the Items, which belong to
Paymar, an Independent con­
tractor. occurred between March
22 and Monday, a sheriffs report
said.
STUCK WITH CHARGES
An Indiana,man landed In Jail
after a Seminole County sheriffs
deputy stopped to help him free
his vehicle stuck In the sand.
The deputy reported that when
he asked the man for Identifica­
tion he produced a suspended
driver's license. A computer
check showed he was wanted for
grand theft.
The man was arrested at 7:37
p m Monday on state Road 419
at Willingham Road. Oviedo. He
was charged with Improper use
of a driver's license and on a
Urrvurd County grand theft
warrant, a sheriffs report said.
Jack Leroy Sullivan, 50. of
Logan sport. It id . was being held
in lieu of $5,100 bond In the
case.

—2 06 p m . 1500 S. French
Ave., rescue. One man was
A ctio n R e p o rts
Injured In an auto accident.
Thomas Lcssonda. 21. of 110
★ F ire s
Starling Court. Sanford, had a
★ C o u rt j
headache but refused treatment.
—2 33 p.m,. "7 Higgins Terrace,
* Police Beat
fire A car caught fire, sparked
by a defective carburetor. There
were no injuries and the amount
CAT WOUNDED
Lawrence Mound. 29. of 817 of damage to the car was not
Suwannee Drive. Forest City, reported.
reported to deputies that his —3:32 p.m.. 25th Street and
6-month-old cat was shot In Its Ridgewood Avenue, fire. A small
rear legs between 6 3 0 p m and grass fire was put out without
10 01 p.tn, Tuesday. Mound was Injuries or damages
not at home when Ihe cat. which — 1 4 6 p.m.. Seminole County
was In his backyard, was shot. vial I. rescue. A 4 4 -year-old
The cat may have to lx* de­ woman who was vomiting pro­
stroyed because of Us wounds, a fusely was taken to the hospital,
—6 54 p in . 13tlt Street and
sheriff s report said.
French Avenue, rescue Tw-o
women were Injured In an auto
TIRE CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department accident. Betty Freeman. 40. of
3202 Orlando Drive, Sanford,
responded to the billowing calls.
Monday
was taken to the hospital with a
—1.07 p m . Airport Boulevard loot Injury. Sherel River. 19, of
near the S e m in o le County 3202 Orlando Drive, was trans­
Health Building, fire. A grass fire ported W'llh a possible broken
was put out In alxmt an hour itlpand leg
Tuesday
with no Injuries or damages to
structures,
—6 05 a m.. 119 Hughes Ave.,

fire An electrical wire was
smoking due to a short. There
were no Injuries,
DUIARRESTS
The following persons have
been arrested In S e m in o le
County on a charge of driving
under the Influence*.
—Herbert William Davis. 27. of
Orlando, was arrested at 10:27
p.m. Monday on Grant Street al
Church Street In Longvood after
his car. which was clocked
s|K*cdlng on state Road 434. ran
a red light and turned onto
county Road 427. Longwood.
where It almost collided with
another vehicle.
—Jo h n Lee Ward. 32. of Ft.
Myers, al 8:18 p m Monday on
state Road 426 at state Road
419. Oviedo, alter hts car had
stopped In an Intersection. He
reportedly gave Oviedo police
permission to search his car and
they found a small quantity of
marijuana and a pipe bellrvrd to
I k * used to smoke pot m I lie
vehicle, a police report said. He
w a s a 1s o c h a r g e d w i t h
possession of less than 20 grams
of inarfiuana.

�*A — Evening H trald. Sanford. HW»&lt;Jn*td*y, March 27, IN S

County Not Sure It Wants Out Of Garbage Business
Bjr Donna Eate*
Herald S taff W riter
Despite proposal* from private enterprise to
lake over Ihe county'* roftrw disposal operation,
the Seminole County Commission Isn't so sure It
wunl* In gn out of the business.
Nor are commissioners ready to make one of
the decisions — mandatory garbage pickup —
which ihelr staff says Is necessary for Ihe
operation to pay for 11self, Under mandatory
pickup, all residents In Ihe unincorporated areas
would be required lo subscribe to a refuse service
to have their garbage and trash picked up This
would assure ihe county of a continuous flow of
garbage at Its facilities.

...Score
Continued from page IA
dents. One, Robert Gardner,
from his seal In the audience,
said, "He (KlrchhofT) Is one brave
soul,"
The commissioners askrd staff
lo review Impact fees wllh an
eye toward revising (hose Ires
upwards to meet today's costs
and lo have the revisions back lo
Ihe boArd as soon as possible
On Ihe Issue of changing the
county's land use plan, the
courtly commissioners on a 2 2
He vole fnllrd (o approve a
change that would have allowed

At a workshop session Monday, commissioners
instructed a special committee to study ways of
updating and modifying the operation to promote
efficiency and cut costs
The committee, headed by Public Works
Director Larry Sellers, was lold to have lls report
back tf» the commission within a month.
Meanwhile. Sellers lold commissioners that he
county's refuse business has declined 40 percent
In the past three months since fees for dumping
garbage were Increased al Ihe transfer stations
near Sanford and Altamonte Springs and al the
county landfill near Oviedo
County Administrator Ken Hooper said when
fees were raised some commercial haulers began

using the Orange County landfills where ihe cost
was less Hooper predicted that will change as
soon as Orange County raises Us rales within ihe
next few weeks.
A proponeni of mandatory' pickup. Hooper said
there's an "awful increase In ihe litter being
thrown along the roadways. People are dumping
wherever they want to."
Sellers sa id the c o m m itte r had " m ix e d e m o ­
tio n s " about w h e th e r lo re co m m e n d Ih e c o u n ty
s ta y In Ihe b u s in e s s or turn It over to private
e n te rp ris e .

"None ot the three companies that submitted-,
proposals suid they would be happy to assume 2
liabilities" for the landllll. Sellers said.

"There doesn't appear to lie a clear need to
divest ourselves of Ihe operation now." hr said.

which means the applicant can zoning Irom ag ricu ltu re to
bring bark lo Ihe commission multi-family dwelling district for
the same zoning rrquest In less a 7 .3 6 acre parcel on the
than a year A flat denial pro­ northwest corner of Tuskawllla
hibits an owner from requesting Road and Howell Creek was also
Ihe some zoning again within a rejected on a 4-0 vote without
prejudice. Plans were to build ?J&lt;)
year.
apartments on Ihe property.
Hugh Darling, a representative
A third request for a change m
of Trppcr. said the plan was to
build a shopping center on 7.16 the county plan from low density
a c r e s on Ihe west side of residential lo medium density
Tuskawllla Road, south of the residential and rezonlng from
agriculture to residential pro­
Wllla Springs Shopping Center.
A second request from l be fessional for a drolls! office on
same parties for a rhange In the ,H9 acre near Ihe northeast
land use plan from low density corner of Tuskawllla and Dike
residential-preservation to high roads was denied on (be same
density residential and for re- 4-0 vole.

a shopping center lo !&gt;e built on
Tuskawllla Road.
Thr vote was Commission
C h airm an Hob S tu rm and
C o m m 1s s l o n e r ft a r ba r a
Christensen for thr proposal
w h ile C o m m is sio n e rs Hill
KlrchhofT and Fred Slreelman
opposed. Commissioner Sandra
Glenn, In Europe on vacation,
was not present to break Ihe He
The change In zoning re­
quested by Frank Tepper, Iruslc e , on b e h a lf of Malcolm
Clayton, Charles Clayton and
Edward Fielding as memln rs of
a trust from agriculture to retail
commercial was rejected on a
4 -0 voir without prejudice.

adding that even If the county turns over the business It will still need to monitor the operation
and determine ihe seriousness of the problem of
methane gas at the landfill. (The gas Is created by
rotting garbagrf In addition, the county will have
to bear Ihe costs of closing the landfill, which Is
estimated al $500,000, to contain In what has
been described as a "giant baggie" the garbage
and trash already buried there, according to
orders from the state Department of Environ­
mental Regulation
«*

W INDOW &amp; D O O R
GUARDS
THE BEST PROTECTION
AGAINST INTRUDERS!!!

fi
j

FREE
E S T IM A T E S ^ WINDOW

e

FUNCRAL HOMtfCIMfTMT
O«* tempi*!* Funseal Ham*. II out
comotary. mat** dimeutl lima* aaatat
W t At ttta a W l R J

* «&lt; «« i f Ca.fr*

f U tU .

t u d a c t/ta t* N ary

One name snvs it best.
Kenton. Ohio. Marvin, Mills City, Jr .. Vicksburg. Miss.
Baldw in Fairchild F uncral
Ohio; a s i s t e r , Currie
Home. Forrsl Clly. Is In charge
lllaserrhaver. Dover; nine grand
nf arrangement*
ch ild re n , I 1 greatgrandchildren.
MARY ELLEN TOBIN
Granikow F u n eral Home,
Mary
(lllrn Tobin. H2. of 2515
Sanford, Is In charge of ar­
Enterprise Road, Orange Clly.
rangement*.
died Sunday al Central Florida
IIAYWAHDI1. MYERS
Mr Hayward II. Myers, 70. of Regional Hospital. Sanford. Horn
201 Temple Ave., Fern Park, Fell 26. 1903 In New York City,
died Tuesday al Florida Hospi­ she moved to Orange City In
tal-Altamonte Horn Sept. 9. 1972 from New York She was a
1914 In Illinois, he moved lo memlier ol SI. Ann's Catholic
Fern Park from Flint. Midi In Church. Drliary. and VFW Aux
1979 Hr wus a retired ruglnrrr Illary 10108, Sanford She was a
an d a me mb e r ol Oviedo retired bookkeeper
Survivors Include a sister.
Masonic Lodge and ( ‘onslstnry.
Survivors Include Ids wife. Anne M Campbell, Sanford:
Inez M . two daughters, ll.ith.ua niece. Maureen Newton. San­
ford
MrCollum. Flint. Patricia L
Altman Funeral Home, De­
Hebrmis, St. Charles. Ml&lt; h . lour
nary. is In charge ol arrange­
grandchildren
Ha Id win F airch ild Funeral ment*.
Home. Allamonln Springs tn
MINNIES. WILLIAMS
charge.
Mrs Minnie Supp Williams.
JA N IC E P E R K IN S
Miss Janice Perkins. (i|. of 159 H3. of 7311 Academ y Ave..
Lake Harlrll Drive. Alfainonle Oviedo, died Tuesday al South
Springs, dlrd Tuesday In San­ Seminole Community Hospital,
luingwood Horn Ju n e 6. 1901 In
ford. Ikirn Dec. 17. 1923 In
Milieu.
Go., she moved lo Oviedo
Natchez, Miss, she moved lo
A l t a i n o n i r S p r i n g s from In 1924. She was a homemaker,
Jackson. Miss. In 1964 She was member ol Hie Sunlight Pulla rented secretary and was a tanners Society 2 1 and Temple
mem Iter of Forest Lake Sev­ o f F a ith H olin ess C h u rch .
Apopka.
enth duy Adventist Church
Survivors Include three sisters.
Survivors Include her father.
J a m e s Dee S r .. A ltam onte Lillie II Snillli. Eulu Mar Fuller,
S p rin g s; two s is te r s , Alice I k i i I i n l M i a m i . E v a M a e l l l l l ,
Klmlier and Nadine Smith, Ixith Washington. DC ; six brothers.
ol Sunlord; brother. Jam es Dee Ike Sapp. Oviedo, Prince and

SEMINOLE COUNTY
RESIDENTS
CH ECK YOUR MAILBOX THIS C O M IN G WEEK
FOR YOUR C O P Y O F THE
SEMINOLE COM M UNITY C O LLEG E
SUMMER TERM SCHEDULE.

V IL L A G E
F L E A M A RKET

3 2 3 -5 4 5 4

SANFORD’S FIRST AND ONLY
REAL FLEA MARKET
NOW FULLY PAVED

1500 FRENCH AVE.
SANFORD. FLA
OPEN WED.-fit.-SAT.-SUN MIN OR SHINE

A

N U M

B E R

Y O U CAN TRU ST!
3 2 2 -8 3 2 1

OAKLAWN

1214261
Pr»Pfc* b *

Flowrru F or All (Avusiori*

(HiilUns

For Air Conditioning Service Installation
And Good, Sound Advice From A Professional
Ara You Thinking ol Upgrading
Your Praiant Hooting t Air Syitom?
Why Not Call Now For A Horn*
Survay On How You Can Boat The
High Colt Of E n e r g y ?
DOISC a u t is m IN THE SANFORD ARIA SINCE

XH\

)

-P liiJiJw J'
U J4 1

3231204

'

Boat Insurance?

AREA DEATHS
WILLIAM A. BYU8 JR .
Mr William Alexander llyus
Jr.. 72. of 602 Ivanhoc Way.
Co sat Iberry, died Monday a I
Florida H o sp ital-A llam o n Ie
.Springs. Horn Ju ly 13, I HI 2 In
Charleston. W.Va., be moved to
Casselberry Irom there In 197H.
He was a retired owner operator
of an Insurance agency and wus
a member of Ihe Neighborhood
Alliance Church. Long wood.
Survivors Include his wife.
Naomi, a son. William A III.
Charleston; a daughter,
C h a r l o t t r H. R i c h a r d s o n .
Washington, D C . a sister.
Catherine McBride, Charleston;
four grandchildren, four great
grandchildren
Ha Id win-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Goldrnrod, Is In charge ot
arrangements
LILLIE V. CAREY
Mrs Lillie V Carey. 79. of Apt
29. Redding Gardens. Sanford,
died Yrlrtay s i Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford Horn
Jan. 0. 1906 in Sanford, she was
a lifelong resident She was a
member of Hickory Avenue
Church of God.
Survivors Include a sister.
Ju lia Carry Holmes. Rounn,
Iml ; a daughter. Norma L. Ikiyd,
Philadelphia; Iwo sons. Willis 1,
Ikiyd. Philadelphia. Edward C
Ikryd, Washington. DC.; dnugb
ler-ln law. laiulse L. Ikiyd. San­
ford: six grandchildren, tlirre
great grandchildren
Sunrise Funeral Home, San­
ford. Is In charge of arrange­
ment*.
F. JAMES KARNEH
Mr. F. Jam es Karnes, 25, of
4222 S. Kin, Orlando, dlrd
Tuesday east of Geneva us the
result ot a traffic accident. Horn
May 29. 1959 In Princeton,
W.Va., he moved lo Orlando a
month ago (tom there. Hr wus a
memlier of the Marunalha Hap
list Church of Princeton and a
graduate of Princeton High
School and West Virginia Uni­
versity.
Survivors Include his mother.
Mrs. Edith Katties. Princeton;
foster brother. Hob Clemson.
Florence, S C .; sister. Edith K
Hurt. Heaver, W.Vu
Granikow F u n eral lloin r.
Suuford. Is in charge ot ar­
rangements.
ERNEST E.McCREERY
Mr Ernest Eugene McCreery.
H2. or 125 E. ISlh St.. Dover.
Ohio, died Tuesday ut Central
Florida Regional Hospital, San­
ford Horn Frh. tl. 1903 in
Tuscarawas County. Ohio, hr
wus a winter resident of Sunlord
Hr wu» a retired equipment
operator and a member of the
United Church ol Christ
Survivors Include tils wile.
Emma: son. Donald, Dover;
daughter, Jo a n n e Telkump.
Sanford; two brothers. Ja ck .

323-2600*'

1001 t . J U h ST.

tA N FO ID FIA

•m * u « *

m

SOUTHERNAIR

LICENSED • BONDED
INSURED
CODE OF ETHICS

I•"IT #11&gt;14
Ml#

O F S A N FO R D , INC.

tOO N MAPI! AVI

tt»t» Ctrtltwilt** CAC006107

J

• w

Marlon Sapp, both of Trenton,
N . J . , Mu n g e n C S a p p .
Englewood. Calif.. Louis Sapp.
Philadelphia, and George Sapp
Rome, N Y.; 5 grandchildren, 1 I
great-grandchildren and Ihrre
great-great-grandchildren
Wilson Elrhrlbergrr Mortuary
Is In charge of funrral arrange­
ments.

T TONY KISSI INSURANCE
it
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

v4uto- O w ners insurance
I it&lt;-

Hum ,

I .it

S P IN A L

Funeral Notices

CASEY. LILLIE V.
-Funeral service* tor Mrs Lillie V Carey.
T*. of Meddin* Gardens, lenterd, who died
F rid a y wilt be held Saturday et 1 pm a*
H ickory Avenue Church of God with the P e r
Quinton Wallace officiating Viewing w ill be
i t pm
F rid a y Burial In Restiawn Ceme
»ery Sunnsa Funeral Mom# In charge

Iln «

n in ir

it j l l

E V A L U A T IO N

WARNING SIGNALS OF PINCHED NERVES
t F re q u e n t H e a d a c h e s
2
L o w B a c k o r H ip P a in
3 D lz z tn o a a o r L o s s o t S lo e p
4 N u m b n e s s ot H a n d s or Foot
5 N o rv o u sn o a s
6 N e c k P a m or S b l l n u s a
7 A rm a n d S h o u ld e r P a in

TOBIN.MANY ELLYN
Funeral te rvle ft tor the repot# of the tout
of M a ry Ellen Tobin. 17 of l i l l Enterprise
Orange C lly , who died Sunday, will be
held at St Ann t Catholic Church Thursday i t
f io e m
with E ith e r Ja m e s Eel war dt
officiating B urial In A ll Soult Catholic
C e m e te ry, Sanford F ria n d t m ay call a»
Altm an Chapel today I 4 and I I p m
A
scripture service will be held Wednesday at f
p m at A ttm a n Chapel The V F W A u r illary
1010# Sanford, will then conduct Its service
A ltm an F u rw ra l Nome D e B e ry , in charge

H ia lilm

/ill Mvuiuct Alliesarsis
•w * ^ " ™ ; UWU

Evaluation Include*: Pastun AnjIpB, Fiubon Tnt Short
L*‘

T« l M

°«*'

•tMf P A 'it M AHD ANY OtM| * M P V lh A B h i k S 'l l I FOU PAt Ml *»T MRS A WiC*h T TO AMUSl tO
ra t CAP* i k PAtM iNt U M I m M H uhsio FOW p a » m i h » row AHt afYtfn t i n v c i H a p w a
ftcj*i on fMlAfMCft* * H K &gt; ‘n PIKFOAUCCI AS A fttiiilT OF **0 WftTMlN H HOUR* Q#
piwu »o TM| a i i « i n t i s i m &lt;•«* roe
m i l u n v i c i i i a m i n a t i o n on tnt a t m i m

a A.M t A N P O R D
to

O P

P A IN

C O N T R O L C L IN IC

C H IR O P R A C T IC ,

IN C .

0 P.M
2471 S AIRPORT BLVD - 5ANF0RD
‘ ■ *"
SANFORD 321 5763 * A* Usual TM* S*rvlc* 1* FREE ORLANDO 6490369

�SPORTS

Evening H e ra ld . S an fo rd . Ff.W adno aday. M arch 17. I * U —7A

Sam
Cook
Sports Editor

Pins Will Continue
As Peters Inherits
Rams' Mat Program
Doug Peters, who has bided his time as un
assistant wrestling coach the past six years,
will be the new head coach at Lake Mary High
School, according to Principal Don Reynolds.
This news, of course. Is not unexpected.
When Frank Schwartz, who wllh Peters’
help pushed Lake Mary to the top program In
Central Florida, made his Intentions known
earlier this year that It would be his last as
head coach, there was Just one likely replace­
ment — Peters.
Schwartz. 37. and Peters go back a long
way. When Peters was a freshman wrestler as
Lyman High. Schwartz was his first coach.
Schwartz was In a good position to watch
Peters develop as a wrestler and a coach
And he did develop The 26-year-old Pelers
posted an outstanding 130-4 record as a prep
wrestler. He was a state place winner In 1975
and 1976 for the Greyhounds He was selected
as the 1976 Orlando Amateur Athlete of Ihe
Year.
After his flnr prep career, which also
Included participation In football, cross
country and track, Peters went on lo the
University of Central Florida. For the Knights,
he was a three-time slate champion, threcllme southern regional champion and a 1980
NCAA college All-America Again In 1980. he
was chosen Orlando Amateur Athlete of Ihe
Year Pelers finished his collegiate career with
a 95-6 record
It was during the latter stages of tils college
career that Pelers Joined forces with Schwartz
— first at Lake Howell and later for the Hams
to form one of the finest combinations In Ihe
istnte.
During Petrrs’ two years at Lake Howell, the
Silver Hawks wrrr 29-1. During his two-year
hitch at Lake Mary, ihe Rams were 40-4.
Overall, there were three conference, three
regional nnd three district titles Also on three
occasions, those teams finished In the state's
top 10.
j Schwartz said Ihe decision to step down was
[made much raster by the presence of Peters.
* "Doug has worked hard over the past four
years and he deserved a lot of credit for our
success." said Schwartz. "W e’ve had a lot of
success at l-ake Mary already but I think the
best years arc yet to come. We have a
tremendous freshman class I think a slate
championship Is In Lake Mary's future."
Although Schwartz Is stepping down from
ihe lop spot, don't expert him to fade away.
I’ll be around." tie said. "If Doug needs any
help, he won't Ik- afraid to usk. I'll still
encourage every kid I can to wrrslle."
Schwartz, though, said he wouldn't be too
i lose "It's Doug's show. He'll run the program
the way he wants." said Schwartz. "There
won't be any interference from me.”
Peters said hr 1s looking forward to the
challenge. "One of the things that was
especially important (or us was our off-season
program." hr said. "We're getting that going
right now. The USA wrestling club Is having
matches every Saturday That's where a lot of
Interest Is created.’’
Schwartz and Petrrs both feel that the
foundation for the Lakr Mary mat success was
the numbers. "1 just walk down (be balls and
ask kids If they want to wrestle," said
Schwartz. "Our ability lo get kids out has been
the key to the program. We'll give anybody
and everybody a chance to wrestle We don't
cut kids."
This excess of numbers was further em­
phasized during Ihr regular season Whereas
some schools were continually depleted by
forfeits, the Rams never lost a match by not
having a wrestler whether Is was junior varsity
or varsity.
Further proof of l-akc Mary's reputation
See PETERS, Pt|« 8A

M brsU N k S by G rb **rl 0 * * M

Doug Peters, left, and F ra n k Schwartz
have been a winning combination for
Lake M ary.

H«r aid Pt*oto» by tammr Vl(«an*

L isa H a rtm a n b e g in s her s lid e s a s L a k e M a ry 's L a u rie L e iffe r

reaches

for

t h r o w . H a r t m a n , in s e t , r e l a x e s a f t e r tr ip le

Lady Sem inoles U pset M ary
By C hris Plater
Herald S p o rts W riter
Usually, when a (earn makes more
errors that) It gets hits. It's going to
lose. Sanford's Lady Seminole* know
that better than any team.
The Lady Trilie still struggled In
the Reid Monday, but used Its bats to
overcome 10 errors cn mute to a U-G
vtctiiry over county rival Lake Mary
In Five Star Conference softball
action ut Sanford's Fort Mellon Field.
The loss dropped the l-ady Hams to
3-3 In the conference and 10-6 overall
while Seminole Improved to 2-2 In
the Five S ta r and 4-7 overall.
Seminole hus two more tough confer­
ence games this week as It hosts
Apopka today at -1:15 and Lark
Brantley Thursday also at 4 15. Lake
Mary hosts l-akc llowell today In a
non-conference game then tangles
with Ajxipkn Thursday at Apopka.
“ I hope this game turns our season
around." Seminole coach Beth Corso
said "We have two Important games
left this week and we can put
ourselves In a good position If we win
them."
In the early going Monday. It was
the same old story for Seminole as
Lake Mary look advantage of two

S o ftb a ll
rrrurs to take a 1-0 lead In Ihr lop of
the first. Liz Stone reached on an
error to lead off. Karen DeShetler
singled to left center and. with two
o u ts . Stone sco re d when l-lsa
Slmklns rcuclicd on an error.
Seminole came back wllh four runs
on three hits in the bottom of the
second with Ihe big hlls coming from
freshmen Lisa Hartman and Laura
Burke.
Barbara “T aco" Silva reached on
an error to lead oil and Shelly
Sanders followed with a single to
center. With one out. Silva was forced
at third on Showanda W alker’s
grounder. Hartman then slrpped up
and unloaded a triple over the left
llrlder's head to drive In Sanders and
Walker for a 2-1 lead. Burke, the
tenth hitter In the order, scorched a
single up the middle und. when the
trail took a bad hop. It bounced by the
outnetdrr* und all the way to the
fence for a two-run hunter ami a 4-1
Seminole lead
"Burke Is Just up from the junior
varsity and Is doing a good |ob.“

Torso said. "We have a lot ol young
people who are playing well."
Four Seminole errors enabled l-akc
Mary to regain the lead In the lop ol
the third. Britt Watkins walkrd to
leatl off. Kim Averllt reached on an
error and Slmktns singled to right lit
loud the bases. Watkins was forced at
home on Lisa Sanlulll s error for the
first out and Iteedy Mels popped to
third for the second
Vulerle Smith then reached on an
error, scoring Avrrlll and and run
scored when Laurie Leiffer renticd on
an error. Amy Adams thru stroked a
single to led lo score Snntulll and
Smith scored when ihe ball got
through the outfield and l-akr Mary
took a 5-4 lead.
"We sputterecP on defense In the
beginning." Corso said "Bui we
came hack and pulled together Bill
we rnti l continue lo play a good
Inning amt then a rollen one next."
Seminole pounded out five hits In
the I m i Mo i i i ol Hie fourth ami came
away wllli three runs and an 7-5 lead,
Jackie Suggs and Walker led off wllh
concscutlvc singles and, with two
ouls. Alyct.i "F a t" Dixon singled up
the middle In load the bases. Sheri
Peterson followed wllh a single lo

Oviedo's 1-2
Decks Osceola
By Bam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
KISSIMMEE — Oviedo's potent 1-2 punch of
senior Eric Shogren and sophomore Mark
Merchant bus knocked out a lot of good statistics
this year but personal stats haven't mudr winners
out nf the Lions.
Until Tuesday. Shogren rapped four hits and
Merchant drilled three as the Lions knocked
Osceola Kissimmee from the Orange Belt Confer­
ence unbeaten ranks by a 6 2 count at Onerola
High School.
Oviedo, which nipped Father Lopez Saturday
with a seventh-inning comeback. Iruvels lo
Orlando today for a game with Evans. "That’s
two wins in u row. our longest winning streak of
the year." laughed Howard Mable.
Except, he wasn't Joking. The victory was
Oviedo’s sixth tn 19 games. The Lions are Just 2-5
In the conference. Hampcrrd by a lack of solid
pitching and some defensive shortcomings.
Oviedo has yet to hit Its stride this year.
The Lions committed three errors but none was
damaging. Shogren. who ripped three singles and
a double, also stole two bases and drove In three
runs. But II was a defensive play In the fifth by
the flasher center fielder which had Mable
excited.
The Lions had built a 5-1 lead and Junior Craig
Duncan had checked the Osceola bats unit! a pair
of singles put runners at first and second. Steve
Krupo followed with a base hit up the middle.
Shogren charged the ball. Gelded It cleanly and
gunned a perfect one-hop peg to catcher Mark
Hofmann, who scooped It and nabbed fleet-footed
Ruben Aviles at the plate, cutting short (hr
outburst.
Merchant, meanwhile, was Just a hit behind
The slash-hitting soph roped two singles and a
double, stole two bases to run his county-leading
total to 20 and scored two runs.
Duncan, who improved his ledger to 3-4 did his
Job on the hill. The curveballing right-hander
scattered eight hlta, struck out four and walked
two. He strikeout total Increased lo 51. third In
the county.

center lo drive In Suggs and Walker
tor a 6-5 lead. Jack ie Farr followed
wllh a single tip ihe middle to drive
In Dixon.
The Lady Hams pulled within 7-6
In Ihr top of the sixth when Averllt
singled and went all Ihe way lo third
on an error on the play. Avrrlll scored
on Slmklns' grmmdont
But Semlnoti- added n pair of
Insurance runs In the tKillom of the
sixth Hartman. Burke and Dixon till
consecutive singles to load the tmses
and P eterson's sin g le drove In
Harlman. After Burke was forced ul
die plate, Janet Hauck singled to
center to score Dixon for a 0-0 lead.
l-akr Mary got Its llrsl two billers
on In the top of the seventh, hut three
straight fly outs ended the game.
"The kids played with no Intensity
today." Lake Mary couch Cindy
Henry said "It was like an opjmsltr
from the tmirnument (l-ady Hawk)
Saturday. We could have hit the hall
on the ground more and made
Seminole make ihe plays hut we
didn't. I'm hoping now dial we can
gel a decent serd for districts “
Seminole had 14 hlls and 10 errors
lor the game while Lake Mary had 10
hlls. all singles, and made Hirer
errors.

Lady Hawks Keep
Hold On Top Spot

E r ic Shogren, left, and Mark M erchant
combined for seven hits to lead Oviedo past
Osceola Tuesday.

Baseball
The Lions picked up a little bll In four of the
seven frumes Merchant opened Ihe first with a
double to right center. Shogren singled lo left to
score Merchant for a 1-0 lead.
In the third. Merchant singled to left center and
Shogren singled past third Brlflowrr dropped a
nice drag bunt down third to score Merchant.
” Wc didn't squeeze." said Mable "We Just went
on the throw With Merchant's wheels you have
to make two bang bung plays to get him."
In Ihe fourth. Jim m y Barrett walkrd and when
losing pitch "Tubby" Donahue threw the ball
down the right field tine on a plckoff attempt.
Barrett raced to third Hofmann then lifted a short
fly to left on which the left fielder and shortstop
collided with the left fielder dropping the hall to
score Barrett. Bill McCurdy then sacrificed
Hofmann to second and Merchant's Infield single
moved hltn to third. Shogren singled sharply past
shortstop to drive In Hoffman for a 4 -1 lead.
In thr slxih. Hofmann singled and McCurdy
sacrificed. Merchant whiffed but . Shogren
doubled over left fielder's head to bring in
Hofmann for the fifth run.
In the seventh, Watson fanned but Bradley
walked and John Kewley pinch ran. Kewley.
though, was thrown out at second trying to steal.
On the next pitch. Lowrle crushed a homer over
the 350-fool sign tn left renter field.

By Cbrla P later
Herald Sports W riter
DAYTONA BEACH — Even an extra five feet on
the base paths couldn't save Seabreeze's lady
Sand Crabs Monday Sonny land Field's buses arc
65 feet apart Instrud of Ihe regulation 60 feet and.
although it tnay have bothered Lakr Howell's
l-ady Hawks In the beginning, it didn't slop Ihrm
a* they bung an 8-3 defeat on the Sand Crabs.
l-ake Howell maintained Its leud In the Five
Slnr Conference wllh the win. Thr Lady Hawks
arr 5-0 In the conference and 1 1-4 overall. Lake
Howell returns to conference action Thursday ut
Spruce Creek. The Lady Hawks have a nonconference game against Lakr Mary today at
Lakr Mary.
Seabreeze took a 1-0 lead In the bottom of Ihe
first but a four-run second inning paved Ihe wuy
for the Lady Hawks. Jaudon "Pee Wee" Jonas led
off Ihe frame with a single and Belli Saunders und
Alicia Dlnkclacker both walked to loud the bases.
Wllh one out. Jennifer Wallaces reached on un
rnor. scoring Jonas. Erin Hankins drew another
free pass to force In Saunders with the second
run. Christy Tlbbltts had the big hit of the inning
when she singled to drive In Dtnkelacker and
Wallace for a 4-1 Lake Howell lead.
Seabreeze pulled within 4-3 after three frames
but the Lady Hawks added two runs In the fifth
for a 6-3 cushion Sandy Gillies reached on a
fielder's choice and Eileen Thiebaulh. the Burger
King Player of Ihe Week this past week, crunched
a shot over the left fielder's head for an RBI triple.
Thiebaulh then scored when Ava Gardner
reached on an error.
Seabreeze pul together a threat In (be bottom of
Ihe fifth but Gillies, playing shortalop. extin­
guished Ihe flame by turning a double play. With
runners on first and second and one out. Sue
Burgess bloopcd a shot ovrr Gillies' bead but the
senior fielding whiz made a lunging grab and
Bred to second for the Inning-ending DP.
The Sand Crabs threatened again In the sixth
when they loaded Ihe bases with no outs with
their best two hitters. Michelle Eflerson und
Jennifer Toliver, coming to Ihe plate. Effcrson hit
ftss SOFTBALL, Page BA

�• A — Evening Herald, tan lord, Fl.Wadnetday, March 77. IMS

Horseshoes, Hand Grenades...And Tennis
ll has been nald that close only
counts. In horseshoes and hand gre­
nades. but recently I have come to
.believe that close also must count In
tennis.
I overheard one of my students
talking to another member of the class
about a match that they had Just
finished In the class tournament. One
of the players was probably the best
player In class and the other some­
where near the middle.
Anyway, the weaker player was very
elated and excited about the match
land the way he had played, even
though the score was G O. 6-4. His only
comment was. "Hey, I almost took a
set.”
II did not matter to him or even
come to his mind that the better player

might have let up a bit. or the fact that
a 6-0. 6-4 score Is totally decisive. The
only thing he knew was that — he
almost took a set.
Close but no cigar. Tennis Is a
bottom line game, you play two out of
three sets and the person that wins
two of the sets wins the match. Simple,
right.
Wrong — tennis players are very
funny about th eir‘ games and their
matches. II guess the fact that It Is an
Individual sport has something to do
with It.I We not only often claim moral
victories In our own minds for a close
match or set with better players but
we even go farther than that.
We claim small victories on games,
or even Individual points. We often say
after missing a put-away shot — "I had

Larry
Castle
Herald Tennis
W riter
ya" or "you could have never gotten
that one. If I had of made It."
A player might be losing 6-0. 4-0 but
each Individual point, each rally Is Its
own little contest within the big
contest and we still feel elated when
we win the point, we claim another
little victory. It doesn't matter that we
are losing very badlv. we still try for
each Individual point.

C lu tch H ittin g , G lo v e s
In su re F o re st C ity W in s
Combining fine hitting In the
clutch with strong defense.
Forest City 1 George Frey Insur­
ance rolled to a pair of victories
In Seminole Softball Club Eagles
Division action.
In a 7 - 2 v i c t o r y o v e r
Casselberry Hotary Club. Mamie
Frey ripped u three-run triple to
run her Hill total to 12 for five
games and Aretha Higgins drove
In a pair of runs. Meanwhile, lefl
fielder Erin Higgins made the
defensive play of the game by
throwing out a runner at the
plate.
Kathy Davis added a pair of
'singles for George Frey Insur­
ance while .Jill Knutson had two
Itase hits for Hotary. Tamara
l^wls was the defensive stund'out for Coaaelberry with four
pulouts and one assist on a
throw to the plate.
George Frey Insurance came
'hack to play errorless liall for six
Innings en route to a 9-1 victory
over the Forest City Angels.
‘ .Jennifer Hartman led the of
frnse with a single, double and
one Hill while Melinda "Fat
H a c k " .Ju ck so n and Tumi
'Northum hud two singles each.
T racy Goodrow and Hcncc
Muthlcu came off the tiench to
. add two Hill's apiece for George
F r e y I n s u r a n c e . I. e 11 c I a
Strickland had a pair ol hits for
the Angels.
D efrnslvely. Ju ck so n , the
pllchrr. led the way with lour
assists and two pulouts on line
drives. Forest City I also turned
u double pluy wltfi second
buamun F re y r e l a y i n g to
, sfiorslop Nlkl liiirke who fired to

Laurie Klversat first for the DP.
In other action, Itie Angels
held off a late rally to claim a 9-8
victory over Goodings. Lisa
Sllverseln led the Angels with a
t r i pl e and s i n g l e . S h e r r y
McDonald. Tonya Colvin and
Strickland roped doubles In a
five-run first Inning. Colvin was
also the winning pitcher.
Stephanie Woodard brought
Goodings hark In the game with
one swing of the but us she
clouted u grand slam homer In
I he filth Inning to pull Goodings
within 7-6
Amy Adams. Marcle Dalzlcl
and Kristen Conway had two
hits each as l.ongwood JAV
Enterprises oulslugged Fern
Park Commonwealth insurance.
12 6. Sherri Sholts and Sabrina
Jarrell added doubles for JAV
and I.auric l.rlllcr was the de­
fensive standout
Storrnl Llllrrll pitched a
four-hitler ami hrl|&gt;ed her own
cause wllli three hits as Com­
monwealth Insurance ii|&gt;endrd
Fern Park 2. 8-4. Llllrrll struck
oul two and walked two and also
added three singles lo (he Id-hit
at luck
Forest City 2 picked up a pair
of vi ct or i es In the E ag les
Division, 6-5 over Oviedo and
15-1 over Fern Park 2.
Agai nst O viedo. Heat her
Meyer led I be way wllli a pair of
sin g les and Dawn G rbhurt
turned in a strong pitching
pefonnance with two strike mils

...Softball

11

Continued from 7A
1 a line shot down the third base line but Hankins
mudr a nice stab of It for the first out and Lake
i Howell pitcher Tlbbltts Induced Wesley to ground
I back to the mound for the force ut home and thr
second out. Tlbbltts got the next hitter to ground
Into u force play for the third out.
"Sandy (Gillies) saved us In the fifth with u nice
double piny." Luke Howell coach Jo Luciano said
"And Christy (Tlhbllts) did a fantastic Job on their
two best hitters (Elferson and Toliver). We hacked
up utmost to the fence for Toliver but Christy got
her to hit a dribbler ta c k to the mound "
I The Lady Hawks added u pair of Insurance nms
In thr lop of the seventh. Hunklns singled to lead
off und Gllltes followed with a triple down the left
Held line lo score Hunklns. Gurdnrr followed with
a single to chase home Gillies for un 8-3 leud
i MAINLAND SINKS LAKE BRANTLKY
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS - Mainland s Ludy
Hues rullird for five runs In the second Inning
Monday en route to u 6-1 victory ovrr Lake
Hrunllry's l-ndy Putrlots In Five Slur action at
Luke Hrantley High.

I
I

The Lady Hues. 4 2 In the conference und 6-4
&lt; overall, broke u scoreless tlr with five runs In thr
second. Hrrndu Robertson walked to lead off.
' Trrrl Hand reached on un error und Michelle
Mlkrl wulkrd to load thr Ituara Joanne Carbonrll
hit a grounder to Mlehrllr Drown ul short, but thr
catcher dropped thr throw home to allow thr first
run to score. Susan Drsmorr then smacked a line
drive |&gt;ux! third und thr outfielder couldn't cut II
L off us It went for u grand slum homer und a 54)
Mainland lead.
Hrantley. which fell to 2 4 In the conference and
' 5-8 overall, scored Its lone run In the bottom of
thr fourth. Mundy Mutthlrson got on on u fielder’s
rholce and went to third on a Mainland error.
Mutthlrson scored when Denise Hurke reached on
another error.
Aftrr the fourth. Hrantley only got one runner
as far os second the rest of thr wuy. The Lady
Patriots oulhlt the Hues. 6-4. but couldn't string
1 the hits together.
Hrown led thr way with two hits, including a
double, while Luuru Davis. Heather Meyer.
Wendy Jeffers and Hurke had one hit each.
Lake Hrantley has a non-conference game
today at Lyman and returns to conference play
Thursday at Seminole.
LADY ORBYHOUND9 FALL TO DBLAND
DELAND — DeLand'a Lady Bulldogs stayed
„ one-half game behind Five Star Conference leader
, Lake Howell as they used right Lyman errors lo
drop the Lady Greyhounds. 9-2. In softball at
DeLand's Airport Field.
DeLand Improved to 12-1 overall and 5-1 In the
conference. Lyman, which travels lo Mainland for
a 4:15 p.m. Thursday, slumped to 3-7 and 2-4.
"We hit lonely hits." said Lyman assistant Jerri
Kelly. "We had eight hits but didn't get them at
the right time.”
DeLand broke loose against loser Lott Helms for
four runs In the third Inning. Lyman came back

J

...Peters

S o ftb a ll

M arnle F re y , above, con
tlnued her lusty hitting with a
three run triple.
S to rm l
L lt t r e ll, below , hurled a
tour-hitter and rapped three
h it s .

and no walks Against Fern
Park. Cindy Luplnsk! hud u
single, double and homer to lead
the way. Vnlrrte Smith cracked n
triple and homer. Meyer added u
single a triple while Grbhurt and
Michelle Kurr each ripped
doubles
— Chris F later

with a solo run In the fourth when Junior Denise
Stevens clouted her fourth homer of the year to
deep center field
Deland picked up three more In the fifth und
iwo more In the sixth for winning hurler Kathy
Corr. The Lady Greyhounds scorrd their last fully
In the second when reliever Pam Underwood
walked Mary Ryan. Dawn Boyesen und Klane
Richardson to loud the buses. DeLand then
reinserted starter Corr who guve up un RBIfielder's choice to Dlnnu Ikiyesen.
Dluna Boyesen. playing her first game for
Lymun. stroked u pair of singles us did sister
Duwn. Stevens hud u single und u homer. Wendy
Vickery. Kristie Kaiser und Helms each had u
truschlt.
COLE'S TRIPLE LIFTS LADY LIONS
ORLANDO — Debbie Cole has Just 2 hits In 17
ut huts this season, but one of those wus u big
one. Cole unloaded u triple to breuk un 8-8 tie
Monduy und Oviedo went on to claim a 16-10
victory over Jones' lady Tigers In Orange Belt
Conference uctlon.
The Lady Lions Improved lo 8-7 overall and 5-1
In thr ODC with the win. Oviedo travels to St.
Cloud today for unnlher conference matchup.
Oviedo scored nine runs In the lust two Innings
to sew up thr Win und ovrrshudow u 15-error
l&gt;rrfnrmanre.
"We hud more errors In one game than ull of
our games together." Oviedo couch Jucklr Miller
said. "It's u good thing we were hitting."
Aftrr fulling behind. 6-0. Jones rallied to take
un 8-7 lead going Into the sixth Inning Thr l.lons
then exploded for live runs for u 12-7 leud und
udded four morr In the seventh
In the top of the sixth. Fran Foster. Caroline
Chavis und Mlkkl Eby hit consecutive singles to
loud the Itasca and Dee Dee Ueusley followed with
a sacrifice fly. Cole, who wus I for 14 going Into
thr game, the ripped her clutch triple to drive In
two runs for u 10 8 Oviedo leud. "She hasn’t been
hitting thr hall well lately, but I wus pleased she
gut that triple when It wus Important." Miller said
of Cole.
KHI singles by Kelly Duvldson und Durlu Hull
pushed thr Lady Lions' lead to 12-8.
Foster led the 17-hlt offensive explosion for the
Lions with three hits while Jodi Switzer, also the
winning pitcher, wus 2 for 3 with four runs (ratted
In. Cole added three Kill's while Beasley und
Duvldson had two each. Jessica Urudley. Chavis
und Eby added Iwo hits each.

Bartels Whiffs 10 In Win
Jalm le Linn. Jennifer Forston and Stacey
Hurger drove in two runs each and Barbara
Bartels struck out 10 hitters as Winter Springs
Mary Salvugto's G irls totaled Casselberry
Trtvlston Chevron. 22 2. In Starling Division play
In the Seminole Softball Club.
Linn smacked a homer and a single while
Burger rapped two doubles and Barbara Bartels,
Susan Wtllts. Mindy Kracth und Forston each had
u double.
In another Starling Division game. Ju lie
llelmers led the way with her pitching and hitting
as Rlnker Construction demolished Atlantic
Bank. 24-9.

and he beat me soundly, something
like 6 0 . 6 2
All 1 could think of though was how
well I had played and some of the
points I had won and how close 1 had
come to winning some games. It dldn*1
matter that the guy had thoroughly
destroyed me. I had won some small
victories and I almost took several
games.
It's nice and It's a credit to the game
of tennis that even though we may
never win a match, we can have the
satisfaction of the near misses that
would have been great shots, the long,
long rallies that we can sometimes win
or that rare ace that makes us feel like
Connors.
It's nice to say and to even believe
that. I almost took a set.

One player recently came ofT the
court to report the score of his match. I
asked him how he did and he said. "I
aced him three times In the first set
and four times In the second set. and I
hit two great topspln lobs..."
Yes. but how did the match turn
out?
"Oh. I lost 6-0. 6-1.”
We all know the feeling don't we?
It's the nature of the game and I guess
the nature of competitive people. We
often don't worry about the final
outcome as much as we worry about
each Individual point or shot
Without a doubt, one of the best
matches that this writer has ever
played was against a Junior vet player
named Ed Fltzhugh. Fltzhugh was
ranked No. 1 In the stale at the lime

Continued from 7 A
comes with the move-ins each year. If a new
resident brings with him wrestling sons, he
moves Into the Lake Mary district. Sarasota's
Scott Rosa Is one example and Schwartz said
there Is another family coming from New
Jersey, which Is supposed to be loaded.
Peters, who turned down a chance to be
head coach at Lyman, said he feels Lake Mary
has the best program around and he plans to
keep It that way. "We've got some great young
kids coming up.” he said. "W e plan to keep
winning and hopefully get that state champi­
onship some year."
Peters reminds area wrestlers that the 4th
Annual Lake Mary Wrestling Club will run
through May 15 It Isopen to boys 12 through
18.
Saturday was quite a day for softball at Red
Hug Lake Park. Lake Howell held Its 3rd
Annual Lady Hawk Softball Tournament,
which drew 10 teams from Central Florida.
The Five Star. Metro and Orange Belt
conferences were represented.
In all. 18 games were played. West Orange
took top honors with a 4 0 record The Lady
Warriors beat a gritty Lake Mary tram In the
flnul Lake Mary, which won five straight
Inbetween losses to West Orange, finished
second while Lake Hrantley was third
Defrnslvely. the county's girls are second to
none. Lake Mary shortstop Ktm Avrrlll and her
counterpart. Grace Ley of Lake Howell, both
roam the field with knap-dragon gloves. It
seemed like Avrrlll was coming up with one
good play after another. In the outfield. Karrn
DcShrtler. a Lake Mary Junior. Mlkkl Eby. an
Oviedo sophomore, and Eileen Thlebauth. a
Lake Howell senior, can all go und get them
und nre very adept at diving catches. Offensively, though, something Is missing.
Very few county girls (Lyman's Denise Stevens

excluded) flash any power. West Orange had
several girls that Jacked the ball over the
outfielders' head, whereas most of the county
girls are singles hitters.
Hitting a softball Is one of the hardest things
In sports to teach. Every year baseball players
switch over to softball and have trouble
mastering the art. It seemed that the county
girls' biggest problem Is bat speed. Most of
them don't swing hurd and they try to pLice It
somewhere. This works until the other team
starts moving up the outfield. Then, most
don't have the power to take It deep
Defensively, the girls are In a class by
themselves. When the offense catches up. look
for a county team to challenge for the state
title.
The Lady Hawk was sponsored by the
Rotary Club of Casselberry and the Rotartans
did a fine Job of running the tournament.
Longwood's Roger Richardson, who along
with Mike Averlll got a lot of these girls started
playing softball at Five Points, was tourna­
ment director and he kept things rolling.
The event was well attended and with action
going on two fields most of the time, there was
always something to see. Richardson even got
some manual labor from Don Jonas and
"Faultless Frank" Tlbbltts.
Jon as, the only successful football coach
UCF has ever had. Joined Tlbbltts after each
game to recondition the Infield. Nice Job with
the rukes. fellas. Jo Luciano. lake Howell's
softball roach, hud the proceedings well
organized as usual.
With the Lady Hawk Invitational In basket­
ball and the Lady Hawk Softball Tournament,
the Luke Howell people put on two fine
tournaments.
I~akc Mary golf coach Hill Elssele reminds all
golfers that the County Championships will be
held Friday nl the Casselberry Country Club
Golfers will tee oil between 10 a.m. and noon.
All the county schools will tie competing.
Hurger King will sponsor the 18 hole champi­
onship.

G a to rs Pull
O ut 2 M ore
The Forest City 2 Gators had u
co u p le of c lo s e cu lls, but
managed lo pull out u pair of
victories en route to the first
round title In Hawks Division
pluyoff action Sunday at the
Seminole Softball Club complex.
In the first game. Casselberry
Pools By Mux took the Gators
Into extra Innings but a sevenrun eighth carried the Gators to
• 15-8 win In the second game.
the Gators broke u 2 2 tie with u
run In the top of the seventh and
held on for a 3-2 win over Forest
City l Hurger King und the first
round championship,
In the first win. Michelle Davts.
Mlsal Slone and Danielle Kitlinger ull came through with
clutch triples for the Gators.
Chrlssy Malhlcu rapped out
three singles. Slucle Thomas
stroked three singles and Mlssl
Martinez hud two to leud
Casselberry,
In the second win. Christa
Schroeffel kept the Gators out of
trouble by making u number of
kry defensive plays Courtney
Finley had Iwo hits to lead the
offensive attack and Kim Rogers
ripped u double. Sherry Adums
and Kelly Hurtmun hud two hits
each for Forest City I.
In a game before the playoff,
the Gators rolled to u 18 8
victory over Altamonte Springs,
Duvts had four singles to lead the
20 hit attack while Schroeffel
and Klltlnger had three each and
Mundy Prntelrra and Jennifer
Kruger added two.
Casselberry Pools By Max took
u 7-1 decision over the Gators In
an earlier matchup Martinez
had three singles to lead the
offensive output while Tanya
Higgins unloaded un RBI tripie.
Duvts had a pair of doubles for

M U FFLER • B R A K ES
F A S T F R E E IN S T A L L A T IO N
CUSTOM PIPE BENDING • DUALS • G LA SS PA CKS
CHHOME S T A C K S • T U R B O S • RESONATORS

SANFORD

322-00511

ORANQE CITY

[ 775-47471

♦05 S tIT 1ST ST
I ll* 5 tAST or NWT 17 U

SU 5 VOLUilA AVI
WWY 17 «2

ASK ABOUT OUR 24 POINT SAFETY INSPECTION
EXTRA-WIDE
60 SERIES

WIDE
70 SERIES

•mum Mm iimn
■i»%
•BH01
mtimi m i

SUE
PI7S/70R1)
PIAS/70RI)
P14S/7M13
P2OS-70R1I
P14S774R14
P209/74RI4
P71S/70R14
P22S/74R14
P23S774RI4
w i n mis
P2SS/70R1S

--41.44
M.SO"
44.SS
MM
n.M
ILN
ILH
M.RS
17.M
141*5
140.*0

• r w f«a»«iAit m v t

obn •mu rmmna
•ott m i
•mnm«
untai

pui

♦4 41
44.24
11.74
52-34
5157
59.71
57.34
11.24
44.41
•1.33
4S.34

nw ui
wa

s in

’ 91.95

55.03

P22S/60R14

99.90

59.99

P235/60R14

103.95

62.27

P245/90R14

109.90

9 S J9

F235/60*15

103.95

92.59

P245/90R15

109.95

99.21

P255/60915

119.90

70.43

P275/60R15

129.95

74.39

•OUTLINE
WHITE
LITTERS
•IDEAL FOR
RUCCID
TERRAIN
•DESICNIO FOR
SPORTS A
RV USE
•NYLONTUMLISS

STOCK
SIXTY

•ouyuoc mart
um n

riMKULU

MU!
- roiniTU

A0O-1I
F40-14
•69-14

"■ r
44.99

70.43
74.95

40.99
44.29

M i5

79.90

51.30

LAO-11

I1 J 0

59.41

i
i

L—

NTUat FIT

■4UUR uu
Hha

31il95919 1915

4

114.90 1900

31ill.5915 11-15

4

111-95 7417

Ui 115915 12-15

5

14995 1753

SO.94

199-14
049-11

r

un

uu
r*Ki

P215 60R13

CUSTOM

s in

Forest City 1 Burger King
pounded oul 17 hits en route to
a 20-3 thumping of Longwood
Denny Salvagto s Girls. Adams
had an Impressive game at the
plate for Burger King with two
singles, a home run. three RBI's
und five runs scored Nicole
DeLuca added a single, double.
triple and four RBI. Hartman
drove In two runs with a single
and double and Tania Diaz
stroked three singles. Christine
Rlsae was the winning pitcher,
allowing Just three hits, striking
out three
- Chris F tstar

TW O S T O R E S

12 MONfH
FINANCING
AVAILABLE

17.74

SERVICE
SPECIALS

M AKE
INSPECTION
NO PURCNASE
PURCHASE NECESSARY

— .W ITH THIS COUPON—

�Evening H e r jld , Sanford. FI W e d n *td * y . M arch 27. 1U 3—TA

SPO RTS
IN BRIEF
Kesslnger, Thayer G et Rips;
St. John's Wins, 5CC Loses
A couple of ex-Oviedo baseball players had a pretty good
day Tuesday. Chris Kesslnger and Brett Thayer —
teammates for the Lions' Orange Belt Conference champi­
onship team two years ago — each rapped a pair of hits and
drove In two run* for their junior college teams Tuesday.
Kesslnger. a sophomore al St Jo h n 's River, singled
home the decisive runs In the 1 1th Inning as St. Joh n's
nipped Valencia. 6-5. at Orlando Kesslnger. who attended
SCC last year, led the county In runs batted In two years
ago
St. John's Improved to 14-15 overall and 5-2 In the
Mid-Florida Conference. Valencia, which hosts SCC
Thursday al 3 p m., fell to 21-12 and 2-6. The Matadors
pummeted the Raiders. 17-4. in the last meeting,
Thayer, meanwhile, provided a pair of singles and two
Rlil but the SCC Raiders dropped an 8-4 decision to Florida
Junior at home. Thayer, who led the county In batting
average two years ago, had a two run single In a four-run
eighth Inning but the Raiders couldn't come back.
Mike Walker lasted Into Ihe fifth and toss the loss. SCC
fell to 17-13-1 and 3-5.

SCOREBOARD
TUBE
SWWl TW l*,TVi*r*

uxtwu
t »• - u a w i a set

•Wattn Tp—n u
• • • - u w « n a nit mmvw
uCUrt LMXWIU

lot INS
* r« - IVS. WNww
twfmm

W*

n •&lt;** lev
-

U nited Press International
With Joe DiMaggio looking on. the man who may
become the next Yankee legend turned In a performance of
epic proportion Tuesday night.
Don Mattingly, appearing for the first time since knee
surgery a month ago. slammed a home run In his first
at-bat of the Grapefruit League season, then doubled In his
next trip to the plate to lead the New York Ynnkees to a 2-1
victory over the Montreal Expos
Mattingly ripped the second pilch he saw from Montreal
right hander Fred Hrclnlng over the right Held fence In the
first Inning. Before Mattingly's homer. Brelnlng had struck
nut the first two batters.
In Ills second at-bat. also against Brelnlng. Mattingly
lined a double to right In the third. After that. Yankee
manager Yogi Berra removed the defending American
league batting champion from the game.
In other exhibition games, the Chicago White Sox beat
Detroit 8-3, the New York Mcts defeated Boston 1-0.
Houston edged Cine.' natl 6 5. Atlanta downcdUaltlmore
6-2. Los Angeles thumped Toronto 11-5. St. Louis
crunched Philadelphia 10-5, Pittsburgh nipped Minnesota
4-3. Kansas City topped Texas 7-5. Oakland clobbered San
Diego 12-6, Milwaukee eclipsed the Chicago Cubs 8-7 and
Seattle blanked California 44)

Nuggets Bank On Home Court
United Press International
The Denver Nuggets believe thry can win the Midwest
Division from Ihe comfort of their home.
"We're going to have to win a lot of games to cam this
division title. I don't think we can afford to lose any games
at home," Denver coarh Doug Moe said Tuesday night
alter Lafayette Lever scored 8 points to key a decisive 17-2
surge opening the third quarter, lifting the Nuggets to a
104-8!) victory over the Utah Ja z z for thrlr 18th
consecutive home victory.
The victory kept the Nuggets four games ahead of
second-place Houston In the Mldwrst Division.
Alex English scored 25 points and Calvin Nutt 2) as the
Nuggets Improved to 46-26. Lever added 14 points.
Elsewhere, Dallas slammed Golden State 134-107.
Cleveland downed (he New York Knlcks I 12-98.
Milwaukee defeated Washington 107-96. Houston beat
Kansas City 115-93, Chicago topped Indiana 120-119.
Detroit whipped Phoenix 119-93. New Jersey shaded
Atlanta 10!)-108 In overtime and Portland outlasted the
Los Angeles Lakers 1 16-113 In overtime.

Rams Sign Canadian Star Brock
ANAIIF.IM Calif. fUl’l) - The Los Angeles Hams have
signed quarterback Dieter Brock, a two-time Most Valuable
Player In the Canadian Football League, and projected him
to be the starter next season.
Tuesday's signing will likely mean the trade of Vince
Ferragamo. who led the team to the, 1980 Super Bowl, but
has hern Inconsistent and plagued with Injuries since.
"How this move turns out. nobody knows.” Rams coach
Jo h n Robinson said, "but we're excited about this because
we think Dieter can provide a missing Ingredient."
Brock. 34. and agent Gil Scott of Toronto, began
negotiations with the Rams last week and had their first
face-to-face meetings Monday. Earlier In Ihe day. Brock
was brought lo the Rams training cump and threw to
receivers under Ihe watchful eye of Robinson.
Both sides apparently agreed to the part late Monday.
Terms of Ihe agreement were not disclosed, but It Is
believed Brock will ram $2,1 million over the next four
years.

Goulet Cracks 50-Goal Mark
United Press International
Michel Goulet's play is one of Ihe supreme pleasures the
NHL hastoofTer.
The Quebec Nordlque forward's acclaimed offensive
prowess took center stage Tuesday night when Goulet
cracked Ihe 5Dgoal mark for the third straight year.
"Obviously. 50 goals Is a magic number." said Ooulet.
But the real magic of the particular goal — and of the
player whose offense obscures his blatantly underrated
defensive contributions — Is II also won Ihe game. 4-3. over
Adams Division rival Buffalo
Goulet's game-winner came on a low slapshot at 4:39 of
the third period.
"I'm happy with this third season of 50 goals and It s
something I'd like lo see continue In the future." he said.
"If 1 don't get (an NHL left wing season record| 60 this
yeur. then maybe I'll get It next year. My main goal ta to
help the team as much as possible."
Elsewhere. Edmonton edged the New York Islanders 7-5.
Montreal beat Boston 5-3. Detroit dumped Minnesota 5-1
and Ihe New York Rangers nipped Pittsburgh 5-4.

Kelger, Llvernols Boost Broncos
Je ff Llvernols fired a two-hllter and Jim m y "Hammer"
Kelger squeezed In two runs lo lead Longwood 2 to a 3-0
blanking of Longwood 1 In Seminole Pony Baseball Bronco
Division action at the Five Points complex.
The only two hits Llvernols gave up were singles to Joh n
Elam. Llvernols struck out 14 and walked Just two. Jason
Goodpastcr pitched well In a losing effort as he gave up Just
four hits, struck out six and walked five.
In olher action Seminole Pony action, Jo e Taylor drove
In two runs and was the winning pitcher as Longwood
upended Casselberry. 6-3.
Taylor gave up seven hits, struck out six and walked
only one. He also drove In a pair of runs with two singles.
Defensively, Lance Keyes led the way for Longwood as he
handled five chances without an error.

&lt;*«•
a un* h fr" s
UMWiNNi W.tHjWTN
VI—* .* ( ( W.M
n»L**r On* a i»t» * ru * a,
i*.B*~n |i,)n N n * lW n
&gt;U m ai h « i
tissrt
hr*

T—*-*— -----|--i r
l"**' L«* 11*1 &lt; «r|&gt; n t
Owi ■**«» h e La n rt k m m m
C**"S 1TP1t CV*&gt; I I
ITFit
• a W i a a ' n l a **t
' t » l »* J Cmmrn (TFl 1 Cm i i »«•
ttXMS
iM
.'
I
I
1 ■ »• - tv* Was Cm a a i
ITF1 I i n
K M a W i i * , ».rm » m
*•»•*» 1 1 &amp;•&gt;•■.» l i - t . i |TF1 |
i »a - (UN a r v l a *
Ch**w
i
m
tl
h
o
t
Tm**
***• w ai *•* %
II UW'iipwitH
»*** W*
UttS.NNi r N U W I
W n t &gt; * |I k N IM W .

I

la - (VI 1 M ai a

w

SOKC

•* W i t M * M k m &lt; W M M

W W - IX I .nil
’j** *** *
’r

1'grtMt

la 49

um«a

• Mlarpi (Dm
ft#
MTU « » . T|’ M! m e

Mr$c$iLikilwi
&gt;(*!**

Dmn
pa in ra
ia la

7&amp;4^&lt;*4rt»
49
6 nu D i f 0» tu t T (t tm a

oe(Mima
H w m ot ta
iCguVf
ta ia ia

«**»**•&gt;
ia ia
Ttitm iM i
ta
oiHiMAPCHixat TtH-nma

a&lt;"
ta ia ia

]«**••

Mattingly Shines For DiMaggio

la

Play Better Golf with JACK NICKLAUS

• &lt;►**'*
i i ia
10**y M*
ta
OiHi a a 9 (HI a a. T(H ii itia

*rw»-in4.« p*

I B ta !■
ia ta

'« 1 I T»,*t*4 M
«M &gt; |l* I T u M I I
' M l m l D M K b tw n * • •
• is )* * ,
U N a n ilN M * !

H e * M*« 1LSI t ****** t l 11)1,

ILB't » * M II
"M W im tl M M iu u t iw * ,*

IX IMt*

lm:

Sm n (i*i

v - t UMli C&gt;*«M I)

M ni InwUMM ILSI « H*

w vN *a

tl

ill *

S W S M Il

«Wr,

mm»ui»&lt;iiii
1*W« S*«||)« taw, IX tm ,
***** us) &lt;a «iu
IX CrnuH IXSI « k.&lt;m IX I t s H*)**
IUt)I HUM ||
tWNM ( W Ima IXSI &lt; imm
l**»l ■&gt;. III). Stltr* Cll.'l i
WnTMWIWl It, I* * « . LMI
«Wil&lt;(WMWH
UHNSMIUrtNWI
iuii 4 w*~ i j

Caw** CHI « M. m It

[INI I Nr**WS t&lt; I V* ,T») t
i w -s fern*
ta
It Mh H* IXM1« s t m tM'l) k
Ohtic a Mniiaa Toitmta
N**1 iTFIt Cri*. tl
a w - ft/ u c an
&gt;(im
ta ta ia [Worn C«w** 1*1 ICHI | a *.
ihmtMt), a n** i *******iT?i «
ia ta
«»«*.*, tl (M*M - 111*
iCawarp
ia
»vmu Tr*fl*a**»i
onwan Mtnaa. tohi u?b
LN *k *lh *IM IW t
m n f- W L h m
F,*» lllx kWat.lt [*-*•
i w*Af*t
na ia la
icsi
&lt;
D ia * n tx no at***
is * * e»
ta ) a
T
a
r
t
i a ILII t Ml* •* In* nil H a l l
M m illX O x a Ii
onoaa Rant* a. Tai nts a
tH**1 ' * * l h r ill) 4 VWtl
a i m - v i c aa
II D U m M iN In * ILII «
i *»*•-***
na ia ia
ffarrwliton
ra 4a l**ftw* tl &gt;**« . (*, a***,

It'tCfcp*
19
onuaa. Mona*. TB H iaia
ism -ii t o m

li Om&gt;**&gt;••

ICBA

ftrwa
(H ia la
k*r Cam*
l u r , 1*
iiM O m w
ta ia
lnm ,**K U U I*tM
|Hair«vHr*y
ia
H
t
n
*
0 nu u a m i n &gt;•a. t » »ti mba
JNka*m&lt;N) l * m * l
I- K t i u 91$
l
1 1 H4*t l C**i X »,-*■|
s * ia ta
Na** i a * * i h* it le v
i
ta ia Iw*ti
i
,
w
i
l a w l n w n l tM*|
|M*«feO*r
)9
0«* ii » t * i it)) **■**&gt; 1 V*ti t
Q'MUia MM1M*. Tfftllia 9
&lt;*m**&gt;CS*&lt;iC**t tia a l Oa***l
K i r i l l SM
4MI 1* * I
4* 19IB i w i ) N't t iw n l Cl** I i f * , t

IB tB

tlM tlffD *
IS
0(14) SB: Mil) *«, T (114) tit a
4V V* H444I4) Tstswrt H L N
n a U n y m VM\ a
I * rsew ftA4*C S M
iiiv%!iK$a
4a ta ia
• M i*
(a ia
MsyiUniH
|B
onuna. M m aa. t im i i h *
m nm - i t a sa
il* r
n a ia ta
ia ta
ft*t*t»*r W$r
ta
0 m i n a. 9 n i l n a

l d in

uaa. ftaOiaif*)iaa. lai/anna
i-ua. *

PREPS
MNm « III*
V.kM M lW N raXliU l**

•l&gt;l*Lk*atl Hr*I
***** I*** Win—

SI Ha*-* *» ).* * * ll ****** X
U * IX Dam ix a * ts 5*** x

IN*** t In i t (&gt;■** i *,» &lt;
* W « f 1 XouiX DxiX tv*,**I

**&gt;-* M I*** H I aGv&gt;« 1X D m I*

1 ***** X Wn»* I ****** i »*•**
* «r-W I

naitk.**

»"V '» * IB) Na* * j**a ix *•«&lt;
t Omt i 4*. , * T *&gt;m&gt; 1 t I m &gt;X
C***Tx On* i 0**M* X***** I t *
I
J* in S'** US! C,*«* x ****** i
e *t*w X am**** II, am** * ■*•**
X **•&gt;• 4 0*M*m I * , ****.* t G-nwr
t It*—1 1 • * * • * .*

4 l**ar

t J***** X

•***»
U«* bt*10**t**r
I * N r* INI 1*4 IX W*l a J ******
IX X ****** X Until* X ***** a
S**a M S**1 (tf) H*&lt;*| H *,**” *&gt;
X IMS it la m a ...........X H * 4

N an* ***** 1

**e vv3 *VE
S T A T IC
v o o
e z e o t r * (ST
AWINO YOXJ'XL.
IH H K I, fiNO
tm

*

S T iF S t t C

TV*C SWiMO

THI

tm

*

'WOH.SC
S

h o t

.

S p o ls k i
P it c h e s
1- H it t e

By C hris F lster
Herald Sports W riter
Andy Spolski tossed a onehitter to lead the Astros to a 1-0
victory over the Cardinals In
Altamonte Springs Little League
THE ANSWtA U *S iu
WAOOX.lHCtt
Major Division action.
A f i w miqi-AWtNQfe
O * TH E CkU bH ERO
Spolski struck out 12 and
A W A -y AAOHV O W D
f c A C K T O T H E 6 av»l
walked only two to overshadow
a »
-vo w S S T T L . S
IN T O T H E S E T - U P .
the thrre-hlt. nine-strikeout per­
formance of Jots Ferguson.
iO Q l.E S A AE S U A E
Spolski and Scott Davis each
TENSION-AAE VENTS A S
ANO THUS SHOUkO
had
doubles for Ihe Astros while
e»e AN INOAO.NEO
Eric Vlolland had the lone hit for
ssSkT oa evewy
Q 0V .V EA S f A t - SWING
the Cards.
A A .E P*
PAAO
" T IO N .
The C a r d i n a l s dropped
e HU1Ml f •****••*t*«sN'i%
another one-run decision when
Ihe Dodgers rallied for five runs
In the top of the sixth and pulled
C-evee* n e«
1*1) B ft'
*»¥l4y» T&lt;4 ’ *»«
out an 8-7 victory
l« lyr-n rt Mkr ml ft 9&gt;«e
tAIIIAU
t
T# «Xf •
Doubles by Brian Sanders.
c$e*r$l 4W
r*«aMTMit
1Ait f J o h n G u r d n e r and R i c k y
UCI
» ftC 94 0 t| | t e nR'**B*f
* * T&lt;« 1 Wt •
r*&lt;i
a « a t 4i
m—m(tmi) tit* (Hiksr $mexrtrrt O^Tlnwe * i ' X Johnson were the big hits In the
1111 to** (ft)e*
»«rv4in m
rt tenet C.*» r »e* live-run sixth for the Dodgers,
- UCT CenfssM*II MI III Kk-H^n 44*yr\ T«#/&lt;
4
1
X
|
"»
Jonhson drove In three runs
It
a*enrv IIM
U Mt )
4fee*# rt •Lrtid'i s' OierrtB Tie
0»i kM )t II*
im ||i
lor the game while Sean Spivey
' If •
'•4 » UtNVf ftl m| | ||i t w v n
M'rtjft rt hill •»
Tl# drove in two with a single and a
A«l t ) NOiftl I«x7 *l - C$"**r' f «r**M
1Xf rt&gt;
i$a te a m
mi n Tm** «i Ourne* triple,
Ciiiinitu ••nun
T4* t K( m
1'ete Joseph smacked a home
Afl
• l
run for the Cardinals and Josh
Ten**#
U 1
’I)
(miiiilittfti
DrJohn added a pair of singles
CV$p
U t
4?4
V* a^sw J' AssArtfSar n
X ♦ m
T.J. Hamilton was the winning
OrrtM
rtM
'l
As
Vet
n
*87*4$
• «
in
pitcher for the IXtdgers while
(VjfMa ita e iii
M)
II • V
9
De- m iR Gwie ft&gt;«Rat
Vlolland took the loss.
t ♦
RM
rmi
‘rusl
h
T
J
1 • AM
94
Irt#
p
irw i
• • tn
IIILLET HR LEADS ANGELS
ksrwje»t m 4' jr»* m
I t s Tart
1 • 4’.
CW*etif« r-e.t)
In Minor Division play. Dan
(« 1 «
t 1
Nr’-erti H4 l A inet IIJ
Oast**
f 4
*•
Hlllry's Inslde-the-park home
•tlMiliy i Oieit
*«vwts*$
1 M 0'
(MTmnllTl
run highlighted a 2 0 8 victory
fk*’em
t 11
9*
Mkri'Vs.rws ? I j s
1 9
for Ihe Angels over the Cordlm
A
«h
-en
-fA
e
1
Bp
m
m rw u u iA tu i
nuls John Herrlwuk pitched a
i
-sl-ee
’
&gt;
9f
m
« L
M
Mrtrtte¥ TBfn
three-hitter for the Angels
L « 4rtp**t
It ft
Cterte*ft*s»»¥ fteArteve | Wpm
Cfetftfi
)
n
m
OemfQMA
a
ip
*
9 4 in
l Amet pt Ws"rt U p s
CARDS OUTLAST DODOERS
How T f|
• 1
In Rookie League artlon, stx
1 •
f 7
players had three hltB as the
F ' s k Hcd
1 1
An***
Cardinals outlasted the Dodgers,
1 • 4)1
TW lllIm n
• tl
H a *** I t***r)
15-12. Leading Ihe way with
7
ft* l«M*
ft
ID
Xaa * •»**■I
three hits each were Scott Kuhn.
ft~ Ortfi
1 II
w* i ***** t p ***a/tt *
ID
[HevtmMi
) 9
Mark Tolonc. Carlos Torregrosa,
l#M rts M |»a «tM l«M
I * r » , N* Had** |
Curt Hillman, Raul Mnmlnglnne
Sieii i Imiti
■•*••*&lt;•* * Oi«t,
and S h a wn W h itlock. Tint
UfTanllT)
Htuemi, CkemvaKI
It ley-i B p*. '-edv-pi*4 ft
H***rt *
’ U|«
Frazier led Ihe defense by turn­
A*-eH41 L-&lt;wt)
S—J**r* -**arf*- XBt ***
ing two double plays.
Ul4nfv«nti 1$r4l
S' I M f T m k l i i *
NreVvadlUl Inert
^*- r * * M * Cw «a • B | *
In other action, Nicky Sosu
» r * * r m*m a m* *
9
KUwemM)
Cfcejfi (All 1 teem)
C *t** 4) l a H m 1 B t a
socked a pair o( triples and four
»W4»(-*t'i T»s« ft
players had three singles each as
OMierailWCHnt
the Tigers trimmed the Dodgers.
CiWT^wt HuTrweecei
17-15.
T
rA
e
t
a
fter*
rt
ftwe«tCiMv$itl
Uitmnllll
erw Vet lA ll t i M t ‘
Jooh Uond. l,*r Cos, Dour
isep# ie a anm i $*
ftaeOtf Media
TfeynAiyi Hen
Daunt and Brian Wrbb had three
jetHMc#•«|*rmrt#Pww•Bpn
W ua$ rt •4r$se t* «e«*
hits each for the Tigers.
HA T|#. |I# m
**• 8*wt B Artrev* B pn
bxrr how oo
STAV “ u &lt; » » .
_
»v«« 7
VNDit*. NAtSSuifV

BASEBALL

NBA

NHL

USFL

Bassett: Spring Is The Thing
TAMPA (UPII - The U S .
Football League's most stable
franchise Ibrew the league Into
chaos Tuesday.
Ripping apart the league's
ixisture of unanimity on the
planned shift to a fall schedule.
Tampa Bay owner John Bassett
earned a fine for Ills unilateral
announcement the Bandits will
play In Ihe spring of 1986.
Bassett, speaking without any
agreement from other USFL
owners, held a 3 p ill. EST news
conference at Hand It s' head­
quarters to go public with his
club's decision to play next
spring Bassett's announcement
was made despite plras by USFL
commissioner Harry Usher to
reconsider.
The Bandits arc the only one
of the 12 original USFL teams to
have the same owner, play In Ihe
same city and have the same
head coach ISlevc Spurrier).
"The commissioner Is upset,"
Bassett said, "but we will not
play In the fall of 1986. period. I
don't speak for ihe league — Ihla
press con feren ce Is for the
Tampa Bay Bandits Mr. Usher
thinks we're not helping him
with his negotiations, but for
four years I've done nothing but
act In the best interests of the
league.
“Now. I'm acting In the beat
Interests of the Tampa Bay
Bandits "
Just two hours later. Usher
levied an unspecified penalty
against the Uandhs' owner for
breaking the league's code of
silence.
"His statement violates my
directive that public statements
regarding the USFL will origi­
nate from the league office."
Usher said in a released state­
ment. "As a result. Mr. Oasselt
will be fined. The subject of
whether the USFL will play In

F o o t b a ll
the spring or full of 1986 Is
currently under study and I have
Indicated that a decision may t&gt;c
madc In the ncxl 30-60 days."
The USFL Is In the midst of Its
third strulght spring schedule,
and the 14 teams are staled to
skip the spring of 1986 and
b eg in their n ext s eason
head to-head against the NFL In
the Tall of ' 86 . Led by New
Jersey owner [k&gt;nald Trump,
Ihe league had maintained a
unified (run! for a (all schedule
until Bassett's strongly worded
news release and conference.
"I'm tired of all ihe hassle."
Bassett said. "We've been here
three years and the Bandits have
done a helluva Job. I haven't
spoken to one fan within 60
miles of here who wants us to
move to the full and our staff,
coaches and fans deserve to
know Just what our situation will
be next year.
"The fall people have hud their
chance and they haven't suc­
ceeded. I sent a telex yesterday
to the commissioner and (hr
other owners. If they vote for a
spring schedule In the next
league meetings, fabulous. If
not. wcTe not gonna play In the
fall."
Last summer. Trump played
an Instrumental role In the
league's decision to switch to a
fall schedule beginning In ' 86 .
Eddie Elnhorn was selected by
USFL management to begin
negotiations for a major network
television deal for the fall, bul
talks have been fruitless Bassett
said he is optimistic Ihe Bandits
will not be left to twist alone
from (be T a m p a S t a di u m
goalposts
"Donald Trump Is a very

bright young m an." Bassett
said, "hut I think Donald gels an
Idea and most often gels his way
wllh 11. I think In this rase, hr
secs we made n mistake. I'm
worried alsiut our |&gt;eople and
this community. Yes. we'd start
another spring league 11 we had
to."

I

D O ir

Following Bussell's pointed
comments. Trump appeared lo
lake a step hack from Ills
position as chief architect of Ihe
leagtir's announced schedule
shill

RACING

"It d o e sn 't m atter w h e n Ih e
m o ve to the fall Is m ade u s long
as w e 're going In that d ir e c t io n ."
Trump s a id . "If 1 d o n 't th in k
w e ’ re g o ing that ro u te , th e n I'll
h a v e to m a k e a d e c is io n ."

NIGHTLY 7:30 P.M.

(txospt tun.)
MT.:UM .WE0 SAMPU

PLAY THE EXCITING &amp; HIGH
PAYING "PICK 4" &amp;"BIG 0"
THUnS FFUE

GRANDSTANDADM.
PON LADIES
Visit our two c limits
control tod ctubhousss lor
your hns dining and
snlsrlsmmsnt ptsssurs
Clubhouse reservations

WHATEVER THE
TEMPERATURE

831-1600

Sanford-Orlindo
KNorth
ennel
Club
ot Orlando.

Wsathsrtrofi Ctntial
Air Condlllonsr/Hsat Pump
Won't Lsl You Down
• y j l l l
W A L L

PLUMBINGS
HEATING INC

Just oft Mwy 17-92
Ml »s| Tort l«&gt;A la p m l
Sorry No Minors

IH* »*"'•»&lt; At# . ft$*($»I
PA 111 444)

TH E ADVANTAGE m

RADIAL M UDTERRAINIM

RAW YOUR STANDARDS O f RIDC
AND RERrORMANCC.

OlYC YOUR TRUCK RACE MO YEN
rCRrORMANCE
9 fmt um*i- •

fW
M

Goodrich

SEMINOLE COUNTY
RESIDENTS
CHECK YOUR MAILBOX THIS COMING WEEK
FOR YOUR C O P Y OF THE
SEMINOLE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
SUMMER TERM SCHEDULE.

1
A W K
Q t iC

Mrr^~

T IM

E

=3

V I '

MON FEU (X V JO SAT 0 3 0 0

3 2 2 -7 4 8 0
'2413 S. French Ave.
SANFORD

b g JSU I
1 mw s r J

�10A—Evening H«raltf, Ssnford, Fl.WsdrwwJsy, March » , IM1

Final Four Condo, Ducats Go For $2,900
LEXINGTON. Ky. (UPI) — If you
don’t yet have a room to go with your
ticket to the NCAA * Final Four and
live further than a day's drive from
Lexington, you might want lo consider
framing your ducal* and watching the
games on TV.
Otherwise, you Just might have to
choose between spending the night In
a sleeping hag on n University of
Kentucky gym floor, sitting up In an
ull-nlghl diner or driving 70 or 75
miles to find ihe nearest clean and
empty bed
Of course, If you’ve got money to
burn, there Is another option: For
S I ,400 and change you can rent a
one-bedroom “ luxury condo." Just 10
minutes from Rupp Arena, for Ihe
weekend. The owner, who placer! a

dlvreet ad In the local newspaper,
says he’ll throw In a couple of Final
Four tickets for a flat t 1.500.
You get the picture?
Although, there Is a wave of roomseekers who do not get Ihe picture and
have been flooding Ihe Greater Lex­
ington C onvention and V isito r’s
Hureau with phone calls the last few
days.
"They have no concept Ifiat (the
hotel and motel rooms) are all gone
and have been gone for months."
bureau worker Carolyn True said
Despite the addition of a 350 room
hotel downtown a year ago. Lexington
and the surrounding area of Fayette
County had only 5.000 hotel rooms to
offer the 22.000 people who have
tickets to watch defending champion

Basketball
Georgetown, St. John's. Vlllanova and
Memphis State battle the national
basketball crown this weekend.
That fact has prompted a few callers
to ask the convention bureau why the
NCAA gave the Final Four to such a
small city. (Lexington, with a popula­
tion of 250.000, Is the smallest city lo
ever host the event.)
Hut the fact of the matter, according
to Ihe NCAA Most Committee. Is the
NCAA's only requirement, with regard
lo overnight accomodations, is that
700 hotel rooms be located within one
block of the playing site.
Lexington met that requirement

Alford, Blab
Key Indiana
Against Vols
NEW YORK IUPII - It’s l*een
no coincidence that Indianan
Inte-srnson rise has paralleled
Ihe rise In Steve Alford’s shoot­
ing jRTceidagr
Alford, the slick shnoilng pe­
rimeter player Ihr Hooslers dc|K-nd on lo deflect Inside pre­
ssure from center Uwe Blab, haa
lift G2 |«-rcenl of Ills |Mist season
shots In guiding Indiana Into the
Final Pour of the National In­
vitation Tournament.
The llooftlera, looking like the
favorite to win the 48th edition
of Ihr nation's oldest college
basketball ton run incut, lake on
Tennessee tonight (7 p in EST1
In a srmlflnul game at Madison
Squure Garden. UCLA |)lays
taiulsvllle In the other conical,
with Ihr survivors mrrtlng for
the NIT championship Friday
night at 0 p.tn.
When Alford’s shooting touch
disappeared In mid season. Indi­
ana Inst touch with the rest of
the BlgTen.
The 0-foot-2 sophomore, u
member of the gold-medal win­
ning U.8. Olympic team, was the
leading scorer In right of Indi­
ana's first 11 games as the
IhxMlrrs got nil to a 9-2 start.
But Alford numugrd more limn
20 points only once In a 13 gume
mid season span that had Indi­
ana lose eight conference con
tests.
Alford has righted himself In
lltr NIT. He's scorrd 2(1. 14 and
29 points In victories over
Hutlrr. Klchmond and Mur
quelle, respectively. In advance
the Boosters tit Nrw York
UCLA, muklng Its llrsl upprar
alter In the NIT after 23 seasons
among Ihe NCAA rllle. Is hoping
for a repeat of Its February 24
gumr will) Ihr Cardinals
Itrggle Miller. Ihe brother of
Southern, California's Olympic
basketball star Cheryl Miller,
clicked on 12 of-It) shots In thut
75 65 (Humph al Pauley Pavil­
ion. and Nigel Miguel, u 6 6
guard, udded 15 (mints and 8
rebound* as thr Bruins played
their heal game by reaching
season lows In turnovers 17) ami
fouls (III
UCLA. 19-12. bus won six
straight games and 10 of lls lust
11 — Us onlv loss In (our
overtimes to USC.
Thr Bruins will have to con­
tain Billy Thompson, the Cardi­
nals' leading scorer, rebounder
and playinukrr The 6-7 Junior
forward, an All Metro Confer­
ence selection, averages 14.7
points and 8.5 rebounds per
game.
All hough Louisville, 19-16.
has hern hurt by Injuries oil
season. Thompson may have
been Indirectly helped by them.
He haa played some guard this
year and that has Improved hla
Im II handling and passing skills.

*1

’’They'll take anything." Fair said.
"Price doesn't seem to be a problem
with them.”

BEST PRICES
BEST SERVICE
TRY US!

Of SANFORD

'fP. _

• WUftS
L* WAAItANTED

LIKE
NEW!

V f r\

i I iDi

COUtON

COUPON

TIRE
| ROTATION * 2

McPherson

00

STRUTS

*8999!

•M
.1*4NARM
T*
% •«QflC«CMD

: rr ! " " ^ S 0 O 9 9 i : —

CARTRtDCC TYFl

CARS A UftHT TRUCKS

IT E C L A A D IA L t

Wl
u n til
173 7*1)
113701 J * 4
113 7014
lt3 JOU .# Jt3
COUPON---------- 11-------------COUPON------------- I f ----------COUPON
!! BRAKE SPECIAL 11
WHEEL
HEAVY DUTY
11
11 ln»t*M rUi
II
SHOCKS
ALIGNMENT
II
I
. 11 “•«
$ 0 9 9 cms

till___
earn litI'll*/fi|i#
mtmrr
‘fmrnirr

tidiMfi
Hitniiiii

IM PORT

J J2759

'/
2I0I ”" 1
¥J2 *
fcW

N .**rts*i
«w «

tin
_ &gt; A

D O U U I S T I I l 9IIT1D RAD IAL!

FRIM IUM 9 IIT ID F O I V I I T I *

PREMIUM
I (TRIADS
R9
IMIUM E1TRIADS
• LOOK

M IC H E L IN

Mill WARRARTY I 40.000 MILE WARRANTY

■y n.'.'.i i m - M i m i 24,000 MIL! WARRANTY

to ihe school gyro, using Ihe
facility as he saw fit. regardless
of the hour.
This yrar, the 6-fooi-0 senior
swlngmao became lfie career
leading scorer at St. Jo h n ’s and
again made New York one of
college basket ball's capital cities
St John's won the regularseason title In the Big East
C o n f e r e n c e a nd p n w errtl
through the West Heglmtal with
vi ct ories over S ou th er n,
Arkansas. Kentucky and North
Carolina Stale The Rcdmen
have u 3 1-3 record.
Mullin averaged more than 20
|M&gt;lnts a game this season, hil­
ling 52 percent from the floor
and 82 percent from the free
throw line. It was all the more
Im pressive, corning against
double coverage anti hounding
(mix und one defenses.

The convention bureau also has the
numbers of two private companies
who are arranging rentals of private
h o m e s , a p a r t m e n t s and c o n ­
dominiums. Most of those have long
been booked. Truer said, but some still
are available,

■

2 9 9 0 t . O R L A N D O D R . (H W V . 1 7 - 9 2 )
PM. 3 2 3 0 8 0 4
SA N FO RD
M O N . T H R U F R I . 9 : 0 0 A .*# . T IL • R .M .
S A T . 9 :0 0 A .M . T I L 8 R .M . C L O S iO S U N

B a s k e t b a ll

The University of Kentucky has
agreed to house about 550 students
from St Joh n ’s and Georgetown un­
iv ersities in residence halls and
Alumni Gym. The city also has made
Its own gymnasium floor available to
students and their sleeping bags

T Tr n T T Y TT

UPI S e le c ts M ullin
A s B e st
'GRat'
NEW YORK IUPII - Chris
Mullin, the Brooklyn gym ral
who made St. Jo h n ’s one of Ihe
class ;ir|s this season, Is United
Press In ternation al’s college
basketball Player of Ihe Year
Behind Mullin s elegant shot
and shrewd floor game. St.
John’s soared to No. I for five
weeks before qualifying for Its
first Final Four In 33 seasons
The Rcdmen meet Georgetown
Saturday It) Lexington, Ky.. In
the semifinals of the NCAA
Tour na men I
In balloting by I4H sports
writers and broadcasters. Mullin
was more than a 2-lo-l winner
Tuesday over Patrick Ewing of
Georgetown. Mullin received H5
voles. Ewing 3 9 and Wnyman
Tisdale of Oklahoma 8
The vote was conducted over a
two-week period beginning In
mid-February.
Mullin g r e w up pl ayi ng
basketball in the schoolyards
and gyms of Brooklyn Al Si
John's, he lllrrolly held the keys

BO miles south In rural Appalachia.

when the Radlsson Hotel opened Its
doors across the street from Rupp
Arena and the adjoining Hyatt Re­
gency last year.
But th e ci ti zens of B lu egru ss
Country still are doing their beat to be
gracious overnight hosts
When the last of the Lexington hotel
rooms were reserved for this weekend
three months ago. the convention
bureau started looking for other digs lo
recommend
As a result, said True, motels as far
away as Richmond and Franktort.
both 30 miles from Lexington, are
booked solid Now Ihe convention
center Is advising people to look for
rooms In Louisville. 75 miles to the
west: Cincinnati. 75 miles to the north,
and to London and Corbin, about 70 or

$Q99

• Nsottl WMTMtT

AMERICA'S LARGEST WINE &amp; SPIRIT MERCHANT HAS THE LOWER EVERYDAY PRICE ... SAVE UP TO 40% .... AS MUCH AS $3 A BOTTLE
ABC’S W INE
DEPARTMENT
HAS THE SOUTH S
LARGEST SELECTION
O F FINE IMPORTED
WINE.

\ D IS C O U N T L IQ U O R
OR

OR

11.19

C A N A D IA N ...

KAHLUA

-V

S&amp;GDLD PEAK

CHAM PAGNE

I

4

awl

&lt;pi

2.99

C V m *4*4
Rk*"4.1«*au*4y

BEST
BUY

M

WW! OCPHI
/tf/fA ir e s ” ? v j

4 16IA IV CS 49 90

CANADIAN
PREMIUM 86.8°

(M

6.79 750 Ml
8.49 LITER
13.99 175 HR

TEQUILA

Q
TsA LE

WHITEHALL
GIN • RUM

SOMETHING
SPECIAL
SCOTCH
W O R LD S F IN IS ! |

SCOtCM

m 111

12.49 175 LTR|

r n

Cam o# 6 J6 SO

t f - l VODKA

099

99

# 7 5 0 ML

yr

129 |

GORDON'S
tim VODKA

1
f e j

SA LE

Cam of u -; mo

W

SALE

Mix ANY6 53 50

B j i ___________
C A S E O f 13

9ITER
4
L

7.

tLUGMV
I
MINIATURES tOUTNuucnoN
*VU(MVAGMAHnXIA. SIM) .59
MU CAKM.KOI. MOUXXMMOM .69
CANADIANM)SI
CltttYSGU
cutty Sara scotch
REISRA VOOAA
ANCIENT ACE frOURtON
9AUEY S IRISHCREAM

THE PREMIUM IS IN TH4

MIX ANY 13 •J 9 50

2.49 750 Ml

CERTIFIED
BRANDY
'V wircte i. «*a 4warn

■ tOuts or u h u *1 mu sn

IRISH VELVET
COFFEE MAKER

7 .9 9

4 .9 9 500mi

JUST ADOHOT WATER

TOM
SIMS
AYR. BA" KY.
BOURBON

v r.

6.19 7 5 0 ML
. 8.49 LITER
14.49
j j H 1n7 5r jLTR
jy

\f *
jn

O M EG A 94'
tONDON DAY

G IN

OOOO SAT . MARCH10

GOOO FRI. MARCH39
ABC BURGUNDY

WTill M# OllMAN

• 9AN F0R0

Hwy 17 92 SOUTH C ITY UMtTS

lU T CASE
1413 o r ca n s

1.5 LTR I

GO O O Sa

i

. U A I C H 30

GOLD SEAL WHITE’

3.99 1.5 LTR

Mwy 17 93 NCAA434

• • A LTA M O N TE

H«™ 117-9
MU ONE BLOCK
t*ry *

•• CAMEL99MV
Hwy t7 82 AT 439

]ABC BEER,
&lt;5.2? case
i ALE, « .9 wi^Kt
acaB
1.59
6PK
KO N IGSBACH ER
]c*w ,ii«tw
1j 0
1lortus • / y apk

SNACKS • MIXERS
MILK GUSTAfSON lOtxt
oal 1.99
COKE OR TAB
3 LTR. 1.09
coco CREAM or COCONUT
tsoi 1.29
- i 4. BLOODY MARY MIX
34oi 1.29
CIGARETTES *#« &amp;
CARTON 8.99
TioftCANAORANGE JUICE
V. GAL 1. 99
ruNTtts COCKTAIL NUTS
n o r 1.79
MIXERS
”►£*04° AU IYFES »OX Of 4 .99

CRICKET
LIGHTERS

9 9 *,
ww wiiLi .BoJUl.

M

&lt;5. PP

A90VI 13 Oi l ROOMTEMF.

LITER

^ OH4N*CU4TOMtlW COurONj ON *» cuircMd w LCMON
• LONOWOOO

P .P ?

ON* NS CUDOMlI WYCCKFON

KELLER GEISTER

1.5 LTR

5.79
7.29

750 ML
LITER
j 1 2 .2 9 175 LTR

ROYAL DELUXE RUM •

4.69

LITER

12 .4 9 m*

PHILADELPHIA BLEND

OOOO Wtl&gt;. MARCH37

4.19

4 . 4 9 710Ml

'SALE

^

TRIBUNO
VERMOUTH

LITER

2.99
13.95

/

99

OOOO IHURS . MARCH 28

5.39

Nil CQSI

12.49 - 3.00 = 9.49
12. 49 -2. 00= 10.49
12. 29-2.00= 10.29
. 9.74 - 1.75 = 7.99
. 6. 69-2. 00 = 4.69
10. 49 - 2.00= 8.49

ABC
G IN • RUM
VO DKA

•omi NorrmFitci •

0 4 rt« tuiroMii w couhjm

!

’83

NICOLAS

li$ * RELSKA ^ M E X IC A N A m
*
* / K VODKA /TV
white o aoidooid

P0UILLY
! 7*0Ml
FUISSE

750 Ml

MfC.FEBATE

84 BEAUI01AIS NOUVEAU

4.49

M il AMY 4 - I t s o

MYERS'S RUM
C R E A M ...

CHEVALIER
JABOULETVERCHERRE

VICTORI
ASTI-SPUMANTE

750 ML

S C O T C H ...

SAU. YOU* CMOtCL CASt U5

MOULIN ROUGE

CALIFORNIA

Dvryi/ndy, Sovferr*

LITER

MARTIN'S W 0

i
m

*

LMADE
CKobiilt khift*, Roi«,

rV il -

SEAGRAM'S V .0 .

OR

SAIL YOU* CMOICL CASI 71 95

1.75 LTR

S C O T C H ...

6 .5 9 * * 1 0 .4 9

PRICES GOOD *•
MARCH 27-APRIl 2

1

PASSPORT

BEEFEATER GIN
,lfcl,

1.75 LTR

C A N A D IA N ...

SAIL YOU* CHCHCL CASt IJ JO

JIM BEAM BOURBON
or CHRISTIAN
BROTHERS BRANDY

1.75 LTR

B L E N D ...
WINDSOR

6 .9 9

SAIL YOU* CMOICL
CASt 66 9$

SAULPlia

CALVERT EXTRA

LAUDER’S SCOTCH^

G ILBEY'S GIN

§

MANUFACTURER REBATES

R &amp; R CAN ADIAN

RON RICO RUM

7a 4mmt'iiifww

1f

'ti

�PEOPLE
Even in g H e rald , S an lo rd , FI.W ed n e sd ay, M arch 77. I t t J - l B

Cook Of The Week
If She Knows You're Coming, She's Apt To Bake A C ake
By Dorothy Greene
Herald Correspondent
l( you can catch up with her. this native
Sanford girl will tell you all about her mother s
"gumbo and what It was like growing up on
Lake Monroe with her three sisters
Shirley Lazar, our Cook of the Week, says her
mom "was the best cook, and I still think she’s
the best cook. She cooked Southern style and
liked to cook grits, fish and hush puppies She
always made a dish for us, we called It gumbo,
but It wasn't like anybody else's. It was made
with okra and tomatoes and seasoned with bacon.
I keep asking her to make It. but she doesn't even
remember how she made It anymore”'

S h ir le y L a z a r h a s a
w e ll- s to c k e d p a n try
in c lu d in g c a k e p a n s o f
v a rio u s s h a p e s a n d

Looking back. Shirley remembers nlrc things
about growing up with her sisters In Sanford
"We lived In the country and we'd go out and find
some tall weeds and trend them and break them
to build a playhouse Daddy raised chickens and
sometimes we'd find an empty chicken coop and
play house m there We Just had a gixxi time,"
says Shirley, "and we had a good childhood."
A busy wife and mother, Shirley has been
married to Klchard Lazar tor 17 happy years, and
they have tine daughter. Tina Richard, who Is an
11-year veteran of the Sanford Fire Department,
also served a 4-year tour of duty with the U S
Navy.

s iz e s to a c c o m m o d a te
ju s t a b o u t a n y k in d o f
c a k e . W hen frie n d s
a n d fa m ily w a n t a
c a k e fo r a s p e c ia l
o c c a s io n , S h irle y can
a lw a y s c o m e up w ith

When he's not fighting fires, he likes to relax
and talk to people all over the world on his ham
radio Tina's pride Is her special collection of
unicorns. She has scores of these unusual
animals In all sizes and forms tin display lit her
room and Is always searching for more to add to
the collection
"I had never been nut of the State o( Florida
until I got married." says Shirley "Then we lived
In several places while my husband was In the
Navy. He was stationed In Sanford, but was
transferred so many times, you name It and
we've been there He's (torn South Carolina but
he loved Florida so much, we settled here In
Sanford.
A recent visit to a glrlfrtend in Mlt hlgau gave
Shirley her first taste of snow “ I had never seen
snow in my life." says Shirley, "and I had a blast!
I loved It. and I haled to leave. I wanted to bring
the snow home with me. It was beautiful."
When she's not "running around here, there
and everywhere." Shirley devotes much of her
s|&gt;arr lime to her needlework and her favorite
hobby of all. cake decorating. From the simplest
birthday cake to the most elegant wedding t ake.
Shirley bus a professional touch when It comes to
this specialty A scrapbook of snapshots showing
her beautifully decorated cakes for Just about any
occasion (tears witness to that fad.
About seven or eight years ago. Shirley took an
H week course In cake decorating and really

a w in n e r.
Mofild PSo»oif Timfflf Viftctnf

enjoys crvutlng some of the most beautiful and design pillows and several lovely hand sewn
Intricately designed cakes "It's something I quilts add it homey touch in the Lazar household
always wanted to do and Dually made up my And when t hrlstmasllmc comes, the entire tree
mind to do ll Seminole Community College had is decorated with Shirley's heauttlnl little
discontinued their classes, and two ladles who handmade angels and snow-flakes
had taken the course started a class of their own
Cooking comes easy to Shirley and she credits
So I went and learned how to make the flowers. this to her mother's influence, Every so often the
Iiurders and so on." says Shirley. Her jiautry Is l.imtly will gather for a seafood dinner and that's
well stocked with talking pans of various sha|H-s a treat everyone enjoys, Shirley says that being
and sizes to accommodate Just atanit any order. taint ami raised In Florida has made her very
When friends and family ask Shirley to bake a critical of fresh seafood and It's got to be made
cake for a speclul occasion, she can always come right. "W c'lt Itave shrimp, o y s t e r s . s c a llo |&gt; *. lis t* ,
conch chowder, you name It. we have It all." says
up with a winner.
Another talent Shirley displays Is her hand Shirley. "Mom's tn Tampa right now. and I wish
quilting and cruft work. "I love to do crafts." site she’d hurry up home so we ean have a good
says, "like pillows, quilts. Christmas ornaments, seafood dinner again We love conch chowder and
and needlepoint." Quilted Cathedral window Mom bus duplicated the recljx- of a famous

seafood restaurant and It's stmplv delicious. I
would love to he die Mystery Diner' and visit all
the different restaurants and taste the foods.
Shirley laughs Being born and raised In Florida I
know what 'fresh' seafood Is."
Outdoor cooking Is an all-year-round affair at
the Lazar's "We barbecue and grill all the tune,
summer and winter." says Shirley "1 do most of
It. except for the smoker. We have a smoker and
my husband does that. We smoke ribs. |*&gt;rk
chops, roasts, chicken. Just atanit anything Hr
loves to do that, anti he's a pretty good rook, tint
Most of the following recipes are Richard's
favorites, but Shirley managed lo sneak in one ot
her own. the Chop Sury!
EGGPLANTCREOLE
I medium eggplant, cut In li 'cubes
1j lb fresh mushrooms, cleaned and sliced
l medium onion, sliced thin
l green jn-pper. cut fine
1 tsp. salt
isp pepper
1 isp. sugar
Dk cups fresh or canned tomatoes
3 tablespoons oil
Saule onions in oil Add mushrooms, thru
green peppers and seasonings and cook about live
minutes Add tomatoes and eggplant, stirring
well Cover and cook otamt 20 minutes Serves
4-6.
MACARONI AND CHEESE
I lb Colbv cheese, grated
llh box elbow macaroni
1 I h cans evaporated milk
ti eggs
Salt amt |x-p|M-t to taste
Cook and drain macaroni Mix together the
macaroni, cheese, eggs, salt and pepper, ami 1» ot
the milk Add enough extra milk lo cover
macaroni well Dot with *v l stick ol btillri and
hake In a 3 5 0 “ oven 40-50 minutes, ot until
golden brown, using a !l\ 13" talking dish Serves
IIH
CHOP SUEY
I lb pork, cut tnloblle size pieces
1 lb beef, cul Into bite size pieces
1 cup relrry. sliced
1 cup onions, sliced
2 cans Ix-an sprouts
I can water chestnuts, sliced
I can twintax» shoots
4 ta b le sp o o n s s o y sa u c e

Flour Ihr tneal and brown In enough grease to
make a brown gruvy when ready. While btownlng
meat welt, saute onion. and rrlcry until clear
Add 5 G tablespoons flour lo meat (trippings along
with some water to make gravy. Add remaining
Ingredients and rook for about 3 0 minutes. Serve
over rice or Chow Mein ncxxlles. Serves 8 H,
S ee COOK, ail

Easter
Fashions
D u rin g r e h e a r s a l fo r an
E a s t e r F a s h io n S h o w ,
C h rlssy C h ild ress, 3 ' a, left
photo, gets her bonnet ad
justed by fashion coordinator
J a n e J a c k s o n of J . C .
Penney's, while Nancy
Gilbert, commentator,
a ssists IB month old Ashley
Hodges on stage, rig ht photo.
The fashion show, to be held
In the C h ild ren 's Departm ent
of Penney's, Sanford P la /a ,
S a tu rd a y, M arch 30, at 11.30
p .m ., w ill feature fashions
fo r i n f a n t s t h r o u g h
t e e n a g e r s . O p e n lo the
p ub lic, there is no adm ission
ch arg e. F a v o rs w ill be given
to children attending.

*10
V A 1.1 IF

WITH AM

DRESS-SUIT-GOWN
Just a FANTASTIC DEAL!
Because You Receive FREE S HOE S
With Any Of Our Already
Reduced Designer D resses,
In All The Latest Spring Colors.

-GEORGETTES-JACQUARDS
-CREPES-COTTONS
Come In And Let IJs Show You
This Truly Fantastic Deall
Slrct 3 32 / I 4V.-32'/.
C«th Or Lty-Away TUI East*!

"Bette/ Value 01 Bettei Quality "
S lim &amp; S&lt;X44y! 'S iy y ti &amp; Sc/T ti

H ttiM « • ( • ) ) r t « i « B i VMKtfll

MOM SAT.

»:J0 Si 10

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES...

We also make 1st and 2nd mortgage loans
on Residential or Commercial Real Estate
up to $100,000.
Personal loans are available Including
Revolving Credit Line.

Family Credit Services. Inc.
AM ittsyc&lt;0 5 Gw^q Oxpotum

ON S.R. 4)4, NEAR 17-92
In The Park Square Shopping Clr.
Longwood, FL 32790

unt

norm, uca

831-3400

Lab For
Tots And
Parents
The Parent Resource Center of
Seminole Community College Is
of f eri ng an l nfant /Toddl rr
Enrlchmrnl Lab April 9-Juue
13. Mothers and Ihelr bablrs
(0-36 months) are Invllrd to
attend (he lab which stresses
effective and jzosltlve parenting
altitudes with guest sjx-akers on
topics of Interest to new parents.
M others and babies meet
together three times a week on
T u e s d a y . We d n e s d a y and
Thursday from 9 a m. to 12
noon. The Wednesday morning
class features a special kindergyrn session
Tuition Is S45. Prc registration
la required. For more Informa­
tion please call 3 2 3 - 1 4 5 0 .
Extension 228 (From Orlando
call 843-7001L To rrgtslcr go lo
the admissions office In the
administration building.

3 DAYS ONLY
• THURS. • FRI.
&amp; SAT.
march
78th30th

212 E . First St.

Downtown Sanford

E A S TE R
M

THURS., FRI., SAT.
MARCH 28, 29, 30
S elected

DRESSES

All Sales Final
Cash-Check-MasterCard-Visa

1 1 6 W. F ir s t St.
Ph. 3 2 3 - 4 1 3 2
D o w n to w n S a n fo rd
S a n lo rd 'a M o a t U n iq u e U o u tlq u e

\

�2 B- Evening Herald, Sanford, FI Wednesday, March V, 1*15

Reader Refers To Bible For Last Word On Ribs
DEAR A B B Y s "A l C. In
Ncwtxrg. Ore,” wrote: "My wife
awl ! have a disagreement we
think you tan settle. Do women
have one more rib l han men?"
Your answer was: "Dear Ah
Men anti women have the same
mimtier of ribs. (Who Is ribbing
whoin?l"

Lord God had taken from man.
he made a woman, and brought
her unlothe man.'
Women have one more tlb
than men.
FUNDAMENTALIST

Abby. you quote Scripture
from time to time, so 1 would
have thoughi that you would
rem em ber Genesis 2 : 2 1 - 2 2 :
"Anti the Lord caused a deep
sleep to fall upon Adam, and he
slept; and he took one of his ribs,
and closed up the flesh Instead
there of. And the rib. which the

Dear
Abby

DEAR FUNDAMENTALIST:
With all due respect to *he Old

MONEY SAVING COUPONS
th r Sonf lower Croup

le n t «.t

66219:
I n n i

MSNUflCTUSIRS COUPON [inU IJU tW IMS

l

■

Save 30$ |

on any ura or Ravw oI

S tc u 'e tffip ' j
54300043130101

I
I
30(
1
Save 4(K
I

1 H H r*

roooscoae

MANurKTUR(N 1 coupon

tiP tP ii juit it, tns

I ssjaSSSF^ z r
r y

—~T: .

..

w* **m **m m t «a W

|

Q tN C R A l

*« JUUU HJ I JU

on S iw y Htrkt or

.

long Cum | Wild RiC*

*•» mm* ’ IT ~

SCOilMS

54300043140000

UUU

DENNIS &amp; KATHY'S

C O C A C O LA
PRO D U C TS
8-16 OZ.
BO TTLES

J i *4U

COCA COLA
SPRITE
TAB
MR PIBB

C A M P B E L L ’S
CREAM OF
M U SH R O O M
SO UP

2690 S. ORLANDO DR., SANFORD, FL
LOCALLY OWNED A OPERATED BY DENNIS B KATHY QRINSTEAD

323-4950
F R IC tl IN THIS * 0 0 0 0 0 PROM THURt MAR 1* THRU R I D , APRIL I. K M

OPEN: 7 DAYS A WEEK 6 A M. TO 10 P.M.

‘ ‘A

nut lorni

SmiU % Butty AuU

Crsam of

Mushroom

WE W ELCOM E FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS.

MPOtll

FRESH CEN TER CUT

PORK
CHOPS

U.S.D.A. CH O IC E B EEF
7 BONE

49 OZ. BOX
50&lt; O FF LABEL

CHUCK
ROAST

CHEER
DETERGENT

$

$

1.39

$
LH

6 12 OZ. CANS

O LD M IL W A U K E E
BEER

1.99 1.89

U S D A. Cholca
Baal Bl*da

F re s h

uoiaen Ripe
Hipe
Golden

* 1 .2 9

Mott lb

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef, California Roast Lb * 1 .4 9

Fresh

Round B o ne Shoulder R o ast
Lb * 1 .5 9
U.S.D.A. Choice Beef, Chuck Steak
lb * 1 .0 9

Florida Solid
L ettu ceH,d*

USDA Cholca Baal

FREEZER F R E S H W H O LE
*
FILLER
PO RK LOIN
Frith
Sunnyland
1/4Loin
Sunnyland
Rag 01 Bssl
Rag Or Bail
Pork
Jumbo
Bologna
Chops
Franks
u M .2 9 L b * 1 . 4 9 i b * 1 . 5 9
O N

Eggs
Dor

25®

T H IS

W

1 .2 9
Sunnyland

Cardinal
Bacon
u o&lt;

h|

E E K ’S

Pst 1% Plastic Or
Vitamin 0 Pap.r Cln
WITH 1
Flllsd
D OK
Cart.

M ilk
Vk Qst.

2 5 "

Oal. Jug

4 9 *

Priest Ending 4/3JB5

Pile** Ending 411149

G R O C E R Y

S P E C IA L S

25* Oil labtl. 22 Or. Bom .

Potatoes 5 Lb.$ 1

WITH t
FIIKd
D OK
Cart.

Buttermilk Biscuits

Meat Ravioli

J ^ a g e r J fo w e ls ^

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

. . .

Jumbo Roll Z f

S P E C IA L S !!

ib * 1 .9 9

WITH 1
Flllsd
D. Dll
Cart.

Pries* Ending 4/3/15

D E L I- B A K E R Y

French Bread . . . e«. 6 9
Angel Food Cakee.

.

.

_

n

_

_

l« 7 !l

• Inch Franch Appla.
Swaal Potato, Paean Or _ ~

Cherry Pie . . E a * 2 . 3 9

.

Orange Juice . . . . * 1 . 4 9
tOYt Or. Pig Jano't

WITH 1
Flllsd
0. 01.
Cart

14 Or. Loal

4 / #1

Hard Salami . ib 2 « 8 9

Bu y O n* For I1 .4 B

G E T 1 FR E E

.

• Or. Pig Banqutl

s

Chicken or Beel Pot Pies 3 / * 1

DEAR ABBY: I need advice
fast. My mother, who Just turned
6 5 . had an o p e ra tio n two
CONFIDENTIAL TO B .G .J.. months ago for cancer of Ihe
TRENTON. N .J.: The Trenton lung. One-third of her lung was
Times Is no more Immune to removed and she's been on
typographical errors than any oxygen ever slnre. Her doctor
other newspaper, but sometimes says she's been doing fairly well.
li t wise to leave bad enough Now my problem: 1 have caught
alone.
my mother smoking several
I s u b m il an a m u s in g e xch an g e times. Her doctor told hrr not to
th at app eared In th is sp ace five smoke, but she smokes anyway.
y e a rs ago to Illu s tra te that p o in t:
My father has a heart condi­
DEAR ABBY: My mother re­ tion and If he found out. It would
cently passed away after a brief tear him apart And IT her doctor
Illness In Iheoblluary published knew this. I don't know what
In our local newspaper, her age he'd do.
was given as 89.
I love my mothrr and don't
Abby. my mother was only 80. want hrr to turn against me. but
so II was apparently a typo­ I know that not saying anything
graphical error.
to my father and the doctor Isn't
Now this may nol seem very right. How should I handle Ihls
Important (o some people, but situation?
Mother was a very vain and
UPSET
prideful woman who would
never tell hi rage
DEAR UPSET: I'm sure you
Because of this typographical arc aware that smoking around
error In her oblluary. everyone oxygen can Ik- disastrous, so (or
will think she was nine years that reason alone you must tell
older than she actually was
the doctor that your mother Is
Should we ask the newspaper snraklng smokes
editor to publish a correction? I
Although the cancerous |xirsay we should. The real of the lion of your mother's lung was
family says to skip It.
removed, Iter craving Tor tobacco
OUTVOTED IN OHIO was not. so shr also needs to be
treated lor nicotine addiction
DEAR OUTVOTED: Some­ Tell your mother's doctor ai
times It's belter to leave bad once. It could save In r life.
enough alone. In support of my
advice. I offer the following from
DEAR ABBY: My 2 0 year old
th e C a l i f o r n i a News paper daughter Is u lesbian, and 1 am
Publishers Association. It Is an having a tough time dealing with
example of a typographical error this. 1 have no one to talk to
In the classified section of a about this as she askrd me not
small (own newspaper, and the to tell her father.
subsequent disastrous attempts
I love my daughter and want
to correct It:
her to Ik- happy, but I worry
IMonday) "FOR SALE - R.D. about her fulure
Jones has one sewing machine
Also. Is 11 possible In have two
for sale. Phone 948 0707 after 7 homosexuals In one lumlly? I'm
p.m. and ask for Mrs. Kelly who beginning to wonder about my
llvrs with him cheap."
15-year-old son. loo.
(Tuesday! "NOTICE - We
WORRIED MOM
rrgrri having erred In R.D.
Jones' ad yeslerday. It should
DEAR MOM: You sound like a
have read: One sewing machine
for sale. Cheap Phone 948-0707 very loving and understanding
and ask for Mrs Kelly who lives mother. Your daughter is lucky
to have a mother like you. Send
with him after 7 p m "
a
long, stamped, sell addressed
(Wednesday) "NOTICE - R.D.
Jones has Informed us that hr envelope to: Parents Flag. P.O.
has received several annoying Box 24565. Los Angeles. Call!.
telephone calls Ix-cause of the 90024. They will provide you
error wr made In his classified with literature that will tx-ltrr
ad yesterday. Ills ad stands equip you to handle this pro­
correct as follows: FOR SALE — blem.
Yes. It's possible to have Iwo
R,D. Jo n e s has one sewing
machine for sale. Cheap Phone homosexuals In Ihe lamlly
948-0707 p.m. and ask for Mrs
(Problems? Wind's bugging
Kelly who loves with him."
IThurMay) NOTICE - I. R.D. you? Unload on Abby. P.O. Ilox
Jon es, have no sewing machine 39923. Hollywood. Calif 90038.
for sale, f smashed II, lion‘I cull For a personal reply, please
948-0707. as Ihe telephone has e n c l o s e u s t a m p e d , s r I f •
been out I have not been addressed envelope.)

Continued From IB
POTATO ROLLS
I pkg active dry yeast
Vk cup warm water
Vk cup butter
Ik cup soft shortening
Vi cup sugar
I cup unseasoned hot mashed
potatoes
1 cup cold water
Ik tsp. salt
6-6Vk cups slltrd all-purpose
(lour.
Dissolve yeasl lit Vk cup warm
water and set aside. Mix rest ol
Ingredients logelhcr. then add
yeast stirring well. Pinch of!
enough dough lo make a dozen
rolls. Place In baking pan and
bake at 350® degrees for 25-30
minutes. Leftover dough may be
covered and stored In refrigera­
tor fur several days until needed
Remove from refrigerator, let
rise, and bake undirected above
CHEWY CAKE
3 eggs
2 cups brown sugar
1 slick butter
2 cups pecans
1 tsp vanilla
2 cups flour
lllend all Ingredients together.
Haller will be -cry stiff. Spread
onto cookie sheet and bake at
400® for 20 minutes, no longer.

Cut Into squares
LEMON PIE
2 cups sugar
Vk cup cornstarch
Vi lap salt
2Vk cups warm water
Grated rind ol 2 lemons
Vkcup lemon Juice
6 egg yolks, beaten (reserve
whites)
2 lablespoonsholier
2 shallow or 1 deep dish pie
crust, unbaked
Put pie shells In oven lo brown
about 30 minutes at 350-400".
Set aside In a large saurepan.
mix sugar, eornslureh and salt.
Slowly stir In water, then lemon
Juice, egg yolks and butler
Cook, stirring constantly, until
mixture is smooth and thick
enough to mound when dropped
from spoon Remove from heat
and cool 5 minutes, Spoon Into
pie shrlls. Top with meringue
and return to oven for a few
mi nut e s uniII meri ngue Is
golden brown.
MERINGUE FOR PIES
3 egg whiles
Vk tsp. sail
Vk tsp vanilla
l c up sugar
Heal egg whites until frothy.
Add remaining Ingredients,
beating until stiff mounds form

Correction
Pumpkin Mallow Pie. a light

1 teaspoon rum flavoring (op­
tional)
2 8-o*. containers 13 cups
each) whipped topping with real
rream. thawed
Pecan halves
Combine crumbs and marga­
rine. Reserve V4 cup crumb
mixture; press remaining mix­
ture onto bottom and sides of
9-Inch pic plate. Chill.
C o m b i n e pie mi x .
marshmallow creme and flavor­
ing. mixing with electric mixer
or wire whisk until well blended.
Fold In one Hoi . container
whipped topping; pour over
crust. Sprinkle with reserved
crumbs. Cover: freeze. Remove
from freezer; lop with remaining
whipped topping and pecans.
Refrigerate Vk hour before serv­
ing.
8 servings

Frath

Ground
Round

Chatty

Maltha Whila 7 K Or. Boi
Myda Path

3 9 *

10 Count. • Or. Tuba Hyda Park

54 Ot. Cln. Rrconil. Troptcana _

3 /* 1

Squash 31* 1

Pries* Ending 4/3/45

Elbow Macaroni or Spaghetti .3 /* 1
Lock Bag Storage Bags ........... 1 9 *

Glad, 4 Cl Boi

. . . .

1 Lb. Bag

Peach or Cherry P i e . .

T Or. Bo&gt; Ctaamallaa

Macaroni Cheese Dinner

Potatoes

30 or. Fkg. Banquat

Smoked Bar-B-Que S au ce........9 9 *

19

US. "1
Whits

Grapeade ..................... 7 9 *

11 Or. Jar Kratl Rag Ot

Ea

Med Y* viiuw
illo w
mill.

D IS C O U N T

M Or. Cln. Mlnula Maid

Dawn Liquid Detergent___ * 1 . 3 9

.^

Idaho Baking

F R O Z E N - D A IR Y

Fireside C ookies........................9 0 *

gt*

Celery 3 «... 1 Onions 3 - - - S 9 c

Pries* Ending 413/45

All Flavor* - IB O l. Bag

39

^

D O U B L E

Clorox
Bleach

With 2
Flllsd
0 Dl*.
Cart.

Florida

$ 4

* 1 .1 9

■

Bananas 4 J 1

1LM

y u, 9 9 *

Oi*d* A Lsrg*
Myds Park

EOS

i

IX(Hilt IhttHNNi: B
UT )
BUT

Ground
Chuck

Chuck
Roast

1

n s s

carrying on with Mrs. Kelly.
Until yesterday she was my
housekeeper, but she quit."

...Cook Of The Week

$

W E CARRY ONLY U SDA CHOICE BEEP AND
PRE3H PORK . . . NO FROZEN PORK
WE OFFE R A FULL SERVICE MEAT CO UNTER WHERE
YOU MAY SELECT YOUR IHDIVIDUAL C U T S OF MEAT

!!S A V E

10.8 OZ. CAN

Testament, he who seek, the
knowledge of the number of ribs
hath man and woman had beat
look upon the X-ray a of both.
Then let him go forth and
compareth.

Swiss Cheeso

Lb

2 . 6 9

Loan, Tandar

Roast Beet

Vk Lb.

* 1 .9 9

and luscious make-ahead frozen
dessert submitted by Helen
Julian of Brooklyn. N.Y.. won
the $ 5 ,0 0 0 Grand Prize, In
Kraft's Easy Secret Ingredient
Recipe Conical.
Some of the preparation In­
structions were Inadvertently
omitted in the recipe appearing
In The Evening Herald March
2 0 . The Herald regrets the
omission.
The corrected recipe Is as
follows:
PUMPKIN MALLOW PIE
2 cups glngersnap cookie
crumbs
Vkcup margarine, melted
lVk cups canned pumpkin pie
mix
1 7-oz.Jar marshmallow creme

�High, Light, Airy
Chocolate Fantasies
Melt In Your Mouth
It's springtime and cakes as
liglil as a feather — especially in
America’s favorite flavor, choco­
late — are definitely In season.
These particular cakes are
especially high and light because
they're made with flne-textured
rake flour instead of all purpose
flour.
RASPBERRY-CHOCOLATE
CHIFFON CAKE
Raspberry Sauce (below)
Vi cup cocoa
cup boiling waler
I Vi cups rake (lour
14v cups sugar
I Vi teaspoons baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
Vi cup vegetable oil
2 teaspoons vanilla
7 egg yolks
1 cup egg whites (7 to 8)
Vi teaspoon cream of tartar
4 cups frozen (t hawrdl
whipped lopping
Prepare Raspberry Same; refregerate ut least 1 hour. Mix
cocoa and water; cool.
Heal oven to 325°. Mix flour,
sugar, baking soda and salt. Heat
In oil. vanilla, yolks and cocoa
m ixture until sm ooth. Heat
whites and cream of tartar In
large howl until very stiff peaks
form; gradually pour yolk mix­
ture over whites, folding Just
until blended. Pour Into un­
greased tube pan. Hi x 4 Inches,
Hake on lowest oven rack until
top springs back when touched.
65 to 70 minutes. Invert on
heatproof funnel: let hang until
cake Is cold Cul cake horizon­
tally Into 3 layers. Spread I Vi
cups whipped topping and scant
Vi cup Raspberry Sauce between
each layer over top of cake.
Refrigerate any remaining cake.
Raspberry Sauce: Drain I
package (10 ounces) frozen
raspberries, thawed, reserving
liquid If necessary, add water to
liquid to measure Vi cup Mix Vs
cup sugar and 2 tablespoons
coinstarch In saucepan; stir In
raspberry liquid. Heat over me­
dium-low heat, stirring con­
stantly. until inlxtlrr thickens
and I miII s . Hull and stir I m in u te .
Stir In 2 talbcspoons orangeflavored liq u e u r o r o ra n g e Ju ic e ,
II desired, and raspberries.
CHOCOLATE ALMOND
ICE-CREAM ROLL
1 cup cake flour
's cup cocoa
I teaspoon baking jxiwder
Vi teaspoon salt
3 eggs
I cup sugar
Vi cup waler
1 teaspoon vanilla
' i cup finely chopped un­
blanched almonds
2 iubles|MMtns amaretto or Vi
leas|KK&gt;n almond extract, if de­
sired
3 cups vanilla Ice cream,
softened
Cocoa Glaze Ifollows)
Heat oven to 3 75*. Line Jelly
roll jxin. I5-Vi x lO-Vi x I Inch,
with aluminum foil; grease. Mix
flour, cocoa, buking powder and
salt; reserve. Heat eggs In small
howl on high sjieed until very
thick and lemon colored. Pour
Into large bowl, gradually beat In
sugar Heat In water and vanilla
on low sjreed. Heat in flour
mixture Just until smooth. Hake
until wooden pick inserted In
center comes out clean. 12 to 15
minutes.
U mmco cake from e d g es. Invert
on t o we l s p r i n k l e d wi t h
powdered sugar. Remove foil
Trim off stiff edges While hot.
roll cake and towell from narrow
end: cool completely on wire
rack.
Stir almonds and amaretto
into Ice cream. Unroll cake:
remove towel. Sjrread with Ice
cream, Roll up; wrap In plastic
wrap. Freeze ul least 6 hours
sjiread top with Cocoa Glaze. 10
servings.
C ocoa O la ia t Mix 1 cup
powdered sugar. 3 tablespoons
ilershey's cocoa and 2 tables
peons amaretto or milk until
smooth. Stir in about 1 tables­
poon milk. I teaspoon at a time,
until of desired consistency.
CREAMY CHOCOLATE
TORTE
2 eggs, separated
Vi cup sugar
1Vi cups cake flour
1 cup sugar
Vi cup cocoa
1 cup buttermilk
Vi cup vegetable oil
H teaspoon baking soda
Vi teaspoon suit
Cream Filling (below)
3 tablespoons cocoa
Heat oven to 3 5 0*. Generously
grease and flour 3 round pans. 9
or 8 x IVi Inches.* Beal egg
whites on high speed until
foamy. Heat in Vi cup sugar. I
tablespoon at a lime: continue
beating until stiff and glossy.
Heat flour. 1 cup sugar. Vi cup
cocoa. Vi cup of the buttermilk,
otl. baking soda and salt on
medium speed 1 minute. Heal In

remaining buttermilk and yolks
I minute. Fold In rgg whites.
Hake until top springs back
when touched. 20 to 25 minutes.
Cool 10 minutes: remove from
pans. Cool completely.
Prepare Cream Filling. Stir 3
tablespoons cocoa into I Vi cups
of the filling. Spilt each layer
horizontally Into 2 layers. Fill
layers and frost top with plain
filling, using scant V» cup for
each. Frost side with chocolate
filling. Garnish with chopped

pecans. Refrigerate at least 4
hours. 12 to 14 servings.
*lf necessary, 2 pans can be
used. Fill each with
of the
batter. Refrigerate remaining
batter while first 2 layers bake,
then bake third layer.
Cream Filling: Heat 2 cups
chilled whipping cream In
chilled large bowl until slid Mix
1 package (8 ounces) cream
cheese, softened. Vi cup packed
brown sugar and l teaspoon
vanilla: fold into whipped cream.

Even in g H e re ld , San lord. Ft.W e d n e sd a y , M arch V , I t t J —I B

Trio of delicate chocolate cakes sure to steal the d essert scene.

ISeafood
Fresh

Appetizing.
THIS AD
EFFECTIVE:
THURS..
MAR. 28
THRU
WED..
APR. 3.
1985 . . .

Publix

Grouper F ille t...
Fro sh

Medium Shrimp

Fresh

Cod Steak ........
White Fish Fillet

IMeatl
Swift Premium Mild or Garlic

Corned B e e f....... S' *239
Switt Premium Sliced Bologna,
Pickle &amp; Pimento Loat or

O liv e
,,

Loaf............ X* 7 9 c

Swift Premium

■rs

Flavorful Sandwiches: Ham Salad,
Chicken Salad or

Q

Smoked Daisies... S* M "
Armour White. Spiced or Bar-B-O

Turkey Roast...... VV *249

Tuna Salad.......... •£" *1°®

Kahn’s

Fresh-Baked Dutch Apple or

Sunnyland Slicod

Apple Pie

f or

Sliced Bacon....... X M03

s^ ss

Cooked Ham....... W

Hot From The Deli!

Lasagna............... S' *2”
Potatoes
Au Gratin
S * 2 19

Pork Chops

$ 2 3 9
\-VfVB

iw 69*

Gw altney
C h ick e n Bologna

Great
Bolony
1-lb. pkg.

I t only makes sense
that the best supermarket
M ^ h a s the best beef.

55

— i

Publix Beef - Gov't.*
Inspected Boneless

^

Bottom Round
Roast

77

per i

lb.

■

Lykes Meat or Beef

W ieners...........'IV *1,#
Oscar Mayer Sliced Meat or Beet

Bologna ..« 9 0 * iV *149'ir*17»

Publix Beef
_ tr-**
Gov't.-Inspected

Cubed Steaks
P«f S

2

^

7
Great Tatting!

la

rfl

p ob W ,

Publix Beef
Gov’t.-Inspected

R eel

Eye Round
Roast
per $

^

^

,b 4K-

3

*2«•

Smoked

Buy At Leaet One Pound of the
Following Items, Mix or Metch,
and Get One Pound of Potato
Salad FREE!
Old Fashioned Loaf, Polish Loaf,
OUve Loaf or

Dutch L o a f...........

£ f $209

Trout Fillet.......... »'

- m

Roast Beef.......... "“STM”

$2^9

F re sh Fro ze n

.
-**•.*. *'

Delicious

lb

Fresh

Try something delicious from our Deli. We
offer a host of spicy Deli meats, chicken, ribs,
entrees, salads, sandwiches, desserts and
cheeses. For large groups, try our
popular Deli Platters. They make
any occasion special.

It s the little things that
make the difference
at I hiLx.

P#»

7

Raisin Bagels...
Cherry or Apple

Fried P ies............. 4 *&lt;»
llam* Abevi Avail.bi. at all Publu
S lo r.t K i t h In Slot. B .k .r t .l Only.

Single Layer, Old South Recipe

Carrot C a k e ......... T T M "
Butter Streueel
C o H m C a k .......... r »1«
Perfect Treat tor the Children

Chocolate Chip
C o o k ie s.................

ItM I. Above Avet.04. *t «U P v M i
Store. I D M ik b k .n e t .

VaR

�« B — E v e n in g M .ra ld , Sanford, F I W ad natday, M arch 37, IM S

Skillet Dinner
Busy Cook's
Best Friend
America offrrs a great abun
dance and variety of loorIs Kill
Americans have unique lime
priori Men and lend In wunl Ihe
tiest quality meals In Ihe least
amotml of lime holer Die sklllrl
dinner Willi a well-slocked
paniry and a hit of Imagination,
s.iilxlying dinners lhai are
wonderfully lusty ran fa- put
together quickly.
"I lie trick Is to take advantage
of Ihe versaiillly ol your pantry
pul-togethrrs. Using canned
Cheddar flavor cheese dips as a
rooking Ingrrdlrnt helps ease
tlie pressure of not having
enough lime Mils creative Idea
was Introduced hy Frltn-Law,
makers of lilgh quality dips
available In four robust flavors
Unopened, they don't need re­
frigeration and will keep frrsh at
room ti iu|H-ralure up to nine
mo n t h s T h e y ' r e dcllelmiM
served .is is. Inn the savvy eiaik
will lind they're indispensable In
preparing simple sklllrl meals
Try cheesy Mam and Skillet
Dinner, a delirious, quick-to-fix
meal Dial's a friend to the
liiulgt-l anil Ihe linsy conk short
on lime llam and rahhage.
I« iked with earn wav seerls lake
on a new dimension when com
hilled wllll a ran ol dip
Coney Island Sklllrl Dinner
will make lit tit- kids giggle with
glee. Inil don't he surprised
when Die college i towd asks for
more. Wagon wheel pa si a and
slices of trunks ate hound
I n g r l h r r wiih tin* hut l ery
siiioolhorss ol cheese dip spiked
wlill Woirrslerslillr sauce anil
imiNlurd
CIIEESY HAM SKILLET
DINNER
I lah|cs|MM)u huller nt uiurga
lin e

I 2 cups shicddi il green rah
large
if cups cooked &lt;-idled ham ( I 2
ounces)
1Vlras|HMiti caraway seeds
I can Iff or It) miners) mild
•hrddar and herb llavor cheese
dtp
Apple slices loptlonal)

In a large sklllrl null holler
over medium heal, add rahhage.
ham and caraway Cook, stirring
occasionally, utilll rahhage is
i lisp lender SMr III cheese dip.
Ileal I In 2 mini ilea longer
(iurillsh wllli apple slices, If
desired
YIKI.D -I servings
CONEY ISLAND SKILLET
DINNER
H nuiiics wagon wheel pasta.
■IIkiw mac ariitli or oilier pasla
I c a n (II or ID o u n ce s) m ild
i h e d iliii lla v o r e lle e se dip

p e r k e d w ith c a rra w a y
s c a d s ta k e o n a n e w
d im e n sio n w h e n
e a rn e d w ith a can o f

B frankfurters, r ul Into W-Inch
slices
I large, ripe tomato, chopped
Cook pasl a accordi ng lo
package directions; drain In a
large skillet combine &lt;Iteese dip.
milk. Worcestershire and dry
mustard, stir until combined.
Sr ir In cooked pasta, frankfurters
and tomato. Cook il to .p&gt;minutes
until heated through
YIELD *1 servings

d ip in th is C h e e s y
H am S k ille t D in n e r
s

Sprlngllme holds the promise
nl wuruirr, less violent weather
ha most legions ol die country
(ciiatnlv. Mils wilder Mother
Nature wasal her liulllest
As ihe sun reappears, demand
grows Ini new thirst quenchers
I hose with lower caloric dunks
in mind will enjoy a punch nl
apple |utce or elder mixed with
lea and orange and lemon Juices
li c •ream parlor Ians will lake lo
ice i ream sodas made wall apple
mu &lt; cranfierry juice, soda and
whipped i ream tilt )siuicd over
lee i ream
Hl’ KINOTIME PUNCH
:t quarts * lulled apple
pilcr in elder
2 quarts strong lea.
chilled
.1 ciins |ti ounces ear III
Irn/rn mange juice
ccmceidulr. undiluted
*-j c up lemon |u|t e
Comhlne a!) Ittgreellenls will)
Ice In punch Ikiw) 1'lds kllch
en tested recipe makes uppruxlmatelv
quarts
AFELE BLOK8UM ICE CREAM

•OOAI

I cup chilled itjqile Juice
or elder
'« cup chilled cranberry
juice cock lull
ti lalilcsjHMins whipping

cream

Chilled club soda
1 quail vanilla Icecream
Combine apple Juice, cranbrrry Juice cocktail and cream. Pour
crpial amount Into fl tall glasses
Kill glasses to hallway with club
MKla Si Ir lo mix Add 2 scoop*
Ice rreum lo each glass. Kill
glasses with dull soda. Stir
gently. Hervr with straws and
long sjMKin. This kllrhen-leatrd
recljte inukes 0 servings

I

Polaroid Camera .. Vo. *18”

600 Speed Instant

S 749

Polaroid Film ........... UV
Heavy Duty D or C &lt;2 pk pkg )

Eveready
B a tte rie s................... "V

S-joe

Heavy Duty AA (4pk pkg )

Eveready
B a tte rie s ................... X

S-J49

Heavy Duty 9-Voll (2 pk pkg )

Eveready
Batteries .................. “ V *189

Ripe juicy grapefruit, crisp and juicy
seecfless grapes, mouthwatering Red Delicious
apples you’ll find them all at Publix. The best
selection of produce all year long. Taste the difference.

Publix
ID a iry I
Breakfast Club Rot) , Whipped
(bowl) or twin pack
I lb
Soft Margarine
me
Blue Bonnet

Spread......................... to'..

■Health &amp; Beauty I
F R E E l 2 -llt. b o l of
• u g ar f r a * C r u a h

I t ’s the little things
that make the difference
at Ihiblix.

w h a n y o u b u y tw o
8 2 o f . tu b a* ol
C t a il.

Reg , Mint or Gel Twin-Pack

Crest
T o o th p aste......... 2 US! *3”

THIS AD EFFEC T IV E:
THURS . MAR. 28 THRU
WED., APR. 3. 1905 . . .

59*

Regular

Agree Shampoo ... \o*‘ *179

Regular

Agree
Conditioner......... , 'bo*!*

S-JO'i

Pillsbury Butler milk, Butler or
Country Style

B isc u its..................4 ' m* 89*
Swifl Brookfield (Flat Cln )

Butter Q uarters......

1 ib

tin

S ^ 79

Krntl Assorted

D ip s.............................. mi 65*
Treasure Cave Portions or Crumbled

Blue C h e e se ............ X ' 99*
Polly-O Wholo or Skim Milk

Ricotta C h o e se .....

Wisconsin Cheese Bur

1%ul

toufO

17 &lt;il

o

cup

Sharp Cheddar.... .. pk‘ J
c m

n

20c OFF
With Thlt Coupon ONLY

Wisconsin Cheese Bar
Longhorn Cheese
per pkg
(E ffa ctlK O M .u c h 2 8 A p n l 3 . 19HS)

Florida Sw eet. Juicy S eed less
G D Q U I V

30* OFF
Wisconsin Choese Bar
Cheese Spread
2-lb. loaf

Exrtiia
»N|»M*H»

HIMMIt

(E f f e c t iv e M a rc h 2B A p ril 3

1&lt;JI»MC

l Ml f

tO t D

Breakfast Club Reg. Quarters

Margarine

2 89*ES
Dairl-Fresh
Assorted Sw iss-Style

^

W

&amp;t

Publix
Teller
(O* }« MCKin

8 - o z .jf t Q l
cups

^0^0

COMVtNWWCI

» OU C A N 8AM * OM

T h a ta Ita m t I f f a c t l v a In O rango,
L a k a , S a m in o la 4 O tca o la Co.

Tab, Mr. Pibb. Mello Yello
or Reg. or Diet: Sprite.
CaHeine Free Coke or

Coca Cola

Flavorful F re sh Sliced

Made From Concentrate
Publix Brand Chilled

Yogurt
0l

White Grapefruit... 5 *1
Seedless G rapes.... r 99c
Servo With Choose Sauce, Sno While W estern Fresh
Cauliflower............. ss*1*#
For Snacks or Waldorf Salad, Crisp. Juicy
Red Delicious
A pples.................. 3
99c
Low In Sodium. Florida Fresh Tender
Yellow Sq u ash.......v. 49e
Mushrooms............. $119
Beautiful Large Potted
Areca Palm s........ "yr * 1 2 "
In Bud &amp; Bloom, Polled Single Stem
Easter Lilies............*sr*6w
Fresh Cut Flowers Arranged In A Medium size
Mixed Bouquet.......zz. *359

"T h e Natural Sn ack", Thompson

With Thlt Coupon ONLY

Soft Punch
Zaps Thirst

One Step 600

H U SH

II cup milk

I teaspoon Wurcesl er shire
sauce
1 ti aspoon dry musiard

H am a n d c a b b a g e

12-oz. cans.
8-pk.ctn.

Reg. or Light Blue Ribbon

Pabst Beer

64-oz. $
size

4

(L im it 2 P la a t o . W ith O th a r P u r c h a i a . o l
9 7 .9 0 or M o ra , K ic lu d in g A ll T o b a c c o H o r n .)

Reg., Light or LA Carling Beer

Black Label
12-oz. cans,
6-pk. ctn.

- 4 9
|

$ &lt; |6 9

1

1

Breakstone's Lowtat,
California or Smooth &amp; Creamy

24-oz.
cup

$&lt;f39

(L im it 4 P l o a .o , W ith O th o r P u r c h a .o * o l
9 7 .9 0 or M oro, K ic lu d m g A ll T o b a c c o H o r n .)

ns

Cottage
Cheese

348

12-oz. cans, $
12-pk. ctn.

Orange Juice
(0

$ -|7 9

All P u r p o s e

a

W hite
Potatoes
1A
( J Oi n

10

I

-

S1 3

•

■

I

�Evening H e ra ld , Sanford. FI.W e d n e *d a y , M arch i f , 1» « —SB

Spring Dinner
D ine In Sp lend o r, C o u n try Inn Style
Knr g r a c i o u s . co m fo rta b le
dimin’ th ere’s nothing like an
old country inn Americans love
the am biance created by old
stone lire p laces antiques and
polished woods Even the foods
served have a special charm
T h c M e e k m a n A r m * In
Khltirbeck N V is the epitome
of a line cu n try inn The Kxecu
live Chef. H rure Manns lakes
A m e ric a n c l a s s i c s su ch a s
roasted lamb, rice and cran b er­
ries and m akes subtle changes
that insure the the tood is in step
wnh the ruhnarv times
“ Hone the leu of lamb before

Chef Bruce Harm s prepares Easter dinner.

rg

toast mu for easier slicmu t'het
Manns s n u u c s t s
\e vr r
overcook lamb he adds Cook
to an Internal temperature ol
140° rare and ISO to 155° for
medium Basie u with a rranher
ry-orange glaze « bile cooking for
a touts! succulent and unique
flavor
Mice also t a k e s on a dltlrrriu
taste when It Is cooked in a
flavored l l q m d stub a - chicken
broth or orange pnee For tills
menu, orauue flavormu is added
to complement tin- lamb basting
sauce jn d add a festive _l»*jfii
colorinu to the rice dish

S3 S3

Breakfast Club Grade A
Florida White

Frozen Treasure Isle
"Micro-Wave” Rik-Sha 16-Oz.

Large Eggs

Breaded Shrimp

Fnr the perfect tlmsltmu touch,
cranb erries a native Am erican
trim
a rc com b in ed w ith a
nnuvelle favorite w hltc ch o co ­
late mousse Ha untjv and tart
iTunborrv saner is an t x , client
contrast to the sweetness ol the
m ousse
C R A N B E R R Y ORANGE
G LA ZED LEG OF LAMB
I boned. rolled and tied leu of
lamb IS |xmnds|
II teaspoon martnram leaves
•v ieasp&lt;sin rosi-matv leaves
•it teaspoon thyme leaves
' j icaspoon sage leav i s
1 clove garlic, slivered

Fresh Homogenized

Publix Milk
gallon size

per dozen

BUY 1 AT REGULAR PRICE. G ET 1

FR

dJ

I S Low F i t . i s Low F i t or
SLlm . Gallon SUa Anillebl* with
Ona S i n Stamp Pi'ea

Lki

S a &gt; *r C a ililic a t a

Publix Nature's Grain

Bread....................... 2 .£,0.\, 129
Dinner R olls............ 2
*129
Boil in Bag
Success R ic e ............. &gt;v. 73c

Minute Maid Reg or
Country Style Concentrate

In Unsweetened Juice or Heavy Syrup:
Dole Sliced, Crushed, Chunks or Tidbits

Baked Pot a t o e s .... '£•*

IFrozen Food

Breakfast Club

Mrs. Smith Frozen

Pumpkin
Custard Pie

Orange J u ic e ...........Y.V
Penobscot With Cheese or
Sour Cream &amp; Chives

26-oz. pkg.

Pineapple................... "t.v 79c

Bndgford (M akes 3 Loaves)

32-ct. Toddler Convenient Pak
Elastic or 48-ct. Daytime Absorbent Diapers

Jeno's 10 8-oz Combination,
10 3-oz Pepperoni or
10 75 oz Cheese

Bread Dough........... Ul

Pampers.......................r *739

10*inch

Pizza

48-ct. Extra Absorbent Convenient Pak
Elastic or 32-ct. Large Super or 66-ct. Small Diapers

Weight W atchers Southern

Fried Chicken

Pampers....................... v? $839

6

flat

pkg

Banquet Patties

Assortod 12-oz. cans

Chicken
Parm agian................Y»V *25B

(45c Off Label) Automatic Dishwashing Detergent

Sara Lee Individual Pecan, Apple,
Cheese or Cinnamon Raisin

Spree Drinks................‘r $179
90
Cascade ...................
Upton Family Size
Tea Bags..................... *179

Flounder F ille ts ...... £?
Hellmann's Real

Mayonnaise

Maxwell House

32-“ -

,ib $ 4H 9 9
can
(Limit 1 Please, With Other
Purchases of tT.SOor More,
■■eluding All Tobacco Itams)

Nabisco 19-oz. Reg. or
18-oz. Chewy

Chips Ahoy!......

Si

H

$ 39

(Limit 1 Please, With Other
Purchases of S7.50 or More,
■■eluding All Tobacco lloms)

p‘«

ga

•

gg

Mamschewitz Passover

Nabisco

Matzos.................

Rilz Crackers...... '£?.* *12®

Manischewitz Passover

Eagle Snacks Crispy Cut

Matzos.................

Potato Chips....... 'b.Y *1"

Manischewitz with Beets

Sunshine

Fig B ars...........

S3

THIS AD EFFECTIVE: THURS., MAR. 20
TH R U WED., APR. 3, 1985 . . .
aacr.

to *.

*649

m.

*129

Borscht................ ’23* »119

IS ol

Sanka

Kellogg’s Cereal

Instant Coffee....

Frosted Flakes

Durkee's Real

*4flB

French Fried
Onions

Bonus P rintS

Dessert Topping Mix

Dream Whip........ " V
Assorted Sugar Free Gelatin

Je ll-0 ...................3 bo\aa *1
Hefty Tall

Kitchen Bags .
Hefty Cinch Sak

wun *••»! »aa*rc*M* a&lt;»l hw* w xsaacote' H* Dot
raw p,w&gt; ( i m w i i ,•« t«&lt; *■« Mtt •&lt; *&lt;***'&gt;

Trash Bags.....

r r w u • » . • r a n i»a o&gt; &lt;«*»&lt; ot » » .» » t co*o&lt; aunt

Hefty Cinch Sak Tail

“ FR EE FILM

Kitchen B ag s......

Baggies................. Z \' *17®

No Sugar Added.
Welch s White Grape or

Grape Juice.........

Publix

Fabric Softener
Sheets..............

mV *1"

Howard Johnson Assorted

Ic e C re a m ................ &amp; *1“
C a m p b e ll's

M ushroom
Soup
lE

auaui M tiavia

»oo

roviMitouumti toes

E!

39s

E

SANFORD PLAZA, SANFORD
L0NGW00D VILLAGE CTR.,

*1® *

Publix

lice Cream

i0 .7 5 - o z .
can

tM l Ad E tle c ll.e Al That# L o t .lio n . Only

99c

Plastic Food Storage Bags

L0NGW00D

Liquid
Fabric Softener ... Ki. • I 1®
Hearty Burgundy,
Chablis Blanc, Pink
Chablis, Red Rose, Rhine

Gallo Wine
1.5-liter
bottle

ground black

1 c a n I I d m in e r s ) In itia to r*

Mrs. Paul’s Light &amp; Natural

£3 E

l e a s p o o n s swill

traspunn
pepper

■Frozen Seafood I

Dog Chow.....................C *7"

CRANI1ERRT ORANGE
GLAZE:
2 (an* 11-I ounces rarhl emu
Iwrrv -orange sauce
2 cup* oranue |ulce
4 mi ne r s i '-j cup) Grand
Marnier
In large saucepan, combine
ingredient*. heal, stirring, ii*
melt
ORANGE RICE:
1 nip nneookrd i lee
» tablespoons bnllei nr marga
i tin' ) leasjMMin sail
H* cups boiling chicken broth
' i cup dry while wine
(haled peel nl I orange
Ju lero l I orange
Sail and grninul while pepper
Combine rier. Inittrr. ami salt
in baking dish Stir III chicken
broth and wine ('over and hake
at 350° lor 25 minutes (35
minutes |nr parhnllrd rler). or
until rier Is tender and liquid is
ahsnrtN-d Stir orange perl and
lulee Keturn to oven lor 1()
minutes Season In lastr Hull
wilh a lork and sprinkle with
parsley nr slivered almonds il
desired Makes ii servings
HEARTLAND LAM!) STEW IN
RICE RING
3 pound* l amb shoulder
iHinr In. i ill Into 1 1 Inch pieces
I t a b l e s p o o n s vrgrlahlrotl
‘s enp Hour
1 lablespiHin sugar
2

Danish........................ '12;* * 1 «

Purina (Bonus Pak)

ADC, Regular,
or Electric Perk Coffee

Dairi-Fresh Assorted

1 medium onion chopped
1 stalk celery, chopped
1 medium carrot, chopped
Before tying. tub lamb vvilh
m arjoram
rosem ary, th y m e ,
and sage. cut '.-in ch deep silts
in leR. Insert Uarlle silvers, roll
and tie Place chopped onions,
celery, and carro ts in bottom of
mastlnu pan. place lamb on lop
t'txik 1 ‘ i h ours at 350®. or until
m eat t h r r m o m r t r r rr u is te r s
140® for rare 1150 to 155® for
medium) B rush with C ran b er­
ry Oranue G lare last half hour
S erve la m b with rrm a ln ln u
glaze S erve with Oranue Klee
makes |()to la sciv io u s

$099
where shopping is o
pleosure 7dou5 o week

P u b lix

2 medium onions, quartered
1 clove garlic, minced
3 whole cloven
V* leu spoon dried roweovary
I small buy leaf, i rushed
I cup water
3 carrots, cul in Ihlek slices
(i medium turnips, quartered
I package (IO ounces) fro/rn
grrrn Ix-ans
6 cups hoi cooked rice
I rup gralrd Cheddar cheese
*« teaspoon ground white
|M-|ip. I
In oven -proof Duleh oven,
blown lamb In oil Pour nil
drippings In small Itowl or cup.
mix together flout sugar sab.
and black jwppcr Sprinkle over
lamb stir well Add tomatoes,
onions, garlic cloves, rosemary,
hay leal and water Cover, hake
.0 350® lor 40 minutes Add
carrots and turnips Hake, cm
ered, another l&lt;&gt; minutes Cor­
rect seasonings, it necessary
Add beans, cover, and trakr lit
minutes longer, or until qieai
and v eg etab les are lender
Comhlne rice, cheese, and while
pepjs-r Pack llrmly Inin well
Iniltered (i-eup ring mold Un
mold onto serving plate, Kill
center wttli lamb slew Makes ii
servings
WHITE CHOCOLATE MOUSBE
12 ounc e s while chocolalr
I I cup bultrr nr margarlug
3 tablrs|KH&gt;ns amarrlto
i 1'i lras|MKins vanilla extract
3 egg yolks. beaten
I cup heavy cream whipped
5 egg whiles
Itreak chocolate Into pieces
Place III to|i ol douhlr Isiller. arid
holler CiMikover hot watrr until
c hoc nlair melts Keninve from
brat Stir In anuirrlto and vanil­
la Cool Stir In egg yolks Kohl
chocolate rnlxturr into whipped
cream Heal egg whites until still
tint not dry, Fold carrliilly hut
thotoughly Into chocolate mix­
ture Turn Into a glass dessert
ImiwI or Individual sherbet dls
l i e s Lei stand In rrlrrgerator at
least 12 hours Serve with
Hrandled Cranberry Sauce
Mousse anil s auce can be
layered Note It white chocolate
c a n n o t be f o u n d In you
supermarket, look lor ti In a
candy store, makes 12 to Mi
set vlngs
BRANDIED CRANBERRY
SAUCE:
1 can (Mi ounces) whole berry
r rani retry sauce
2 tablespoon amarrlto
In u saucepan, melt whole
berry cranberry sauce over low
heat Break up with wooden
spoon, stirring well Remove
from heat Stir In amaretto Put
mlxtlre through food processor

€

(MARTMl
C A LL TOLL. m e n

la**-Ml ran

5

�I B — E v e n in g H erald . S an fo rd , F I W e d n .id .y , M a rch 27, I»»J

Evening Herald, Sanford FI Wednetdey March 27. m $ - 7 B

Potpourri

Tangy Beef , Vegetable Stew
Takes On A Caribbean Twist

Citrus Fruit Adds Sparkling Succulence To Seafood Dishes
Thr local fish market Is Ifir*
v n r of rnofr hustilnfl activity
these days with housrwlvrs,
bachelors. yminfl professionals
and home rooks of all drserlp
lions lined up. swajjplrifl recipes
and tips on how lo prepare the
'ratrh of the day ’ All of ihls is
flood news, for seafood Is not
only delirious, easy-lo-prrpare
and rjulck-cnoklnfl. hut. It's also
heallfiful and nutritious
One rei ||&gt;r lr» try Is Seafc*od
Vero An Grntln. a plipiani dish
rorntilnlnfl shrimp and scallops
with pilry flrap'lriill sections
Mushrooms adrl an earthy loste
and parsley |is savory ftouejurt
lo die mixture which Is sj&gt;oonri|
Into a casserole, lopped with
sauteed breadcrumbs, shredded
Cheddar and Swiss elieeses and
baked tirlelly ll ran lie prepared
ahead of time up to tin point ol
haklnfl. maklnfl II a flreal treat
for enlertalnlnfl
Wh e n e v e r worklofl with
seafood, there are certain basic
rules of conkllifl dial apply lo all
varieties The first is not to
overcook Kish or seafood should
lie heated Just until the meal
flels llaky
Iceyond llial II loses
flavor The second Is to keep it
moist and succ ulent because it
dries very cpilc kly One won
derflll solution Is lo use c Urns
hull ll doesn't overwhelm die
natural taste ol seafood and adds
a sparklliifl suet ulenc e to dishes
Grapefruit Iroui Klorlcla. plump
and Juicy, can lui|irove the taste
of seafood creallu The Juice Is
excellent In ittarlnade or steam
Infl or broth while sections
jiresent a clellflhtful c outlast m
texture to dir llaky while meat
SEAFOOD VERO AU OH ATIN
.'I laldes|MMitis butler 01 uiarfla
fine, divided
'-Vcup chn|i|H'd onions
'S pound miishrcMims. sliced
Me pound medium shrlinji
peeled and dcvclnrt!
'‘j pound Iresli sea sc allops.
sliced In hall
Mi leasjMion sail
'/« teaspoon dried cl 11|weed
I‘Inc h id |if|ijici
2 cups Klorlda flrajcclrult sec
lions
'A c ujt d ry In ea d c t in n h s
'A c t l | i s h r e d d e d t 'h e d d a i
c h e e se
'A c u p s lirrdctril S w i s s c h e e s e
1 « c i i j i c h o p p e d palsie s
III m e d i u m skillet m e l t
1*v
l a h l e s p o o i i s hill ter s a u t e ciuliill
until
t r a n s pa re n t
A d d
mushroom s
s h i l m j i &gt;11111
sc a l l o p s , r o o k f» m i n u t e s lonflet
01 u n t i l sealiMid Is 1 chiKi i I l&lt;&gt;
m o v e l i o m heat M i l In s a lt dill
a n d |&gt;c|i|&gt;ci (&gt;1-1111v told III fliap&gt;
h u l l sec III 11is 111111 l u l u a hut
ti l e d '2 cjuarl c a s s e r o l e In s m a ll
s k i l l e t m elt re llia llllllfl
I 1-j
t a b l e s p o o n s b u t t e r , stti in lireacl
crumbs
S p i l u k l e 1 1 lim b s,
t'lie d d a r and S w is s c lie c s r and
j i a r s l e y e v e n l y o v e r cciHsernle
I t a k e In a 4 00 " F o v e n I &gt; ,‘n
m i n u t e s in u n til c h e e s e m e l t s
a n d lireacl c r u m b s cue llfllitlv
t o u s l e d S e r v e wi t h h r o w u rlc e 11
d e s i r e d Y ie ld I ft s e r v i n f l s

PAHTITHIO
AMERICAN STYLE

the

I I me

c u iis u m liifl veflelab le m lu cliifl
S e r v e t ills c u s t a r d tn|i|ied 1 .issc
t i d e wi t h a t o s s e d s a l a d a n d
e l l l l e t l u s h h u l l 01 b a k l . u a Im
desset t
I pound Ic.iii fltuillld licet 01

lamb
I call |H11/ |tnllialn s.iiu e
‘2 tabli s|MM&gt;ns lust,ml mini i d
nulun
I leasjMHUi nieflaiio leaves
crushed
1 t e a s p o o n flattie s a i l

*» leas|MMiu fllnuild 1 lliliailiciii
11 teas|MMiii fllnuild nulmefl
2 c ups |H0/ |c'IImiu mac atom
c'lMikrct and drained
' i c up |2 0/ I ClUUlhlcd le t,1
cheese
'2 lables|NNMis bullet
'2 taldes|MMctis Hum
'2 cups milk
•I eflfls tcrulen
In lOincti miielei pan nr
skillet civet medium heal conk
f l i nund tirel s l l rrl l i f l u c •
caslcuiallv to hteak tirel ajiarl.
until hmwnrd. (i Immii ft minutes
I'ciiii oil drl|i|&gt;lnfls Sin In tomato
sauce, onion &gt;1111! seasonhifls
Evenly s|ireud 11 ol the meal
mixture II 1 tijil in HxHx‘2 " leak
iiifl dish Tup with li ol the
conked niuearniit (2 cups) He
|ieal lay ers. S pr IttkIr* with
cheese
In medium sain c|&gt;uu over me
dlutiblilflli heat, mrli bullet
lllrncl In Ilnur Cook. stlrrltifl
const. inily. until mixture is

■J
%

Herb Dresslnfl
2 cups Chinese pea peats,
cooked until crisp-tender or I
jiackafle (10 oz ) frozen {tea pods,
thawed
I cup red pcpjier stnjts
Marinate lint salmon and hot
Ireks In Herb Dresslnfl at least
one hour Remove salmon and
leeks, toss pea jxeds and |&gt;ep|trr
with Herb Dresslnfl Drain and

O f F o o d

1 m» mi

!•*•

F o r

*1 198S
10aa A
t lAunrv RIGHTS
Dir.wrn RESERVED
DrcrDt/cn
PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY, MARCH 2B THRU WEDNESOAY. APRILI J.
QUANTTTY
s

s C ash
D u u la u l

C ash D t r u le t u i

spec tally
opened in
Here is
stew trem
iiilluem c

Althnuflh many new Amert
cans tend lo conflrrflale in
coastal communities tin- m f l u
encc Is felt in all rrfltons .lust
note the new ethnic foods now m
your s u p e r ma r k e t , or the

O livos and ra isin s add d ifferen t flavor to stow.

toc&gt;d

lh a t h a t e
o u r a re a
a Iteel a n d v e f l r t a b l e
F l o r i d a w nil a U u h a n
i h r m i f lh the n v
ol
liSilts o l l l o l l
fl.illt. *10.1 1hi
nfl ol v i n e fl a r

of e th n ic food s

I i n c h c litics
lie u p s b e et b r o t h
« c u p e ld e r t titrflur
I im-chum s i z e d o n i o n s
p e e led a n d i j i i .l l t e r c d
1 o p s sill t i l t d e l l
2 1 n jis t o m a t o WTcliirs
1 . 1 up s l i c e d j u t t e d
fllCCII o l i v e s
&lt; c u p tat s t t is
1 t e a s p o o n i n i n c r d flarllc
I In t e a s p o o n flro u n d

CAR IBBEAN B E E F
AND V E G E T A B L E S T E W
.1 bihles|H hiiis 1 eActable nil
2 jHiunds bone less N c l
lor slew 1 III 111

THE 20 LBS OF FOOD CONSIST OF:
5 LB BAG DIXIE CRYSTALS SUGAR
5 LB BAG MARTHA WHITE FLOUR
10 LB BAG ALL PURPOSE
WHITE POTATOES

l cel pep|tt’t
12 -.111.111 new lied I
JHIt.ltCICH
cut |&gt;eeled and It.d i ed

2 t.it’ ll
til’ ll!
• i uj&gt; w.itci
In a l.ttflr *4.iui*e|titl lte.it nil
until lint Add beet llrn w n n nall
-.ides drain ntt lat
\dd tarot ll vliu-fl.it unions
c e l m inm.ilcies olives raisins
flarllc and ted |&gt;r|i|&gt;ct llrttifl to a
IhiiI Kedtiee heat and simmer
i n\ ered lot I hour
Nile! j i o b t l o e s
S im m e r
un
t u v e r e i l unt i l |&gt; otaloes e a n !«•
j ile r e e d easily w i t h th e li|i ol a
s h a r p k n i t f a n d m e a t is i c n d e t
a lm n t .10 n i n i n i e s
( ' o t n h i n e limit w n t i w a t e r A d d
to sane c|m&gt;i L o o k a n d stit u n til
t h i c k e n e d . 2 to 3 m i n u t e s
Thi s k i t c h e n t e s t e d tee i|ie
m a k e s ti to H p m l i o n s | J |n I

A N D THREE FILLED
CASH DIVIDEND
SA VIN G S CERTIFICATES

CALIFORNIA

LETTUCE
LARGE HEAD

ONE DOZEN

r C ash '
D u u la u l

DAWN

CLOROX
BLEACH

SUNNYLAND

BREAKSTONE

COTTAGE
CH EESE

LIQUID DISH
DETERGENT

ONE GALLON

1SOZ CAN

B re a k fa s t
In J u s t 15
M in u t e s

^ ^ y * Vn A +

' C ash D ir u la u l

HUNTS
TOMATO
SAUCE

LARGE
EGGS

O n ly .

J hiii

' C ash D iv id e n d

PANTRY PRIDE
GRADE “A"

ICEBERG

WHOLE HOG
PURE PORK

SAUSAGE
HOT OR MILD

i&amp;OZ

ALL GRINDS
1 LB CAN

$169

WTTMONt nUIO CAIH
OMOCNOCOmnCATt

WITH0N€ rxuo CASH
orvxxno cirtwcatl

GROCERY

WE SELL
ONLY

•mu 1 rxu o cash
onxxno cixnncxTt

MIH ON* H it0 CASH
BVWfNOCtNIVCATL

U «SJp *A * C h o ic e B e e f*

S h o p P a n tr y P r id e fo r Q u a lit y &amp; S a v in g s!
PRODUCE

MEAT

BAKERY

W’L
i» &lt;» 1Ah* 1

$179

llMil I WllH A|&lt; I

1*U4 H

PAN TRY P R ID E

WHITE BREAD

MR. BIG
PAPER
N A P K IN S

FA B
D ETERG EN T
4&amp;OZ
BOX

*•*

$149

300
: ( &gt;|INI

APPLE JUICE

vu m

A! MO*AH

A &amp; W ROOT BEER

Ml 14W
»HI I. IN* ? Hl«dOH

1 .3 9

PER
PO U N D

* *n
*s* *I A Q
Uixl* ca
•PAL*
IJiM CANS

PEPSI COLA

79

fXArcTATkv.... n»n -aa &gt;t n
MARKO STYLE

SUCED
BACON

G RO U N D
BEEF
RO UN D

$1^ 9

St

i

LB

lLAN MEATY

MR DIG

MR DIG

BATHROOM
T IS S U E

PAPER
TO W ELS

$169

6

FR E S H P O R K
S P A R E R IB S
sin

m (WUNO
Q X ji c

mq1 .29

OHFOtAM

... ^ 1 .2 9

IMV HICANSANt.CS ON IMV CMXSI IX111U

KEEBLER COOKIES . troct 1.49

_

uA-nx toe o o c t

„MTAnUNWHOL1 NUU
»OA

Vi

SAUSAQES

a

^ 1.59
I

m

V

vQouJny i
DOWNY

FR IT O LAY
PO TA TO C H IPS

FA BRIC
SO FTEN ER

(XU on urewTin scun

t HtAM4 OHO* UNBAM4V0

‘Jt&gt;OZ

0

4

9

^

H W O 1M 0M D

BAG

9

9

% m

19 BREAST’ a™

LEAN
BOILED HAM
HALF
POUND

$ 1 29

i&amp;oz
PKG

w axootM U ixx

RJ COTTA

LUNCHEON MEAT . . . 1.29

MNUTl MMO

rwcSHMnB MM

IT AU AN BREAD

. 4/1.00

..

5 ALIVE

2 B9

*

^

^

KMCTauetD

* I« « C A H —
A A l ID ilV T R U M

GOURMET DIPS

SANFOKO 29M ORLANDO ROAD. ZAYRE PLAZA AT THE CORNER O F 17«2 4 ORLANDO ROAD

I IQ

«
mv

1.78
qa

.89

y

'

H.69

BtINTE
JELLY BEANS

OWALTW

TU RKEY HAM
x x w w oxcxna

t*oi 1.99
« h 1.29
m

KJNMA1 KJTATOSACA/OI

S A LA O « « x x ^ .

uoz

1&amp;OZ
PKG

6 9

■UNTVIMBMa

PUUHO

4 9 *

FLORIDA CARROTS

^

WHITE GRAPEFRUIT

.49

U21.29

FRO ZEN

I

«JMP

TO O TH ­
PASTE

1 c up Irrsltly sipu i /c cl uranflr
jute e

4&amp;OZ

‘2 i.dili-spcHins honey
1« leas|NKin flruunil c iiuiaiiinii
1« ti-.ispiMiii fliciuud mac e
2 &lt;i|i|ilrs. cured thinly sliced
2 (M-ars. cured, thinly sliced
2 ciiaiiflcs. pec led and sec

$ 1 29

tinned
1 c u p jil.iln nr v a n illa voflut I
In m e d iu m s k ille t iin n h liie
•iranfle Juice-, h n it r y . litm a m im
an d mac e m ix w e ll A dd a p jtle s
an d pe.cts C o o k o ver in e d lu iu
h e a t. 5 H m in u te s u n til h u ll is
Just le n d e r H aste tru ll o lten w ith
Juice m ix tu re A d d u ra n flr sec
H un s. Ile al S e rv e w ltlt vnflu r!
M A K E S 4 s e rv in fls

ST MS 0 IKV BU.V, XltiAXA
AlCX VIM ort O l MX XXXI

SUM FAST

£52.99
’MV

4.99

MU

AQUA NET MOUSSE ......... 99
BIC U Q H T ER S............ 2/1.00
M ILLER o r
L IT E
BEER

MANANA PEANUT BUTTEH
MUPPINB

6 PACK
1202 CANS

2 euj&gt;sall-j)ur|)osr Hour
cup llflht brown suflar
2 teaspoons liakltifl jeoweter
2 larfle eflfls

s239

1 c u jt
m e d iu m
^ l c up
c u ji
cup

FISH FLORENTINE 9-OZ
OR R S H JARDin 1 1 -OZ

M

^

.89

MARSHMALLOW p o p . ’S£ .79

FRANK FORD EQQS

A Q UA
FR ESH

REGULAR OR
FOR KIDS

LEAN CUISINE

'

YOUR
CHOICE

ay

$ 2 2 2

marum ti a in mm i m

SWANSON DINNERS ”££1.39

swaxion

4407 mcNCM tcmct acme ia u x a m on

PANCAKES44! ^ . .. ^

.99

A21.79

BOX Mu a 4UCXD HIT WJUUtT IUCZD TUnxXY OK3UM
--------- , CWAMC w m HD on MACAPOM4 q f I X

SS .69

ORANGE JU ICE

..2aSl.OO

n K IH U K H If
■WTTW on 0000MVT CW M

.a s

! b&lt;£

MAH VENT EHUIT WITH
YCKiURT

(JBKJAAAil

|

vniow. mm. on wmti

HERSHEY K IS S E S . .

FT

SHAMPOO

FUMOA

,C

MARSHMALLOW EQQS

mood*

HEALTH &amp; B E A U T Y A ID S

OKXXXATl CMVAMXiA

r u i n | ao

E A S T E R CA N D Y

O SCA R
M AYER
W IE N E R S
uu'WKir

SAUSAGE . . .

^

9

^S2.49

5 9 * %$V 9

MortMd seiau halt kxjho

9

FRESH

. u.99

CLOVERLEAF ROLLS 2/1.09

is?

Y ELLO W
SQ U A SH

CHILIAN GRAPES
EATING PEARS

I&amp;OZ
PKG.
surwnAMO uacj.rn

,

29

n

CALIFORNIA
BROCCOLI BUNCH

A

lb

\2 PALP PAHTY flAPl OH

ASPARAGUS

70

LAAQCCTAMJOU

DAIRY/DELI
PA RK A Y
rfv N
M ARGARINE
Q U A R T E R S C^_

5 9

FRENCH STIX BREAD 2/1.09

FRESH

x tc iw o m la o i

TY10NS FRHD O O I N

1.69 SAUSAGE

QLAZED DONUTS 12/1.78

7-az

anfAixD oocmd mat

1,2,69 . B A C O__N_....... 'iS 1 .79 —FISH
»“ •1.99
_ _ —_- C
. _A _K ES -a
1MV

LB BAG

BAKING
PO TATO ES

9

ma itax nexu

IN THE DELI/BAKERY
STORES ONLY

i

■ cnip^-f
f 1— iS

3

1

US NO 1 RUSSETT

J

.

t Potato 1

»IB
»Vli

AST HCAT4 MPVt

a n HUTn ,TYU wjaD

5W1HLYCJ1

KEEBLER COOKIES

ohco*

SUNNYVAKcO

d a a c t

C4NNCR UNK

UNCLE BENS RICE

c

pwq

^

$159

VLASIC SPEARS

iamut

T U R K EY
DRUM STICKS

YELLO W
O N IO N S

iHtf

CALIFORNIA

PER
POUND

c

US NO 1

S T E A K S -— &gt;&gt;*2 -89 RUMP ROAST f 2 . 6 8 P A T T IES ........ ,.1 .1 9

ROLLS

ROLLS
WHO

roe ococi

! 1"

US GOV'T INSPECTED
LARGE MEATY

$ 1 39

CXCmiNT FOROOOHOl/TS

usoa

ONE
PINT

extra lean

c

59

SAVE *120 PER LB

HOT DOG B U N S ....... 3/1.49

LARGE STALK

FLORIDA
STRAWBERRIES

LB

3 / $l 49

•PACK
PANTHy PHlU tvAMmiMr.1 HOH

FRESH

e

SAVE 40 PER L0

1.79

20OZ
LOAVES

ROUND
ROAST

PICNICS

,^2.99

D ISIN FEC TA N T

M
|OUt AHt SiKJLHI HII

BNLS. BOTTOM

FRESH PORK

M;^ 1 . 4 9

GLAD WRAP

m
M

i* t-

US GOVT. INSPECTED
WESTERN CORN FED WHOLE

III UCMlt ►Mll.(HAHOHNAIUKAl

LYSO L

llte.ikt.isi was once a daily
h ou seh old I r ail 11 nan llut m
almost halt ot Am erican homes
today someone ic-flulatly skips
tins meal Studies have shown
that tneaklasl is y it.it lot pm
dueily ll v .ind flood muse cilat
teaetlon. ja.trllcill.llly ill the talc
uiiirtiliifl and lot well rounded
calorie intake and avuidanee ol
iivrrindulfletiee in liiflti &lt;atone
snacks
Wlial slops most people liom
eii|ovtnfl hreaktasi'* tin- most
eoiniium reason seem s to l»- Lie k
ol I Iliac- llut an liili-iesilnfl
n u n iiioiis tiieakl.ist only take s
lltti'cii minutes tn w hip up w Itli a
little advanc e iirepaiatioti
I lac vest tru ll Willi \ofluil and
Itaiiana I’eatiui Mullet Mullins
•tie a tasty, healthy and cpilc k
iniiniliiA combination tin- Itmt
ililxluti* Is a warm dish that uses
lliiee trulls available all yc at and
widely ealeli apples peats and
ocanfles Very easy to jcrepaie it
lias flreal a|i|&gt;eal with Us clu
nuniim and tiouey Itavortufl
When srtprltnfl ornrifles tiMik
lor those ifi.it are linn and Itrav y
lot their sl/e th e Hulled Fresh
Fruit and Veflelable Association
ady tses us that c olor is not an
tudlcalluil ol cjiialllv so flteeti
tltifles and small llflht blown
m arks should not |ircvcul you
hum jiutc hasliifl ihls c tints It till
d ian flis arc' an exeelleut soiiic r
ul vitamin ( ' ami are yuiually
scidium tree I tv usitifl them and
utliet cllius as s«'asoiiltifls to
ri-llui e sail Intake
Han.ilia Peanut lliillet Mullins
c an easily be |iit-|iarrd the d.cy m
niflht IM-Inre your niurnliifl n
past Mananas ate a fliMiil snun e
ol |Mibisstum whic h hil|is the
lioilv flet eneifly lit,in hind
Manana lY.uuit Mullet Mullins
are moist and feature the latni
ly |tlc-.isl•ifl taste ol |M-aiiul hut
tel ,i flood source lit vc-flelahlc
|iiutein

MAXWELL
HOUSE
C O FFEE

V

$

C ALI, r o l l F B W

L B S .

The continued flow ol ynuttfl
anil old Into the United Stales
front such areas as the Carlbbr
an. the Orient and India c o n
st.mtly adds to our mrlttufl [*&gt;t

i llfis

tfcNG
(IMfWITUi

teapoon pepper: mix well. Makes
about cup.
' P o a c h e d S a l mon: Cover
salmon pieces with bolllnfl salted
water: add two slices lemon, twro
slices union, one sprifl puisicv
and several jreppercoms. Return
to boll; reduce heat and simmer,
covered, five minutes or until
salmon flakes when tested with
a fork.

reserve Herb Dresslnfl Gently
loss loflcther salmon, leeks, pea
pods and jrepper Serve with
reserved Herb Dresslnfl Makes
six servinfls
Herb Dresalnfl: Combine 11
cup Bertolll olive oil. '« cup
white wine vineflar. one tables­
poon lemon Juice, one teaspoon
dry mustard. 1« leasjMion each
crushed basil and salt and ‘4

20

G e t

t(4Al *()« MKJKJWAVl rtlfmiNQ

M ote rea d ily a va ilab le
Iclu
c h e e s e a n d n i d l u c u v m a r circuit
s i i t i s l l t u l e leu the k c l . i l o t l i i a n d
m l t / l l h i a c h e e s e s a n d |M stllsln
m a c a r o n i citlfllinillv c a l l e d Im in
tilts h e a r t y G r e e k e n t r e e And
l i i s i a u t m i n c e d ciuliill a n d flarllc

sa 11 e l i m i n a t e

desired
YIELD: G servinfls
ZE9TY MARINATEDSALMON
AND VEGETABLE SALAD
I p o u n d s I'v tn rh thick
slitesi Alaska salmon, thawed ll
necessary and cut Into bitc-sizrd
pieces and jioar lied*
I larfle or 2 small leeks,
trimmed, cut in half lenflthwise
and cooker) until lender

s m o o t h a n d b u b b l y Stir In m i l k
all at o n c e C o o k a m i s t ir unt i l
m i x t u r e Ikci Is a n d is s m o o t h a n d
ilile k e rn el
Stir Inin eflfls a n d
blen d it io ro u flh lv
I’o u r riv e r
c In esc
M a k e in p r e h e a t e d M5 0 ° F
oven un til knlle inserted n ear
c e n t e r c n i n e s cent &gt;lean . .i Ikiiii 30
m in u tes
Let s t a n d 5 m i n u t e s
Icetore s e r v i n f l M a k e s I s e r v i n f l s

cPifde

«*or 1.69

J

tn a s b rd rljM- b a n a n a (3
s l/ r |
pc .I l l ’ ll lu ll ter
v e fle la b le o il
m ilk

I trasjMMin vanilla
In a larfle bowl mix (lour,
brown suflar and Itaklnfl jtowdrr
loflcther In small m ixer Imwl
eomblnr eflfls, banana. |vanui
butler, oil. milk and vanilla, treat
until smooth. Make a "w ell" in
dry litflrrdlrnls. add banana
m ixture all at o n er Stir Just
unt i l ’dry I n f l r r d l r n t s a r e
moistened, do not overheat. Kill
12 flreased iVi-lneh mullln pan
cups. Make In a 4 0 0 * K. oven
2 0 -2 5 minutes or until flolden
Kemcivr jran to wire rack. Cool 5
minute*, before removlnfl unit
tins Irom cups Serve wurtn or at
room trtn prruturr
MAKES 12 multlna

�BIONDIE

by Chic Youn j

» B - E v e n in g H e rald , Sanford, F I W ednesday, M arch 27, IM S

'i * t s / o o fsc^ . ~ o e f

T

*O

h

O

f(

/O J O O

, 5 0 WAMV •» ,

Sorry, Diet Won't Help
Emphysema, Black Lung

DEAR DR LAMB - My
husband has emphysema anrt
blar k lung Somr days hr has
Irotible getting his breath. Hr
itilnks that If hr goes lo Arizona,
his condition might Improve I
a J P a .
ttilnk this would be money
wasted Is thrrr a dlrl hr can
I K S
follow Ihat helps litis disease?
T u Ci ~&gt; &lt;£■
DEAR READER — I wish ihrrr
by Mort Walker wrrr a dirt that would hrlp The
BEETLE BAILEY
l&gt;rsi one ran hope for Is to
mmm
riirmnate obesity, if any is pres
TH E G E N E R A L
, , p.
(
OH,
•H
m l. and to follow a (food
10 BACKFPOM &amp;!&gt;&gt;. /
l ©OOP t m
balanced dlrl Unfortunately,
B ivouac,
you arr describing some rather
■
HALFTRACK
- p j / ; 1'
■B
prrinunrnt changes In the lungs
. r&gt;*
The most important thing is to
tW
avoid
exposure many pollutants
r
or irritants Tobacco smoke ts
■ 1j
ihr No I (tollman! that most
people with emphysema have to
K
contend with I do hope your
___A \
husband dors not smoke if hr
tines, he simply must stop No
one living with him should
smoke, either
THE BORN LO SER
by Art Sansom
Before considering a move to
another area, chrrk the pollution
and air quality Information for
Ihat area Many of those "clean "
areas have become contam i­
nated by suit! things as the
copper Industry You also need
lo know tlie altitude, since
Individuals wliti chronic long
disease (Jo tretler at sea level
Another imi&gt;uriant aspect of
managing sui It problems Is to
avoid respiratory Infections t his
often involves staying away from
puhlU gatherings and avoiding
children Such Infections ,yr
conlagloos diseases What may
I Run into a lot of
a s a AiArrea of f a c t .
ME ASKEP. ~H5Y. WHAT­ Ik- &lt;i simple cold (or .1 child may
o u v s who vveOE AT
O N E S U V IN O U IH E P
&gt;
EVER SECA/VIE of
t&gt;e .1 serious complication to a
OlP WHAT'S MIS
prison wlih chronic obstructive
NAME f t
lung disease
Some patterns find breathing
exercises hrlplul Improving the
level ol physical Illness, when
that Is (Hissitilc. usually makes
Ihr patient ted In'I ter
DEAR DR LAMB
I am
concerned .ilioul the health
needs of my f&gt; and 7 year-old
grandsons in save money, their
parents arc tiuving skim milk lor
them, and they nil peanut butter. bul du noi use butter or
M V f m i f A J M J W l t n ',
w /t tu i y a m u/#jt aucuj
■50 i m n u n i m g a r r . u ? (
margarine I am worried that
ibrlr need lot dairy products
O l AIL UJAI’M Aw YA&amp; U 5
AIOY S t R ( l £ 1W -U r TO HELP
ARE SEVERELY P?AIIUED
may
mil be met
AUEVIME THE SlTUATOO..
F E U II0 G 5
DEAR READER Don T worry
RIGHT CM.
another minute Most skim milk
HCT5H0T j

that Is commercially marketed
has 2 percent non-fat solid*
added This means that It con­
tains more calcium and com
plrtr protein than ordinary milk
Even without the added non fat
solids, skim milk provides Just
as much calcium and protein as
regular milk Eliminating the fat
is not harmful as long as the
rhildren are getting enough total
calories from all food sources
Nutritionally, neither butter
ACROSS

nor margarine ts necessary un­
less you nerd to consume more
calories Half of the fat In butter
is saturated fat. and It contains
cholesterol Peanut butter Is not
optimal or needed, either.
Send vour qu estion s to Ur
L im b. V O Box 1551. Radio City
Station. .Vrw Yuik. S T.. 10019.
A n w ar to Pravious Purna

6 Putt lo work
7 Radium
ama nation

1 Unit of i&gt;(|ht
4 P o t u it ia
pronoun
9 Eskers
5 Common
10 Ri*#' in tn#
contraction
Congo
12 Water (Fr |
11 Accomplish
13 G'tek mountain
mant
14 B -b liC tl p ro p n « t

8 San»! srmys

15
18
17
18
70
22
24
25
29
33
34
36
37
38
39
40
42
44
46
47
51
55
56
58
59
80
61
62
83
64

Before (prat |
Secondnend
Cowgirl Evans
Baginning
Detosifiad
Greek letter
2aro
Daar matt
Attampt
Coen hi,
City ol Oevd
Vatican rubber
traa
Tibiat
— and can
0-ve’s ip aciait,
Defame
Ri«ar in Ortgon
Top of an apron
Stnva
Ship*
Ladies man
Concapt |Fi.j
C'ott
inscription
Franch com
Aquatic bird
Cioaa falcon
a ,a i
Anda |Fr t
Dili seed
fnlicmg
Toddiar

DOWN
1
2
3
4
5

Gourd
Tail tala
Ragrats
Youngster*
CIA
pradacassor

19 Silkworm

21 Wall iSp |
23 S'lma
25 Vary important
parson! labbr |

76 Qua
27 hast of
pnatianti
76 Notch
30 Chaptar of
Koran

35 Soonar Siata
39 Cannonballs

l»l)

31 Got off
32 S!sngy
iltirmativa
•

47
48
49
50
52
53
54
57

labbr 1
38 Cheese vtogty
4 1 H X prastmi

43 lightly
45 Joy

lif t
Parades
Onad up
larga knit*
Convant
Out#' (prat |
Eapal
King (la t l

t

1

10

11 1

r
u

11

r

11

21

if

11
11

J

40

41

41

4«

SI
SI
•I

J

|C|1 (M III M * me

27

WIN AT BRIDGE

h

w

i

^

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
f &lt;l

- - •*—.
_______________

f\

X
OCHECK}
y

FTNI^HGP T H l
L E T T E R .M R Hi&gt;‘ .'t 1
CAN 1
M O W i’

OO

/

/ ( (PN E A V -W E N I
Y
/,V \ K « *a A IT I KHKAiM ') (
I P LIM
l IT FHIFZ’KL Yr'H-F
/
^
V
LEAVE

)

(

wCKP
\
FTRFECT '

^ pC&gt;^ W H O S P E L L S

IHF- --AAU WAT

J ------- "
/~ —

H APPtA/ES S l

I*; MAVINC 5 A

. / V

&gt; V

^ /(p y
X p )

-uGtv
by Warner Brothers

BUGS BUNNY

0 &lt; r-A\P M£ "THE '
0 WANPHSI&amp; ICON

WH&gt; APE TA 03kN[&gt;N
&gt;0^ 2 C A P \ 5A C \ £P

C ozen s*'
\ J
\

^

By Jam ea Jacoby
T he late Cornelius Slavcnhurg
ol the Ncihcrl.inds was the
winner ol 1he World Pair Chant
plnnslitp in Amsterdam tn HMiti
B0I1 Slaveillmrg, .1 gregarious
a n &lt;1 c h a r m i n g p e r s o n ,
particularly nijuyrtl a ilramallc
wtn achieved tlitough artifice
i Ills deal (crialulv qualifies
Slavrnhurg. sitting South,
made a I wo heal I overt all When
Ills partner raised, there was no
11or si ion that hr would bid live
hear Is rather than allow vulner­
able opponents to play lour
spades The (lummy was a
dlsup|Htinimrni
Still, declarer played dummy's
spade king 011 tltr opening trad
ol the spade deuce and got the
hoped-for spade continuation
after East s ace bad won Mr
lulled and led a diamond West

' V

—
by Bob Thaves

SUPERMARKET 1 1 1 l l T 1 ^

fi^ s r o p

a

*-l ,

p p n i P,

"LOW C A L o p l F "
fo O £ &gt;
y

l

o n

R o r ro A A

I X N ’T

s h e l f

GARFIELD

W hat The Day
Will Bring...
YOUK BIRTHDAY
MARCH 2 8 . 1 0 8 5

An Interesting friendship will
develop In lhe year ahead with
someone you will meet lhrough
unusual circumstances This
Iret sou w ill mine bom a dllferent
country and culiurc

TH P
.

.

tila'lQ

by Jim Davis
1 I P IP N T KNOW
. HAP A
BtLLVBOITON/

V

A RIE8 (March 21 April l!l|
Guard against tendencies today
inward being envious ol another
II von bad access to .ill the facts,
yon wouldn't trade places. Look­
ing Inr romance? The Astro
Graph Matchmaker set can help
you in your search Mall $2 to
Astro-Graph. Box 4H0, Radio
City Station New York. NY
IOOIB
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Serk verification of any supIrosed Iy confidential Information
passed on to you today. Your
source may blend fucts and
fiction.
GEMINI (May 2 1shine 20) Be
ANNIE

by T. K. Ryan

1

s

y

a

♦ K7 4

1 it as

V K J 73

♦ K gn

♦ 10 r

KANT

WK.NT

♦ y if 4 1

♦ AJ I 5 3

♦ X J7 J
♦y * 3

♦ Klit

V

vrt

♦ 10 9 5 3
SO ITM

♦ 10
V Ay |0»6S I
•«

♦ AJ V7

Vulnerable East West
IfcaU-r West
Viol
Pass
DM

Nurth
I'm
4V
Pau

Kail
14
«♦
Pass

N»«tk
74
yv
Pass

Opening lead 42

HOROSCOPE

'

------------- v.Y

a

►
NORTH

^

FRANK AND ERNEST

i

rose with the acr and continued
spades. Slavcnhurg ruffed and
tx-gau to play Ills trumps In fact,
lie played all bis trumps without
even cashing any ol his good
diamond tricks in dummy
Madness you say
But place yourself In the post
linn of either West or East
Surely declarer had a little
diamond tell Thctrlorr West Irlt
It was absolutely necessary for
him to kerp ihc Jack and two
small diamonds And East ft-li
ihr same Imperative existed lor
him
namely, to keep all Ills
diamonds
Alas Innh hapless defenders
(amt- down 10 singleton club
honors and the last lour tricks
were taken tty declarer's sud­
denly solid clu' 1 Idlug,
Yes. someo- ■ should have
known, bm the Ira* i* history

-5

1

t-xira careful In your commercial
dealings today, especially II you
are using an Intermediary Stay
on lop of everything
CANCER (June 2 1-July 221
Your Indeclslvencss regarding
your own plans could spill over
and nrgalively .dint the ur
rangetnctils of your companions
who expect to share certain
activities with you
LEO Uul y 23 Aug 22) A
Irlrntl who confided In you Is
going to be chagrined when she
learns you've revealed some­
th lug told In confidence to a
third party
VIRGO |Aug 23 Sept 221 If
you let down on your selfdiscipline today chances are you
will have to let out your
waistline Moderation Is a must,
so don't overindulge
LIBRA (Sept 23-Oct 231 To
gain attention or admiration
Iroin others today, you may
rmhelltsh one of your recent
accomplishments u bit more
than you should
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 221

Normally you're a perceptive
|K-rson hut today you could read
mure Into ihmgs than others
said or intended Don't Im- un­
reasonably sensitive
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
211 In a joint venture today, be
surr the one you're Involved
wlih is not looking to you and
your resources to sponsor the
enterprise single-handedly.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 Ja n .
191 Unless you take a firm
p o s i t i o n t o d a y , a mo r e
dominating personality you II be
associating with will rail the
shots and make the decisions for
vou
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Keh 19)
Your drive and persistence
might not t»e up to par today and
you may pack it In when you
run Into obstacles you could
normally handle in stride
PISCES lErh 20 March 20)
Take with a grain of salt today
promises offered to you by an
acquaintance with whom you'll
rub shoulders at an Informal
gathering
by Leonard Starr

�F I W edneiday. M arch 17, I 4S5—*B

E ve n in g H erald. Sanford

TONIGHT’S TV
C**rr#t11 at

WEDNESDAY,

- *&lt;1ft dut*ou»

rMufti

CD1O DYNASTY A, powerful Worm
•* Frpra KJtftmg ft#

EVENING

a 1 i o ' u « i«
ij &lt;mi jeffersons
(»0|

UACNCIL

)

LEH RfR

B&gt;« •
J#n n o n COnljng«ncy
b**n* at Denver-Cbrrnglofv AmbAa * i unpfbdttU Me b K l w putt
*•» M ixb m fbtCbvtJy C
TT (M l QUINCY

930

k ew sm o u r

£B III W ELCOME BAC*. KOTTER

605
T2 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
8:30
fl
J
f
It
®

NBC NEWS
O C B S HEWS
O ABC HEWS Q
(M l ALICE
III OOOO TIMES

835
11 QOMER PYLE

7:00

?

4 SA LE O f THE CENTURY
O P M MAGAZINE f n a l n
aommarc»al cActogfipfr, back
!Uh}* wifi ft*# nition«t touring com­
pany o* C*|»
7 U JIO P A R 0Y
11 (M ) TOO CLOSE TOR COM­
PORT Aftbf
U m M im M v
4 e Anaw go** imo ibbo*
•
Mnrou* H w v , 1 (| wort KAring
M» no ch o c * but to n r Monro* lor
Mip (Pbrt I of 7)
ED 110) AltSTAtR COOKE'S AMERCA
® III OWE DAY AT A TIME

705
m o use

ON

th e

O ® SARA Rcibfyft tibiib.bb thbt
S k i ■« in • bfutfunk to i n plant t
K&gt;WC*» JTth-bbthd,, C M P t lo n
for nw» c o v o i k

1000

I

11 LITTLE
«e

PFUf-

7:30
f ] 4 ENTERTAINMENT tom kjm t
FbiflKbd MbrtO tftornt*
1 O W HEEL Of FORTUNE
f O
1 100 BOO NAME THAT
TUNE
11 IM l BENSON
( D i l i a l l in t h e T a m il y

800
O 4 hiQHWAY t o HEAVEN An
C*J4W m*r&gt; * &lt;tapr*tt»on m jy bm

Curwt «rNpr» All, Qf.»iTHjvyi 9#*d

O 4 ST ELSEW HERE AutcHianow t * f» uruNtgovt oo*n n**n
HKgwY * mbn tiAPnmg to b* If*
M*tt.«n it fount n«*M to • c»o»t
W«ipA«u C'Hg brut AjtcMtnOwr
W ith # Chbbry b o
5 O CBS REPORTS Thb d m Of
LA* CorrMponObnf BA Kgrti* bncfion Put itpon on pwcot &gt;no
pfoMbnit n»or*w0 in grgvi 1'bntPMnt bRorfl ncfwtng mtwv&lt;b«t
•"tn rtCNNbntt donort *mT OocTort

(7 O HOTEL An biMlbnt mbnba*r from tnoflbl Sbn FitncitCO hotbl ooot Chnttvib I I tbbmt fiom
both hoftft bbtlN fw m* OT&gt; tonbar crown P*f«r tpwytt hit WWW*
brut Wbtcfwng ovwr • IM n tgw ti
conoRc CJ
I t (M|PfO€ PE NOE NT NEWS
X &lt;l) POLICE WOMAN

TO

f l O BODY B O U TfFU t. BOOT
HEALTHY
(1&gt; ( J f A IL OUY A group 0l tO K Jr

fraternity ferotter* fcKjnapt fl bail

11 MOVIE Thb Lwfl HtryJbO Oun
( t l i l l Ptui i n wmbn Lit! M*bn A
yduthtiA BA| th« K*t tnwn^bt hit
wnploywr t dbblh bn) thbn Ktcbpwt
toMbOwo

11:0 0
0 4 ) 0 ^ 0 n ew s
11 (M l BENNY HILL
X 1101 DAVE ALLEN AY LA POE
X III NtOMT GALLERY

2:25
11 MOVIE Mohbwt I IBM ! Scott
brAdy RilbObm

2:30
J O CBS NEWS NKJHTWATCM
11 (M l OUNSMOKE

300
(I

o

MOVIE Thb Wly Wbtt
K ut Oougttt
Robbit

1 196 T |

ifl |M) DALLAS
ED 1101 U V f f POM THE MET Tinca
MtkJflgard Banrant ftac&gt;do
DortMogo Cornai Mac Nad and Ha*o
TflfO star m Pucont I opart
r»*u%#pp# Sinope* mafeat fwt Mat
dabut a t conductor
(D (!) UOVtf Madman |t«79»
Nkruaai back S^Ourray iNw y * A
yOuing, ttuytian Jaw artft r#vanga on

,11 (M | FAMILY AFFAIR

005
OX B A S C B A U
b e h in d
th e
SEAM S A batund tb* tear** too*
at Maiof Laagut baaabatf locuamg
on lour mam&amp;ar§ of lb# 1904 Allan
ta frtv a t
0«uca B*nad«.i Tarry
Naraaiar Brad (commimt and Bob

Watton

9 00
4

TACTS

or

Mftcftjm

3:30
400

LITE Bia* bt

tbmptt lo hold down in* tori v&gt; Mu

830
8 1 m rh
i l i O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
7 O ABC NEWS t h is m o r n in g
? ! (M )P O P fY I
11 FUHTIME

6 45

4:15
11 OCT SMART

4:30
It (M l DORIS DAY

4:45
11 THAT OlRL________

MORNING

500
11 (M | NEWS
11 IT S YOUR BUSINESS (MON)
11 CHILDREN 8 rUNOlWCDI

11 AGRICULTURE USA (TRI)
5:15

12 WORLD AT LARGE (THU)

11:05

700
0 ® to o ay
1 O CBS MORNINQ NEWS
7 Q OOOO MORNING AMERICA
?1 (M )FLPtTS TONES
® 110) FARM DAY
X (*) h e a t m c l it f

7:15
X ( t 0 | A M WEATHER

7:30
&lt;R (M l TOM AND JERRY
X (W| SESAME STREET Q
X IS) INSPECTOR GADGET

7.35
12 I DREAM OT JEANN E

1 1 :3 0
O 4 SCRABBLE
7 O R y a n -s m o p e
X (1 0 m O R « A S T Y L E

11:35
11 LUCY SHOW
AFTERNOON

12:00
O i m id d a y
) o 7 a NEWS
11 IM I BEWITCHED
X
(10) NATURE OF THINGS
(WON!
X
1101 D*ONNE WARWICK IN
CONCERT r m r
X I »0I »* THE SWTNO (WED1
X IW1 NOVA (THU)
X I Ml WONDERWORKS iFRFI
X (l)MANN(X

1205
11 PERRY MASON

1230
O

4 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
f O YOUNG AN0 THE RESTLESS
7 O lo v w o
11 (M l BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

100
O

4 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
T Q ALL MY CHILDREN
M (M| Dic k VAN DYKE
X ( TO) MOVIE (MON, TUE. THU)
X ( W) CONGRESS WE THE PEO­
PLE (WED)
X I *01 FLORIDA HOME GROWN

605
I I BEWITCHED

8 30
U (M) PWK PANTHER
f f l (101 MISTER ROOF FIS (R)
X {» MY F AVORITE MARTIAN

835
I I I LOVE LUCY

900
0 f DIVORCE COURT
1 Q DONAHUE
7 O BARNABY JONES
1! (M lWALTONS
(D ( 10) SESAME STREET CJ
X (tlP A R T R ID G E FAMILY

905
11 MOVIE

9 30
0
I LOVE CONNECTION
X (II HERE'S LUCY

1000
0
1
(7)
IT
ffl

X

! TIME MACHINE
O HOUR MAGAZINE
O SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
(Ml BIG VALLEY
( TO) E LEC T FUC COMPANY | R|
(II MAYBERRY R F 0

0
F
ffi
X

4 SALE OF THE CENTURY
O FAMILY FEUO
( 10) V 7 - 1 CONTACT IR| Q
HI REAL MCCOYS

1030

11 00
O 4 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
i J O PRICE IS RIGHT
(7) O TRIVIA TRAP
f l l (Ml EIGHT IS ENOUGH
(D 1 101M AGC O f OIL PAINTING

NEW YO RK IUP 1I - Hill K u rils
was a partinA trh apt person to
anchor a documentary on organ
transplants — The Gift of Life"
— because he has Ic'-d through
the kind o! tnci1li.il tragedv that
has no such solution
"The G ill ul late
to air on
channel t» tonight at IO is a
painful. Informative look at the
real life drama til transplants —
the gill ol an organ that must hr
made In I he midst of traged&gt;
the long watt wills dwindling
quality of litr lor an organ to tie
found, and the pain, hope and
disappoint men) that can follow
transplant surgen
It is fascinating hut not prett\
ih rrc ts hope lull It is of a very
grim vartrty
In this show the em phasis ts
on heart live r an d ktdnev
transplants

n iiii not Ih- what the optimistic
transplant patient hoped lor
there reallv is htlle ehotee
Mr said that .diet living with
someone w ho had cancer and
di ed
h r vv on Id opi for a
iransplatu n necessary despite
am problems
!i s a choice between the pom
and being alive
he said
Id
choose life

K u r ils a m i th r program s
producers followed the fortunes
of AI and Karen l.tlh of Head
mg I’a tor almost a vcai .is AI
now 35. watted lor his Iil c i
transplant
Karen Lilly spoke ol how
w h e n t h i n g s w e r e gin tig
smoothly during that pt-rind tinl.tllvs deluded t h e m s e l v e s into
thinking that perhaj’s \! would
fwat the odds and somehow
recover spontaneously
It Is a strange met hauism
that comes mto pla\
Kurtis
lound hlmsell saving
Mv wile
had cancer and to the verv end
you think you are ihc exception
There's alw ays hope that sonic
how n won I happen, or that
experimental dings will he tin
kev
Ills experience helped him
u n d e r s t a n d t hat
whi l e a
transplant is not a cure and tin
qiinhlY ol tile after a transplant

Floyd T h eatres B H
B Z D ' s ;r, ! W

! | a i !tt

^

SAl.lY I T K l . n

jr™

KS

\

J

(TRI)
X ID MOVIE

105

800
11 (M l WOOOY W OOOPECKER
X t » ) f AT ALBERT

By Jo an Hanauer
UPI TV Reporter

11 Ca t l n s

7 O m w iT N C s s d a y b r e a k
f f illO IA M W EATHER

11 (M l PATTY DUKE

THURSDAY ___

]ha i baan ■aitmg tor

600
O T NBC NEWS AT SUNRISE
jfi O MORNING STRETCH
~ O EYEWTTNESS DAYBREAK
_l’l (M l OOOO 0AY1
U NEWS
X (I) JIM BARKER

10:30
ItlM lB O B N EW H A R T

fcimpwr tcnockpod io t * a kr» «-t
natt «n a trial in*o»*«ng tha mob |Rj

tm, rr*«rKj Ijndi mat bang *1 Iba i f
la«f« army givaf bum tb* opportunity

O ®' 7 8 COUNTRY (TUC-TRn
11 JIMMY 9WAOQART

The S to ry O f A G rim H o p e

X (II FAMILY

MOLLYWOOO AND THE

STARS (TOE THU)

10:05

jonalfran flncr*xag* fwn io lik * up

0

CD O

5:30

8-00

ED

5:25

11 MOVIE

1:30
&gt; o AS THE W 08LD TURNS
H (M IO O M E R P Y LI
X (T0I CONGRESS WE THE PEO­
PLE (WEOl
X 1101 PAINTING CERAMICS (FRO

200
0 4 ANOTHER WORLD
7 Q ONE LIFE TO LIVE
11 (M| ANDY GRIFFITH
X (TO) SURVIVAL (WED)
X 1101 JOY OF PAINTING (f Rl|

230

I iPBlt'v A *'•

) O CAPITOL
11 (Ml QREAT SPACE COASTER
X I '01 PEOPLE WHO MEAN BUSI­
NESS |MON!
X (10) ROBERT RUSS IN WYO­
MING SCULPTOR riMUl
X OOl M AGC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING [FRII

SGVC
whan you buy ONE 1
and ONf TLnud*

300
0

Hm i Caka
Frotting

(Of TWO Cak# o# TWO F rotting) any flavor

4 SANTA BARBARA

IS

) O OUtONQ LIGHT
1 0 GENERAL HOSPITAL
11 |M) BUGS BUNNY
X ( 101FLORIDASTYLE
X III v o l t r o h d e f e n d e r
THE UNIVERSE

of

** ,4« «- | •*'

«M» -

3 05
11 BUGS BUNNY AND FRIENDS

3,30
11 (Ml SCOOBY DOO
X 110) MISTER ROGERS |R)
X III INSPECTOR CJADOET

v / o o o 'v sib sa 1

PROCTER A OAMBLt [__ 1 0 6 2 2 5 ____ ]
V F»»'b.*'y a.

3:35

SGVC

11 HECKLE ANO JIC K L C (MONTHU)
11 THE CHAFLMKIHS (FRF)

w h e n y o u b u y o n e a n y s ir e

FAMOUS RECIPE
WEEKLY SPECIALS

a n y l ia v o t

X ) u n c A 4 R 4 4 u ic &amp; , C o o k ie M ix

20c

_
MbM ‘
*1 M» «ib *»■

Hr u

s i. A 1

* b i&gt;. •# -«b

|
5

*0 ■*t « n ar* Ht&lt;#

p r o c t im a g a m ble

57000ll54 It ’ ll 1

[__ 1 0 8 2 2 5

“ “ ™" r * l"", T

UAtf tB ' (4

SGVC

when you buy one any size
T)unrn« ^mcx.Brownie Mix

20°
M .A H

PRO C TI Fl 4 (i A Mill

,[

b S Q V G

106225

7

1

/ u f l i r H i i ’ o1

0

*

T h e B.B.B.

Combo

‘

1

s

b .b .b .

.

9

7

B etter "N" Backyard B urger

1/4 Lb. of 100% Pure Beef
French Fries
16 oz. coke or Beverage

a
e

•

YES, All For Only $1.97
•—

'm

•

p o p p a ja y ’s i j j
w Im t c

Hm* r l N i i r r Is ^ H ir s .

: 2501 S. French Ave.

Ph. 322-9212

Sanford

�* ♦ *

IO B -Evening Herald, Senlord, Fl.Wedneidey, March 77, in s

Division Of Inspection
Proposed For Longwood
By Ja n e Casselberry
Herald S taff W riter
Creation of a Division
o f I n s p e c t i o n In
Longwood has hern
recommended by the
d ly 'a acting city ad*
tn l n I » t r a t o r , G r e g
Manning
The division would
Include the building
I n a p e c t o r . fire I n ­
spector. and a full-time
code enfnrrcrncnt of­
ficer. Manning said.
Al present the code
enforcement officer Is a
part-lime policeman
and Manning said, ’ ll
requires a lot of time to
gel everything done
the city wants In gel
done. We haven't been
ublc lo enforre the sign
ordinance, because be
hasn't had lime "
Manning. Ihe city’s
police chief who has
tM-en filling In as ad
ml nl s l r ai or lor two
months, suggested al
Monday nlghi s com
mission meeting that
Ihe building Inspector
could be trained so that
be could also function
as a lire Inspector.
Ilul building official
Hud Hrynnl does not
see bow the building
department Inspector
can tic included In one
division with lire and
code enforcement In­
spections because his
department Is a sepa­
rate entity sup|Mirtcd
by user fees Hr said
Ihe user fees paid by
builders are only lo pay
for Inspections and rrla led costs of process­
ing building applica­
tions and permits
"If you bring In all
these other things, you
would lose control nl
and would hr pulling
ntori ey I nt o oi l i er
p l a c e s , ’ * Hr y n n l
explained "At the end
of Ihe year If there Is
loo much surplus, we
have in reevaluate to
sec II Ihe (res should lareduced. Other areas of
Ihe city are paid for by
lax money."
l.ungwood Kite Chief
Charles Chupmun said
T u e s d a y h e ag rees the

c o m m issio n should
co n sid er creating a
division of Inspection.
He said bis one-man
fire Inspection til vision
Is mi tiers Itiffed lor tintask of Inspecting all
new roust ruction lo
make sun- II conforms
with the fire safety
regulations In addition
Ihe lns|K-clor must re­
view all plans submil led lor approval afal
has more (ban 1,000
businesses lo Inspect
each year when oc­
cupational l i c e n s e s art*
re Issued.
Ihe county provides
an I nvr s l l gat or lor
fires.

legal Notice
P IC T IT IO U I NAME
Nol it# It tw iaby given lhal I
am engaged In business *1 t i l
B alm Springs D rive lu ll* 111.
A lternant* Spring* Sem inal*
County. Flo rid a IJIOI under thr
t k llllo u t n am e ot B AR I f H
C E ItltM
and I Sal t Inlrnd to
la g ltla r la id nama with tba
C l a i t ol tha C irc u it Court.
Sam lnola County. H o n d a In
accordance with ISa p ro rlsk n s
ot tha t k l l l l o u t Nama Statutes
lo w ll
Vac bon Sat 0* t lor Ida
Sla lu la s If ) ?
M I N N t m t COMP
/S' Hobart E Mannattaa
Publish M arcB JO )t A April 1.

10. 1*9)

O E D t l*

“ t s ia

"A s fast as we’re
growing. Just keeping
up with new construelion Is a lull-time Job,"
Chapman said "The
clly needs lo lake a
look at al t er nat i ve
ways of getting 11 done
lo avoid du plica IIon of
effort, Cross training of
Inspectors may avoid
duplication and yield a
more efficient use of
s ta ir."

C h a p ma n s ai d It
would he easier lo Irain
a building Inspector
with a background in
construction to do fire
Inspect Ion than the
other way round.
Another recommen­
dation hv Manning lhal
a director of public
safely he named to
oversee the police and
fired departments will
lx* considered al Ihe
nexl commission meet­
ing Chapman declined
in comment on the
suggestion
Manning, who was
named police chief In
11177. sold the police
chief before him was
appointed director of
public safety, hill there
has nol been one since.
Chapman became lire
chief after the clly elim­
inated the public safety
director.
It was pointed out
lbal a new &lt;barter was
passed after lhal and
did mil rail for the
public safely depart­
ment Clly Attorney
Gerald Kornian will
research the mailer.
The attorney has also
hern asked lo research
Ihe legality of giving
ham radio operators
|K-rrnlssloii lo Install an
amentia on lop of Ihe
*•11 y wul er l o w r r .
Manning said he was In
favor of it
City Comnilsslonrr
Ju n e Lnrmann had two
qursilons "Will li Intrrfrrr with cable and
TV reception anil do
we have the tight to Irt
them put II on clly
properly?”
Man Minn suit! the
radiu iipctalnrs would
Install and maintain II
al llirlr own expense a t
well iis assn me the
lliihlllly.
" W h e n you start
pulling private pmperty on public pro­
perly. you start runn­
ing Into d ifficu lty ."
Koruiaii said

Legal Notice
IN I K E C IR C U IT COURT
O F THE EIGHTEENTH
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT

INANOrOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CAU L NO I I W C A H O
C V F H N 0 N M I7 E . JR
D IV ISIO N G
IN R E
TH E M A R R IA G E O F
JO H N N Y L JOHN IO N .
Petitioner Husband
Anri
L E O N A JOHNSON
Hescrorvdanl W IN
N O T IC E O F AC TIO N
F O R O ISSO LU T ION OF
M A R R IA O E
TO L E O N A JOHNSON
107 Calendar Street Dorchester
M assachutaH *
Y O U A R E ME ME I) V
N O T I F I E D IS *I A Petition tor
D isso lu tio n ol M art lag* h««
boon I Hod *nri (om moncod In
this Coutt And you o.o required
la co.vo a c yjy ot your written
d e t e n t * ! , It a n y . to tt on
C A R M IN E M B R A V O E S Q ol
C A R M IN E M IIM A V O P A .
U M Stela Rood AU Longwood
Sp ringe P ro fessio nal Con I or.
Longwood Florid* 1JM0. And
III# IS# originol with IS# C lark ot
•h# A b o.t styled Court on or
bo loro April M. H») othorw lt# a
riolAull w ill bo onltrod against
you lor Isa roliot ptAyod lor In
is # Pol a ion
t h is Nolle* shall bo published
onto oacS nook tor tout I AI
c o n s e c u t i v e w to k k tn Ih o
SA N FO H 0H ERA L0
W IT N E S S my hood And ’ So
tool ot sa ’d Court At Sanford,
F torrdA thlt JJnd doy ot M arch
io«l
IC I R C U tT C O U R T SE AL1
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
A t C l t ' k . C I R C U I T C o u rt
S E M IN O L E County, flo r id
tty Dorotby Norton
Ooputy O o rt
P ub lish M ortS I I , A pril J. 10

U.1*01

O E D l?4

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
Notlco it hereby glean tbAt I
a— engaged &gt;n b u t’nAtt At 10el
N Hwy
1 7 * } , Lo n g w o o d .
Sons not* County. Floririo under
ISa lictibou t n *m * ot B E N O IT
E N T E R P R I S E S . IN C . And that
I intend to rogittor void nomf
w its IS# Clork ot ISO Circuit
Court. Sem inal* County. Ftorldo
In Accordonco with Is# pro
ritio n i of tho F lctllio u t No-no
Statutes. to wit Section M l 0*
F lor Ido S’ olu ’ot 1 *0
/t/ Lorot’ o P Bonoil
P ub bts M orch JO. 17 A April ].
19 1**S
O E D IA0
U N IT E D S T A T E S
D IS T R IC T C O U R T
M ID D L E D IS T R IC T
O F F L O R ID A
O R L A N D O D IV ISIO N
C O U RT NO : M 904 O r OH 19
U N I T E D
S T A T E S OF
A M E R IC A .
ploW llff.
1f%
L U C I L L E W ILK IN S O N .
Dolondontm
N O T IC E O F S A L E
Nolle* It hereby gieen ISAt
purtuAnt to A Fln e l Dor roe el
Foreclosure entered on Morch
II. 1*91 by ISo eboye on 11bod
Court In tso A b ort causa. ISa
u n d e r s ig n e d U n llo d S le le s
MArlhAl or on* of hit duly
*ulSorlr*d deputies w ill t*ll th«
prop*rty tltu a t* In Sem inal*
County. Flo rid *. d *tcrlb *d *«
Lot 1 end ts* North 19 t**t ot
Lot e Block t. A L L E N S F IR S T
A D D ITIO N TO W ASH IN GTON
H E IG H T S, according to ts* plot
IStraol *1 recorded In P lat Book
1 Pego JJ ol iso Public Rocordt
ol Sam Inol* County. Florida.
*t public outcry to th* hlghatl
And belt bidder lor coth *1 11
o'clock noon on M ay } I f f ! At
tso W ell door ot th# SamlnolA
County Cou rth ouse
Sanford.
F lor Ida
O a’*d M arch I I . I f t l
R IC H A R O L C O X , JR
U N IT E D S T A T E S M A R SH A L
M ID D L E
D I S T R I C T OF
FL O R ID A
RO BERT W M E R K L E
U N I T E S S T A T E S AT
T O R N E Y M ID D L E D IS T R IC T
OF F L O R ID A
Publith M arch IF . April J, 19,
IF 1*4!
D E D IFJ
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E I4 TH
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C A IE NO 11 *14 CA 94 E
IN R E TH E M A R R IA G E O F .
P E T E R A B A G SH A W .
Petitioner.
and
A L IC E O R E I L L Y BAG SH AW .
Respondent
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO
ALICE
O 'R E IL L Y
BAGSHAW
B or i* J C a t t r l* t . St L u c ia
Island
W EST IN D IE S
YOU A R E N O T I F I E D that an
action toe dissolution ot mar
riage hat been Iliad egein tl you
and you a r* required lo t a r .# *
ropy of your w ritten tie N otes. It
any lo It on F R IE D M A N 4
F R IE D M A N . P A . Attention J
DON F R IE D M A N . Petitioner t
ekorney. who** eddrese It P O
hoi t il
ITT W est C h u r c h
A r t n u * . Lo ng w o od . F lo r id a
lin o . U S A . on or before April
FA IMS. and Ilia th* original
with ttr* Clerk ot thlt Court
olth* f be’or* t e rv lc * on Poll
boner s ekorney. or Im m ediate
ty Ihereelter, otherwise A de
taull will b* entered against you
lor lb* rebel dem anded In the
Com plain!or Petition
DAT E D on M arch JJ. IMS
U A V E D N B E R R I E N . Clerk
ol the Court
By Je e n B rllla n t
Deputy Clerk
Publith M arch JF A pril ]. 10.
IF, IMS
D E D 1FF

N O T IC E O F IN T E N T
TO A M EN D
A T T E N D A N C E TO N E
B O U N D A R IE S
Nolle* It hereby given that
Th* School Board ol Sammota
C o u nty. F lo r id a . In te n d ! lo
emend lb* present attendance
ton* bounder let between A lt*
m onte E le m e n t a r y S c h o o l.
Longwood E le m e n ta ry School
and W ood lan ds E le m e n t a r y
School Th* mooting w ill be held
on Wednesday A pril ig. IM S. al
J JO p m in th* Board Room,
l i l t Matlonylll* Avenue. Sen
lord Florid*
Th* School Board ot Semmolo
County. Florid * alto intends lo
amend th* present attendance
ion* boundaries between Ster
ling Park E ltm e n W ry School,
C a is e ’borry E la m e n la ry School,
E n g lis h E t lo la t F ’t m t n la r y
School and La k e Or lento E l*
moniary School Tho meeting
will be held on Wednesday April
10. IMS. I t I t C p m
In thr
Board Room I J I I M ellonvllle
Avenue Sastord Flo rid a
Th* tpocilic law being Im
plemented Is F S ) » 1) 1X11*1
Tn* proposed policy It avail
able al tha Of I k e ol Suporln
’ended I
Persons desiring lo review
sam e prior lo A p ril 19. IMS m ay
do to by contacting Dr H or fence
G E v e n t Th* School Board ol
Seminole Cou'y. Flo rid a t i l l
M ellonvllle Avenue. Sanford.
Florida JJFFI, telephone number
IFF I1SJ. E . l F0S
Th* School Board of Seminole
County. F tor id*
By /4f Robert W Hughes
R O B E R T W H U G H E S . SU
P E R IN T E N O E N T
Nervy W arren, C h a irm e n
Th* School Board ot Semmoie
County
Publish M arch tF. IMS

D EO IF!

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T .
E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT .
IN AN D FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY.
F L O R ID A
C A S E NO IS 111 CA I I P
IN T H E M A T T E R
Changing
Nam a ot R IC H A R D THOM AS
M IC H A U D
to
R I C H A R D
T H O M A S
W A LR A V EN
A M E N O E O R O T IC E
O F ACTIO N
TH E S T A T E O F F L O R ID A TO
T H O M A S H A N S M IC H A U D
(Address Unknown)
YO U A R E
H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D th a t K E R R I E
K N iF F I N W A L R A V E N hat I l k
a Petition In th* C ircu it Court ot
Sem inole County, Flo rid a lo
change th* name el R IC H A R D
TH O M AS M IC H A U D to R IC H
A R D TH O M A S W A L R A V E N
and you a r* required to serve *
copy ot your written defenses, If
any. on F R A N K C W HIGHAM ,
E S Q U IR E
of S T E N S T R O M
M c iN T O S H . J U L I A N
COL
B E R T 4 W H IGH AM . P A , At
torneyt lor Petitioner, whose
address It Pott O ttk * Bor 11)0.
Sen ford Florida FJF7) DM. end
file the original with the Clerk ot
th* ebore styled court on or
before A p ril IF. IMS, otherwise a
default and ultimata ludgmenl
will be entered changing tha
nam e as demanded in th* Petl
Hon
W IT N E S S my hand and ot
f k lo l tool ot said Court on tha
i*h day ot M arch. A 0 IMS
(S E A L)
D A V ID N B E R R I E N
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
C O U R T S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
By V irgin ia Jackson
Deputy C lerk
Publith M orch D M. V , April
1. IMS
D E D OF
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U RT
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R IO A
P R O R A T E D IV ISIO N
F I L E NO 9 )4 )1 C P
IN R E E S T A T E OF
SA LV A D O R R U IZ .
Deceased
N O T IC E OF
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
TO A L L P E R S O N S H A V IN G
C L A I M S OR D E M A N D S
AGAINST
THE ABOVE
E S T A T E AND A L L O T H E R
P E R S O N S I N T E R E S T E D IN
TH E E S T A T E
YO U
A R E
H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D t h a t t h e ad
m inistration at th* estate ot
S A L V A D O R R U IZ deceased
Case No SJ 4J) C P . It pending
In the C ircu it Court tor Seminole
C o u n ty . F lo r id a . P ro b a ta
Division, tha a d d rtts ol which It
Posl O tflca D raw er C . Sanlord

F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Nolle* It hareby given that I
*m engaged In business el 14FF
A ir p o r t B lv d . S a n lo rd
Sami nol* County Florida under
tho llctltto u s nam e ot T H E
LIQ U O R G A R 0 E N and that I
Intend to register u d name
with the C le rk ol the Circuit
Court, Semmoie Cosaity. Florida
in accordance with th* pro
visions ot the Fictitious Nem *
Statutes, to w n
Section its e*
Florid * Statutes |*SF
s Lin d * Nettles
Publish M arch JO IF * April 1.
14 IMS
D E D 104

D o o n e s b u ry
’H v w r r - im c f

UHICMT m i l 5f£JM

I Tom vtPt\ucn fA
j SK O A L
: j t f w

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322 - 2611-

‘jo to e ftA P s io h h 6nes him
A M IX. ANP1KX ArtUPHNU,
WMN6SHlM10AfkHU£rM
M W C H f* } W

4 t V l K fi5

M60CDHGH1IDOJHGOVIV
NJaHTUTHOUT
fiV L ’

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 t im e ......................67C • Im*
HOURS
3 CPRMCuti** time* 61C ■tin*

8:30 A M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 Noon

7 epfiMCvtiv* tint*) 52C a lint
10 cpnsecutiv* times 46C a line

Contract R iU s AxaiUfcU
3 lin ts Minimum

D E A D L IN E S
Noon The D ay B e fo re Publication
S u n day - N oon Friday
M o n d a y - 1 1 : 0 0 A .M . Satu rd a y

23—Special Notices

17—Cemetery and
Crypts
J V A U LTS D O U BLE PLA Q U E
H EAD STO N E
O AKLAW N
173 4C3* 4 tl» r 1 30

21—Personals

*

1 Balloon Magic

.- V i'

)0S SETG400
’ ...........S E N D A G I F T
...... „ .,.W IT H A L I F T !

_________BALLOON

I wll not be reipont'bl* lor any
debts In cu rre d by anyone
other than m yte ll a t ol M arch
If. IMS Arvetter Motley_________
New
Credit
C ard ' No on#
te tu std
V is a ’ M a s t e r c a r d
C e ll I (SIS) Tat 014}

M ary Key Casm eltcs
Fre e Complimentary T e c,a lt

For o O ctal Spring Loak.roddSJ
SPRIM O I t TH E T IM E TO
BU ILO BIG BUSINESS
TH RO UG H L I T T L E AOSI

25—Special Notices
*

BOUQUETS
We O eliver!
Fo r every reason every see ten

CELEBRATE
A BIRTH!
Mr Stark's visit
m akes far a lifetime
*1 memories, gilts 4 e lll
Call L ind* » ) SI IF
e M A R Y K A Y C O S M E T IC S *
Skin c a r* end color flair
C O N N IE
m -FT M

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
B#by|IM *f nrcdffd w t# k d *y».
1 y r Old R « t» r# n c ** Lain*
M p r y i r N 373 *13#
For tvndtr. loving 4
ch ild c a r t , c a ll A
World 12) M H

★

qualify
C h ild '*

33—Real Estate
Courses

Thinking of golfing §
Root Eitofo U ( M M f
Join v* i t our C o n o r Nighf
Apcil lOfh M o * PM
Wo of for F ro * Twtlton
ortd co n h niou t T ra in in g I
CaH D ick o f V ic k y for d o f i i l i
IH M W
121 2a00 I wo 77* f 0*0

NOW
That we have

Koyotaf Florida , Inc
I* Y o a n E iM H f iH it

your

61—Money to Lend

HELP WANTED:

S m a ll p a rt * * * * m b if W ill , r a ,r|
N tv f' a Pm I

O F F I C E H E L P no » . p a n a m a
needed Coed startin g pay
F u ll u rn * Can I IS D M

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
77 6 1 3 4 8
Assistant M aintenance menag
•r
E x p e r ie n c e p re fe rre d
Apply &gt;n person Monday thru
Frid ay S A M I o a F M Sanlord
N u rsin g Home
t)0
M ellonvllle
AVON Hiring Smiling Faces!
Fu ll 4 pt lim e Call tmmedi
slaty 1 1)1 S S Ile c F H - t tlt
B A K E R W A N T E D for B ” l
Knapp s C om m issary in San
lord Send letter of interest to
B ill K n a p p i C o m m issa ry
IMS Silver Lake D rive atten
bon Joe G reetini
________
Bookkeeper Receptlon't'
Mature yvperlented individual
lor bookeeping through linen
c a l Payroll Federal Depot”
Q u a rte rly and Annual Re
ports W F t Accounts Payable
and Receivable audit answer
telephone corresp on dence
Sen lo rd E le c t r ic Com pany
Alin
Ed Dembrowtk.
Mail cover letter &lt;x resum e with
references to Bo* I N , c o
Sanlord H e ra ld . P O . Boa
14SF. Sanlor d FI l i f t ! 14)1
Bookkeeper...........
ITT)
C re e l job lor a
tik e charge
p e rso n "
need s a " lu ll
charge" etp er.en ce Esceilen *
opportunity to advance with
this firm

W A R E H O U S E W ORK
Im
medie*e Will tram Also Gen
e rai Laborers at* DM
CU STO M ER G R E E T E R
fully ram Good pay
now F y llb m o 4F9 4XXJ

will
Start

T R U C K D R I V E R S locator long
h a u l W ith or w ithout rig
E « co ” entpey C all*T *c)0O
CO M PU TER O P E R A T O R S
Good P ay S e e k ' Secure poti
lions C a l ls ’ ! 4)00
TRADESMEN
a ll p h a s e s
E x c e lle n t pay
S le rt right
away 4F1 DM
Tired ol Job Hunting?
Call Futures, they can help*
They have IM 'i te openings
m any with no eipertenet
needed Call lor into
________ S fl 4)90
___
I n t U lk r s
N eed4 Im m ediatlytll
Any dip erm co with I lk or m lr
ror helpful *0 install m arble
Baturas Perm anent posl I Ion
Never a Ieel

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774 1348
lrtvt«tf*ry C h r l ......... ........ t i l t F
Ktvpirrg !r*ck of (Jqily ROtordt
Shipp.p*g *nd rt(« lv ln 0
p r e t d jo b ' Q t n t f l f * w ith

Employment

323 5176
IS ) ) Fre n ch Ave

Employment

CLA RK A P P A R EL
Jaw Old
Lake M aty Road Unit TJO
La k e M a ry , needs evperl
enced sewing m achine opera
tors 111 14)0
___________
Cook naadad ’o proper* Wed
netdey night suppers at local
church lor Id) people Lunch
room experience helpful C all
m jo v

323-5176
ISJ3 Frtmch Aw»
LA B O RERS
A SSEM BLERS
W AREH O U SE w o r k e r s
A itig n m fn ft avaiiab'O1 tn San
lord
l a k y M ary and
Longw ood aro a
No feo
A b lB tt To m porary S B fv Icg
371 3*40

C B im t
SH IP JO B S ' G re a t
income potential A ll occupe
lions Fo r information call
1)11) ?4? SaJO ext tM

LA BO RERS
Strong ro lia b it.
gonoral latx^rer* nrodod tm
m rd iafoly D tlforonf locafton*
Phony and frarnporfaf-on a
mw*f N ow o rafro Apply

D ebarr Manor now hiring L P N
or RN tor day sh ill Apply to
N H igh w ay I F * ) or c a ll
M l 44Jt
_______

KELLY SERVICES
660 2 33)

Dispatcher needed lor Sanford
Contract Labor o lT ra Boo*
Seeping Skills a plus C elt I JOS)
Ft) a I F I or M l i SM _

SEWING MACHINE
OPERATORS

Employment

E a per .enced sewing mechtn*
operators wanted all opera
lio n s epen We w ill ir a ln
qu lelfled applicants In aur
a d van ced techniques, plus,
a lt e r p ro b a tio n a ry p a lle d
great benefits ol S paid hall
d a y s and h e s p i l a l i i a l i e n
Apply • lo ) Mender thru
Frid a y a l F)40 Old Lake Mary
Rd , S a n k rd . a rc a ll I I I Mid

323-5176
t i l l FrtiH .li Avo
E X E C U T IV E S E C R E T A R Y
A D M IN A i l l i T A N T
f ■ e cu ttrf offHO oecoHonl th ill*
m u ll bo p r o f ta iio n jl fliOOO
P trm o n o fll petition N evrr a
too'

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL

attention
A s a c latsilie d advertiser In Ihe
E V E N IN O H E R A L O .
IN C R E A S E tha R E A D E R S H IP
a l y e w *d by using s la r t i
Otv* our sales tees a call al

B u s in e s s C a p it a l tlO.OOO lo
11,900.000 and over P 0 Box
1411 Winter Pk F la SUSP

7 1 — H e lp W a n t e d

322-2611
O IO YO U E V E R S E E SUCH
B A R G A IN S . AS L I S T E O IN
TO O A V SW A N T AOST

Legal Notice
S E C T IO N IM
A D V E R T IS E M E N T FO R B ID S
Public N ellc*
Public Nolle* is hereby given
that Seeled Proposals will be
received by the Senlord Airport
A u th o rity
S e n lo rd
F lo r id * ,
hereinafter called Ihe Authority.
*1 th* o i l k * of lh * Airport
M an ag er
Bldg s i , Sanlord
Airport Sanlord. Florida, until
1 JO P M E S T on F R ID A Y
A P R I L S IM ) lor tha Fainting
Ol Tha M arkings And Numbers
On Runway f V In accordance
with drawings FA A specific*
Hons end procedural documents
prepared by ihe Engineering
D e p a rtm e n t ol Ihe S e n lo rd
Airport hereinafter caked th*
E nglneer
In general the protect Includes
thee leaning scraping, m illing tl
n e ce s s a ry and a re a s ol old
paint, hauling all debris from
in * e re *, end repainting th*
m a r k in g s e n d n u m b e rs as
shown on th* plans
Drawings. Speclliceliens. and
P recedurel Documents
Draw ings. Specifications and
O t h e r Contract Documents m ay
be esem m ed a l th# otHct ol Iho
A ts ls la n l to Ihe D irector ol
A v ia tio n
B ldg r l , Sen lord
Airport Sanlord. Florida Con
tract Documents may bo ob
•emod a l the Airport Manager s
otflca lor a non refundable tee ol
SF0 00
Special Features
Th* A irp o rt A u thority ro
s e r.e s Ihe right I* reject any or
a ll P r o p o s a ls , or any p a r i
thereof end lo waive any in lor
m ality or lochn kality In any
proposal m Ihe interest el the
Airport Authority
A ll bidders must be competent
In the work specified end furnish
both e live percent l ) \ l bid
bond end a on* hundred percent
I104N p e rfo rm a n c e bond II
awarded the contract
Dated M arch la IMS
Sanlord Airport Authority
Sanlord. Florida
By J S C lo v t’and.
Director ol Aviation
Attest M W Groenttein
Assistant Manager
Publish M arch IF. IMS

AVON C A R N IN O S W O W Itl
O P E N T E R R I T O R I E S N O W III
m m u rm m f
ACCOUNM RECEIVABLE
C L E R K StrongbochgroundIn
pay mom I potting to lOmpufor
iy it o m ,, nwlfh o m p h a ii* on
proof pcocott Mutt tie wwfll
organ nod with good c tor leal
%kIII*
Inforotfod candidafo
thovld confa&lt;1 M arcar Afuml
num
A crylic Applicators needed to
apply protective coating on
cars, boats and planas SS lo
I I I pur hour Wo tram For
work in Sanlord a rea c a ll
T a mpa I I ) 94a Fi l l
A D M IN IS T R A T IV E
A SSIST A N T
A C C O U N TIN G C L E R K
SECRETA RY
K E Y PU N CH ER
W AN O O RERA TO R
C L E R K TYPI ST
CRT O PERA TO RS
Im m ediate assignm ents avail
a b k m Lake Alary and San
lord Area Call Abies! Tempo
m y Services I I I 1444

__ 774 1341

L I V E IN H O U SE K E I P E R
COOK
Fo r r«t|r«kcf L«h« M«ry couple
B eau tifu l hom e W ilt n * * d i
*om t per to *4 1 «**l%tftnce
Nohtmoker M ulf d f lr f , cur
e v jile b i*
P r i v a t e liv in g
quarter % ISOO per month Ref
e rm c e t required 1 131 lW *
or 13? 10*4 ______ _________

F lfiltli C arponfry *4 p»r h oyr &lt;o
•fart Wll) tra m Calf f ) 0 i l
»•? *%a7«n** ? P M
Fyfl and p art fim # position* now
awailatolo H our* ca n Lr fleet
bio for tch o ei or
jq4&gt;
B onofit* aw ailabio a fte r quail
ty in g
Apply in p e rso n a l
R A X * 1000 W Hwy
*14.

LO AN P R O C E S S O R
F u ll’ P art bm # telephone an
swaying se cre tary *
Expert
a n c a p r e f e r r e d , b u t not
required C all » 1 StSf

C o m m g rc lil mortgage eaperi
f h e e w ith good' ( e t r r i e r &lt;ii
•k i i l l
P e r m «n «n t p o iifI0h
Salary H i opo N e v e r a f t f !

G R EO O R Y LU M B ER SA LES
Agresstvo le m lly owned horn*
canter has m ad* an opening
lor o sales Ireinee Must be
agresslu* ambitious willing
lo k e r n and text responsib.lt
ly Also nved part time ce
shier and slock person C all
for appointm ent
ask lor
Alvin K ilp atrick L a i’ &gt;1)0)00

TEMP PfKM PERSONNEL
7 7 *1 3 4 8
N ation * !erqt\ f ch ain of fam ily
fun iv n ie f t h a * im m ed iate
a p t ruing % to r a m a n a g e r
I ra tin e * p r im a r ily runt** (
weekend* Mutt be m ature
neat In *p|M!arance A 'bond*
b •* Ph w *• • tt app t 171 4f01

H O U 1 E P A R E N TS- C h r is tia n
sFw Ikr lor abused 4 troubled
leans La* S0*t

NEEDED:

PART TIME HELP

IN D U S T R IA L W O R K E R S

E x c a lk a l

Urgently need strong depend*
b k w o rS e r s Never a F e e ’

opportunity

for

Iho

tutuiu. m i n i ____________
N U R I C ' S A ID E S W A N T E D
Apply In pofton la k av la w
Nursing Centor. IIS E Second
Straal, Sanlord

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774 1341
I

R .V . S U P E R S A L E &amp;
O FFER ED BY

F lo rid a R .V. T ra d e A s s o c .
W ith A re a s L a rg e s t R .V. D ea lers
•
•
•
•

MOTOR HOMES
TRAVEL TRA ILER S
FOLDING CAM PERS
PARK MODELS

•
•
•
•

MINI HOMES
FIFTH W HEELS
MICRO MINIS
VAN CONVERSIONS

SPOT FINANCING • 15 YEARS
BRING YOUR TRADE
SPECIAL SA LE PRICES

SH ERTO N TW IN TO W ER S
I-4 KIRKMAN RD. (S.R. 435) ORLANDO
Fri. March 29th 2-7 PM
SAT. 12-7 PM
SUN. 12-7 PM

DED iFt

Shopping For A
New Or Used C arl
to u can alw ays Find Ihe
bast deals In th * C t t n l n g
H t t a l d 't CJaasJFIad l t d Ion
B ra d F rid a y '* f s a n ln g HaraJd
Far Ihe hex I se le ctio n s

Evening Herald
M 9 N—e lk I r e a r ! S rents*
k a s la r d . I l e r l d s
U M E II

r

A S SEM B LY W O RKERS

D rlvrr W irr h o v c i
lo 1109
F C L A ll local d e liv e rie s no
overnight Load and unload
Be your own boss'

&amp;

★

BV GARRY TRUDEAU
11L

O rlando - W inter Park

Florida. JIFFt
Tha personal representative of
the e sta te a r * Y V E T T E H
W EN D T , whose address It M l
Blue Jey Len *. Selenite Beech
F lo rid a )1 *)F and E D W A R D
PA B O N whose address it 11IF
O lm tleed Avenue. Bronx New
Y o rk I94S* T h * n am e and
addrats ot th* personal rrp re
te n ta tiv e s attorney a r * set
lovtn below
All persons having claim s or
dem ands agalntl Ihe ttla ta ar*
r e q u ir e d , W IT H IN T H R E E
M O N TH S F R O M TH E D A T E
O F T H E F I R S T P U B L IC A T IO N
O F T H IS N O T IC E lo til* with
the clerk of th* above court a
w rltlan statem ent of en r claim
or demand lhay m ay have E ach
claim m utt be In writing and
m utt Indicate th* basis tor th*
claim , th* nam e and address of
the creditor or h it agent or
a tto rn e y , e n d th * am ount
ctaim ad tl tha claim Is nol yet
due, the date w hen it w ill
become due shell be staled II
the claim It contingent or unit
qu ideled . th* n ature ol the
uncortotnty shall be ttalad It
tha claim It secured, the tecuri
ty s h e ll be d e sc rib e d
Th*
claim ant shell deliver sufficient
copies of its* cla im to th* c&gt;*tk
to enable th* clerk to m ail on*
copy to each personal rape*
tentative
All persons interested In the
e tle t* lo whom a copy ol this
Notice ol Adm inistration hat
bean m a lla d a r * re q u ire d .
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
FR O M T H E D A T E OF THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
TH IS N O T IC E , to til* any ob
lections they m ay have that
challenge the validity ot th*
decedent s w ill, the q u e illk *
lions ot th* personal repre
t e n la liv e , e r the venue or
lu rlidlclton of th* court
A L L C L A IM S . D E M A N D S .
AN O O B J E C T IO N S NOT SO
F I L E D W IL L R E F O R E V E R
BARRED
D e l* ot the first publication ol
this Notice a l Administration
M arch IF. IMS
Y V E T T E H W E N D T . As
Personal R e p re ta n la llv * ot tha
Estate ot Salvador RulT
A T T O R N E Y
F O R
P E R S O N A L
R E P R E
T E N T A T IV E
Irving Nethenton
Posl O ftic* Bos aa Cocoa,
f lor.da 17477
IM S) SM SJ44
Publith M arch JF, A pril J. IMS
O E D IF)

71-H elp Wanted

71—Help Wanted

Legal Notice

�71-Help Wanted

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

117—Commercial
Rentals

BAM B O O C O V E A P T S
M t E Airport B ird
E lf it n t t I and J Btdroom from

Naw O tt.ca Buttd&gt;ng
-war
C F R M on was* F .rst St
Totally dasora-ad -aady tor
occupanay f*4 to 4117 so It

KIT N 'C A R L Y L E

[MT PERM PERSONNEL
774-1341
R S C ’S A ID E S A H O U SE
E E P E R S W A N T E D Apply
n p t n y ’. L o l l «'On Hurting
eutor. t l * E Second Street

sue month ns tow. moon

S X Discount lor Stnkor Cltl

CanlEfbufj it the Crosunp
1 Bdrm . t or l bath Cende k
P rlv a la Palm A Carpart
W tlh rr O ryrr Hook up
Barwtilul Country Srflmg
Child/an. tm all pa't wekamed
Samar cityaws t i f f t y r !

^_______ 111 Hll_________
LU X U R Y A PARTM EN TS
Fa m ily A Adults Faction
P ar Is Ida. } Badraem t
M a itrr Cava Apartm rnts

nlqrd______

t r l lim e
d o l t entry
bookkeeping IB M PC t r p t n
onto requ red C oll Horriotl
c oot m o w
___________
HONE W O RK F R O M HOME
E X P . P R E F E R R E D IO E A I
FO R R E T I R E D OR SHUT
INS I K S ilt . A F T E R S
___
tot pi lo t It I .............................l i s t
"I ond g r t t l custom er) An
• n o ' phone* tiling No typ
mg' Local e iie b ia h e d to

Employment

323-5176
ISIS F r t n c k A vt

m mi

Open On W rakrndt
S P R IN G T IM E
T IM E TO P LA N T Y O U R S E L F
IN A HOM E O F T O U R OWN'

O

m

H

o

S A N F O R D
Sundij Noon 4

M B IITS

Bntish Amtncan Realty
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS
I and J bedrooms

in aaio or n i_*4» i
SP A C IO U S A P A R T M E N T S
Lakafronl. pool lennls. adults
no pats laundry S i l l to tMO
mo Coil i d 0)4} to tea

” u»h O tllct C o n t ro l o t lic t
Skill* Typo 40 W PM Phono*
Ptrm on tnl position N t r t r t
lot'

I and 1 bdrm Also turnahed
ell.* ien&lt; y trom | l ) week 11)0
dapos.t No pals C a ll 11) 4101
\ ; PM i I P a ma'to

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774-1341

1 bdrm , | bath appliances
upstairs, near downtown U IS
month U 00 security daposil
Ml t too or 111 s i l l ________________

r e c e iv in g

Rti'Oblt. strong with good ol
Mudt P trm o n tn l ond Itm po
rory positions N t v tr o lot*

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL

774-1341
SUN ST A T E L A N D S C A P IN G
l« « n 4 M ^ inten inct Ground
p r w n n H d e d Cell*410017
Wet apt.on,\t
mod
typitl
|I1 0 « l « k , p l u %
ho%p«filll4i*ton And retirtm wn!
C i m m ; 411* for m f« rv if«
Van Driver
Dey treafm ent
d^orN»r Fu ll fim# petition
dealing w iklh c h ro n ic
p iyo etric dtvsfi'rd end ri
d*'ty Call pr»vor%n#i 1)1 J a il

_____

A « i l t f t l a a n lr d
A p p ly m
V** von only. befween 7 ond 4
t*M
M&gt;b R a n c h . 2141 l
F ranch A r t .______________________
W A N G O FEBA TO B
Op#nirsg% m la » * M ary No fee
Cal i Abl t t t T e m p o r a r y
W f r tCW H I ItdQ
MORO P R O C E S S O R S
lm r r * 4u ie optnmg* P a rm a
nant povhon* Mutt have n
p e r m x t on e iB M D uplay
tV niar# Lantar or • W ANG
Never a tea'

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL

774 1348
91—Apartments/
House to Share
Wanted sober working woman
to vhara horn# I child o k ISO
naak
ttt and latt m 7*02
days )JI If f le f f e r 4 PM
A

| k | f l m odern c ount r y
home |l) 0 par month C a ll
17) &gt;W

93—Rooms for Renf
(b rittle * Apt I A Hemet
TV mtchon. laundry manS 1W&gt;
*k u p o n 42) v*ai *2) *4io
Com fo rtable c le a n D e e p in g
room P rivate entrance Ma d
serv let SeO wee* 111 H J J or
111 a t* 7
•» e Mat » P»
roorrr in
bom# Mutt be non tmoking
re tp o n tia b la ta m a le
C e ll
Monika eve 2H HaS. day
m 4Qoi____________________________
Room in private home Ma-d
W 'v K a ufilifiot and laundry
iaOwaok C a ll 0 2 P R __________
SA N FO R D Furnished rnom t by
*na weak Raatonabia ratat
Ma d tar vice C e ll 121 4107
s f PM 4 l) Palm etto A vo
.a n f o r d
R a e t tte e kly 4
Monthly ratat Uttl inc aft
vaoak
Adultt t 041 744)

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent
F u r* Apts f*r W im h C if u rn *
i l l P»im «!lo Are
J Cowan Nd Phono C l l l s _
*

.tetw ei located
Sanlord
P a r t e d horn* l * r S in g le ,
nonsm oking m ol* or frm * e
C « ll Month4 eve I l l n 4S
doy i n 40*1
___________

L Oy « l y I b d rm
C o m p le t e
privacy MO p*r * H » plut
MSB t d c u n ly do posit C a ll
n n t i i i f m m e _______________
M A K E Y O U R S E L F AT H O M E
In a completely t u rn shad sfudio
apartment Single slory living
al Its bast Sound cankoltod
n a ils B u ll! In booAcotos. da
cor wall c o w lin g Alto
&gt;
Bdrm orOilObN
Flea.bto leases
Samar C lllia n t F i k m i I
San lord Court Aporfmontt

________»a» i._________

Tw o b t d r o o m l u r n l s h r d
rportmont UFO mo plus I W
deposit CoHOTBSAa____________
I bdrm . hying room Sitchan
c a r p a l, a ir
N a p a ls ar
sh.idran A Ha* 1111 IN )

SHENANDOAH:
VILLAGE
» 1 0 0 O FF
S E C U R IT Y
D E P O S IT
iH M O W N P U l
r 1 FA M ILIES W 1 L C W *

3 2 3 *2 9 2 0
1422* S. oauwo BtTVf

Reconditioned Appliances
t em U ) W A R R A N T C E O
BARNETTS
CASSELBERRY
M b S ) l l ............................... M»S4M

,it
LlP

G e n t l e m e n need* li vi ng
g u e rfe r*
Oeat o^et *
No
kebte m 7 m . *fftr 2 10 P M

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Renf
OEBARY
) B drm I bath A C
carpeted
w a t h e r / d r yec .
lar^a U tS dike ousted Sac
Dap Required 001)424 1147
leave nam e and number or
1101) m 7AM after t 10 PM
a a a IN D E L T O N A • • •
• • H O M ES FO R R E N T a a
a a &gt;14 14)4 a a

★ LANDLORDS*
Tired of the headache* * Let u%
m an a g e you r r e n fa l pro
part*a% Profatkionai low cent
kanrkca 111 M il C ad anytime
United Valet A tte o a fe t. I»K
Prep Mg ml Div Realtor
New ) bdrm . J bath Cant heat
A air. fen*. blind*, garage 1/4
mi w&gt;ufh of Lake M ary High
A I neighborhood IS IS A «ac
Day* Mr
lo r e n f
1)1 4001
E vat 172 4W)
2*0 Howard
B in d . L o n g w ood
Lease
pure haaa p m ib k e
Now accepting apt «•
rental 4 B drm
| l ) bath,
family room, central heat and
a ir. carpeted, fenced back
MM. plua tkt last A D O
Available 4 I. Broker Owner
C an m o m _______________________
S A N F O R D 4 bdrm . |Wy bam
toper condition In 4 out All
eppi
CMA a
fan* garage
Ni ce n e i g h b o r h o o d
No
children, no pet* Vacant M/S
mo piuk deposit A ll 11*1
1 Bdrm . 1 bath. Fenced yard
1471
G rove
View
C all
172 1094
1 bdrm on Su m m erlin A ve
Ftrtt. lakt and depot it re
guir ad w ' refer am et 122 440)
) bdrm 1‘ i bath new carpet
cent heat A a ir. appliance*,
drape*, fenced back yard IMO
mo Day 111 1347. E v e * 177
M l*

105—DuplexTriplex / Renl
B E A U T IF U L 1 bdern I bath
carpet appliance* u • eared
patio, laundry 13AQ 7H O i l
N.ca I bdrm turn o t u n fu rn .
atr. w/w c arp a l patio I K S
p a tt.ia aa a B i n d
SA N FO R D D U P L E * 1 bdrm .
&gt;H bath M M mo M M kecurl
f y depokit No pet* R f *M7

107-Mobile

Homes / Rent
Ctaah petyata. n ita lurhishacl
W ashar
A d u lts S K S
MM
Fu lly aqutppad. 1 bdrm . 1 bath
unlurntshad Cant haal L atr.
I ' s y r s a t d SMS plu* d*(&gt;o*il
C all H I S**«

113—Storage Rentals
Mini Wiithousrs

tsa a up................

i i i MM

S T O R A O IT R A IL B R S
Fa r aw sn* caaslrucltww, *l&lt;
Wtlca Saws t i l »1M 111 M l*

117—Commercial
Rentals

O F F I C E 1 P A C E A V A IL A B L E
m downtown Sen ford Newly
deco^efed fully equip kitch
en. f.re p ie ct O o*e to hotptfel
4 co u rth o u k t
Im m
oc
cupency R E A L TOR 121 *4*4
V E R Y D E S I R A B L E 1 office*
eve*iebie Mutt *ee to *ppre
(ie*e Only U M per mo 177
4174________________________________

Lie R ia l E stale Brakor
1S4* Sontord A rt
F I N E C R E S T . lu s t Ilka N a * 1
B d rm
I both Naw root,
carp al cab.nats. p a.rt msida
and out lane ad bach Conya
n .tn l location SVt *00

321 0759 Eve 322 7643
C O M M E R C IA L S P E C I A L I S T
L A K E M A R T R E AL T V
REALTOR
ns*
D E L T O N A Dihtrohl halo closo
U 1 4 a n d now chopping
conlor Astumoklo Mortgago

s

i

g

g o o

D E L T O N A Partoct Hida A w ayl
l ’ y acros with m at.la hema A
root buy
1 4 1 . tog
W A L L ST C O M PA N Y

111 SMS

H A P P IN E S S IS
A K E V T O A N E W MOM E I
F IN O IT ME R E t

HALL

t i l f f . MC
H TtAti

RfAlfOe

uHtdect

L O V E L Y T R E E D CO RN ER
LO T Recently rented*ted )
B d r m . horn* wltfk f e m lly
room* Cleon end c*red fert
E * t y I t r m i l 1)7 144
C A LL H ALL
12)1774
R A M B IE W O O O 2 S T OR Y with
kp e fllin g pood Huge it#ne
fire p U c tf Cefhedrel Ceiling*!
All the e ifr e k l Assume no
q u a l i f y i n g i A l m e t f ne wt
147.144
C A L L H A L L ___________ .1 2 )1 7 7 4
C O M M E R C I A L ZONING )
Bdrm I 1/7 Beth Cent heel
end ekr. geregef Brick BBQ
end p 4 t» ' Fenced yerdl Ber
kn living room 1144.404
C A L L H A L L ..................... 12)1274

CALL HALL
Naw a tta cia to t wantadl Will
train tar a rewarding
U R E A L ( S TATE CAREERSI

323-5774
ltd* H W Y l l *1
H E R A L D R I A L E S T A T E ADS
ARE P E O P L E MOVERS
C H E C K T M I R E A L T O R AOS
A N D IN D IV ID U A L LIS T IN G S
T OOAT I
IN V E S T M E N T M IN O EO
Fra.-na duptaa an double lot
G ro stes avar SM0 mo Cony*
man! location, lane a and many
t k lr a s P n co d al only SIT SOB
B a i l o r c a l l la s a t

CALL BART
R E A L ESTA TE
REA LTO R
111 14W
LAKE M ART
] bdrm
l'i
balk, apoliawcot Clean at a
pm u i.a a a
LA N O STO CK B R O K ER S
M 1FB1

~ MARKHAM fSTATES
I bdrm / 1 bam Roality built
cal id timbar kanta. appraa
iw a kg H yndar a ir. mgk
a n a rg y v a lu a t d aa* w all.
u y t K lank, c yttam araad cab
ina*k. priaacy laaca
SIM M*
Mu»»a, R ealty. * 1 ACT ORS
a u so aa
« y i* i* t im im

SANfORO RETAIL STORES
Nawty ratwvatad rtlaM sta rts aa
F i r s t S I. la lh« H is t a r K
D aw alaw a D i s l n d
FM la
IM 00 *4 H. Rrtcas sU rttag a l
SI par s*. Ft m a M *

t i l l Franch A *a
IMO so fl
Star* Front W ill ram adai ta
tanants t p a o lu a t t a n s SM*
par month M l l«IS

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS
M IU 1W M T
o Adult I Fam ily
Sections
• W O C o n n a c tio n s

• Cobla TV. Pool
• Short Tarm t a o s a i

U 1 b Ml. ! 6 tx
Figw * 3 * |

ISOS W. 2Sth St
m -i

O STEEN
L A K E A S H B Y IB I
a crat
B E A U T I F U L NEW
HOME
Laka a cca ti
NO
DOWNto guaiiliad buyar L ir a
but w h a rt yaw c a n an|ay
n alw ra and d a a n a ir I X
.n to rttl B110 000 Owner IMS)
♦1* I M l
Sanlord Owner will help I,nance
•p a n o u t canyortabia home 4
bdrm . 1 b*rht ar homo •
mother in low apt Aaaumabia
T 't m a r t i a n B M J M P 1 W 1 I
S A N F O R D O W N B R " Walk M
trapping
1 bdrm . IN bam.
cant hoot 4 a t. w-w carpal,
icraanad tronl parch, work
m ap M ay help Hnanca R&gt;

Iasi_______________________________
Sanlard N ita 1 Ik F ra a m homo
w m Hying roam , dming room,
ponotod lom ily room, laundry
roam, work chop C oil tor in
tormahon H I U M or k]4 4 U ’
S a n a a ar boat otter_____________
S A N F O R D O P E N H O U SES3 BM batow VA appraikol J
bdrm . I bom. Cant H A A.
largo lot. toncad back yard
F H A aktw m abla m artgaga
non g u a llly in g Ooa.MS a l l
Bom D rlao. Roronno Park
araa M utt taai Sal 4 Sun
1 M A S 1 IU
IS 00 to 1 OB
Furlhar daiaili
O w nar
111041 AMI ar 0 11 to* Or**

183—Television/
Radio / Stereo

* C LIS T AND 1 C L L
M O B F H O M ES T HAN
AN YO N E IN N O B TH
1 E M IN O LE C O U N T Y
S T A B T E B HOME f 2 Bdrm . I
betfs heme cle*e te shopping
end schools porch. U rge utils
fy room lets Pf frees' I N . 044
D O L L HOUSE I 2 Bdrm ) both
tn the country, eet in kifchen.
2 porches, utility room, fonced
y o r d t
1 * 1 . 1 4 4
SH A D Y LO TI ) Bdrm . t», both
home with peddl* ton*, greet
screened porch, setsilty room,
kitchen hos lets of cebmott.
l o r g e y e r d i 141.000
C O U N T B Y L IV IN G I ) Bdrm . I
both heme en 4 lot*. S et which
m e y be t * ld s e p e r e t e l y t
E e t in kitchen, peddle ten.
fire p lo c o t 141.144
B E A U T I F U L I « Bdrm ) beth
home with *plif bdrm . pien.
peddle lent, t i repi ec e
I p e n i k h e r c h i e t oe I ur e t

I

• I

t

0 0

W IL L B U IL D TO S U IT ! YO U B
LO T OB O U B It E X C L U S I V E
A G E N T FOB WINSONG
DEV
COBP
A CENTBAL
F LO B IDA L E ADC B f M O RE
HOM E FO B L E S S M O N IV I
C A L L TO D AY!
O G E N E V A O SCEO LA RD o
I O N ! D FO B M O B IL E S I
I Acre Ceuntry Ire ct*
Weil treed en peved Rd
M X O o w n I I Y r* e l l l N l
From 111.IM I
If you or# looking tor * sue
costfwl corner to Boot Estate,
1ten«trem Beelty l* looking
tor yoo Celt Leo Albright
tedey e l 122 J IN
Evoningt
221 3442

MS 44 ) 444)
!M4 E Graves

**4 H I H IS
O rjn g e Cily

JUSTOFFI 4
* 1 O R A N G E C I T Y E X I T 1)4

liiirs t Ne»
Used Mobil*
Home Deiler in this Arei
f am ities
1441 Hwy I f 42

4
12) 1240

t l 14 ■ 40 2 B d rm
A«sume
m ortgage
12) 4724 a fte r 1 PM

2 bath

42 Scoff Mob-te home

24141 2

C e ll

322-2420

NEW S M Y R N A B E A C H
Ocean front 2 2 condo No money
down At*um *bte mortgage

Sanford 1 A cre 2 lot* 14*000
W M aticfo w kki
REALTOR

m zm__________________

l K l i Park. Santertf
W1 Lk Mary Blv* Lk Ma-y

C ar Shoppingf Save your chop
toathar! Read tha Want A d i
toy B a ll Buytt

* DAYTONA AUTO *
★ AUCTION it

P U P P I E S P UPPI ES
C V R H i »ead» to go' 7
weeks old 1 of the nice*!
puppies you ever saw Mother
i* a genuine B o ie r
Tail*
ii*i&gt;ped black loveable Why
no* give that special someone
the perfect Easter gift* The
Bo b ef mother op tor adoption
el*o it a gentle loving obe
d*enf dog Her former owner
•ttt town and we took her in
P 'ease come and t#e u« soon
C all )JJ *214 as* tor Pat

Hwy t j
Qeyton* B each
e o e e e Held* a e e e e e

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION
C aa ryW a d Nila at I to PM

* Where Anybody *
a Can Buy or Sell I *

I T JOHN S R I V E R Near Oe
baafy on 100 ■400 Deep water
we»i 1 septic C a ll 101 *7t aan

239—Motorcycles
and Bikes
itol k a w a u k i 440 L T D IMO
m llak * &lt; c * ll* n l ce n d ilio n
MM C all 111 MIS

241—Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
M GM C Motor Homo oacollonl
cund.lion By ownor i l l *00
( a l l lor Appt ))) 4d&gt;e____________

243—Junk Cars
B U Y JU N K C A B 1 4 T B U C K *
F rem H I te 1*4 a* mere
Call 22) I U * 11) 4111
TOP Dollar P u d tor Junk 4
U*edcar% truck* 4 h##vy
equipment )2J )H 0
A ! i ‘ A y TOP IX H l AR f OM
J J N K C AR S AND T R U C K S
C B S A U T O P A R T I I f ) 4*01

Fa r mere detail*

Debar y Auto 1 M e' me Sale*
A cros* the river, top of h ill
170Hwy 12 f l Debar jr *a4 4W4
*77 VW
Sett er bettefter
i j j o n 9 evening*

Y eah ! If* alm ost Summer I
C o m e | o i n t h e f u n at
Stonehedge We give English
or Western riding lesson* end
have rental* too 111 2211

* s

DISCOUNT
AUTO
S A LE S

WE FINANCE

L I E AUCTION
SOd lAMlBfd l a i
C O N S IG N M E N T S W E L C O M E I

1444 Ford Bronco
42SOO
C a i i i n m &gt; _____________
I f f ) D ella Noyaie AC 4 dr hord
fop New paint, rodfat tire*,
broke* Tune up Battery Low
mt l prev owner *1071 or
be*t otter )) f t*1|

323(593
FO R ( S T A T E
C o m m a r c la l or R e ild e n lia l
Auctions A A p praitais Call
Dell k Auction i l l MM

'71 P L Y M O U T H Q U IT E B 0
c * I . rebuilt engine, power
Go o d cond I I I f i l l __________
7) Red ThunderbiMl Lonfc% and
run* good 1000 C all )2I 0*10
•02 W 20th St

217—Garage Sales
F R I d SAT. MA R C H 1* A M
M at itom t 441 S SU N LA N 0
DRI VE

1976 CAMARO
*2 300

1974 GREMLIN

‘ 74 Pint#
14*4 Dn
74 Ford Caerter P/Up 1744 Dn
1*41 F re n ch Ave .............I D 1441
Why Buy New Yee Can R en ew !
K ip e v l Pe(n«4B edy W erb
f r * e t * n m a ! t * . .....

213—Auctions

LAKE M ARY
E k cu ttv * type pool home vary
ip a c ta u t at an a lto rd a b t*
price For appo.ntmnnt attar
1 PM Glady Brown Realty
Broker 171 1*14or 111 S i l l

Cutiom built DM lb itrtn gth
Hal bed ungie a i l * Good lor
) w h e e le rs or l a wn c a r *
equipment SStS C a ll 111 MIS

_______ iota r n t ii i_______

A U C TIO N E V E R Y F R I NIGHT

U3—Waterfront
Property / Sale

UdC Dn
1404Dn
*200Dn

Fre e Dog and pupp*e* Miaed
H eed
2 male t female I
week* 4 mo* old female C all
12) 4*0 4 after 1 P M

W A N T E D Young led e* 12 *0
11 y e a r * , t o w o r k a t
i t o n e h e d g e S t a b l e * In
e»change tor riding )21 2111

BeechsMe Beatty. B I A L T O B 1
*44 427 1212 Open 7 D ays'

C A L L ANY T IM E

71 Ceugar
71 M ark IV
t* Datiun 1W

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1120 S. Sanford 321 4075

41 Skylifs# 14 X 14 2 bdrm 2
both split plan 10 X 24 K fe e n
porch 10 ■ 10 shod central
A H gat ttov* L heat Adu't
section 111 QUO 12* i l t l

Ar« you getting D ivorced tren*
ter red foreclosed n*#d quick
sa le 7 C all D ale 121 4447

237—Tractors and
Trailers

E 'ee Sm all Lhasa Ap*o 4 year
old spayed female Desperate
ly n**&lt;H T I C ______________________

201—Horses

159-Real Estate
Wanted

O A R O E N I N O T I M E IS H E R E !
P LA N T A WANT AO
WA T C H TH E C A SH O R O W J

Bad Credit?
No Credit’
WE fINANCE

199-Pets &amp; Supplies

bdrm
l b ath ad u lt park
Central H A | l 1 000 221 44)4

Pey Balance W eekly l
it t 4444 ..................
it t m i

231-Cars

Sjtufdjy Sundii
Mj »t h 2)rd I 24th
Refreshm ent* from * te I

Ito l Ford Bronco X L T
Nam
Bros brakes sh o ck i sWO end
lake over paym on lk 11) TIBI

223—Miscellaneous

Satoll.la TV Syklemc
Comptoto All you -wed I JO S
Financing No money down
• I Md 00 UnivgrXal 1)1 5)44

G E solid *tete con*oi« Like
new 1110 or he*t otter M ull
s r r Ab*0&gt;ut4ly no call* 4ff#r
If 121 OQ77_________________________

Sjnford's Sales Leader

400 Fo»d J/4 »on pick up dump
•ruck Now painting uphol
itoey fund up and I'o n i and
alignment Apple p i* condi
lion Yours lor S*W
Dump
truck toolur* alon* i worth
SM 00 a day MS ) )4 It o l

I ) F O R D F 144 «f e p s i d e
p*«*kupp * P b 4 Or custom
w heel* L e e r topper
L ik e
new P i M R

Rebuilt K IR B Y / S ll* to A ua
Cuaraniaad Kirby Ca
114 W H I SI I U )440

C O LO R T E L E V I S I O N
21 color (00*0*4 fe'evi
* oo O tg m e i price Ovqr 1400
boionce due 1244 C4% hort*ke
Ov#r p iym e n f* of 121 month
NO M O N E Y DOWN Still In
worronty F r n homo trial no
obligation Can 142 l i f t doy or
night

REALTY-REALTOR

141—Homes For Sale

BATEMAN REALTY

U Rick S lK w b e rn e t
Tuet Thur Sat 44S4 Hector Ava
llH * k T
4)1 4441

4-

STENSTROM

235—T rucks/
Buses/ Vans

7 4 Pinto, $250 Down

Wh.rpool D ryer l ' i yrs old
L ke New! C all i l l 7*4) alter
) P M ___ __________________________
W ILSO N M aVE R F U R N i T U R E
111 111E F I R S T ST
m s a il

COUNTRY VILLAGE

■t * M E R C U R Y
C A P R I
H ATCHBACK
S&lt;lv«e w 'ad
tntoetar Vary good condition
111 D U from * S A n toe
Amy or Altore M i l l I D !

221—Good Things
to Eat

Used W ashers Parts A Service
tor K enm ores .............. H id e * !
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S

Nawty ranavalad an F irs t St
in tha Historic Downtown
OfStrlct M* to S M to tt
starting
at
IT.M/ to tt
Including 111 Slot

I Out ItoS Bu‘ck R lvw eak! Na
lim a avaiiabto to m ' o r a my
lo ti
your g ain ! A ll 4 USOO
Can 111 4d&gt;4_______________________

W A N T E D DE AO OR A L I V E !
Refrigerators. W ashers
D ry e rs
111 41sa

Tw o
o ra n g e
n au g ehtd e
lo .e sp a ts U S each Ioe Sanora
Bled . Call 111 44]i_______________

157—Mobile
Homes / Sale

Baky Sedi. flreltors. Ctothes.
Playpent ET*. Paperback
is i l l u n i n esaa

M wsai « 111) uoo

S T O V E A R E F R IO E R A T O R
S I K F O R BO TH 111 i!4S ar
111-401*. alte r ) __________________

Piolesuonjl Office Space

231-Cars

Need Cribs playpens, baby
f u r n i t u r e c lo t h in g
gectf
pr»co* After 7 BM 12) 1741
Paying CASH lor
Aluminum Cans Copper
B rass Lead. Newspaper
C la ss Gold Silver
Kokomo Tool * I | W Is l

________ m saaa_________

1 or 2 bd^m how*e or tce'ler .n
need of repe*r Will p*y tor
p e r t o r e l l m e l f f i f i i In
• ■hong# tor percentege of
rent 171 4141

219—Wanled fo Buy

NIEDA
| ' W H A T C H A M A C A L L IT " O R
" T H I N C A M S O I O " !
A D V E R T I S E F O R I T WI T H A
W ANT AO!______

a R E N T T O OWN.
Color T V s . i-e-eot w aih ars
d ry e rs reir.geraior l-ta te rs
turn.lu re video recorders
Special 1st weeks renl etc
Alternative TV A Appl Rentals
Z ayres Shopping Cantor

173—Wanted to Rent

m

anto'd m o n u fo d u rtr n t t d t
qualified TIO . M IG ond ARC
welder win* tobnoolion ond
loyout e i penance Only ta p t
r i t n e t d n t t d o p p ly
if )
R u d d tr C l r c l t , S o n to rd
A -port Industrial Pork

S H IP P IN G

O tltca or R t 'a ii South Sanford
A .a
IBM ta 1 K 0 «o It
I U SO so M Totally -astorad
B rick Bui'd.no 111 1 *0

t ■ »dt a \

COM E AN D S E E tha Brand n a*
1 b d r m / ] b a l k Uni t s
Fcr.anad parch, w a char and
dryar. m ini blinds Fram trot
a mo L a ta la d on Oak Ay* al
Park Dr bahind Dairy Owaan

r e c e p t io n is t

__________Ml l»H__________

H a av r duty h a a ia r. Ilka n*w
t l!S
U p rig h t piano t lJ S
11*4)40_____________________________

127—Office Rentals

SA LESM A N A CER
tttfrol F lor ido* largest R tol
E i'e to m o g o im t e.pend.ng
■rto Stm m olt ond W Orongt
County M u ll be w illing to coll
on Into ftoltor* o doy Solory
plut t o m m l i i i o n Coll
toruae m i or nous*; mqi

SECRETART

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

HtCCe's hoboby i^Me To
Foe Trc PAOCA6C CM.eF
W'U- yso AtccpT A
PAW tt?iNT

O F F IC E C L E R K S
;♦ com pany moving m&gt;o
dutiful new o il le w neeot to
J K t K * 1 t l l f t l Tvp« U
PM C o n tro l office e ip e ri
n ot re q u ire d
P e rm a n e n t
Dltiont N e v a .a Fe e l

Evamng Harold. Sanlord. FI Wadnasday. March J 7. ItB S-M B

by Larry Wright

___

*480

1969 JEEP
WACONEER * 1 0 0 3
1980 DATSUN
WAGON
*2 00 3
1980 DATSUN P/U
TRUCK

1983 CONCORD

ID/L WACOM * 3 3 0 0

S A N FO R D
m o t o r

c :

AM C JEEP
SO B S. F i g n c h A y *

in &lt;]iz

CONSULT OUR

■ | 4 1 t OO*

STem

per

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

A T T E NT I ON I NVESTORSI 1
U n t il south S a n lo r d on ly
SSI 000 Large down or ra
tin a n c* ow tner w ill halp

To List Your B usin ess-

I M P A C T BONO M O N E Y !
10 « * \ ] Bdrm
I bath watt
kept homo only )4 l 000 C all
l o r d a l a i l *

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9 993

O S T E E N I 1 Bdrm I bath h o m .
plus t Bdrm I bath mobile
110 000 Ownar will help It
n
a
n
c
e
S A N F O R D I 1 Bdrm home H all
a c r a ♦ / . brick Itra p ia c a
targe rooms beeutitul decor
I K a l i a n ! co n d itio n
J uki

s

a

a

o o

o

SA N FO RD
Rental 1 B drm .
l'i bath
S4B0 mo
C A L L A N Y T IM E
R E A L T O R 111 4**l

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service
PrviessienaI Tea t aperlf Pre
pere my attic* ar yeur heme
Best prices E Z
*4 A 410
long | l } CaU after » H4 ||7 )
Taa accountant 24 year* tape
rle n ct Will prepare ta a e i In
your horn#
P e rs o n a l and
sm eil business 744 4)44

WE N E E D L U T IN G S !
Townhowee
1 Bdrm U s bath
laundry room dan pool, close
•a shopping Oamer M otivated
Sal OM Make oiler 111 OHS or

m io n __________

) B drm . |ty bath lam ily room
•tncad hard, t i l r a i l
Aseum abla • ) \ m ortgage'
E K a l i a n ! ca n d tiia n l M u si
wen' Sanora South SS* 100
C a ll te tn .n g s ar w oaktnds
M l 1 IU _____________________________

151—Investment
Property / Sole
C A S S E L B E R R Y I acra. lonad
P R I U S 000 W M altctowskl

E IA LT O B

PI m i

I D E A L F O R IN V E S T O R S 1
apt io n .e e btdg m dwnlwr.
Sanlord Near hoipiiai Poet
litre cash How R E A L T O R
m a a a a ______________________________

153—AcreageLots/Sale
O ytaga- I a c r e s hig h . dr y.
' fared an hardroad frontage
I m l Fram tkaret 1)000 down
U a a m a B y Owner 1 171 * U 0

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale
‘I I Coward. UkSA Adult kmc
•ion Carriage C aw su.M C
H I m i Laaagmakkag*

Additions 4.
Remodeling
REMODELING SPECIALIST
W* Handle
Tha Whoto B ailo r Wa&gt;

B E. LINK CONST.
322-7024
Ftnaamg Aeallabto

Appliance Repair
Aliens Appliance U m it
2*hr Service 14# E l i r a Charge
17 yr eap 441 1441.174 44)1

Building Contractors
ADDITION) R IM O O I LIN G
B ill lirip g Custom Bultdar

Slato Lit

H RO O U U *

(95-7411

Carpentry
R IM O O K L IH G
R IF A IB IM G
Ratorarwak ......... V ary Reliable

m e * 1 l/X M t

H a m illl

Cleaning Service
H»ad Caraa* Ctoanmg Living
D.n.ng Room A H ail U t O t
Vela A Chair l ) ) I I I U M

MAIDS To O.dei
Ctoaaliaati it aaal Ta Oadlmetk
Call Hr» k alban l
Gva/aatoad torvKa Law Rato,

CALL NOW* 3190400

Electrical
R I V I O C N T I A L W IR IN O
Indoor / Outdoor l.gM .ng
torvi ck Upgrade) Anything
C la d f e e l Fre e t i l l m ala)
Vine a it ig i C all:
Tam ’% Etoatrla V a rv k a 111 ID T

Firewood/Fuel
T R I E t I R V I C I A F IR IW O O O
FO R SA LE C A L L A F T E R
i F u m Me

Handy Man
l i p Handym an. Hal Reliable
F r* a E l l m otl any IOb B a ll
R a tal 111 B i l l C a ll Anytime

Health &amp; Beauty
T O W i r t B I A U T V SALON
F O R M E R L Y H a rrie tt') Beauty
Nooa ) I B E li t SI m I t a

Home Improvement
C ellw r't Building 4 Remodeling
ta. ia k Tad Sm all
I I I Burton Lan a. Sontord
111 a a n
Plum bing Painting (to c Ir K
L or pantry Don I Vaa 111 A ik Be*
It yM I &gt;p
HAL I I I 6441

Landclearing

Pointing

L A N D C L I A R IN G
F I L L D I R T B U SH O G G IN G
CLAY 4 s h a le
MU

Piofmionil Custom Paialm|

in

Lawn Service
A C C L AWN S E R V I C E
M aintenance lid d in g Pruning
Ctoanmg Thatching Fertlh lln g
Fre e I I I .m a la )
...... M l 1111
Law n Maintenance
Landscaping Bukh Hog Mowing
Mt was

LAWNSMOWED1 TRIMMED
Spring Y a rd Clean up)

111 ITS!

CkntliMIttB. ' J 1
CdMpitt* Liwfl Cut
N jb t im iiH i tilts
____B S k
3234401

P A P IR H A N O IN O
Aay ly * * wallaavaring
Raakanakto.....................n i laaa

Plastering
P A L L P K akaTaTFU ktorln ga
Repair. Iluaaa. Hard Caal.
SadHdatod BrtcB H I W fl. *
A r t ya« a F i i a r f Thaw UM
alhark al yaar ktr via* I k n v g k
W aal Adi I
______

B E A L Cone rate &gt; man quality
operation Paliok. d n vow ay)
O a y t U I T U I E vat t V Dl l
D H Ruby Can*rate
Haute ktobt a Dr Wat a Patio*
Light Grading
...............W M H B

Labautow H u.)m g Cantor
•IB ■. Sac and S I . Saatord
m an)

CARPENTER
R a p a ir ) and
ramoddl.ng Nd |gb too email
C all I D toe)

Painting

i

Paper Hanging

Plumbing

Home Repairs

GENEVALANDCLfARING
Lot and La n d &lt;toar mg.
nil dirt, and haul mg
C all U * MM or to* l/ U

WA L L P A K I RI NO
PAI NTI NO
Ratorawatt
V ary Raliakto
m aai i / Xt o*
n e m n e i

a Buddk Ptombmg U r v ia * a
R e p a ir# Raptaaa a Ram adai
a Fre e I d im e lev a I11BBM a

Nursing Cara
ouaB A T i l A R E LO W E R

Landclearing

Varying Central F la tor I ) y rt
with complete Ruallly ua.nl
mg earv K a t O uallly a M v tl
Spaaial wa ll taaiing i n M il

Masonry

THOM AS A TH O M AS Hama
rapair. ctoanmg. lawn car*
Call 111 D M

Maintenance ot an type)
Carpentry, painting plumbing
endetoctrie m a t *

w T O tiV C O R IN O *

Ca l v i n a t o m s
Haute Pam tm g A Wall Paper
Van boy me tor toll
W e kapply lobar T t S A V S SM

mini

Ratparwtbto Man and helper w ill
pern! your Homo *r Butmoh*
ole G lad your probtomi to vg
W C C A R E Ouul'ly work. »
y r t e c p W X *&gt; L k cant

Pressure Cleaning
P R I V A T I AMOBI L F H O M O
C O M M .R C IA L
m it h
___________

Tile
S a a ilm a n n T ilt
F ia u iiii
C le a n in g C g ra m lc . V in y l
A iU it o ) All Phatak R C
B r k k Hamac Buk.navk**
F re « I U
RaakanaMa n i a l a l

Tree Service
■ C H O Lt Test tlev ice
F r e e ! klim atotl Law P r K M l
L icantad. in w rad/ 111 O T*
" L aT Nka PtatotH analkda l f
JO H N A L L ( M l LAW N I T I B I
Dead Iraa rgmpval L k A Via
F r# e a *l 111 USB

�• %#

• /

ilnf Hraid, Sanford, Fl.Wtdnasday, March 37, ins
F3

early 'bird

earlv'binl

co u p o n

coupon

GROUND BEEF
c our 0*1 D
UlUl
CO U PO N GOOO M ARCH J B A 2 *

|J
C O U PO N G O O D M A R CH 21 A 2 9 . I M S

1«1S

c u ..° ~ ~ - « R » » 80 o. -O '*

PRICES GOOD
MARCH 7IS-30. 1985
1
P ? l|
HitwiiuW

u t i l macaroni

SAUCE

MAYONNAISE

a

■■&gt;11

cm iis l

I v T s

SINGLES m

DINNERS

\

PHIIADCIPHIA HAND

\

$ 1 1 9 A r t )

w

! I
11

CREAM CHEESE
A

K Q c

All VAIIitltS
SIOAEU

DETERGENT

U R G E EGGS

GATORADE

TOWELS

BACON

CHICKENS

$169

COLGATE PUMP DISPENSE I
REGULAR oi GEL

&amp;

BREAD

TOOTHPASTE

TISSUE

PEACHES

$139

ia-*».
h o r m el

*

#v

l it t l e

SIZZLER
10-CT. ^ I

FREEZER
BAGS

SHRIMP N
RASHIT

PRESTIGE OVEN
WHOLE GRAIN

SAUSAGE
LINKS

GLAD LOCK

1S-«I.

BUT ONI
GET I TRIP

A

GOLOEN FLAKE FRIED
CHEESE CURLS Of BAKED

(HfDQAIw but ONI
MOZZAIILIA CU I TRil1

CHEESE
. NUGGETS.

ASTOR
COFFEE

PORK
;\ ROAST

SIRLO IN TIP
a ROAST

DETERGENT

Sausage
'SA V E 9 0 ' .

,a
m

11 l

\
MlCROfl* S W I t t B O H Il t S S
&amp;MORIO W M O lf f U l l f C O O R lO

CHUCK
ROAST

BUFFET
HAM

$189

COMPAItiSAVl

• fs A V E ^ S ^ n j'^

" " / COMPAIHSAVt

J^ " ^ A V E 4 0 '

M 0 BHRNO U tO A CH OtCt
B t f f CHUCR •1*0*

CM OtCI

CLOROX
BLEACH

$169

|$199
1SAV E 5 0 * . t7 - ^

FILBERTS
SPREAD
SAVE 34

SAVE 4 0

SAVE *110

GRAPEADE or * 3
LEMONADE . . A .

$ 0 9 9

PEPPERONI, COMBINATION
Of CHEESE

SA V E 8 0

L $039

f

W M SAVE 4 9

\ r

ICE CREAM ,
o r SHERBET

W -D BRAND
\ FRANKS

SWISS STYLE
YOGURT

$129

$129

SAVE 5 0

TSnnrtS
Vi
STRING
BEANS

|

PEELED
TOMATOES

W HITE
POTATOES

b y !
■
m&gt;, M

t - T

Potatoes

&gt;

ORANGE
JUICE

BOILED
HAM

$149

1
*■
L Aool

i

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152098">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 27, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152099">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152100">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 27, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152101">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152102">
                <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;, March 27, 1985; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152103">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152104">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152105">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152106">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="15243" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="14857">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/8e4a6080e8d7fe02cefb42ada5c06281.pdf</src>
        <authentication>8cabb906ae35a9ce9b163f7b712e9be7</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="152097">
                    <text>77th Year, No 184 Tuesday, March 76. 1985-Sanford. Florida

Evening

Herald

-

(USPS

481 280)

-

Price

25 Cents

Tire Blows; 3 Die
As Semi Hits Auto

Firefighters work to extricate bodies from Ford Bronco hit by out ot control semi

By Deane Jordan
H erald Staff W rite r
Three men were crushed to
death today when a tractortrailer carrying a load ol sand
skidded Into the path of their
Ford llronco. crashing head on
Identities of the men killed In
the wreck were being withheld
pending notification of next of
kin.
The driver of the tractor trailer
rig received minor ln)iirles and
refused transportation to a hos­
pital.
The 8.33 a m accident ix-curred on the south side of stale

Hoad 46 about three miles east
of Geneva.
According to the tractor-trailer
driver. Michael Thigpen. 56. of
Nockledge, he was heading
wcsltround on SR 46 when the
left front tire ol the rig blew,
sending the 70.(XX) pound vehi­
cle with Its load of sand into the
oncoming casibnund lane
'I couldn't hold it." he said
"T h e other vehicle tried to get
out ol the way by going that
wav. Thigpen said pointing to
south but we met alMiut head
on."
The lielge Bronco Is owned bv

Stonier Stagg and Associates, ot
Orlando and I'ape Canaveral
according to lettering on the
vchicle's door
Thigpen, who received cuts on
Ills head and was shaking follow
tng the accident, said his rig was
carrying the sand Iroin Cocoa to
H ln k e r 's In S a n fo rd
The
tractor trailer is owned by Keene
Hauling, ol Orlando, according
to the lettering
All of the victims were dead at
the scene One was dismem­
bered
See W R E C K , page 8 A

With Higher Bids

Hundreds Protest 'Bias Against Christians'

City Nixes
Preference
For Local
Businesses

Pledge Fight
To Change
School Policy
By Roger Sim m ons
Herald S ta ff W rite r
More than a 1.000 i&gt;eoplc
turned out to "take a stand for
righteousness and against
schools that discrim inate
against Christians" at a rally
Monday night at the Sanford
( ‘Ivlc Center.
The rally was called by
t ’lll/ens for Decency. Inr.. a
group headed by Rev George
Ctossley of the First Baptist
Church of Lake Monroe. It was
intended to protest jxtllclcs of
the Seminole County School
Hoard In reference to the
separation of church and slate
provision of the U.S Constitu­
tion
Ctossley said Ihosr In at­
tendance donated $1,153.76
lor rally expenses and a fund
for Irgal expenses In stilts
against the school hoard
"O r lo stage more rallies.''
he stild
There were verbal sw!|&gt;es
taken al the school txiurd. hut
l lie rully'smaln I heme became
llie need lor the two sides lo nil
down and discuss schoolreligion conflicts
The conflicts healed up re­

HtflM

If Tlflintf VlfKKtt

Rally attendees join hands and sing "Lord Lilt Us Up Where We Belong "
c e n t ly w hen C o n c e r n e d
Women for America brought
suit against thr school hoard
on tx-half of Sanford secondgrader Ollvta Mendez. who
was prevented from dlstrlhut
lug religious Christmas cards
to her claaamalrs Just la-lore
the holidays and 13-year-old
Kcbcrcn Reichert of Winter
Springs, who's poster of a
Nativity scene was removed
from sehtMil because It's re­

ligious content was against
school board jxillck-s
"W e were brought here to
make a statement." Crosalry
•slid Looking al tfir* sl/e of I he
audience he added "I see
we've already made one "
Crossley later made a plea
lor the starting of a dialogue
between the school hoard and
a group ol local preachers, lie
said dial the lawsuit against
tile district could l*r drt&gt;|&gt;|x-tl II

"the school hoard publlrly
u|x&gt;li&gt;glzca lo the two students
Involved and sits down with a
group of minsters and adopts a
p o lic y l h a l is not d i s ­
criminatory towards Chris

liana
The school Ituard has Mild In
thr pist tb.it n welcomed a
dialogue wllli I be group of
ministers Seminole School
District Superintendent Robert
Hughes met with a group ol

minlstrrs in December and
said hr would review the
district s policies on religion lo
schools But the dialogue
coded when the soli was filed
against the district
"W e sec the soil as the next
dialogue lo lie considered.
Karen Coleman. s|x&gt;krswoman
lor the district sold "We are
anticipating court action lo
See R A L L Y , page 8 A

TV Station Plans $4 Million Facility In Lake Mary
Hrpresenlallves ol Orlando television
station W OFI.-TV channel 35 are sched
ulfd to go before the Lake Mary Planning
anil Zoning Hoard lonlghl lo seek
preliminary approval Inr Ihr construc­
tion of a $4 million studio anil olflce
facility In ihc city.
The meeting Is scheduled for 7 p.m. al
the Lake Mary City Hall. 158 N Country
C lub Road
J i m Doyus. the sta tio n 's c h ie f
engineer. Mild W O F L will ask Ihr city's
permission lo build a broadcasting
complex on a five acre tract near Skyline
Road and Interstate 4 T h r site 1st lose to
the NCR Corp. fuclllty next to the
Interstate on Lake Em m a Knud
Dnvus Mild Ih r Drs Moines. Iiiw .i -Im s c i I

Meredith Cor|xiratlon. owners of channel
35. arc asking ih r Ixwiril In approve a
llnal subdivision review that will allow
construction ol road for Ihr facility, and
a preliminary site plan that outlines thr
placement of the building on (hr sta­
tion's land.
"We've just outgrown these facilities."
Mild Doyus in reference the ihr station's
rurrrnl studios and offices al 2300 S.
Orange Blossom Trail In Orlando. Doyus
said that the station lias "looked
cxtenslvclyl’ for a site for Ihr new
broadcast facility und Lake Mary was
selected, In jwrt. because of Ihr growth
that Is biking place in Ih r area
Lake May City Manager Kathy Klee
Mild she has reviewed Ihr station's plans

and m i w no major problems She Mild
W O F I. w a n t s t o b u i l d a
34.000si|uurrfoot building w l l l i two
M i l r l l l l r dishes, a lower mid a road
liarallcl lo 1-4 that will provide aerrss lo
lls building. Mrs Rice said shr thinks ihr
planning and zoning board will probably
approve the plan, but added lhat the
Federal Communlratlnns Commission
and the Federal Aviation Administration
must approve the cons)ruetIon of the
lower.
Doyas M ild that the lower will lx- alxmi
200 feel high and w ill send signals from
Ihr siailon lo lls transmuting tower rust
of Orlando in Blihlo
"It's the kind of development we want
In that area." Mrs Rice M ild . She added

•hat building the station In Lake Mary
will iK-nrlli the city "It rrrtallily w ill lx.m asset tax-wise anil II won I Impart our
services as much as another project
might." Mrs Rice Mint
II approved by the planning anil
zoning hoard. Ihr station’s proposal
must ihen tie approved by the city
commission
Doyus Mild that If all gix-s as plannrd.
ground breaking for Ihr facility should
lake place sometime in Ju ly.
Hr said that although W OFL will be
moving lls headquarters to Lake Mary. It
will not lx- looking lor new employees
since Ihc siullon's current shill will
commute Irom Orlando
— Roger Simmons

U.S., M o s c o w Sw a p C h a rg e s In Sh o o tin g

S k a te R a m p s Is s u e G r o w s

A ’ ’ re s e n tfu l'* P re sid e n t
Reagan Is demanding a full
explanation Irom Moscow on the
killing of an unarmed U S Arm y
officer by a Soviet soldier In Easl
Germany. T h r Russians claim
he was "caughi red-handed"
spving
"There was no justification for
th is m u r d e r . " A s s is iu u t
Secretary of Stair Richard Hurt
Mild In Washlngion. "There's no
truth" to Soviet charges that
Ma|. Arthur D. Nicholson Jr. was
spying when hr was gunned
down Sunday.
Nicholson's body was flown
lair Monday lo thr Rhein Main
Air Base outside Frankfurt. West
Germany, und was taken lo a
military mortuary to lie prepared
lor a lllghl In the Dulled Stulrs.
N ic h o ls o n . 37. the firs t
member of u U S. military liaison
mission in East Germany to be
killed In the line of duly by
Soviet troops, died In the Inci­
dent Reagan labelrd an " u n ­
warranted tragedy."
T h r Soviets, whose account of
the shooting conflicted with the
U.S. version, said the ofTlrer.
accompanied by another U.S.
soldier, wan Inside a restricted
Soviet military Installation and

Hoards of yo u ng people are worse .’*
gathering In Itack yards lo use
H r M id the rumps are u
skate board rumps are noisy neighborhood problem that
and disturbing neighbor­
can be solved by neighbors
hoods. County Commissioner talking to each other and
Barbara Chruslrnseu (old her agreeing on a time, say before
colleagues al u worksesslon dark, when Ihr activity will
Monday.
end each evening. "Th is Is a
Shr ulso said she has re­ fad that will die out." he M id .
ceived numerous complaints
Sirretman said he approves
from her d is t r ic t — the that building prnnlls must be
Casaclhmy und Oviedo areas obtained to be sure the ramps
— lhat skate board ramps are are safely constructed, but he
multiplying and residents are added that he doesn't want to
"objecting that thr ramps arc see all upplkatlons for the
so high the skate boarders can p rn n lls denied.
r u s l l y see o v e r p riv a c y
If you live in the unin­
fences."
corporated area of Seminole
Commissioner Hill Ktrrhholf County und want lo build a
pointed out. however, Ihc skuir board ramp, all you have
same children ran climb a Irre lo do Is gel a building pennll
and see over privacy fences.
al the county services building
And Com m issioner Fred al First Street and Mellonvllle
Strertman said remarks of Avenue. Sanford
opponents lo Ihc ramps ure
If you build one without first
being heard, while those who obtaining the building penult,
favor them are not.
you'll likely be taken before
Klrchholl said a rump exists the county's Code EnforrrIn u yard across the alleyway merit Hoard, charged with
from his Sanford home and violating county law, says
while they are noisy, "kids are C o u n ty Adm inistrator Ken
using them and they could be Hooper.
doing a lot of other things that

— Donna Estes

I

was killed while escuplng after a West Berlin with his wife. Karen,
warning shot was fired.
and Ihrir 8-year-old daughter.
U.S. army and administration
Reagan Mdd the Soviets had
officials said N icholson, a
lieen asked "for a full explana­
Russian linguist assigned to the
tion" and Mild, "W e ’re resentful
lia is o n m is s io n based at and feel It's an unwarranted
Potsdam in East Germany, was tragedy '*
shot m the chest In Ludwtgslust.
Vladimir Kulagin, the Soviet
85 miles northwest of Berlin.
Embassy's first secretary In
Nicholson, from West Redding Washlngion. M ild Nicholson was
Conn., was assigned to the
See O F FIC E R , page 8A
mission In 1982 and lived In

B y Rick Brunson
Herald Staff W rite r
A Cussellicrry firm has lx-cn
awarded a contract lo maintain
two Sanford cemeteries, despite
a pica from one city commis­
sioner that a Sanford company
lx- given the Job — regardless ol
Its higher price
The Sanford ( ’llv Commission
should help the city's economy
hv awarding contracts on city
projects to local businesses
w hen |heir bids arc within dose
range of the lowest bid. main
la in rd Com m issioner David
Farr
Farr told colleagues al Mon­
day's commission meeting ii i»
belief to deul with" Sanford
businesses and keep rliy money
in the community whenever
|xtssiblr
Mm ( tiv Manager Warrrn E
T r ie
Knowlrs Mild awarding
contrncis in Sanford businesses
was the practice ol the com­
mission years ago and the |xi|icy
led lo higlirr bids us local
businesses gouged the i lly.
I hair lo say this bill our lix al
|x nplr started taking advantage
ol the illy " when they were
given preferential treatment.
Knowles said "I strongly urge
ih.n von don't gel yoursell en­
meshed In that situation again "
The commission followed Ills
advice and voted -I lo I lo uwurd
i he contract lo the lowest bidder.
Bills Irom four landscaping
companies were considered lot
the cemetery ttuilnlalnencr job
— ( ami King Landscape. O r­
lando. $63,350 u year. Kill's
Lawn Scrvlre. Deltona. $51,540.
Andrea's Lawn and Landscape.
Sanford. $35,800. and Sun-Slate
La nil sea p! rig. C a a s e lb r rr y .
$35.(MX) The two cemeteries.
Lakcvlcw und Evergreen, are on
25th Street
Knowles recommended the
Casselberry company's low bid
of $35.(MX) In a memo lo the
commission, saying u would
mivc the city $1,000 a year over
the current contract with more
services were written Into the
contract. The city currently pays
$36,000 a year lo Kulore Pro|KTty Services of Winter Park for
landscaping services at the two
ecinelerlcs.
Farr said It was worth the
$8(X) difference lo deal wllli a
Sanford rompany and keep the
money In town. He recom ­
mended dial when the difference
In bids between Sanford compa­
nies and others was "narrow"

Foreign Affairs Anyone?

Oscar winners,
page 2A

VIRGINIA BEACH. Vu |UPI| "Interested
In foreign ulfalrs?" asked a recent advertisement
In a Virginia newspaper.
Not an Invitation lo find out alxmi govern­
ment service overseas, the ud told of a new
International matchmaking service ojK-ratrd by
Virginia Hrach resident Jim Mason. 43. and his
Polish wife. Danusla
Mason M id he Is so happy with lit* 3 I year old
wife lhat he decided to help other American
men seeking u "sincere relationship" lo find
Polish women He has received 50 responses In
the past two weeks The service has pictures
and letters from about 1.000 Polish women
between ths ages of 18 and 52 The letters
began arriving after Dunusta'% mother placed an
ad In a Polish newspaper.

Sec L O C A L , page 8A

TODAY
Action Reports
Classifieds
Comics.............
Dear Abby.......
Deaths..............
Editorial...........
Florida........
Hospital............
Nation.............
People
Sports ...........
Television.......
Weather..........
World................

... 6B
...IB

....2 A
. .I B
5 7A
IB
8A
BA

�IA ~ E v » n ln g H «rjfd , Sanlord, FI.

Tuaw Uy, M arch I t , m l

NATION
IN BRIEF

Haitians Claim Discrimination;
Seek Constitutional Protection
W A S H IN G TO N (UPII — Haitian refugres awaiting
deportation hearings say they arc victims of "Invidious
discrimination," and have asked the nation's highest court
for constitutional protection.
Ira Kurztian. rrpresent|rig more titan 2,000 Haitian "boat
people." Monday urged the Supreme Court to give his
clients the same due process rights as U S , citizens
awaiting trial.
He said the refugees have traveled more than BOO miles
to Florida shores, only to be detained for months or even
years Iteforc their Immigration status Is determined.
The administration defended Its policy of detaining the
refugees as a necessary tool to stern the growing Influx of
Illegal aliens Into the United States.
At Issue Is whether aliens have the samr const Hut tonal
rights us U.S. citizens to challenge Incarceration IWore
they appear In Immigration court to plead their case for
nsylum.
A federal appeals court ruled last year that aliens who
have not penetrated the border "have no constitutional
rights" to challenge the way their admission to the country
ts handled.

Uncle Sam May Get Refund
W ASH IN GTON (UPI| — The chairman of the General
Dynamics Corp. has ordered an Internal rrvlew to check
rrjxirts the company Improperly rjuallfled for 915 million
In federal subsidies on the construction of llrjuiried natural
gas tankers.
David Lewis also told a House Energy and Commerce
subcommittee Monday the company had dropped #23
million In claims on Navy shipbuilding contracts.
During Ills second day of sworn testimony, l-rwls was
q u e s tio n e d a b o u t overseas b rib e a lle g a tio n s ,
mismanagement and conflicts of Intrrrst In the hiring of a
lop Navy official.
la-wls denied I he hrllx-ry and mismanagement allega­
tions.
He was asked u Ihiu I reports that Genrral Dynamics
advised I he* Maritime Administration several years ago It
expected a 10 jtencni profit on construction of two
federally subsidized LNG tankers when Us outside auditors
actually projected a 55 percenl profit.
Rep. -Jim Slattery. D Kail., said the difference qualified
Ihr company for 915 million In extra subsidies from (tie
agency.

Gerrymandering Before Court
W ASHINGTON (UPIJ — The Supreme Court has agreed
to decide the legality of the age-old practice of gerryman­
dering — (he drawing ol voting districts by the political
jairty In jmjwit to give its candidates an advantage.
The Justices Monday accepted an appeal by Indiana
officials of a three Judge panel's ruling that slutr legislative
mujis drawn alter the I9H0 census unconstllullminlly
discriminate against Democrats.
Although (lie Justices refused to accept a similar appeal
from Caltlurttla. It Is likely the high court's ruling tn the
Indiana case will ailed congressional and slate rrupjmr
llonnieiil plans nationwide.
Indluna officials contend llirlr maps deviate less than I
perm it from the one man. one-vote rule mandated by die
Stiprente Court while preserving Hie voting strength of
minorities

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Some School Bus Drivers
Have Criminal Records
TAM PA (Ill'll — An examination ol school system
documents, stale Dcpailrnent of Motor Vehicles records
and local court (lies show there arc flaws In the way the
lllllstMiiough County school hus program Is operated
But despite ih r shortcomings, must stale and local
education olllclals rate the county's schnot transportation
departnteiil as one of the lx-st In the state.
IIIIIslHirmigh County lias 75tl drivers operating 058
buses carrying 05.(XX) students an average ol live hours
each day. The lire! recorded 10.H mllllun miles Iasi year.
There have been more Ihun 10O school bus accidents tn
Hlllslxirougli County since the official start of tbr school
year In July, and most were minor.
A check of records dating buck live years showed aI least
u dozen drivers had arrest records when hired, and that
one In live drivers Involved In accidents this year were at
luull.
Although a security check Is required for all new bus
drivers, it lound at trust u dozen men und women drtvrrs
with tirrrnt records. Including one woman with an
outstandingurrrst warrant that went undetected

FP&amp;L 'Concerned, Not Guilty1
.llll'l l KR (Ill’ll — Florida Power und Light Co. says Its
oiler to |w»y lor the hurlul of seven jreople electrocuted by a
fallen |x&gt;wrr Hue was made out of concern for the victims'
rrlullvrs und their nerds, nut guilt.
A s|Nikrswomuii for the utility company said Monday the
ollrr Is not an admission of (lability In the Saturday
morning accident outside a mobile home In rurul Palm
Beach County.
The seven members ol Ihr West Jupiter lamlly died after
u power line tell near their mobllr home and caused a grass
fire l&gt;eiidc the structure
Believing the trailer was on lire, they tried to escape In a
car. a nrlghlior said
But when one ol the cur’s rear doors was openrd. It
touched an adjacent vehicle In contact with the power line,
und 7.200 volts of electricity shot through the (wo cars

HOSPITAL NOTES
C*•**•! MwtSa **§■*«*I
ADMItllOMl
iMtst
CIWMI !«&lt;»•
Ais» 0»lt*0*
Al*rs 0 0«n*M
NelwM Jotm
Suits* L. Protl. OiLsnU
CSsrlM Klmlmci. Oilloni
Mart A Miiuiunt Dalton*

N*llo H Plih*r. TltvtUH*
OliCMASOCI
tw is t
Uw wA Ho«wnb*
tkxuK llMIsert*
0*. .aG Cook. 0*a«n*
J t w C QuU*. p tU o m

Antoro Gurman. D*Uan«
U w s l MwrpftvmO'MOvDoy.Ctelioni
SISTNt
Jons onSMorr A Mw M m . a bofcr tor.
Otliono

New Stars Rise To Oscar Fame
A N ight O f Firsts For A m a d e u s' A b rah am , Refugee
HOLLYW OOD |UPI» Amadeus." an
epic on the life of Mozart, swept eight
Oscars. Including best picture and best actor
for F. Murray Abraham, while Sally Field.
Dame Peggy Ashcroft and a refugee Cam­
bodian In his first movie role were honored
at the 57lh Academy Awards.
Milos Forman was named best director for
"Am adeus." which also won for best
screenplay, sound, makeup, art direction
and costume design during Monday night's
televised extravaganza.
Forman won his second Oscar. He was
named best director In 1975 for "One Flew
Over the Cuckoo's Nest ."
"Amadeus," nominated for 11 Oscars,
was based on the Tony award winning play
by Peter Shaffer, who won the award for
best screenplay adaptation
Abraham, who port rayed Viennese court
composer Antonin Salieri, won the Oscar for
his first major film role.
"There's only one thing missing for me."
Abraham said accepting the award, "that's
to have Tom Hulce standing by my side."
Ilulce, who played the title role, was
nominated for best actor and grinned at his
colleague from his seat at the Los Angeles
Music Center.

M u rra y A b ra h a m

Field, who struggled to keep her family
together In Dust Bowl Texas In "Places In
the Heart," also won her second Oscar,
having been named best actress for the
1979 film. "Norma Rae.”
Field beamed at the audience,and said It
was a good feeling to know "that you like
me now. You like me."
Robert Benton, who wrote and directed
"Places In the Heart." won an Oscar for his
original screenplay based on his great­
grandmother's experiences In Waxahachle.
Texas.

D eBary M a n Hurt In Train
Accident A w a rd e d $36,400
A Dellary m an has been train heading for the Sanford
awarded $.'10,400 for an Injury
he received after he was thrown
against a wall when the train In
wlilrh he was riding lurched
mtrx|x-rtrdly. In a separate civil
case, trial was tn begin today In
the case of a Casselberry man
suing a grocery store for In|ut1es
he received when run down by a
shopping cart.

S a lly F ie ld

term inal. Sims was Injured
w h r n the train su d d e n d ly
lurched und threw him against
the wall of the caboose.
Sims staled In the suit that he
received neck, shoulder and
back Injuries.
In the second suit. Jury selec
lion began Monday and lrial was
expected lo begin today In Ihr
case of Glllts Litton vs. Winn
Dixie of 944 state Roud 436.
Casselberry

A s ix -m e m b e r S e m in o le
C lrru lt Court Jury gave the
award to Charles E. Sims Jr., of
Litton slated In his suit that
327 Cnlnmhu Road The Jury
actually awarded 805.OCX) but while In the store on April 20.
said Sims waA 44 t*ercent re- HIH2, an employee of the store
operated a shopping cart "In a
sponsible for the results of the
negligent manner." Litton stales
Incident and Seaboard Systems
the cart struck him and knocked
Railroad 5(3 percenl responsible,
him Into a wall or door.
Sims had asked for 9290.000.
He is asking for an unspecified
According to court records, oil
A p r i l 17. 19H I w h ile an amount of damages In excess of
employee utxiurd a i almost- on a #5.000
— Deane Jord a n

Ashcroft, who played a British dowager
unhappy with English colonial rule In "A
Passage to India." and Dr. Haing S. Ngor. a
Cambodian refugee who portrayed a report­
er forced to flee his country In "The Killing
Fields." won as best supporting actress and
actor.
It was the first nomination for Ashcraft, a
stage veteran who also won acclaim this
year for a similar role In "Jewel In the
Crown.” a British series broadcast on public
television depicting the end of colonial rule
In India.
Actress Angela Lansbury accepted the
award for Ashcroft, who was In London to
attend today's funeral of her friend. Sir
Michael Redgrave.
Rock star Prince, who wore a purple
serjulned cloak to the black-tlr ceremony,
won the best original song-score Oscar for
"Purple Rain." Stevie Wonder won for best
song with " U u s i Called to Say I Love You."
Seen by an estimated I billion people, the
A B C -TV telecast ran only seven minutes
over the scheduled three hours.
Cary Grant presented the Academy's
Lifetime Achievement Award to his old
friend. Jim m y Stewart.

2 Charged With Disorderly Conduct
During Drug Raid Free Without Bond
T w o m e n a rre s te d on
charges of disorderly conduct
during raids on 11 homes
suspected of being drug store
bouses have been released
without bond.
The two men were charged
idler thry failed to obey orders
to leave the scene of two of
the ra id s , a c c o rd in g to
sheriff s reports.
Herman Harrlng. 23, of
2340 Randall St.. Midway,
was released Friday. Tommie
Barnes. 41. of 1204 W I4ih
St., was released Monday.
Both are scheduled to he
arraigned April 3.
The 11 people arrested on
drug charges during the Fri­
day raids have been released
on txind. except for Benny
Arnold. 35. of 43 Lake Monroe
Terrace. Arnold, who was
charged with jxissesslon id
cocaine. Is being held without

bond because he was on
probation when arrested
The raids, a Joint effort of
the Sanford and Longwood
(Hiller departments and Ihe
Seminole and Volusia sheriffs
departments, shut down what
[Hitler suspected lo tie the
major drug bases of the
Goldsboro area of Sanford and
the M id w a y d is t r ic t of
Seminole County.
The raids were conducted
simultaneously at about 6
a.lit
The amount of cocaine and
marijuana seized during the
raid or Us value has not been
determ ined, according lo
Sanford police spokesman
Keith Wright. In addition lo
the drugs, h r said two stolen
guns were confiscated — a
.357-Magnum pistol and a
shotgun.

Suspected N e w Hom e Burglars N abbed In Stakeout
Two tnen tmeked their truck
up to a home under construction
III west Sanford, ready to haul off
some appliances Bill a poller
officer was walling lor ilu-in
Inside, and Instead thry got
hauled oil to |afl
A high number ol burglarirs In
Hie newly developed Kay wood
subdivision located off stale
Road 4I3A sparked ihr stakeout,
according to police s|Hikrsimm
Keith Wright Thieves have lieen
taking appliances und lurnllurr
tiring pul In unoccupied homes.
Wilgiil said
Alxuit 2 ‘y hours alter auxiliary
officer Greg Smith was stationed
In a home ill 105 Woixtrldgr
Trail Sunday nlghl. two men
arrlvrd In a pickup truck. Wilgiil
said. They hurkrd the truck lip
to the garage and started loading
It with a television and other
iuriilsIiingH stored there, ac­
cording In a police report.
Smith radioed Sanford |xiller
who arrested the men at alxuit
9:30 p.m. One siisjiecl was
armed with a .22-callbrr pistol,
the report said. The*two may lxconnected with other burglarirs
III the ateii. Wright said
Kevin Dale Pearson. 22. of
114 1 L a n it m a r k t, a u e ,
C a s s e lb e r r y , a n d J a c k I c
Bruitiagrn, 23. of Union I'aik.
were charged with armed bur­
glary. Pearson, wlio was also
charged with carrying a con­
cealed weapon, remained In the
Seminole County Jail today.
Ilnm iageu was relrusrd on
$3,000 txaid
BR A W LER S CH ARGED
Two men who allegedly brut a
Sanford bar owner and a bar
worker with a (xxil stick have
tx-rn urresled along with one of
the pair's father who reportedly
tried to Interfere with the ar­
rests, Sanford police rr|xirted.
T h e tw o m en rep o rte d ly
aaaaultrd Gust Halkls. owner of
Uttelr Nick's liar, and one of his
employee*. Tony Duncan The
men told poller they were at­
tacked at the bar at 2605 Park
Drive. Sanford, on Saturday.
The juilr fled and were nabbed
by police In Ihr parking lot of the
liar.
Rusty Mastrota, 29. of Or­
lando. and Ja m e s Kenneth
Lennox, 27. of 1305 Sanford
A vc., Sanford, were charged
whh two counts each of ag­
gravated battery at about 3; 10
p in. Saturday. Lennox was also
charged with resisting arrest
with violence and two counts of
battery on poller olflcera after, hr
reportedly fought with police. He
was ulso charged with driving
under the Influence.
L e n n o x 's fathe r, W illia m
Maurice Lennox. 74. of 1305
Sanford Avc.. was arrested at the

Action Reports
A Fires
★ C o u rfs

★ Police Beat
same time anil charged with
Interfering with police and dis­
orderly Intoxication, a police
report said.
Mastrota and young Lennox
were released on $2,500 bond
each amt are scheduled to uppear 111 court April H William
l.ennox was released on $500
blind and Is scheduled to uppear
In court April 3.
C H E C K T H EFT A R R E S T
Cusselberty police charged a
20 year old Casselberry niun
with grand tlicit In connection
with the lhell und cashing of
checks stolen from a Casselberry
woman.
Anne C. Wtrkllllr. 77. of 1649
Lake Drive, reported to poller
the checks were taken along
with utxiut $200 on March M
w hrn two men entered her
home. The pair, whom she knew
by their first names, were look
lug for yuid work, a jxilirr report
said.
On March 9. she discovered
she had Ix-en robbed and rejHirled Ihe theft lo poller on
March 20 Tw o of four checks
stolen with values of about $400
ruch had hern cashed, poller
reported. The sus|&gt;rrt was traced
through the cashed checks. Ihr
rr|xirt said
David John Alcantara of 24H
Plaza Oval, was arrested after
questioning ut the Casselberry
poller station ut H p in. Satur­
day. He was being held In lieu of
$5,000 bond.
' Q E T O r r M Y PORCH '
A Sanford woman has been
charged with aggravated battery
alter allegedly stabbing a man In
Ihe leg who refused to gel off the
porch of her home.
Sanford police reported arriv­
ing at the woman's home at
ubout 5:30 p.m Saturday and
seeing George Byrd J r., of 21
William Clark Court, Sanford,
sitting on the woman's porch
with a slab wound In his upper
left leg. Byrd reportedly told
police a resident of that home at
22 William Clark Court had
attacked him with a butter knife.
The woman reportedly told
police the man had refused to
leave her porch She handed
over a knife to police, a police
report said.
Curlern Root. 26. was arrested
ut her home. She has been
released on $1,500 bond and Is
scheduled to appear In court
April 8.

A R M E D R O B B ER Y
A knlfe-wleldlng bandit took
an undetermined amount of
cash from the Bear Lake Food
Mart, 349H stale Road 436.
Apopka, at about 10 p.m Sun­
day.
Clerk Dctxirali Ann Seeley told
deputies the man entered the
store, threatened her with a
knlfr and said. "1 want money,
come on," She pul cash from the
register Into a l»ag The man flrd
and ran south with the loot. u
sheriffs report said.
A L IT T L E POT
A 32-year-old man whose car
was slopjx-d by a Sanford po­
ll c r m a n a f t e r t h e m a n
approached Ihe officer's car from
the rear, without slowing, whrn
thr officer was waiting to make a
turn off U.S. Highway 17-92.
Sanford, has Ix-en charged with
possession of less than 20 grunts
of marijuana and driving with a
suspended license
I’ollcr reported Uniting a straw
containing white (xiwdcr and a
partially smoked marijuana cig­
arette In the man's car idler he
was stopped because of the
trulllc incident,
Robert Itixlrlguez Nonrjo of
216 Hickman Drive. Sanford,
was arrested ut 7 35 p.m Sun­
day on U.S Highway 17-92 at
5th Street. Sanford He was later
freed on 8500 bond.
NABBED AT SCENE
Sanford poller nabbed two
suspected burglars as they were
reportrdly loading loot from a
home at 165 Wtxxlrtdgr Trull.
Sanford. Into a pickup truck at
about 9 30 p m. Sunday.
I I'oiler said the pair had a
television und other household
furnishings In thr truck when
they were caught Both were
charged with armed burglary
after one of the men was found
to have u ,22-cullbcr pistol.
Krvln Dale Parson. 22. of 1141
Landmark Lane. Casselberry,
was also charged with carrying a
concealed weapon. He was ar­
re s te d a lo n g w ith J a c k ie
Brumugen. 23. of Union Park.
They were being held tn lieu of
$10,000 bond each
B A T T E R E D W IP E
A n 1 8 -y e a r -o ld S a n fo rd
woman reported to a sheriffat
deputy that her husband tried (o'
choke her when she visited her
baby at the home of her In-laws
on Sunday.
Alter Lima E. Sewell. 18. of 201
W. 19th St., reported the Inci­
dent deputies went to the man's
'home where he lives with his
parents and arrested him.
Joseph W. Sewell. 21. of 730
Haywood Circle. Sanford, was
arrested at about 12 p.m. Sun­
day. He was released on $500
bond and Is scheduled to appear
In court April 3.

A SSA U LT ARR EST
A 29-year-old Oviedo man has
Ix-en charged with aggravated
a ssa u lt and assault after
.iltrgrdly firing a shot at another
Oviedo man during an argu­
ment.
Sheriff's deputies reported ar­
resting the man afler being
alerted to Ihe Incident by Oviedo
(xillceat about 3 p.m. Saturday.
The man had reportedly shot
at Clifford Miller. Deputies went
to the suspect's home, ordered
him out and arrrstrd him, a
sheriff s report said.
Mathew Dane Morgan. 29. of
Route 3. Box 1885 Smithson
Road, was charged In the case.
He has been released on $1,000
Ixmd and Is scheduled to appear
In court April 8
DUI A R R E S T S
The following persons have
been arrested In Sem inole
County on a charge of driving
under the Influence:
— Charles Woods. 45. of Deltona,
was arrested at 9:01 p m Satur­
day oil laiurel Avenue. Sanford,
after his car failed to maintain a
single lane.
— D A Dergbeiils J r., of New
York City, at 8 55 p.m. Saturday
alter Ills car was seen weaving
on state Road 436, Casselberry.
— Hilly Michael Candy. 28. of Mt.
Dora, at 1:43 a m Sunday after
his car failed to maintain a single
lane on slate Road 46A. Sanford.
H r was also rharged with driv­
ing without a license.
— Gary Edward Campbell. 32. of
180 Manor Drive, Altamonte
Springs, at 3:36 a m. Sunday on
Post and Rail Road. Longwood.
after he was found asleep In his
car with the engine running
— Edward Cllfllon Payne. 60, of
710 W. First St.. Sanford, at 6 41
p in. Saturday after his car was
seen weaving and traveling
slowly on First Street. Sanford.
— Gary E, Mullnt. 30. of Apopka,
ut 7 55 p m. Sunday on state
Road 434. near Longwood. afler
his car was Involved tn an
accident.

�Cost Of Operating
Compact Car Jumps
D E TR O IT (UPI) — Lower gaso­
line- prices, and the increased
efficiency of new cars, were not
enough to prevent the average
cost of owning and operating a
typical compact car In the aalion's largest cities from rising to
a record 49.6! cents per mile
last year, a study shows.
The 6 6 percent Increase In the
cost of driving a typical new
compact car means a motorist
paid about $5,000 last year to
operate the vehicle. Hertz Corp.
said In a study released Sunday.
Hertz said the rising costs In
the categories of price. Interest
rates, Insurance, taxes and.
maintenance more than offset
lower prices at the gasoline
pumps and the Increased effi­
ciency of new cars.
The new figures top the pre­
vious record of 47.19 cents per
mile In 1982.
The rental-leasing firm said
the drop In 1983 to 46.53 cents
per mile marked only the second
time since World War I! Ihai

ownership and operating coats
had declined.
Los Angeles continued to lead
the nation as the most expensive
city In which to operate a new
car at 60 69 cents a mile. 3 8
cents higher than In 1983.
San Francisco was second at
58.16 cents, up 3.5 cents from
1983. New York was third at
57.25 cents, up 2.7 cents:
followed by Miami at 53.47
cents, up 3.4 cents: Chicago at
52.74 cents, up 3.3 cents; Den­
ver at 51.91 cents, up 4 .1 cents:
St. Louis at 51.57 cents, up 4.0
cents; and Sealtle at 50.58 cents,
up 3.5 cents from 1983,

Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI

W H A T IT C O S TS T O R U N A M E R IC A 'S C A R S
Dtps- Mfists- Cm .
clttbn nsec* Oil

tare
lopccs*

Me
ape
r.Je
ax

ax

$ tc

7.0c
toe
are
IN
4.0C
4,Pc
4 4C
ate
Aorrcnttrtt'on

toting, InturToll* onto
ax
a pc

Tito*
«.7t

0 9c

4 PC

in

ape
ape
ax

5.fc

f PC
toe
f.4c

Totol
A n
Jo.ec
17 PC
MX
ii. re

Tuesday, March It, l»* J— )A

Tax Reform Is Alive
But Facing Long Road

W ASHINGTON (UPII - Con­ ing most deductions — are open
gress holds Its second hearing tochange.
However, with debate over
this week on tax reform and
4-je
while behind-the scenes negotia­ how to slash the federal deficit
s.oc
tions have kept the Issue alive, heating up. some lawmakers
SOURCE; foO*'»&gt;
more pressing problems are believe that if solid progress Is
clouding the chances of passing not made on tax reform soon,
the Issue may bo dead for the
legislation this year.
Th e House Ways and Means year.
"Unless lax reform is passed
Committee today began Its sec­
ond hearing on how to simplify by the August 1 recess. It will
the nation's complex ta.% code, not pass for the next two years.”
planning to listen to testimony predicted Sen. Charles Grassley.
from sponsors of the key reform K-Iowa. a member of the Senate
blits.
Finance Committee. "Th e n we
Those lawmakers have re­ go home and then we re In the
mile for Cincinnati, the study other service station charges.
said.
The 20-clty average of 49 61 cently been engaged in qulel rlection cycle."
"Congressmen arc going to be
Cost-per-mlle figures are based cents per mile Is 8.63 percent discussions with Treasury Sec­
The lop eight cities retained
on a normally equipped compact higher than the overall 1984 retary James Baker and Deputy timid about changes In a tax bill
their 1983 rankings, the study
car. such as a Ford Tempo, national average of 45.67 cents Secretary Richard Dam ian, who even If Its going to reduce taxes
showed.
bought new and driven 10.000 recorded last month by Hertz, a are trying to develop a new for middle-income" people." he
All 20 cities experienced a rise miles annually for five years. unit of RCA Corp.
a d m in is tra tio n tax reform said.
In costs from year-ago levels, Hertz said
The company attributed the package bv May.
with a 16-cent variation among
Hakcr has said that virtually
Figu re s include purchase Increase to the traditionally
them. Increases ranged from a price. Including tax. loan Inter­ higher operating expenses for all parts of the Treasury De­
high of more than 5 cents per est. depreciation. Insurance and cars In cities because of sleeper partment's current proposal —
mile reported In Houston to a license fees, average repairs and Interest rales and lax and w hich would streamline and
low of just under 2 cents per maintenance, and gasoline and licensing fees,
reduce tax rates white eliminat­
The Sanford City Commis­
sion has declared the month
ot Match as "Clean-Up"
ARE YOUR SPRINKLERS
month tor the City ot Ssnlord.
WORKING PROPERLY?
• W ASHINGTON (UPI) - Those famous Air from the original $557,500 to a new and Charles Grassley. K-lowa. who complained
Spring Ip hsrs, and
Tho Sanford City Commis­
ubnut the pliers when they first cost $748
fForee pliers that cost taxpayers $748 a pair similar $557,500.
ill llm* to checkl
sion urges all residents to
An engineer who testified before Congress
However. Uoctng spokesman Allen Hobbs
•last year and were reduced to $90 after a
)oin In this ettort and keep
'public outcry are bark up lo $748.
In June said Ihe pliers were the standard told the Post the charge for "support
WE REPAIR ALL TYPES OF
"The
Friendly City" a clean
! The Washlnuton Post., quoting recently duckbill pliers that he lound In a hardware equipment management" was legitimate.
INQROUND SPRINKLERS.
and beautilul city.
^obtained government documents, said Ihe store lor $7 61. The only change was a small
"Building and delivering lilts equipments
CALL US FOR FREE ESTIMATE.
jlkx-lng Military Airplane Co,, after agreeing notch on the end. an Air Force parts requires professional controls and support,"
TOM'S LAWN * SPRINKLER
number on the side and a black oxldr he said. "These supjwirt costs include
•lo the price slash, then lacked on a $95,307
MARCH ’85
SERVICE
management. Rnanciul controls, materiel
[charge for "support equipment manage- protective finish.
•SALES •SERVICE
rment."
"Dealing with Ihrse contracts is like buying, vendor cost analysis, various lypes
"CLEAN-UP MONTH"
The result, the I'nsl said, was that the squeezing a balloon: you squeeze It In one of p la n n in g , com p utin g tim e, fringe
CALL 3 2 2 - 2 7 3 9
•total price of tlit- pliers and other tools went
place and It |M&gt;ps out In another." wild Sen. benefits, etc."

KEEP YOUR
CITY CLEAN

Boeing Makes End Run On $748 Air Force Pliers

Lyman High
In Running
For National
Excellence Award
Seminole County School of­
ficials have received wortl that
Lyman High School has been
selected us a srml finalist in a
national excellence In education
contest,
Karen Coleman, x|»okcswomnn
lor the school district, said that
Lyman has been chosen ns one
of six Florida high schools that
will he Inspected lor the De­
partment of Education's Sec­
ondary School Rccognllion Pro­
gram The visit will mark the
first lime that a srhnol In
Seminole C o u n ty has been
selected lor national consid­
eration. Mrs Coleman said.
Lyman, along with 143 other
high schools across the nation,
were chosen lor Inspections by
an education panel that included
parents, representalives of edu­
cation associations and the
private sector. Th e panelists
reviewed applications Irom over
500 U.S. high schools that were
nominated try school officers In
48 states, the Department of
Education said. The applications
were carefully screened and the
143 high schools were selected
lor lur) her consideration.
Mrs, Coleman said ihe rduralion department Is sending Dr.
Joe Richardson of Georgia Stale
University to Inspect the Lyman
school campus. He will be at the
school on April 22 and 23. she
said.
Alter all of the 143 high
schools have hern Inspected, the
reviewers will meet In June In
Washington, D.C. lo discuss
their findings. The Inspectors
will make the final selection of
schools that will lx* given special
recognition by Secretary of Kducation William J , Dennett.
Now In Its third year, the
recognition program seeks lo
locus national attention on the
nation's strongest schools. "It's
goals are to Identify and pay
tribute to secondary school* that
arc unusually successful In
meeting Ihe educational needs of
all of thrlr students, ami to oifer
outstanding models lor other
schoots.’* Jane Glltknian. de­
partment s|M&gt;keswoman said
Ms Gllrkm an Mid that one
key element looked at by the
program Is a school's ability to
overcome obstacles and to adopt
new approaches In un effort to
Improve tiie edueullon students
receive.
Schools participating In the
Secondary School Recognition
Program were examined (or
their overall quality on the basts
of 14 criteria. They are; clear
academic goals, higher expecta­
tions for students, order and
discipline, rewards and Incen­
tives for students and teachers,
regular and frequent monitoring
of s tu d e n t p ro g re s s , o p ­
portunities for meaningful stu­
dent r e s p o n s ib ility and
participation, teachers' leader­
ship qualities, concentration on
academic learning time, positive
school climate, administrative
curriculum, evaluation for in­
structional improvement, and
com m unity support and in ­
volvement.
— Roger Simmons

In v e s to r O p tio n IR A .
I t ’sB e e n M o re T h a n F ifty
Y ears In T h e M a k in g .
For many years, all the
American family could count on
for retirement was whatever
wealth that long, hard hours of
work could muster.
Later, the U.S. Government
developed Social Security, and
com panies also pitched in with
pension plans.
More recently, the IRA
(Individual Retirement Account)
idea meant even more help for
millions of Americans.
Now, at N C N B , there are
Investor Option IRAs, which,as
you can see, offer more ways to
put m uscle in your money.
N C N B Investor ( )pti&lt; hi IRA.
Fixed Ruh •Ik ’ixisits•Wiriabli *Nate Deposits
Got 'eminent Si \until *s-St&lt;x ks
A l( v\ey A Un U ilA i imuit-C&lt; irjxnxitt?/lands

Maybe you want the safe,
higher-yield,fixed-rate IRA.
Maybe youd like to shift
gears into stocks or bonds.
O r maybe its som e other
combination of investments.
Whateveryou need,com e
see us. Just do it soon.
The time to start is now.
The place to start is right in
your neighborhood.
I

National Bank
M in U r FtMC

�E v e n in g H e ra ld
(USPt 411 ISO)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 631-9993
Tuesday, March 76, 1985-iA
Wayn* 0, Doyle, Publisher
Thornes Olordeno, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director
Home Drllvrry; Wrrk. »I.JO . Monlh. W 7V 3 MonIhe.
•14 25: 6 Months. *27 OO. Year. $31.00 Hy Mall Wrrk.
•1.50 Month, $6.00:3 Months. » lh 00; « Month*. *32 5C»
Yrar, 660 00

Gorbachev
In Power
Mikhail S. Gorbachev's rise lo power marks
a generational change in the Soviet leadership
and yet another time of uncertainty for
Russians and Kremlin watchers.
After the deaths In Just 28 months of
Konstantin U. Chernenko. Yuri V. Andropov,
and Leonid I. Brezhnev, the ruling Soviet
Politburo apparently decided it was time lo
select someone who'd tie around fora while.
O nly hours before Mr. Chernenko's passing
March 10. the ll-m em ber Politburo Installed,
and the 315-member Central Committee
rubber-stamped, the balding. 53-year-old
Gorbachev as the youngest Communist Party
leader In the USSR’s 67-Year-old history.
With degrees In law and agronomy. Mr.
Gorbachev also Is Ihc besl educated Soviet
leader since Lenin. Ills reputation as a
sophisticated politician was enhanced during
a visit to Great Britain last year in which he
managed to charm the "Iron Lady," Prime
Minister Mnrgaret Thatcher.
Before anyone gets their hopes up about a
■'liberal” Soviet leader, however, one should
keep in mind that Mr. Gorbachev lias been a
dedicated communist and "aparatchlk" since
his youth. Ills political survivability Is
demonstrated by the fact that as Soviet
agricultural boss, he won promotion to the
Politburo after six bad harvests.
Style has little to do with substance In the
Soviet Union. Mr. Gorbachev's mentor, the
late Mr. Andropov. (itqicd "frrezr-nlks" here
with his reported love for Jazz and bourbon;
yet many believe he also plotted the at­
tempted assassination of Pope John Paul II.
W hile Kremlin succession remains a
mystery, the unprecedented quickness of
Comrade Gorbachev's ascension suggests the
transition of power was worked nut wrll in
advance, possibly in order to avoid another
international embarrassment of giving the Joh
to someone with a brief life expectancy.
Mr. Gorbachev's linmedlutr predecessor.
Konstantin U. Chernenko, ts likely to only be
a footnote in history hooks with his 13-month
sickbed effort to stop economic reforms
Initialed during the equally brief rule of Mr.
Andropov before him.
Because of h is relative y o u th , Mr.
Gorbachev should be uround much longer
and thus make more of an Inqmct. At the
same time, It also may take years for
G o rb a ch e v to consolidate his pow er,
especially if his rise has been brokered. For
the near future. Politburo elders may be
Inclined to give the |&gt;osls of president and
prime minister toothers.
Belter to Irani what Mr. Gorbachev stands
for before rmbrucing him too enthusiastically.

A c c e n t : Ig n o r a n c e
The challenge facing the West in regard to
the developments behind the Kremlin walls Is
how to pronounce Hie lust name ol the new
Soviet leadrr. Mikhail S. Gorbachev.
The New York Tlmco tells its readers to
pronounce it "Gore-bah-CHAW FF," with the
accent on the last syllable, The Lon Antfclcs
Times advises Us readers to pronounce it
“ Gor-BAM-chof.” with the accent on the
middle syllable.
Professor Jerry Hough, a Soviet expert,
says The New York T lm n Is right. The fact
that Journalists can't agree on how to
pronounce Gorbachev's name measures the
depth of our knowledge about the Soviet
Union.

BERRY'S WORLD

DICK WEST

Bombs Away-With Banana Split Syrup
W A SH IN G TO N |UPI) — Congress appears
sorely divided over whether to provide funds for
more MX missiles. Perhaps It would make the
MX Issue less controversial If the nuclear
warheads were replaced with Icecream.
Just how an Ice cream bomb might go down
at the disarmament conference In Geneva must
remain a mailer of speculation al this point.
There Is no doubt, however, that some members
of Congress think more highly of Ice cream than
they do of the MX.
Lawgivers will have a dm nee to examine the
Issue more closely at an "Ice cream social" al
the Capitol. That June 20 event will signal the
slart of ih r third annual "Ice Cream for
America" celebration, which will last all sum­
mer.
The big question Is whether the Soviets share
America's passion for frozen confection. If they
do. then dropping Ice cream bombs on Soviet
cities might render thr Russians too fat to fight.
Proposals to arm the MX with icc cream could
I k - used as bargaining chips by American

disarmament tram as surely as they have
become bargaining chips In President Reagan's
budget negotiations with Congress.
Some Pentagon weaponeers see the ice cream
bomb as the answer to the dread snow bomb the
Soviets presumably have trained on the U.S.
Capitol.
Intelligence reports Indicate the Kremlin Is
well aware that a light dusting of snow Is all It
takes to paralyze the U.S, government.
The Soviets don't even have to deploy the
snow bomb to make It effective. Just the threat
of a snowstorm is enough to panic this city.
It should be pointed out that work on the Ice
cream bomb Is still In the research stage. Some
experts doubt such technological problems as
melting and choosing the most satisfactory
flavor can be overcome.
There are highly placed scientists. Including
v&gt;mc with access to the White House, who Insist
the United Slates would be better served by
spending any research money on a Jelly bean
tom b
They note that Jelly beans have a solid-state

quality that makes melting a minimal problem.
Moreovrr. several conflicting flavors. Including
raspberry and licorice, would Ik- placed together
In the same warhead.
Detractors doubt, however, whether Jelly
beans would be fattening enough to match the
corpulent potential of Ice cream. According lo
Defense Department sources, the butterfal
content of Ice cream ran be stepped up so that
even moderate consumers would gain weight.
Their analysis Indicates that Jelly beans are
widely viewed as more suitable for service as
Intermediate range betwren-meal snacks than
for heavy duty as a dessert.
Would Soviet officials, including those re­
sponsible for civil defense preparations, be able
to resist free Ice cream falling from the sky?
Or would they eat their fill on the spot and
take some home for the wife and kiddles?
Proponents of the ice cream bomb are banking
on Ihc latter. Possibly the picture will become
clearer during National Ice Cream Month In
July.

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

WIUIAM RUSHER

Blunder
On The
Right

C redits
A r e Not
W e lfa re
If one follows tlie syndicated
columns and the political Journals,
one soon discovers that this Is the
season for wfi.it a num ber of
commentators refer to as "corporate
welfare."

NEW YORK INEA) - Three of the
ablest young R epublican con­
servatives In the House of Repre­
sentatives are. with the best of
in te n tio n s , m a k in g a serious
mistake In their effort to shape U.S.
policy toward South Africa.

One of m y favorite conservative
columnists, Jack Kilpatrick, re­
cent ly argued that tax rrrdlta to
corporation* for new equipment
"are outright suhsldlrs to Industry.
In no way distinguishable from
suhsldlrs as food stamps for the
poor." Willie I always respeet Mr,
Kilpatrick's opinions. I believe he
and others who take tills view are
seriously mistaken. A tax credit Is
not welfare.
The program specifically criti­
cized by Mr. Kilpatrick Is tlie
accelerated cost recovery system
under which companies can write
olf certain expenditures for new
machines und equipment In rive
years Companies which Invest In
new inuehlnrs und equipment re­
ceive lax iKMieflls. but the country
gets something substantial in return
— more modern Industrial facilities.
Mr. Kilpatrick IK-Ileves tfiat new
plants and equipment would have
Ix-en ordered without thr lax cred­
its. Many proplr Irelleve otherwise.
America's Industrial facilities were
rapidly lK-cotnlng obsolete when the
lax provision was Introduced. The
country still has a tong way to go
towards full modernization. Other
countries provide Ihrlr Industries
much more generous incentives
Itom Investment In new facilities.
In any case, Ihc federal govern­
ment doesn't give money to compa­
nies. It simply doesn't take so much
away in taxes. Therefore, lux credits
aren’t subsidies. Food stamps, how­
ever. rrpresenl a transfer of wealth
front the productive to the non­
productive. T h r y urc strictly welfare
payments. It's unfortunate that a
welfare program is confused with a
provision of corporate tax policy
T h r U.S. tax system alwuys has
rriognlzcd various public interests.
Slner 1917. tlie tux code has
allowed taxpayers lo take very
substuntiul deductions for gifts of
art to museums. This Is or benefit to
donors of url works. Without thr
system, however, museums and urt
galleries would be unublr to acquire
new works.
Every church, private college and
hospital In thr country depends on
the lax deductibility of gifts. They
simply could nol continue without
tax-deductible gifts. Yet critics
ml g in a rg u e , e m p lo y in g M r.
Kilpatrick's logic. Ihut these are
unwarranted suhsldlrs by those
luxpuyrra wiio have no Interest In
these Institutions.
Arranging our tax system in this
manner is an American tradition.
It's thr wuy we do things; the way
we nuance all sorts of activities.

T h is year's big liberal push
against South Africa Is enshrined In
HR 1460. a destructive blunderbuss
of a hill promoted hy liberal Demo­
c ra tic Reps. S te p h e n S o lu rz,
William Gray atul Howard Wolpe.
Oosponsorrd by 105 members of
the House, this grotesque mess
would ban the stile of Krugerrands,
bar American loans and technology
sales (Including com puters) to
South Africa, require all American
businesses operating there to abide
by the "Sullivan principles" (of
w h ic h m ore b e lo w ), co m p e l
U . N . -s u p e rv is e d e le c tio n s In
Namibia (South-West Africa), etc.

IN TALLAHASSEE

Turnabout For L e w is?
By W illiam Cotterell
TALLAHASSEE (U l’l) - Com ­
ptroller Gerald A la-wls, who won
ids first two statrwldc races by
drplcllng Incumbents as loo rozy
with businesses they regulated,
may be vulnerable to that kind of
accusation himself next year.
List week's revelations ubout his
minor, hut politically rmbarasslng
relationship with officers of the
defunct ESM Government Securities
Inc. ol Fort Lauderdale may well
provide an opponent with consider­
able campaign fodder. Lewis has
already begun Ids re-election cam­
paign organizing, and so far hua the
Held lf&gt; himself.
After Gannett News Service re(Mirtrd that he had received $7,000
In campaign contributions from four
|K-oplc anil u law firm associated
with ESM. and had twice conducted
routine reviews of the company
before It folded. Lewis quickly
Issued u statement last week saying
the contributions In no way Influ­
enced his examination of thr compatty's finances.
The amount Involved Is miniscule
— less than six-hundredths of 1
percent of the $1.2 million Lewis
raised In his re-election race four
years ago — but the collapse of ESM
after two reviews by the compt roller's olf Ice could be damaging.
ESM. which went out of business
March 4, has been accused of
defrauding Investors of more than
$300 million. Some of those In­
vestors Included Ohio savings and
luan associations that were tempo­
rarily closed In an emergency
stopgap meusure lost week.
"Alliioogh the Information re­
ported In the Gannett story Is
basically accurate, the conclusion
which that story Invites — Implying

even a hint of Impropriety — Is
absolutely inaccurate," said Lewis.
"M y actions as a regulator and a
public official have never been und
never will be Influenced by con­
tributions to past campaigns."
A day after the Gannett report.
Florida Auditor General Ernest
Ellison Issued an annual review of
the Department of Bunking and
Finance. Ellison said a spot check of
annual financial reports required
from the 3,100 securities firms
Lewis regulates had disclosed that
ubout 40 percent of the companies
hud not done so.
Lewis hud sent a form letter to the
delinquent companies Dec. 3. telling
them to get their reports In. An aide
said ESM was not among those
filing late. ESM's next report would
have been due April I, If It was still
operating
Early this year, l-ewis announced
reluctantly Ihut he would not be
able to campulgn for re-election
without taking any contribution*
from hunkers or companies regu­
lated by his department. He Mid he
wished he hadn't made that pro­
mise In previous campaigns, having
been criticized for taking some
donations from bunk directors and
other contributors his campaign
com ml lice might not have known
were In the finance business.

Please Write
Lattars to tho editor are
welcome for publication. A ll
latter* moat b* signed and
Inclnde * m oiling addrcaa
snd. If possible, a telephone
number. The Kvenlng Herald
reserves the right to adit
latter* to avoid libel and to
accoounodata apace.

Enter Rep* Robert Walker (Pa.).
Newt Gingrich (Ga l and Vln Weber
(M in n .) — three youthful con­
servatives .... HR 1460. they de­
clared. went loo far: but In Its place
they offered a bill ol their own.
Their bill would direct the U.S.
representative on the International
Monetary Fund to oppose IMF loans
to any rountry that has an official
segregation policy (South Africa —
great! think the liberals), or la
Involved In International terrorism
|the Soviet Union? — well...) or
Illegal drug trafficking |Cuba? —
cr .) It would strengthen a ban on
Importing products made with slave
labor IRussla again), and prohibit
economic or military assistance to
nations Ihut vote against the United
Slates In the United Nations more
than H5 percent of the lim e.
Specifically with regard to South
Africa. II would deny lederal con­
tracts or economic assistance to any
U.S. company doing business there
that refused to abide hy the Sullivan
principles.
Now, the Sullivan principles are a
b asica lly p ra is e w o rth y set of
guidelines under which cooperating
Am erican businesses In South
Africa promise lo provide equal pay
and working conditions for black
employees, permit black unions,
and provide housing subsidies and
such for black workers
The Sullivan principles have un­
doubtedly advanced the welfare of
black workers In South Africa.
But there are exceptions lo every
rule (e g the John Deere case. In
which a tractor company wanted to
spend money on retaining black
workers on the payroll during a
slack period, but could only acquire
"points" under the Sullivan princi­
ples by laying them off and spend­
ing the money on workers’ housing
Instead).
That's the trouble, gentlemen,
with barging Into remote and unfa­
miliar situations.

JACK ANDERSON

Long Maritime Battle Nearly Over
W ASHINGTON — A bureaucratic
hrannlgun between two federal
agencies has finally ended — und
the public could be Ihc winner.

“C M O N - pa* us a littlo SMILE/'*

Alter years of exasperated prod­
ding hy the Maritime Administra­
tion. the Environmental Protection
Agency has finally decided In begin
g ra n tin g licenses this fall to
*|K-elully designed Incinerator ships
thul will burn hazardous Industrial
wastes at sea This could mean the
eventual shrinking of the mountain*
of toxic chemlcuts that are strewn
around the country, contaminating
the soil und poisoning our drinking

water.
Inltlul EPA tests suggest that
these cancer-causing waste sludges
can be successfully burned ul
extremely high tcmpcrulurcs in the
floating Incinerators. Some agency
officials are still concerned, howev­
er. Ihut spills and residue could be
harmful to the ocean life.
Internal documents obtained by
my associates Corky Johnson and
Donald Goldberg chronicle several
yens of pressure on EPA by the
Maritime Administration lo allow
full-scale ocean waste burning. An
EPA spokesman denied this, und

Maritime hasn't tried to take any
credit for the EPA decision. But the
persistent critical bombardment
over Ihr years ts obvious In the
tntrrnal memos and reports.
" T o be perfectly candid, this
situation at EPA regarding Incinera­
tion al sea has reached egregious
proportions " one expert wrote re­
cently after reviewing EPA's draft
regulations.
"Th e subject draft regulatory
document ... unfortunately does not
represent a coherent and equitable
regulatory scheme." complained
another memo writer, who claimed

that Maritime's view that EPA had
been dragging Us feet was shared by
EPA's own scientists.
Why was Maritime so worked up
about EPA's delaying tactics?
One answer rould be concern over
u financial gamble the agency took
In 1982. when It guaranteed a $55
million construction loan for At Sea
Inc., one of the companies Interest­
ed In burning wastes at sea. The
company ts building two Incinerator
ships, and Maritime rould get stuck
with at least pan of the bill If EPA
doesn't approve them for operation.

�SPORTS

Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Tueiday, March It, 1 W -S A

-P itch e r's P a ra d ise
The Crack Is Back, H agen No-Hits Seabreeze With 11 Strikeouts
B y 8am Cook
Herald Sporta Editor
DAYTON A B EACH - Eric T h e
W hip" Hagen rediscovered the crack
In his fastball and the control of his
curve Monday afternoon as the Lake
Mary right-hander hurled a no-hltter
In a 14-2 fiv e Star Conference
baseball victory over Seabreeze at
City Island Park. The game was
slopped after six Innings due to the
10-run rule.
Hagen. 3-0. finished with 11 strike­
outs and Just one walk. He was
perfect through the first three In­
nings. striking out six of the nine
hitters. II was Hagen's second nohlller of his career. Last year, he
no-hlt West Orange
"Th e Whip was lough." said Lakr
Mary roach Allen Tullle about his

hard-throwing senior. "He threw
mostly fastballs and kepi them off
balance with his curve."

Baseball

Lake Mary, ranked No. 6 In the
Florida Sports Writers Prep Poll,
improved to 15-3 overall and 12-1 In
the conference. Lym an, ranked No. 7
In the poll, lost to DeLand. 11-10. In
eight innings Monday to fall Into
third place. Lyman Is 15-4 and 8-4.
DeLand moved Into second place
with a 10-6 and 9*3 mark. There arcfive conference games to play.
While Hagen blew away the hitters.
Ron Natherson and Brett Molle con­
tinued their torrid hitting Natherson.
a senior second baseman, slapped
four singles and drove In four runs to
boost his hatting average to .333.
Molle. a Junior right fielder, singled
and doubled and drove In three runs

to Improve his averagr lo .371
Donald Grayson. Saturday's hero In a
victory over Lym an, rapped two
singles.
Lake Mary gave Hagen a 2-0 lead In
(he first when Shane Letterlo walked.
Scott Underwood was hit by a pitch
and Rod "C .J ." Metz walked to load
the bases Kevin Hill struck out for
the second out but Natherson sockrd
a single to left center to plate both
runs.
1-akr Mary upped Its lead to 6 0 in
the third os Letterlo. who was on
base three times and stole two bases,
walked and stole second Underwood
rrached on an error by the second

Baseball
overall and 3-8 in the confer­
ence while Brantley, whlrh
has lost five o( lls last seven,
fell to 7 0 In the Five Star and
12-9 overall.
Seminole will try to knock
off Apopka Wednesday after­
n o o n at A p o p k a w h i le
Hrantley returns to action
Wednesday night when It
hosts last-place Mainland
After tailing behind. 2-0, In
the top of the first, the
Scrnlnoles rallied for three
runs In ihe bottom of the
Irame Seminole was the home
team Monday since lls field
Isn't ready yet and they were
visitors the last time ihcy
played at Brantley.
A flrr the first Inning, not
much happened offensively as
Sheffield stymied the Patriots'
bats and Brantey*s Tat Lusk
kepi the Tribe's aluminum

Natherson then advanced to second
on a wild pitch and scored on a single
by Grayson Anthony Laszalc. dhlng
for Hagen, walked and Molle followed
with a single push the lead to6-0.
Eight more nuts In the sixth Inning
pul the game out of reach. Ryan Lisle
doubled to oi&gt;rn the frame and scored
on a single by Letterlo. who then
stole second and moved to third on a
wild pitch. Underwood popped out
but Metz drilled a double to deep left
r enter to score Letterlo
Hill followed with an Infield hit
which pushed Metz to third where he

II was pitcher's paradise
Monday for Brian Shef­
field, E r ic 'T h e W hip'
H agen and Jo rg e De
IMonte. Seminole's Shef­
field, above, three hit Lake
B ra n tle y. Lake M a ry 's
Hagen, above right, no hlt
Seabreeze, Lake Howell's
DelMonte, right, one-hit
Mainland.

See S H E F F IE L D . Page 7A

W IN T E R PARK - Jorge
DelM onte allowed Just a
Inimh-lnnlng single and his
Lake H o w e ll te a m m a te s
hacked him wlftt 16 runs as
Ihc Silver Hawks destroyed
Mainland. 160. in Five Slur
Conference baseball ul Lake
Howell High Monday after­
noon The game was stopped
after four and one-half Innings
due lo the 10-run rule.
Lake Howell Improved to
It) 10 overall and 6-7 m the
conference. The Hawks travel
to Lyman for a 7 p m. game
Wednesday. A game set lor
Friday against Seabreeze at
Daytona Beach was born re­
scheduled for Thursday.
la k r Howell used the redhot hat of Ed Taubcnscr to
s c o re In e v e r y I n n i n g .
Taubcnscr. who had four lilts
In a win over Seminole Friday,
singled twice and drove In four
runs lit three trips. The lefthanded billing Junior raised
bis average lo .385.
l-akr Howell made things

Crazy Plays Doom
Lake Brantley, 4-1;
Oviedo Rolls, 24-2
By C h ris Flster
Hersld Sports W rite r
A L T A M O N T E SP R IN G S Taking advantage of three Lake
Brantley errors. D r Land's l-ady
Bulldogs scored Ihrce limes In
the lop of the sixth to brruk a I-1
Ur en mule lo a 4-1 victory over
the Lady Patriots In Five Star
Conference action Monday at
Lakr Brantley High
DeLand moved lo wllhln a half
game of Lake tlowrll wllh the
win. The Bulldogs are 4-1 In thr
conference w h ile ih r Lady
Hawks are 4-0. DeLand also
Improved lo 9-1 overall, Lake
Brantley now stands at 5-8
overall and 2-4 In the confer­
ence.
"When we stop making these
crazy plays we'll be all right."
Lake Brantley assistant Debbie
Frank said. "Th e four games we
have lost In conference are all un
errors. We have to stop beating
ourselves."
DeLand scored once til the
Ihlrd lo break a scurrlrss tic hut
thr Palrlots tied It In thr bottom
of the fourth. With two outs.
Mandy Mutthleson singled lo
right and moved lo second when
(he outfielder bobblcd the hall.
Matthleson came around to
score when H o lly Hagaman
reached on an error.
DeLand came bark with three
unearned runs In the top of the
sixth and shut the Lady Patriots
down the rest of the way.
Brantley managed Just five hits
In the game, one each by Angle
May. Matthleson. Denise Burke,
Niki Burke and Dcana Jeffers
Lakr Brantley returns to confemce play today at 4:15 when It
hosts M a in la n d , Th e La dy
Bulldogs are at Lyman today at
4:13. In other Five Star games
today, Sem inole hosts Lake
Mary at 4:15 and Lake Howell
goes to Daytona Beach to take on
Seabreeze.
LIO N S P U N IS H H O R N E TS
C A S S E L B E R R Y - Oviedo's
Lady Lions exploded for 11 runs
in I he first Inning Mondy and
never looked back en route to a
24-2 shelling of Bishop Moore's
Lady Hornets in Ontngr Belt

raced hom e on a w ild p itc h .
Natherson and Grayson followed with
base hits to lewd the bases. A wild
pitch scored another run and Molle
doubled In two more. Letterlo's
sacrifice fly on a strange 8-2-3 double
play on which Molle scored before
Lisle wus doubled off first base
completed the scoring
Seabreeze. 4-12 luid 3-10, scored In
the fourth on a walk, stolen base,
wild pitch and a sacrifice fly. In the
fifth the Sand Crabs pushed across a
run on a three-base error when
Natherson dropped a short pop fly
and a wild pitch by Hagen.
Lake Mary travels to Spruce Creek
Wednesday. Tullle said Neal Harris
will pitch. The Rams played again
Monday without Mike Schmlt. Tuttle
said he may be out two or three
weeks with mononucleosis.

DelMonte Hurls
1-Hitter At Bucs

Sheffield S u b d u e s
Patriots O n 3 Hits
By C h ris Flster
Herald Spo rts W rite r
A L TA M O N TE SPRINGS Up until Monday night, ihc
1985 season for Sanford's
Fighting Scrnlnoles was one of
ulmosls, The Tribe came close
a few times to beating the
frontrunners In the Five Star
Conference but could never
pull off an upset
That all changed Mondaynight though as the Scrnlnoles
got a s t r o n g p it c h in g
peformanre from lirtan Shrl
field and an excellent de­
fensive hallgumc from Dexter
Franklin en route to a 4-2
victory over the slumping Pairiots of Lake liraniley High In
Five Star action at picturesque
I-like Brantley Stadium
"W e bent a really good team
tonight," Seminole coach Mike
Ferrell said, "W e've been close
a lot of times ihls season. I'm
really Impressed wiih thr way
I he kids euim. beck aj,rr
gelling blown out (17 0 1 by
l-akr Howell.**
Seminole Improved to 7-10

basemun which moved Letterlo to
third. Underwood then stole second.
Metz popped up and Hill fanned
again but Natherson came through
with another clutch two-out single to
score two runs.

Baseball
easy for DelMonte to record
his third win In right derisions
by scoring two In the first,
eight In I he second, one In the
ihlrd and live more In the
fourth.
In the first. John Canfield
walked and stole second. Mark
Schnltker followed with a
walk and when losing pitcher
David Llvesay tried lo pick
Canfield off second, both
runners moved up. Ernest
Martinez llrw out n&gt; center hut
Tuubcnsrr drilled a single lo
right for a 2-0 lead
In the second, the Silver
Hawks sent 13 hitlers lo the
plate, W llh one out. Dave
Marlrllr walked and moved lo
third on I wo wild pilches,
Canfield then walked and slole
second Schnilkcr walked lo
load the bases ami Ernrsl
See D ELM O N T E, Page 7A

‘Take that, Colonial,' says
Lake Howell's Sandy Gillies.
The Lady Hawks' smoofh
second baseman fired to Ava
Gardner to complete a dou
ble play against the Lady
G re n a d ie rs in the Lake
Howell Invitational Saturday
at Red Bug Lake Park In
Casselberry. Lake Howell,
which hold a one half game
lead over DeLand in the Five
Star Conference, plays at
Seabreeze today.

So ftb all
Conference play at Red Bug
Park.
Oviedo Improved lo 7-7 overall
and 4-1 In llu- OBC with Ihc win.
T h r Lady Lions go lo Orlando
today ul 4 to lakr on conference
rival Jones.
Sophomore shortstop Caroline
Chavis hud a pair of hits in (he
first Inning uprising Including a
two-run tvomer, her first of ihc
season. Oviedo also capitalized
on a number of walks In Ihc

ttof*M B s l , by Or*t*ry 04 Km

inning.
The Lions had 19 hits for the
game, which was called uflrr
four and a half Innings because
of (be 15-run rule. Chavis led the
way its she went 4 for 5 with
seven RBIs. Thai enabled her to
move Into a tie with Seminole's
Janet Hauck for the county RBI
lead.
Dee Dee Beasley stroked three
hits and drove In four runs for
the Lions while Jrsslcu Bradley
was 3 lor 5. Barbara Malone had
a pair of hits and three rtbbies.
Jodi Switzer was 2 for 2 wllh
two RBIs and Frau Foster and
Mlkkl Eby added two hits each.

Caroline Chavis drove in
seven runs with four hits
Monday as the Oviedo Lady
L io n s sq u a sh e d B ishop
Moore, 24 2.

D e v il's

E v il P o s s e s s e s

S C O T T S D A L E . Arlz. &lt;UP1| Denny
McLain faces up to 75 years In prison. Joe
Pepltone gets caught red-handed with co­
caine. heroin, and a loaded hand gun Daryl
Sronlers voluntarily turns himself In for
drug rehabilitation
W hy Is someone up there suddenly on our
national game? What is Ihls devil's evil that
la subverting so many of our "Blessed Boys"
and how long can It ronlinur? Where will ll
all end?
"If I knew the answer you'd have to stand
In line lo talk to me because I'd be thr
the world." says Vida Blur,
upfront he's not.
this spring as a
non-roster candidate wllh his old club, the
San Francisco Giants, has pitched so wrll he
has won himself another shot with them At
35 he Is no longer counting his birlhdays.
although he did celebrate something of an
anniversary a few days ago. He did It very
quietly.
Last Thursday was exactly one year that
Vida Blue was released from the Fort Worth
federal prison wherr hr served HI days for

B a s e b a ll P la y e r s
Milton
Rlchman
U P I Senior

hts Involvement with drugs and drug
handlers.
Willie Wilson. WUIIe Alkens and Jerry
Martin, all of whom were teammates of Blur
with the Kansas City Royals, did lime wllh
him In the same slammer, but Blue look the
hardest fall of all. Bowie Kuhn considered
his transgressions the more egregious.
l*osslbly to make Blue think about them a
little longer, he booted him out of baseball
for one year.
With Jack Clark and Al Oliver gone and
Vida Blur being the moat recognizable name
with the Giants, most of the writers visiting
their ramp naturally make a bee-line to
Interview him.

He's astonished by the avulunchc of
attention he's getting. As much. If not more,
than when he wus lour hull's hottest com­
modity as the American la-ague Cy Young
Award winner In 1971 wllh the'Oakland
A's.
"QuestIons, questions, questions." he said
without showing any Irritation over them.
He was talking about all the questions that
have been asked him regarding drugs and
his experience with them. "I don't think It's
newsworthy any more. It's been dwelled on
so long It has gotten to be old news with the
fans us well as wllh myself. ! have no
objectiona to the questions though. Through
m y recovery program, talking about what
happened helps me with my overall sobriety
and 1grow from that, too."
Blue la bright, thoughtful and articulate
He fully realizes what a dreadful scourge the
combination of alcohol and drugs has
become nol only In baseball, but In our
entire society. Nonetheless, lie la unable to
offer any great new ideas for solving the
problem.

�l A - E v nlng H tr«ld , Sanford, PI.___Tutw Jjy, March

21,

Hawthorne Outruns Kinley

| «j

SPORTS

NEW S M R Y N A B E A C H Running a trouble-free race for a
change, talented teenage race
driver Casey Hawthorne put his
family-owned Mustang In victory
lane, besting Wild Bill Klnley,
Junior Simmons. Dale Howard
and hard-charging Ted Mltchem
of Sanford Saiurday night at the
New Smyrna Speedway.
David Rogers, m eanwhile,
continued to dominate the late
model action, as he won Ihe
25-lap late model feature.
But LcRoy Porter, driving
ALL-PRO regular Daniel Keene's
back-up car. was putting on the
show for Die fans, as for the last
two weeks, he and former track
champion Joe Middleton, who
flnlshrd third, have been fight*

IN BRIEF
Mouse Turns Loose Defense
A s Gold Crushes San Antonio
DENVER |UPI) — Denver Gold coach Mouse Davis gained
notoriety last season as an offensive Innovator with his
run-and-shoot offense. He may gain more attention this
year with a btack-and-bluc defense.
The Gold defense forced six fumbles and quarterback
Vince Evans turned two of them Into touchdowns Monday
nlghl. powering Denver to a 16 2 victory over the San
Antonio Gunslingers.
Davis, us offensive coordlantor of the llousion Gamblers,
Installed Ihe run-and-shoot, making u siar out of
quarterback Jim Kelly, He has brought the same
alignment to Denver and Evans has handled II well.
Evans converted Gunslinger turnovers Into h 5-yard
touchdown run and a 1-yard scoring pass to l,eonard
Harris. Brian Speelman kicked a -17-yard field goal after
another San Antonio fumble.
San Antonio starting quarterback Whll Taylor completed
only seven passes for 53 yards before being relieved In the
fourth quarter by Fred Mortensen. who quickly threw an
Interception, A bad snap on a Denver punt with I 55 left to
play gave San Antonio a safety to avert a shutout.
^ Denver Improved to 3-2 while San Antonio dropped to

O 's Hurlers
Solid Again
United Press International
T h e B a lt im o r e O r io le s '
chances of once again challeng­
ing for the American League
East title arc looking belter
every day,
Ned Yosl drove In two runs
Monday to lead the Texas
Rangers lo u 2-0 victory over the
Orioles, hut Baltimore's pitching
was again sharj).
Scott McGregor pitched six
Innings for Baltimore, allowing
six hits and holh runs. Dennis
Martinez. Tippy Martinez and
Don Aase limited Texas. 7-7 In
exhibition play, lo no runs and
one hit over the final three
Innings.
Yost's flrsl RBI came In the
lourth Inning with a single olf
llrsl baseman Eddie Murray’s
glove lhal scored Gary Ward
from third base. In Ihe slxlli
Inning. Yosl doubled to left off
McGregor, scoring Bill Stein
Wayne Gross hom errd off
Dave Schtnldl In Ihe ninth
Inning for Balllmorr's lone run,
Texas starter Dave Ho/ema
allowed six hits over five In­
nings. hoi had to work out ol
frequent Jams to get the victory.
At Scottsdale. A rlz .. Ray
Burris, Boh McClure, and Pete
Ladd combined on u three-hit
shutout lo lift (he Brewers.
Burris, who was 13-10 with the
Oakland A's Iasi year, pitched
six Innings and gave up all three
hits H r struck out three. Mc­
Clure went two Innings and
Ladd worked the ninth
A! Mesa, Arlz., Oils Nixon
atoned for a ninth-inning error
hy scoring Junior Noha wlih a
13th inning single to lead the
Indians Nixon dropped Brian
Doyen's fly lo center field with
two out In Ihe ninth, allowing
Gary Woods lo score the tying
run from ftrst base
Ai Palm Springs. Calif., Barry
Donnell drove In two runs and
three Seattle pitchers combined
un a live hitter. Winning pitcher
Matl Young held the Angels to
three hlis and an unearned run
through alx Innings.

Knlcks Lose King Permanently
The New York Knlcks werr quickly reminded what life
without Bernard King Is like.
With King — the leading scorer In Ihe NBA with a 32.9
average — the Injury-plagued Knlcks have been losing
steadily; In their first gume since he was lost for Ihe rest of
Ihe season, they were blown away.
The Milwaukee Bucks thumped the Knlcks 126-106
Monday night, after the New York learned the extent of the
knee Injury King suffered Saturday. In the course of
examining the slar forward's twisted knee Monday, doctors
discovered a torn ligament and torn cartilage. Surgery Is a
|MM*lblllty.
•'We miss (ISIIII Cartwright and (Truck) Robinson and all
they do," Knlcks coch Huble Brown said. "A n d on loj&gt; of
that, you lose your leading scorer for 17 games, which Is
what King hus missed all season, and on top of that we're
without Fat Cummings, one of our leading players
“ It's been a very frustrating season It's no fun at all
when your major players are out. I thank (Buck coach) Don
Nelson tor taking It easy on us."
Elsewhere, Kansas City beat Seal lie 121-106 and
Portland blasted I he Los Angeles (.'Uppers 122-99.

Broten's Goal Tops Canucks

I

HL(X)M INGTON. Minn, |UPI) - When Ihe V a n c o u v e r
Canucks Jumped to a 2 0 lead early In the llrsl period.
Minnesota center Neal Broleu thought he was watching a
replay of the North Stars' game with Calgary last week.
Minnesota buttled hack for a 4-4 tie against Calgary last
Monday, but lirotcn exceeded his expectations Monday
night by scoring the deciding goal In a 5*3 victory over the
Canucks.
"W hrrt we got down 2 0 again. It seemed like lire same
old North Slurs," Broten said "lt‘s really Irusiratlng
gelling off to a |x»or slart like dial and having lo battle
hack. It seems like we keep walling for something lo
happen at the beginning of thr game.
"We've got to play every game Irom here on out like It's a
pluyoll game,"
Broten scored with 3:02 left on u bad-angle wrist shot
(hut brut goalie Frank Caprice high to the short side to put
Minnesota ahead 4-3.
"Th e winning goal was a bit of a long shot." Canucks
asslstunl coach Ron Smith said, "but It was a laid play at
center Ice lhal caused it. Our guys skated rigid past the
puck.”

Thornton Wants Fast Recovery

!

At Yuma. Arlz.. Sieve Garvey
drove In a run wllh a thirdInning single und Mario Ramirez
hit u fourth-inning sacrifice fly.
l i l t i n g t h r P a d r r s . D ave
Dravecky. who went 5 2-3 In­
nings. was ihe winner. In the
second game

C LEV ELA N D (U l'l) — Andre Thornton s|&gt;enl a quiet
night In u downtown Cleveland hotel "mentally preparing"
lor arthroscopic surgery on Ids left knee this ultrrnuon.
"I plan to gel a good night's rest." the Cleveland Indians'
veteran designated hitler said Monday night "And I'll ask
God dial my recovery lie us swill as jmsstbie.
"I know I'm In gcxxl hands Faith will get me thmugli
this,"
Indians team physician I&gt;r John llcrgfeld said Thornlnn
may return In thr lineup In as little as three weeks
Bergfeld performed un urthrugrum Monday at Ihe
Cleveland Clinic, and said Thornton s Immediate prognosis
was very satisfactory,
"D r. Bergfeld said therr was torn curtilage Involved, but
rx|xcts thr arthroscopic surgery to repali that." said u
team spokesman. “ It's really the best scenario we could
huvr Imped for."
Bergfeld said Ihe recovery time could tnke us long us live
weeks, but noted Thornton's all-around health as iielug In
the player's favor.

At Dunedin, veteran rightImnder Doyle Alexander and
Ron Mussetman combined nil u
slx-htlter In lead the Blur Jays,
Toronto Improved Its Grapefruit
League record to 13-3.
At Clearwater, a two-out single
In the eighth Inning by Luts
Aguayo knocked In the winning
run. helping ihe Phlllrs conic
Irom behind In a game played
In-fore a record crowd of 5.830 al
Jack Russell Sladlum,

Hippie Stops Rumors, Signs Pact

A l Ta m p a . Cesar Cedeno
doubled home two runs In a
five-run third tuning lo lift ihe
Reds. Eddie M ilner, Duane
Walker und Dave Parker had RBI
singles In Ihe Inning

D E T R O IT (U l'lI — Uuartrrhuck Eric Hippie may have a
future with Ihe Detroit Lions after all
Despllr rumors he was about to be traded, Hippie
Monday signed a new 2-year contract with Ihe Lions. Ihe
tram announced.
While terms of the contract were not announced. Hippie,
who played In only eight games lust season because ol a
knee Injury, is believed to liuve signed u deal worth nearly
0700.000 In salary, bonuses and Incentives
"I'm very hujqiy with the signing," Hippie said In a
statement. “ Il gives me a vote of confidence and eliminates
the uncertainly of m y future here. It also gives me ihe
opportunity to continue to produce as a Detroit Lion In
what I believe Is Ihe greatest sport* town In the country."

A u to R acing

M O N E Y L IS T ,,,.
B A S E B A LL S TO P

($ ^ )A L A R IE S

&lt;
) //
&lt;
[ S
b

P layer
Team
George Foster Niff fork Mifs t2 ,051,632
Data Winfield Niff fork
Yankeei
2,030,45 f
Mika Schmidt Philadelphia
1,989,675
Phlll/at
Gary Carter
1,863,264
Maw York Mata
Ricky
New York
Htndtnon
1,720,000
Yankaat
SOURCE P io ltU io n tl B t t t b t ll P lt y t t t JUdOMhOfl

,

J

)

^

---------------

Poetic Judge: Daylight
Is All Right For Cubs
C H IC A G O IUPII - A poetic
Judge, Invoking Chicago tradi­
tion. has refused lu allow Ughls
at the home of the Cubs, saying
Ians have believed for genera­
tions that baseballs inventor
"never Inlended for the game to
lx- played at night."
Cook County Circuit Judge
Rlchurd L. Curry Monday re­
jected a challenge to ordinances
banning lights al Wrtgtcy Field
In a 64 page ruling thut bor­
rowed tltxTully from baseball
lore and even a famous song
about the sport.
Th e Tribune Co., owners of the
leutn. had sought a court order
striking down a state law and u
city ordinance passed to keep
lights from tiring Installed In (h r
nation's second-oldest ballpark,
and the lost one without lights.
Tribune olTIclals filed notice
they would appeal the ruling.
"W e consider this very, very
serious business, and we. of
course, huve appealed that de­
cision." Cubs general manager
Dallas Green said. "We're going
to hopefully accelerate that uppcul so we can gel about running
our business as a baseball busi­
ness should be run."
Curry challenged Ihe Idea that
baseball should be a business
like any other.
"F o r generations now ," he
wrote, "baseball fans ... believe
as an article of faith that Abner
Doublrdny never Intended thr
game to be played at night; thut
vines and heroes grow better In
ihe sun; lhal one "homer In ihe
Gloomin' Is worth a hundred
lilts Into Ihe blackness of night
and that Wrlglcy Field is Indeed
a Mecca for Ihe baseball purist."
Curry, who described himself
as a "sports fan" in a footnote lo
Ihe opinion, began the ruling
with u poem. He said the lyrics
suinmarlzr the Issues involved
in ihe Tribune Co.'s attempt to
light up 7()-year-o!d Wrlgley
Field.
11 reads
IX&gt; those who schedule play
time

Baseball
for the games of our national
past time
have the right to Interfere with
bedtime
by starting the game at night­
time
Instead of the custom ary
daytime?
Curry said the Tribune Co,
bad attempted to throw a legal
curve In Its arguments that
lights should lx- allowed.
"Justice Is a southpaw and the
Cubs Just don't hit lefties."
Curry said.
The Judge said the suit bad
"aspects which appear to parody
reality and Justify ridicule." and
described the history of Wrlgley
Field In a chapter he entitled
"T a k e Me O u l to Ihe Ball
Game."
"The ballpark Is Wrlgley Field,
so often referred to as ‘beautiful
Wrlgley Field* lhal some people
Ix-llevc Ihe word 'beautiful' Is
actually a part of Its ofTIrlal
name.
“ In (h r complaint. Ihe plaintiff
Identifies the ballpark as '1060
W. Addison Street, Chicago.
Illinois.' Such a nondescript
I d e n t i f i c a t i o n m a y be
a p p ro p ria te for th r Postal
Service but it does not seem
quite appropriate for (he Cubs
who have played at that location
for almost 70 years."
Culm fans flocked to bars In
Ihe Wrlgley Field nrlghtxjrhotxl
In celebrate the ruling, but not
all local merchants were pleased.
Steve S h a e vltz. owner of
Sports Distributors, a souvenir
shop across the street from the
park, said be believes the ruling
will cause the Cubs lo move.
"Money Is made at night on
TV', ami the Tribune Co. Is
Interested In money, like uny
other company." Shaevltz said.
"I think these people (opposed lo
night baseball) are making a big
mistake."

Pttrum. * Jtrry R»*»*. G*rn**»lll*. ’
D*l«"d. I Ed ettttb e co tt. Stnlord.
9. Gary P*tN**or StMHmeor »0 Buddy
T«*d Orlando
* T R E E T STOCKS

f *««**«• &lt;*tK»&gt;'

am*inter-

Wcond **•' I* l«P ») &gt;• Li"0* BroM l.
D*r*on* B * « n
_
..................
F t * V l (I f l*d*&gt; I C*My H***Som*.
Swiferd, 1 BHt t0nt*y. 0»***n &gt; J te W
Simmon*. Untocd * D*&gt;* Mo**nl. &lt;-**»
H*!*n 1 T*d Mttctxm S*ntofd. * J«*y
W x m x t . Santord F M*rt&gt; Rob*r'V W&gt;
ford. I Ltrd* Brooki. Dar'on* B**ch f L*»
C l* r k . O rlin d e
t# M l* * X u b * «t»* .
FO U R C V L IN O C R S
Fir»f h**&gt; t* 1*9*1 I Bobby S**r* 0»»**n
Socwid n**' (* 1*P* t t Curtl* Mlll*r,

V*"»ord

F**fvr* II# 1*0!) &gt; Bobby Mar*. 0****n.
J Richard Boggt. Orlando J Billy Moov«n.
Orlando. * R*r Symon* N** Smyrn*
B*«ch. f Sf*»* Thompson San'ord *
Tom my EIH*. Edge*****. Z Corfu MilNr,
Sanford I J*** « * r » T»w*rni*r, » Jimmy
Tr* »* r 1h*n, N r* Smyrna B«*ch. IS K*&lt;th

P«ery» Pil'iti*

Gullickson
Labors 6,
Expos Win
W EST PALM BEACH (U l’l) BUI Gullickson survived one
shaky Inning Monday while
becoming the first Montreal
pitcher In go six Innings during
ihe Expos' 5-3 win over the New
York Yankees.
Gullickson gave up lour hits
and a walk during a thrre-nin
New York fifth, hut pushed his
spring record to 3-0 when
Montreal scored twice In I lie
slxihtolakra-f-d lead
New York stnrtrr Phil Nlekro
allowed Just one hil in live
Innings bill that was a fourth*
Inulng home run by Hcrm Winnlngham Montreal had scored a
run In the second when Huble
llrcxiks walked, stole second,
advanced to Ihlrd on a passed
ball and scored on a sacrifice fly
by Razor Shines.
Hrnok* singled home I be first
of Monlrral’s two runs against
loser Mike Armstrong In the*
six th and T e r r y Francona
knocked In the go-ahead run
with a sacrifice fly.
Scott Bradley singled home
two runs and Ken Griffey one
during Ihe Yankees' three run
fifth
Tim Raines, moved lo left field
for this season from center,
singled and stole a base (or
Montreal. Ralnrs has six steals
111 eight attempts.
K LA W IT T ER S H IN E S
VERO BEACH I Ul'l) — Greg
Gagne and Ron Washington had
two bits each ami To m Klawlllcr
pitched three scoreless of relief
Monday to lead the Minnesota
Twins to a 5-1 exhibition victory
over the Los Angeles (Xxlgers
Gagne stored the first run of
the game In the second Inning
then doubled In a run In the
fourth agalnsl Los Angeles
starter Orel Hershtser. The
Tw ins put ihe game away In the
ninth with three runs off Tom
Brennan, highlighted by Steve
Lombardozzl's two-run double
R Y A N IM PROVES
W IN T E R H A V E N IU P I) Nolan Ryan hurled six Innings of
one-hll ball and Mark Ross
worked out of u bases- loaded Jam
In the ninth Inning Monday to
preserve Ihe Houston Astros' 6-5
victory over the Boston Red Sox
lu an exhibition game.
The 38-year old Ryan entered
the game wllh a 6 43 earned run
average, but no bit Ihe Red Sox
until the filth tuning when
Jackie Gutierrez sirukrd a on­
e-out double Ryan walked four
and struck out seven In his
fourth exhibition appearance.
The Astros. 8 1 1 . look a 6 2
lead Inin the nlinh when Ihe Red
Sox rallied for Ih rrr runs against
reliever Joe Sarnbllo.
Rookie Kevin Rotulnr led of!
wllh a single, and our oul taler
■left Newman doubled. After
Dave Stapleton drew a walk lo
load the bases. Glenn Hallman
drilled an RBI single

Drug Problem M ay Cause Brock's Resignation
TKMPE. Arlz (UPI) •— A former Arizona
State University baseball player dalm shr
was benched this season after refusing to
lake a controversial mood allrring drug
prescribed by Ihe team's psychiatrist to
Improve performance
Drrw Slier, a sophomore third baseman
who started 10 games for the Sun Devils
this season, has since quit the team und has
said he will transfer to Ihe University of
Nevada Las Vegas.
"I don't believe In taking drugs, and 1
never have." said Slier, who told Arizona
State baseball coach Jim Brock two weeks
ugu he was leaving the squad. "I don’t think
that ihe use of drugs la forme."
Use of the drugs became public Friday
when It wus reported phenelzine sulfate, a
hydrazine derivative marketed under the
name Nardil, has been prescribed or re­
commended to at least eight members of the
Sun Devil hascbull tram this season. Nardil
Is generally given as a lust rrsort to people
suffering severe neurotic depression.
Slier said hr was given a prescription lor
thr drug by Dr. James Gough, a Scottsdale
psychiatrist and former director of mental
iirallh (nr Student Health Services al the

t

Furman Selects Estes A s Coach
G R EEN V ILLE. S C . (UPI| - New Furman basketball
coach George "B utch" Estes said he plans to emphasize
urudrmlc standards In his effort lo rebuild the struggling
Paladin program.

i

Symons and Steve Thompson.
A 50-lap late model race will
highlight this coming Saturday's
End of the Month Champion­
Ing tooth and nail for the second ships for all divisions.
s p o t.. Fourth and fifth were
L A T E MODELS
Harold "Fat Rat" Johnson and
FatN tt Qu*lth*r- D i e d Rog***. OrtanSa.
Prof. Duke Southard.
I I M l MC
After a crowd-pleasing wheel
H .i t ( 101*011 ) Roger*
F*«tur* (IS I*p5l 1 D*vld Pop*.I O r
lo wheel battle for the lead with
l«rdo. 1 L*Po» Part**. Orlando I Jo*
Mark Sills, fastest quallfler/fost MiddWtorv So Dayton* * M»mid F it P » t ”
heat winner Richard Proulx JtM Htn. Sanford,- S. Du** Sowfwrd. N r *
drove the Mntocare machine to Smym* S**&lt;* I M*rk G 'b w lam tula. *
John M****y. Port Or*ng* Id Norm Fagan
victory In the 20-lap thundercar Hudton. N r * H om pthlrr
main. Sills held on for second,
TH U N D E S C A R S
F a itrtl Qu*lin*r
Richard Prouli. Or
followed by previous week's
lando. It •» m c
winner Tom m y Patterson. Jerry
F ir,lh ** l 111*9*1 t Prouli
Burbaugh and Mike Barfield.
S*condh**l I I 1*0*1 I j*f« Bi«hr. Dalton*
F**tur* (10 1*0 *1-1. Richard Prouli. O r
The top four-cylinder finishers
S. Mar* Sill*. Orang* City; I Tom m y
were Bobby Sears. Richard land*,
P*tt*r*en. Scottimoor « J*rry Bkrt*ugh
B ogits. B illy llo n v e n . K ay N*w Smyr*n Batch I M il* B »r(i*ld

"One of my goals Is to make sure our uthletes graduate,
and I think the university lends Itself to that," said Estes,
who wus named coach Monday, replacing J r nr Davts who
resigned last month.
"Another goal I have Is to Increase the support for the
entire athletic program and attendance at our busketbull
games."
Eates moves over from Presbyterian College, which In his
five years as coach he turned from a perennial loser Into a
20 victory team that scaled the NAIA national rankings
Davis cited both high academic standards and a lack of
sebjol support for his Inability to post a winning season
Furman won only Seven games this year, its fifth straight
losing season.

i

B a s e b a ll
university. Gough currently works two day#
a week as u psychiatric consultant for Ihe
Sun Devil athletic program.
Brock, who said Sunday night he may
resign as head coach, was In seclusion
Monday and unavailable for comment.
Gough was also unavailable for comment.
Slier, who was batting .421 early In the
season, was In the midst of a slump when U
was suggested he take Nardil. He said his
balling average hud dropped to .226 when
Gough handed him a prescription for the
drug.
Slier said shortly after he refused to take
Nardil. Brock and other members of the
coaching stafT did not associate with him.
He said his playing time was drastically
reduced and coaches refused to help him
with his fielding
Use of the drug by Arizona State athletes
Is being Investigated by a panel headed by
Dr. Monty Roth, director of Student Health
Services at Ihe university. Roth met with

Artzoan State president J . Russell Nelson on
Monday to outline procedures for (he
Inquiry.
The matter was originally going lo be
Investigated by Athlrtlc Director Dick
Tamburo. who called lor thr probe last
week. It was turned over to Nelson on
Monday.
"We're Involved by Implication, so wr
thought the fairest thing to do was not lo
conduct the review ourselves." assistant
athletic director Frank Sacklon said
According to the manufacturer. ParkeDavis Co.. Nardil has potentially dangerous
s id e e f f e c t s a n d , u n d e r r e r t a l n
circumstances, can be fatal.
A Parke-Davis spokesman said Ihe drug
should not be taken with cheese, beer. wine,
chocolate. cofTce or cola, as a reaction
between any of those Items and Ihe drug
can result In hypertensive crisis and an
uncontrollable elevation of blood pressure.
Hypertensive crisis can result In stroke and
death.
*
Several doctors, including the chief medi­
cal officer for the U.S. Olympic Committee,
believe the drug Is dangerous and should be
used only as a last resort.

I

�Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Twvsdjy, March I*. IttS— TA

M em phis State Relishes Background Seat
United Press International
Memphis State may own the best
position In the Final Four — the
background.
With all the attention going to
Vlllanova's surprising success or to the
fourth edition of the Georgetown-St.
John's battle, not many people are
noticing the No. 4 Tigers.
One thing Is for sure, though. People
will pay attention If Memphis State
wins Its next two games In the NCAA
Tournament.
*'l think Memphis Stale has the
capability of winning the whole thing."
Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs said.
"And 1hope they do."
The Midwest winning Tigers have
experienced good fortune during the
tournament — capturing two games at
the buzzer and receiving the benefit ol
a key call In their 63 61 decision over
Oklahoma on Saturday.
Memphis State meets Vlllanova this
Saturday In the Final Four's doubleheader semifinal at Lexington. Ky. The
second game features St. John's,
winner of the West Regional, and
Georgetown, top of the East. All but

Memphis State represent the Big East
Conference.
Memphis State reached the Final
Four by smothering the Sooners'
Wavman Tisdale, holding him to two
shots the last 13 minutes. The Tigers
figure to try the same on 6-foot-9
Wildcat center Ed Pinckney.
U n ra n k e d V llla n o v a . a s m a ll
Pennsylvania school, finished the
season fourth In Its own conference.
The 'Cats may not be elegant —
clawing past Dayton, the nation's
top-ranked Independent college team.
No 2 Michigan and Maryland by no
more than 4 points to reach the
regional cham pionship. But they
clobbered No. 7 North Carolina 56-44
In Sunday's regional championship.
Vlllanova's chances against Mem*
phis State — longshot as they may be
— are sure to be better than If the
plucky team was matched against one
of Its two Big East competitors. The
Wildcats have been defeated three
times this year by St. John's and twice
by Georgetown.
Vlllarova Is no stranger at the NCAA
Tournament. Th is was the fourth

‘Dwxtar (Franklin)
worries you
sometimes, but
he really gets
the job done.'

...S heffield
Continued from SA
quiet. Sheffield allowed Just
thter hits In going the dis­
tance and only one of those
was hard hit. T h e lanky
right hander struck out seven
and walked five.
"Sheffield was In control
after Ihr first Inning." Ferrell
said "He made the pitches In
the key situations."
A couple of mistakes by Ihc
Setnlnoles opened I lie door for
i wo Brantley runs In the lop of
Ihr first Andy Dunn drew a
walk lo lead olf and. after Brad
Dunn was called out for Inter­
fering with the catcher's throw
to second. Mark "Pork" Coffey
tlrlhbled a single to right to
put runners on the corners.
Mike Beams till a grounder
lo short but Gary Derr threw
the rrlay to second Into right
field and Andy Dunn scored
Coffey, who wrnt lo third on
Ihr error, scored when Shef­
field balked.
"Th e um pire said Brian
(Sheffield) had his fool off the
rdge of the rubber." Ferrell
said "Usually they just tell
you to watch It and let It go.
inti the limp called It "
Sheffield, featuring hts danc­
ing knuekleball. came back to

— Mike Ferrell
strike out both Mike Davis and
Dan Beaty to end the Inning
Srm ln o lr responded with
three runs on four tills off
Lusk In Ihr bottom of the first.
Sheffield coaxed a walk lo lead
ofl and l&gt;err billowed wilh a
single |Kist Colley al third.
To n y Cox thrn hit a bullet to
centrr and It sailed over the
head of Beams who was run­
ning In on the play. Sheffield
and Derr scored on the play
but Cox was thrown out trying
to stretch II to a triple.
With two ouls. Larry Th o m ­
as singled lo right center and
the speedy outflrldrr then
stole both second and third
James Hersey beat out an
Infield single lo scorr Thom as
for a 3-2 lead Hersey then
stole serond and third but
Lusk struck out Joey Corsl to
end the Inning
A t w o base e r r o r b y
Franklin, the Tribe's third
baseman, gave Brantley a
threat In the top of the second.
Franklin would come hack to
make some outstanding plays

Basketball
straight year that the team made It to
one of the rcglonals. The school made
It to the Final Four In 1971. but was
disqualified because star forward
Howard Porter was ruled Ineligible for
signing a pro contract with the ABA.
Vlllanova's best-ever finish In NCAA
play was third In the Inaugural
tournament In 1939.
What made Sunday's victory even
sweeter for the Wildcat seniors was
that It was North Carolina which beat
Vlllanova In the 1982 East Regional
finals In their freshman year. The Tar
Heels then went on to win the NCAA
championship.
"This Is probably one of the nicest
things that ever happened to me and
the kids." Vlllanova coach Rollle
Masslmlno said as he chomped on a
huge victory cigar. "1 want to congrat­
ulate m y seniors. The y deserved this."
As for Georgetown. It must once
again defense Chris Mullln. The tlnya.s
have been successful In two of three

that kept Seminole's lead In­
tact.
Bass, who reached on the
rrror, went to third on a
passed hall With Lusk at the
plate, the squeeze was on but
the pitch sailed high The utnp
called a ball on the pitch hut It
sounded like halk so Bass
dkini go back to Ihlrd and
was pleked off S h rlflrld
struck uul the next two hitters
to end the frame
Seminole added its lourth
run In the bottom ol Ih r
second. Franklin reached on u
two-base error to lead of! and
Toni Wilks' followed with u
hunt single Sltefllrld then
skied to right and. w hile Wilks
was doubted oil al first.
Franklin scored lor a 4 2 lead.
Alter Ihr first Inning. Shef­
field shut Brantley oul on two
hlls — one a solid single by
Brad Dunn — and another a
hunt single by Davis
Alter the second Irattte.
Seminole got Just two hits oil
Lusk who struck out (our ami
walked two In going H e dis­
tance. Seminole had just one
runner past first base after the
second Inning.
In the fifth inning. Franklin
made two good stops al third
and threw out the runners to
turn away the Patriots. With a
runner on second and one out

SCOREBOARD
T*»*4h

t¥ Iportt

ia u it ia u

4 Bm IlHl
« 4CAA Tmm
*«*•
L»
•011*4
- I VP**■#»**&gt;(*#•*#*■*
w%

V b # Mm in*

Mr*

F001Ull
i i i * — is** urn u*
M ii*6
4 »

m

- IS** Mw4

C*

l»lMMi»6
IBM - IS**

*CAA D -.w i

•t m i
end Dte«| (Mxir*
«*#fr«MTuMIUMI. 4*
•tfSTlNM
l |* — USA ftmmmm *«* Tm*
- if# I«t*«Mi *NI J***#Y*"M|
IM l* - VU *'•»«»
An
| m$m l/li *»■*»*». v«(»
MwMUtrsonandl*« A*vd h&lt;*t« ****&gt;«« *f

Mri

PREPS
M IU A U
jACtiOffllUl lUFt) - Tnb fmma
'■#®h#» Mn Asms #'•* m t b n # ' '*&gt;
* • • •
OMfAAAA
&gt; Gb n w i T#i
III
1
4** IMM
til
»4|
1 MfM.
4#
4 ilFBM*« ■
01
t ILfs, I f #
If &gt;1
a Lfftt man
#1
7 Lisfinl itmm
04
1 TBZMBf C f ’MM*+
III
1 Lfff
til
4 OlM# Am
Ol
hbwt# m

WimU CirsiV

*■

m c itlltio

••fi
W* 1IV* Maw*U | Q.«* i) I
*«M .av* 1*1 (U. *1 SA*
*MaH 111 #11 Dw« ftaMar' III
«H*i
S'**** Oi *« T'**
iOS •»**. L0*f ia«f. |#*1*
fOi »s*
v b « v w 0«
MH 1# 4m * Cm
ill. 4 # * «
#M*4A# ID 1C Ml '*#» 0»«6| 4 4
M»«a»
-U ttt’
S«Mi «0* II *» Ml 0*«a4 ill. 1114
Mia»w#ry 'rs* it^ 4 »* tl'U .1
0: DM | M •ffvM t|l
IIII • k 'M t 0»*4b I DM

I I k i a # 41 J lt*B Mac**

41 1OtMR &lt;lant*V)
SM*d J«ta* !■J |l 1 0-acM Ca*»ri
l|i 0 1 *4 *
l « i ill. *4. liff
fvrnf' An*. 101. II**- '14'HM #rf&gt;«
■«#* III 1*0

• « ! i«|. t| If.

M• #46 ill I &gt;1 *# r*4»
un *4 BmAMu*P^t (■&gt; Ml » 14
kzM * 4 II). 17# Ml BMA 1*4
111 IMl
■lifi
i nr m »«#*•&lt; va i * * mm
lit till M ■*-**♦, l * * M v t B lip

MU MfBic&lt;M
*tonmBpmi
OMa# *4. Unft*11«*
Al S-' *•* I m m CC *&lt;*M

Or Mi

M

*1 V

Atari# •

im A*| 1*3 * Plu*4 M «## n.
Vr-anaa1*

I0TI

ri4#n *#K*d

BlUaab*|l

M«*V- »| *****
III* fa* IMlII ir*i iOl I &amp;#** 11
Dm #* i0! 6 **A 12

*MM

M

FMpd II
Dm *** *****
iOl A
14 Cm M*H 101 I

Aad#* I I &gt;m b

14
«tU

.Oi d

0**M 41

0**mt iMakvi*

SMfM f.anad 0#«M&gt;V I s Cd*4B &lt;
|*ar«d# I ) Smm m i A W * I )
Mtvmi I Cm m * 14
i
H«r# I I

-.....
r-*•»**, i*

■»»■ ■ ■ — - « w*

im s m ii

SOKC
Al |*BfarfOi**#
MpiiMt'Mg#r&gt;w4l
I4ff(f' LXl ItJ«
iittCNM'
i i ia la
iim im
«a ta
iMVKMa
ta
•a«*a ran*Btti»*ii»B
H i w - u t aa
iim im
ua ta ta
:t«ii!«es
ra ta
iK iifU m t
ta
im iua run&gt;aa n t w a i
DOttuaa
M ir n -m i PH

«na
ta ia &lt;»
OHoifat
ra ta
i 'v «
ta
Ituiaa. iliuaa tiiMiata
• rw-lntt ril
is w w a i
aa ta ta
iw im W
&lt;ata
Mkitan
ta
liiiigt. tiiuua. iinnaa
a w e rx iu
itttaa
ua ra ia
ic m m w
ta &lt;a
lladwt'aa
&gt;a
intiMB. ii*iiaa. tainajM
M in- I S ! tIM
ksm us
«a ta ta
thwrOWi
ra »a
M rU k
ta

OliriC# RlflllDM. TllltUUM
M ' m I I I 4*
IMargaiD^p**
IH «M 1
)S*4*l S*?*
1M
!&gt;o4*iP**v/»
1M

’ -SfcirftM lanMlCOfl

1Owip :lII mi I
(MWM&lt; OsipIMlI t &lt;lm
OmlvmihiI

H A L L W IL L C O A C H 1 MORE
LEX IN G TO N . Ky. (UPI| - Retiring
Kentucky Coach Joe B Hall will be
coachlng one more game.
T h e 56-year-old Hall, who a n ­
nounced his retirement Friday night
after a season-ending loss lo St.
John's, has agreed lo coach the East
team In the Easi-West All-America
game Sunday at Memorial Coliseum
Meanwhile, the coach of Kentucky's
lone recruit for next season. Irving
Thomas of Carol City High, says his
star was surprised at Hall's retirement.
But Ernie Bell said Thomas, a 6-9
fo rw a rd , w o u ld h o n o r the nittlonalletter-of-lntent he signed with
Kentucky In November and attend the
university.
"Irving signed with the University of
Kentucky, not with Joe B, Hall." satd
Bell "Th e tinting was terrible, but he
feels a lot Iwiler about the sltuatulon
now. lie's handling It well."

DeLand Edges Lyman In 8th

Dexter Franklin made sev­
eral spectacular plays al
third base to preserve
Seminole’s victory over
Lake Brantley Monday.
in the sixth. Franklin made a
nice play lo his left, held the
runner, and threw owl Bass for
l he second out.
"Dexter (Fran klin ) made
some really big plays." Ferrell
said. "Dexter worries you
sometimes, hoi he really gels
the job done.
"We came In determined to
win tonight.” added Ferrell.
"Th e kids played hard all the
way through."

DELAND D r L a n d 's
Bulldogs moved Into second
place in the Five Star Confer­
ence with an eight-tuning
11 10 victory over the Lyman
Greyhounds Monday night at
Conrad Park
DeLand. which has won
seven In a row. tied the game
with one rim In the bottom of
the seventh and won It with
another tally lit ihc eighth
against l.vitum reliever Mark
Whittington
"W e just couldn't pm a
ntnp|MT on the mound," said
Lyman coach Bolt McCullough
a b o u t Ills 15-4 a nd H-4
G re v hounds M c C u llo u g h
went through three pitchers

. ..D e lM o n te
Continued from 5A
Martinez walked lo force home
a run Taubensee followed
wilh another single to chase
home two more lor a 6-0
bulge
A lte r Scott " T h u r m a n "
Munson grounded out. Ernest
Martinez scored on u wild
pitch and Terrv Gammons

T u b -M a s t e r

Ml'«d
*ffd C«*M' C**MiLjBtMyiiand*^B
St
****** JfUMM*#A
T«twt«C***d»

TU B E

lot." Webb satd. "1 thought I could
keep him from gelling the ball, but he
did a lot of pushing He uses his body
real good,"

meetings this year In limiting the
potency of the 6-6 All-America.
North Carolina State roach Jim
Valvano got so riesperale trying to slop
Mullln on Sunday in the West Regional
championship that he assigned 5-7
leaper Spud Webb to front Mullln A
quick 5 points later and Valvano
looked elsewhere.
"St John's has ti&gt;o much firepower
to concentrate on Mullln." Valvano
satd following thr 69-60 decision that
eliminated the Wolfpack
While Mullln was getting hts 25
points, forward Waller Berry added 19
and center Bill Wrnnlngton 14, Mullln
w-us voted the regional's most valuable
player. Berry. Webb. North Carolina
State's Lorenzo Charles amt Ken­
tucky's Kenny Walker Joined him on
the regional all-star team
“Slnee the whole nf!ense Is geared
toward running him (Mulltnl oil picks.
It's like trying to guard somebody In a
forest." said North Carolina Stale's
Te rry Gannon, the third of four
Individuals Valvano assigned lo the St
John's senior.
"The refs let him get away with a

IC B A

"We're (list not making the
defensive plays." said Mc­
Cullough. "W e were hurl on
another grounilhall In (he sev­
enth A n d . we made two
hiiseronnlng mistakes that
cost us two runs,"
Derek Llve rn ols led the
Greyhounds with a double ami
three runs butted In (taker
slapped four straight singles
while Paul Alegre and Kyle
Brubaker each had a single
and a double. Mike Henley bail
a pair of base hits and Odom
singled home I wo runs.

singled to right lo plate
Taubensee. Hobby Miller then
stroked a double lo left center
lo score Gammons and Dave
Mat Idle followed with a single
lo rigid Held lo chase home
two more. Canfield singled but
Schnllkcr whiffed lo rinse the
Iraiiie.
DelMonte Insi his nu-htltcr
in Die fourth when Brian
Byers drilled a clean single up
Ilie uilildU

SOth

H o n o r s

Aaahnrury

A c h ie v e m e n t s

The Intrr-Couniy Basketball
Association's Ihlrd season ol
0r**Min I It*hg:&gt;! I
pbiy came to a highly successful
&gt;»• I H « . &gt; (.,&lt; «■ .&gt;i Mil
t|HI t *•!•••.* 1
conclusion this past w c k with a
lU h iw
iH
series of all-star games and
4 Oil it#. A1)4) BI* f (]#|l 171#
ins tf
N Sm 774411)). 1 wmmn I F i gad
trophy presentations. On hand
I M &gt;g n
I'M # Carry *** #4 M
&gt;
a
i*
lo help honor the boys and girls
iJMraca 1/4. C 117*
1I » ol the U HA was Ms. Jane Dane,
17M AM «M «Mim
t
0
*
v
rt
ISM
r
An1
IImif0«|Dm
7# i#
is** n* .t i p .
representative of Tub-Master,
'iHliAratM
rat
&lt;•»*** * lnmp ***p*s It i|
thr local Orlando firm tliut
0(1414#. P(24)l#«4. KI47IBMM
•14*4(4-VI A M4
.Inn,iii (I all the awards (over 250
C
m
ap
ia
,
rt
I
n
i
a
P
wm«« •«
iWaAtltbv*
IH 7M &lt;M 1 I t SI
In nil).
IH 44
C
*
sj«i 1*0 rt S s .• asp*
U m Mh m
IH
In the Settlor division thr
ipsI
m
*
Bgs
4 0414#. *|B|) TIM T IBM) MM
ia. im « i n (*«*** mo (• Easlm o nlr Greyhounds who
4*6 IHAH•&gt;#*
H
ps A' I )I s
A-MM. 4 a # o n )U
s,", rt l*&gt; Os«p 1 (|P*&gt;* Vip | won the playofls. lopped lhe
is
division all stars. 76-67. lamer
tSrtMPMrt MilMpwakMC** *P't
USFL
Wall had a great night scoring
l|*
u*lt|0 STATU fOOTMU LIACUI
OmvM n {*&gt;»«* a **— 2H anil rebounding like crazy
I*A*t*Cwkmtf
lr* * * C »i ip Eddie Norton of the Oviedo Stray
« l f All •f PA
t
Cals led the All-Slurs with 21
1
A 1 • M •M ■m
7 mb *
i*-*»* a I 2 • si «4l 14
Ms YsfI
Wall was minted the game MVP.
#t«rv
1 1 • A# a »n
O bm D * 7
The varsity game had the
1 1 1 •M « 4»
ifcMMMd#
&gt; 1 • 44 TJ7 U
NBA
South Seminole llolrcats, un­
1 1 1 Ml 0 4
defeated league A playoff win­
4A? TOMAi
o
1 I • HI 71 1*4
I f Al
CfMf—«t
ners. heating i h r All-Stars.
•MUM
1 • • &lt;Ml 41 41
76 61. Th e well-divided Cal
■
i
*
*
ei
7#
0MMF4
'M i#
1 11
i Am p
v a at scoring was led by J .J . Miller,
a*m*
1 1 • Ml 41 M
i
P
fc
i
a a ra t
1 f • Ml 111 41
Willy Daunlc and Danny Rubin
■
a
w
n-t
##P-M|4f
Al
I 1 • m 1 •1
Nrw m m
— all wilh 15 ra rh and Delmott
* a at n
tfB a
1 A • m 14 h ;
4b* iw%
!p a ID D «
U a tetfif
1 A • m M !»•
Simpson with 11. Terry Dixon of
(p s * BmpH
Winter Park was Ih r biggest star
II It *M*&gt;
Dm * 4. I# AMbam 1
V D I# 1)
of Ihr stars with 29. Dixon and
fMliV- BlMl !«
U
M
1
7
*1
COMP
(AB Tm IIT )
Rubin were named co-MVP's.
CmitiN
N Al #4 n i
V w I* a*#***»% •B*
M0 1# n &gt;
AO#
Sa*rW| Mart* M
In the J V game, the All-Stars
*****
Mit Ml Mt
,im *m**-mmi
i ■bm
turned the tidr and topped the
#**#*•CfAMflf
**■• ilanff «t Art!#* 4i « •
iMsinl
division champs. Winter Park,
« l Pd 61
•#*M(*p.. 1 l | i
43 33. Donovan Williams led Ihc
4 M tU •Opm#
Dmandf*LfAAM*p*i *p«*
4# m 4
*****
way with 17 and Danny Phillips
O
# Dm * I M B•
4 B UA 1• had 10
0#OB
Ua Mpb
M17 0 4
BASEBALL
MV *A Of
The Jackson Hts. Scorpions
«Bf«f» C+f
M 4 41 4 *
■•rtnlira Irwliii
defeated the all stars In Girls
P*tmbwrnm
la lK U L(*4WI
B 4 70 —
t IA LfffFS
Division play. 18-12. after trail­
4 l
■ V #1 4
at P#(i#4
'wwm
I)
ing 64) early on. Bridget JcnrrOi
4
1
N
mi
B
M
•
a
t*»w»*
1
retlr led the rhamps with 9 and
tipB
B 0 f«7 D
If
c»t*s*
LA C|#t
B 4 M Mi was selected us the ganie MVP.
•
(*-*WM
M
l
B
»
o#4#
tu
rn
a
«i
f
Cm—
4
BSmM
Sportsmanship awards went
•
to couches D o u g Zook of
I
* WPP « * ( ! « •
I
W r s t m n n t r In the S e n io r
U P H tC S V faprtM*1
t
division: Kevin Wcldceker ol
***** IB l* C« n a
I
Ip iilii i Iran
Winter Park In the Varsity; Ken
I
«t
IMTi m IITI
at
•
Mlekrnberg land Mrs. Coach) In
m a m * »B|«
a
I
rt ****** v
J V ’s. from Tuskawilla, and Jim
U t«U U IlM I
Or** t*a
w
Norton of the Scorpions In the
sr* ****Cn*sr &gt;Ip s
mi
•t
W M lC S p ll)*
Girls.
tv
a
(M llw rO M l Ip tv
a
T h e fiv e -m e m b e r all-star
******t*i aNam t *»•
m
■
teams for each division, us voted
isaaOM* t ■*«
t
u
0*s*.*&gt;rspv&gt;* •
on by the coaches, season-long,
l
Is t(m u
LA Lam a N*»mt 4 Mt «
I
were: Seniors — Eddie Norton
t
and Doug Ackerman of the Stray
•
NHL
« t a*
a Lap*
C a t s . E y a n W a lh o u s e of
i « ■
W&gt; Omp
Westmontc: Lance Wall and
t MMP I
*•
i i Ml
LaVrrchle Nelson of Eastmonte.
UWTimm tITI
Second learn — Kelly Klukls and
&gt;*«*s* t
C«s*1&gt; LMI
laiUMWOrt*. &gt;1 1 *
■L Lr* ****** 1
Pop Bowers of Stray Cats: Kevin
r*ara**i t v m ’ aia
iMpstmUkil
Brown and Willie Meadows of
UMPprbnnip*
W e stm o n tc: Steve Falk of

(Whittington. Clint Baker and
Craig Meyer) once and starter
Byron Overstreet twice.

0114)27# *(||)I4M. T H ill 144
11# rac»— l/H. 0 II H
lM#4l^taAa#»f
1# I# IN
«M IB

l

Basketball
East monte and Tony Km.imicl of
Winter Park
Varsity: Willy Dannie. .1 J
Miller and Danny Rubin —
Bobcats; Terry Dixon anti Erin
McGuire — Winter Park. Serond
team ('tills Krwley and Charles
Warner — Lions: Jim m ie Smith
— Winter Pnrk: Larry Watkins
and Delmott Simpson — Hob
r a t s : S t r v r .J o h n s o n —
Tuskawilla.
J V Boys Robbie Crager —
Tom nds Donovan Williams and
Danny Phillips — Lions; Clay
llu lr — W inter Park. Jason
Gilman — Tuskawilla Second
team Jim Mortis and Chris
Weal berry — JH Wildcats. Clint
Johnson — Westmontc: Tyronnc
G a in in o n s — T u s k a w i l l a
Chuckle Atkins — Tom cats
Bryan James — Winter Park
Girls Wendy Powell — Winter
Park; Erika Cain — Kdlrits;
Bridget Dey — Tu s k a w illa ;
Michelle Wynn and Suzanne
Hughes — JH Scorpions. Second
team — llrlgette Szobar — Klllt'lls; Pam Starks anil Jackie
Goodman — Wlntrr Park: Tla
Watson — Tuskawilla; Corrte
Lawson — Scorpions,

TH E ADVANTAGE TM
RAISE YOUR STANDARDS Of RIDE
AND RERfORHANCE.

DOQ^

RACING
NIGHTLY 7:30 P.M.
(■■capl Bun.)

M U U O N MD.SAT 1PII.

PLAY THE EXCITING A HIGH
PAYING "PICK A" &amp; "BIG 0"
TH U M B . FAC I
O fU N O B TA M D ADM .
FO R L A D IIB

Visit out two climsts
controttsd ctubhousss lor
tout tins dining and
#n|#najnm#nt pisaaurs.
ClubUouss tsssrvstiona

031-1600

Sanford-O rlando
Kennel Club
North ot Ortando.

Ju s t oMMwy 17-82
M l Bt| Trsrt M t ( U s fM M

Sorry No Minors

R A D IA L M U L E T E R R A IN m
GIVE YOUR TRUCK RACE PROVEN
PERFORMANCE

Goodrich

Goodrich
tHTQOCW JCJtt

\ 0 k T llt l- &gt; 1 /U 1T
wii
flKSSB
ii m
“m ar
M O N f M1 a 5 :1 0 S A T
_____________
»
.

U i 00

u m m r u N iT Y

r

--------1

2 4

1 3

S .

K r c n ,c ) i

A v e .

C A L L IN G *

S A N F O R D

# *♦ * *

* •

�I * — E v n ln q Herald, San lord, ft.

T u t *d«y, March I t , 1»»5

But It's Not Exactly What He Asked For

L o n g w o o d M a k e s P o w e rs A n O ffe r

W ORLD

B y Jane Caeeelberry
Herald Staff W rite r
As expected, the Longwood
City Commission has voted to
offer William T . Powers, assis­
tant city manager and finance
director for the city of Perry, the
Job of city administrator effective
May I with a starting annual
salary of 935.000. $5,000 less
than he had asked for.
Powers would not say today
whether he would lake Ihr Job,
but Instruct will make a counter
offer. He said the matter Is In
negotiation, pointing out that
ihe cost of living Is considerably
higher In Seminole County than
In Taylor County where he nowworks.
Monday night's vole was 4-1
w it h C o m m is s io n e r P e rry
Faulkner dlsscnllng. but not
because he was against hiring
th e 4 2 - y r a r - n l d P o w e r s .

IN BRIEF
Arms Negotiators Get Down
To Specifics; ‘Star Wars' Up First
G E N E V A . Switzerland (U l'll — U S .-Soviet arm* talks
moved Into the detailed negotiating stage today, unaffected
by the killing of an American Army officer by a Soviet
soldier In East Germany.
A U.S arms delegation spokesman said the Geneva talks,
now In their third week, were continuing with the first
detailed discussion of possible luturc defensive anti-missile
systrms In space.
Max M Kampelman. overall leader of the U S . delegation,
returned to Geneva from Washington today In time for the
first m e e t log of the respective sub-groups on space arms
The meeting was held at the Soviet mission lo the United
Nations,
The arms talks began March 12. with the first two weeks
mainly devoted Inorganizing the complex negotiations.
The Soviet Union Is determined to torpedo Reagan's
Strategic Defense Initiative — known popularly as "Star
Wars "
Moscow says there must be an end to research Into
unll-misslle systems If the superpowers are to progress
inward reducing Intercontinental and medium-range
nucleur weapon*.

A Sanford man ha** pleaded no contest to
the DUI manslaughter death of a pedestrian
who was killed as he walked along Celery
Avenue, east of Sanford.
Ernest Tom Pitts. 47. of 1752 Midway
Avc.. entered the plea Monday before
Seminole Circuit Judge Robert II McGregor
who could scnlcncc Pitts to up to 15 years
on April 30 lor the death of Tom m y Stills.
19. of Academy Avenue. I'tits was arrested
within minutes after his car ran down Mills
on Nov. 4.
According lo u Florida Highway Patrol
report. Mills was caslbound on ihr south
side of Celery Avenue at 11:32 a m when he
was struck from behind by u 1972 Ford,
which was also eastlxiund. Witnesses said
the car wus weaving from lane lo lane and
struck Mills, throwing him Into a damp,
wrcd-lllled dllch on the south side of the
road. Mills was dead at Ihr scene,
In other court action:
— W rslry James llolallng J r.. 20. of 4859
Ptibllx Lane, pleaded guilty Monday lo
carrying a concealed weapon. He could
receive up to a year when sentenced May 10
hy Clrcull Judge C. Vernon Mize Jr,
llolallng was arrested Scpi 25 after he
fought with an Orlando man and kicked In
som e d ry wall at a b u ild in g site In
Casselberry, An investigation Inlo llte dis­
pute by an officer revclaed a loaded pistol
under a shirt on the Irmii seat of his vehicle

T O K Y O (U l’l) — Prime Minister Yasuhlro Nakasone.
eager lo ease friction with the United Stales and Asian
trade pari tiers, ordered new concessions lo open Japan's
markets to foreign im|iortx, government sources said
today.
The Nakasone governmenl said It would Implement
another round of marke|-o|&gt;enlng measures In April A
series of similar steps carried out In the past have failed lo
satisfy the United Stales and other trading partners.
The prime minister Instructed Ihe officials lo study ways
lo gradually lower tariffs on Imported forestry products
over a few years, work out a medium-term program lo
Increase official development uld and come up with
concessions lo expand Imports from Aslan countries, they
said
The forestry Industry Is one of four major areas of
Interest for the United Stairs In trying to get Japan to open
Its markets to foreign Import•• The other areas are
telecommunications, pharmaceutical and medical equip­
ment and electronics Industries.

Abductions Scare Off Westerners

I

B E IR U T. Lebanon (U l’ll — Large numbers of Westerners
were rrporlrd lo he moving out of Moslem areas today
while authorities searched for a IJ.N official and a French
bureaucrat — the laiest victims In a wave of recent
kidnappings.
A IJ.N. Relief and Work Organizations official. Alec
Collett, 63. was abducted Monday In Beirut, Just hours
after police reported the kidnapping ol Ullles I'ey miles, the
32-year-old director of the French cultural Insiitulc In the
northern city of Trl|toll.
Th e tndcpencirnl Frenrh-langtiuge dully L'Orient-be Jour
said the abortions had triggered an "exodus" of foreign
nullonals from mostly Moslem west Beirut. *espec ially
those working for International organizations."
No group claimed to be holding Collett, hut I he shadowy
Lebanese Armed Revolutionary Factions said II took
IVyrolles. It threatened to kill him unless France released
one of Us members within 4H hours.
The llltlc-knowri group Is believed responsible for killing
four U.S. and Israeli ofllrlaln in France since IBM I

...Rally
Continued from page 1A

WEATHER
N A T IO N A L REPORT! Wintry
breezy. A lltlle warmer with high
weather assaulted the Wesl to­ In Ihr low 80s, Gusty soulhcasl
day with snow and Icy winds wind 15 lo 20 mph
lliut knocked nut power, en­
B O A T IN G F O R E C A S T ! St
dangered young livestock and
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
threatened to end u Plains
miles — Sm all cratl should
h e a tw a v e H in t hud m a d e
exercise caution Northeast wind
Nebraska warmer than Florida
15 to occasionally 20 knots
Gale w arn in gs covered the
today. Wind becoming sonlheasl
n orthern Pacific Coast and
10 knots tonight und 10 to 15
winter storm watches for wind­ knots Wednesday, Sea 4 to 0 feet
blown anow were Issued for decreasing to 2 to 3 fret tonight
northern California and western
Partly cloudy.
Nevada. Idaho und (he moun­
EXTEN DED FO R ECAST:
tains of Orrgcm wrre covered by G e n e r a lly f a ir T h u r s d a y
travelers advisories Three In­ becoming partly cloudy Friday
ches of snow dusted Ely. Nev.. thru cloudy with u chance of
today, and an Inch was re|Kirted sbowrrs or thunderstorms north
at Billings. Muni A mixture of part Saturday. Lows uvrraglng
raid ruin und snow threatened upper SOs north and 60s south
the health of newtxrrn livestock except near 70 southeast roust
In Utah and Montana, prompting a nd low 70s keys H ig h s
stockmens advisories Frost und averaging near HO north and low
freeze warnings were |&gt;osled In to mid HOs south
the Carolina-* Utah Power A
A R E A R E A D IN Q S (9 B.m.|t
Light crrws worked today lo temperature: 67; overnight low
rc|uBr a |&gt;ower line lliut was 5 3 ; M o n d a y 's h i g h ; 7 9 .
d n m u g rd Sunday night hy barometric pressure 30,38: rela
s tro n g w in d s that p ush ed tlve h u m id ity : 49 percent:
10 Inch-thick blea ks of Ice out of winds: east-northeast at H mph.
(he Great Salt Luke, knocking sunrise: 6.23 a m ., sunset 6:40
uver 14 support towers
p m.
W ED NESD A Y TIDES:
A R E A F O R E C A S T ! Today Daytona Beach: highs, 1135
aunny and mild High In the u m , — ; lows. 5:22 a.in.. 3:17
upper 70s. W ind northeast (in i.: Port Canaveral: highs.
uruund 15 mph. Tonight fair. 1127 a m .. — ; lows. 513 ant..
Low In the mid to upper 50n. 3 OH p nt.; Bayporti highs. 4:38
Wind southeast 5 to 10 mph. a til.. 3 21 p.m.s lows. 9 54 a m .
Wednesday mostly sunny and l l : l l p in.

STOCKS
TS m * «ustaOan« pro.uptf tr n s n t w i o»
M* Hottonol X m w ittvn ot 1oturttio* Dn S - i
«
M p re W fiW O l tntor J h I*&lt; prKoi 01 ot
mm motnlnf toOor Intor dM i# i m i n i n
&lt;A*V* IA . m v ' W W* M i
0o not

H» Pcogrtu
Pf**dom S*,lngi
MCA
Hue***Ms&gt;'»

tndu*o rotolt mort&lt;+
Atlantic Bank
larnatt f r~ H »»l PMilih, U 1
PtatWaFaw**

!•'*

IM AtA
un&lt;rv*ny*&lt;j
*•** «*
IU
IL

to *

1IW

M o o iton i

l| «

)* '«

NCH Cvp
Hstm
Scotty’*

ft** ftS
|t'i IIM
It** wncStns*a

SoutSMIl ■•«*

Sun Sint*

Flower* For All Occtuion*

d u llin g
mms m
mfXSZn

t O flU

323-120*

1C* US
»'« t'i
i) US
it n ’t

IM t

SS

necessary?" He pointed out that
Powers Is only making a base
salary of 924.800 plus benefits
at hts present Job.
"Le t’s start him at a realistic
figure.” Commissioner Larr&gt;
Goldberg said. "Otherwise If we
start him too high we could not
afford to move him up the ladder
and he would tie dissatisfied In
the future."
&gt;
The commissioners came to a
consensus favoring Powers over
the other finalist. Wallace A
Payne, 48. city manager of
Crystal River, at a work session
Friday afternoon The iwo men
came lo Longwood Thursday
and met with department heads
and loured the rlty before being
Interviewed by commissioners
Individually and as a group on
Friday,
Powers has a master's degree
In public administration and has

been with Perry, a city of 9.000.
for four years. Longwood has a
population of 12.000.
In other business Monday, a
request by developer Robert C.
Dietz to rrzone a parcel south of
Overstreet Avenue from R-1A to
R-2 residential was denied after
several nearby property owners
protested, R -IA zoning Is for
single-family homes of at least
1.800 square feet while R-2
would allowed Dietz lo construct
duplexes.
Dietz said he thought duplexes
would make an Ideal buffer
between the commercial zoning
along county Road 427 and the
single-family residential area H r
said a privacy fence would tic
put up
Residents, however, c o m ­
plained lhat duplexes would
lower (heir property values and
Increase traffic In the area

Sa n fo rd M a n Face s 15 Years In D U I Death

. Nakasone Orders Concessions
i

Faulkner said his objection was
lo the city not offering Powers
the 940.000 Powers said he
would have to have to go to work
for Longwood. Powers had also
said he would expecl a 95.000
pay increase wlihtn nine months
and two weeks vacation the first
year and three weeks the next.
T h e p re s e n t s a la ry fo r
Longwood city administrator Is
934.290. In addition to the
salary. Powers will have his
moving expenses paid, will have
ihr use of a city car for official
business and to drive to and
Irom work If he lives In the city.
The city will send Powers the
offer asking him to sign It If he Is
agreeable. No deadline* was given
for a reply.
"We like the man. he's well
q u a lif ie d .'' M a yo r H a rv e y
Smerllson said, "bill why bring
him In at a higher salary than

MS

»* »

consider Irgallty ol Ihr action
taken by thr superintendent ami
the school board."
Crossley urged the crowd to
pul pressure on Hughes to tuert
with members of the clergy. "If
they fight this suit, they’re
spending your tax money," lie
said.
M rs. Colem an said e a rly
Tuesday calls were licglnnlng to
trickle Into the school Imard
Irom persons who attended thr
rally.
Crossley warned that II thr
school hoard would not open
discussions with him ami others,
his group w ould light th r
board's "unconstitutional, Im­
moral. Indecent discriminatory

policy."
lie said that the school tiourd

— Stacie Leake Joiner. 21. of 108 Delores
Drive, Altamonte Springs, arrested Oct. 30
and charged with possession o( cocaine,
marijuana and drug paraphernalia was
sentenced to 3 years (initiation. She was
charged after a sheriffs deputy s(ioticd her
using marijuana In a car which was also
occupied by three boys. Circuit Judge
Dominick j . Sallf also ordered her to
complete 300 hours of community service.
She could have received a year In the
county Jail
— Lee Andrew Nelson. 19. of 502 Peachtree
Lane, Altamonte Springs, was sentenced by
Salli lo 3 years probation (or resisting arrest
without violence He could have received a
year In the county Jail. Nelson wus arrested
Oci. 18 after be ran Irom a hearing nxim In
the courthouse and had to he chased down
hy deputies. Nelson boiled aftrr a Judge
ordered him lo be taken Inlo custody for not
gelling an attorney to represent him In a
l hell ease lie was also sentenced lo 3 years
probation In the theft case.
— Eddie Lee Gray. 30. of 2019 McCarty Avc..
Sanford, w’as sentenced by McGregor to one
year probation and a $5(X) tine for restating
arrest. Gray was arrested following a scuffle
Aug 14 at the Seminole County Courthouse
after hr refused in leave ihr building to
begin serving 15 days for non-child support
Gray could have received up lo a year In the
coubly Jail

declined in comment. "I came
here to see what everybody bad
losay." h r said.
After the rally. Crosslry said
be saw Julian. "I wish I'd seen
the srhonl hoard," he added. He
said he thinks Julian should
resign.
"Everything he's clone has led
to confrontation " Crossley said,
"lie's brought us to conflicts and
he’s not doing the Job he should
I k - as school iKiard attorney.**
Another attorney, John Jones,
was one of the llrst to speak at
the rally, He said Christians will
not Ik- kicked around by Ihe
s c IickiI board.
"It's high time Godfearing
Bible believing Christians were
not treated ns second-class citi­
zens," Jones said. Applause

...Wreck

members should Ik- voted out of
Continued from page 1A
office if they don't correct the
discrimination against Chris­
O n th e s c e n e w e re 10
tiana.
Seminole County firefighters
"Christians are not going to Iklike second-class citi­
zens." he said. "You've goi as
much rights as everybody else
amt it's time we started using
them."
School Board attorney Ned
Julian Jr. was ut the rally but
tre a te d

...Officer
Continued from psgc 1A
caught photographing a Soviet
military Installation and was
killed trying lo escape.
"W c have lodged a protest and
expressed rrgrrt over the death
ol the American military of­
ficer,” Knlagln lold United Press
International. "Despite the pre­
sence of clearly visible warning
signs in Russian amt German,
(the Americans) rttlrrrd the ter­
ritory of a restricted military
Installation. One of thr U.S.
officers wearing a camouflage
suit and carrying a photo cam­
era penetrated directly Into the
territory of this installation
where be photographed Ihr
combat equipment which was
there
"Caught red-handed by u So­
v ie t s e n try g u a r d in g the

with three vehicles nod at least
three Seminole sherlffis depu­
ties.
F ir e f ig h t e r s had to use
extrication tools to cut the
bodies out of the vehicle. Florida
Highway Patrol troopers are In
rhargrol Ihr Investigation.

equipment, he did not comply
will: his ordrrs. anti aftrr a
warning shot, while attempting
lo escape, he wus killed "
U S officials denied Nicholson
und his partner were spying
Burt lold a news conference that
Nicholson's mission when he
was shot was “ lo monitor Soviet
ucilvltlea They are unarmed hut
they carry cameras because one
of their Jobs Is lo monitor Soviet
military activities."
Burt said Nicholson was ac­
com panied b y , Sgt. Jessie
Schutz. also fired on but nut
Injured.
B u rl said Nicholson and
Schulz were In a marked m ili­
tary vehicle wearing army field
camouflage uniforms when they
were shot at without warning
He said they were "near, but not
cm or in. u permanently re­
stricted urea."
Burt said Nicholson bud left

— Roger Hornsby Steward. 24. of Wmdsong
Apartments. 919 Haltard Si.. Aliumontr
Springs, was placed on one year prntiulion
but was to remain In custody until an
opening In an alcohol treatment center
became available. Steward was arrested
after he kicked an officer who stopped him
lor DUI Sept. 27, McGregor also susended
Steward's driver's license for five years,
ordrred him lo s(irnd 10 days In the
Seminole County Jail, and puv a 9504) fine
— Jonathan Wayne McFarland. 20. ol 133 N
High St., l-akc Mary, arrested Dec 3 on a
charge of car theft. He was sentenced by
McGregor to 3 years in prison lo be followed
by 2 years of community control, a form of
Ill-house arrrsl
— Robert Steven May. 34, of 1013 Moree
Loop, was sentcced to 3 years probation by
McGregor for Juggling bank accounts. Ac­
cording lo court records. May deposited
checks in u new account at Liberty National
Bank which were drawn on a closed account
at Atlantic Bank Hr was arrested Nov. 6
and could huve received up lo a year in the
county Jail.
— Janice Matnor. 20. ol 34 William ( ’lark
Couri. wus sentenred by Ctn oil Judge S
Josprh Davis J r to 3 years probation for
attempted burglary. She was arrested on the
charge Dec. 20 following an attempted
break-in at a Sanford grocery store
— Deane Jo rd a n

” 1 think we're going t o s e e the
Supreme Court establish silent
prayer as a First Ammendcment
constitutional right bv the- end of
the year," Jones said.
Brian Pappus, candidate lorj
the- state commissioner of educa­
tion, Invited by Crossley to
speak al the rally, said he wants
to Ik- the commissioner of educa­
tion so be call help (ml an end to
Ihe secular-humanistic approach
to trachlng that Is In schools
today. He said Ihe (caching ol
"scif-grallficatlon" In the schools
would stop II he Is elected.

Rev. George Croasley
greeted Ids comment that he
Iwlleves school prayer will re­
turn to public schools this year.

Crossley said the stale needs a
new education commissioner
since "In public schools today
you can heat more alxmi Karl
Mnrx than JrsusC'hrtsI

The Bronco, resglstered In such accident's do cause people
Brevard, appeared to be carrying lo think about the Inspection
surveying equipment, boards system.
and stakes. Stonier Stagg and
Thr. accident brings to six Bir
Associates Is an engineering,
nu 111 Ik-r ol people killed In traffic
planning and archltrctuul firm.
accidents In Seminole County
Ai least two law enforcement
Bits year
personnel working the uecldrnt
complained thal If the vehicle
An 82-year-old woman who
Inspection system was still In­ was Involved in un auto aceldent
tact. the tractor-trailer rig would Monday died today In Oviedo,
not have had a bad tire lo blow­ Details of that accident were nol
out.
available because the troopers
Gary Kaiser, director of public who worked the ureldrnl were at
safety for Seminole County, said i he scene ol today's fatalltv.

the vehicle when u Soviet soldier
emerged from a wooded ureu
and started shooting The first
shot was directed ut Schutz. who
w a s s t ill In th e v e h ic le .
Nicholson was hit by one of
about Btree shots fired. Burt
said.
Burl quoted Nfcholson as

...Local

Continued from page 1A

the Sanford business be- pre­
ferred
B ut C o m m ls s lu n e r Jo h n
Merrer said out-of-town busi­
nesses would soon tell the city to
"stick It In your ear" whenever It
requests bids on a project He
said word would get out that
Sanford businesses get preferred
treatment und bidding would he

saying. "Jess. I am shot." Burt
said a Soviet soldier laler arrived
with u flrst-ald kit, but the
Soviets made "no ellorl” to help
Nicholson Hurt said later the
Incident “ shows a disturbing
tendency or pattern by the
Soviet Union lo shoot first and
ask questions later "

less competitive and Ihe city
would lose money.
Jack Horner, president of the
Greater Sanford Chamber ol
Com m erce, said Monday he
agreed wifti Farr He said a city
has to shop (or the best deals but
when Ihe difference In bids is
small the Santord business
should gel the coni ra d ,
"For a few bucks I'd rather see
the local guy get It."
Farr and Horner did not quan‘llfy a "s m a ll" or "n a rro w "
difference.

AREA DEATHS
C A T H A R IN E M. W E1Q LEY
M rs . C a th a rin e M argaret
Weiglcy, 76. of 231 Fern Drive.
Casselberry, died Sunday at
F lo rld u H o s p ita l-A lta m o n te
Springs. Bom April 3. 1908 In
Robesonla. Pa., she moved to
Casselberry from Reading. I’u. In
1960 She wus a retired secre­
tary and a mem ber ol the

Altamonte Community Chapel.
She was ulso a member of the
Florida Audubon Society.
S u r v i v o r s I n c lu d e h e r
husband. Ira J .: a son. Ira F.,
Reading; three grandchildren:
one great-grandchild
H a ld w ln -F a trrh lld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs, is In

charge of arrangements.
the Ocoee Lions Chib.
H A R O L D R . P EC K
Survivors Include his wife.
Harold R. Peck. 63. of 2671
Azalea Drive. Forest City, died V irg in ia ; daughter. Yvonne
Monday al Florida Hospital- Altman. Dunnrllon; sister, Mrs.
Orlando. Born June 12. 1031 In Delorts Johnston. Green Hay.
Conneaut. Ohio, he moved to Wise.: two grandchildren.
G a rd e n Chapel Hom e for
Forest City from there In 1955.
H r was a retired electrician and Funerals. Orlando. Is In charge
a Methodist. He was a member of of arrangements.

�PEOPLE
Church Presented Flag
During DAR Meeting

Lewis,
Agee
Vows
Sp o ke n
Wllda Helen Lewis of San­
ford. and William Michael
A g rr of laikr Mary. were
married
Feb 9. ai 11.00
u m.. In the laikrvlew Baptist
Church. I-ike Mary. The Hev.
Jackie Nix performed the
traditional ceremohy.
The bride- I* the daughter
of Mr. and, Mrs. Robert M.
Lewis. Houston. Texas. The
bridegroom Is the son ol Mrs.
Patsy Agee. Tallahassee, and
J . Wendell Agee. l-akc Mary.
Given In marriage by her
lather, the bride chose for her
vows a formal lace over
bridal talfeiu gown lashloned
along the Southern Helle sil­
houette Tiers of hire ruffles,
accented with while satin
nldion. formed the tiouffant
skirt that cascaded Into a
sweeping eha|&gt;el train. Her
headpiece was a lace-covered
picture hat holding her c I I m i w
length veil ol Imported Il­
lusion She carried a liou&lt;|urt
of white and retl roses In­
te rs p e rs e d w ith b a b y 's
breath.
Sandy Lewis attended her
sister as maid of honor. She
Wore a red tafleta gown with
a elenh waist and lull skirt
accented with a neck ruflle
She wore lace gloves and her
headdress was a comb ar­
ranged with .1 spray ol flow-

One of the highlights of the March turning of
Sallle Harrison Chaptrr National Society Daugh
ter* of the American Revolution was the
presentation of an historic flag to the Lake Mary
Presbyterian Church.
The Daughters met In the fellowship hall of the
churrh and Mrs. R E True took this occasion to
present the Rev. A.F. Stevens the American flag
which had licrn used at Ihe funeral of Robert E
True during World War II and presented to Mrs
True alter the rites. The Trues, pioneers In l-ik r
Mary, have strong ties to the church and
community. R.E.'s father having been Involved in
the construction ol Ihe Lake Mary Churrh.
After the business meeting presided over by the
Regent. Mrs E. Paul Kelly. Mrs Clark Davis
described the schools sup|M&gt;rtrd wholly or lit part

College Student Never
Learned To Ride A Bike
M ri. William Michael Agee
ers. She carried a nosegay of
pink and red carnations.
Clnda While and Margaret
llohhy. sisters ol the bride,
were the bridesmaids. Their
gowns, flowers and head­
pieces were Identical to the
honor attendant's.
Ll. Jim Agee seved Ills
brother as la-st man Ushers
were Richard Lemons, cousin
of the bridegroom, and Hlch­
ard White, brother-in-law ol
the bride.
Hulh White, nlrcr ol the

bride, was Mower girl, and
Robert White, nephew ol the
hrtde. was the ring bearer.
Following a 'reception at
Lake Mary City II.ill. Ihe
newlyweds departed on a
honeymoon trip
The y are m aking I heir
home In Lake Mary The
bride is a student at the
University ol Crntral Florida.
Orlando, and Ihe bridegroom
Is a project engineer for
Wenco Development t'orp .
San lord

TONIGHT S TV
qtatkly change *n*r h* become*
th# Quarry ol a It to rJ daacPy (#«*•
mtavaa (S)
0
O MOONUOMTINQ Uaddm
and Datnd kaca doam a raat-aaa
mucdacac a tm packcipakng ai a
toredacmyal ary kaln lrX&gt; comaac
aiP*l**0*PtNO*NT NCWS

TUESDAY,
EVfNiNQ
600

O 'lH D O JiO N c w a
u (i s i j c f f e m o n s

■)

(101 MACNCIl / KHSE*

CD in w n c o s M b a c k , k o t t i s

S

(0W O niD ATW AM

630
O 4 n s c s rw s
J O C M NCWS
7 a A »c NCWS CJ
i f r iM iA u c t
CD It) OOOO TIMES

11:00

700
O 4 S A lt Of th e CENTUSY
(Si O PM MAOAAMC fecauto
U o m m v i t*# p i i t N n o* C u m .
dag* &gt;W
( 7 i O JEOBASOY

0 ® ( | ) O 0 O new s
11 (M l BENNY HILL
ffi (101 DAVf ALLEN AT LAAQC
(D |l| MONT OALLf NT
0 0

PONT Jack— aaga.tr aaarfa a mac
'taga pcopoaM aSan Bead return*
(com a kip but IS# roung man re
itacwrg tacond INougMi
(D ( m» N A Tu w op t h m o s
CD (*l ON* OAT AT A TSIE

0 TAXI
Q ABC NEWS MOMTVJNC
(M l IANTONO AND BON
in TWXJOMT ZONE

j)

705
12 U T T U NOUS* ON THC PRAl

m

7:30
0 D CNTINTAMMCNT t o m o m t
teethed NotwriConcad
(5 o WHEEL OF FOSTUNE
0
O
1 100 000 NAMt THAT

tun*

I t (M l MNSON
( S i t ) ALL M TH i PAMXT
800
O H ) A-TEAM S A H am ** and
coftorta rtantaia an auto laciory
■Cart tn#y teeU an aaaaoma mad m daupnad la capita a pang ol
ruiMaaa auto pacta e«#v#« i S k j
(1) O M O W Anna Xacanma
(Pcaemeel Jetqueane Bmeel CSoalopn#c Sa#.a M ia«a torn cantur,
(Vcaaia a #oman daAaa aatw caev
i a paaacona"a» a#s a daaXmg mMacy olBcac
AdapMd Sam l*o Tolaioy a KOI#

&amp;

O t h r e e » a c s o w o jet*
aaaat a percnotog- 1 I imp aman
isa comanca mis V«k| become* a
pcoMam (R|g

i

t (M| DALLAS
) ( 101 NOVA An acpaocauon ol ma

myetanoua (ac iscda Tr—ngca an
acaa off Via coaat ol rionda amaca
mouaanda at W p t pMnaa an*
paopca saaa daappaarad 1*1 g
O i n M O W Rogue Mata |1(T||
Salat O Tools Joan Stanckng a

11:30
T O M H T Moil Jonrmy Car.

12:00
O

TALL OUT Com and Huai*
mar* man a am* dMtcMty
M capture a bod pauper afto
1 become th# ttar cd a *om*&gt; a
*r Mating leant (A)

go (J The bajnt
4J (M l P-TNOOP
a ) in KOJAK

12:05
12 M O W larceny Inc (1»4J)
(d e a d 0 Robeteon. Jan* Wynton
12:30
f l ( ( ) LATE MOHT WITH DAVHO
I f TTEB0AAN
1 ! (M il LOVE LUCY

1.00

0 O

M O W CompuMion |1 M*)
Orion WaSa* Dean Slociaa*
11 (M IlE A V t (TIO B E A V E N

(D in the avenue ns
1:10

0 O COL UMBO Coaumoo a a
pacta a plant coaactor ikay MNandl
01 mwdarmg Sn nopnoa lo g «n accaaa lo a kual Said (N|

It (M l BCTV

1:30

200
J I (M ) BUANNE
205
B M O W Teal To Flgnt 1 19*T)
Csadl»*rat1 UartynOaym
2:30
L O C M NCWB MQHTWATCM
1
(MIOUNBOPOM
ft!
2:50
0 O M O W TSo Vagm Ouaan
1 iM ti Bon* Dana McSard Todd
3:30
I t (M| FAANLT AFFAJN

MMJI
to - A

4.0 0
11 (M l PATTY 0 U M

B tnatoml
8:30
WHO* TUP BOM’ Angara
■a M w a anan ana taaSi aa mat
Mona ■ dakng a fowig tddaga
man (Nig

0 O

#00
• 0 n m o a Cody N O and Ooi
go imdacLoaac ai is# Army Is aaacat
a (adarat niaakgakan at Visa toemat VMnam rommandat ado a
auapactad ol *ug amuggang
0 0 MACQMUOIIl t LOUO A
cowl oedae pcondaa «ioa heap Ip
Maacaaa an* Jacwcy aa may icy lo
capo was a iaaaci.ee man ado a
sacaaamgNaM -ada g
ItM Q U M C V
0 1» WORLD AT WAN

tooo
0 0 M M M T O N STECLI Lav­
ra a plan* lar a romanaa caraaon
acts Steal* an Via Franca Wwara

525

0 O HOUTWOOO ANO THE
STANS(TU*. THU)

0 (101WONOERWORKS (FN|

5:30

6 (C I 1 COLNTTNT (TU* FBI)
12 -»m m y s w a o o a n t
600
O [It NBC N*WB AT SUFTNlM
) 0 m on funo ( tn c t c h
7 10 ETEWTTNtSS OATBNCAX

1V(Ml OOOO0AT1

S

(D (TO) DONNE WARWICK IN
CONCERT (TUE)
(D 110) IN THE SWINQ (WE Dl
0 (1 0 ) NOVA (THU)

NfWS
in AM BJUCKEN

(DiaiM ANN II
1205
12 p e n n y m a b o n
1230
O (41 MARCH f o r TOMORROW
(J O YOUNO ANO THE RESTLESS
(7 O t O W l O
fl (M l BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

630
O ® NfWS
(I) O C M
NCWS

1:00

EAAIT MONNWaa

(7 O ABC NTWS THM MONMNO

0 I OATS OF OUN LIVES
J ( J a l l M l CHILDREN
11 (M )O C K V A N DYKE
0 (1 0 1 M O W IMON. TU*. THU)

(D 1101 CONGRESS WE THE PfONlf (WEDI

?«! (M IPO PEYI
12 funtbpe
6:45

® O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
ffllW IAM WEATHER

(C |101 FLONIOA HOME DROWN
(TNI)
CD IS) MOVIE
105
12 M O W

7:00
00TO O A Y

It nei too a o tr eon com

12 M O W

CONTMCNT N

10:30
I t (M l BOB NeWHAAT

6 35
O gom es m *

8 05
Th# Sa.aga

in AFRICA

10:05
12 M O W snort n**i To DayagM (HT?| Jama* Broun. Don
Mitch** A kcnal group at paopt*
pa kappad m a tubaray adac an
aartsquaaa deanery* Now Tor* Cay

605

B BfVtSLY MUMUU

bv the National Sorlciv Daughters of the
American Revolution These arr the sc IkniIs lor
American Indians. Barone College in Oklahoma
and St Mary's In South Dakota, as well as
Hillside School In Massachusetts. Hindman Set­
tlement School In Kentucky. Crossnorc School lu
North Carolina. Berry College In Georgia.
Tomassee In South Carolina and Kate Duncan
Smith School In Alulwima. These schools are
evidence that NSDAK teel that Its soundest and
most enduring Investment Is In the education of
children.
Mrs. Zoo Stanley and Mrs. Mills Boyd reported
on the State Convention which they attended
recently lu Jacksonville.
Refreshments with a St. Patrick's Day theme
were served to the inemtiersaud guests

4.-06

4:3 0
o M O W -n a t r 11*; IIIWW.
ard Crasna. Anga Ocamaon
I t (M l DOM t OAT

0

4:35
Q WONLO AT LAA08

(T O C M MONNINO NEWS
0 O OOOO MONFawad AMERICA
I (M )FU N TS TO N tS

ID i ioi fahm

oat

7:1 5
(S OO) A M WCATHEA
7:30
1 t (M l TOM ANO JENNY
( «0I SESAM* STNECT g
(I) BTBBCCTON (JA M E T

8

7:35
B I 0NEAM OP Jf JENNIE
600
lit (M l WOODY WOOOPECp IN
( t 1*1TAT A I BENT
8 05
11 BEWITCHED

S

835
1 2 1LOVE LUCY
»0 0
0 ’3 ) DfVONC* COUNT
Tno oN A N u*
J i O ban n aby jo n e s
(MlWALTDNS
1101 SESAME I T N E f T g
IDPANTMOO* FAMILY

0.30
0 3 ) LOVE CONNECTION
CD in HENTS LUCY

10:00
g l TBPS M AO (PM
O hounm aoaom
O b a lly je b s y n a n h a il
(M l WQ VALLEY
1101C U C TM C COMPANY (N)
KIMAYMNNY N F O
1030
I ^ IALE OP TH* COYTUrry
0 O p a jw ly f i u o
CD 1101M - 1 CONTACT (N) g
0 » N B A L MCCOYS
11O0
i WHEEL OP FONTUNB
b p PMC* MMOafT
0O TM V M TN A B
: (m i e i o h t m ( n o u q n
H W MAOC OP OB. M B H B 0
) in FAJWLY
11.05
B CA TU N B
1130
0 NY AN I HOP*

8imaoMOAsmi
1135
B lucy show
APTINNOON

It (M iM W *

12 rr® toun
12 C M B DNO rt FUND (WtDI

B AOMCULTUN* USA (FNT)
5:15
B WOFU3 AT LAM M (T&gt; M

12 00

s

7 I

IM
10

NATURB

7 O ON* IJF1 TO LIVE
ft (Ml ANOY DM*FTTH

S

(10) SURVIVAL (WEDl

110) JOY OF PAJNTINO |FW)
2:30

CIOCAPYTOL
ft (MIQRCAT SB ACS COASTER
0 ( 101PEOPLE WHO MEAN BUBtNESS (MON)
0 (101 ROBERT RUSSN WYOMMO SCULPTOR (THU)
0 (101 MAOC OF DECORAT M
300

® SANTA BARBARA
I OUONQ IJOHT
I Of Nf NAL HOSPITAL
i t (Ml BUDS BUNNY
tj (101 FLONOASTYIE
0 t») VOLTRON OCFENOf R OF
THC ua«vtNM

OP

D E A R A SH A M E D : Don't tie
so hard on yourself. It's no crime
lo In- unable In ride a hike
Ask u triend who bikes lo
leach you on a country road Or
go to a shop where hleycles un­
sold; the |ico|)le there will llnd a
teacher (or you They may even
suggest training wheels You run
do It. People have learned to ride
a hike In their h&lt;K you're jusi a
kid. Gel going.
D E A R AIH1Y: My rx wife and
I are having an ongoing dis­
agreem ent c o n c e rn in g our
S-ycar-old son. IWc have joint
custody.) She insists on having
the fniy slcrp with her every
night that he Is in her care. I
don't think It's healthy fur the
Imiv . and I have told her so. hut
she bus one e xcu se after
another
I think she's using our son as a
surrogate lover, or a dull Well,
he is neither a lover nor a doll,
and I am worried that u this
continues, she may tin him some
set Ions harm
What tlo you Ihlnk? And how
should I li.indie U? I don't want
to ujiset her us II has taken three
years in build u halfway civil
rrlaUonshl|).
C O N C E R N E D F A T H ER

D E A R C O N C E R N E D : Your
concerns may I n - lusitfled. hut to
avoid upselling her. make no
.recusations Instead, luslsl that
she discuss n with a family
cnunselur. who will undoubtedly
agree with you Your eX-wlfe will
llnd the counselor's decision
caster lo.iccejil than yours.
D EA R A B U Y : Please settle ail
argument Is it pro|ier to send a
w Milling Invitation to:
1 A terminally III |H-rson In a
buspit.il ’
2 A senile elderly |iersnn In a
nursing borne?
N .V . IN NEW Y O R K
D E A R N.V.t No lo Ixttli
C O N F ID E N T IA L T O Y O U :
Easier Is nearly hrrr. and If you
l&gt;lan lo surprise a small child
with a gift such as a live ruhhll
or a liaby chick, jile.isi- consider
ihls Living creatures need pro­
per cure: so unless you un­
certain that the ruhhll or chick
will receive the care II needs to
survive, jilrase give a slutted
hud or animal Instead. Living
crrulurcs are not "toys" to Ikmauled, abused or neglected.
And l( you p la n to d y e y o u r
own

B u s te r

eggs,

p le a s e

he

uwurc that Irani Im llcd e g g s —
cs|K-clnlly d y e d ones — s h o u ld
not Ik - kepi (e v rn u n d e r re­
frig e ra tio n ) lor m o re th a n a d a y .

D E A R A O B Y : Your answer to
'Mother ol the Groorn" was
totally nlf-hase You said the
stepmother should not have

I rj Floyd Theatres
[9 9 C

1 ^ 7 ^

HEART
m o v i i u .n o

oa

B IE V IE R I-Y r ill-IN

(Problems? W hut's hugging
you? Unload on Ahby. P.O. itox
39923. Holly wimk I. Calif. 9003H,
For a personal rr|ily. |)leuse
e n c lo s e a s t a m p e d , s e lfaddressed envelope.)

KEEP YOUR
CITY CLEAN
The Sanford City Commls•lon has declared fh* month
ol March as “ Clsan-Up"
month lor lh« City of Sanford.
Tha Sanford City Commis­
sion urges all residents to
join In this effort and keep
"Th# Friendly City" a claan
and beautiful city.

SALLY FIE L D !
P LA C ES
,N T H E

been In the receiving line at all
Abby, In some cases, a step
jiarent most coutulnly should tie
In the receiving line. Some
stepparents plav an lm|Mirtant
role In the stepchild's life. Ques­
tions such as "H ow long has the
stepfather been remarried?’’ and
"W ith whom do Ihe children
live?" wrre not answered In the
letter. The relatlonshijr between
the strpjiurent ami the child nr
Iris or her new spouse must also
lie considered.
It's their wedding, and they
should hnve a say In Ihe matter.
ST E P P A R E N T -T O -B E
D EA R S T E P P A R E N T -T O -B E :
I
agree, thr circumstances can
make all the difference In the
wnrld. In this case, the parents
of the groom had a hitter
divorce, after which the father
proni|itly married his girlfriend,
who had been walling lu the
wings for some tlm r These fads
should have been Included In the
letter but were not.
In my eagerness to stay within
the sparr allotted for my col­
umn. It's often necessary to rut
the original letter to Ihe hone. Or
snmrllvrs a local editor ruts a
letter, eliminating some ImjKirtuut facts
In this case. It was I who cut
Ihe guts out of the letter, omit­
ting some pertinent facts. Many
readers wrote to complain. They
wrre right.

MARCH *85
48
HOURS I

"CLEAN-UP MONTH"

305

B BUDS BUNNY ANO r MEMOS
3:30

I t (Ml SCOOBY 000
0(101 MISTER NOOCNS(R)
0 in

0 05

12 M O W

500

200

O J ) ANOTHER WONLO

PAJNTaaQ (FRO

830
J t (M| FINN FANTMIN
( T01 MlSTIN NOOCN3 INJ
in MY FAVOMTE MAN T IAN

WEDNESDAY

IJ ' O AS THE WONLO TURNS
II (MIDOMENNYLE
0 1101CONONCSS WE THE NfONUIWEDI
0 110) NAvmNQ CERAMICS (TNT)

CD |l| HEATHCUFS

i

1:30

D E A R AB U Y: I am 21 year
old male college sojihomore.
physically Intelligent, with no
physical or mental problems —
except tor the one I m witting
.i ImuiI. I never learned how to
ride a hike.
When I was growing up I never
owned a hike, and I didn't liavc
thc courage lo ask any of mv
friends who had hikes in leach
me I grew tip leellug Inferior,
lull I lie (tain ol not In-In*; able lo
ride .1 bike was pushed out of mv
mind during mv teen years
when I learned bow to drive my
l.ither'scar
Now that I'm lu college. I
really need a bike I k -c u u m - I live
two miles Iriim school and
there's no bus service near me.
Driving a car Is out ol thr
&lt;|Uesll()U because there's no
plaee to |&gt;ark
Is there a plaee where adults
are taught to ride a hike? In
private. I mean. Iiecuuxe at mv
age I'd feel like a loot trying to
learn lu a park or some other
puhllt- place where peujile could
set- me. Please answer soon, 'Hits
Is earing me up
ASH AM ED

in s p e c to r

DAoorr

3 35
12 M t C * ll ANO JCCRL1 (MON-

THU)
12 TH* CMANMMNI (FFV)
0

®

4.0 0
U T T U HOUSE ON THC

o s t a r tac k
Q ME RV OMFFM
(M l SUPER* AM NOB
1 101B U A M C S T R U T g
K ih e a t h c u f f
405

B FiansroNES (laON-ms
12 MY U T T U PONY I (FAN
4:3 0
I t (M l HC-MAN ANO MASTERS
0P TMC UNrvENSE

ant
B
B

4:35
P U N U T0N C S (IPOPF-THU)
MY UTTU PONY I (FW)

5.00
0
l*t ( ANYTMMQ FOR MONTY
TH R U I COMPANY
U T S MAKE A DIAL
(M i DUKES OP HA22ANO
(M0*t-TMU)

i8

H (Ml MY UTTU PONY I(FRO
0 110| OCfANUS (MON)
0 I’Cl IPaOERSTANOPIQ HUMAN
BCHAVION(TUB)
0 1101 NEW UTENACY AN PtTNOOUCnON TO COMPUTINB

0 ( 0 M O W T P U ZZU (THUI
( 0 ART OP
(PRO
0 m happy oats adajn

FAMOUS RECIPE
WEEKLY SPECIALS

�Tussday, March U. 1W»

t A — Evsnlr-g H f aid, Sanford, F I.

But It's Not Exactly What He Asked For

L o n g w o o d M a k e s P o w e rs A n O ffe r

W ORLD

Faulkner said his objection was
B y Jane Casselberry
to the city not offering Powers
Herald Staff W rite r
As expected, the Longwood the *40.000 Powers said he
City Commission has voted to would have to have to go to work
offer William T . Powers, assis­ for Longwood. Powers had also
tant city manager and finance said he would expect a *3.000
director for the city of Perry, the pay Increase within nine months
Job of city administrator effective and two weeks vacation the first
May I with a starting annual year and three werks the next.
T h e p re s e n t s a la r y for
salary of *35.000. *3,000 less
Longwood city administrator Is
than he had asked for.
Powers would not say today *34.290. In addition to the
whether he would take the Job. salary. Powers will have Ills
but Instead will make a counter moving expenses paid, will have
offer. He said the matter Is In ihe use of a city car for official
negotiation, pointing out that business and to drive to and
the cost of living Is considerably from work If he lives In the city.
The city will send Powers the
higher In Seminole County than
In Taylor County whrre he now offer asking him to slgti tt If he Is
agreeable. No deadline wus given
works.
Monday night s vote was 4-1 for a reply.
"We like Ihe man, he's well
w ith C o m m is s io n e r P e rry
Faulkner dissenting, hut not q u a lif ie d ," M a y o r H a rve y
because he was ugatnst hiring SmeHlson said, "but why bring
the 4 2 - y e a r - o l d P o w e r s . him In at a higher salary than

IN BRIEF

Arms Negotiators Get Down
To Specifics; Star Wars' Up First
G ENEVA. Switzerland (UPI| — U.S.-Soviet arm* talk?*
moved Into the detailed negotiating Mage today, unaffected
by the killing of an American Arm y officer by a Soviet
soldier In East Germany.
A U.S. arms delegation spokesman said the Geneva talks,
now In their third week, were continuing with the first
detnlled discussion of possible future defensive anti-missile
systems In space.
Max M. Kampelman. overall leader of the U S delegation,
returned to Geneva from Washington today In time for the
llrst meeting of the respective sub groups on space arms
The meeting was held at the Soviet mission to the United
Nations.
The arms talks Ix-gan March 12. with the first two weeks
mainly devoted to organizing the complex negotiations.
The Soviet Union Is determined to torpedo Reagan's
Strategic l&gt;efense Initiative — known jxipularly as "Star
Wars."
Moscow says there must he an end to research Into
anti-missile systems II the superpowers are to progress
toward reducing intercontinental and medium-range
nuclear weapons.

.

A Sanford man has. pleaded no contest to
the DUI manslaughter death of a p&lt;drslhari
who was killed us hr walked along Celery
Avenue, east of Sanford.
Ernest Tom Pills. 47. of 1732 Midway
Avc.. entered the [ilea Monday licfore
Seminole Circuit Judge Robert B McGregor
who could sentence Pitta to up to 13 years
on April 30 for Ihr dealh of Tom m y Mills,
19. of Academy Avenue. Pitts was arrested
within minutes after his car ran down Mills
on Nov. 4According to a Florida Highway Patrol
report. Mills wus caslbound on the south
side of Celery Avenue at 11:32 a.m. when hr
was struck from behind by a 1972 Ford,
which was also caslbound. Witnesses said
thr car was wcuvlug from lane to lane and
struck Mills, throwing him Into a damp,
weed-filled ditch on the south wide of the
road. Mills was dead at the scene.
In other court action:
— Wesley James I hauling Jr,, 20. of 4859
Plibllx Lane. pleaded gullly Monday to
carrying a concealed weapon. H r could
receive up to a year when sentenced May 10
by Circuit Judge C. Vernon Mize J r.
Ilolullng was arrested Sepl. 23 alter he
fought with an Orlando man and kicked In
some d ry w all at a b u ild in g site In
Casselberry. An investigation Inin the dis­
pute by an officer revriaed a loaded pistol
under a shirt on the front seal of tils vehicle.

Nakasone Orders Concessions

Abductions Scare Off Westerners
BEIRUT. Lebanon (U l’ll — Large numbers of Westerners
were rrjrortrd to be moving out of Moslem areas today
while authorities searched for a U N official and a French
bureaucrat — Ihr latest victims In a wave of recent
kidnappings.
A U.N. Relief and Work Organizations official. Alec
Collett, 03. was abducted Monday In Beirut. Just hours
after police reported the kidnapping ol Glllcs Peyrolles. the
32-year old director of the French cultural Institute in the
northern city ol Tripoli.
The Independent Frenrh-lunguugr daily f.'Orient-Le Jour
said the ahurtlons had triggered an "exodus" ol foreign
nationals from mnsily Moslem west lieinit. 'especially
those working for International organizations."
No group claimed in lie holding Collett, hot the shadowy
Lebanese Armed Revolutionary Factions said u took
Peyrolles. It threatened to kill him unless France released
one of It* memlrers within 48 hours.
The llllle-known group Is believed rea|&gt;oitalble for killing
four U.S. und Israeli officials In France since l!»H I

A R E A F O R E C A S T i Today
sunny and mild High in (he
upper 70s. W ind northeast
around 13 mph Tonight fair.
Low In Ihe mid io upper 30s.
Wind southeast 3 lo 10 mph.
Wednesday mostly sunny und

brrr/y, A llttlr warmer will) high
In thr low 80s Gusty southeasl
wind 13 to 20 mph
R O A T IN Q F O R E C A S T i St
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — Small eraft should
exercise caution. Northeast wind
15 to occasionally 20 knots
today. Wind becoming southeast
IO knots tonight and 10 to 15
knots Wednesday, Sea 4 to 0 feet
drcrruslng tu 2 to 3 feel tonight
Partly cloudy.
EXTEN D ED FO R ECAST!
G e n e r a l l y fa ir T h u r s d a y
becoming partly cloudy Friday
then cloudy with a chance o(
showers or thunderstorms north
part Saturday. Lows averaging
upper 30s north and 60* south
except near 70 southeast coast
■ n d lo w 70s ke ys. H ig h *
averaging near HO north und low
lo mid HOs south
A R E A R E A D IN G S |0 a.m .|:
temperature; 67; overnight low;
3 3;

M o n d a y ' s

h ig h :

70;

barometric pressure: 30 38; rcla
live h u m id ity ; 40 percent:
winds: east-northeast at H mph;
sunrise: 6:23 a m., sunset 6 40
p ill.

WEDNESDAY TIDES:
D aytona Beach; highs. 1133
a in., — : lows. 5:22 u m ., 5:17
p m.i Port Canaveral: highs,
11:27 a m .
lows. 5:13 a.m.,
5:08 p in.; Bayporti highs. 4 5 8
a.m.. 3:21 p m.; lows. 0 34 a.in..
11: 11 p m .

STOCKS
rs*«# «u*Wttn«

St* h o lu n o l Am n ICw i

Sr mm**, &lt;X

S

1C* I 1**

oti* cu rll&gt; »t Dm S 'I
•e*
«**»»• va*r&lt;*M*»r p .i,* i j&gt; ol
m id mersJrt* M i ,
tnfor a o o fr m o ,to ',

freedom lo vingi
MCA

U

&lt;A«n*o n r e e s v ' m* as, Priceo ao m i
"K'ui*ire&lt;*.7m«/lH4&gt;
a * A»*
A lle n lk Sank
JO o uncNon«od

Mu*he» lww&gt;ir
Mormon t
sea Cor*
fS M » i

&lt;1 n *
I I S I0&lt;«
u s uh
r j'i U S

f Ifol fO o lO y U
f tortde Pewet

t M S O U l Son*
tun Sooko

Bernetl Sen* ...

«s

l

JS

«0

»S

*&gt;• FlSfZSSI

Wotlr t

}C« n s
os

declined to comment. "I came
here to see what everytxxly had
to say," he said.
Alter the rally. Crossley said
Continued from page I A
he saw Julian. "I wish I'd seen
consider legality of Ihe action the school hoard." he nddrd He
taken by Ihe superintendent and Mild hr thinks Julian should
resign.
thr school board."
"Everything he's done has led
Crosslev urged Ihe crowd to
[Hit pressure oil Hughes to meet lo confrontation." Crossley Mild
with members ol the clergy. "II "lie's brought us lo conflicts und
they fight tills suit, they're he's not doing Ihe Job he should
be as school hoard attorney."
s|H-iullng your lax money," he
Another attorney. John Jones,
said
was one of the first to speak at
Mrs, C o le m a n said e arly
Tuesday calls were In-glnnlng to tiie rally. He Mild Christians will
trickle Into the school Iwiard not tx- kicked around by Ihe
bom persons who attended the school board.
"It's high lime Cod fearing.
rally.
Hlhle-tx-llevlng
Christians were
Crossley warned that II the
school board would not ojh- ii not Irratrd as second-class citi­
discussions with him and othrrs. zens," Jones said. Applause
his group w ould fight the
txiard's "uiiconstliutloiial. im
moral. Indecent discriminatory
[Hiltcy."
Hr said ihut Ihr school txiard
mrmtx-rs should lx- voted out ol
C o n tin u e d fr o m p a g e 1A
office If they don't correct Ihr
discrimination against C h ris­
O n
th e
s c e n e
w e re
10
tians.
Seminole County firefighters
"Chrlsllans are not going lo lx* with three vehicles and al least
treated like second-class citi­ three Seminole sheriffs depu­
zens." he Mild. "You've got us ties.
much rights us everybody else
F ir e lig h t e r s had to use
and It's time we started using extrication tools lo cut ihe
them "
I todies out of Ihe vrhlclr Florida
School Hoard attorney Ned Highway Patrol troopers are in
Julian Jr. was at the rally hut charge of thr Investigation.

— Roger Hornsby Steward, 24. of Wlndsong
Apartments. 919 Ballard St.. Altamonte
Springs, was placed on one year probation
hut was lo remain In custody until an
opening In an alcohol Ircaiincnl center
became available. Steward was arrested
after he kicked an ofllcer who stopped him
for DUI Sepl, 27 McGregor also susetidrd
Steward's driver's license for five years,
ordered him to spend tt) days in the
Seminole County Jail, and puv a $500 flnc
— Jonathan Wayne McFarland. 20. ol 133 N
High St.. Lake Mary, arresled Dec. 3 on a
charge of car theft. He was sentenced by
McGregor to 3 years In prison lo be followed
by 2 years of community control, a form of
In-house arresi.
— Robert Steven May. 34. of 1013 Morrr
Loop, was senteced to 3 years probation by
McGregor for Juggling bank accounts. A c­
cording to court records. May deposited
cheeks In a new account at Liberty National
I tank which were drawn on a closed account
at Atlantic Bank H r was arrested Nov. 6
and could have received Up to a year ill the
county Jail.
— Janice Mainor. 20. ol 34 William Clark
Court, was sentenced by Circuit Judge S
Jo*pch Davis J r to 3 years probation lur
attempted burglary. She was arrested on the
charge Dee. 20 following an attempted
break-in al a Sanford grocery store.
— Deane Jo rd a n

"I think we’re going lo see the
Supreme Court establish silent
prayer as a Flr*l Aminemieoienl
constitutional rlglu by die end of
thr year." Jones said,

...Wreck

...Officer
Continued from page 1A
caught phologruphtng a Soviet
military Installation and was
killed trying lo escape.
“ Wc have lodged a protest and
expressed regret over the dealh
of the American military of­
ficer." Kulagin told United Press
International. "Despite the pre­
sence of clearly visible warning
signs in Russian and German,
(the Americans) entered Ihe ter­
ritory ol a restricted military
Installation. One of the U.S
officers wearing u camouflage
still and carrying a photo cam­
era penetrated directly Into the
territory oT this Installation
where he photographed Ih r
combat equipment which was
there.
"Caught red-handed by a So­
vie t s e n try g u a r d in g the

f

R e v . G e o r g e C r o s s le y
greeted tils comment that lie
Ix-lieves school prayer will re­
turn to public schools tills year

Th e Bronco, resglstered in
Brevard, appeared to tx- carrying
surveying equipment, boards
and slakes Stoltlrr St.igg and
Associates Is an engineering,
planning nnd architect ual Itrm
Al least two law enforcement
[xTsonncl working the accident
complained that If the vehicle
Inspection system was still Intaci. the tractor-trailer rig would
not have hud a bad tire lo blow
out.
Gary Kaiser, director of public
sufrly for Seminole County. Mild

Crossley said ihe slate needs a
new education commissioner
since "in public schools today
you can Itrur more almut Karl
Marx I ha n Jesus Christ

such accident's tin cause people
(o dunk about I tic Inspection
system
Thr; accident brings lo six Hie
number ol [x-oplr killed in iralllc
accidents in Seminole County
this year.
An H2-yrur-old woman who
was involved In an auto accident
Monday died today In Oviedo
Details of thul accident were not
available because Ihe troopers
who worked the accident Were at
the scene of today's fatal It V.

rqulpment. he did not comply Ihe vehicle when a Soviet soldier saying. "Jrss. I am shot." Hurl
with his orders, and after u emerged from a wooded area said a Soviet soldier laler arrived
warning shot, while attempting and started shooting T h r first with a llrsl-uld kit. but Ihe
to escape, he was killed "
shot wus dlrecled at Schulz, who Soviets made "no effort" to help
U S nfflctals dented Nicholson w a s s t i l l In the v e h ic le .
Nicholson Burt said lalrr the
and his [lartner were spying
Nicholson was hit by one of Incident "shows a disturbing
Hurl told a orws conference that about three shots fired. Burl tendency or pattern by the
Nicholson's mission when he said.
Soviet Union to shoot first and
was shot was "to monitor Soviet
Burt quoted Nfcholson us ask questions laler "
activities They urr unarmed hut
they carry cameras because one
of their Jobs Is to monitor Soviet
less cflnqx-tlilve and the city
military activities."
would lose money.
Hurt Mild Nicholson was ac­
Jack Horner, president of the
com panied b y . Sgl Jessie
Continued from page 1A
Greater Sanford Chamber ol
Schatz. also fired on but not
Com m erce, said Monday he
the Sanford business be pre­ agreed with Farr He said a city
Injured.
ferred
H urt said N ich o lso n and
has to shop for the best deals but
B u t C o m m is s io n e r J o h n
Schatz were In u marked mili­
when the difference In bids Is
tary vehicle wearing army Held Mercer Mild oul-of-town busi­ small ihe Sanford business
camouflage uniforms when they nesses would soon tell the city to should gel Ihe contract,
were shot at without warning "stick it In your ear" whenever It
"For a few bucks l‘d rather see
He said they were "near, hut not requests bids on a project He ihe loc al guy get It "
on or III. a permanently re said word would gel oul that
Farr and Horner did not quan*
Sanford businesses gel preferred 'illy a "s m a ll" or "n a rro w "
strlctcd area."
Burt Mild Nicholson had left treatment and bidding would be difference

...Local

AREA DEATHS

loH urnNonaod

VW

M'o

MS
MS

(Hollins
323-1204

C A T H A R IN E M. W E IQ LE Y
M rs. C a th u rin e M argaret
Welgley, 76, of 251 Fern Drive,
Casselberry, died Sunday ut
Flo rid a H o s p iu l-A lia n io n te
Springs (k&gt;rn April 3. 1908 In
Rubesonla. Pa., she moved to
Casselberry from Reading. Pa tn
I960. She wus a retired sccre(ary and a member of the

Altanumle Community Chapel
She was also a member of Ihe
Flortdu Audubon Society.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e her
husband. Ira J .; a son. Ira F.,
Heading: three grandchildren;
one great-grandchild.
H u ld w in -F u lrc h ild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs. Is in

charge of arrangements.
H A R O L D R. P E C K
Harold H. Peck. 63. of 2671
Azalea Drive. Forest City, died
Monday at Florida HospitalOrlando. Bom June 12. 1921 In
Conneaut, Ohio, he moved to
Forest City from there In 1955.
He was a retired electrician and
a Methodist. He was a member of

the Ocoee Lions Club
Survivors Include his wife,
V irg in ia ; d a u g h trr. Yvonne
Altman. Dunnellon. sister. Mrs.
Delon* Johnston. Green Bay.
Wise.; two grandchildren.
Gariten Chapel Home for
Funerals. Orlando. Is In charge
ol arrangements

I

i

,

Brian Pappus, candidate tor £
the state commissioner ol educa- M
Bon. Invited by Crossley to
speak at the rally, said he wants ■
to tx* the com miss kincr ol educa* ■
lion so lie cun help put an end lo
the secular-humanistic npproach
to teaching that is In schools
today. He Mild the teaching ol
” srlf-grallllealirin" in the schools
would slop II lie Is elected,

Hi
OS

Flowera For A ll Ocvtmtona

S r.'S L T .

— Stacie Leake Joiner. 21, of 108 Delores
Drive, Altamonte Springs, arrested Oel. 30
and charged with possession of cocaine,
marijuana and drug paraphernalia was
sentenced to 3 years probation. She was
charged after a sheriffs deputy spoiled her
using marijuana In a car which was also
occupied by ihrrc boys. Circuit Judge
Dominick J . Sullf also ordered hrr lo
complete 300 hours of community service.
She could have received a year In the
county jail
- t e r Andrew Nelson. 19. of 502 Peachtree
Lane. Altamonte Spring*, wus sentenced bv
Sail! to 3 years probation for resisting arresi
without vlolenre Hr could have received a
year In thr county Jail. Nelson was arrested
Oct 18 after hr ran from a hearing room In
the rourthouse and hud to lx- chased down
by deputies Nelson twilled after a Judge
ordered him lo lie taken into custody for not
gelling an attorney lo represent him in a
l belt case He was also sen Icured to 3 years
probation in the theft case.
— Eddie Lee Gray. 30. of 2019 McCarty Avc..
Sanford, was sentenced by McGregor lo one
year probation and a *500 fine for resisting
arrest. Gray wus arresled following a scuffle
Aug 14 at Ihe Seminole County Courthouse
after lie refused to leave thr building lo
begin serving 15 days lor non-child support.
Gray could have received up to a year In Ihr
couhtyjatl.

...Rally

WEATHER
N A T IO N A L R E P O R T : Wintry
weather assaulted the West to­
day with snow and Icy winds
that knocked out power, en­
dangered young livestock and
threatened to end u Plains
h e a tw a v e tha t hu d m ade
Nebraska warntrr than Florida
G ale w arnings covered the
n o rth ern Pacific Coast and
winter storm wutchrs for wind­
blown mow were issued fur
northern California and wrulern
Nevada. Idaho and (he moun­
tains of Oregon were covered by
travelers uilvlaorlrs Three In
ches of snow dusted Ely. Nrv..
today, and an Inch was reported
at Hilling*. Mont A mixture ol
cold rain and snow threatened
the health of newborn livestock
In Utah and Montuna, prompting
stockmens advisories Frost und
freeze warnings were |x&gt;*led In
the Carolina* Utah Power ft
Light crews worked today In
repair a [rower line that wus
dam aged S u n d u y night by
s tro n g w in d s th u l poshed
10 Inch thick blocks of Ice out of
the Great Salt Luke, knocking
over 14 support towers

been with Perry, a city of 9.000.
for four years Longwood has a
population of 12.000.
In other business Monday a
request by developer Robert C.
Dietz to rrzone a parcel south of
Overstreet Avenue from R-1A to
R-2 residential was denied after
several nearby property owners
protested. R -IA zoning Is for
single-family homes of at least
1,800 square feel while R-2
would allowed Dietz to construct
duplexes
Dietz said he 1bought duplexes
would make an ideal buffer
between the commercial zoning
along county Road 427 and the
single-family residential area He
said a privacy fence would he
put up.
Residents, however, c o m ­
plained I hat duplexes would
lower their property values and
Increase traffic III thearea.

San fo rd M a n Face s 15 Years In D U I D eath

TO K Y O (UI'IJ — Prime Minister Yusuhlro Nakasone,
eager to ease friction with I he United Stales and Aslan
trade partners, ordered new concessions to open Japan's
markets to foreign lni|Kiris. government sources said
today.
The Nakasone government said It would Implement
another round of murkel-opening measures In April A
series of similar steps carried out In the past have failed to
satisfy the United Stales and other trading partners.
The prime minister instructed the officials in study ways
to gradually lower tariffs rat Imported forrstry products
over a few years, work out a medium-term program to
Increase official development aid and come up with
concessions to expand Imports from Aslan countries, they
said.
The forestry Industry Is one of four major areas of
inlerest for I hr Untied .Slates In trying In gel Japan to open
IIs markets to foreign Imjxirts 'lire other areas are
telecommunications, pharmaceutical and medical equip
merit and electronics Industries.

I

necessary?” He pointed out that
Powers is only making a base
salary of 824.800 plus benefits
at hts present Job.
"Le t’s start him at a realistic
figure," Commissioner Larr&gt;
Goldberg said. "Otherwise If we
start him too high we could not
afford to move him up the ladder
and he would be dissatisfied In
the future.”
t
The commissioners came to a
consensus favoring Powers over
the other finalist. Wallace A
Payne, 48. city manager of
Crystal River, at a work session
Friday afternoon The two men
came to Longwood Thursday
and met with department heads
and toured the city before being
Interviewed by commissioners
Individually and as a group on
Friday.
Powers has a master's degree
In public administration and has

�PEOPLE

E v e n in g H e r a ld . S an fo rd

F I.

Church Presented Flag
During DAR Meeting

Lewis,
Agee
Vow s
Sp o k e n
Wtlda Helen Lewis of San­
ford. and William Michael
Agee of Lake Mary, were
married
Feb. 9. al 11 00
a.in.. In the Lake view Baptist
Church, laikr Mary. The Rev.
Jackie Nix performed the
traditional ceremohy.
The lirlde is the daughter
of Mr. and, Mrs. Robert M.
Lewis. Houston. Texas. The
bridegroom Is the son ol Mrs.
Palsy Agee. Tallaltassee. and
J . Wendell Agee, Lake Mary.
Given In marriage by her
lather, tlie bride chose for her
vows a formal lare over
bridal lulfrla gown fashioned
along the Southern Belle sil­
houette, Tiers of lare rulflrs.
accented with while satin
ribbon, formed the Itouflani
skirt that cascaded into a
sweeping chapel train, Her
headpiece was a lace-covered
picture hoi holding her eltaiw
length veil o| lm|xjrtcd Il­
lusion She carried a iKiutpiei
of while and red roses In­
te rs p e rs e d w ith b a b y 's
breath.
Snndv Lewis attended her
sister as maid of honor. She
wore a red talleta gown with
a elenh waist and lull skirt
accented with a neck ruffle
She wore lace gloves and her
headdress was a comb ar­
ranged with a spray ol flow-

One of the highlights of the March meeting ol
SalUc Harrison Chapter National Society Daugh­
ters of the Am erican Revolution was tire
presentation of an historic llag to the latke Mary
Presbyterian Church.
The Daughters met In the fellowship hall of the
church anti Mrs R E. True took this occasion to
present the Rev. A.F. Stevens the American (lag
which had been used at the funeral of Robert E
True during World War II and presented to Mrs
True after I lie rites. The Trues, pioneers In Lake
Mary, have strong ties to the church and
community. R E 's father having been Involved In
the construct Ion ol the l^ike Mary Church.
Alter the business meeting presided over bv the
Regent. Mrs E Paul Kelly. Mrs Clark Davis
described the schools supported wholly or In part

College Student Never
Learned To Ride A Bike
» if*-

Mrs. William Michael Agee
ers. She carried a nosegay of
pink and red carnations.
Clnda White and Margaret
Hobby, sisters of the bride,
were the bridesmaids, Their
gowns, flowers and head­
pieces were Identical to the
honor attendant's
1,1. J im Agee sevetf Ills
brother as ix-st man Ushers
were Richard Lemon*, cousin
of the bridegroom, ami Rich­
ard White, brother-in-law ol
the bride.
R u th

W h it e ,

COO

O D U O f Ufitwt
u c M J c m it tO M S
CD («01 UACMtJL

hfwsia ■

tjutOS ihanga ehan ha Pacorst
(ha quarry ot a Ino of doadty (aaal

IhravM |RI

IWNMQ

/ LIMNfK

a&gt; i n w tL C o u * s a c k . k o t t i r
COS
IQ S fV tS lY M IllB X U fS

6:30
0 'l l NBC News
I} O C M news
( 7 0 R B C N tw s g
P (M l ALICE
(H fl| 0 0 0 0 T1UC9

6 35
a oowen m t
7 00
0 J ) B A U Of THE CtNTURY
® a p u u A O x n s c nicwdo
Mondibm (Sa p» refuel C n u daga lU

(7.10 JfOCASOY
Mi (M i t o o a o »t f o r c o o roar Jataia Mgariy h ik i a mar»aga propoaar X w Brad '(turn*
tom a tup but tha young man a
Aanng Mcond thought*
a ) ( Kt) NATURf O f THM0S
(S t* ) ONE DAY A t A TIME

7 05
IX U T T L I HOUSE ON THE PRAJ
ME

7:30
B D ENTENTAMMENT TONtOHT
fM iu tM Aotoarl Conrad
J O WHEEL Of f ON TUNE
(/) O I too,000 NAUf THAT
TUNE
M lM | BENSON
ffi It] A U IN THE FAMtLY

800
a Lft A -U A M B A Hanmbat and
cohort* nMlraia an auto (actor,
•Sara lha* bust an t M t o N maf m daargnait id caesura &gt; gang ot
nritiiin auto parti Ihmma (SI g
( I ) O UO V K Anna Kararana
(Pramaral Jacguaana A u n CSnalophar Hamm In lata tfis-cantvay
Ruaara. a voman daAaa aocra* canrancrona and angagaa M a paaaron
mm though ,dianacwy (rage to*a
aSaa aath a daamng masary odtear
Adapted bam Lao T orator • noMt
» O T H R U * A CROWD Jaca
aaaa t a paycnorogral l harp aban
Na romanca oMh Y e t, becomoa a
praacam ( « i r j
1t (M l Da l l a s
ffi (101 NOVA An aiptorttron of tha
mrHanoua B a s d l TnangN an
■raa otf » • coast of Hondo anara
(SOutandt Of Kept (Sanaa and
p a p a N r a » » a c paarad |A)g
(B It) MOV* Sogua Uaw (1IT*|
Pafar O loom JoRn SlanWng A

tha quarry *» Na p

CD O MOONUOHTINO Maddra
and (land track 00«m a taaMrta
mwdarar ahaa parlrcrpaang m a
rnurdar myaiary train tnp corner'
11 (M l MOEfCNOCNT NEWS
1tot WONLD AT WAN
(») AFRICA CONTINENT IN

8

10:05
OX M O W snort WaA To Day
hgM 119171 Jamai Brofm Don
Urtcnod A amad group of paopN
ara Irappad m a aubway aSar an
aanhquata daalroyy Naa York City

10:30

n ie c e

ol

th e

brlde. was flower girt, and
Robert While nephew of the
bride, was the ring bearer.
Following a reception at
Lake Mary City Mali, the
newlyweds departed on a
honeymoon trip
Th e y are m aking their
home In Lake Mary. The
bride Is a student at the
University ol Central Florida.
Orlando, and the bridegroom
Is a project engineer lor
Wenco Development Corp..
Sanford.

1100

805

6:30
CD o

WHO I THE B O M T Angola

Mona m daung a young coaaga

■MiYtfQg

• (X) ISP TO E Cody. N«A and Bo*
po mdmtovat at tha Array to aaaral
a Mdarai an oafgallon of Waa tormar vtaaiam commandar afto*
auapactad of drug amugging
CD O MACORUOBR 1 10U0 A
court ordar prorstaa ana haw Id
U NOBill and fanny at Way try to
capo atth a jaaroua man aho a
Saram na Na aa arOa g

It m O U M C T
0 ( tOt WORLD A? WAX

KfcOO
a CD RBMMGT0N STEELE Lau­
ra a paant to* a romanac aacakon
atth S u a a On tha francs A v a l

6 00
O D N K NEWS AT SUNIBSE
(1) O MORNMO STRETCH
(71O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
11 |MI QOOO DAY!
11 NCWS
a ID A U BARKER

I I rUNTIME

6:45

&lt;7&gt;O

e y e w it n e s s d a yb r e a k

7:00

ffi ( 10) NOVA (TyCJI
ffi (101 WOFfOERWORXS (FN)
ffi (t) MAMMtX
1205

ax PERRY MASON

12:30
a EI SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
(1) O YOUNO ANO THE REST­
LESS
(7 U LOWfO
r ( U ) BEVERLY HILLBULKS
art

1 00
( ) I DAYS OF OUR LIVES
J O ALL m y C h il d r e n
V (M l O C K VAN DYKE
ffi 1101 MOV* (MON. T U I THU)
ffi 1101 CONGRESS WE THE PEOPlEfWED)
ffi (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRO

asin mov *

r U ABC NEWS MOM TUNE
1 (M ) SANTORO ANO SON

( D O t A U GUV Colt and Homo
Sara mora than a anw ariseun,
irymg to captura a bad lumpar aho
haa bacoma lha ttar ot a woman a
roaar Mating lawn (ft)
( D U THE SAINT
(ft (M| f-TROOP
a (I) K0JAK

12:05
IX M O W LOfCany, me" (1**2)
EdaardG Rotmaon, Jana W,Kean

1230
O ( I : LATE NIGHT WITH 0AVI0
LETT I ROLAN
I t (M l I LOVE LUCY

1:00

M O W ConwuNwn ' (t»M )
Orton Won* Doan Sioo.ee*
11 (M l LEAVE (T TO BEAVER
a |t| t h e a v e n q c r b

1:10
( £ O COL UMBO CoAonbo are
pact! a plant ccAador (Ray unandi
Of nsrdarmg Na naefw* Ip gam ac
coat to a irual And |R)

1:30
a t (M ) BCTV

200

11(M) BIZARRE
2:05
n M O W I » t l To f i g w (tMT|
Chad traralt UarVyn Damn

2:30
0 C M NCWS MQHTWATCH
(MIOUNBAdOKf

2:50

CD O M O W Tha Vugm Ouaan
(tb iil Ba*M Dana Rrchard Todd

J

a OOOO MORNINQ AUERCA

? l (Ml FLINTSTONES
O lltOIFAR U DAY
d) III MEATHCLIfY

7:15
ID |10| A M WEATHER

7:30
a t (M ) TOM ANO JERRY
6 ) 110) SESAME STREET □
0 (SI BfSRECTOR GADGET

7:35
I t I DREAM O f JEANNIE

800
■11 (Ml WOOOY WOOORECKER
a iS I FAT ALBERT

8:05
IX BEWITCHED

6 30
31 (M l P*fK PANTHER
llO)MfSTERROOERS(R)
(I) MY FAVORITE MARTIAN

S

8:35
1XI LOVE LUCY
9:00
ft DIVORCE COURT
f O DONAHUE

1

t (Ml WALTTtffB
ltd)SESAME STREETg
IlSIPARTRKXM FAMILY

4:00
4.05

90S

S

CftLOVf CONNECTION
(SI HERTS LUCY

1000

ITBM M ACM NB
I HOLM MAGAZINE
I SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
J VALLEY
I (M l ILE C n B C COMPANY (R)
I (SI MAYBERRY A P S .

10:30
I (ft B A U o r THB CENTURY
O f AMAY FEUO
j I tOIS-S-1 CONTACT |R)g
) toREAL MCCOYS

11.00
4:30

WHEEL O f FORTVM
I PRKC ■ (BOHT
I TRTVLA TRAP
I (M l O O M TM ENOUGH
) t Ml MAOC O f OB. PAMTBfO
I (SJ FAMILY

1

O W O R U A TLA R M

11:30
a 9 ) scrabble

8

0 RYANS HOPE
(M lf U M O A S T Y U

1135

XX u i c t b n c w

500
s ir ,s a ,
IX OBLORBBTI FVNOfWEDt
Q AO R C U LTUM U S A (FRO

5:15
IX WORLD AT L A M B (TMU)

I ANOTHER WORLD
(7 O O N E U f f TOLTVf
(It |3S) ANOY GRIFFITH
(101 SURVIVAL (WED)
(10) JOY O f PAINTING (FRO

8

2:30

(J O C A P TT0 L
ft, (M l OREA T SPACE COASTER
ffi t »OI PEOPLE WHO MEAN BUSI­
NESS (MON)
ffi (XT) ROBERT RUSBM WYO­
MING SCULPTOR (THU)
ffi M0| U A G C Of DECORATIVE
PAINT INO (FRO

300
0 .4 SANTA BARBARA
( T O OLKOfNG LIGHT
(7 O OENERAL HOSPITAL
I t (M|BUGS BUNNY
ffi ( W) FLORfOASTTLI
ffi (S) VOL IRON OEFENOCR Of
THE LPftVERBE

%

a jw s M

1200

aCDONBW B

11 M u ra aa
tot NATURE Of THWGS

IMONt

been In the receiving lineal all
Abby, In some cases, a strpparrnt most coutainly should fu­
ll) the receiving line, Som r
stepparents play an important
rolr tn the stepchild's life. Ones
lions such as "H o w long has ihe
stepfather been remarried?" and
"W ith whom do the children
live?" were not answered In the
letter. The relationship tret ween
ihe stepparent and the child or
his or her new s|Kiuse must also
tie considered.
It's their wedding, and they
should have a say tn the matter.

Dear
Abby

'NTHR

_ _ _

CO N CER N ED FA TH E R

8 TE P P A R EN T TO
DEAR

1
agree, the circumstances can
make all the difference In Ihe
world, tn this d i s c , the patents
of thr groom had a hitter
d Ivoire, after which the lather
promptly married his girlfriend,
who had been walling In the
wings for some time. Thrse facts
should have been Included In Ihc
lelterbut were not.
lit my cagernesN to stay within
the spare allotted for my col­
umn. It's often necessary to cut
thr original letter to the hone. Or
snmrtlves a local edllor cuts a
letter, eliminating some lui|x&gt;r
(ant fuels.
In tills ease. It was I who cut
the guts out of the letter, om it­
ting some pertinent fuels. Many
readers wrote to complain. They
were right
(Problems? What's hugging
you? Unload on Abby. P.O. Box
39923. Hollywood, Cahl. 9003H.
For a personal reply, please
e n c lo s e u s la m p e d . s e 11 •
addressed envelope.!

KEEP YOUR
CITY CLEAN
Tha Sanford City CommlB»lon has daclared tha month
ol March aa "Clean Up"
month lor lh« City of Sanlord.

1

Tha Sanlord Clly CommlBalon urges all rtBldtnla lo
Join In this attort and katp
“ Tha Frlindly City” a claan
and beautiful clly.

a.so

w r*

48

HOURS]

MARCH '85
"CLEAN-UP MONTH"

305
3:30

FAMOUS RECIPE
WEEKLY SPECIALS

11 (M l SCOOBY DOO
ffi I *01 M1BT1R ROGERS (R)
a (S) INSPECTOR GADGET

12 HCCKIE ANO JE C K U (MONTHU)
12 THE CHARMK1NS (FRO

D

a

4:00
l it t l e

ho use o n th e

STAR TREK

S
[ (MtBufCRfRM XOB
| (101 SESAME I T REIT Q
) ( I ) h e a th c l jf f

4 06
Xt F U N T B T 0 N U (MON-THU)
12 m y O T T L I PONY I (TRW

4.30

at

(M l HE-MAN ANO MASTERS
O f THB (REVERSE
9 (tt MONK AMO MBfOY

4:35
IX F U N T B T 0 N U (MON-THU)
IX MV U T T L I PONY I &lt;fR»

6:00
® AMVTMBaQ FOR MONEY
( 3 ) 0 TH R U 'S COMPANY
J O L I T E MAKE A DEAL
(M ) DUKES O f HAQARO
(MOM-THU!
U (M l MV U T T L I PONY I (FRQ
(£l I &lt;0) OCEAMUS (MON)

I

.

WEDNESDAY
FAMILY SPECIAL
Three Piece Chicken
Dinner

I ptmmmmml qaMaai Bream f a m a t Rau**' Cam,** CTacaae.
•NaW mmmhmrn aaraioaa a N e r q . a a i^Y aaN M m aa* a
N* Iraaa MauR

$049

8

1M| UONBY BUZZU (THUI
(101 ART O f BONO HU

B M HARRY DAYS M A M

Eight Piece
Thrift Pack
a a t im a F ia i ai *i is i « C m

M * m M FRM w m «

$ f i9 9
CDtam nO BO O N

t£ |Wit----------

BEHAVIOR (TUE)
a l TO) NEW LITERACY AN IN­
TRODUCTION TO COMPUTERS

|c o u p o n |

COtMTBT CMCXIN
BAN F0R D
IB M Ftanch Aae.
(Hary H M )
US MU

C A S S fIB E R R V
41 N Harr 17 M

U1-01U

S A N FO R D
I M french An
(Hary 17*2)

BE

S T E P P A R E N T -T O -B E :

Q BUGS BUNNY AHO FRStNOB

11:05
Q CATUN B

WEDNESDAY

2.00
0

D E A R AHUY: I am 21-year
old male college sophomore,
physically Inlrlllgenl. with no
physical or mental problems —
except tor the one t rn writing
alKiut. I never learned how to
ride a hike
When I was grow ing up I never
owned a hike, and 1 didn't have
the courage to ask any ol m&gt;
Irtends who had hikes lo leach
D E A R C O N C E R N E D : Your
me I grew up feeling Inferior. concerns ma&gt; Im- Instilled, hut lo
Inn the |iain ol not bc!n«{ able lo avoid upsetting her. make no
ride a hike was pushed out ill im accusations Instead. Insist that
ittliul during rtiv leett years she d iv iixx li with a family
when I learned how lo drive in\ counselor, who will undouhtedlv
lather’s cur.
agree with you Your ex-wlfe will
Now that I'm in college. I lind the counselor's decision
really need a bike liecause I live easier to accept than yours.
two mile s Irom school *111(1
l here's no Ims sen Ice near inr
D E A R A D D Y : Please settle an
Driving a car is out ol thr argument I*, li pto|M-r lo send a
quest ion because th e rr’s iki wedding Invitation to:
place In park
1 A lermltially ill person tn a
Is there a place where atlulls hospital?
are taught to ride a bike? In
2 A senile elderly person In a
private, I mean. Iiecaiuse at my nursing home?
age I'd feel like a lout (tying In
N .V . IN N E W Y O R K
learn in a t&gt;ark nr some niher
public place where people could
D E A R N . V . : No to both
see me. I’lrase answer soon. This
ts rating me up.
C O N F ID E N T IA L T O Y O U l
ASHAMED
Easter Is nearly here, and ll you
plan to surprise a small child
D E A R A S H A M E D : Dnn'l hr
with a gift such as a live ralihlt
v i haul im yourself. It's no crime or a b.diy chick, please consider
lo In- unable to ride a bike.
this Living creatures need pro­
Ask a friend who bikes to per care: mi unless you are
tench you on a country road Dr certain that the rabbit or elilrk
go to a shop where bicycles are will receive Hie care It nerds to
vild. Die people thrre will lind a survive, please give a si idled
teacher lor you. They may even bird or animal Instead. Living
suggest Induing wheels. You can creatures are not "toys" to lie
do li. people have learned io rule mauled, abused or neglected.
a hike In their (VOx you're )uh| a
And II you plan to dye your
kid Gel going
own Faster eggs, please be
aware ituil hard boiled eggs —
D E A R A I 1 H Y : My ex wile and
especially dyed ones — should
I are having an ongoing dis­ not Ih- kept (even under rea greem ent c o n c e rn in g our frlgriatlanl lor more Ilian a day.
5-year-old son (We have Joint
custody.I Slu- insists on having
D E A R A D B Y : Your answer to
the buy sleep with her every
''Mother ol the Groom " was
night that hr Is in her care. I
totally off-ha.se You said the
don't think It’s healthy for the
hoy. and I have told her IO , hut stepmother should not have
she has one e x cu se after
Irq Royd Theatres 1
another
I think she's using our son as a
surrogate lover, or a doll. Well,
Et i l7 9
he Is neither it lover nor a doll,
_ _
\ 9C
and I am worried Ihut If this
S A L iY FIELD .
continues, slu- may do him vm ir
P LA C ES
serious harm
Whal do you Ihtnk? And how
HS HEART
*»
should I handle It? I don't want
to upset her us II has taken three
MOVttLAHOOO
years to build u halfway civil
M l
B IEV lER LY fll...relationship.

3 35
9:30

12 THAT OWL
D O M O W tn o t t ig r t il
ar d Cranna Angta 0
I t (M l DORM DAY

1:30
] O AS THE WORLD TURNS
I t (M )QOM ERPYLE
ffi ( 101 CONGRESS WE THE PEO­
PLE (WED)
ffi ( HD PAINT N O CERAMICS (FRO

IX m o w

I t (M| FAIRLY A ffAM
lt ( M | PATTY DUXE

105
IX MOVIE

» to d a y

II IO CM MORN1NONEWS

I it) t w il ig h t z o n e
a*
12J30

8

EARLY MORNWa

?t (MIROREYE

o
tajo

CD O

ffi 110) IN THE SYVINQ (WED1

6:30
O '4 NEWS
lit O C M

JoAnny Car.

4:35
MO

S 13 r t COUNTRY n U E -f TV)
11 JIMMY SWAOOART

CD |IOt DfONNE WARWICK IN
CONCERT (TUE)

O H tOt A M WEATHER

11:30

3 30
IX M O V « tha Sa.aga (1BU)
Chorion Haaton Suaan Mono* A
anna man raaad By Stout kxhana
■ tarn Balaaan taa toyana

5:30

NEWS

Q H U U a iD O N C w s
I t ()! ] BENNY HIU.
(S ( W| DAVE ALLEN AT L A M E
a (El NIGHT GALLERY

O CD TONIGHT Moat

5:25
(D Q H OUYW OOO AND THE
STARS (T U tT H U I

(7&gt;O ABC NEWS Tf«S UORNtNO

31, (M l BOB NEWHAXT

ton
1 10

by the National Soclelv Daughters of the
American Revolution. These are the schools lor
American Indians. Baconr College In Oklahoma
and St. Mary's In South Dakota, as well as
Hillside School In Massachusetts. Hindman Set­
tlement School In Kentucky. Crossnorr School In
North Carolina. Berry College In Georgia.
Tomassee In South Carolina and Kale Duncan
Smith Sc IhniI in Alabama. These schools arc
evidence that NSDAR feci that Its soundest and
most enduring Investment is tn the education ol
children.
Mis Zoe Stanley and Mis. Mills Boyd rrported
on the State Convention which they attended
recently In Jacksonville
Refreshments with a St. Patrick's Day theme
were served to the members and guests

'JV M

TONIGHT S TV
TUESDAY,

T u e t d a y , M a rc h U . I t B J - I B

C A B B IL B IR R V

41 N. Harr 17*2
B i t *111

�Tuesday, March 1* m s

I B — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI,

A C E A U TO

RADIATOR

711 FRENCH AVE.
SANFORD
322-0235
OPEN MON.THRU FRI. M
SAT. 1:30-3

! A 5 ^ AcIS S i

AU WOM GUARANTIED
I DAT URY1Cl
mnwr
1 co/

I D /o

c r r ir m

A L A N ’S

★ SALES:

S* M A BAT

★ RENTALS: VZ

DIANE GILLMAN

ahdbrugs

m i M Dr

1$ NOW WITH

3 2 2 -5 7 8 3

HAIR NOW

WINDOWS Cuelom tied* Draper Mini or
Micro Bllnda
a
FLOORS Vinyl Kamila, Wall lo wall Carpal,
Area And Braided Ruga
WALLS Wallpaper, And Bordera By We,an,
lAILES CutlomHade TaMecloTha AndFlacamala
Sofa A (hair Sllpcoeere A Reuphofaler)
Cutlom Mada Decorator Plllorea

a

• ASHAMED OF
YOUR HARD TO
CLEAN TUB?

H

• OR JUST WANT TO
CHANGE COLOR?
Rt tea rtiarlact pat l.k *&gt;i "At rt laat kraal are at I fractiaa
at IHe teat ef riataraareat. aat aypal at apatf Start krtykl aad
tkwf far yaart la caaia

“ BATH GENIE “

r e s u r f a c in g !

CALL COLLECT (305) 295-1044

V O LK SH O P

Spec is II i ing In S«rvicB A Parti For
V.W.'l, Toyota and Datum
(Corner ind A Palmalfo)

214 S. Palmetto Ave.
SAN FO RD
PHONE

321-0120
THE

FURNITURE HOUSE

UNISCX HAIR STYLING
sri is looeme rofraato ro
siaviae aia roetiia
CUSTOMtS ACAIM

TEL 322-8711
607 W. 25th ST.

PLAYSMARTTOYS
EDUCATIONAL TOYS 6 MATERIALS
FOR PARENTS, TEACHERS A STUDENTS

"Wo Sell Education:
The Toys Just Make It Fun.”
fiPtts
l*4e ‘Ns I AM*K FV
set toAM* m

PARK SQUARE PLAZA
LONOWOOD. FL

Just In Time For SpringT*

MEW LADIES’ $ Q
DRESS SLACKS O

S econd I mage
CONSIGNMENT CLOTHING

Phone 3 2 3 -9 4 2 1
27th St. G 17-92

Sanford

UNIVERSAL
SATELLITE TV
With AH.ma.lt TV
COMPUTE SYSTEM
INSTALLED
FOR AS
EITTIE AS

IM0 NORTH HIGHWAY IT »&gt;
SOUTH OF FLEA WORLD
FIRIT TRAFFIC LIGHT
NORTH OF HIGHWAY 414ACROSS FROM HANOTWAV

$36

S
NEW-USED FURNITURE —
rmT,.
ANTIQUES
“

pH

100% FINANCING AVAILABLE
TO QUALIFIED BUYERS
to n u t (in a n K i« uictbomcs
3*7 Hwy. 17 *2 N.
CeteeWarry, FI.

831-5744

• put ro u rr b u s in k j o n thi movi •

The Runcibie
Spoon Tea Room
has a Victorian
look.

HEARING TESTS
SET FOR SANFORD/
CASSELBERRY
AREA
Electronic hearing letti anil be
(men lire at the Ofinge Heating
Ax) Ctrl 7701 S Orlando Or Sen
lord (Monday only) and 170 S
M
ary 1797 CeLvelbert) Monday
Inday Ihu *eeli rt Cltmtenun
and B Irsher cerlilted by the he
tional Heannj Aid Society Mill be
at these offices to perlorm the
teilt

Anyone .ho hat trouble heinn(
or undervtandmg n welcome to
hate atevt using the latent elec
home equipment to determine hn
or her particular loti.
(rtryone should hate a hearing
tesl at least once a year il there
&gt;i anytrouble at all heating cleat
ly [yen people now .eating a
heinng aid or those who have
been told nothing could be done
for them can Imd out aboul the
latest methods ol heinng
corrections
The life hearing tesl will be gnen
Monday thru Friday Ihis week
at theCasselberry office and Mon
day at the Sanlord location Call
the numbet below and arrange lor
an appointment or diop mat yout
convenience

u f l

UiRANGE

HEARING AID CENTERS

7701 S. OfUndo Or
Sanlord
3715707
Sanlord

3 2 2 -4 1 3 2
We Buy And Sell Top Quality
Furniture, Antiques, Appliances
And Tools
WE SERVICE ALL MODEL PORTABLE
KEROSENE HEATERS

3 2 2 -8 4 6 5
lit* w. ism si
IB AAA
»AWf&lt;?Bpatt

xm------------------------------------------------------------

(?A rfd &amp; V lt &amp; M tV l
I plrtMafll14 l hihttumml
630 Rlvtrvlew Ave.. Sanlord
ifMr Accmm Ptom14 IF 82
CuamohniI To Downtown Sanfcwdi

3 2 3 -2 0 0 5
HAPPY
ACRE5

laltal Cara Tkrte|A IT Taari Of A&lt;i
ftpecieired Nimterparlen foiioalo,, Program Pre
k.fvaVctaetaahvT t ) aAaa. Treiaounewn to«nd
trumlocal Khoort prut epecral tumnti ecli.ilr pro
gremhu AIT tee oiila

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES

BLAIR AGENCY

Personal loans are available Including
Revolving Credit Line.

CUSTOM DRAPERIES ■BEDSPREADS
WOVEN WOODS - MIMI BLIMDS - VERTICALS
CARPET - VINYL ■WALL COVERINGS

P h ilip s

,\ w \ \ x m w w x x M « w n t m

PAINT

ALSO INSURE MOBILE
HOMES, M O TO RCYCLES
HOMES. REC VEE6

4M. man iree
le tha PM Mu
rt mat

i

tit

CAU
MR! B1CMTIB, MGR.

831-3400

304 East Commercial St.
(305)323-1137
Sanford

NEW HOURS
MondayTriday 9:00-5:30
Saturday 9:00-5:30

PACKAGING
CUSTOM BOXES
FOAM MOLD
SYSUM
GIFT
WRAPPING
SHIPPING
PACKAGING
SUPPLIES
FRUIT ORDERS

INCOME TAX RETURNS
Prepared By Accountants

COLBERT &amp; SHALETT

I PAINT

Allanuc National Hank llltly
Downtown Sanlord
Call Fnr Appointment

3 2 2 -5 7 2 1
| H r 7e.illire Complete In llounr Computet Service

SUPPLIES

A COMPLETE LINE

Serving Sanford for 27 Yesrt
OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 9 5

Benjamin M o o r e Paints

"CALL BLAIR AND COMPARE"

Pen Paints

Seitkmik

323-7710 or 323-3866
2510A OAK AVE. SA N FO R D
Corner ol S Park Ava t Oak

H ivi atai*

"GRAVELY

G la ss &amp; Paint
Com pany

MAGNOLIA A V I.

322 -46 2 2

C W R IS T O ’5
B R E A K F A ST SP EC IA L

1
AT BOTH LOCATION!
1lOOt. HOMi PBIII OB
oairt. i e n c it bacon
$ m gwgw
or lAutAaa Toair a m u B * W
MFaAAi n a t a h i rw im

TRY OUR
FAMOUS
GYRO SANDWICH!

BANQUET
FACILITIES
AVAILABLE

N O W O l »R N
WATCH &amp; JEWELRY REPAIR
and PAWN
SHOP
rti/ti
mi

^

l*h . 3 2 3 - 1 3 2 7

2109 S. FRENCH AVI., SANFORD
B Special Dcxlgn • Cualnm Wntk
B Rmtorr Antlrjur .levtrlry • Mule* Kr(iait
• Clw k • Watch It, (Mir
B Ring SUIny - Slone Setting
• AoiHatul*
• Fine Jewelry Sale.

m wr ecua una •umeutaocu t »tnm •mms

. rui UN MIICAT!StlR
. FABM tBATS MAO* TO 0BMI
•CAAIt toa AU OCCASIONS
•91 TLAVOBS IC1 CHAM A TOCUBT

NOW SERVING PRIME RIB, FRESH SEAFOOD A
SHAMS ALONG WITH THESE DINNER SPECIALS

root ’1888

SAUTEED CALVES LIVEN DINNER
HAWAIIAN CHICKEN D M N U ................... *5.50
S T U N IMPERIAL (Fttti MIpkM) DINNER &gt;8.25
GRILLED STUFFED FLOUNDER DINNER . . *6.95
CLASSIC SHRIMP DINNER.................. .‘ .*7.25
SNISH KEROfl DINNER .............................. *5.95
GYRO D M N U ............................................. *5.50
UIYVIR SPECIALS FOR CMHtSTO'S C LASSK'S 01X11*
IVfO RESTAURANTS

MON. FBI. B S:M . . . SAY. IS
1/10 MILE NORTH OF 1-4
AauPakMryd CAl GeuMdCetsuahnn

lllllngs Irnm scratch
and she Is now featur­
ing a "soup and halt
w icli" liltieh lor the
llyhl cater as well as
open filer T ro p ic a l
1‘htrkrn or As|iarayus.
Tomato and Swiss with
11 a m o p e n - 1it e r d
s a n d w i c h e s , (it I a
pocket sandwiches and
others The desserts
she makes w ill I (trill
vour laxtrhuds
T o discuss arrange'
nienia lor a private*
party, please talk lo
ikillle Pearson after It
p m or Ijclon- IO :M)
a ,m
S he r a u h •
reached hv telephoning
HMMtiOl

PAC N’ SEND

Sulle 002

SAVE * 5 1 1

Family Credit Service*, Inc.

322-3315
322-7642

Dicourmc
HN
In IkrtHiraa SliMt IIIAI
319 W 130&gt; $1. SANFORD

SPEC IALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURAN CE
SR 22’a FILEO

The lea room was
opened In 1‘IHI by
Hetty .Jo McLeod and
Dorothy I’carson. who
hullt the Brow ser's
Barn as a place fur
yuests lo relax am)
hrmvse for antiques,
plants handcrafts and
view special showings
hv vlslilny artists.
Tea room hours are
10 a.in. to 4 IIO p m
Tuesday through Sal
urduy Lunch Is served
I I a.in. lu 2 30 p m
Beverages, dessertH
and snacks arc avail­
able before am! idler
lunch.
Dorothy prepares her
salads and sandwich

f-ni/ruloiul I’ut k.igintt Ami
Shipping Service
Ca«.t.«.t Da.alan latatlaa ArawB Tka Camav fra* Fail Office

We’ ll Bring The
Best In Decorating
Right To Your Home

FREE ESTIMATE
NO OBLIGATION

Wa also make 1st and 2nd mortgage loans
on Rasldentlal or Commercial Real Estate
up to $100,000.

or i a

T u r d ol I Inn pl.istlr
ItHik and uNsrmblyllne
foods liuini! nl those
I r in ieti I st- rulrrtrre ?
T.'iki* heart. thrn-'s n
chnrm liiyi u n p rr lr n lion s place nil the
h r a l e n p a I It I n
l.n tin wood l hut will
lake you hark to a
yen Her era You can
relax and enjoy con­
versation with a Irlrnd
w h ile y o u r food Is
prepared with rare lo
your order Irom choice
luyrrdlc nix
Discover The Kuncllxt«- S|M»on Tea Room
tucked away in the
I bowser's liar it liH'atrd
ill I fill W. Jeiytup Avr.,
■ill county Hoad 427
north of giost ulflce In
Lonywood's Historical
Dlsirtel. Serving yood
fresh foo&lt;l, It's a yrrai
place for lunetl with
the ylrls or a midalternoon lea break
Iroin sliop|iiny In the
i|ualnl shops located In
Hrowsrr's I lam and the
historical district

NEW &amp; USED MART
215 Sanlord Ave.

IID IIUHOBN OVM DIF A C V I M
•Complete Veterinary Service!
•Small Animate
•Diognoetic preventive medicine
denltttry A lutgety
•Specialty In Internal medicine

A D V E R TIS IN G

Runcibie Spoon Tea Room
Has Charm A n d G o o d Food

170 1 Hey 1792
Cetuiberry
H I 1776

LARRY’S

E v e n in g H e ra ld
lie-raid A d v e rtis e r

A D V E R TIS IN G

A D V E R TIS IN G

MEDC0 DISCOUNT
DRUGS

NOW OPEN AT OUR
NEW LOCATION
SEMINOLE VETERINARY
HOSPITAL

Mon Thru Frl
B AM to B PM

8 3 4 -T O Y S

851 E. S.R. 434

t 1

i- v e r y u n i t MARKUP-LOW PRICES -f- - ’
1W8
LAYAWAt-WE DCLIVER
n f W T 's
V "
i CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME
| U J.J2 -1 OPEN r DAYS A WEEK » l 10*1 f__

SANFORD

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

Cafe 322-2611

321-0741
830 6688
HWY. 17-92
SANFORD

c m a ’ ravcai

★ SERVICE: cI*r»*Tm*s

DISC.

Business
Review

J im
L a s h ’s
B lu e B o o k C a rs

□ GRAVELY OF ORLANDO
1414 S. ORANOE BLOSSOM TRAIL

ptHMiB422-7951
SALES -

S E R V IC E -

PA R T S

CHRISTO S CLASSICS

•U AD UEITBUN EI
•OACOBTIKKA
•StAFAOSHTRWOOD

air w m u m

. TABATA HENOEBSON
. S U TIC TIC H N IP M
. EAMWAT WENOKA

rear t u t rr ai
M la a la .
li»&gt; m i urn
(JOB)osa 0931

JUaaM
(BO*) SBI S4BB

EQUIPMENT SALES, RENTAL, REPAIRS
AIR, TRIPS, ADVANCED A SPECIALTY CUSSES
FREE AIR ON SUNDAY 10 A M - 4 PM
» # I t «M - T PM - MT. • AM - * PM
ifta m u north of dog n u n road

tar WE S T . F I R S T S T R E E T
SANFORD. FLA

323 3443

; o ^ o - , CHRISTO'S FAMILY
RESTAURANT
:' j i 5
'0 y =

* Taaw L A K E M A R T B i v p
L A K E M A R T FLA

323S62S

COMPLETE SCUBA CERTIFICATION

uses cuu •ran rut

•wti Katn anil •it atat)
MwaniBm
PMMWBT Wfl SOT U U

^

__________
^■ R O U TU t
B0 WOOCB COSTS

�E v e n in g H erald, Sanford. M

Business
Review

Prepared by Adverliiing Dept, of

E v e n in g H e ra ld
H e ra ld A d v e rtis e r
A D V E R TIS IN G

ru7 rOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE •

•

A D V E R T IS IN G

THE RUNCIBLE SPOON
Tta Room of B R O W S E R 'S B AR N

150 W, Jessup Ave., Longwood, Florida
fOne Bloc* Worth of P.O. on CR 427}
Lunch Served 11 A.M 3:30 P M.
Tuesday thru Saturday

A D V E R TIS IN G

831-4661

FREE SH O ES
($10 00 VALUE)

WITH A N Y EASTER
DRESS - SUIT - G O W N
Bra* 3-52 A 14V»-32Vi
Coth or lay-Aw ay Hit faitat

"Hcflrr Ualiicn On ileftrr Qualm-"

SUm &amp;
212 I

i &amp; SeOetSl
H I ST

D O W N TO W N SANFORD

3 S

W IN D O W T IN T IN G
2 Door
Dooe
Car
A Door
Car

t r 4 9 5 Small
Small
SC/195
*54
Pickup*
tCQ95 Regular
9*1
Pickup*
(Olhcrt Per Quote)

5i n3 n
9 0i 0

$4

9 0

°

10% DISCOUNT WITH THIS AD
O H oe Oood T il Match 8. 1985

Professional Car Care
3 2 3 -7 2 7 2

Comer 01 Slh 8 17 92 Stnlord

Sharon HunT (right) and Elyse Ison display some ol the Easter silk arrangements
at Flowers by Gaynelle.

Spread a lilt It- Easier joy by sending a bouquet.
plain or corsage I...... Flowers by Gaynelle. H1H S.
Sanford Avc., Sanford Hup on down anti order
your Easier llowrrs early and avoid ih&lt;‘ rush
You can retnenitier Irlends and tamlly members
I h i i I i near anti far with iM-auillul spring flowers
Mieli as F T D s arrangement in an Iris stained
glass vase or I hr Easier Basket bouquet Gaynelle
Is nlllllnlrd with several floral wire services. Just
t ail 322-5066 in order by phone and you can
charge them on your Master Charge or Visit
cards,
Guy nr lie also have a soli cuddly bunny
bugging a bud vase wllh Mower or assorted Easter
dish gardens. potted Easter lilies and azaleas.

Also
SEWING

UUD

SI WING MACHINE
8 VACUUMS

There are m a n y I k m i i i i I i i I rtew silk arrange­
ments of sp rin g flowers in attractive co n ta in ers—

hath large and sm all
II you are planning a spring ttr summer
wedding talk to Gaynelle. She does Iresh or silk
flower arrangements lot weddings at reasonable
prices and has all the trudltlonal wedding
equipment lot rental lieins available include ihc
kneeling bench, flower stands, arches, aisle cloth
Iree candelabra and wine glasses
Owner Gaynelle Hendrick has on her stall her
daughter-in-law Sharon I hint and Elysr Ison
Whether the flowers are lor a wedding, funeral
or to cheer up u friend In the hospital, you can be
assured your flowers will Is- fresh.

Balloon Magic Delivers
Fun For All Occasions
Add a little Balloon
Magic in your Easter
greeting this year. The
Easter Bunny will say
H appy Easter" for
you by delivering a
bouquet id colorful
balloons attached to an
a d u ra b le stuff r d
b u n n y , an E a s ie r
Ititskcl. nr candy.
T o top It all oil Un­
happy recipient ol I he
surprise will receive a
Polaroid phnio taken of
the Easier Bunny pres­
enting the balloons lo
him lor her)
Linda Sapp, owner of
Balloon Magle. opened
S a n fo rd 's only a lloccasion balloon de­
li v e r y b u sin e s s in
Eehrtiuy anti she has
been spreading happi­
ness ever since.
She delivers a n y ­
where in the Sanford.
Lake Mary. Longwood
and Altamonte north of
stair Road 436.
She delivers
h e liu m -f ille d lu le x
rubber or (he shiny
m llu r b a llo o n s for
birthdays, a n ­
n iv e r s a rie s , new
b ab ies, hospital or
nursing home patients,
holidays or Jusl lo say
" I ’m thinking of you.”
Balloons can Ire at­
tached to coffee mugs
or Irddy bears.
L in d a does p a rty
d e c o r a t i n g an d
supplies a clown and
balloons and parly hats
for children's turtles
She color coordinates
(he balloons to go with
your color scheme and

STOREWIDE CLEARANCE
10% to 4 0 % O F F All
Instock Merchandise

O r d e r E a ste r F lo w e rs
A t F lo w e rs By G a y n e lle

Up

ACCISSORKS

Seminole Sewing &amp; Vacuum
3820 HWY. 17 92

|305) 322 9411

Ready For Easter?
W e Have The Supplies
For All Of Your
Easter Crafts:

ZAYRE PLAZA
xhaori st«i a irai
IM 4 S M
SANFORD

• FURNITURE • BO A TS • CARS
Largt S*lac lion ol Malarial
Qualify Workmanthip
Fraa Etbmate*
Free Pickup
And Oallvary

490 N. 17-92
Nail To Sobik't Sub Shop

L O N G W O O D . FLA.
(305) 862-1600 .
Mon

'• K . 1

Frl. 1:00 AM 4 M PM

"Say It W ith Balloons"

Balloon Magic
- CALL ANYTIME -

305/323-0400
Wo Deliver Bouquet* of Balloon*
"Seven Day* a Week"
For Every Reason and Every Seaton j
P O BOX 174 SANFORD. FL J1772

S ITU coon INC w 4
s ty u AiMotmer
u .~ Im c&gt;mb r—.* 4

makes floating pool
d e c o r a l Io n s a n d
b a llo o n a rch es for
s|M-c|al occasions.
"Balloons make peo­
ple smile. It makes
them happy." Linda
said "We sell (un I
always knew there was
some kind of Job where
you could work uud
have full, loo.’*
How did she get Into
(he balloon business?
"I got laid olf of m y Job
and I needed lo do
s o m e th in g ." L in d a
explained, "In the past
I had seni balloons lo
|x-oplc and knew Han­
ford d id n 't have a

b a llo o n d e l i v e r y
service. I attended an
o p e n s r m I n a r In
Georgia In December lo
le arn e v e r y t h in g I
needed to know to start
the business, then I got
my license uud begun
advertising.
"I've gotten a real
good response." said
Linda, "but there are

some hazards The first
lime I wore rabbit out­
fit. I 1**11 Hal ou my fare
lit the parking lot when
making a delivery In a
hospital. An old man
rushed up and said.
Rabbit, rabbit, are you
() K.?’ You have to gel
used lo handling (he
b a llo o n s , th e y gel
tangled up in the wind
or float away."

4 Hna .n i i

.

Irt— hM

•tim nenct i nowc ro a
punct MAI”
IU oue COUPON M m MTCU ■ITA4MART UMPU1
MARKET

DAY &amp; NIGHT GRILL
JUNK A TIMA lt&gt;HZIG-Owner*

1300 fraaefe An. ■SaaEard

Pb. 323-8738

■ &gt;»*»* i m h i v i **0 M h u in iM to a o u a n o u COUNT*

D an M ye rs
glass , 1 0 0 ,T

FREE S P I N A L E V A L U A T I O N

111 t. fXNCN AYt
sAxfoeo ru. 12771
ilOSl-1212M0

WLJtRINC StCRALS OP HNCMD N UYU

Has The Paint Products
For All Your Needs

Fraquant Maadacftaa
Low Bach or H ip Pain
D u im a ta or Lo »a ot Slaap
Numbnaa* ol H a n d * or Faat
Naerouanaia
Nach Pain or Stiltnaaa
Arm and BNouldar Pam

Palat

( n h i t M latlaSn. Polar* LaO ps. fu

MADAME KATHERINE
PAL*-CARD-CRYSTAL BALL READING

P o o l • P re s e a t • F s l s r e

HELPFUL ADVICE ON ALL
AFFAIRS
• UP! • LOVt • BARHAM • K U t U

KEN M BUSINESS FOR 50 YEARS
M PRIVACY Of MY HOME
HOURS 8 AM - 9 PM 7 Dirt A Week
LONGWOOD

(305)
695-7005

Rm

Im Start l*t Tt*L Start * ■ Tat

M I A I M i Dade
*H T f i V k»9 M l 0*m« HMm M lM lM vl ' 01
**
, (MCI. MMrtV (OMNRNkNU; *10F*MMMKWMdO’ta*MRetl !•*«****W
« b-&lt; m mi n
*• *nuA* m mm m-&gt;*m n
10
ndiON
H3I irqismisrfl
OBfaytMHil

Phone 322-5066

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
OF CHIROPRACTIC. INC.
8 4 M 10 8 P V 1 0*«&gt; A Arrk J6S D.i,s A Year
. i«»t \ aiaaosr irvo - Sasfoho
U N IO M W IV Il 1

lil» d | &gt; a W « | i| llll

O R IA S O O t M O W

f ill

m j

] slocks norm op socmca to.

^
- MiTALt
VOTED BEST PHYSIC FOR l»M BY
CENTRAL FLORIDA SCENE HA0A2INE
IM » « « * ■ * h r M RMS Tk n M

L

m achines

VACUUMS

$ 2 £ «S

DAVE'S UPHOLSTERY]

Bunny u y s 'Hoppy Easter' with a little Balloon Magic

Wagner found i t
ho we* droned

v e t
ooiiott to c o m p o i o whan
u p In h ii t o r i e a l c o i t u m e i .

IB

Federal Deficit:
$20.8 Billion
In February

, Treat yourtrlf lo loach where the coo*
■hope dally.Enjoy old faahlon flavor of
1natural lugredlenta Individually J
i prepared In our own kitchen.

CofC 322-2611 Haw!

lu e id a y . M a rc h I t , m i

JV

OCCASION ARO BUDGET
"H* Ntkant* ComiMiool Account*"
NOW 2 LOCATIONS TO U IY I YOU
I
111 I. 1ART0*0 Art.
LAJli MARY

By Lienli G. Gullno
W ASHINGTON ( I ’PI - Amu hr r S20 M billion in
rirbt showed up on the government'* Ixxtks m
February, on the way to .1 record $2011,7 billion
deficit this fiscal year the Treasury Department
reported Monday
The accumulated deficit during the first live
months ot the fiscal year, which started Oct 1. is
$9*1.6 billion and ts running 11 7 percent ahead
of the same period last year
The red ink will have to build faster lu order to
reach the $209.7 billion deficit forecast lu the
president's budget on Feb 1 At the current rate
it would reach onlv $195.9 billion hart-h a new
record.
The five-month total lor Income tax collections
ts $139.2 billion. 9 .1 percent ahead ol last vent
Corporale Income taxes, .it SIM I In I lion are
running 34.3 percent ahead ol the same period in
llscal 1984
The cost of paving interest on the $1 7 l trillion
national debt is $74.83 billion lor the Ihc months
20,9 percent ahead ot last year
Thai Interest cost is forecast hv Ihc udnilntsirn
lion to reach $IHO .1 billion by the Sept 31) end ol
the fiscal year, a record amount ib.u by itscll
accounts tor most ot the deficit
As more annual deflcils arc added to iIn­
tuitional debt the cost ot paving interest on the
lol.il Increases
Already the Interest cost lias grown lo he Ihc
i bird largest single category ol government
expense alter sociol programs anil defense. and
is the Inslrst growing category
The five-month lol.il tor social programs is
$128.9 tillllon. H. I jM-rcrul ahead ol a year earlier
Defense In the same period cost $103.5 trillion
fi h percent ahead of the Oololier .January Iasi
year.
So far In the llscal year government receipts
lot at $290 6 billion and government cx|H*mlltutcs
•390.3 billion.

CALENDAR
T U E S D A Y . M AR CH 20
t-anlnrd AA. 5:30. closed ills, ussltm and 8
p.nt . open discussion. 1201 W. First Si
Gofn' Buggy musical prescnied hv seeund
graders at Wilson Elementary School 7 30 p m
Open to the public.
B c Ikis Club AA. noon and 5 30 p m . dosed 8
p m . step. 130 Normandy Itoail 1'.ihsc|Im-i i \
Clean Air KebosClub, noon, closed
24 Hour AA group beginners open discussion. 8
p in.. Second and Bay Sireels. Sanlortl
17-92 Group AA. 8 p in ., clus«-&lt;l. Messiah
Lutheran Church, 17 92 and Dogtrack Itu,id
Overealers Anonym ous, open. 7 30 p m
Flurltla Power A Light. 301 S Myrtle Avc
Sanford
W E D N E S D A Y . M A R C H 27
Full Gospel Business Men's Fellowship In
u-mat tonul break last mt-ciiug, ti 30 a,m.. Holiday
Imi. Stale 9o.nl -I3li and Wymorc Mood, Alia
moult- Springs For details call 650 4255
Central Florida Blood Hank Seminole Couulv
Branch. 1302 K Sr cond Si . Sanhird 9 a in to 5
p m Florida Ilospllal-Altarnonle Branch. I I a m
In 7 p in
Free Income lax help Inr retirees. !• a m lo I
p m . Community Untied Methodist Church. 285
U S Highway 17-92. CasseltM-rry Bring copies ol
Iasi tax return, forms lor the current year and
ol her rrle Vii ru materials Through April 15.
Sanlord Klwanls Club, iiimiii. Sanford Civic
Center
Casselberry Notary lirenkl.isi 7 MU a m .
Casselberry Settlor Ceitler. 2tK) N Lake Triplet
Drive.
Financial advisory service for senior clil/cns
available by apiNdtiimeni. I p hi CasseltM-rry
Settlor Center. 2iM) N Lake Trtplcl Drive, fail
831 3551. ext 264
Medicare help lor seniors. IU a m uuiil uimiii.
Cussellrerry S&lt;-iilor Center 2UO N Triplet Drive.
Cassells-rry.
Foods demonstration on
Kggunoiiilcs" by
V'allnda Heri/e. borne rconomlsl w llh Florida
Poultry Federation. 1-2:30 p in and 7 MUM p m
Seminole County Agri-Center auditorium Free to
lilt- public
T H U R S D A Y . M ARCH 28
Wine and Cheese Ix-ntJII lor Seminole Couulv
Council for Exceptional Children 5:30 m 7 p m
.J .J Whispers. Lee Road Center. Orlando. Call
Kim Prrlgo for llckcl Informal Inn ai II.m illion
Elrmeniary S c Ihk i I, 322-1984
International Tra in in g In Conim unleullon
G r e a t e r S e n t In o le C l u b ( p r e v i o u s l y
ToustmlsiresR). 7:30 p m .. Altamonte Cha|N:t
Education Building on Si.ilc Road 436. second
and fourth Thursdays
Seminole Chapter of Florida Audubon S&lt;h lety
nuetlng. 2 p m . Florida Power A Light Co.
Myrtle Avenue, Sanlord Dave Marsh. WKSH TV
meleeorologlst will speak Guests welcome
Sanford .Jayrres. 7 30 p m., Juyrre building.
50i and French. Sanford
I'healrr-ln ihe Works presents award winning
plays from Thruullngale A Ekpurosls Loop by
ilohhle Hell. 7 1 5 p m.. Orlando Science Cenlcr
Audllorlum Free lo the public
Alzheimer's Support Gnm p of Seminole Area. 7
p m ., board room of Seminole Community Menial
Health. Cranes Roost Office Park Sulle 377.
Pelican Building. A lU m o n lr Springs Cult 831
2411 or 323 2036
Central Florida Qulltet* Guild. 7 30 p m . First
tiapllst Church. 519 S Park Avc.. Sanlord
Demonstration by Helen GocttM'he cm binding
quilts. Open lo visitor*
Sanford AA. 1201 W First Si.. 5 30. closed
discussion, and 8 p.m., open, speaker.
Oviedo AA . H p.m ., closed. First Untied
Mclhodlsl Church
Overeaters Anonymous, open. 7 30 p m. Com ­
m unity United Methodist Church. Highway
17-92. Casselberry
F R ID A Y . M A R CH 29
Central Florida Klwanls Club. 7:30 a m ,
Florida Federal Savings and Loan. Stale Road
436 at 434. Altamonte Springs
Seminole Sunrise Klwanls Club. 7 u in Airport
Restaurant. Sanford.
Optimist Club of South Seminole. 7 30 a in .
Holiday Inn. Wyrnore Road. Altamonte Springs
Central Florida IBook Bank Florida IhrsplialAltamonte Branch. 601 K Altamonte Ave.. « a m
to 5 ptn.
Sanford AA Step. 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St.,
rinsed

I
Y

�* I

&lt;B— Evening Herald, Sanford, F I.

*• 4

Tutiday. March 34, ttlJ

Legal Notice

Legal Notice
K

aoenoa
m ih o l e c o u n ty

BOAR O O F
A D JU S TM E N T
‘NO T ICE OF
P U B L IC H EARING
A P R IL II, IMS
1:00 P M
T O W H O M IT M A T CONCERN
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y 0 IV E N
T H A T IN* Samlnot* County
Board of Ad|uttm*nt will con
duct * public heating *0 consider
iho following tfemi
A
B EQ UEST
FOB
S IX
M O N TH S E X TEN S IO N
I O R L A N D O SCOTISH B IT E
MO l D IN G
CORPORATION
B A I 10 11*41 MIC
A I
Agriculture To*u Reguetl foe a
Sir Months Ealontlon on o
Spoclol Eictpbon approved on
October It. IFti to permit e
Mo ionic Lodge on property
located In Sections 11 end
M I I M el itie ME corner ol
Howell Branch Rood end Grand
Avenue (O IS T II
B V A R IA N C ES
I
R IC H A R O M H OAJA
B A le I I t l ) 41V R I AAA Rail
deniiel Tone Setback Variance
Irom &gt;| ft lo 0 It Irom tide ttreet
•o allow lance lo remain at
pretently initalled an Lot If ,
Amber wood Unit I. PB V . Pg
IF. In Sac I ton H i m , eOO It
North of D'ka Road on the W ell
tide
of
Sugar wood Circle
(O IS T II
I
BRUCE
SHAPIN
B A le I I (SI I I V R I AAA Rail
denllal Tone Setback Variance
from 11 It to 0 tl on tide tlreel
lor ttockede fence on Lot eO,
Amber wood. Unit I. PB I I , Pg
IF. in Section I l l l 10, on the NW
corner of Sugar m od Circle end
Woodgteda Cove. North of Dike
Road (O IS T I)
1
W IL L IA M
J
KELLER
BA|e 1111) 40V
R IA Retl
deniiel Tone
Rear end Side
Verd Variance Irom 10 tl lo 1 II
lor
pool and Rear
Verd
Variance Irom 10 tl lo I ft for
patio root on Lot 41. Block A,
Winter Woodt. Unll 1, PB II, Pg
IF, In Section I I I I 10. on the
North tide of King Cherlet
Court, 100 tl F etl of Nottingham
Driye ID IS T II
4 H A R R Y MASSEV. JR —
B A N I I *11 17V
A I
Agriculture Tone
Lot Sue
Variance form 4I.S40 sq It to
14.M0 tq II end a lot Width
Variance Irom 110 M lo 110 II on
Lott f A
Bloch 1. Cate Villa
Malghlt, PB 10. Pg »F, In Sac I Ion
4 1 1 11, on lha Weil tide of Palm
Drive between Pine Street end
Jettem y Avenue ID IST II
1
N E IL
D
W ILLIAM S
UA (4 I I 111 NV R I Netlden
hal Tone
Lot Site variance
Irom 4400 tq It lo FIR) tq II and
Lot Width Varlanca from TO tl lo
41 tt on Lot 10, Block
t,
Long*oral Park. PB II. Pot ( 10.
In Section 10 10 X). on the South
t'de of Mer|orle Boulevard.
m ile Wetl ot longwood Lake
M a ry Hoed IDIST II
A N E IL D
W ILLIAM S
H A M IS t t ) M V
H I Hetlden
llel Tone
Lol Site Variance
Irom 1400 tq tl to IDO tq It and
Lot Width Variance Irom TO ft lo
41 II on Lol II, Bloch
I.
Longwood Perk, PB It, Pgt I 10,
In Section 10 10 10. on the South
tide ol Mer|orie Boulevard. &lt;s
mile W etl Ol Longwood Lake
M ary Hoed ID IS t 1)
f MH
UN AW EAVEH
(A lt ltllim
M 1AA Reel
•kennel
lane —
Let (ir e
Variance from I I .TOO tq II to
10,111 tq tt end Lot Width
Variance Irom »0 tt lo M To II on
Lol M. Block A Let# Brenlley
Itle t Ind Addition PB II, Pg 1.
in Section 111 If. on the North
tide ot Weilwond Drive. ' ) mile
North ol Watt Late Brenlley
Hoed (O U T II
I
CARL
H
N E ILL
It A ca I I I I I M V
R IAA Retl
deniiel Tone
Rear Yard
Variance Irom 10 II lo 14 II on
Lot 10. Palm Park. PB 11. Pg a.
in Section 1)1 It. South ol
M arly litv&lt;J el die end ol Wetl
Cadillac Drive Eatl ol Wetl
Late Brenlley Rd IDIST II
»
HOW ARD
POMP
H A it IS ( I I 41V M )A Multiple
Fa m ily
Tone
Setback
Variance Irom 100 II lo I I II on
Block I I . Wetthertlleld Second
Addition. PB II, Pgt 101 101. in
Sec lion I I I I If. on the Wetl tide
ol W tetheftlltld Avenue. I0O0 II
South ol S M 414 IDIST II
10
L L O Y D S V E N N E V IG
H A M H H I HV
A I
Agriculture Tone Hear Yard
Variance from W tl to IT tt on
Lot f. Heplel ol Bloch I. Pearl
Lake Height!. PB I. Pg (1. In
Section IT I I If. on the SW
turner ol Pitgah and Palm
Circle Wetl of Pearl Lake
Ceutewey IDIST II
II V IR G IL IU POPA ( D A V ID
PLANK
B AIt IS I I I IfV
H
IAAA
Retidenliel Tone
—
Variance lo rtplere ••tiling * tt
lence with I II lance along raar
lot lino of Loll 41 ( 44, Spring
Valtoy lhate PH If Pgt IT M
In Section 1 }] I » on tho Wotl
tide ol Morlh Cheto Court, South
ul Spring Chete Circle (O IS T
1)
M
B ETTY
RABY
—
BAi4 11(11 MV
M IAA Retl
denllal
Tore
—
Lol
Site
Variance Irom II TOO tq tl to
1000 tq It ond Lot Width
Variance Irom fO tl to SO tl on
Lol T. Sanlando Spring* Bloch
A . Tract I f PB (. Pg IF. In
Section II I I If. on Iho South
tide ol North Slrool between
Raymond ••nil 4 IDIST 4)
II
M IK E
H A TTA W A V
H AM IS ( I I IIV
R IAA Retl
denlial Tone lo l Site Variance
from 1 1,too tq It to T114 tq tt and
a Lol Width Variance Irom *0 tt
to 41 ft on Lol 11 Bloch A. Wetl
Altamonte He&lt;ghlt. Section I.
PB 10. Pg at In Section II 11 I f
on lha North tide ot Highland
Street Wetl ol Virginia St
ID IS T 41
14
LIN D A
R IE D E L
B A M IK S IIT V
R IAA Retl
deniiel Tone Lot Site Var lence
Irom II.TOO tq tl lo 1000 tq ft end

Lot width Variance Irom *o tt to
Tl tt on Let II. BNch O . Druid
Mill* Perk PB 10 Pg I I , In
Section m i If, on Itw South
tide at Banyan Drive between
Flame Ave and Orenoto Road
ID IS T 4)
I I LA U R IE A SO UO EH S
B A M t i l t ) 14V R IA Randan
Del Tone Rear end Side Y ard
Variance from 10 ft to 1 ft lor
pool encloture or the N 4} ft ot
Lot IS end the S M tl of Lot M,
Block M. Northgete. PB 10. Pgt
0104 in Section » 1 1 M . on the
Watt tide ot Glettonberry Road,
to mile North of Derbythlre
Road ID IST 41
■4
ROBERT V
W ARD
B AM l l l l l MV
R IA A Retl
dentlal Tone
Side Yard
Variance Irom 10 tt to 1 tt on Lot
I. Block 1. Indian H illt Unit I
Replat. PB 14 Pg a*. In Section
M i l » . on the South tide ot
Derbyshire Road. 100 II Watt ot
Kewanee Trail IDIST 4 )
IT SARAH F B R A D L E Y —
BA la-IS 111 MV
H I Retlden
llel Tone - Lot Site Variance
Irom 1400 tq It lo WOO tq t l; and
Lot Width Variance from TO tt to
10 tt on Lot 1. Bloch T. Lockhart
S/Q. PB 1. Pg TO. In Saction
IS If 10. on the Eatl tide ol
Airport Bird M tl South of lltti
Street (O IST II
11 THOMAS QUINN, A G E N T
B AM H i l l IIV R I Retlden
llel Tone
Lot Sue Variance
Irom *400 tq ft to 4T04 1 tq ft,
Lot Width Variance from TO ft to
SI Hi end Side Street Variance
Irom IS ft lo tO II on Lot II.
Parkview. PB 1. Pg I f , In
Section I » M on the NW cor
ner of Ilth Street end Perh
Avenue IDIST Jl
C
SPECIAL
EXCEP
T IONS MOBILE
H OM E
A P P L IC A T IO N S / A -I
A G R IC U L TU R E TONE
I M IC H AEL P TC H E B A N O F F
B A M IS IS) SITE
To place a
mobile home an Lot G 10. lahe
Harney Eilatet, In Section
II M M, on SW comer ot Settler*
Loop end Winona Drive ID IS T
I)
1
DANIEL
H URLEV
H A U IS 111 SITE
To plate a
mobile home on Lot H I , O P
Swope Land Company's Plat of
Blech Hammock. PB 1, Pgt
110 III, In lot lion M M I I. on
W ell tide of Orange Street. 1*00
tt North ol Howard Avenue
ID IS T l|
I
JOANNE
W IL S E V
HAI4 III1 I4 1 TE
To place a
mobile home on W to ol Lot 1(1.
0 P Swope Land Company'*
Addition lo Black Hammock. PB
1. Pg 110. in Section 14 10 11. on
the Eatl tide ol Oklahoma
Streei. to mile North of Howard
Avenue IDIST I)
4
LY N N
O
CONNER
BA 14 l l l l l alTE
T o plate a
mobile home (R E N E W A L ! on
the N 100 B ot E ISO ft ot Lot IA.
Van Actdaiv Otborne Addition
to Black Hammock. PH I. Pg II,
In Saction ) II II. on lha Wetl
tide of CR 4lf, to mile North ol
ArtetleAvenue IDIST 1)
5 B O B BY J H EY * J U L IA L
SM ITH
BAM l l l l l STTE
To
place a mobile home IR E
N E W A L I on Lot II. Woodland
E tla itt, In Section to I I 11 on
the South tide of Hod Ember
Hoed. N mile W ttl ol Lockwood
Hoed IDIST II
a
TH AVIS
M
W EST
B A t a li m s a t E
To place e
mwblle heme I R t N B W A l l an
lo t
4T
Wnrvftend
(tltlv i
IPercel IMl In Section 14 11 Jl
and Section II &gt;1 11, on the Wetl
tide ot Scrub Oak Tra il, one
mile W ftl ol Lockwood Road
end TOO B South ot Red Ember
Hoed IDIST II
1
ROY
T R O B E R TS
B A i 4 ISIS) t i f f
To place a
mobile home on Lot a. Joe E
Johntlon Survey, Block 0 ol
D R Mitchell Survey of lha
Levy Grant PB I, Pg 1. Lett
NW 100 ■ WO tt In Section
I 11 M 400 B W ftl ol Tuthawille
Hoad on the South tide of S R
4I» and 414 IDIST II
JO ANN H A C K E TT A JO H N
S HUGGIN S BAM l l l l l 4TTE
To place a mobile home on the
W it ot Lot 114 plut the N 11 ft ol
the E*&gt; ot Lot lie. Van A rtdalt
Hiotarege Company t Addition
lo Black Hammock, PIS I. Pg ll ,
In Satlion 111)1, on the Watt
tide of Otiahoma Street 1000 II
South ol Florida Avenue ID IS T
SI
f
RAYM OND
E
M O SER
ISAM ISIS! 41TE To piece e
mobile home on Lol 1. Otceoia
Blutf South, in Section I W Jl, on
Waccette Drive. |u*1 E a tl ol
Bow Legt Trail and South ot
Otceoia Hoad IDIST 11
10 TM O M Ai EARL PARSONS
B A M l l l l l 14TE To piece a
mobile home on Lot IF, Otceoia
Blull South. In Sec Horn l end
I I W 11, on the South tide ot
Wilhelecochet Road. to mile
South ot Otceoia Road ID IS T
11
II
JAM ES
N ELM S
BAM l l l l l 4f ! E
To place a
mobile home on the N 'y ol N W '«
ol NW * of SWto ol Section
4 M U . on the E a tl tide ot
Retreal Road P* mile* Watt of
Mullet Late Park Hoed (D IS T
I)
11
TRACY
P O W ER S
B AM IS IS) SITE
To piece e
mobile home on Lol Tl. Otceoia
Acre* In Set ban f M 11, North
ot Oueoi* Hoed ID IS T 11
I)
W ILLIAM
H AR R IS O N
BAM ISIS) 40TE
To palca a
mobile home on the Ioilowing
properly From the NW corner
ot S e ^ ol IWto ol Section
f M i l . run 1 00 degt IS M
E
441 0 It lor 1*0B. thence tun N If
degt 4144 E 44! 1) tt, thence S
00 degt IS M ' E 411*1 tt to N
H/W ot O utola Road thence N
I I degt M U W H O tt. thence
N 00 d&gt;gt IS M W 111 If tl
thence N Tl d*gt M Oi W AM ft
tt. thence N 00 degt IS M W
It ! as tt te POB, totaled on the
Norm tide ot Oicoole Road, one
m ile Norlhot S R 44 ID IS T 1)
M JO E A BAD DY A B E T T Y l
ANDREW S - B A M 11 A ll SITE

Doonesbury

To piece a mobile home an Lot
J l. Otceoia Acres In Section
f W tl. on the E e tt tide ot
Shawnee Trail, one mile Watt ot
O k ao'i Hoed ID IS T 51
11
P ATR IC K
HRABOSKY
- B A M 111!) 17TE To placo •
mobile home on Lot IT. Otceoia
Woodt
lit Sec bone ]
end
II M M . on the North tide of
O k tola Road |utt Watt ot Flint
Tran ID IST !&gt;
t*
RUSSEL
E
BARBER
-M IS IS it S T E
To pleco a
mobile home on Lot O 11. Let*
Horner Ettatet. In Section
10 M » . located to mule South ot
Setber'i Loop on Iho Norm tide
ot Stafford Trail ID IS T 11
IT
R O BER T
O
BROWN
- B A M 1) 1)1 41TE
To piece e
mobile home (R E N E W A L ) on
Lot F 14. lake Met nay Estates,
in Secliont lOAII M U . off Os
cooleRoed ID IS T tl
11 C LARENCE J M f T I L E R
BAM IS Bit 44TE
To place a
mobile home on Lot If. Sominolo
E tltN t. Phase 1. In Section
U If If, on Mellord Drlvo
IDIST 1)
If
ROY
G
M EN R ICK S
BAM l l l l l 44TE
To pleco a
mobile home on Lot 4. Yankee
Late $/D. PB f, Pg ft. In
Sec I ion
la If If.
on
Weil
Highway 44 ol Yen*** Lake
(D IS T II
M CHARLES R DO N ALD SO N
B A It I I I ! ) If T E
To place 4
mobile home on the W M l 44 tl
ot Lot 141 and W M l 44 ft of S 'l
ol Lot 144. Eureka Hammock.
PB I. Pg lit, in Section 14 M M.
on Itw North tide ot Myrtle
Slriel. approximately *00 ft
Wetl ol Sen lord Avenue (O IS T
1)
11
MARY
TO B IN
-B A M l l l l l W TE
To piece e
mobile home (R E N E W A L ) on
Iho following property Beg Inn
ing all II tt W ot SE corner of
SW'* ol NW'* of Soction 1 M 11.
end on S lino of aald N W 1*.
continue W e distance ol l i t It
ihenct N 111 04 II, (hence E 114
It. Ihenct S 7?) M II lo POB letl
S 11 B tor road r /w of Marquette
Avenue Further deterihed at on
the Norlh tide ol Merquelte
Avenue. 1*0 ft E a tl ol Ohio
Avenuo IDIST !|
D
SPECIAL
EXCEP
TIO NS'O TM ER
1
BAKER
FAR M S.
INC
BAM l l l l l ITE
C 1 Com
merdel l one To ollow intielle
lion ot get and an accessory to e
convenience Here on (he loilow
ing deurlbed property Th* N
TOO It ol SEto Ol th* S E '« ol
Section 11 M M , lying South of
County Roed 41T. Io n iho North
M0 tl ol Iho Eett 110 tt of the
S E '« el the SE '* end lets that
portion ot the tub|ecl property
the)
will
be
needed
tor
right of way lor luture Interior
lion improvement*
Further
deKrlbed at located el the
lunclton ol CR 4]T and Sanford
Avenue (D IS T 1)
I
R O LLING H IL L S G O LF
C LUB. INC - H A U l| (SI H E
R IAA Single Fam ily lone To
allow contlrucllon ot a Malnle
nance Facility on Goll Course
Property other then at present
location on lha following de
tcnbtd property A port Ion ot
T recti 11 end U . Sanlando
Spring* Piet Book 1 . Paget
I I ll Commence el the SW
corner ol the SW’* ot th* SW V
ol Section 1 11 1* Run N 11 tl to
the northerly right at way at
Norm si.**i for P O B Continue
N If 1* It to north right of wey
line ot Lenwood A y r
Run N
along right ot way IM a] tl NE
40 Degt U T f l tt SE 44 Degt
JM tl II NW along right ol way
1(4)4 tl lo POB Further da
scribed et being located North
ot Intersection ol North Street
and Bernard Street (O IS T 41
1
H EN R Y
HAROY
B A It 11(1) H E
A I
Agriculture lone
To permit a
Matall landscape Plant Nursery
on th* lellowlng d e K rlb e d pro
petty: The NW'* ot the N W '. ot
th* NW'* ol Section H I M
Further d e K rlb e d at located el
th* South E etl corn*, of
Char loti* Street
end
Lake
Howell Hoad ID IS T 4)
4
JAN C Y
KENNEL
U A i 4 11 (11 HE
At
Agriculture tono
To allow
Veterinarian lo Practice In the
earning Kennel operabon on th*
following deKrlbed property
Lol 4, E G Towntendt Sub
division, PB 1. Pg 41 of Section
1111 11 Further deter Itied et on
lb* south tide ol SR 414 |utt wetl
olSIarwoodDrive (D IS T II
1 W ILLIA M K G A IT H E R
BAM IS (11 H E
At
Agriculture Ion*
To allow
operabon ol an Associated
Children'!
House
Mon
H i tew Method Kindergarten on
th* (ol lowing deKrlbed pro
petty Lot 4 W ot Tutkewille
Need tnd Vacated Street on
Watt Tutkewlb* Road PB I. Pg
I. in Saction 4 1111 Furthar
described et being on th* SW
corner ol Natures Way and
Tutkewille Roed ID IS T 1)
4
CARL
H A R M E L IN O
B AIt 11(11 ME
R l Single
Family Residential lone
Hi
quest a conditional uto lor Day
Nurtery on th* tollowlng da
K 'lb td property Lott tl end I]
Block A. Fern Perk. PB 1. Pg
II, in Section ( 11 M Further
deKrlbed t t being totaled on
rh* North tide ot Lotus Circle
and immediately *d| event to the
Norm tide ol Concord Drive, &gt;t
mile E ot Mwy l l f ! I OIST a)
E APPROVAL O F M IN U T E S
I Marcg t( l t d
Regular
Meeting
Tmt public hearing will be
held in Room WHO el th*
Seminole County Service* Build
ing 11(1 E Flr*t Street San
lord, Floe Ida. on April 11. IMS
*1 ! 00 P M , or a* toon thereat
ter at pottibie
Written comment* bled with
(he lend management Director
will be considered Per torn ap
peering at the public hearing
will be heard Hearing* may be
continued Bern time to time at

found neceatery Further detent
available by colling m i l l .
E*l 441
Persons are advised that, it
(hoy decide ** oppeel any d*
cltlon made et m i l hearing, they
will need e record ot Iho pro
reading*, and. for tuch purpose,
they m*y need to in u r e thel e
verbehm record et tho proceed
mgt It mad* which record
Includes the testimony end m
done* Upon which th* appeal IS
to be based, per Section M* (10S
Fiar id* Statutes
S EM INO LE C O U N T Y
BOARD O F
A D JU S T M E N T
BY R O GER P E R R A .
CHAIRM AN
Publish March M . IMS
PC D 1)4_______
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice ll hereby given thel w*
ere engaged in but mess at MSI
Montgomery Rood Attemoni*
Springs. S em ino le County,
Florid* under the fictitious
name ot M A L E E L E G A N C E ,
and that w* Intend lo regular
teid name with lha Clerk ol the
Circuit Court. Seminot* County.
F tor-da in accordance with the
provition* ol tho FlctlllOWk
Nam* Slatuiek. to w it Section
(4) Of Florid* Statute* IMF
M ALE E L E G A N C E . INC
By John C Ridgeway
Pres
By Meriem P Ridgeway
Publish March 1 11, If, » . IMS
O ED tl

FICTITIOUSNAME
Nolle* It hereby given thel I
am engaged In business at I0t*
E AUamonte O r , Allamonl*
Springs, S em ino le County,
Florida 17X01 under (he fictitious
name ol A L T A M O N T E V E TE R
INARV H O S P ITA L , end thel w*
intend lo register teid name
with me Clerk ot th* Circuit
Court. Seminole County, Florid*
In accordance with the pro
vltiont of the Fictitious Nam*
Statutes. *o wit Section (4) Of
Florid*Statutes IfS!
!(/ Kenneth E Ac re. Sr .
0 V M
Publish March 1 11. If, H IMS
DEDH
________
C IT Y OF
LONGW OOD, FLO R ID A
N O T IC E OF
P U B LIC M E A R IN O
TO C O N S ID E R
A D O P TIO N OF
PROPOSE D O R D IN A N C E
TO W HOM IT M A Y CONCER N
NO TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
by Ih* C it y ot Longwood.
Florida, thel the City Com
mission will hold e public hear
mg to consider enactment ol
Ordinance No a il. entitled
AN O R D IN A N C E OF THE
C IT Y OF L O N G W O O D
FLO R ID A. A M F N D IN G ORDI
NANCE NO efS. B E IN G THE
C O M P R E H E N S IV E lO N IN G
O R D IN AN CE O F TH E C IT Y
BV R E V IS IN G S E C T IO N Ml
D E F IN ITIO N S IS T R U C T U R E I
BY A M E N D IN G S E C O N D
SEN TEN C E
TO OE LE TE
WORDS " B U T D O E S NOT
IN C LU D E U N R O O F E D SUR
F A C E S P R E P A R E D FO R
SPORTS", P R O V ID IN G FOR
S E P A R A B IL ITY C O N F L IC T S
A N O E F F E C T IV E D A TE
Said Ordinance w et pieced on
lirtl reading on kRarth II, IMS,
end Ih* Clly Commission will
consider same ter tmel petteg*
and adoption after the public
hearing, which will be held In
the city Hell, IIS Wat I Warren
A v e , Longwood. Florida on
Monday, the im day ot April.
IMS. partial may appear and be
heard with respect to th* pro
posed Ordinance Th u hearing
may be continued from time to
lime until hnal act ton it laken
by Ih* Clly Commission
A copy ol Ih* proposed Ordl
nance It potted *1 th* City Melt,
longwood Florida, and copies
are on tile with In* Clerk ol th*
City and lama may be impeded
by ih* public
A taped record ol this meeting
Is mad* by th* City tor Its
convenience This record may
not constitute an adequate re
cord tor purpose* ot appeal Irom
e decision mad* by the Com
mission with rasped ta lha
loregoing matter Anr per ton
wishing to ensure that an ada
quel* record ol the proceeding!
tt maintained to* appellate
purposes it advited to make the
necessary arrangements at hit
or her own t ■pen tv
Date this lln d day ol March.
A O IMS
C IT Y O F LO NG W O O O
Ooneld L. Terry
City Clerk
Publish March M i April ],
IM )

THE
CLASSIFIEDS

C IR C U IT C O U R T lE M I H O l t
C O U N TY . F L O R ID A
CASE 4 (4411 CA-41 K
Codsco Inc . etc . Plaintiff
vs
Reginald C Smith end Llndd
Smith d/b'a Amarican Airco
S4rvlcas, Defendant
C IR C U IT C O U R TO R A N G E
C O U N TY . F L O R ID A
CASE* C l M 1114
R A R Supply Company. Inc . a
Florida corporation, Plaintltf
vl
Reginald C Smith d -V e Amen
can Airco SarvKot and Linda C
Smith Defendant
N O TIC E O F S H E R IF F 'S SALE
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
that by virtu* ot that certain
Writ of Elocution, t t ttyled
above, end more pemtuledy
that certain Writ of Elocution
issued out o* end under th* tael
ot the CtrcuBCaurl at Orange
County, Flo*Ida. upon a final
judgem ent rendered In lha
aloretaid court on lha (th day ot
October, A O IMA. In that err
tain case entitled R i R Supply
Company. Inc C Smith, Plain
tltl, — v l - Reginald C Smith
d ib 'a American Airco Sarvlcot
and Linda Smith. Defendant
which aforesaid Writ ot E*o&lt;u
Hon was delivered to me et
Sherlll ot Somlnola County,
Florida, end I hove levied upon
tho following described property
owned by Reginald C i Linde
M Smith, said property being
located In Seminot* County.
F lor Ida. more particularly d*
K ribed et follows
Lot 141 Barclay Woodt See
ond Addition, according lo the
Piet thereof et recorded in Piet
Book 11, Peg# t l , Public Re
c e rd i ot Seminot* County,
Florida
and the undersigned as Sherlll
of Seminole County, Florida
will *1 It 00 A M on th* l!th
day ot M arch. A D 'M l, otter
lor tele end tell to th* highest
bidder. FO R CASH, lubiect to
any end etl **ntlng Hint, et th*
Front (West) Door at th* ttept
ot the Sominolo County Court
house in Sentord. Florida, the
above deKrlbed Reel property
That la id tale is being mad*
to satisfy th* lerm t of said Writ
ol E locution
John E Polk. Sheriff
Sominolo County. Florida
To bo advertitod March 1. tl. If,
14 with the ta ir on March 11,
IM l
OE J 41
___
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Notice It hereby given that we
are engaged In but'nest at 111
Grovewood Avenue. Sentord
Sam mol* County. Florida 11! ) 1
under th* Bctltious name ol
CDC'S. end that I Intend lo
register said name with the
C lerk at th* Circuit Court,
Seminole County. Ftorid* in
ere or dene* with th* provisions
ol Ih* Fictlttout Name Statutes
to wit
Section 44) 04 Florida
Statute) I f ) !
!k/ C Dennit Cochran
I t Joann* Cochran
Publish March 11. 1* » ( April
1 IM l
D I D FI
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice It hereby givrn that f
am engaged In business at D M
M i c h e ll e L e n * . S a n fo rd
Seminole County. Florid* J1TII
under the fictitious name ol
W O N D E R W O O O FARMS, end
that I i n l a n d la regular sa d
name with the ClarS ot Use
Circuit Court. Seminot* County,
Florida In accordance with th*
provisions ol th* Fictitious
Nem* Statutes, to wit Section
tel 0* Florida Statutes 1*1!
t AAerthaE Entor
Publish March 14 A April 1. t.
14. IMS
D E O IF)
N O I K l OF I H E R I F F ’l l A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that by virtue ot thel certain
Writ ol Elocution issued out ot
end under th* tael ot th* Circuit
C o u r t o l O ra n g e C o u n ty,
Florida, upon a ttnal ludgement
rendered In th* etoreuid court
on th* lath day ot Jenutry. A D
i n ) . In thel certain cet* *n
titled Equipment Wholesalers.
Inc . etc , P le in lltf. — v t Bench M ark Contractors ot
Florida, In* , etc , Defendant,
which aforesaid Writ ol E&gt;*cu
bon was delivered lo me et
Shorltt ol Sominolo County.
Florida, and I have levied upon
lha tollowlng deurlbed property
owned by Bench M«rk Con
tractors ol Florida, Inc , said
p r o p e r ly be in g located In
Seminot* Ceunty. Florida, more
p a r t i c u l a r l y described et
lol lows
O n * IfF S F lt e lt l a r ,
y e l l o w ,'b l a c k . 1 0 t
F D fS E O U IU ra . On* John Doero
Bubdocor. yellow ID • 11*010
being stored at Habib A Sent.
Santoed, Florida
end th* undersigned *t Sherilt
ol Sominolo County. Florida
will t i l l 00 A W on th* Dth
day ol M arch. A D IMS. ob*&gt;
lor tala and tall to Ih* higtwti
bidder tor cash Subled to any
end *11 e iltb n g lelnt. at th*
Front I West I Door *1 Iho ti«p t
of tho Seminole County Court
house in Sentord. Florid* th*
above d*Krit»*d pertenel pro
party
That said sal* Is being mad*
to satisfy ih* terms of sa&lt;d Writ
ot E locution
JohnE Pots. Sherd!
Seminole County. Florida
To be advertised Merck 1. t). If.
la. with th* sal* on March )!.
IMS
D E O (4

CALL
3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

71— H « l p W a n t e d

C LA SSIFIE D A D S
Sem inole

O rla n d o * Winter Park

322-2611

TfpiBI

SEWING MACHINE
OPERATORS

7 consocutif t timoi 52C a I
10 cfonocRthK trusts 46C a I
Contract Ratff Available
3 Lines Mmimom

Eiaartoncad tawing machine
•aerator* wanted ell epert
bent open W t w ill tret*
(yielded applicants In eur
advanced technlqM t. plut.
attar preh alien ary parted,
great benefits et 1 paid hell
days and h es p ifa llia tla n .
Apply B to J Monday thru
Friday at 1)40 OW Lake Mary
Rd . Santordi or call 111-Mid

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

17— C e m e te ry a n d
C ry p ts

21 — P e r s o n a ls
I wti not be reioentibf* lor en^
debts Incurred by anyone
other then myted *s of March
If, IM l Arveslgr Hailey
New
Credd
Cerdi No on#
'e lu te d V lte /M e tle rca rd
Call I ( ( I f ) iaf D ili

Mary Kay CetmeNct
F re t Complimentary Facials
Per * Pewal SprOog Laah. l » * * l l
S P R IN G 11 TH E T IM E T O
B U I L D B IG a U S I N E S !
TH R O U G H L IT T L E ADS)

2 5 — S p e c ia l N o t ic e s

61— Money to Lend
Business Capital 1)0 OOP to
I ; 000 000 end over P O Bo*
H I ) Winter Pk Fla H lfC

71— Help Wanted
Insfabert
Need 4 ImmediaftylIt
Any aiparinca with file or m lr
ror helpful to Install marble
fl*lures Permanent position
Never* feel

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
7 741341

Balloon Moglc
101 1110400
SEND A G I F T
W ITH A L I F T !

_______BALLOON
_____ BOUQUETS
f

1 9f r y

r—

Delieff»
tvtey m i m w

CELEB HATE
A BIRTH!
Mr. Itork't visit
m*S*t Nr • llfellm t
ot moment*, gilti 4 ell I
____ _________ Cell Undo m o i l !
• M A R Y KAY COSM ETICS •
Skin car* and color lleir
C O N N I t .............. ........... m IM l

★
NOW
That we have

your
attention
A t * clettdred *dr*rtit*r in Ih*
E V E N IN G H E R A L D .
IN C R E A S E the R E A D E R S H IP
et yeur * d (y M in i starst
Give t v r salat r tpt a call et

322-2611
Tw o eirllro ticket* Orlando to
Grand Rapids. Michigan. SM
each Must be used April a
Cell m (471

27— N u rs e ry &amp;
C h ild C a r e
Bebytlfter needed weekdays.
1 yr old Reference* Let*
M e ry eree n ) ( l l ( ___________
K ip mother with bebytit in my
hem* lolenft I* teddlert
la nt*r*area 111 1(14
Per lander, laving 4 qualify
child cere, call A Child s
World m 4*14

3 3 - R e a l E s ta te
C o u rs e s

LA B O R E R S Strong reliable
general laborers needed Im
medielelr Older**! locations
Phon* end trentporfeflon e
mutt Never a fee Apply

KELLY SERVICES
AVO N E A R R IN O l W O W III
O P E N T E R R IT O R IE S N O W III
___ III 111)4* 111 041*
A C C O U N TS R E C E IV A B L E
C L E R K Strong background In
paymtnt potting to computer
ly tle m , with em p he tlt on
proof process Musi be well
orgenited with good clerical
ik lllt Interested candidal*
should contact Hercer Aluml
Acrylic Applicators needed to
apply protective coating on
cars, boats end planes IS to
111 per hour We train For
wort In Sanford area cell
Tern p e l l] see f i l l

.

aaeaaaamiMe (ve. m-iMd
Keyes at Florida Inc
)* Years Itperiencef

Shopping For h
New Or Used Car?

Evening Herald
I H W i l l Irearl Israot
llorMa
tS M ill

to

Large company moving Into
beautiful new olbces needs
add several clerks Type 11
WPM General otbc* eiperl
enc* required Permanent
positions Never* Feel

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL

774-1341

N O T IC E

B A K E R W A N T E D lor B ill
Knapp s Commissary in San
lord Send letter ol Interest lo
B ill Knapps C om m issary.
IMS Silver Lake Drive, alien
_bon Jo* Grestlnl______ _
Bookkeeper Receptionist
AAelur*. Mperienced individual
to* boo***p&lt;ng through linen
d e l Payroll. Fadarel Deposit.
Q uarterly and Annuel Re
port* W i t. Accounts Payable
and Receivable, audit answer
telephono, correspondence
Sentord Electric Company
A ttn
Ed D o m b ro w s k l
Mail cover toller or resume with
references to Bee If*. C'O
Sentord Herald. P O Bee
141F, Sentord. FI T2TT7 141!
C L A R K A P P A R E L , let* Old
l4 k * Mery Road Unit IM.
Lake M ary, needs eeperl
•need sewing machine opera
tors )11 1(10
Cook needed to prepare Wed
nesder night suppers at local
church lor leg people Lunch
room tiperlenc* helpful Cell
W 4B 4I______________________
Debarv Manor now hiring LPN
or RN tor day shut Apply ad
N Highway IF *7. or call
*44 *4)4
Full and pa't time positions now
available Hours can b* Meal
ble lor school or Ind |ob
Banetits available alter quell
tying Apply In person at
R A X * 1000 W H w y 414.
It
F u ll-Perl time telephone an
(waring secretary* Eepert
enc* p r e fe r re d , b ut not
required Cell n &gt; SOS*__________
OR BOOR Y L U M B E R ■M i l l
Agresslvo. lemlly owned homo
cenltr has mad* an opening
tor a soles frame* Must be
egretiiv*. ambitious, willing
to toern and lake responsiblll
ty Also need port time c*
shier ond stock person Call
tor appointment
ask ter
Alvin Kilpatrick Coll M l OSOO

■ IN O O

HELP WANTED:
O F F IC E H E L P no experience
needed Good storting par
Full lime Cell 4 ! ( 4)00
W ORK

KNIGHTS OF
COLUMBUS
is m

oaa aw

,

taw see

THURSOAT 7 P.M.
SUNDAY 1 P H
GAMES U S I 4 B I M
JAC K P O T U 3 0

H M P l£ SHALOM

■ IN O O
Satnrday M l P.M.
Wednesday ( 4J P.M.

125 •535 - ISO

2 5250 Uckpgts
1745 IRuoat Btvd
iCareee PrsvM iau RM .I

DfttMA, Fl

KIWANIS CLUB
OF C A S S U M M Y
F1»4T NMKT 7 rm
U S U 4 IIH
12) USd UCKPdTS

Im

medial* Will train Also Gen
ereHebartrs sto 4XX)

(fS B U l

C U S TO M E R G R E E T E R
will
•ully ram Good pay Start
now Full lime 4!t 4100
TR U C K DR IVER S- total or tong
haul With or w ithout rig
Eecebontpoy Cell 4to 4)00
C O M P U TER O P E R A TO R S
Good Pay Scetot Secure post
bens Cell 4 !t 4100
TR A D E S M E N
a ll phases
Eeceilont poy Start right
awey all 4100

“"(MS

PART TIME HELP
E icebent opportunity lor the
future, l i t l t d _________
N U R S E 'S A ID E S W A N T E D
Apply In person. Lekevtow
Nurtmg Cantor, fl* E Second
Street, Sentord ____________
NURSE'S A IO C 1 A HOUSE
K E E P E R S W A N T E D Apply
In per yon Lekevlew Nursing
Center. ( I f E Second Streef.
Sentord
_______ _
O F F IC E C LER K S

A V O N Hiring Smiling F aces I
Full A pt time. Cell tmmedi
slaty I i n Sfiaer l l l j a n

W AREHOUSE
ThrnkIng el gening a
Reel Eilat* Llrvntef
Jeiw »• i t ear Career Night
April lath f ie f PM
Wa alt** Free Tuffieit
end cenfmreut Tratnmgl
Cell Owker Vicky ter d e ltilt

L IV E IN H O U S E K E E P E R
COOK
For rtbred Lake Mary couple
Beautiful home Wile needs
tom* personal ass,stance
Nonsmoker Must drive, ter
a vailab le
P riv e t* liv in g
quarter* 1100 per month Ref
•fences required I H I J)**
or H I BBS*___________________
Nation t largest chain ot lemlly
tun censors hat Immediate
opening* lo r * m anager
trainee p rim a rily nltet A
weekends Must be mature,
neel in appearance A bond*
ble Phone tor epp’t 111 4*0 )

REEDED:

660-2339

/
*

....._ j i ) - m f i

Part tli

CLASSIFIED DEPT
RATES
1 1ties# .................... 67C a I
HOURS
3 conioeuttf* times 61C » I

law can a/eaya Find Ih*
heal deafa in Ih* Evening
Herald a d e t a in e d M e llo n
Reed F rM d jr’a E ve n in g Hoto!4
fee Ih* Beal eefeeften*

f t f 9

U fM H o w t f w t - io n #

831-9993

• : 3 0 A M . 5 :3 0 P.M .
M O N D AY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Moon

H O U S E P A R E N T S - Christian
shelter tor abused 4 troubled
teens le t SOW____________ __

Tirade! lob Hunt tag)
Coll Future*, Ihoy coohslpl
They hare I a r t to epea n u t
many with no at per tone a
aatdad. Call tor Inlet
(F B 4 M

fee to be tododad to
But HtUeg ((M

E v e n in g

Ik-mid

CLASSIFIED

D E P A R TM E N T
JJJ2 4 U

�71-H elp Wanted

?3 -R o o m s for Rent

P a r t lim e
a o l* e n t r y
bookkeeping IBM PC aeperi
once required Call Harriett
C op* H i OHt
________

SANFORD Furnursed room* by
the week Reasonable r#t*»
Me d service Cell M l *50)
S?PM «l S Palmetto Aye
SANFO R D. Reet weekly A
Monthly rate* U W Inc • «
SOOOek
Adult* I A ll 740)

S A LE S M A N A G E R
Central Florida* largest Real
Ettel* magaime erpond’ng
Into Seminole end W Orange
County Must be willing to call
on live realtor* a day Salary
p lu * c t m m l i i l o n C a l l
I *o&lt; I see U M o r i i o s i u ; Mot
Sanford manufacturer need*
qualified TIG , M IG and ARC
welder with fabrication and
layout experience Only tape
rle n c e d need a p p ly
)* t
R u d d e r C ir c le . S a n f o rd
Airport IndmtrlQl Parti_______

SECRETARY R EC EP TIO N IST
P'ush office General ellice
skills Type *0 * P M Phone*
Permanent position Never a
tee'

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL

774-1341

Secretary-Typist
longwood Area conitructlon
otlice Accurate typist In
eluding sniw enng phone*
and general otfica dute* Call
Ala 4* 10. ( 20 to 10 JO for apt
Mon thru Fri________________
SHIPPING R E C E IV IN G
Reliable strong with good at
titude Permanent and tempo
rary position* Never a feel

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL

774-1341
SUN S TATE LA N D S C A P IN G
L if t n

&amp; Mtiirnff-njiPSEt GroufXt

per ton n w did C«H
005?
Super
m jfktt
eiperi«nced
caihitr Afternoon Ihlfl and
wq*fa«*M$ft A pply in per ion
Park and Shop ?Sth and Park
See manajar______ _____
Telephone Pwcepfionitt
and
ty p llt
I I SO # • « ! , p lu s
ho%p1til(|alion and rttlremenf
CaU M 2
fpr 'Mffvi+gg
Van Ori wtf
Day frihalrntfif
worker Full fim* potlfion.
d e a li n g w l k l h c h r o n i c
ptyoatric. disabled and et
dtf ly Cali peridwwtl I I I 241 1
•HteJO^JOAM
W a ilre tt wanfad A pply in
perkon only, between j and 4

P M . Rip Ranch. 2S4S S
French A y t ._________________
W A N TE D 7 phone solicitors
F I#* Ib I• hours A p p ly •«
A%ftociatad Contractor* 7200
F rernh A*«

WE WANT YOU!
Secretaries- Bookkeepers
Tjpiili Ori«rs Salespeople

AAA EMPLOYMENT
Hn All Types of Job*
Call

323-5176
G E N E R A L O F F IC E
to STM
All around * office kAlllt H
needed here F illn g / llg h t
phono work
C a s u a l at
merkpherf f
ACCTS REC C L E R K .... lift# ♦
Good with (IfurotT It the answer
is &gt;ot thi* company noedt
you now Accounting with
iipnioffice SkiJIft
R E C E P T IO N IS T
SIM a
Humbly personality g#»» you thlt
on*' Phono* word procotting
Stable company
F IL E CLERK
tit* ♦
Th l* prole%*ional c om p any
noodi High energy per ton to
l i l t and answ er phono*
BoneMt and advancement I

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

Cell Monike
dey 17) 40*1

MARE Y O U R S E L F A T HOME
In e completely tvrnlshed studio
epertment Single story living
et It* belt Sound controlled
wells Built In bootee set de
cor welt covering Also
1
Bdrm available
Flexible leases
Senior Citnen* discount
Sanford Court Apartments
___________ M l 1 1 0 1 ________
T w o b e d ro o m fu rn is h e d
apartment USO mo plus U00
Sit Cell M l *644
1 bdrm , living room, kitchen,
c a rp e t, e lr
No pets or
children Attar 6 I I ) T46)______

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
BAMBOO COVC A PTS
&gt;MC Airport Blvd
Eff fancy t and 7 Badroom from
1770 month 771 4470. 7214411
i% Dttcovnt for Ian lor Cltf
im
Canterbury i t the Crossings
) Bdrm . I er 1 beth Cendo’i
Privet# Pelie A Carport
Washer/Dryer Hook up
Beeutllvl Country Setting
Children, smell pels welcemed
Senior cltien* discount
____ 111 l U t ____
___
LU X U R Y A P A R T M IN T S
Family A Adults lection
Poolside. I Bedrooms
Master Cave Apartments
III m t
open On Week ends
RIDGEWOOD ARM S APTS
I end 1 bedrooms
M l 6410, or 111 64* I
Sartor* C O M ! A N D S I R tta
Brand new 1 bdrm /} both
Units
Screened perch,
w asher end d r y e r , m ini
blinds Fro m l i l t a me
Located on Oak Ave et Perk
Dr. behind Dairy Queen
British American Realty
e i t i i n _______ _
SPACIOUS A P A R TM E N T S
Lakafront. pool, tanmt. adults
no pat*, laundry 1)75 to l &gt;40
m° Call 711 0747 to tea
1 and 7 bdrm Alto tumnhad
•fboancy from |7J waak 1710
dapotit No pat* Call 731 4107
5 7 P M 4I 5 Palma Ho_________
2 bdrm , 1 bath, appliances,
upktalr*. naar downtown U t l
month '1100' security dapotti
IJI 4*00or 771 5117___________

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
Moutat for rant in kinford and
Dal Iona J bdrm porch, fant,
central atr/haaf. fancad yard
Con van * n l to shopping Call
_____
772 * 1 0 ___________
D E B A R V 1 B d rm I bam A C
c a rp a ta d . w a t h t r / d ry a r.
lanca I W
diftcountad Sac
( JOS) 474 1*47

7411 after t' JO PM

a a a IN O I L T O N A a a a
• * HOM ES FO R R E N T a a
a a I M i 414 a a

D H I V t R W A R I H O U S f l o l l JO
F C L Locel werehoute need*
goo d d r iv e r w ho he*
supervisory cepebilllie* Good
edverscemenl

Tired or the heedechest le t u*
meneg* your re n le l pro
parties Professional low cost
service M l M U Cell anytime
United Seles Assoc tele*. Inc
Prop, Mgmt D lv., eeeltor
New 1 bdrm . 1 both Cent heel
A elr, ten*, blinds, garage 14
ml south ol Lake Mery High
A I neighborhood BUS A sec
Days Mr Lorenj. M l 1*01
Eves M l 6M1
1*0 Howard
B lv d . L o n g w o o d
Lees#
purchase possible
Now accepting applications lor
rental 4 Bdrm . Ms both,
lemily room centre! heel end
elr. carpeted, fenced beck
4458, plus 1st lest A D O
Available e I. Broker Owner
Cell Ml 0?Sf
______ _____
K * E IN* St. 4 Bdrm I'lb e th
mini condition, central heat
end e lr, super appliance
package, tens no sm ell
children, no pet* Reference*
SMS mo lit end Security
M U H B o ri l l B *
___
I B drm , 1 beth Fenced yard
*4M
Grove
View
Cell
Ml i Qec _ ____ ___________ _
1 bdrm on Summerlin Ave
First, lest end deposit re
quirod w/ reference* M l 640)
I bdrm | ii beth new carpet,
cent heat A elr. appliances
drapes fenced beck yard 1)00
mo Dey M l 1U1. Eve* M l
RH

* TOO MANY TO LIST *
Discount Fee 1 W kt Selery
Lew t&gt; M Rtgtsfrelien Fee
e He Fee Unlit Hired e

2523 FRENCH AVE.
h : ! tr»i t,:r tir.v in ih id
Full end pert time

position* availably

lent hers

aides. coots end clerlcei Celt
III M4S

91— Apartments/
House to Share
Will there m odern country
home UR) per month Cell
a » i m _____________________
Working sober temoi# to there
hawse with tingle mother L 1
children P riv e t# beth A
kitchen privilege* 1)1 T?U

*3— Rooms lor Rent
Chrittien Apt* A Mewses
TV , kitchen, leundry. meld. 450
wk up Or I 4TSS4M U I M I O
Cieen cemfertebie sleeping
room with private beth A
fcitchennette US e week Cell
i l l to n * r m a te ? ____________
Leke Mery privet* room In
homo Must bo non smoking
rospontieblo lem elo C ell
Momke. tv* 111 7)6) dey
IM 40*1______________________
Roam ns private homo Men)
Service, utillhe* end leundry
Cell i n toee

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS

ora 14 rue*a y

• Adult 4 Family
Section*
• W O Connect»on*
• Cable TV . Pool
• Short Term looooe
A v oi lotto
I. L ! » « * * . I It. TJL
Im

*3

1505 W. 25 th i t
M M M

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

c ia r

CAT rcob \k*t t.

The huwsn

a

J e f i B . t iP A &lt;S liM iL f J it&gt; ?c*vj PYDCrsVtJ fFctd L.V rW
tits

T h e c *L ciet.rvt .c m S t n k ^ e r , ir t L ljJ .n ^

7 ’t v Dog end pupp*** .Aiied
Breed
) mete 1 female I
week s l me* old female Cell
U ) *Sa4«Her 5 PM__________
P U P P IE S P UP PIES
Cute cuddly reedy to gat ?
week* old S ol the mcett
pepp’•* you ever ta n Mother
it * genuine B oat' Ta -it
cupped black loyeabi* Why
no! give that spec al someone
the perfect Easter gift? The
B o ie ' mother up tor adopt,or
else it a genu* loving ob*
deni dog Her former own*,
left town end no took her in
P'eete come end see us soon
Cell U ) sue ask tor Pet

COUNTRY VILLAGE

e d .U e T W . i S Ui.th.w t r y L

117— Commercial
Rentals

★ LANDLORDS ★

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent
B E A U T IF U L I bdrm I belh
carpel, appliances screened
peWe. leuwrt-r SMB M I H U
SANFORD DU P L e x 1 bdrm .
is* beth LOO m o U H securi
ty deposit l u p r ' i ees lU r

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent
Clean privet*, nice furnished
Washer Adults S161 M M

r

2 H M O M I B tlf U l

r 'r w a u u wucoea

323-2920

MS 447 4447
3)00 E Grave*

SANTORO RETAIL STORES

New Otlice Building
near
C F R H on w**l First SI
Totally decorated rtedy *or
occupancy Yk4io41f]iq ft

________ 111 i«l&gt;________

Office or Retail South Sanlord
Ay*
ISM to 1140 »q It
BiSSO sq ft Totally restored
Brick Building 111 ISIS
S lo re g e or m e n u le d u r in g
space 14 hour security guard
Cell H I M ? ? _____
t i l l French Ave
'WO sq It
Store Front Will remodel to
tenants specification* 1500
per month M l IBIS
S P RING TIM E
T IM E TO P L A N T Y O UR S ELF
IN A H OM E OF YOUR OWN*

123— Wanted to Rent
G a n t la m a n n v v d * l i v i n g
q u a rta rt Ra«*onabla No
It?r r

Bjd Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
Tl C e u ge r.............

4*44 On
V«*e On
•74 Detkun SW ......U44 On

H Mark IV ..... ...........

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1120 S. Sanlord 321 4075
Car Shopping t Save your the*
leather I Reed the Went Ads
to* Best Buys I
_______ ___
D tto ry Au*o I Merino Sales
Across the river lop ot n il
ifsH w y 17 e )D e b*ry eel t r t
?our ieel Bu'ck R’tiere*! No
time available to restore my
lot*
your gaUst All e 4)500
CaM I J I t i n _________________

1 f&gt;M

1 Of 7 bdrm hou*t o* traMaf in
naad of fapaif WHI pay to*
pAirf or all m o far lo ll in
tnhangt far par can tag# of
ant 771 **&gt;_________________

ID E A L L O C A TIO N J tuff'.shwd
ottlces w ith break room
multi line phone system end
copy machine Reedy lor
im m e d ia te o c c u p a n c y
Associated Contractors 1100
French Av* M l Oast or StS
BISS

Professional Office Spice

Nawly ranovalad an Ftrtf V
in tha Hittoric Downtown
Dtifrut MO to 1000 \q tt
itarftrvg at 17 M sq tt
iiHlvtdinf 177 4100

141 — Homes For Sale
lake m any

Eacutiv* type poet h©ma vara
tp a c io v * at an affordabia
pr«ca Far appointment attar
I P M Giadv Brown Realty.

Brofcer 177 Jf74o^ J77 5777

MAHHAM ESTATES
3 bdrm./ 3 ballt, qualify built
*altd timber Noma approi
7300 eg

ft

under air,

high

energy value r deep wall,
teptK tank cwttom wood cab
*net*. privacy fence
UMOOO
Hutkay Really. R EALTO R S
&gt;41 M— ....
I venirsat ) I 2 ;s*s
O S TEEN
L A K E A I N B V 101
a c re *
B E A U T IF U L N EW
HOME
Lake i c c t t t
NO
D O W N to QLialibad buya^ Live
ouf w h e re you can en jo y
n a tu re and clean air
f\
intere*f tHOOOO Ovmar (3051

47f I W

_ _

Sanford Owner will help finance
H-a&lt; iol/i convtrfabta home 4
b d rm , 2 bath* or homa ♦
mother in law apt A « u m a b i«
Sanford and Deltona home* tor
**te by owner 1 bd rm perch,
fan* central air heal fenced
yard Convenient lo chopping
CaM 377 4*30

SA N FO R D O W NER- J b d rm .
) Ti bath C M A w w carpal,
K f te n a d front porch., work

Shop 773 7457________________
SA N FO R D ) Bdrm
7' i bath
ham* an quiet cut da tec
Eat in kitchen, family ream,
ic ra a n a d parch ITt.aoo
W A LL ST CO M PA N Y

I7t S00S

S P R IN G T IM E

TIM E TO P LA N T YO U R S ELF
IN A HOM E OF YOUR OWN!

an. ftraplaca Ctota to hoipital
4 c o w r lh o u i*
Im m , ot

cwpancy R E A LTO N SI) 444a

141 — Homes For Sale
SUPER LO C ATIO N
la r ja oldar horn# plu* garaga
apt on tha mott baautlful lot
7 bdrm . dming room family
room with ftraplaca Mitch
mora Raducad to |74 400
C A L L T O D A V

I I Stott Mob i»t home I4«4) 7
bdrm , 7 bath adult park
Central H A in^OOO 12^4434
l&gt; Skybne 14 K 54 2 bdrm 7
both yplit plan 18 K 7ft «re * n
porch 10 * 18 *hed central
A H gai tfove &amp; heat AduM
vect or lift 000 371 51*1

141 — Homes For Sale
Towrnhouta 7 Btfrm l ' i bath
laundry room dtn, pooi, dOM
♦O khopp-rtg Oanyr Mot»«atfd
U 3 000 AAakaoffar 721 01II or
l ’ i bath fam ily room

f ( t u t d h a rd
•■fr •*f
Attumabia * 1 % morfgaga 1
E a c tlltn f condition! M utt
W
Sanora South i i f I00
Call avtnkngi pr wtfkrftdf

313 m i

S ACRES
LO W D O W N
Geneve Mobiles OK

SANFO R D Cony*ni#nca ifpra
for iaia on Airport Road Lot
t00 r 100 I f f . &gt;00 C A S T I
P R O P E R T IE S
C a ll Tom
M ullanf Realtor A**oci4ta
’M 1792 Evening* |LI 1JJf

C AS S ELB ER R Y I acre laned
PR 1 44) 000 W Me lie tun Ski
R E A LTO R

ID E A L

m if t l

FOR

IN V E S TO R S .

apt 1 office bldg

1

in dwntwn

Sanford Near hospital Pott
five cath flow R E A L TO R
77) ta*a______________________

153— AcreageLots/Sale
CHteen (8 acre parctl f *o(d
Only 1 left Improved Good
a tc e ii Good water 14 OOO
down 1 JM per mo 1)0 000
C Jeffery Garland Realtor
____________331 4044

SA N FO R D Handymen special
1500 sq II Hying aiee New
root Fireplace In ground
pool guest college F inish end
save
1 1 4 .1 0 0 c a s h

C A LL A N Y TIM E
R E A LTO R M l eeei

BATEMAN REALTY

W E N E E O LISTINGSt

Sentord t Acre 1 loll leS.000
W M eiiciowski R E A L T O R
M2 744)

hike new

ft)7| Upright piano 1775
3)9 45a0 _________
Rtcond*lMm«Nd Appfianctf
l orn 141 W A R R A N T E t D
B A R N E TTS
C A S S ELB E R R Y
•30 311)
IX) M l)
• R E N T TO O W N a

H A LL
•tAlia MC
H U fO
I* ft 4#% lif t M att

H U G E ] S TO R YI t Bdrm *
Bern. M Country 1 Oaks, palms
end trot* trees' New A IM Sen
Cswt Heat end Aw with heel
pump i New taler het water
.'watert Double sided brick
lireplece &gt;*' a 10' screen
percht
Beeutllvl
View I
Unbelievable too.See
C A L L N A L L ..... ........J D i n t
F H A V A S P E C IA L Lew dear*
p e y m e n i i Le w m ea tlsly
payment I 1 Bdrm heme Ms
esc* tec alum’ Cell ter details I
Only s u e**
C A LL H A L L -------------M S U fl
S P A R K L IN G C L E A N PO O L
S I T S T N I MOOD FOR TH IS
C O U N TR Y TY P E I Bdrm .
R b r s b kb a c r e , le e c e * .
e ls v m e b l* . "# guelilyinB
mortgage L it MS
C A L L N A L L ...........
MS U K

Stew e senetales wanted I Will
k it e tee * rewarding
S IB E A L 1ST A T I CAR 1 1 RSI

323-5774
_______ Itd l t W T . I H S
H IR A L O R I A L I S T A T I AOS
A R I P EO P LE M OVERS
C H E C K T H E R E A L TO R ADS
A N D IN D IV ID U A L LIS TIN O S
T O D A Y I____________________

U Pick Strawberries
toot Thur Set 4414 Hester Ave
m i n ' _________________i n ccei

Special 1*1 week*rent *•*
Alternative TV A Appl Renlel*
layre* Shopping Center
371 3009
Tw o

orange

223— Miscellaneous

n a uga h yd e

toveeeaU |73 each 109 Seoore
Bled . Call 17) 44JI
Uied Watberi Pert* A Service
ter Kenmerei
....... U3 94tf
M O O NEY A P P LIA N C E S
*’■•’ r I ■• ' c" , r*

I , ,n

O A R O E N IN O TIM E IS HE RE I
PLAN T A W ANT AD
W A TC H T H E CASH GROW!
Rebuilt K IR BY/ III* 49 A v»
Guaranteed Kirby Ca
714 W 1st 51 3)1 144#
Satellite TV I y tit m i
Complffta All you na«d I08X
Financing No monay down
|l )ft#OOUmvar*alft)l 3741

Old

Like New* Call )77 7ft4iaMer
3 PM
WILSON M A II W i U R N IT U H I
311 U S E F IR S T ST
177 M17

2 31 -C a rs

Radio / Stereo
laigtst Ne» .4 ...Used Mobile
Home Dealer in this Ai m
Tam il w t,...... A
Adultt
K M H e y t f K ....
32) I N I
I f f ! C y p rtu 13 « »
Nearly
rtmodeled AAuftt be moved
m o o Ca»i m 1/43
•I Concord, I im54 Adult kat
bon Carriage Cove H I .100
111 5*51 L M re m t iia g r
•1 14 ■ *0 7 Bdrm
7 bath
Aitur 4
mortgage Call
371 Y774 after 5 PM

★ DAYTONA AUTO *
★ AUCTION ★

COLOR TE L E V IS IO N
Jemth 71" color conioie teievi
*ion Original price over 3400
balance due 1744 Ca*h or leka
Over payment* of 175 month
NO M O N E Y DOWN Stilt m
warranty f »ee home trial no
obligation Call §47 3394 day or
nlfhf

Hwy t)
Dey ten* Beech
* * * * * Helds * e e e e e

PUBLIC AUI0 AUCTION
Every Wed Nile et I 14 PM

* W here Anybody *
* Can B uy or Sell! *

G f *obd itafe concede Like
new |I30 or betl otter Mu*t
vee' Ab*otufely no call* alter
St 3)1 0077

Fer mere detail.

I *06 lit till

Why Buy Nevr Yau CaR R44M 7?
E iperl Paint A Body Work
t ire C sl.metyi
lit CIS)
'•64 Ford Bronco
5)500
c a iim m i
k) Falcon Wagon J O ' Re
stared Sell or trade tor smell
let* model travel trailer Cell
XT} 4145 ____
______
7) Red Thund*rbird Looks end
tin s good 5400 Cell ) ) l 0*50
403 W JOthST
__
i* M E R C U R Y C A P R I
H ATCH BACK
Silver w red
interior Very good condition
I I I 1750 from « 5 Ask lor
Am y or Hirer* 58)1) I lf )

235— Trucks/
Buses / Vans
1910 FoftJ 3 4 ton pick up dump
truck Naw painting uphol
tta ry tuna up and front and
aiignm ant A ppit ptt condi
flow Your* for 1*308 D um p
truck taalura atona i* worth

*20 00 a day 303 374 ;?f)
Ifftl

F o rd

Bronco X L T

74 Pinto. 5750 Down
Pay Balance Weekly!
tt* OBB t..................
4*4 4404
’ l l F O R D F 144 step tid e
pkkup p i

p b 4 dr . cult urn

whaat* Laar
naw 574 7103

toppar

Cutlom bull! 1730 lb iirangth
flat tied ikngta a*la Good lor
3 w hat la r i or lawn car a
*quipm»rd 3373 Call 171 1473

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes
1*41 Keweteki t «2 L TD 77t»
m iles eacellenl condllion
4* 5P Cell III ) U )

241 — Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
24 G M t Motor Horn*, ftcallant
conditio** By ownar 171.900
Call tor Appt 377 4474

243 -Ju n k Cars
B U Y iU N K C A R I B TB UCKS
Frem I I I hi I I I or met*
Call I I I ta n 17) 4)12
TO P Dollar Paid tor Junk A
Used can.truck* A heavy
equipment m 5048
Wt I'A r TOP OOL l AH t OH
JU N K CARS AND TRUCKS
C BS A U T O P A R T S 1*1 4505

STENSTROM
REALTY-REALTOR

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

Sonlwds Saits tiidu
W E LIST A N O tE L L
MORE HOMES TH AN
A N Y O N E IN NORTH
S EM IN O LE C O U N TY

IM M A C U L A TE I 1 B d rm . V*
beth hem* en * gorgeous freed
ecrel Peddle lens, centre I
heel end elr, new cerpell
S
S
S .
0, 0 0
C O M E S E E T H IS O N C I 1
Bdrm , I 'y Beth heme with
large heck yard IB e 14 utility
shed, centre! heat end eiyl
M u c h m e r e I 1 1 1 .* 4 4 .

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service
Prefer lien* I Tee Cspertl Pre
here, my eft ice er yeur hem*
Bet* grtcet; tl ■ IB. A I I I .
I t ) Cell etter 4 774 )571
Tea accountant 1* year* o p *
ri*n&lt;t W ’H proper* lea** in
your home P e ria n a l end
imeil business &gt;18 1)64_______

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
REMODELING SPECIALIST

S U P E R ! 1 Bdrm . 1 Beth hem*
with iniide utilities, split
b d rm . glen, eat In h lichen,
eatre large living reeml Cam
pietely re modeled I 444.4*4

W* Handle
The Whole Bell Of Wea

B E. LINK CONST.
322 7021
Fmacing Ava»tabla

• R A N D N E W HOM E I I Bdrm .
I Beth hem* ** I acresl
i n . ” kitchen, brand new
washer end d ry e r M e y il
G r e e t r e e m l 11 1,4 4 4.
W IL L B U IL D TO S U ITI YOUR
LO T OR OURSt E X C LU S IV E
A G E N T F O R W IN S O N O
DEV CO RP. A C EN TR A L
F LO R IO A L E A D E R ! M O R E
H OM E FOR L E U M O N E V I
C A L L TO D A Y I
e O E N S V A OSCEOLA R O B
ZONE D FOB M O B ILES!
I Ac,4 Country tracts
Well treed** pared Bd
r#*v D e .n l| Yf4 I t l l X I
Frem 111.4441
It you ere Weeing lev a sec
cessfvl career I* Reel Ettas*.
SSensIrem Realty It lathing
Ser you Cell lee Albright
today *t M l te n Ereeuigt
Ml M l

CALL A N Y T IM E

L A K E M A R Y I b d rm . IS*
beth. appliance* Cl#** es *

322-2420

LA N D S TO C H BROKERS
US M U

ISOS S Peril, looser*
f i t Ik Mery Me* Lh Mery

Lika

237— Tractors and
Trailers

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

H A N D Y M A N S S P E C IA L ! 1
Bdrm . Vs beth hem* with
fireplace, remodeled kitchen
L stuped porch! Submit *11
m i n i
*11,441

Naw

tira* braka* *hock* 3300 ami
taka ovar pajrmant* 371 7791

CONSULT OUR

PINE C R E S T Just tike New ]
B drm
I beth New root
cerpet cabinet*, paint Inside
end out, fenced beck Cony*
men I location S54.*0D

H AP P IN ES S IS
A K E Y T O A NEW HOME I
______ F IN O IT HE RE I

221— Good Things
to Eat

Co&lt;cr T V * , iter t o t w ith e r* ,
dryer*, refrigerator freeier*
furniture video recorder*

Lie Reel Eslets Broker
1*4* Sanlord Ave

For Sale by Owner Sentord
N e t 1 bedroom home with
living ro «m . dining room,
paneled lemily room, leundry
room, workshop end large
screened porch Cell lor us
lor motion 111 1104 sal *00

W A N T E D D E A D O B A L IV E I
Refrigerators Wethers
Pryors
.................... I l l CHS

183 - T e l e v i s i o n /

ISO. 000
IN C O M E P R O P E R TY Brick
duple a with eatre lot In beck
Room lor Irlplea 5*4,000
Owner will finance

Beethstd* Really. R EA LTO R S
*04 427 1)1) Open t D r .lt

Heavy duty fradter

Off Short Fiiharman Tuna
Towar Cuddy Cabin Twin
Engine* Compiyfa and Raidy
To Go With Traliar S74 WO
Can 377 aftf*

Beh* Bed*. Strollers. Clothes.
Playpens, Etc
P 4p trb 4 Ck
) ) ) 4)77 )1 ) *14*
NEED A
W H A T C H A M A C A L II T ’' OB
" I H I N O A M I O I O " ?
A D V E R TIS E FOR IT W ITH A
W A N T AD!
_ _ _ _ _
Need tribe playpens baby
lu rn ltu r*
clo th in g
good
prices Alter F PM Ml STB!
Paying CASH tor
Aluminum. Can*. Copper.
Brass le a d Nentpepe'
Glass Gold Silver
Kokomo Tool. 414 W 1st
■ i 00 S..I i i i : i "do

181 — Appliances
/ Furniture

IN C O M E Mobile O K end cel
lege Rent ene live In other

R E A L E S TA TE
R E A L TO R
M l ties

R E A L TO R ................... J I M 16*

■Tt Pinto...........................44SO Dn
Tt Ford Courier p U» 474* On
)44l F w w h Ave............. 1)11445

219— Wanted to Buy

NEW SM YRNA B EACH
Oc een front 11 condo No money
down Assumebi* mortgage

151 — Investment
Property / Sale

In

S AN FO R O
Renlel. 1 B d rm .
i , b e th
l l l l ms

C O M M E R C IA L S P ECIALIST
LAKE M ARY R EALTY

WE FINANCE

l«4 Sentord Ave
C O N SIG N M EN TS W E LC O M E )

jl

143— Waterfront
Property / Sale

149— Commercial
Property / Sale

1S7— Mobile
Homes / Sale

CALL BART

321-0739 E v t 322-7543

L &amp; E AUCTION

215— Boats and
Accessories

A rt you getting Divorced tram
•erred toreclOWd nwwd1 quick
vaie* Can Dai# 311 a*f ?

D IS C O U N T
AUTO
SALES

O

31343*3
FOR E S T A T E
C o m m e rcia l or Residential
Auction* A Appreitei* Cell
Dell t Auctions)) *e)0_______

159— Real Estate
Wanted

773 7033___________ __________
3 B d fm

•I A llo a *

S Tem per
O F F IC E SPACE A V A ILA B LE
In downtown Sanford Nawty
dacoralad folly aqwip h itch

*04 77) J!7|
OrengaCffy

JUST O FF 14
A r OR AN GE C IT Y E X lT lS l

t i mortgage »M 000 J72 J t)l

127— Otlice Rentals

213— Auctions
AU C TIO N E VE RY f R! NIG HT

Newly renovated retell ileret on
F irs t St. in the Historic
Downtown District MS to
te.koe sg It Prices sterling et
S) per sg tt 111 4100

MSP &gt;21 2)M

231- C a r s

M arch ISrd. A &gt;tth
ie frtth m e n f* tra m t to i

m

CALL HALL
SHENANDOAH.
VILLAGE
^
•100 OFF
SE C U R IT Y
D E P O SIT

Adult Mobile Home Put
Saturday •Sundij

w

T u e s d a y , M a r c h 3* lees —-SB

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

................. m * * M
S TO R A G E TR A ILE R S
Far on lit# cannirwctfan, tic
WHca Safa* H I t 7M m UT9

t v t M l 7) *4
___________

L o v e ly I b d rm
C om plete
privacy 1*0 per week, plu*
USO security deposit Cell
M l H M tv n s t h * ________

l)M ) m

LABORERS _______ _ ___SIM
R U good with your hendt end
went to work? Locel compeny
went* to hlro ASAP Know)
edgeol wood epiu*

E v e n in g H e r a ld . S a n lo r d . F I.

Mini Wirthouses

••iff namaand number er

MGR TR A IN E E
..........to *400
Do You Here e Sole* Ability?
Thi* company It reedy to treln
the right per ton Retell e plu*

by Larry Wrighl

113— Storage Rentals

non tmoking m al# or female

IN V E N TO R Y C O N TR O L Site *
Never be stuck behind • desk'
Fesl paced werehout# Blue
teens |ob

cert

Fully teu p p M 1 bdrm 1 be'h
unfurnished Cent h**t k elr.
1 'iy r s o ld SMS plusdepos'l
CeM M l 5**«

KIT N’ CARLYLE

ISO * Up
Fern. Apts tor Senior Ciftien*
111 Pel motto Are
J Cowen No Phone Cel i&gt;
Houseboat located in SantcwcF
Perlect home lor single,

Dap Required

323-5167

107-M obile
Homes / Rent

Appliance Repair
Allens Appliance Struct
14hr S ir v K * N * l i t r e Charge
it y r .e r e e g l e u . u t t e i i

Building Contractors
A O O ITIO N 4 R E 7 A O D IL IN O
BUI StnppCustom Builder
S te ttL k
H R O 0 11588

1)5-74 It

Carpentry
R E M O D E L IN G
B E P A IB IN G
References . ....V e ry Reliable
u ia e iT/ x ia e ...........m m m ?

Cleaning Service
Ttoed Carpet Cleaning Living
Dining Room * Hell 414 08
S ail S Chair, 415 p i 1588

MAIDS To -Outer
Ctaentina*i is M e t Ta Godliness
Cell His tsrtpersl
Ouereasued Service Law Reset

CALL NOW! 33)4*00

Electrical

Landclearing

• E 5 IO E N T IA L W IRING
Indeer/ Ovtdeer Lighting
Service Uptredes. Anything
Electrtcel Free Estimates
Since 1*781 Cell
Tern's Electric Service 111 1714

G E N E V A L A N D C L tA H IN O
lo t end Lend clearing
till dirt, end hauling
Call 144 5d)8 or 54* 4741____

Firewood/Fuel
TREE SERVICE * FIREWOOD
FOR SALE C A L L A F T E R
4 P M 51) COBB

Handy Man
Eap Handymen. Met Reliable
Free f si masi any |Ob Best
Rate* H I 01)1 Cell Anytime

LANOCLCARINO
F IL L D IR T BUSHOGGING
C LA Y B SH ALE 1)1141)

Lawn Service
ACE L A W N S E R V IC E
Maintenance Sodding Pruning
Cleaning Thatching Fertilising
Free Estimates
i n in
Lawn Memienence
Landscaping Bush Hog Mowing
_____ ICC 1 0 * 5 _____________

UtWNS M0WLD &amp; TRIMMED

Home Improvement
C*fh*c’t Betiding A Remodeling
N* Mt&gt; Tea Smell
I I I Burton Lane. Sentord
___________ iit -e c n ___________
Plumbing Painting Electric
Carpentry Den IS**It? Ask Bet
H y rs l i p
..... B BL UIB M 1
IP R IN O F IX UP
Special layings on thermal
windawi. ta llil end lecid.
siding, gutters, screen work,
and burglar bars Fam ily
ow ned end o p e ra te d
Associated Contractors 7M0
French Ave Sentord Cell
m sw .
TH OM AS B TH O M A S . NORM
repel'. (leaning lawn car*
Ceil 111 14*4

Horn# Repairs
CARPENTER

Repair* and
|ab too small

Cell i l l 4*41
MainSonanc* at all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
end electric i l l eoj*

★ TONY CORINOw
Ptoftsiioml Cutlom Painting
Serving Central FI* t o r lt y r s
with complete quality paint
mg service* Qwellty * M ult
Spadiel well taetSnB. iw-BBFl
W A L L P A P IR IN O
P A IN T IN Q
Retorencet ....... Very Rellebl*
m e t it / X M *
**4 2)4)147

Paper Hanging
PAPE RHANOI NO
A*r If M W illfBVtfM f

99#k#4SqKl# .irmtitiiatili **ain U4*

I prSeg Y ard Ctoeis ups..-US 1841

Plastering

CkristidB Bios,

*ALL Phasesel PiesterHvg#
Repair, tlucce. Herd Ceel.
SlasalPtodBrHIi. Ml WW.

Health A Beauty
TO W ER 4 B E A U T Y SALON
FO R M E R LY Harriett I Beauty
Nook 514 f 1st St m i l l )

remodeling I
BARGAINS A l l ALW AYS
S P R O U T I N O U P IN T N I
W AN T ADS. R I A O T N I M
■ veev D AY

Painting

'j*

CwbrIbU Ljwb Cits

IlN N lU t lilts

Are you * F is trf Then toll
others r t yeur ser rue through
Went Ads I

3234401

Plumbing
Masonry
B E A L Concetto 1 men quality
operation Peliot. drirdwoyS
Oars 111 r n ) E x * a u m
O H Ruby Cencret.
House Slab* e Drive* e Pellet
Lighl Grading__________ 11IIIM

Nursing Care
OUR R A TE S AR E LOWER
Lekevlew Nvr ting Censor
4ft I . Second SI Sentord
151 474)

Painting
C A LV IN R TOM 1
Hduse Pointing A Well Paper
You buy me tor sell
W* supply I*bee T t SAVE 144
____________m i n i ___________
BespensibSe M en pad k d p a * M
pemt yeur Hom e er Bus.ness
etc G tra m ur prebtoms to w*
WE C A R S Quality work »
yr* erp W 1087 LH cant

g rv -s

* Rudds PSumtSng Service *
Repair e Replace * f
* Free Estimates e m i

Pressure Cleaning
P R IV A T E A M O B ILE H OM ES
C O M M ER CIAL
44* I t l l

Tile
tc a ttm a n n Tit# P r t i i u r a
Cleaning C * r* m l«, V in yl
Asbestos All Phases P C :
Brick Hama* Businawas
Free ( t t Raasonabi* H I *741

Tree Service
■ CHOIS TREE SERVICE
FreaEll.mato*! Law Pr k a il
Licensed- insured' U ) ID*
"LrtRiaPYaliiiSaaiNdaN**.
JOHN A L L IN S LAWN B T N 11
Deed tree removal Lk Bln*
Free m l U l IN*

�4

4

4 4 4

►# • *

€

4B— Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

BIONDIE

Tuesday, March 2*. Itts

by Chic Youn j
/SaTTri

r ’ / f CAi

by Mori Walker

BEETLE BAILEY

THE BORN LOSER

WHAT

T^TE

ET PlfcPS?

by Bob Montana

by Howie Schneider

EEK A MEEK
SO WOW WLXr TO BLUE.
COLLAR C R M LAW D lW lTt
CCUARCRIWE. ..

WE. HAVE T O ADD ’RING
A R O U (U D TV tta i^ 'C £ lM E

Sun Radiation Brings
Out Brown Skin Spots
DEAR DR. LAM B — I have
developed brown areas on m y
face, on both cheeks and at the
corners of m y mouth. T h is
condition appeared once before
but faded a fte r about six
m o n th s . T h i s tim e It has
persisted for more than a year,
and the spots have not lightened
wtth the use of two different
commercial fading creams.
I am 46 and had a total
hysterectomy 18 months ago.
Is there any way to completely
fade the brown marks and avoid
their recurrence without giving
up all the summer sports I
enjoy?
DEAR READER - The winter
Is a good lime to have such spots
checked by your doctor. When
you don’t have a tan. It Is easier
to see just what needs treat*
ment. All skin spots and bumps
should be seen by a physician,
since a good look ts worth a
thousand words of description. If
you have the usual brown spots,
or "liver spots." caused by the
accumulation of melanin skin
pigment, your doctor may wish
to remove them by lightly
freezing the surface of the skin.
Th e area peels off. leaving
normul skin.
The radiation from the sun
definitely brings out these spots.
You can help to prevent them by
a void in g sun exposure. Be
extra-careful to protect your skin
In the winter. Avoiding reflected
radiation from the sidewalks,
snow and exposure to wind In
the winter Is Important. Use n
good sunscreen year-round and
use It properly. Then. If you
enjoy summer sports, you can
he exposed to the sun longer
with less damage. Don't forget
the value of clothing In protect*
Ing your skin. That Includes
wearing u hat to shade the face.
I have discussed such spots In
The lleulth Letter. Special Re­
port 28. Skin: Aging. Spots,
Cancer and Sun. which I am
sending you.
D E A R DR L A M B - O u r
church activities Involve much
h a n d sh a kin g D o e sn 't that
spread germs ol flu and colds,
coughs and m um other things?
DEAR READER - Bless you
for trying to be helpful. Hands
are near Ihe top of the list of

vehicles that spread diseases.
Colds and Ru are spread by
hands. Not only can you get the
germs from other hands, but
your hand- can pick up In­
f ec t i ou s o r g a n i s m s from
doorknobs, handrails and other
surfaces.
The Infected hands end up
rubbing the face, particularly the
nose, and the germs have access
to your body.
You can do several things to
ACROSS

help prevent the problem. One Is
to wear gloves: another Is to
wash your hands frequently, and'
particularly after being out with
people A third, and very Im­
portant. thing Is to avoid putting
your hands near your face
Send vour questions to Or
Lamb. P.O. Box 1551. Radio City
Station. New York. S .Y.. 10019
Answer to Previous P u rile

Presently
Bricklayers

1 Chaat* vlntty
5 Shinto tempi*
8 B‘bl&gt;C*l 9»rd«n
12 Novalitt Fertoar
13 Charged (tom
14 Noel
15 Alien country
IS Sandwich typ*
lab* |
17 Singar
Fitzgarakl
18 Similarly
dafmad word
20 Mo»a lo«y
21 Nothing
22 Woodan tub
23 Bird-a parch
26 Uproanout
30 Backward
31 Direction
32 Fait aircraft
labtorj
33 Strtva

Saarest
River bottom
land
7 Insect
B Small hole
9 Rightfully
10 She (FrJ
11 Dose
19 Insect egg
20 Chimney dirt
22 Hitting sound
23 Invitation re­
sponse (abbr |
24 Buckeye Stale
25 Court hearing
28 Fit of petulance

31 Omeletl'ke
34 Food |al |

27 Thessaly

37 Disease

35 Regard
36 Canoa carrying
3B Baka

carrying fly

mountain

38 Bratilisn port
39 Irritation gold

28 Employs
29 Deiets's

41 Clip
42 Natwoik

opposite

\

a

34 Urges (on)

43 Poems
44 Rotter
45 South American
ostrich
46 Author Harte
47 Coai
48 Talk back (si I
50 Compass pomt

i

•

•

11

■

H

IS

1%

It
41 Baronat’l titia
42 Parts in play
45 Parallalogram i )
49 Compila
K&gt;
50 Third parson
51 Odd (Scot)
IJ
52 Mrs Dick Tracy
53 Body ol water M
54 Table supports
55 Ancient Italian
family
SB Hearing organ
57 Shoshoneent
«*
DOWN
W
1 Skinny tith
II
2 Normandy
invasion day
(comp, wd |

•

41

40 Filthy hut

&gt;«

9% 1

I Cl t St S bt h i

w

a

W IN AT BRIDGE

LIU.IL
by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
I THINK ID FEEL SO
RICH TH A T ID GIVE
IT TO SCWNEONE
LESS FORTUNATE
TH AN /WTSELF

M R SMALL.,
WHAT WOULD
"YOU DO IF YOU
FOUND A DOLLAR
ON THE GROUND
AND YOU COULDN'T
FIND THE OWNER?
-------»»♦

by Warnsr Brothers

BUGS BUNNY
we n e s s -to s t a s -t ^
W CacVaON^S # 8 0
CAMPA iSN NOW.

VC y x 5S£ 5j 3S 0 ^N &gt;
x p

&amp; si it n t i a : v x &amp; a i j

vo a c t j a l w x see
HIM AS A CA5Sei\OLH

r '

By J a m e s Jacoby
had his chance to make the
Richard Frey, long time editor bridge columns of the future.
of the- American Contract Bridge
He played the club king. If you
League Bulletin (1958 19701. lx a place yourself In Ihe East posi­
great contributor to bridge litera­ tion. you ran hardly be blamed
ture. Mtxlcrn players may not foe-feeling that declarer also had
know that he was also a great the d u b quern fs*c tills play
championship player In Ihe early Accordingly Easl played TTftck n
days of lournament bridge. Here
diamond, and declarer had time
Is a deceptive play he made 50 to set up the heart suit and nine
years ago that has withstood Ihe tricks, if South does not make
test of (line.
the deceptive play of the club
In 1985 North would Introduce king. Easl would continue clubs,
lhe heart suit Into the bidding und declarer would be set In
alter South's opening one no­ three no-trump.
trump bid. Not then. No-trump
Incidentally, the play should
was raised, and Frey happily
accepted with 17 hlgh-cnrd not have worked. Without an
honor In clubs. West should
[Milntsunda 10 as a kicker.
Declarer won the diamond huve led a high club such us Ihe
lead wllh his jack and played the eight or six. No doubt East felt It
heart queen. West won and was more likely that his partner
switched to the club deuce. hud erred than that Richard Frey
When East played Ihe ace. Frey had wasted hlselub king.

NORTH

1 14 44

♦ Ay

♦ J«7 «1
«I7)
♦ J 105
EAST
♦ 109113
♦ 4 53

WEST
♦ 74 5

♦ y »a 4
♦ yss2

♦ 10 5
♦ A 97
MR T i l

♦KJ 2

♦y

109

♦AKJ 1
♦ K 43

Vulnerable Neither
Dealer South
W »* l

N o rth

H it

Sovlh

I ’a u

2 NT

3 NT

I'au

I’au

I'au
I’au

I NT

Opening lead ♦&lt;

HOROSCOPE
by Bob Thaves

THF

YOUR BIRTHDAY
MARCH 2 7 . 1085

To

THE cfTHEfi EMPLOYEFs,
MISS H u LTON, N o
T IM E OFF T»L-L A FTFf*
Ea ^TF P Tv4 A ve S

QARFIELD

What The Day
Will Bring...

H t

by Jim Davis

Be willing to relinquish In the
year ahead projects or ventures
that have proven to be u n ­
productive. Once you let go. new
and better things will replace
them.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19) Be
careful today not to take credit
for the Ideas of others. Instead,
build upon your own bright
thoughts. Major changes are In
store (or Arles In the coming
year. Send for your Astro-Graph
predictions today. Mall 81 to
Astro-Graph. Box 4H9. Radio
City Station. New York. NY
10019. Be sure to state your
zodiac sign.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
T t e a l I he p r o p e r l y and
possessions of others as respect­
fully today as If they belong to
you. Return what you borrow In

mint condition.
OEM1NI (May 2 1 -Ju n r 20)
Don't be hesltanl to make com­
promises or concessions today to
placate friends. If you'll yield,
they will yield as well.
CAJfCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Although you'll be Innovative
and Imaginative today, you're
also apt to be rather Impatient
and you might put projects into
motion too prematurely.
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Your
luck has Its limitations today, so
don't press It to extremes. Hopes
can be realized through logical
procedures, not wild risks.

you use your head today, gains
and losses ran lie balanced out
Instrud of worrying uhmit what
you lost on apples, try to pick It
up In peur*
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec.
21) Even though you take pride
In being Independent, you will
fare belter today by Itecomlng
more closely Involved with
others.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan
19) You may gel olf to a faulty
start loday but once you get on a
roll, you will be remarkably
productive. In fact, you'll com­
plete several things you thought
VIRGO (Aug. 23 Sept. 221 Try you couldn't.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
to keep relatives out of your
Do not be more attentive today
business affairs today. Although
they may be eager to help, they to u new pal than to friends of
long standing. They'll notice and
could. Instead, gum up the
resent your preferential treat­
works.
ment.
LIBRA (Sept. 23O ct 23) A
P IS C E S (Feb. 20 March 20)
kind friend may try to cover for You're capable of rather remark­
you today. He will repeat to abl e a c h i e v e m e n t s t o d a y ,
another not what you said but especially In situations where
what you should have said.
you are materially motivated.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If Think dollars and cr nis.

ANNIE
by T. K. Ryan
THE BATTLE* HALF OVER t ) WHYEL*E IMOOLP OUR T0M-T&amp;M
„—
a mp flute coRr$ pe o n t h e
OEVI0U5LYV) FlBLP FORMING A G IA N T ‘I*.

r -7 \ r

•

* » • ♦ « »

by Laonard Stair

. N f WCflf « C E

TO SOY SOME
NfAPOhS. CdAPCGf

flCFSOST A6 6000
M THE O K $ f€
-E 8 -T 0 S 7 * .

“is r

r

J.EP6 H0FE
TOUR

C O * ! RE
ATTACH THE

re&amp;odHANCi

asp* c a m

IMPROkf6 ALONd
WTTH Y0US
APPtAIIAHCe!

AT O H U !

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152088">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 26, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152089">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152090">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 26, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152091">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152092">
                <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;, March 26, 1985; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152093">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152094">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152095">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152096">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="15242" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="14856">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/77d011a1d2b178d84ab484c43618c864.pdf</src>
        <authentication>b4c238679acdd3c26e164fdeea6f2ce4</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="152087">
                    <text>Price Choice
For Deputy
Administrator
County PlanInH D i r e c t o r
Woody Price, a
Seminole em ­
ployee for the
past r ig h t
years. Is ex­
pected to be
p ro m o te d to
deputy county
d e v e lo p m e n t
a d mlnlstrator
W o o d y P rice
effective A pril
1
tie will receive a pay raise of
•5.039.
At a workshop mertlng of the
county commission today. County
Administrator Ken Hooper an­
nounced to the board that Price Is
his choice for Ihe post.
The commission Is expected lo
confirm the appointment at Its
9:30 a m. meeting Tuesday at the
County Services Building. 1101
First Street. Sanford.
Price edged out four other top
candidates for the position. In­
cluding his colleague. John Percy.
37. dlrrctor of county services.
Salary range for the newly
crrated Job Is $43,590 to $00,881.
Price’s
salary as director of
planning Is $37,957. Price will
receive at least the minimum of
$43,590.
The deputy administrator for
development will be In charge of
overseeing the operations of the
depart merits of planning ond dev­
elopment. Including the functions
of land management and building
Inspections.
Price has a bachelor's degree In
social welfarr and political science
from Florida Stale University. He
also has done post graduate work
at the U n ive rsity of Central
Florida In statistics, calculus,
economics und computer science.
Hooper said he will announce
his appointment of a deputy
administrator In charge of ad­
ministration at the April 2 county
commission meeting
Among those vying for the Job
are: Eleanor Anderson, county
budgri dlrrctor and acting assis­
tant county administrator and
A nn Nelswender. director of
personnel for the Sem inole
County School Hoard.
— Donna Estes

Top Students G et Windfall From State
By Roger Simmons
Herald Staff W rite r
Some top students at Seminole
Community College, the University of
Central Florida and other colleges and
universities around the state received a
surprise In their financial aid checks
recently — up to $562 more rash.
The additional money is part of an
allocation by the stale legislature for
the 2.179 students In the Florida
Academic Scholar Fund, said Ur. Liz

Sweeney, director of state programs In
the office of student financial assistance
for the department of education.
The Increase affects only those stu­
dents In the scholar fund, she said. The
fund awards money each year lo
students who have been recognized by
the Merit Scholarship Program, have a
3.5 grade point average and high scores
on college entry tests.
Ms. Sweeney said under the scholar
program her office normally distributed

F l» t » Sy

$1.8 million per year. Students who
attended schools with less than 2.000
students received $500 per semester
and those at schools with more than
2.000 enrolled received $750 per
semester.
The Increases range from $835 for
students at smaller schools to $1,312
for those at larger colleges and un­
iversities. Ms. Sweeney said
The Increases came as a surprise
because the state legislature Increased

V0k *«»

Mark Payton, manager of Franklin Arms apartments,
Inspects a table melted by Saturday's fire.

Firefighters hose down a stack of smoldering lumber on a railroad car near the
Central Florida Zoo

Arson Suspected
By Rick Brunson
Herald Staff W rite r
An apartment In Sanford was gulled
and a $ 10,000 loud of lumber burned
on u railroad car In Lake Monroe In two
unrelated fire-*- Aaturdsv. Arson Is
suspected In both Incidents.
The fires were two of seven that kept
S a n fo rd und S e m in o le C o u n ty
firefighters s c ra m b lin g over the
weekend.
Fire destroyed Ihe Inside of an
apartment at *650 Franklin Arms.
Sanford, at about 10 p m Saturday,
uccordlng to Sanford Assistant Fire
Chief Ron Neel. He said arson Is

is peeled and stale lire marshals are
inducting an Investigation. No one
as home at the lime of the fire und the
nly Injury during Ihe blare was a cut
rcllghter Carl Helms received on his
and. Neel said.
M ark P a y to n , m a n a g e r -o l the
partments. said a bottle plugged with
rag resembling a bomb was found
ear a window.
A resident spotted the draperies on
re und called the fire department,
‘nylon said. He and other residents
ised extinguishers to fight the blare
mill firefighters arrived.
The fire was contained lo Ihe one

Tuskuwlllu area residents will have u se«t»nd
chance lo register their objections to development
pro|M&gt;suls for u shopping center, un apartment
complex and an office building on Tuskawllla
Road al a public hearing before the Seminole
County Commission 7 p.m. Tuesday.
Hcrnle Namle. u resident of Tuskawllla Point,
said the main reasons Ihe residents are opi&gt;oslng
the proposed developments are: the proposed
rezonlng Is contrary lo the county’s com ­
prehensive plan; It would have un adverse effect
on trafllc problems and add pressure to an
already taxed sewer system; as well as disturbing
nesting eagles either within or adjacent to the
property.
Th e hearing will be held at the county
commission meeting room at the county services
building In Sanford.
Homeowners from Ihe area turned out cn
masse to oppose Ihe rezonlng proposals und
changes In the county's lund use plan at the
Planning and Zoning Commission public hearing
March 6
The advisory hoard recommended the county
commission uppravr changes In zoning and the
county’s comprehensive land use plan for the
shopping center and the apartment complex, but
recommended denial of the office building
The shopping center Is proposed for construc­
tion on a 7.16 acre tract on the west side of
Tuskawllla Road, south of Ihe Wllla Spring
Shopping Center.
Frank Tcpper. trustee. Is seeking the change In

apartment but Puyton said ilamage
could have been much worse because
Ihe apartment Is udjucenl to a laundry
room where there are gas-operuted
dryers.
"W e’re really lucky It didn’t make It
ilial far," he said.
He hasn’t received an Insurance
statement but estimates damugc to Ire
In the thousands of dollars.
In Ihe railroad car lire, vandals are
suspected of Igniting a load of lumber
on a flatcar at u Seaboard Coastline rail
station near the Central Florida Zoo.
uccordlng to road foreman C.W. Shiver.
He said Ihe fire was started at about

4 30 p.m. and burned all night because
firefighters could not slop the tightlyslacked lumber from smoldering. The
car received "severe damage" but was ;
salvaged, u ccord ln g to Seaboard
spokesman Owen Pride The lumber,
valurd at S 10.000. was headed for
Wllkerson Lumber Co. In Longwood.
A Central Florida Zoo employee
called the Seminole County Fire De­
partment and reported there were
youngsters lighting fires ulong the
railway behind the zoo. Shiver said.
The fire Is still under Investigation,
uccordlng to county fire Investlgntor
ITID rS n .tfrO A

Seeping Gas Burns Through Night
After Blast Destroys LA Store

Tuskawilla Developments
Go Before County Board

Hweis FlewSf Onswv tUfwu

This bald eagle, nesting In a pine tree not far
trom Tuskawllla Road, is one reason area
residents oppose proposed development.
zoning from agriculture to commercial and a
change In the land use plan for the property from
low density residential-preservation to commer­
cial Members of thr trust are Malcolm Clayton.
Charles Clayton and Edward Fielding.
Narnle told the planning and zoning comSee ZONINO. page 2A

LOS A N G ELES (UIMI Seeping gas that
exploded beneath a crowded department store.
Injuring 21 people In a blust that blew the roof off
the building, burned through the night us experts
searched today for Its source.
One employed of the Rosa Dress for Less
department store was still unaccounted for
several hours after the blast reduced Its Interior to
a Jumble of twisted metal, fire spokesman Ed
Reed said.
Rescue workers using bulldozers seurched
several hours for victims who may have been
trapped In the debris-strewn shell of the building
but gave up about midnight.
Tw o people were reported In critical condition
with burns and three were In serious condition al
hospitals with Injuries suffered when the blast In
the Park La Urea shopping center blew out
windows In stores a block away and forced the
evucuaton of hundreds of people from four blocks
around the site.
The blast occurred at 4:47 p.m. PST and more
than eight hours later flames a foot high were still
fluttering from the parking lot and sidewalk and
out Into the street across from the popular
Farmer’s Market tourist area near the La Brea Tar
Pits.
The fire department’s Reed said the gas could
be commercial natural gas. methane from the
sewers or gas coming from an old well. Crews
from Southern California Gas Co., dug up the

Crime Up Only Slightly In Seminole
From Staff and Wire Reports
The overall crime rale In Florida
went up for the first time In three
years In 1084 — 3 4 percent — but In
Seminole County the Increase was
much less dramatic. .6 percent.
Statewide, motor vehicle thefts
showed the greatest Increase followed
by aggravated assault, rape and
robbery.
By category, violent crime In­
creased more In Florid* and Seminole
County than non-violent crime, ac­
cording to statistics released today by
the Florida Department of Law En­
forcement In Its yearly publication.
Crime In Florida.
While the actual number of crimes
In Sem inole C o u n ty Increased
slightly, from 11.278 In 1983 to
11.345 last year, a gain of 67

funding for the program by $300,000
after the financial assistance office has
already Informed students the amount
of money they would be receiving for
the coming school year. Ms. Sweeney
said.
She said the fund was created by Ihe
legislature to provide a way for
Florida’s smartest students to attend
college and to keep some of the
students from leaving the Mate to
See W IN D F A L L , page 2A

offenses, the per capita crime rale
dropped 5.5 percent. The per capita
decline occurred because there werr
12.964 more people living In the
county last year, reporting only 67
more crimes than the year before.
T h e population Increased from
201.906 to 214,870. according to the
report.
Robbery led the crime stals In
Seminole County, rising about 24
percent from 234 robberies to 289 In
1984. Murder showed a 23 percent
Increase from 9 cases l o l l .
Rape locally Increased 21 percent
from 67 reported cases to 81. Burgla
rles Increased 5 percent from 2.907
to 3.047. and aggravated assault
went up 2 percent from 703 to 721.
Unltke state statistics, motor vehi­
cle thefts were down 3 percent In

Seminole County from 572 to 552.
and larceny dropped 2 percent from
6.786 to 6.644.
In the report, the shertfTs depart­
ment made 2.965 arrests in 1984 By
city. Altamonte Springs made 1.228
arrests; Sanford. 1.166. Casselberry.
869; Winter Springs. 298; Oviedo.
165, and Lake Mary. 41. State
troopers made 923 arrests.
Of 12 murder arrests, six were
made by deputtrs. five by Sanford
officers, and one by Casselberry
police. (Tw o anests were made In one
of thr 11 murders.) Statewide. 46
crcent of the people murdered were
Hied by a gunshot, most of them on
a Saturday.
Sanford police
also made the
majority of the anest* Involving rape,
assault, robbery and burglary.

E

The cities of Altamonte Springs
and Casselberry made the most DUI
arrests. 241 and 124 respectively.
Sanford officers made 62 DUI arrests
and the sheriff's department 718.
Troopers made 268 DUI arrests
The shertfTs department led the
county In Altamonte Springs police
a ls o led the c o u n t y In d ru g
possesslon/sale arrests with 295.
Altamonte Springs police were sec
ond with 225 such arrests, and
Sanford 114 arrests.
According to the crime report.
Sanford police reported more assaults
on Its officers than any other agency
Sanford, with 50 sworn officers,
reported 30 assaults. 25 of those with
Injury. The sheriff with 138 sworn
Baa CRIME, page BA

zr

v *

$i

rrT:

street to try to turn off the area's principal gas
main, but said lab tests showed thr seepage was
not commercial gas
Reed said thr flaming gun was being allowrd lo
burn lo decrease Ihe (Kisslblllty of a potrntlully
explosive buildup
John Alcalde. 60. who owns an optical store In
Ihe shopping renter, said he and his wife were In
the department store, crowded with "well over
100 people." when he heard a "soft boom" and
windows began shattering.
"Some (people) fell, some screamed, some ran
— und I ran." Alcalde said.
Mike Gleason, manager of a nursery across the
street, said the explosion blew the roof off the 300
x 200-foot department store and "almost shook
our place down."
i~ -

----------

TODAY
Action Reports...... 2A Florida.......... ........ $A
........ JA
Bridge.............
........ 2A
Calendar........
Classifieds.
,..2,38 People........... ........ IB
......$-7A
Comics............
Dear Abtoy......
Deaths............
........ 2A
Editorial........ ......4A W orld............. ........ 2A

UF Record Falls
KINGSTO W N. R.l. (UPI) - Contorting
themselves In all manners. 1.212 students at
the University of Rhode Island over the
weekend broke the University of Florida's
record for the most people to play the game
"Tw ister" at one time.
Using 425 Twister mats and the school's
gymnasium they bested U F ’s 1984 spring
break effort when 1.203 players gathered at
the Orange Bowl to twist, turn and try to
stay on their feet In the process.
A 1960* classic, the Milton Bradley game
Is played on a plastic mat with colored dots.
A spinner tell* thr player where lo pul his or
her arms and legs while other people on the
mat arc trying to do the same thing. The
object of the game Is not to fall and the last
person standing wins.
Diane Peck of Milton Bradley said the new
record In the "Twister Challenge" will be
submitted to Ihe Guinness Book of World
Records.
.

I

�Evening Herald
IUSPS M U M )
300 N. FR EN CH A V E . SANFORD. FLA 32771
A rm Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9093
Monday, March 25, 19*5— 4A
Wsyrts 0. Oeylt. Publlthar
Thom i t Giordano, Managing Editor
Malvin Adkins, Advertising Director
Homr Drtlvrry Week. *1 10 Month. *4 75. 3 Month*,
•14 25: 6 Month* *27 00 Vr-ar. 151 00 Hy Mall: Work.
•I 50. Month. *6 (X&gt;. 3 Month*. *|H 00. fl Month*. *32 50
Yrar, 180,00

Horsing
Around
After horsing around for some tim e with
President Reagan's proposed spending cuts,
th e S e n a te B u d g e t C o m m it t e e f in a lly
approved Its o w n budget package. Reversing
a series of r a r llr r voles that m aintained a
wide range of domestic program s at present
levels. I lie com m ittee approved on a partisan
I'M ) vote cuts estimated at $55 billion (hat It
asserts could halve the projected deficit In
three years.
T h e reductions were more c u rb than cut.
Instead of elim ina tin g general revenue shar­
ing. I he Sm all Business A d m in istra tio n , mass
transit, the E x p o rt-lm jto rl B a n k , as the
president urged, the com m ittee voted to keep
them all In business on reduced spending
levels. Federal agriculture subsidies of about
$15 billion were spared altogether, and $300
m illion were even added to the Supplem ental
Security Incom e program .
In order to keep all these program s going,
the c o m m itte e defied the p re side n t by
d e n yin g Social S e cu rity co st-o f-livin g In ­
creases next year and allow ing no defense
spending beyond Inllatlon at about 4 percent
rather than the fl jrcrcent after Inflation the
adm inistration Is requesting.
Even this half-loaf of deficit reduction was
too m uch for the committee Dem ocrats, who
voted against It to a m an. Instead. Senate
Democrats are beginning to talk again of
another round of tax Increases.
T h e com m ittee s budget resolution Is slgnlfleant because It becomes a broad blueprint for
other Senate committees and w ill have
substantial Influence over the co m in g budget
debates on the floor.
I ‘resident Reagan, w ho prom ised a few days
ago lo "la ke the he at" for budget cuts, readily
accepted th e c o m m itte e 's a c tio n as a
challenge to co m b at: he’s come out sw inging.
In high dudgeon. M r. Reagan w arned: "I have
m y veto j&gt;rn d ra w n and ready for any lax
Increase that Congress m ight even think of
sending up. ... A n d I have only one thing to
say to the tax Increasers: Go ahead anti make
m y d a y ...."
Those w ho have followed (he Senate Budget
Committee's gyrations, led hy Republican
defectors, must Itnd difficulty In disagreeing
with the president's assertion that "th e
defense budget has become a convenient
scapegoat lor those In Congress w ho aren't
willing lo face up to the tough budget
decisions." He rem inded his critics that
military spending has declined $2ti billion In
the current llscul year from tin* budget
submitted two years ago. w hile n ou-m llila ry
spending Increased hy SIR) billion.
As the farm ers w ho stormed W ashington
have demonstrated, every spending program
has ||s fierce constituency against w h o m the
Congress appeals to be defenseless. A lthough
the nation's taxpayers are not represented by
a (Niwerful lobby tn W ashington, neverthe­
less. they are not defenseless as Widter
Mondale now knows. Congressional D em o­
crats and their fellnw-lravellug Republicans
ought not lose sight ol that reality these days.
T h e Senate Budget Com m ittee has given us
a case history of w hy Congress, the relentless
spending m achine, Is as u n w illin g us It Is
unable to deal w ith federal spending that has
Increased an average ol $75 billion annually
since IflHO and Is a w hopping $107 billion
higher In fiscal '85.
T h e budget that will have doubled since
1079 and tripled since 1975. som ehow, must
be brought u n d e r control. Ina sm u ch us
President Reagan has dem onstrated he can
lake the heat from s p e n d in g cu ts and
Congress Is dem onstrating thut It cannot, the
obvious answer Is for Congress to let him do
so. as the Constitution envisioned In the first
place.
S e n . M ack M a ttin g ly . R .-G a .. has In ­
troduced a trill In permit the president to vctu
line items lit the federal budget attd he has
gathered 46 sponsors. T h is prom ises to he the
litm us lest lor Congress on the deficit. T h e
country will be w utchlug because the line
item appears in he the only reasonable hope
lor controlling spending and reducing the

Increasingly intolerable deficit.

BERRY'S WORLD

" This Gorbachev seems to be a tun'guy. May­
be we could do a CHARISMA SUMMIT1"

\
itf*&lt;■- . * • ' *•■inumm
.* *

•"m

■'-4 m » t

H ELEN TH O M A S

Reagan's Trip To Be Minus Show Biz
W ASH IN G TO N |UPJ| - Missing on President
Reagan's forthcoming (rip to Europe will be the
drama and spectacle that marked his previous
trips abroad.
One aide bemoaned the fact that the trip
would not include the president tn colorful
activities such as he participated In last year In
ceremonies observing the 40th anniversary of
the Invasion of Normandy, and last spring s
London Economic Summit. Nor will there be the
charm of Reagan's return to his roots In Ireland,
or the high profile of his trip to the Great Wall of
China
Ills aides are hard put to spotlight the
moments lhat will give Reagan a high profile
when he attends the seven-nation Economic
Surmnll In Bonn. West Germany. He also will
make stale visits to Spain and Portugal on the
10-day swing.
Presidential aide Michael Beaver acknowl­
edged lhat the European Journey does not have
the stage-managed events that arc attention

drawers.
"I don't know what Pm gotng to do." he M id.
He said he would be leaving with "mixed
But he satd lhat Reagan "wanted to try
something new " and will lake a "red eye*' emotions." He has no plans to write a book,
overnight flight from Washington to Bonn. It Is although he has experiences lhat would fill a
usual for the president to fly overseas at night. volume or mort.
AH other departures have been early In the
He said that Ihe most rewarding pan of his
morning.
While House years was to watch "Ronald
Deaver. described by some of his colleagues as Reagan do the things he s always wanted to do
a "gentiis" who Is on target m knowing what and seeing his success.”
will sell when It comes to Reagan's public
appearances, said the trip will he “ very
Deaver ran Into some trouble hut was cleared
substantive” without Ihe usual fanfare “tt of any wrongdoing when he and others
won't lie necessarily chocked full of news." he purchased a BMW at a discount.
satd In an Interview.
Deaver rrjerts Ihe conventional wisdom that
Re also ruled out sightseeing, which Is usually
guaranteed to produce Ihe front page picture for Reagan will lie a tame duck after two years. He
bases his conviction on the way Reagan handled
the folks hack home.
Deaver will leave the White House In May after his second term as governor of California, and
the European swing He Mid that he ftas not yet cited a number of Initiatives that Reagan look In
decided what he will do In the future, but his that era. Including welfare reform.
"I think Ronald Reagan will be u force as long
friends expert him to return to public relations
as
he Is alive." he said.
and to remain In Washington.

ROBERT WALTERS

SCIENCE W ORLD

Nazis
Kill With
Impunity

Window
On The
Universe

W A SH IN G TO N |NKA| Being
forced lo choose between commu­
nists and Nazis Is an especially
distasteful choice for most people,
hut lor Ihe third time In five years, a
Jury In North Carolina will have In
make Ihul selection
On ihe l wo previous occasions,
the Juries were empaneled to renrh
verdicts In criminal trials resulting
from a violrnl confrontation which
Iclt live peoplr dead in the streets of
Grrensltoro. N.C..on Nov. 3. 1979.
This lime, (lie Jury in nearby
Wlnslon-Saletn, N.C.. Is weighing
testimony and evidence offered
during Ihe trial of a still In which
the victims' survivors seek $48
million in damages from (lie alleged

By Lidia Wascowia
UPI Science W riter
STANFORD. Calif. (UP!) - Ameri­
can and Chinese physicists are
rrachlng for the stars — by trying
for Ihe first time to directly del eel
gravity waves, a type of energy
Einstein predicted the existence of
decades ago.
Scientists at Stanford University
and X h o n g sh a n U n ive rsity in
Gaungzhou, Canton, fumed on the
two most powerful detectors In the
world March 19 and will operate
them sim ultaneously lor three
months.
The researchers will match events
reported at one detector against the
readings from the other In an effort
to become the first to directly detecl
gravity waves — believed born In
dying stars In olher galaxies, they
said.
"This Is the first attempt to nin
coincidental gravity wave expert
menls with detectors of Ihls sensi­
tivity." said William Falrbank. head
of the Stanford research team
The Stanford device Is an alumi­
num bar cooled to minus 456
degrees Fahrenheit, said Peter
Mlrhelson. assistant professor of
jihyslcs. At lhat temperature,
molecular motion Is so quiet, the
instrument Is cupablr of registering
the Impact of energy lhat moves It
less titan t he diameter of an atom
Mlchclson defined gravity waves
as ripples that travel at the speed of
light, The gravity we know on Earth
Is a static form of Ihls energy,
exerting only pull. Gravity waves,
predicted in Einstein’s theory of
relativity but never found, push and
pull.
If gravity waves can lie delected,
scientists might be able to use them
"as a tool lo study objects In the
universe that cannot lie studied
through conventional astronomy."
Mlrhelson said.
"It would be a whole new window
on Ihe universe." he said.
The Chinese delector runs at
room temperature. Allhough it Is
the second most sensitive such
drvlre In the world, it Is consid­
erably less sensitive than Stan­
ford’s. M id Hu En-Ke. a physicist
(rum Xhongshan who Is spending a
year with Fairbank s group to learn
Hir technology.
So far. the Stanford detector has
registered 574 Impacts that might
qualify as gravity waves, but need
further Investigation.
Stanford will ask the Natlonnl
Science Foundation for funds for a
five-year program to complete con­
struction of two new detectors
sensitive enough to detect gravity
waves generated from collapsing
supernovas, or extremely bright
stars.

kilter*
The case Is or more limn local
Import because It raises a number of
transcendent Issues — Including ihe
ipialUy of Justice dispensed In
members of unjtopular political
groups, the status of race relations
In the contemporary South and Ihe
legitimacy ol the activities of ledcral
taw enforcement ageuls acting as
undercover Invest (gators.
Oil one side of the dispute Is Ihe
linlicd Racial Front, an alliance of
tight-whig American Nazi Party and
Kti Klux Klan members openly
hostile In blacks.
On Ibc olher slilr Is Ihe Commitnisi Workers Parly, a hand of
radicals who were Irli-wlng pnluii.il
activists hut hardly dangerous
subversives.
The rarlsla were heavily armed,
with handguns, an AR 180 semtautomutlc rifle, u shotgun, tear gas.
clubs and knives Alter a brief ittil
fierce gunllghl (Ihe Conuntmlsls
were also armed but with lar fewer
weapons) five people were tleatl.
seven wounded,
Four Klansuten and two Nazis
were charged with first-degree
m urder In ihe
crim inal trial,
conducted lu a stale court, tml the
administration of Justice In lh.il case
lell a greal deal lo he desired.
Before the trial. Ihe dlstrlel at­
torney In charge ol the prosecution
publicly proclaimed Mini the Com ­
munists "got wh.il lltey deserved."
The |ury foreman said lie viewed
the Nazi jiarly and Klan as “ patrlollc" groups
lu November 1980, all ol tlir
drfrndniils were acquitted. A sec­
ond criminal trial, on federal con­
spiracy charges, produced similar
results with six Klansuten anil three
Nazis acquitted In April 1984.
The score to date: Five people
were shot lo death In ihe middle ol
the day but nobody has lieeit held
accountable lor those slayings. It
Hie racists prrvall In the currrtil
civil case, they will have evaded uny
form of retribution.

W ILLIAM RUSHER

Vietnam-Nicaragua
NLW YORK INEAI - U Is. pre­
sumably. only coincidence that the
debalc In Congress over whether lit
give furl tier covert aid to the
Nicaraguan contras Is taking place
Just us America's experience In
Vietnam Is undergoing sharp re­
view. Itut Congress Is nol emerging
at all well from Ihe latler — a tact
many legislators may hear In ittliul
tn deriding how lo vote on funding
Ihe contras.
Sen. Henry Calsrt Lodge's deb-at
of President Wilson over Joining the
League of Nations was regarded as a
famous Victory al the time: but
l-odgc Is rcttiemlrered today only us
Ihe leader of a “ little group of wllllul
men" who scuttled Ilit* league anti
thereby recklessly set Ihr stage for
World War II
The congressional opponents ol
Ihe Vietnam War have assumed
that history would treat them more
kindly As they see II. America was
misled Into that deadly adventure
hy Us "l&gt;est anti brightest" during
the Johnson administration. Op
position to the folly grew, but
Richard Nixon became president
and pressetl the buttle. Finally
Congress, taking matters Into Us
own hands, forced the withdrawal ol
American Iroop* from an "tm wlnnahle w ar." ended aid to Soul It
Vietnam, and tell far-olf Southeast
Asia to Its own devices.
But litis account nr events has
never tieen the only one. and a rival
version has recently lieen gaining
ground. Now It has taken a major
stride forward with the publication
of Richard Nixon’s sixth book. So
More Vietnama.
Because of that llllc, some people
may assume tltal Nixon bolds the
view that the Vietnam War was a
mistake from the outset. Nol at all.
says Nixon: "In Vietnam we tried

and laded lu a Just cause. ‘No More
W ilia m s ' can mean Ilint we will
nnl irv again It should mean that
wr will not full again."
And why did we fall? Certainly
not I k - c u o m - the war was lost —
i|iilte the contrary: "On Jan 27.
1973. w hen Secretary of Slate
William Rogers signed the Paris
pcarc agreements, we had won the
war In Vietnam." Nixon's descrip­
tion ol his four-year ellort to reach
lhat (Nilnt Is clear and altogether
convincing.
Then what went wrong? Con­
gress. that's what Fiercely partisan,
attentive to the national mood of
war-weariness. and (though Nixon
doesn't stress this) reaching lor the
president's Jugular over Watergate,
ibc Democrat It lenders ol Congress
In 1973 I list Insisted on a hull tn the
bom bing ol North Vietnam ese
sanctuaries in Cambodia, then
passed the War Powers Act over
Nixon's veto, thereby removing
“ the Iasi lit real to the North Viet­
namese of an American retaliation."
In October. Ilunol resumed the
offensive.
Then, wit It South Vietnam on Us
own and llanol's reinforcement
Irnnt Russia and China growing.
Congress during 1974 slashed the
supjdy of military equipment to
Sotilh Vietnam In well ticluw sur­
vival levels The end came, of
course, lu April 1975
It Is nol a Ifaltering picture of
Congress that Ntxon paints, und ol
c o u rse Its a ccu ra c y w ill be
challenged — (hough I must say It
strikes me as beyond serious con­
tradiction. But Ihe members ol
Congress today, as they approach a
vote on aid tn Ihe Nicaraguan
contras, must hr palnlully aware
lhat they are likewise being wat­
ched by Ihe ryes of hlstnrv-

JA C K ANDERSON

U.S. Sends Pakistan Mixed Signals
W A S H IN G TO N Reagan administration olllclats are at their
wits' end trying to Ifgure out how to
keep Pakistan from breaking Into
Ihr nuclear club — short of cutting
off all U S , aid lo lhat strategic
American ally.
Intelligence experts have warned
Hie Wltlle House with some urgency
Ural Pakistan la on the verge of
producing and testing a nuclear
uotnb alter years of buying — and
s t e a l i n g — lh c n e c e s s a r y
technology.
The administration's public posi­
tion is lo rrslale assurances by
P a k i s t a n 's d i c t a t o r . G e n .
Mohammad Zla ul-llaq, lhat Ills
country has neither the desire nor
the wherewithal lo produce a bomb
and lhat Its nuclear program Is for
purely peaceful research.
Hut privately Ihe administration
Iras done more than Just wring Its
hands al ZD's disingenuous dis­
claimer. My associate Indy Uadhwar
bus learned that there has been a

Hurry of diplomatic activity — and
some not so diplomatic — aimed at
cajoling or pressuring Zla nol to
build u bomb.
High-level presidential aides have
visited Istumuhud ui least a dozen
limes lu bring Zla warnings from
President Reagan. The most recent
was veteran envoy Vernon Walter*,
who "told Z D lo knock off certain
things he was doing." according (o
one Inside sourer.
There urr mixed assessments on
the rlfrrt of the udmlnlsirutlun's
pressure tactics. But uccordlng to
one report. Z D has agreed — for the
time being, ut least — not to operate
Pakistan's uranium reprocessing
itlant or to enrich the fissionable
material at any other facility.
Yet the Reagan administration
uppears to have sent a contradictory
signal (o Z D tn another develop­
ment. That was Its response to ihe
arrest of a Pakistani "business­
m an." Nazir Vald. for trying to
smuggle a Urge number of nuclear

triggering devices nul of the United
States Vald was tried, found guilty,
given a suspended sentence and
deported to Pakistan.
Journalist Seymour llersh gained
access to documents conllscated
from Vald alter his urrrsl. They
linked Vald directly to major figures
In Pakistan's nurlrur project. And
though Vuld cDltned he was buying
the nuclear triggers for IndustrDI
use. he hud tried to acquire 50 of
them — more than hall the total
number now In use commercially
ibrtmghoul the world.
But Instrud of trying Vuld us u
spy. the Justice Department let him
off. Several senior Stale Department
officials reportedly fear lhat the
administration's leniency toward
Vald will encourage Zla to Ignore
the attempts to keep him from
building a bomb. A recent Arms
Control and Disarmament Agency
working paper on the affair Is
reportedly critical of the govern­
ment's treatment of Vald.

I

Vuld was not Ihe Hrsl Pakistani lo
be raught trying lo smuggle banned
nuclear technology. Other "busi­
nessmen" have been apprehended
with everything from blueprints to
hardware In Canadu. T u r k e y .
Holland und France. Pakistan's at­
tempts to build u nuclear weapon
became so blatant lhat In 1079 U.S.
military aid was rut off as required
hy Dw.
Bui It was resumed a few months
laler, after the Soviet Invasion of
Afghanistan und Pakistan’s sudden
emergence a » the conduit for U.S.
uld to the Afghan rebels. In a
loophole drilled specDlly tn the law.
Congress stipulated that aid to
Pakistan would be cut olf only If ZD
actually explodes a nuclear weapon.
The While House supports the
exemption for Pakistan, arguing
that cutting off aid again might
make Zla reluctant to continue
h e lp in g th e A fg h a n r e b e ls ,
especially In the face of recent
threats by the Soviets.

�SPORTS
Sam
Cook
Sportt Editor

Rams Win / Without Schmit
Grayson, Hill Provide
Big Hits To Top Lyman

Alegre Homer:
Did It Travel
465 In The Air?
Paul Alegre hit a long home
run Saturday. How long? I’m
afraid to tell you how long I
think It was. Some of the
people I've told so far have
greeted the news with disbelief
and immediate phone calls to
the men with the whitecoats.
Anyw ay. It was the top of
the fifth Inning at Lake Mnry
High's field Saturday as the
Greyhounds and llie Rams
slugged it out In a key Five
Star Conference encounter.
Alegre cam e to bat w ith
Lyman holding a precarious
6-4 lead.
Anthony Lazsalc was pit­
ching for Lake Mary. Laszalc is
a good pitcher but somehow
he always gets Involved with
spectacularly hit home runs.
There was that one In Gary.
Ind. w ith the bases loaded
against F’lng Tung. Taiwan
and another one this year off
the bat of James llersey which
was traveling around 120
miles an hour when It left the
park.
Alegre, who Is more of a
slasher than a home run
hitter, picked on the first pitch
and sent It up. up and away. I
was positioned on the right
field foul line, a perfect setting
to watch It go. It was one of
those "nodoubters.”
The right field line at Lake
Mary Is 315 feel The power
alley In right center is 345 feet.
Alegre's blast spill the dif­
ference between the two signs
ll carried almost all the way to
bushes, hitting about five feet
In front of the unmowed area
and bouncing In
Armed with such baseball
" h y s t e r i a n s ’ * as W a y n e
Overstreet, Harold Helms and
Roger Clem of the Seminole
Pony Complex and A ltam on te
Springs Little League m em ­
bers Russ "W hit" Whittington
and Ron Holman, we began to
discuss the possible length of
the prodigious |X)kc.
Certain factors, of course,
needed to be considered. The
wind. When the game started.
It was blowing 15-20 miles per
hour toward center field — a
hitter's dream. At the time of
Alegre's belt, however. It was
around lO m ph at die most.
After trying to coerce several
younger fellows Into stepping
off the blast. Helms took the
bull by the horns and walked
ll off. Starting at (he point of
where It left the park. Helms
began Ills trek.
He walked and he walked
and he walked. Once there, he
surveyed the area and Holman
— who had retrieved the ball
— verified that Helms was
p e rfe c tly p o s itio n e d . He
started his return trip. People
made curious observations as
to why Helms was headed for
the brush, but 1 maintained
that he wus on a mission of
mercy and his Intentions were
honorable.
All of this time, various
estimates were going on as to
the clout's length. AH. of
course, seemed a little long.
Was the distance half a foot­
ball field? Was It one-third of a
football field? Was it a short
wedge to the green? Was a
long putt? Was 11 from home to
second base?
Finally. Helms returned. "It
was 135 feet.” hr announced.
Silence...
W hen the figures finally
came together, no one could
believe It. Taking the 330 from
the fence and adding the 135.
the home run traveled 463 feet
— In the air. The roll wus
about 20 feel more. A high
school home run — 485 feet.
Is that possible? On the
surface. II doesn't seem lo be.
Hut until we gel a hold of Lake
Mary track coach Mike Gibson
and his tape measure. Helms'
long walk will have to do.
La ke M ary catcher Rod
"C .J." Metz Imaged his way
Into the Florida High School
Record Hook with 11 straight
hits two weeks sgo, It might be
lime to clear a page for one
Paul Alegre.
Mike Schmlt. who missed
Saturday's game with a touch
of mononucleosis and strep
throat, hit a replica of the
Alegre shot March 15 at Lake
Urantley. Schmlt's blast —
way. way over the right field
fence — was headed for State
Road 436 when Iasi sighted

HsraM f * )M Vt Oraytry Oaten

Lake M ary's Brel Molle crosses the plate
with one of the Rams' 14 runs Saturday as
Shane Letterlo awaits his turn at the plate,
Molle and Letterlo both played key roles as
the Rams cruised to a 14 9 Five Star

C onf e r en c e v i c t o r y over L y m a n ' s
G r e y h o u n d s S a t u r d a y , Lake M a r y
strengthened Its lead In the Five Star as It
improved to 1 U , two and half games ahead
of Lyman and DcLand.

Dy Sam Cook
Herald Sports E d ito r
Saturday wasn't win one for
Mike Schmlt day at Lake Mary
High School, tt was win one
without him. Lake Mary’s Rams,
m inus the tra m 's mainstay,
wanted to desperately prove
they aren't a one-man show.
Schmlt. although not a oneman show but definitely the
nucleons of a fine haltclnb. was
confined lo his home with a
touch of what is thought to be
m ononucleosis and a strep
throat, according to Lake Mary
coach Allrn Tuttle.
"We really wanted to prove we
weren't a one-man tram ." said
Tuttle. ” 1 usually give out game
bull after each game., this time I
would have needed a dozen.”
Schmtl or not. the Ram proved
to be to o m u c h f o r th e
Greyhounds one more time Sat­
urday. erasing two early ftvUls by
Lyman en route lo a sloppily
played 14-U victory In Five Star
C o n lrrrnrc baseball at Lake
Mary High School.
"Ii certainly didn't look like
the two licsl teams In the Five
Star, did It?" said Lym an coach
Hob McCullough. "W e played
horribly. Wc make a mistake
and It's such a blow to our ego
that we can't reclaim It One
mistake Just led to another."
Mistakes were m any (eight
errursl In the Itallle lie!ween
Lyman, ranked No. 5 In the
stale, and Lake Mary, ranked
No. I), Hut so were dramatic
m om ents, w h ic h made the
hallgamr a spectator's delight II
not a purist s dream
T h e Lake M a ry v ic t o r y ,
b ro u g h t a b o u t b y D o n a ld
Grayson's three-run homer and

Baseball
K e v in H itt's c lu tc h g a m e winning RHt single. Improved
the Lake Mnry record to 11-1 In
the Five Star and 14-3 overall.
Lym an. 8-3 and 15-4. fell three
games otr the pace with six to
play.
Derek Ltvcrnols. who beat
Lake Mary In a pre-conference
game but has been Ineffective
ilie past two ttmrs. pitched Into
ilit* sixth Inning before giving
way to Byron Overst reel. The
senior right-hander was roughed
up for 10 hits and 13 runs, nine
of which were earned. He struck
out five and walked stx hut
threw 130 pitches. Lym an’s de­
fense collapsed In the sixth
Inning, committing three errors.
Ltvcrnols fell to 5-2.
Anthony Lnsznlc. subbing for
Schm lt. turned In a performance
pood enough lo win. Laszalr
went the distance to earn his
sixth strnlght win. Th e sopho­
more right-hander allowed nine
hits but Just four earned runs.
Laszalr struck out three and
walked five.
Lym an Jumped ahead In the
first inning when Kvlr Brubaker
singled to right Mike llcu lry
lined out to right but Brubaker
s to ic second before D e re k
Ltvcrnols Hew out to center.
L a s/n lc, pitching c a re fu lly.
walked dangerous Paul Alegrr
but Jim m y Odom spanked a
single through Itir right side for
a 1 O lead.
Shane Letterlo look care of
that with our swing of the but In
See RAMS. Page 7A

Big East Beasts— Three Advance To Final Four
U nited Press International
The argument will continue, but in the
NCAA Tournam ent quarterfinals the Big
East has made a very strong rase for Its
superiority over the Atlantic Coast Con­
ference.
Three members of the Big East de­
feated ACC teams over the weekend to
advance lo the Final Four, the first time a
trio of schools from the same league have
reached the semifinals.
Sunday. St. Jo h n ’s defeated North
Carolina Stale 69-60 and Vlllanovu
downed North Curnllna 56-44 to Join
Georgetown. Saturday victo rs over
Georgia Tech , In I tic Final Four at
Lexington. Ky. Memphis Stale, which
Saturday defeated Oklahoma, completes
the semifinal field.
Third ranked SI John's faces No. I
Georgetown In next Saturday’s semifi­
nals while VUlanova plays No. 4 Memphis
Stair.
The trip to the Final Four will I k - the
llrsi for St. Jo hn 's roach Lou Carncseccu

Basketball
In 17 years at the New York school.
At Denver. Colo.. Chris Mullln's 25
|M)lnts. Hill Wcnnlngton's 10 rebounds
and smothering team defense left the
normally verbose Camesecca as close to
speechless as he could Ik *alter a victory.
"It’s very difficult for me lo express
myself." h r said. "I'm usually very
verbal. With live seconds left In the game,
I looked np at the clock and kept
thinking. ’We're going, We’re going.’ This
Is one i'll remember when I'm going to
tny grave."
"We gained a lot today." said 7-fool
center WcnnUtgton. "They (N.C. State)
just did not hurt us inside. W r kept
(Lorenzo) Charles bntllrd up. and the
other guys Just didn’t get It going."
N.C. Stale got only seven Inside
buckcts from lls big men — Charles.
Cozrlle McQueen and Russell I’lcrre.

"I guess that was thrtr plan," Charlrs
said, "to keep me from getting m y hundx*
on the trail. The y did."
At Birmingham. Ain.. VUlanova seniors
Ed Pinckney. Dwayne McClain and Gary
McLain, denied In the regional limits in
1682 and 1083. finally reached Final
Four.
"There aren't any words to explain the
way I fe e l." Pinckney said, " O u r
freshman year, we mmV a pact between
the three of us to try our hardest to get to
the Final Four. Now we've done It."
North Carolina denied VUlanova u
chance at the championship In I tic 1682
Eastern Regional I Inal and appeared in Ik*
on lls way to rubbing ihr Wtldcnt’adreiim
again Sunday.
The Tar Heels led by as many as H
points In the first ball, using their
siijK-rlor height lo limit the Wildcats lo
only 26 percent shooting from the Held
VUlanova bounced buck to hit l6-ol-21
shots(76 percent) In the second half.
"They've made my hair stand on end

Martin Blazes
Into Record Books

Seminoles Shine
In Jacksonville
By Chris Flster
Herald Sports W riter
JA C K S O N V IL L E - They came, they got
"kicked around a little." they conquered.
Alter bearing up on Central Florida learns the
pasl few weeks. Sanford's Fighting Seminoles
Journeyed lo Jacksonville Saturday to see what
the rest of the state had to oiler.
The Seminoles didn’t completely dominate Ihe
65 tram Bob Hayes Invitational at Jacksonville
Raines High, but they did compile 55 points,
which was 24 better than the second place teams.
Homestead and Miami Southridgc with 31 apiece.
Among the highlights of the meet Included a
school record and state leading 440 relay and the
mile rrlay which ran Its brsi time of the season
and Ihe fastest time In the state.
"It wus a tremendous meet." Seminole coach
Ken Hruuman said. "We've been dominating
trams tn our area and It was good for our athletes
to go up there (Jacksonville) und get kicked
around a little. W r performed super In some areas
and were disappointing In others, but. when we
needed a lift, our tram leaders came through with
quality efforts."
The 440 relay tram of Pat Davis. Clifton
Campbell. Deron Thompson and Frank Barnett
teamed up for a first place time of 42.0. "W r were
even at the first exchange and Clifton. Deron and
Frank extended thr lead." Brauman said.
The mile relay team of Louis Brown. Earic
Martin. Thom pson and Campbell churned to a
season's beat lime of 3 :17.2.
Brown storied off the mile relay and gave
Seminole the lead but. with about 130 yards to
go. his hamstring lightened and he slowed down,
according to Brauman. Martin took the baton
with Seminole trailing Gainesville Buchholz by
40 yards. Marlin caught the Buchholz runner and
gave the Tribe a slim lead when he handed off to
Thompson who extended the lead slightly with a
49 8 spill before giving off to Campbell for the last
leg. Campbell rolled to an impressive 47.4 split to
give the 'Notes first place.
See 'NOLE8. Page 6A

and th cv 'vr made me love th e m .”
Wildcats coach Rollle Masai m Ino said ns
he chomped on a victory cigar. "One
riling they have Is confidence They're
not rocky. Just confident."
Harold Pressley, who led Ihe Wlldrats'
scoring w ith 15 |&gt;oint*. and reserve guard
Harold Jensen, who was scorelrss In the
llrst hall, each had It) second-half points
lo lead Villanova's comeback. McLain
had 6 of bis I I points In the second ball
and McClain bad 8 of Ills I I after
Intermission.
Brad Daugherty scored 17 points and
gra b b e d 12 r e b o u n d s for N o r t h
Carolina.27-9. lint ihr 6-foot-11 center
had Utile sup|Kiri. No other T n r Heel hud
more than 6 points.
"1 frit like maybe attrr wc got through
tough games at Notre Dame mid here
against Auburn, maybe wr thought we
had It." North Curnllna couch Dean
Smith said. "W e were not ready mpnlully
— ami that was my fault.

V

m
TfW
▼*_-

-*

Seminole's Leo Peterson sails to a 21-2 in Ihe
long jump earlier In the season. The Tribe's
junior leaper took second In the triple jump
and fourth in the long jump Saturday in the
Bob Hayes Invitational at Jackonsville
Raines High. Behind state best times in the
440 and mile relays, the 'Notes won the
prestigious meet with $5 points compared to
31 each for H o me s t e a d and M i a m i
Southrldge. Seminole County's young
athletes will be In the spotlight Thursday In
♦he county Freshman-Sophomore meet at
Lake Howell High.

By C h ris Plater
Herald Sports W rite r
S n n ln o lr H igh s Shownda
Martin took on not only some ol
the best the state hail to oiler,
but some of the best In the
nation In the 800 meters and the
fleet-footed freshman let all
challengers eat her dust.
Martin ran Ihe fastest hall mile
In Seminole County history and
was one tenth of a second off the
stale record os she sprinted to a
meet record rime of 2 12 85 In
the Lady Gulor Relays Saturday
at Santa Fc Com m unity College
InGutnrsvIlle.
There were 150 schools on
hand Saturday from all over the
U n i t e d S t a t e s a n d Its
possessions. Th e y came from us
far north as Hurtadalc. N.Y.. and
as far south us the Bahamas and
Virgin Islands.
M a r tin 's In c r e d ib le ru n
highlighted un outstanding day
for Seminole County uthlctes.
Other county winners Included
the luidy Semlnolrs’ mile relay
team, which also set a meet
record, und T rin ity Prep's tal­
ented J u n io r Ad rien n e
I'olltowlcz, who turned In u
tremendous time in wtnnlng the
3.000 meters.
Martin's time of 2 :12 85 Is
electronic timing. Rounded up
for 880 yards, which Is what Is
run in most high schoo meets
Including state. Martin's llmr
would be 2 :1 3.5. The state
record Is 2:13.4 while the former
top Seminole County rime was
2:14 by Lake Howell's Lydiu
Blakely. Martin also Improved on

Track/Field
her previous best of 2:17.8
which was the stale's top tlrnr
going Into Saturday's meet.
Martin completely dominated
the race front start to finish as
Hie next closest competitor.
North Miami's Imogetie Bowen,
came in utmost four seconds
txhlnri Marlin at 2:16 4.
Among thr others Murtln brat
w e re A d rie n n e W u ltu s of
Tru m a n High In Hartsdule. N X .
(2:17.37). .Julie Johnson of Me­
morial Day of Savannah. Ga..
(2 19.50). Stacy Mutschner of
Cocoa H ruch (2 :2 0 .5 3 ) and
Gcnirir Oliver of St. Vincent
A e u d rm y In Savannah. Ga..
(2.23.31).
O t h e r S e m in o le C o u n t y
athletes competing in the H00
meters Included Lym an's Jen*
idler Hllzgca (2:29.91). Trinity
Prep's Katie Sains (2:24.5), Lake
Howell's Nancy Nystrom (2 25 8)
und Lake Mary's Denise Putnam
w ho run a personal beat 2:36.1.
Seminole's mile relay team of
senior Glendu Buss, Martin,
freshman Dorchrilr Webster and
senior Katrina Walker learned
up to destroy Ihe rest of the field
w ith a meet record lime of
3 :4 9 .11 compared lo 3:53.6 for
St. Cruulx Central of Ihe Vlrglna
Islands, 3:54.27 for T ru m a n
High ( N X ). 4 00 33 for Sweeting
H ig h of Nassau. B ah am a s,
Bee RELAYS. Page 6A

�•A— Evening Merel&lt;h Sanford, FI.

Monday, March IS, 1»*J

Tired Rams Can't Stop
Hard-Hitting West Orange
By Chris Flstcr
H erald Sports W riter
C A SS ELB ER R Y - 'T h e y 're
playing like possessed demons."
Th a i's ihe way one spec tator
described the Impressive play of
Lake Mary's Lady Rams as they
m oved thro ugh the lo s e r’s
bracket of the Lady H aw k
Tournament at Red Hug Park.
But. even possessed demons
get tired.
Having played six games to get
Into the finals. Lake Mary would
have had to win two more for the
tournament title. But the Lady
Rams Just didn't have enough
left In them for one game, let
alone two. Even though they
turned In a valiant effort, the
tired Rams dropned a lO fi
derision to the hard hitting 1-ady
Warriors out of Winter Garden
West Orange High.
"I was really proud of the way
Ihr girls played," l-ake Mary
coach Cindy Henry said. "Th e y
looked so tired In that last game
and still played well. I just didn't
know how to stop West Orange."
The Warriors Jumped out lo a
3 0 lead right off the bat.
Heather Hruzlrl and Susan Walls
led off with consecutive singles
and Jennifer Hawkins boomed a
triple to left center to drive In
two runs. The third scored on
Cheryl Browning's ground out.
West Orange made It 5 0 In the
lop of the second when Walls
unloaded a mammoth home run
lo left field. "We were playing
Ihcm deep," Mild Henry. "But
they still hit the hall over our
outfielders' heads."
A solo homer by Maudy Muxcy, who was the tournament's
Most Valuable player, gave the
Warriors a 0-1 lead, but the Lady
Rama fought back with three
runs In the bottom of Ihr (bird to
pull within 0-4. Wlih one out,
Karen DeShctler drew a walk.
Belli Watkins followed with u
single and Kim Averlll singled to
drive In DeShctler. An error on
the play moved the runners lo
second and third and both
Watkins and Averlll scored on
Lisa Slrtiklns' singled to led
center.
West Orange pulled away with
four runs In Ihc top of the fourth.
TIIE COMEBACK TR A IL
li was West Orange that put

r

...'Noles

Continued from BA
J T h r Trll&gt;r went one-two in the
; -140 yard dash Saturday, hul II
J wasn’t thr usunl order of finish,
; Marlin, a sophomore, upsei
j Campbell, u senior, lor llrst place
j with a lime of -tn 2 compared to
; 411 3 for Campbell
| "Chiton (Cumptielll had Just
’ run Hie 440 relay and had ulxiul
I three minutes before running
! Hie quarter," Uruuinan said. "He
! iuidn’l recovered enough und
j was sluggish Ihe last IHO yurds.
I l l ’s an experiment we Bled and
I we fulled. We won't try II again."
I Campbell leads Hie stale In the
j 440 with u 48,) which Is ulso the
! stale record.

Softball
the Lady Rams In the loser’s
bracket to begin with. Saturday
morning, the Lady Warriors
came out with a 4-1 victory.
The llrst win was a hard
fought contest against Oviedo's
Lady Lions. The teams were
knotted at 1-1 after seven In­
nings before Lake Mary won It In
the eighth when Averlll singled.
Slmklns followed with a single
and Averlll scored on an error on
the play.
The going got a lltlle easier for
Ihr Rams In the nrxl game as
they hammered the hapless
lardy Trojans of Orlando Evans.
16-3. larke Mary then outslugged
Oak Ridge. 15-8. to set up a
rematch with county rival and
tournament host Lake Howell.
L ake H o w e l l a d v a n c e d
through the loser's bracket by
beating Lym an, 11-2, and edg­
ing Colonial, 5-4.
RAMS T R IM L A D Y H A W K S
The last time the two teams
met, Lake Howell ram r away
with a 2-1 victory In eight
Innings, taking advantage of a
Lake Mary error to score the
winning run. This time, howev­
er, Ihr shoe was one the other
fool
A tw o-run error by Lake
Howell and lough defense hy I he
Lady Rams paved the way tor
Lake Mary's 3-2 victory,
"We dldn'l make any big
mistakes against Lake Howell,"
Henry said. "It was kind of
ojijMislle from the llrst time we
played them Our error helped
them Iasi lime while ihrlr error
h e I |) e d u s I b i s t i m e .
Psychologically. Lake Howell
was our biggest win of the
tournament. It really Idled our
confidence."
"Our defense was not as sharp
as usual," laikr Howell coach Jo
Luciano said. "It really showed
In (he larke Mary game We
made some big errors tint we
still had time lo conic hack We
Just didn't."
Lake
Mary stored
three
runs on tour hits with one big
error In the bottom of Hie fourth.
W ith one o u t. D e S h c tle r.
Watkins and Averlll stroked

In one of the feature races of
the meet, Seminole's Barnett
bat lied Michael Tlm pson of
Miami Lakes In Ihe 120 high
hurdles. Tlm pson, Hie dt-lendlng
stair champion, ouldiirlrd the
Seminole senior III a close race.
Id 1 to 13 5. Barnett also placed
llllh III Ihc 230 hurdles
Leo Peterson, a Junior, finished
second in the triple |uinp l-IH-3)
and fourth In thr lung Jumjt
122 21 while Alvin Julies took
third In Hie triple Jump (48 10).
Junior distance slundoul Billy
Peiilck took third in Hit- mile
with u lime of 4 20 8
"Th e Irnin showed that lhey
are class Individuals," Bniumun
said "Th e y are a credit lo the
sehool and thr community."

consecutive singles to load the
bases and Slmklns followed with
a single lo center to drive in
DeShctler. Satulll then hit a
routine grounder to second but tt
went under Sandy Gillies' legs
and both Watkins and Averlll
scored for a 3-2 lead.
"That's something you don't
see very oflen," Henry said of
Gillies' error. "She's one of the
best fielders around."
7 ERRORS DOOM BRANTLET
A seven-error Inning enabled
Lake Mary to break open a close
game as they advnaced to the
final with a 10-2 victory over
Lake Brantley’s Lady Patriots.
The Lady Rams capitalized on
seven Lake Brantley errors In
the fifth lo score nine runs and
that was all they needed for a
10-2 victory. The key hit In the
fifth was a two-run single off the
hat of Santulll. Th e hit by
Suntulll. who has been a tough
hitler In the clutch this season,
was the one that broke the game
open for Luke Mary.
While Brantley made seven
errors In the fifth Inning. Like
Mary made Just one tn the game.
BRANTLEY WINS FIRST TWO
In what coach Renny Belrls
called Ihelr best two games of
Hie season. Lake Brantley's Lady
Patriots opened the tournament
with a pair of Impressive victo­
ries, H-2 over Orlando Colonial's
Lady Grenadiers, and 16-2 over
Oak Ridge's Lady Pioneers.
In the first-round game against
Colonial, the La d y Patriots
jioundcd out 14 hits. Laura
Davis was 3 for 4 lo lead ihe way
while Kim Wain was 2 for 5.
scored Hirre runs, and smashed
a two run homer In the scvrnih
to sew up Ihe w in. Mundy
Matthleson and Sherry "Ice"
Asplen added two hits each.
A gainst Oak R idge, Mat(hit-son. Brantley's hottest hitler
In the tourney, was 4 for 5 and
An eight-run fourth Inning
drove In three runs. Wain and
Davis added two hits each. paved the way as West Orange
Michelle Brown scored four runs held off u Julr Brantley com­
while Asplrn and Wendy Jeffers eback for a 12-0 victory. Bru/lcl
slugged a pair of homers In the
Hrovr in one run apiece.
B ra n tle y m o ve d Into the game, Hawkins also belted one
winner’s bracket final against while Maxry ripped a triple
West Orange and. although they LYM AN TIPS TRIBE
In un opening round game.
took a 2 0 lead, the Lady Patriots
couldn't contain thr powerful Dawn Boyrsen's single in Ihe
bottom of the seventh Inning
bats of Hie laid y Warriors

A pair of fine second sackers.
Above, Lake M a ry's Lisa
Slmklns tries to sweep the
tag on runner.
The Lady Rams defeated the
Pioneers, 15 8. It was one of
five victories for Lake Mary
in what was one long Satur­
day at Red Bug Park. Lake
M ary wound up second In the
Lady Hawk Tournament. At
the left, Lake Howell's Sandy
Gillies makes the pivot at
second en route to complet­
ing a double play. Gillies and
the L a d y H a w k s we r e
knocked out of the tourna­
ment by Lake M ary, 3 2.
West O r a n g e wo n four
straight games to claim the
championship with a 10-6
victory over Lake Mary, In
the Rams' seventh game ol
the day, the final decision.

HaraWPbaw* by
gave Lyman a 13-12 victory over
Sanford's Lady Seminole*
Highlights of the game for the
Lady G re y h o u n d s Included
grand slam homers by Denise
Slrvrns and Valeric Price.
Ja n e t lla u c k hud an lm rpesslvc game for the Lady
Seminotes as she went 4 for 4
with three doubles and five Rills
Hauck now leads Ihe county In

runs baited In with 17.
T R IB E . LIONS E X I T E A R L Y
Both Seminole and Oviedo's
Ludy Lions were eliminated tn
two games as Seminole lost to
Lym an and Colonial and Oviedo
was upended by Oak Ridge and
Lake Mary
" T h e girls played a super
game," Seminolr coach Beth
Corso said.

Run*
Hi
Mauck, Samlnotft

COUNTY LEADERS
lUndlnfi
I f AM

V

0y.f4ll
)0 4
40
11
...................... &gt; t
Jl
10 1
J)
101
» 1
14
IF
} ]
14
ii
11
1|
» f
41
Sprue. C r . . k
.............
ii
Monday'! s*&lt;"* lOran*# 0 .111
O v M e II Tov•fill. ) I O B C ) •• Trim ly Pitp
l i n a i r i »•"»«* I F I v . lia r 11
Laka Mary al Samlnola, &lt;11 p m . Fori
Malian
Lyman al 0*1.and, i p m Dala nd Airport
Laka Mow.ll a* laabraara. 4 11 p m . Ion
ny land F laid
Mainland al Laka Branllay. 4 l l p m
Oranpa Ball
Oviado al Jana*. 4 p m
Ftayar
T.am
(M a r mart al ball)

........S I l4 f

At

N

AVQ

Avorlll. L . . . M u ,

Slmklm. l . . . M*&gt; y
Dlaon. Samlnola
Ryan, ly m m
Eby Oviado
K a lw r. ly m in

IS
31
AS
30
30
44
34
n
22
24

V
U 4 IS I.W 1 . L . . . B,antl«y
O avlt. L 4.4 H r.n tl.,
TM*fcau«h, L » . » Mow.ll
Lay, Lak* tiawtll
D .S h .n .r , L M . Mary
A m *1. - Laka Bran»i«y
Mankln*. Laka Mow.il
W a lk ., Saminoi.
Ol utat, Laka How.ll
Lbwlt, L a b . Mow.II
F n l . ' , Oviado
M oo., Laka Mary .................
Suoat. Samlnola .................
Brown. Laka BranfWy

41
17
44
44
45
20
44
ii
4;
ii
7*

V

20
...41

‘6
1)
1*
2)
15
II
77
14
15
11
12
12
10
14
JO
11
10
1
&gt;•
f
II

W
in
114
sn
wo
wo

Mat,. Laka M ary
Wilkin*. L*k« Mary
Adam*, Laka M ary
Wain. Laka Branllay
Busman. Oviado

4FI
471
4M
40*
441
444

Gardrar. Laka Mow.ll
Saundart Lak . Mow.lt
Wllllami. Oviado
May. Laka Branllay
M »y »r. Laka Branttay
Dmk.tacktr. Laka Mow.ll
TiMMTTk. Laka How.lt
Jonat. Laht How«*l
Hasaman. Laka Branllay
ILati man H a l S alt)
Hlcki, Saminoi.
Manual, Lak . How*n
Wallac*. L a k . Mow.lt

•
it

Ml
170

II

147

u

4M
04

411
400
400
400

Ml
Ml

Ml

Vickary, Lym an
H*ll Oviado
Rofeinton. Laka BrantWy
Th om .. Oviado
D H urt. Laka Branllay
W JaMart. Laka Branllay

Ml

41
44
44
7*
|1
2«
45
42
H
30

. V
71
It
II
22
i&gt;
7
If
f
....It
f
4
ii
14

14
n
ii

f

t
14
17
f
f
II
f
17
It
1
10
4

•
4
F
5
i
7
4
4

laa
344
241
113
222
321
211
110
710

...Relays

Mayar, Laka Branllay
C h i •*. laka How.it
Havck Saminoi.
CKfvIt Ov*ado
Jana., laka H ow .il
Vi#van, Lyman
DaVwiiar. Laka Mary
F r k - w r Saminoi*

Continued from 8A

Ihabauiti LakaMow.lt
LaOuk*. Lyman
Sandart. SamwoM
1 by Oviado
M »4 . Saminoia
HankInt Laka H ow . ii
tiM O M Laka H ow .ll
Ryan, Lyman
Wain Laka Branllay
Walkint. la ka Mary
Awtrlll Lika M ary
Farr, Saminoi.
Vickary Lyman

u
is

11
12
12
10
10
10

no

2*7
7*0
Ml
7S1
230
447
jii
4/4
444
434
35/
111
177
304
244

t
•
•
•

lantulli Lai# Mary
Hick*, Saminoi#

1
•
•
S w g Q t . S a m

1 «

1
0 1 a t
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
*
4
5
5
4
4
4

Cllliat. Lak. Mow.il
MattM«ton Laka Branttay

Rant

I

•I 00 4D lor North Miami and
4 03 lit lor Belle Glade Glailrs
Ccnlrul.
Bass ran Ihr tlrsl leg of llie
IX too meter relay and her lime
was In Hie 5 7 V Martin llirn
Sgrabbed the Im tun and set the
! truck on lire wllli a 3U. I spin
! Webster ulso run In Ihc 57 s
1while Walker mu limed wttli u
138.0.
laikr Mary's mile reluy team ol
- l uhithu Garni. Nlkl Hays. Denise*
Putnam and Jodie M cCurdy
finished with u Unicoi 4 25.5.
Polltowlcr finished nil wh.it
, purl u( ihr (rack wasn't already
i hunted uji by Marlin as the
j Trinity I'reji standout ohlitrrutrd
•the test ol llir Held In the 3.000
•miters |7lli tups) with a time or
; 10:30.1 (hand lieldl
j Lake Howell's Amy Ertel also
[ ran an Impressive lime as site
came In lourtli at 10:43.0. Lake
Howell's Martha Fuitsreu was
seventh ut 11:07.0.
Pnlltowlcjc Is going utter her
second straight stale llllr (1A) In
Ihe two mile run. She run u stair
record 10:47.4 In winning the
stale two mile lust year and Ihe
; Junior distance uee took on und
on Hasted all classifications in
. Saturday's meet.
1 Seminole County tu»d three o(
the lop seven (rums tn thr
4XHOO relay Including a third
place finish by Luke Howell's
Lady Hawks, a sixth by Luke
M a r y a n d a s e v e n t h by
Seminole.
L u k e H o w e ll's R o c h e lle
Sjicurman. a senior, placed In
i iboth hurdle events us she came
In fourth In the 300 meter

y GaAni

14
14
I)

Saimdari Laka MowatJ

11
12
II
10
10

Wain, Laka Branllay

10
10

Willtam*. Oviado

f

*
*
f

•

4
3
2
)
2
2
}
2

Tibbie* Lak. Mow.ll
Haeaman. Laka Branfiay
Motxnton Laka Branfiay

•

1
1

§
•
i
l

Mam* runt
J
3
3
Trip*.*
2

l

1

1

S lkv.ni Lyman

Apopka Drops Pats
APOPKA — Rob Cousins und
Tim Oxley combined on a fourhitter Saturday us Apopka’s Blue
D a rte rs h a n d c u ffe d L a k e Apopka rallied for two runs.
Brantley's Patriots, 3-1. In Five Meanwhile, Cousins and Oxley,
Star C o n fe re n ce action al who came on In the fifth, allowed
Apopka High.
Just two hits thr rest of the way
The loss dropped the Patriots while closing Ihe door on the
to 7-5 tn the Five Star und 12-8 Patriots.
overall while the Darlrrs Im ­
In thr sixth for Apopka. Keith
proved to 7-4 and 12*5. Brantley Ussrry drew a walk lo lead off
will try to rebound tonight at 7 and was sacrificed to second.
when It hosts Sanford’s Fighting Lowman followed with a single
Scmlnolrs.
to drive In lissrcy and break the
Apopka got to Brantley starter 1*1 deadlock. Apopka added an
Tim Smith for one run tn the Insurance run when Hlnde
bottom of the llrst as Sydney singled In Lowman.
Low m an singled and came
No hitter had more than one
around lo score on a tingle off hit for the Patriots as Andy
the bat of Mike Hlnde.
Dunn. Bass. Sm ith und Mike
The Patriots came back to Be Beams each had singles.
It ut 1-1 in Ihc third. Kevin Bass
In other Five Star action today,
stroked u single and moved to red-hot Luke Mary travels to
third on a single by Smith. Utalr Daytona Beach to lake on
Patten then laid down a squeeze Seabreeze. Lym a n lakes on
bunt to score Bass.
another of the hottest conference
Smith shut Ihe Dartrrs down trams in DeLand at DrLund and
unlll ihe sixth Inning when Lake Howell hosts Mainland.

Baseball

MM4W FbOW b» Tan ,»y VbKMrt

Lisa Shelby strains to get over the bar In the
high jump. The Lake M ary sophomore
cleared 4 4 Saturday as one of five events
she competed In In the pentathlon portion of
hurdles (45.75) und sixth In the
100meter huidlrs||5 t&gt;6).
Luke Ilruotlry's Culhle Wild
took sixth III litr 300 s (47.34)
while another Lady Putrlul
hurdler. Ta m m y Jours, recorded
a time of 40.0. Also running the
100 hurdles was Lake Mary's

McCurdy who ran a IHtiO

the Lady Gator Relays In Gainesville.
Shelby, a last minute entry In the pen­
tathlon, came away with a seventh place
finish out of 20 competitors.

While the rest of Seminole Jump und It was well worth It us
County's teams were competing she came In seventh out of 20
In reluys or Individual events. coni pet Hors with 1.030 points
"They told her (Shrlby) she
Lake Mary's Lisa Shelby, a
sophomore, entered the five- couldn't enter thr high Jump so
event prntuthlnn comnetlHun. wc got her Into Ihe jyentuthlon at
Shelby entered the pcntuthlon the last moment." Gibson said.
al Ihe last moment utter being "She came in seventh and B h r
scratched In the Individual high was happy as a lark. "

/

I

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
Alford’s 29 Move Knight,
Hoosiers Into NIT Somis
By United Preoa International
According to Indiana Coach Bobby Knight, reports of the
demise ol the National Invitation Tournament have been
greatly exaggerated.
"1 think anybody that would ever wonder about the good
of the N IT only has to look lo this game," Knight said after
Indiana defeated Marquette Sunday In double-overtime.
“ It’s about as Interesting and as exciting as we've ever had
In here."
Sieve Alford moved Indiana into the semifinals as he
scored 29 points. Including 11 In the two overtime periods,
to lift Indiana to a 94-82 victory over foul-plagued
Marquette In a quarterfinal contest at Bloomington. Ind.
The victory advances the Hoolsers to the semifinals,
which, along with the championship, will be played at
Madison Square Garden In New York.
Indiana will Join Louslvllle. which got 15 points from Jeff
Hall and 15 from Mark McSwain off the bench Sunday to
eliminate Tennesaee-Chattanooga 7 1-66.
Manual Forrest added 12 points, helping the Cardinals.
19-16. advance to semifinals where they will play U C LA .
19-12. on Wednesday. Indiana. 18-13. faces Tennessee.
21-14. In the other semifinal The winners meet for the
championship Friday.
A 3-polnt play by Alford with 3:30 left In the second
overtime gave Indiana an 81-76 lead and Marquette got no
closer than 3 points after that
At Lexington. Kv.. Louisville never trailed as It played
before a home crowd of 19.272 at Freedom Hall
Tennessee-Chattanooga. 24-8. moved within 52-48 on a
15-foot Jumper by Gerald Wilkins with 7 58 left. The
closest they got after that was 65 62 on a basket by Clifford
Morgan with 1.11 remaining.
If Louisville wins lls next game It will Insure Coach
Denny Crum his 13th straight 20-vlctory season since
taking over the Cardinals In 1971 -72.

Sweaty Strange Tops Watson
LAS VEGAS. Nrv. (U i’ll — Curtis Strange has spent the
last month with a case of sweaty palms.
During that time, he has won two PGA events In
dramatic fashion and Is awaiting the birth of his second
child.
On Sunday. Strange. 30. knocked In a 6-foot birdie pull
on the 18th hole to claim Ihe title at the PGA's 81 million
slop In Las Vegas. The victory was worth a season-high
$171,000 payday and placed Strange comfortably on top
the season s money list
"I played well today," he said, "T o m (Walson. ihe leader
coming Into Sunday’s round) and I were going at It pretty
good on the front side. Torn hud some problems on the
backside and I tried to have some loo, but I managed to get
out of II."
Watson struggled all wrrk attempting to break out of his
helter-skelter, birdie-bogey syndrome. On Sunday, he
finally fell victim lo It.
Hr started the round at 14 under and quickly moved lo
15 under with a blrdy on the first hole. Watson then
proceeded to miss a short birdie pull on No. 2 and bogey
No. 3. He knocked himself out of contention for the title on
the 12th hole when he came awuy with a very
uncharacteristic double bogey.
Walson finished the day tied with Fred Couples at
14-under pur 341.

Stephenson Staggers To Title
GLEN D ALE, Calif. (UIMI — It had been so long since Jan
Stephenson won a golf tournament that when II got within
reach she was almost done In by negative thinking.
But Stephenson held on Sunday, staggering lo a 3-over
par 75 to capture a $250,000 LI*GA tournament by one
stroke over A m y Alcotl. Barbara Moxnessund Pat Bradley.

Pepitone Just Hitchhiking
NEW YORK |UPI| — One of ihe two men arresled with
Joe Pepitone on drug and weapons charges claims the
former Yankee slugger only hllchcd a ride with them, and
did not know about Ihe cur's Illegal contents, a published
report says.
Thomas Carbone. 51. told the Dally News he had only
picked Pepitone up on a Brooklyn street 15 minutes oefore
the car was stopped by poller.
"They should let Ihe guy go. He was Just a hitchhiker,
the jxMir kid,” Carbone was quoted as saying
The article also quoted Pepitone as saying he was a
victim of circumstance.
" I ’m Innocent ... I was In the wrong place at Ihe wrong
lime.” hr said.
Police stopped the car for passing a red light In
Brownsville.
But when they seurched the vehicle. Investigators said,
they hud reason lo brllve they had more than Just a trafftc
vlolator In their custody.
In Ihe car. police said, was 870.000 worth of cocaine,
heroin, pills and a 22-callber Derringer.
Pepllone did not have any narcotics when the search was
conducted
Carbone. Pepitone and Robert Oates. 46, of Rockaway
Parkway, Brooklyn, have been frred on bond
It remains unclear whether Pepllone will testify before a
grand Jury Invest Igtlng Ihe Incident.

Martinsville 500 Rained Out
M A RTINSVILLE. Va. (UPII - The 8145.350 NASCAR
500 mile race at Martinsville Speedway was postponed
because of rain and rescheduled for April 6th. speedway
officials said Sunday.
“ Naturally, wc would have preferred to run next
weekend, but there are too many conflicts with other
events and I felt It wouldn't be fair to other promoters as
well as the fans and competitors." Speedway President H.
Clay Earles said In an announcement.
The triple-header will Include a 200-lap Modified
Championship race, a 200 lap Late Model Sportsman
Championship and the debut of the Late Model Slock cars
in a 100-lap battle at the half-mile track.
Starting lineups for the races will remain Intact with 30
cars In the Latr Model Stock car class. 32 cars In the Late
Model Sportsman and 3 1cars In the Modified. Earles said.

Monday, March 15, i n i —7A

Simmons, Haas Bouncing Back
By United Press International
It was no coincidence that last
year when Ted Simmons hit
.221. the Milwaukee Brewers
finished with the worst record In
the American League.
So on the heels of their 67-94
season, the Brewers can take
heart from a .500 spring record
and a three -ga m e w in n in g
streak. Th e y can be further
gladdened to see rebounding
Individual performances from
S im m o n s and rig h t-h a n d e r
Moose Haas, who combined to
key Sunday's 7-1 rout of the
Cleveland Indians.
Haas gave up one run on eight
hits and Simmons hit a three-

Sixers
Seek New
Direction
United Press International
The Philadelphia 76ers have
realized the Atlantic Division
title Is probably oul of their
grasp, so now they arc teaching
for new goals
The 76ers. who had lost three
games In a row. gathered for a
pre-game meeting Sunday and
then went out and routed Den­
ver 124-103.
Team captain Julius Ervlng.
who finished with 22 points, said
he called the 30 inlimle meeting
to Improve the players' com­
munication with each other.
"We're trying lo establish a
new direction." Ervlng said.
"We had to do something dif­
ferent because we bad lost three
games In a row We talked with
each other and shared our feel­
ings with each other. We went
Into this game In a good frame of
mind.
"Aflcr the Milwaukee game |n
19|K&gt;lnt loss Friday), we came
oul with ihe understanding that
we probably weren't going to
win Ihe division, so we have lo
make a concession for the final
12 games.
E l s r w h e r e , San A n t o n i o
stopped Seattle 104-99. the Los
Angeles laikrrs downed Detroit
148-130, and Utah beat Chicago
1
1
0
9
2
Spurs 104, SuperSonlcs 99
At San Antonio. Texas, George
Gervtn scored 8 of his 15 points
In. the fourth quarter, halting
Seattle's rom rbark.

...Rams
C ontinued from SA
Ihe bottom of Ihe first. Aller
Ryan Lisle walked, Lerterlo
picked on a Llvernols olTerlng
and sent a screamer over Ihe
center field fence for ^ 2-1 lead
It was Letlerlo’s second homer
off the Lyman ace this year
Brett Molle. who made two fine
diving catches In right field hui
mulled two easy ones, had thc
kry hit us I he Rummies took a
4-1 lead In the second. Donald
Grayson, subbing for Keith
Wallace at first, punched a
□ne-oul single lo left. Molle
followed with a double lo right
field lo push Grayson lo third
Lisle then grounded oul to sec­
ond to score Grayson and Molle
scurried home on a wild pilch lor
tho Other run.
Lyman used three Ram errors
lo take a 6-4 lead In Ihe third
With one out. latszalc walked
Henley and Llvernols Usually
reliable cenlcr fielder Scott U n­
derwood then dropped Alegre's
liner to load the bases. Laszalc
Induced Odom lo pop lo I bird for
what should have been the (bird
oul.
John Banc followed with a
base hit to left which scored
H e n l e y for a 4- 2 g a m e .
Freshman Chris Brock Ihr lifted
a twisting fly ball Into the right
field corner. Molle drifted over
and was In position lo catch Ihe
ball but It skipped off Ihe lop of
his glove for a three-base error us
Lyman seized a 5-4 lead. When
U n d e rw o o d d ro p p e d C l i n t
Baker's easy fly bull, the lead
grew to 6-4.
Lake Mary had a chance to get
a couple In the bottom of the
Inning but Llvernols speared
Laszalc's bases loaded line drive

B a s e b a ll
run homer In the seventh Inning
after the Brewers had built a 4-1
lead.
Haas surrendered only a dou­
ble to Brook Jacoby and scat­
tered seven singles In preparing
for his opening day start April 9
In M ilw a u k e e a ga in st the
Chicago White Sox and Tom
Scaver.
The Brewers scored four runs
on 10 hits In the fourth off
right-hander Bert Blyleven
Cleveland's only run came In
sixth on a sacrifice llv by Mel

Hall.
Montreal's minor league team In
"Moose Is ready to go nine." Indianapolis, hit a grand slam
Mid Milwaukee manager George home run In a six-run first
Bamberger, meaning Innings Inning to spark the Expos' 9 6
and not the nine loial victories victory over the Baltimore O r­
Haas mustered all last year.
ioles. Gonzalez, charted behind
R e g u la r sh o rtsto p Robin starter Hubte Brooks and backup
Yount, recovering front a bad U .L. Washington, made Bill
shoulder, was in lefifleld again Swagger!y a loser for Ihe third
and Bamberger Indicated that's lime this spring
where he will start the season.
At Bradenton. Fla . Glenn
At Pom(wno Beach. Fla.. Pete Wilson, who began wearing eye­
O'Brien's two-run double capped glasses Friday, hit a home run
a four-run fifth inning and sent and three singles and scored
the Texas Rangers to a 5-4 t h r e e l i m e s l o l e ad I h e
victory over the Houston Astros.
Philadelphia Phillies lo a 6-2
At West Palm Beach. Fla . victory over the Pittsburgh
Rene Gonzalez, scheduled to Plrairs. The loss was the Pirates'
open the season at shortstop for eighth In a row.

SCOREBOARD
)k r
4a u
in
UP

PREPS

ftrat f f t — *88 •B| "
U | -g ,-ir s jiC N I
+9 +4*4 ft l A Ckppar\ I I I *

Tmfef tfturt

t iB «

I t * k/V iaBrti x
) f

. (• # G.8* « C * * 8«

1C^ftCom T»stti«|
« tn » U*

■4

» r*«w

tS.

iir
»* x
I %*4
iII
•I I

«

l 1r te*lift**1
* *8*i)
I l8ti Iftml
4•*-*- ft*#"* 04I
1

V* P&lt;u* I .ft«*«8 l

i u#t
I

_ _ft ftft
ir»

t V*PN»IVn*
I

ji

C#r •15n• fr&lt;HI|M|

P«tm

tin

’It)
|88&lt;»
»II7

I *#'*«««
» w #*,tm ft
***V |
I Im

I
4
I

m C4M

t)*J
I t)7*
Uft
•IP
i Oft

4ft*
4 C 11

$

Cor88 #•**»

« II ft
4\ m

I f w* ft»8fft*. II Cnauti C«n"B&lt; £V#f*
M
3t
ef t*-** II P*%Omwmt
If II

I Mim
4tociftai fame*—a
I la'tfr’l
ft

t| Ml

- V ft
If#

I

4M l * MOftfl
•M«tt8Mkll CmdmCm

ft*

na
in
41PI

'^4ft*»CM4|l ft**
Gbm ifti 4fomft «fM
atmm C
***** **•
iff

’I Ml

um
n il
1 D ippi I m o t o * ft r
i * ft
1
» 8 U Trvn#i
ft VI
: r
t v*
0« t
G« I
) ft ft
l iftilA iN i'vft Ch i i I m i *
} BO
| GeMft O'lftp V
A&lt;8ft*»»
UoftVftB
i n i1
ftm i
1 te-4ftkCrif iJrfi
IB 1
1 CftftvBP G4r»C*
09#
r)| |
1 * 8x « D irl iMrwMri
*
T r M (a |
I»t4
i EMM* LfvftOCB IMS |i»ePftf _____lt»«
1 t an
|i8|4i|rftftl
10)
N iftifti lim eiii
1 Dft^r M *
•* gp' toiUs
MAC4I
im
1 T f i l M k H a t i ' i w w i 110
1 : see « Ce brm onj
1111
4 j8vt*P*«^B4g N.Mr
IM
1 (r $ (M fft
&gt;sng»
I ID
• ’ *r&gt;*
1U1
' LJB4llv*t IMOMO'I
____I.IB
f
•
1 1 # •
#
1 #
BB
! Vwrry C*s
RAW* H8m*S
13B
1 V•• *pft C
lift
n pi
» '.to f t Kdur 8 r d e
I Clf 8L $• *
4*1 # * »* I* *!#
an
$ C9 * *+OQ*r H
4^*»«8Pi
a*
IM M ft t
1 1 i Pi ■• • • f * l l f I ftlt 1a TflBttf
ft BHMNI
_
4*41 V4'11**4
ft B I
MnM

HP
19#
$
#1*8r M#**e
iff*
i TM |fcCr« i«rfB
44*1
1Iftftrf*
' ******* mp 44 1
I •‘MB* l* * p
•• t f t r q f
• ft
4
T*s*i£ft**r
iM U n N fc *
ft Ml
t
LPvM 14*8*41
M*ft IIM
Ab»i Ire* LbM
---------------- MMM
4 iM iC f t i
IA
I
*
v*a B p tis
L
u ■'*»
ft 01
f
ftl7| Ul
II V }
1V
BN' I draCjrM**) M O M
N IlM if tM
HI* I
41ft
I OMNI**
4Cft-8t »’8S»&lt;
•ft
14
tV 'M l
•n 1 LB 'tA ttrm f r p i l M I
••
ev
H
&gt;4
•*|H,» -•*&gt;i* Crmei
UPI8 1Tf**f JuW* larfK
4
ftft
?
It
I
ft**)
P
e
W
M
ft
1
1
J
ft ft
J

tor* v«rt 8* O m w i

tltfj
t|ftl

I ft
1to

I ir i V*hp&lt;80**8gImc**•*-(
1 ftraM-wt

•:»

ur
iu
UB

i # liftft

NHL
tapMli CM*tm»

N BA
lA M O a il M W I H U s 4 HOC
I I t l t f • O H t l lM

and lum rd II Into a double play
lo retire the side.
Unsettled. Laszulr served one
In Alegre's wheelhousc In the
lop of Ihe fifth. The Lyman
cenier fielder got It all. sending a
prodigious blast (see related
story. 5AI way over Ihe right
Held fence for a 7-4 lead.
"1 thought we were going to
win It aflcr Paul's homer," said
M cC u llo u g h . ' B ui wc Just
couldn't gel It done."
T w o r e a s o n s we r e fl rsi
baseman Grayson and third
Itaseman Hill. After Llvernols
retired Underwood and Rod
" C .J ." Mrlz In ihe filth, he
walked Hill on four pilches Ron
Nntherson followed with a sharp
single lo right center, laiszulc
then rifled a double down I be left
field line lo pull Lake Mary
within 7-5.
Grayson was next. The senior
slugger, always a late urrivul on
Ihe buv-trail scene because of
basketball, had trailed Just four
limes prior lo Saturday, pro­
ducing a bloop single and sink
lug oul the three other limes
Somehow It didn't mailer.
Picking on a low breaking pilch.
Grayson sent a low liner In right
field. Lym an's John Klwood
t rashed Into the fenre us hr Just
missed flagging down Ihr drive
which fell for a three-run homer
and an 8-7 l^ike Mary lead.
Grayson, a modest senior
hound for UCF on a foot trull
grunt, was surprised as anyone
iry Ihe homer. “ To tell you the
t r ut h, 1 t ho u g ht It was a
blooper." he said. “ I was runn­
ing as hard as I could until I got
lo second base and found oul li
was over."
Tuttle said Ihe drive was the
tu rn in g point. "D o n n ie 's a
gamer. What else can you say?"
said Turtle. "Th e only reason he

ft
y
a
B

•toft*
8 PM
Mr* &gt;*nPr
tor* far*
1 ft

Obp^B*1
CKcap
rft»'»ftn&lt;
Aiwm

■ III »»&gt;8 «&lt;8H
MV
*•

l Pet
ft m
ft m
B Ml
1 1
ft
24 4’ Xft

»
lift
B
B

ft It *4
J M ) H*
ft ft 47)
B 4) B 4
ft 4) B 4
BUM )

■»
IT*
ft V
B
ft
ft

M M lw n a
M -r -R D**tofta
ft l Pel
41 ft 4ft
ft ft Ml
ft B tft
ft u ft*
» r *
ft 42 ft*

OBftB
U p Asftto
tDPtoft Clft

0#
-

1

h
ft
IPl
l)

Opspmm
r V A Ijftarv
P*ftM
l i C&gt;ftrt
O ft** Vlfft
ttftfM * p48f 8## 8fift
V&lt;f t ( M *s*ft&gt; IMt

B
U
D
ft
ft

ft

ft H)
V 4ft
ft
4» m
4) k )
t* M3

-

ft i
B 'l
n*v
it
B (v

Ml f PM ft# #4
m tu
• ft
*i b i m
a) n
u m na
&gt;V B
n « b ft if4

I) 44 » It
ft 41 • •
&gt;*»Wf
A f t* Dhrftfta
ft V • •t
•QwHMK
ft ft M H
B ft U ft
1 #w«4 ft
B ft • 71
If t lp
ft ft t u
Hirfftr#
C***ftftt C— Mvfrt
M8rm
ft l T
ft ft D K
i t t l*f*
• C*C8f 8
a ft I 71
n a II ft
4 D**8d
ft&gt;&lt;wm«8
n ft tl
&gt;« «p •
Y&lt;r8P^8
i - l S O 'i W
M 1) « ft)
■I r w v
41 ft 9 ft
■S -T -l
II ft • 11
■c « t » i
n ft tl ft
• IM
ft 42 • ft
V IK k W
■fM*iai ipAttnNl Iftpfti
h M H lM N
S * » ( N 1 S r. )n t T 1
» » " » ( 1 OraSM 1
|i l(v &gt; ) H m w i l
•« « t &gt; w m * *
:
i l a * -»&gt; « )
M l 1 MMX

ft
ft

H * itM rt

4MtCftvlt|Mr»V|rti«l

ft
m i ciftpBH n
i tfti hi Mbm •*
f«**Wh

IA
ftf
re;
ua
tH
L*

Ml
IM
ill
m
Ml

Ml
lit
ft*
B4
IH

•Bp*

11)4OlftP c

I •worftp• ft T In

Via Aa Vtv* m W«M« ft

arpisff

ft

l A LMBrt &gt;• OMM IB

started was because Wallace
wasn't here. Bui somehow lie
alwnys comes up wall Ihe clutch
play."
Hill, who would produce Ihe
second clutch e f f o r t aii inning
lalcr. agreed. " T h a i homer
picked everybody oj»." said Hill
"W c knew we had them alter
Donald's clutch hit."
Hill's own single and three
Lyman errors made sure aller
Laszalc wild pitched home Baker
to lie the game In the top of the
sixth.
lallerlo ripped a double to
open Ihe frame hut Underwood,
still mired In a dreadful slump,
struck oul Metz, who looked at
curvcbulls and ehangrups all
day, wulked Ibll Uteri stroke his
base hit through I he lell side and
Let ter lo heal the throw lo (he
plutr fora 9-H lead.

NIGHTLY 7:30 P.M.
(ExospO Ion.)

■AT.1U0N Wa.SAMPM

PLAY THE EXCITING 4 HIGH
PAYING "PICK r 4 "BW &lt;T
THIM8. P M I
(MAN08TAND ADM.
POM LAOICS

SAVE ENERGY
ALL YEAR 'ROUND
TR AM S
HUM'S WoltitrtiMi
Hut Pump I k Condilmnti
Din [Hitn«| Clmult
Control for All Suwnt
W

A L L

Nosttaf Im .

T s l. 322-4842
1447 l«rl«l I r l . trolnl

Visit Our two climots
coctrodsd clubbousss tor
your tins dining and
srtMristnmsnt ptossurs.
Clubbouss rsaarvationa
8 3 1 -1 0 0 0

Sinford-Orlindo
Kennol
Club
North ol Orlando.
JuotoffHwy 17-93
M I N Trod IsoilMpMl
Sorry No Minors

THE ADVANTAGE JM
flAisr roun iTAHM HDS o r HIDC

AND nnrORMANCL

Car Insurance?

Collier Sets Modern Mark

isl
n
m
m
)ft
»t

f lanfn |

44«MM &gt;•

Ift

Iff tu
) 7|
Ml 2'4
in 2ft
2ft

P«ftP4 Pwft*ftl(OT|

4*8P*811CfttW lM lO tl
Cftftipftf OftllPlIf

19
------ &gt;t
JftHf
1UftftMl

IB 1*
) 4) ) ’ i

I J.M8CI

WMfttf \ItWft

% V i f t O r H f * 14M 8M V* f f t M

I S*(PPMUUMM

ftAflOftU ftOCII* lt * # U l
• 8 IV I ( l l l M H I l

Goodrich

&lt; )nt* n a u u * m i &gt; s il h i s t .

NEW YORK (UPII — Orlando Renegades quarterback
Reggie Collier set a modern pro football record Thursday
night when he rushed for 171 yards on 18 carries against
the Jacksonville Bulls.
Collier broke the former U SFL mark of 120 yards set by
Steve Young of the Los Angeles Express on April 20. 1984
against the Chicago Blitz.
Bobby Douglas of the NFL's Chicago Bears rushed for
127 yards on 14 carries against the Oakland Raiders on
December 17. 1972.
Despite Collier's efforts, Orlando was defeated 34-31.

T TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
It
Ph. 322-0285

AOK T im : M A ItT
MON FHI 0 5:30 SAT 0 )0 0

2 5 7 5 S . F r e n c h A v e ., S a n fo r d

/

3 2 2 -7 4 8 0
'24 1 3 S. French Ave.

%Siuto-Owners Insurance

SANFORD

I Iff. Hurnr. ( ir . H u «ln r ». line u m « *a*s it all.

Vi

I
la w

,

AT&amp;T

I O w N iu N r n f

€

alung

*

- i33t«F"

�Casselberry 10 assaults on 33
officers; Long wood 9 assaults. 25
officers; Oviedo. 7 assaults. 11
officers; Lake Mary 9 officers and
C o n tin u e d from pafe 1A
one assault.
personnel, reported 15 assaults.
According to the report, there
Altamonte Springs, with 65 of­ are 576 law enforcement officers
ficer*. reported 19 assaults; In the county. 404 male. 172

...Crime

female.
Longwood led the county In
solving crimes w ith a 30.9 per­
cent clearance rate. Winter
Springs was second, clearing
30.4 percent of Its reported
crimes. Other cleanrance rales
were: Altamonte Springs. 26.4

percent; Sanford. 23.9;
Casselberry. 20.1; sheriffs de­
partment. 19.9; Lake Mary. 15.1:
and Oviedo. 14.8.
Statew ide, the crim e rate
ended a two-year downward
trend with a serious ofTense
occurring every 42 seconds. Law

AREA DEATHS
Longwood. Joan Fultz,
CARLF. WOOD JR.
JO H N T . CA TES J R .
moved to Lake Mary from there
Mr. Carl F. Wood Jr.. 48. of Romeoville. 111.; four sisters.
Mr. John Thomas Cates J r.. In 1929. She was a homemaker
3709 Jericho Drive. Casselberry, Kathryn Patterson. Blue Island.
6 4 . of 214 Sherldnn Ave. . and a member of Lake Mary
died Friday at his residence. 111.. Marie Thler and Cell O'
Longwood. died Thursday at Nararene Church.
Born Sept. 4. 1936 in Lewiston. C o n n e ll, both of B uttern ut.
S o u th Seminole C o m m u n ity
S u r v i v o r s Include her
Maine, he moved to Casselberry Wi s e . . Col ette Mc D e r mo t t .
Hospital. Longwood Born April husband. Leonard C.: four sons.
from Portland. Maine In 1972. Chicago: six grandchildren.
7. 1920 In Louisville. Ky . he Lester. Blackshear. Ga.. Byron.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Funeral
moved to Longwood from Satel­ Liverpool. N.Y.. Bobby. Alta­ He was an assistant division
commander with the Orange Home. Altamonte Springs. Is In
lite Beach In 1978. He was a monte Springs. Daniel. Osteen;
retired engineer for a telephone daughter. Francis Tlllls Watson. County sheriff's department and charge of arrangements.
company and was a member of Dellona; sister. Thelma Fredrick. a member of Tuskawllla United
Sweet wat er Baptist C h u rc h , Elmore. Ala.; 17 grandchildren; Methodist Church.
Survivors Include his wife. Funeral Notices
longwood. He was n member of nine great-grandchildren.
JoA
nn r; son. Paul. Casselberry;
Telephone Pioneers of America,
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake
P l u m Lodge 862. P A A M ,
Mary. Is In charge of arrange­ two daughters. Mrs. Carolyn W I * B .K t V I H D O U O I .A t
funsr*l M fv lc tt tor tt&gt;» R « v Kkvtn
Hnugaurd. and Linda Wood. —
Louisville, Scottish Hite Valley. ments,
D o u g in W*M&gt;. IT. of wmtiior, C a lif . will bo
Casselberry.
Orlando. AAltP. Florida Krai
W t d n o i d o y i t X • m at C S r l t U a n
Baldw in Fai r chi l d Funeral M liile n a ry Altlkntk Church, &amp;«nforrf with
Estate Association. He was a
KEVIN DOUGLAS WEBB
tha Rav Ptl*f Caurtat, pattor. officiating
World War II veleran and a
Mr. Kevin Douglas Webb. 27. Home. Altamonte Springs. Is In followed by gr a rat'd* M r &lt; c n at WMahoota
former deacon of the First Bap­ of Whittier. Calif., died Saturday charge of arrangements.
Camatary. Wllllifon, at 4 p m Condoitnctt
and flowart will ba racalvad at tha Murray
ROSE M. ZINNER
tist Church. Eau Gallic, Fin.
In Whltller after a long Illness.
horna. M
Elgin DOv*. I Tha Highland!)
Mrs Rose M. Zlnncr. 82. of Wlntar Spring! Flowkf! will ba racalvad at
Survivors Include his wife, Born April 14. 1957 In Orlando,
153
Tollgntc
Tra
il,
Longwood.
Lyla M.; two daughters. Mrs
tha church batwaan I and J p m Tuacday
lie grew up In Sanford. He
Kaye Shannon and Mrs. Joyce C. moved to Whittier from Sanford died Friday at Life Care Center. fo r m o rt information call » t ! j j j ;
T I L L I t . L IL L IE M
Cauley, both of Melbourne; four Iri 1978. H r was pastor of Altamonte Springs. Bom April 4. — Funaral u r . i c r i tor M r! U llla M Tlllll.
brolhers. Robert L.. Hollywood, Calvary Chapel. La Mirada. 1902 In Chicago, she moved to 77. of IM Laka Mary Ava . la k a M ary, wha
dlad Saturday, will ba htld Tuaiday af II
Jam es E .t Arvln A., and Ernie Calif., and had a ministry with Longwood from (here In 1982
a m al Oaklawn Funaral Noma Chapa! with
C . , all of Louisville; two grand­ drug addicts and runaways. He She was a homemaker and a •ha Rav Albart Grtan officiating Burial In
Catholic.
Oaklawn Mamorlal Park V lilla tlo n for
children,
was co-director of Lovellft In­
Survivors Include her two family and frlandl will b» S I p m today
D avis Funeral Home.
ternational. a California-based
Oaklawn Funaral Homa. Laka M ary. In
Melbourne. Is In charge of ar­ relief agency that provided food daughters. I r ma L r Plana. charga
rangements.
and housing for the Indian
childrn In Guatemala and was
ELTON R. DARE
building a hospital thrrr before u
Mr. Elton R. Dare. HO. of 525
coup overthrew the government.
E. Semoran Blvd. Fern Park,
He was also a guitar player with
died Thursday at Florida Hospia Christian band. Before thut he
lul-Altamonte Springs. Born Oct.
was a member of Sanford Chris­
10. 1904 In Falls Creek, Pa., he
tian Missionary Alliance Church.
was a winter resident of Fern
Park from Columbus. Ohio. Hr
Survivors Include his wife. Jo
w as a retired field service Ellen; two sons. Zebu Ion and
director and was a member of J o s h u a , bot h of Whi t t i er
Elder Broad Street Presbyterian mother, Anna. Sanford; brother.
Church. H r was a World War II Wesley. St. Petersburg; two slsveteran, a member of Mlluor
trr*. Blron, Sanford. Linda. New
Lodge 287, F4VAM. Pittsburgh, a
York City.
member of Scottish Kile. Valley
Funeral sarvic* Is lor tha living...lor those left behind who
of C o l u m b u s and A l u d d l n
mual make an adjustment. What we do. Iharelore, must
Shrine.
ba based upon tnelr Individual thoughts and feelings.
Flowers Fur All Occasions
Survivors Inrlude his wife.
Sura E.; two daughters. Nancy
D. Schm itt, Longwood, Sally
Ann Marplr, Lancaster, Ohio, nix
grandchildren.
B a ld w in -F a irc h ild Funeral
S r .'J T .,
3231204
Home. Altamonte Springs. Is in
FU N ER A L H O M E
charge of arrangements

S A — E v e n in g H e r a ld . S a n fo rd , F I .

E n forcem e n t C o m m ission er
Robert R. Dempsey said.
T h e a n n u a l r epor t sai d
statewide nearly three-quarters
of a million Floridians — one of
every 15 people In the state —
was the victim of a serious crime
last year. Th e FD LE estimated
that half the street crime, rang­
ing from armed robbery and
mugging to prostitution, was
related to illegal drugs.
"A s I have been saying in the
last two years, apathy and com­
placency are setting In." said
Dempsey. "Th a t Is unfortunate.
Crime Is up because the drug
problem Is as bad as It was
before."
The FD LE report said the state
had 42.294 drug arrests last
year — up from 37.984 the
previous year — but that 81.7
percent of t he m were for
possession, not sale, of drugs.
Dempsey said neighborhood
’’Crime Watch" programs were

helpful In combatting household
burglaries and both violent and
property crime. He said Individ­
ual citizens could help by being
more conscious about making
themselves or their possessions
easy prey for criminals.
The FDLE annual report Is
based on seven “ Index crimes"
— mu r d e r , r ape, r obber y,
assault, burglary, larceny and
vehicle theft — and has shown
an overall decline for 1982 and
1983. Dempsey said, however,
every category statewide showed
an Increase last year.
The number of murders In­
creased from 1.203 In 1983 to
1.264 last year. Rapes were up
from 5.170 to 5.576. robberies
from 28.127 to 30.320. and
assaults from 53.798 to 58.208.
In the non- vt ol ent cri me
categories, the report showed an
I ncrease in b u r g l a r y from
191.911 to 198.559. In larceny
from 400.802 lo 408.457, and In
car thefl from 43.236 to 46.847.

STOCKS
Thoto quotationt provldad by mvmtwri of
tha National A tu x la tio n or Saruritiaa Oaalart
tr y rapraaontottum intar dot f prlcaa ai of
mid m orning today Intar doator markatt
thanga throughout tho day Prtta* do not
Irxluda ratoll markup markdown
■Ml

Atlantic Bank
Barnatt Bank
F ln l Fldatlfy SAL
Florida R o w * -t Light

7*'i
rk .

AM

unenangod
unchangad

•’*
7 IH

T*t
If!

Fi| F ro ^ rtii
Freedom Sjvlngt
MCA
HiKihat
ntAJ'” * 2 »IT F
iVlOffltOB t
NCR Corp
P lfitty
Scotty i
^stjthaaif Rthk
Sun Bknki

II your u h of alcohol, cocaine,
or other drugs la getting In
the way ol your work or
family you can hide It
lor ewhlle. Bui why
wait until your
wodd collapse*

Treating
the problem
will.

(Collins

LILLIE M .TILLIS
Mrs. Lillie M. Tlllln. 77. of 136
Liikr Mary Ave.. Lake Mary, died
Saturday at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Sanford Born
August 23. 1907 In Genoa, she

O A K LA W N
FUNCHAL HOMLfCfMfTIRV
Out co m p lex Funerel Home, el out
comelety, m elee dittlcuM lime* eeelet
4 4 * A t Rteekort *4
I t n l y M Contra! flotUa
122 -4 74]
lottlof4JLo*o Mery
Fr» r u «

74 74'!
♦'* * '!
unch.ng^J
41
It 11'.
U*t I I ’!
7 f!
2J ivK h .n g ^j
UH
unrhangad
urwhangad
X
X '!

Hiding the
problem won't
make it go away.

For Tlu*
L iv in g

Ifl'JjJJjtfJ

M e n d e y. M e rc k U . I W

GRAMKOW

Alcoholism and drug dependency ere beatable Illnesses
and your chance ot recovery Is Improvsd with early treatmsnt.

Cali 1-800-ALCOHOL NOW

ISO W EST AIRPORT B O U LE V A R D
SANFORO. FLO R ID A
TELEPH O N E 122 1211
WILLIAM L O R A M K O W

‘Humana Hospital Daytona Doach
■

400 North Clyde Morru Boulevard • Daytona Beach. Florida 32020
Local Helpline 252-HELP . , In affiliation With American International

“I HAVE THE UTMOST CONFIDENCE
CASSELBERRY’S PARAMEDICS. AFTER ALL,
MOST OF ^ ^ .T H E M ARE S.C.C. GRADS.”
G EN E FRY
Paramedic Coordinator
City of Casselberry
1981 S.C.C. Graduate

“When you go out on a call,
you expect the unexpected. You must
have a team that is highly trained —
quick to respond.”
“In my opinion, Seminole
Community College has one of the
best paramedic training programs in
the Central Florida area — and the
S.C.C.-trained Casselberry Paramedics
reflect that professionalism.”

S E IZ E T H E O P P O R TU N ITY .

CA LL SEMINOLE COMMUNITY C O LLEG E.
The Source for |ob training.

CALL NOW FOR REGISTRATION INFORMATION.
843*7001

323-1450

(Orlando)

(Sanford)

Serving more than 20,000 Central Florldiana annually.
An Equal AccMitEqual Opportunity Community Coiiega
Thu ad pratantad a* a public sarvtca without Mata tunds

�PEOPLE
Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Monday, March 2S, l?M— to

In And Around Longwood

School

irs Best In
o
h
C

,

The District Choral Festival was held at
Seminole Com m unity College with students In
middle and high schools participating in the six
county rom petition.
Ann Nllsen. director of the Lake Mary High
School Choir and district chairman of the Choral
Festival, reported that of 13 choirs chosen to be in
the Stale Competition, nine are Seminole County
Choral students.
Choral groups and student conductors were
rated on a I through 5 scale. Receiving a ruling of
straight I Isuper lor I were Lake Brantley's. "2
Mixed Choir. *3 Mixed Choir anil Girl's Chorus:
Lake Mary High s Concert Choir and Girl's
Chorus. The Judges awarded a grading of I
laveragc) to Seminole High School's Concert
Choir, the Oviedo High School Girl's Chorus.
Lake Brantley Hi g hs Mixed *1 Choir and
Lyman's Girl's Chorus
Student Conductors chosen to compete at Slate
through the District Meet are Lisa Rogers and
Cindy Jennings representing I-akr Mary: Tam m y
Mlkell for Seminole High: Jane Torres and
Christina Langus of Lake Howell High: and Dan
llrubaker from Lyman High School.
Tallahassee hound for State competition In
May. these students and their directors arc
looking to a learning experience with their peers
throughout the state as well us hopes to capture
state level distinction.
A major Moral event visited by thousands of
plant enthusiasts from all over the Nation, the
30th Annual Spring Orchid Show will Ik - held
March 2 9 and 30 at the Winter l‘.irk Mall
I’resented by the Central Florida Orchid
Society, the show consists ol commercial growers
and hobbyists In competition with their stunning
displays of flowering orchids.
In addition to the orchid exhibits, the
ftminelaid Soc iety of Central Florida will present
exhibits of bromcllads lx&gt;th for viewing and sale.
The on-hlil growers will also huve many varieties
of orcdldae to s e ll

N ancy
F ry e
Longw ood
323

8893

The Orchid Show will be free to the public and
open during the Mull's shopping hours
World Music Center's Seth Rye will perform at
a concert for the Hacienda Village Organ Club on
Friday. March 29. The Organ Concert Is set for
7:30 PM at Hacicndu Village's Clubhouse located
off Longwrxxl/Oviedo Road In Winter Springs
The community Is Invited to at tend
The first Florida 4H Horse llowl Competition
was held at the Central Florida Fair with
Seminole County's club team placing third.
Member* of the placing county team ure Debbie
Sargcant and Tiffany Wallace of Sanford: and
Barbara Uuccino and Jodi Sobotka of Longwood.
The purpose of the event Is to give -HI members
from over the stnte the opportunity to demon­
strate their knowledge of horses and the horse
Industry in Florida
Come out to the Spring Arts and ('rails Festival
to lie given by the Wcklva Woman's Club on
Saturday. March 30. The show und sale will be
from 10 u.rn. through -I p in. ul the Wektva Hills
Park In the Wcklva area of Longwood.
The League of Women Voters of Seminole
County will hold their Food for Thought lun­
cheon-discussion on Thursday, March 2H, from
noon to I p in.
The luncheon will lie at (Julggley's Restaurant
of the Quality Inn North Just off 1-4 at SR 434.
This month’s discussion will be on growth

rvtn.No
M O
O ' j j i r o T ' O news

11(Mi JtrrrasoNs

ot Doatand Clark Tarry and joa
8:3 0
(1jo NIWHART On hn way to tha
Paw atbaa gama ol tha yaar. Ok a a
ar.aalad lor Staphanat impaid
campwt parking lickatt (R|

10:00

(li HO) U ACHE II / UH R ER
MfW&amp;MOtJPI
0&gt; (■) WELCOME BACK. KOTTER

( I ) O CAGNEY 4 LACEY Whan
Mary Bath goat undaredrw aa a
cabbra on ■ murdar imraatigation.

0:0 5
(Q BEVERLY HS.lBS.tCS

______.
. IM
a t |U) MOCPENOENT NEWS
0 ( 1 ) POLICE WOMAN

6 :3 0
■ 4 ) NBC NEWS
5 O C M SEWS
(7) □ ASC MEWS Q
&lt;Jt (M ) AtICC
a 1*10000 TKIES
6:35
42 SATE AT HOUE
7 :0 0
.
a ® SALE OK THE CENTURY
( D O P U UAQA71NE Former
prow MCftory Jamas Brody mod
M Carol AS and har hutoand pro
Fwckay playar Ron Graadwar
( 7 ) 0 JEOFAAOY
a t (U | TOO CLOSE rofl COM­
FORT Daapda Marry &gt; diiapproval
Sara daodaa lo purtua a TV tan
•Aos )ot rvataad o&lt; « coaaga d »
S T (t«t wOarOERwORKS "TSa
Hotwaan CNcaan Emarpancy Tha
pW a or Motor an n j . ara larroruad By a monalar hgn.ng unH ISay
dneorar a t raaty a hwataa
pound chat an Start GsM Kaplan
CVA van Patlan anu Patar BJknga
Ny (R iq
(B (St ONE DAY AT A TRIE
7:0 5
12 i i m i HOUSE ON THE PRAt
MI
7:30
0 D ENTERTAINMENT TONtOHT
Faalurad aarmy loggina
O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
O RENEGADE RAGE: COACH
U IC O R B O
I T (U ) BENSON
( D i l i ALL M THE FAMILY

S

800
(3) MOV* E w y WNCK Way
But Lo o m (1971) Cant Eastwood
Sondra Lock* A hro-Daiad truckar
and Na orangutan companion laaa
ofl tn putuit ol a prttty countryHttarn amgar |R)g
( I ) o SCARECROW ANO MRS
KINO Aa vndarcovar again
maaguaradmg aa Amanda m mur-

a

Aganry concamad about har aatao
BARBARA WALTER*
Ouaata Boy Gaorga NM Diamond
and Barbara Uandra* g
41 (U l DALLAS
• (»0t THS UVPTO PLANET A
PORTRAH Or THE EARTH Band
AflanlXKCV/' f pkxt i grMi rNtra
aI *m world. atcArdmg tha Amazon
and Wa .arataa of Ma Found n
0 (H MOV* "A Tuna For Lew "
|1*7J| Jack Caaardy, John Band
•on Tad Monas ara praaaniad A

10:06
42 MOV* ' latayatta EacadrMa"
(1 (5 (1 Tab Hunlar, Etchlki
Chouraau Amancan yoluntaart
aarra in a tkghl aquadron at Franca
during World War I
10.30
O (D a l l t o g e t h e r n o w a
mtddM-agad coupla pragarad lo
tntoy thaa rataamant mutt changa
thaa plana ahan thaa chad'an and
an ttdarty at-lav n o rt a. arm tham
Start Barbara Bart* Patar Mrchaal
Gotti |R)
a t (M| BOB NCWHART

11:30
O 3 ) BEST O f CARBON Mott
Johnny Carton Guaati Tart Oart
Part Barbu tit. Uchaa Murphy (R)
i l l o TAX)
It (M l BANEORO ANO SON
CD II) rwxjQMT TONE

12:00
CD O SIMON 4 SIMON Altar ar
ananal&gt;Mndar ta aRad by a Ion. A J
and M u go undarcovar aa too
aorkartloaimir-gaia |R)
* O NEWS
(M| F-TROOP
(l)KOJAK
12:05
42 PORTRAIT OP
UASEACMUBETTB

100
0 O MOV* Tha Oary Ot Anna
Frank' |tbM| Joaapn Schadkraut.
W N P a tn
a t (M| CHILDREN BETWEEN UFE
A tO DEATH
a i m TH* AVENGER*

1:10

O

) Id AM BARKER

3 :1 0

a

HOME

O

Countdorm

|1MF)

3 :3 0
M O V* X Hi

I
O
NEWS

0 O

400
01 P d PATTY DUKE

0 O ACADEMY AWARD* Jaca
Lammon N atl tha STVi armuat
kva bant tha

4:3 0
I t P d DON* OAT

ma Haan." "Tha KWng Fraada." -A
Paaaaga M FaWa' and "A loFAar t
Story ara nonanatad lor baal pteturaottbM g

6:00

^PdOUNCV
I (W| WOOOY HERMAJTB BKJ
BAND CELORATION Woody Hortabrotron at Mouaaon t
Maar Outdoor Tha ytar mm guoatt
PoMBarbum Pay 8*ar» thatFjkaa

TUESCW l

i r s TOUR
O U M B n P U W O tW E O )
AGFKULTURC ILSJL (FRQ

S

6 :1 5
41 WORLD AT LARGE (THU)

1230
0 (S H A R O N FOR TOMORROW
(T) O Y0UN0 ANO THE REST­
LESS
O lO V M Q
(M l BEVERLY HILLBtt.DE*
14)0
O ( ! ) DA YE OF OUR LATE*
IT) O a l l MY CHKORf N
I t (M)DFCK VAN DYKE
H i WiMONW (MON. TUE. TFRR
0 &lt;*0) C O N G A U R WE THE KEORl*(WBD)
(B (tot FVORKLA HOME GROWN

CD(d

MOV*

ABC NEWS TH * MORHMO

1:05
a

6:45
0a rrfW TTNESE DAYBREAK
® &lt; * 0 )A M WEATHER
700
0 3 ) to d a y
1 O C SS M O R M N G N E W S
0 O GOOD M0RF0N0 AMERICA

S(*01FARMDAS
(d m e a t h c u f y

7:15

a ItotAM WEATHER
7 30
a t (M ) TOM ANO JERRY
(M ) SESAME STREET □

S(I) INSPECTORGADOn
7:35
02 I DREAM OF JEANNM

MOVIE

1:30
(X) O AS THE WORLD TURNS
11 (M| OOMER P YII
(D 110) CONGRESS WE THE PEO­
PLE (WED)
Q ) |IO| PAPETMQ CERAMICS |FM)
200
0 0 ANOTHER WORLD
' O ONE U F I TO U V t
1
f (M ) AHOY ORPFtTM
ID 110) SURVTVAl (WED)

CD(tOI JOY OF PAMTtNO(FRR
2:30
0 O C A P TTO L
(ft (M ) GREAT SPACE COASTER
S ) I &gt;07 PEO P U WHO M IAN BUBtNESSIM0N1
CD ( W ROBERT RUBSPE WYOFNHO SCULPTOR (THU)
8) (M l U A G C OF DECORA TTY!
PAM TM 0 {FRO
3:00
9 ) EANTA BARBARA

8:00

at (M l WOOOY WOOOPECKIR

O0UONQU0HT

O l i d FAT ALBERT

U g e n e r a l h o s p it a l
(M l BUG* BUNNY
I tot FLOFWABTYUt

6:05
42 BEWTTCMED
8:30
a t (M l PBtK PANTHER
ts ( 10) M*T1R ROGERBIR)
fit Id MY FAV0FET1 MARTIAN

_ Id VOLTRON. 0EPEN0SR OP
THE UWVERBS
3:05
32 BUOE BUNNY ANO FR*N0B
3:30
(3S)BCOOBYOOO

6:35

12 I LOVE LUCY
8:00
I OtVORCE COURT
IDONAMJE
J BARNABY JOFtEB
tlM lW ALTDN B
I ( tO) b e s a m e STREET g
__
IV

«

(10|M*TtR ROGER*|R)

(B Id BtEPfCTOR GAOQCT

3:35
a HECKLE ANO JEC JU I (MONTHU)

3 THE CHARMUNS (FRD
44)0

e 0 LfTTll HOUSE ON THE
12 MOV*
0 L O V E C O N N E C TW N

8

I

*8

STAR TREK

(M)SUPCRFR*NOB
(t0) SESAME ETREET Q
Id HCATHCUPF

i

4.4)6
P U N TS TO N U (MOM-THU)
MY U T T I I PONY I (F r4

to s t a n VALLEY
) ( (0| ELECT INC COMPANY (R)
) |l) MAYBERRY U F A
10:30
BALE OP THB CENTURY
FAMKYFtUO
( W| M - 1 CONTACT (R ig
(d REAL MCCOYS

18

11.-00
® WHEEL OF FORTUNE
Q P R K S a tW H T
O TR M A TRAP
P d E n te r* i
( I d m a o c o p on . PAMTBta
Ild F A Jd K T
42 CATUNB

dart a a r mar braptaca. may try la
nmardN ■ Sd-yaar-ard uvargdlad

124)5
12 KERRY MASON

EARLY MORPRNQ

? U M )P O P E Y I
42 f u n t im e

I t P d FA4ALY AFPAM

j

CM

114)6

I

8 4 )0
KATE S A LL* Whan Kata

6:3 0

•0

2:3 0

O CBS NEW* MOHTWATCN
(MIGUNSUOKI

0
®

600
3 ) NBC NEWS AT BUFMBE
O MOFMPtG STRETCH
10 CYEWrTNES* DAYBREAK
(M IO OOO 0AY1

2 4 )0
a tP W B U A R F*

fcOt
Bkit Kirght (I t T l I
Nm tU A Lot
i irutt dauda ba-

0

1:06
MOV* "Tha Story 01 A Worn‘ ' Robart S it u Bar And

0 O M C ia U A N 4 W V t A ddM
brand ot tha UcMatana a nw daad
at a maaguarada bad. taadmg Mac
and Sady M matt n g u rb t ot thair
otnar irtandt |R|

M tobitad prt, «*d • pop it* m*o
po wth p r t t M t m*0tl §

02 MOV*

5'3 0
S (3) r s COUNTRY (TUE-FFV)
42 JIMMY BWAOGART

AMERICA

12:30
O 3 ) LATE MQMT WITH DAV O
LETTERMAN
01O ABC NEWS NtOHTUNE
att(M ) I LOVE LUCY

a

5:25
0
a
HOUYW OOO ANO THE
•TAP* (TUE. THU)

(ft (M l F U N TI TONES

11:00
0 ® 0 O ncw s
a I (M l BCPWY HRL
S I Ml DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
O X * ) MONT GALLERY

management at the county level of government.
The League of Women Voters tn a non-partisan
organization that encourages active citizen
participation in government to influence publtr
policy.

A Lake Brantley student. Kevin Greenstein
was chosen Student of the Quarter by Ktwants of
Central Florida. T o receive ibis honor, the
student must be exemplary both acudctnlcallv
and In the community.
Grrcnstclm Is a member of the scIk k i I's Beta
Club. Classical League and Latin Club. He also
holds honors tn sports events at Lake Brantley.

C o rre s p o n d e n t

TONIGHT'S TV
MONDAY

, Off To State

11:30

8

0 RT AMS HOPE
|MR FLOFVOAETYIE

11:35
01UCYBHOW
AFTERNOON
124)0
00M OOAV
0 0 0 0 M M
A 0*1 BEWTTCMED
0
( 0 NATURE OF T H E M
S m * ck on n * WAMMCK m
CONCERT (TUE)
0 ( 0 M THB atFRNB (WED)
ffi|W )HOVA(THU»

4:30
01 P d t*-44AN ANO MASTERS
O PTNEIM VER EE
O m MORK ANO UMOV

8

435
PUNTST0NES (MON-THU)
MY LFTTU PONY • (FRO
54)0

) ANYDdNO FORMONEY
83aOIXTB
THREE* COMPANY
MAKEADIAL

Pd o w n OP HAJZARO
THU)

P d My U TTII PONY I (PRQ
( Kl) 0CIANUB (MON)
BEMAVTOP (TUE]
0 (W ) NEW UTERACY AN ■(TR0UUCT10N TO COMPUTERS
MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
AR T OF M M Q H U

td
* (id

) fl) HAPPY GAYS AGAIN
54)6
O U A v tn ro ia A v f R
5:30
0 (X) P B O S i n COURT
1 O M 'A 'E ’ H
0 O N M S
1! (74) MY UTTLE FONT fl (FRT)
(D (*0) OC1ANUB |M0N)
0 (FO) UNOERSTANIKM HUMAN
• W A Y lO R m jQ
0 I 0 M N LITERACY: AN AFTROOUCTION TO COMW/T1RB
(* « D )

An Easter Contain. "The Crimson Bridge" will
be presented at the Altamonte Springs First
Baptist Church at 7:30 p m. on March 31. The
Cantata, written by Drrrtc Johnson, will lie
offered under the direction of Jerry Ulrry, The
public Is invited to enjoy the music wall church
members.

T h r Seminole League of Homeowners Associa­
tion Inc. will meet tonight at 7:3d p.m. IMarch 25)
at the Wcstmonic Civic Center off Spring Oaks
Boulevard In Altamonte Springs. The league
oilers membership lo all homeowner associations
throughout the county.

Sanlando Springs Extension Homemakers Club
will meet March 28, at 9:30 a m . in ihe
fellowship hall of the First Baptist Church of
Sanlando Springs on SR -134
The March Program will be "Table Sellings and
Napkin Folds - Formal to Casual." Given by Dot
Healey. Margaret McLain and Penny Wilson
Guests are welcome

In the cmmtywldr essay contest s j H i n s o r r d bv
the Seminole Reading Connell eight students
received certificates f o r winning entries.
Middle school level winners were Tahnee
Causey ofTuskawllla Middle Sc »ick&gt;I and Heather
Wtnnkur of Rock l-ake Middle won second.
Third through fifth grade winners were Pat
Wellman, Geneva Elementary 1st: Frrrsa Taylor
of Winter Spring* Elementary. 2nd: Dawn Coker.
Hamilton Elementary paired 3rd,
Kindergarten through second graders placing
were Kevin Morrison. Euslbrookr. 1st: Charles
U * i |h - of Geneva Elementary. 2nd: Je n n y Lauellc
from Sabal Point earned 3rd place.

Seminole County's YM CA Coed Volleyball
League for Intermediate to advanced intermediate
levels teams wilt be held on Wednesday evenings
beginning tilts Wednesday. March 27 al l-akr
Brantley High School from 6:30 to 9 p m For
lurthrr Information contact the YMCA at 8620444

Teaching One's Wife To
Drive Is One Big Fight
D EA R A B B Y : Someone wrote
In lo say that women whose
husbands always drove them
around were at a terrible dis­
advantage should thry become
w idowrd without having learned
how- to drive. He then urged all
married men to leach their wlvrs
how to drive.
I'm all for women learning
how to drive, but I have never
met a man who taught tils wife
tn drive who would recommend
II lo another man A mao can
leach another man's wife how to
drive, but when tt comes to
teaching his own wife. It's one
big light from beginning to end!
I run not smart enough to
explain something about the
husband wife relationship Hull
makes tt Impossible for the wife
to urcepl criticism or Inst met Ion
from her own husband. And for
some rruson, a man bus very
little patience with Ills own
wife's mistakes
Newlyweds nr old-timers, II
makes no difference: II there's u

D E A R

Dear
Abby
man alive who ever laughi Ills
wife how lo drive without a fight.
I'd like lo know how he did It.
BEEN THERE IN FLORIDA

|CJ Floyd Theatres |
rwt
H I

m m rm in

SALLY F l
PLACES
IN T H E
HEART
MOVIUANOO'I
_____________

2 . SO

B IE V lE m .Y j- n i- L

BEEN

T H E R E :

Probably by knowing how lo
disengage Ills mouth until he pul
Ids brain In gear Ills patience In
overdrive and his temper In
reverse*.

KEEP YOUR
CITY CLEAN
Tha Sanford City Commis­
sion hs* dtclsiad tha month
ol March ■&gt; ‘'Cl#an-Up''
month for tha City of Sanlord.
Tha Sanford City Commis­
sion urge* all ratldanls to
join In this sllort and kasp
"Tha Frlandly City" a claan
and beautiful city.

MARCH '8 5
"CLEAN UP M O N TH "

�7 1 - H e lp W a n te d

Touchy
Subject

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

T r a c y S ch n eid er,
co owner of T J ' j Cer a m i e s &amp; Si l ks,
right, demonstrates
workings of a lamp
with touch control to
Dianne Hochm an,
Sanford area
cham ber of com ­
merce memb er .
Co owner Judy Cox
is behind a counter
at the new store, 226
E. First St., during a
recent grand open
I ng. T h e shop
features greenware,
finished ceramics,
supplies for do-ityourselfers and
ceramics classes.
MoreM CkeM by Tam my Vlnont

Affirmative Action Working: Study

The study found, for example, that
blacks' share of I lie Job market increased by 15 percent during the decade
with Ihr majority of those Jobs In higher
paying categories. Women Increased
Ihelr share In the Job market by 19
percent. I be report said, fllspanlcs'
share of the market Jumped 50 perrenl.

the 1970s," was written by Herbert
Hammerman, a private consultant ami
former staff member of the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission,
and was published by the Potomac
Institute, an Independent Washington
research organization.
"Ironically. Ibis positive evidence
comes at a time when the critics of
affirmative acllon — Including ihc
president, the attorney general and
other high g o v e rn m e n t officials — arcwaging a campaign lo strip Hie program
of basic elements," said Harold Fleming,
president of the Potomac Inslllulr.

The lOO-page study, “ A Decade of
New Opportunity: Affirmative Action In

The EEO C, for example, decided Oils
year to emphasize InvestIgalInn of

W A SH IN GTON IIJI'I) - Minorities itiitl
women nifitlt- signflcunl gains Iri
employment In the 1970s due largely to
affirmative action programs and the
guideline* Hhoiild tie ronlInued despite
crlllelsm from the administration, a
study says.

Orlondo - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
i,u , „

HOURS

1

. „ _„

J S S X Jt? ™ 1*Y

SATURDAY t - Naan

10 M N U b t I l M l U C . I

25— S p e c ia l N o tic e s

Bolloon
Magic
- c a i irtiv* - *
*OS ) l l 0400

Fleming conceded employment gains
by minorities and women "have been
uneven and In most nrras purity Is sill!
remote.

.......... S E N D A 0 I F T
A L IF T I

BALLOON
.BOUQUETS
..W t Deliver I
For every ra tio n every teeter*

c iu iu r E
A BIRTH!
M r. Stork't vliit
make* tor e lifetime
el mentor let. giftt A till

___________ Call Unde W i l l )

Half O f All Rapes
Unreported: Survey
W A SH IN G TO N |UI’I| — Nearly half Ihr rape*
Bum 1973 to 1983 w m l unreported, a
govt-rum rni survey says, and a Justice
Department official suggrNis ihc reason is that
vicllm s end up paying emotionally and
financially for the crime.
T h e report by ihe Bureau of Justice
Statistics rrlruftcd Sunday said 40 |&gt;crcciit of
the csllimited 479,tXX) women raped In the
period did not report Hie crime and 49 percent
of Hie 1.03 million ullrniplrd rapes during Ihc
sumr periiid were unrrportrd.
T h e bureau also found that were un
rsitmuird 123.(XX) male rspe victims during
Hie period.
The Information comes from data collected
annually by (h r bureau, which questions
I23.1XX) people 12 years and older In 90,000
households every year about their crime
experience in Hie past ycur. Thrse responses
were then used to estimate Else number of
ra|M-s nationwide.
The bureau estimated more Hum 70 percent
of rupe victims nrc unmarried women. 63
percent are under 25 and 53 percent arc from
ow-lncomc families.
Klghty-onc percent or Ihc victims are while
hill black women nrc slgnlllcanHy more likely
lo he raped compared lo ihelr pro|&gt;ortlon In Ihe
grnrral population, the bureau found.
Asstslurit A llo rn ry General Lois Hulght
Herrington, wtio heads Ihe department's Ollier
of Justice Programs, said rape vicllms ure
hesitant lo come forward fur u variety of
reason*.
"Sexual nssauli victims would be more likely
lu report the crime if they did not frur
liecoming entangled in Hie morass of an
insrnstlvr criminal Justice system." Herrlnglrm said.
"In many slales rupr victims must lltrrally
pay for Ihelr crime." she said. "Th e y arc given
Ihr hill for Ihc mcdlcul exam required lo gather
physical evidence. Burglary vicllms are not
charged for collrcllng Itngrrprlnts. Why should
sexual assault victims tie charged for collecting
evidence?"

W ASHINGTON (IJPI|
W i th President
Reagan and Congress
at loggerhead* over
how to attack huge
budget deficits, the
W h i t e House has
cracked open n dour to
compromise hut that
may not lie enough to
sat i sf y Senat e R e ­
publican leaders.
White House chief of
staff Donald Regan
hinted at u possible
compromise on defruMe
spending Sunday In
acknowledging "some
procurement" of nonstrategic Items could
b e s c r a p p e d nr
po s t po n e d w i t h o u t
endangering national
security.
At Ihr same time,
however. Regan out­
lined ihr cliffirult tusk
that awaits u special
working group created
last week to pursue the
on-agaln. off-again ne­
gotiations between the
White House and the
Senate GOP leadership,
When asked ubaut
the prospects for n
co m p rom ise . Re gun
replied: "That remains
lo lie seen. If we give a
little, arc they going lo
give a little? And. tf so.
In what arras?”
Administration and
Senat e negot i at or s
were expected to inert
Tuesday, though the
budget Impasse that
continued lust week
apprurrd to dim pro­
spects that Ih r full

Legal Notice

Senate could begin
debate on Ihc budget
later this week.
Rc-gun. Interviewed
on NBC's "Meet the
Press." Incllcalrd two
major elements of n
plan approved by the
Republican leadership
are wnaccrpluhlr lo the
administration: deny­
ing (he Pentagon any
budget growth beyond
Inflation and freezing
Social Security
henrllls.
Of the latter p ro ­
posal. a sensitive issue
Hie White House tuts
sought to avoid. Regan
said, "We won't even
touch Hint."
The Senate leader­
ship has proposed u
957 b illio n deficitreduction package Tor
next year, compared
with Ihr 951 billion In
savings contutnrd In
Ihr fiscal 1980 budget
Reagan sent Congress
Fit i 1
Regan said Ih r two
sides nunc to ugrremen* last week on
some parameters of the
budgei. Including eco­
nomi c assumpt i ons
that influence projec­
t i ons of r e v e n u e s ,
expenditures and the
dr(lclt, hut remain al
odds on specific Issues.
On ih c m o s t c o n te n ­
tious of those Issues —
defense spending —
Regan sent a strong
signal that Reagan re­
cognizes the Inevitabil­
ity of compromise

Stars Net Seminole Humane Society $1,000
Tile Humane Society ol Scmtnolr County has
received a 91.000 grant from Galnea Foods. Inc.
for havi ng been one of the nation's top
iiHHicy-ralshig shelters lust year through Its
panicIpatlon In Ihr company's "Share Your Love
for Dogs" progrum.
The Humane Society has raised 9268 by
collrcllng Hie starred price markers from Gaines
dog lood packages. Each marker Is work 30 cents
to the shelter.
"We urr extremely pleased with the response
from urea dog owners," said Joanne Pragcr.
executive director of the shelter. "Th e money will
ruablc us to provide hettrr care for the many
unwanted (lets w r lakr In each day."
Ms. Pragcr said Ihc shelter hopes to raise even

more money In 1985, "We urge everyone to
continue to participate In the program by turning
in ihelr starred price markers to the shelter so
lhat we cun he in Hie lop 50 again Ibis year."
The Gaines program Is part of an ongoing
national effort by the company to assist the
American Humane Association and more than
700 local animal shelters In generating funds lo
help care for the more Hum 120 million animals
utumdoned each year In this country.
The markers can be found on various brands of
dog food manufactured hv Gaines For more
Information call the shelter ui 323*8685 or mall
your stars to Humane Society of Seminole
County. P O. Box 784. Sanford. Fla.. 32772 0784

D oonesbury
AH W t K U t

HUM MAN.

xmzri

tnousntmuv

MNN6US

THAfMJP
M'S OH
ptApum
AMIN.
lACPf. A

F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice It hereby given Itul I
am engaged In butinett el 1)1
E Cbutch S t . P O Boa DM.
Long wood Seminole County.
Flo rida under Ihe ticlltlout
n a m e at M E D I A T E C H
NIQ UES, end that I intend to
regular 14 id name wilt* me
Clerk ol Ihe C ircuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with the provlllent
ot tne Fktltlout Neme Statute*
to wit Section M l OT Florida
Statute* 1*0
/*/ Lonnie Divine
Publlth March 4 .11, II, 1). IM )
D E D 1*

v e r m * has as*w h !M to
Jtffftty \

APFAKm XH/eSAUJI
O F K llt&amp; T INThtNEM)
BKttPCFMiCuaiHANPSONMJH5RS.
/

Legal Notice

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
FOR S E M IN O LE C O U N TY ,
FLO R ID A
P R O B A TE DIVISION
File Number U 1*4 CP
IN RE E S T A T E O F
R O B E R T G L E N N M OORE.
Deceeted
N O TIC E OF
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
The edm lnlttrelion ol Ihe
etlete ol R O B E R T G L E N N
M O O R E , d e c e e t e d , F i le
Number *S IM C P . It pending In
me Circuit Court tor Semlnoto
N O TIC E U N O E R
C o u n ty , F lo r i d a , P ro b a le
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E S T A T U T E
Otvtoton. the eddrett ol which It
TO W HOM IT M A Y C O NCER N
Semlnoto County Caurthauta.
Notice It hereby given trial Ihe
Santord. Florida The name*
under tigned. punuenl to the
and addrettat ol the pertonel
" F lc t l lle u t N am e Statute"
repretentative end the pertonel
Chapter M ) 0#. Florida Statute*
repretenteflve t attorney ere
will regltter with the Clerk ot
tel form below
Ihe Circuit Court. In end tor
A ll Intoretted pertont are
Seminole County. F tor Ida. upon
required to file with thlt court.
receipt ot proof of Ihe public#
W ITH IN T H R E E M O NTH S OF
lion ot Itu* notice, the flctltieui
TH E F IR S T P U B L IC A TIO N OF
name, to wit Deflect# Shield at
TH IS N O TIC E
I II all clelrnt
Florida under which the un
again*! the etlete end 1)1 any
der tigned It engaged in butinett
ob|oct!ont by an Intarettod
et MO* North Highway 41). In
perton to whom IhU notice wet
the City of Long wood Ftonde
mailed met Challenge* the valid
The party Interetted In *4id
Ity ol the will, the quellflcettont
butinett entarprite It H S T ,
ot the pertonel repretentotlve.
Inc 4 F 10, Ida corporation
venue, or |urltdktton of the
C E R T I F I E D P R O D U C TS .
court
INC ,*
A L L C LA IM S AN D O B JE C
F lor Ida corporation
TIO N S N O T SO F IL E O W ILL
By C H A R L E S A T O V E Y .
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Prat idem
Publication ot Itilt Notice hat
Deled el Winter P e rt. Orange
begun on March 1). IM )
County. Florida, thlt lift* day ol
Pertonel Rape eternal ive
March. IM )
M IL D R E D LO VING
Publlth March )t A April I, E.
1*4 Wind meadow*
IS. IM )
Altamonte Spring*. Florida
DED 1)1
H )0 l
Alloc nay for
Pertonel Repretentalive
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice It hereby given that I L W C A R R O LL. JR .
E S Q U IR E
•m engaged In butinett at 110
LAW REN CE W
W M arvin Ava . Long wood
C A R R O L L . JR P A
Seminole County, Florida O TX)
P O B tiN
under the liclittout name el
C E R T IF IE D A U T O SALES, end Cetteitwrry. Florida U n )
Telephone I X H IU 4itoO
the! I inland to regular Mid
neme with Ihe Clerk ol Ihe Publlth March ) ) A April I.
IN )
Circuit Court, Semlnoto County,
Ftonde In accordance with the 0E O It)
p ro v ln o n t el the F lctllle u t
Name Statute*. to w n Section
M l 0* Florida Statu tat 1*1)
N O TIC E UN D E R
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E S T A T U T E
/»/Cherle»A D * N a ,t
Publlth March I*. ) » A April I,
TO W HOM IT M A Y CONCE RN
I IM )
Notice It hereby given met me
under tigned. pwrtvanl to the
O E D 114
" F ic t lt io u * Nam e Statute”
Chapter M )0*. Florida Stotuto*.
N O T IC E U N D E R
will regltter with Ihe Clerk ot
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E S T A T U T E
me Circuit Court. In end tor
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y O IV E N
Seminole County. Florida, upon
met me under tigned purtuent
receipt ot proof of tho publico
to Ihe Fkiitioo* Neme Slat
lion et m it notice the IktiNout
Ufa.” Chapter 14) 0*. F S . wilt
neme. to wit
Buhl Preduett
regular with the Clerk ol the
under which the undesigned It
C ir c u i t C o u r t in and tor
engaged
In
butinett
et lid*
Seminole Canty. Florida upon
North Highway 4}). In the City
receipt ot proof ol the public#
ol Long wood Florida
lion ot mu Notice, me tktittou*
T he party Intarettod in Mid
nem e, to w ll. S E M I N O L E
butinett entorpriM It H S T .
G A R B A G E S E R V IC E , under
Inc . a F lor Ida corporation
which name I am engaged Wt
H S T . INC , a Florida
butinett el Route I, Bee 11)0.
corporation
Santord. Florida, and me eatent
By C H A R L E S A TO V E V .
et my imereti in teid butinett I*
Prat idem
Mt%
Deled el Winter Pert. Orange
D A T E D mu rrn day et March.
County. Ftonde m u l)th day et
IM )
March lee*
!%J Frank G William*. Jr
Publlth March IA IS A April I.
Publlth March II. IB )*. April
I. IM )
I. IM )
DED W
D E O tt

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

WRITtA QAXiDtAAfABOUT
HtSAtLATIONSHlPWm

e M A N Y K A T CO SM ETICS e
Skin cere end cater Heir
C O N N IE. ...................... TO ))M

Shopping For A
New Or Used Car1

NOT NON).
SOKOVM i

QAcvrr

post.

Tan can •)•#/■ N ad IS#
Set! deal* Im the f i r n l e f
Nereid'* Cto**!TJad *ecf ton
Read Friday * E e e n ln f N ereid
lot Die P a il •election#

Evening Herald
atM S a n k I r e a r A l i n e r
he a la r d 1 1a r id a
1 1 1 -t S I I

i

Small part attembly Will tram
Never a Teel

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL

774-1341

25— S p e c ia l N o tic e s

NOW

Boekkeeper Receptionitt
Mature, emperienced Indlvlduel
tor bookeepmg through linen
d a l Payroll. Sectoral Oopotlt.
Quarterly end Annuel Re
portt. W i t. Accounit Payable
and Receivable, audit, antwer
telephone corretpondence
Mall cover letter or return#
with reterencet to B oi IM . cto
Sonlord Herald. P O Boa
1*1&gt;, Santord, FI W i l l 1*11
C L A R K A P P A R E L ]e*t CXd
Lake Mary Road. Unit 110.
Lake M ary, need! taper!
enced tewing machine opera
tort H I H M ________________ _
Full end pert lime potltiont now
available Hourt can be fleal
ble tor tchooi or }nd |ob
Benelitt eveiieble ettor quell
lying Apply In perton at
R A X t 1000 W H w y all.
Lpngwood___________________
F uM- Pact time telephone an
twerlng tecrelaryt E apart
ence p re fe rre d , b u t not
required Cell 173 SOSO_________
Herd worting. energetic perton
needed tor wort on tree term
Ceil between 111 l weekday!
I l l MOB_____________________
H O U S E P A R E N T S C h rltlle n
trailer tor ebuted 1 troubled
leant toejoet ____

Mery Kay Cot metic*
Free Complimentary Faclati
Far a Or eat Spring Lo e k TO 4 4 )l

In addition, the Justice Department Is
entering court cases opposing Judicially
ordered remedies to Implement af­
firmative action programs.

Acrylic Appticatort needed to
apply protective coaling on
cart, boat* and planet t ) to
» tt per hour We train For
wort In Sanford area call
Tempo ItS O P MSI
A S S IM S IT W O RK ER S

AVO N hiring Smiling Facet!
Full A pf time Call Immedi
otefyl m W H t r l M i m
• A K E R W A N T E D far B ill
Knapp* Com m lttary in San
tord Sand letter ol Intorett to
B ill Knapp* C o m m itta ry .
IMS Silver Leke D rive, etlen
Non JoeCretttnl

I wll net be re*ROft*ibto tor any
debit Incurred by anyone
other then myaell a» at March
10, m i Arrertor Holley
New Credit Cardl No one
refuted Vite/Maifercard
Call i (atai it* o ut

S P R IN G IS T H E T IM E TO
B U I L D B IO B U S I N E S S
TN R O U O N L I T T L E AOS!

Regan: Compromise
Possible On Budget

extract Rate* A'.iUMs
3 Line* Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Doy Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
Monday - 11:00 A .M . Saturdoy

Individual discrimination complaints
rather than widespread "pattern and
practice" Instances of discrimination.

"Hut the trend Is unmistakably In the
d i r e c t i o n ol equal o p p o r t u n i t y ,
particularly In the higher positions that
were for so long closed lo Ihr traditional
vic tims of discrimination, he said

RATES
.....................« 7c * i

3 cont*cuti«« ti»»* 61C • I
7 M i m i l k i time* 52€ a I

21 — P e rs o n a l*

C L E R K strong background In
payment potting to computer
tyttem , with em phatic on
proof procett M utt be well
organ! jed with good clerical
tk lllt Interacted candidate
thou&gt;d contact Hercar Alum!
nu n

That we have
itUntMA
A t a clettllted edverflter In the
E V E NINO H ER ALD .
IN C R E A S E the R E A D E R S H IP
el your ad by vtlng ttert I
Give evr to let rapt a cell el

322-2611
Two airline llcteti Orlando to
Grand Rapid*, Michigan, t i l
each Mutt be uted April 4

Coii m u n

_______

INDUSTRIAL WORKERS
Urgently need tfrong depend#
bleworkert Never e Feel

27— N u rs e ry &amp;
C h ild C are

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774-1344
I

Babytitter needed weekday*.
I yr old Reterencet Lake
M a ry area M l **)♦___________
E ip mother win* bekytlf In my
home Intent! It teddlert
Sentovd eroo, H I ***4,________
Far tender, laving A quality
child c e rt, cell A Child'*
World TO H H

3 3 - R e a l E s ta te
C ourses

n

i I a I I e r
Need t Immedietly 111

t

Any eaperlnce with tile or mlr
roc helpful to Inttell marble
llaturet Permanent potllton
Never a leaf

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774-1141
LA B O R E R S Strong reliable,
general laborer! needed Im
mediately Dinar am location*
Phone end IranaportaNon a
mutt Never e lee Apply

KELLY SERVICES
660 2339
TMnklng at getting ■
Reel Etfato LkewwT
Join ut at ear Carter Night
April teth )to * P M
We attar Free Tuttien
end cenflmeut Trelntngt
Cell Dick ar Vicky tor detain:
M* M M I I ) I M ..Eve. TT4-IM*
Keyetel Ftonde . Inc.

^^j^eer^njerience^^^

41— M o n e y to L e n d
Builnett Cepllel 1 10 000 to
1 1 000 000 end over P O Boa
141 ) Winter Pk FU OTTO

Legal Notice
N O TIC E UN O ER
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E S T A T U T E
T O W H OM IT M AY C O NCER N
Notice H hereby given the! the
under tigned. pwMuent to the
" B k t l l l o w t Nome S to tuto"
Chapter MS Of. Florida Stotuto*.
will roglttor wilh the Clerk of
the Circuit Court. In end tor
Seminole County. Florida, upon
receipt of proof of the publico
Hon of fhli notice, the Hctitioui
name, to wit Buhl Chemical
under which the under tigned It
engaged In butinett el IIM
North Highway t il. In the City
ol Long wood. Florida
The party inter at led In tald
butinett tnterprlte It H S T .
Inc , e Florida corporation
H S T . INC . o Florida
corporation
By C H A R L E S A TO V E V .
P re* idem
Doted at Winter Perk. Orange
County Florida toll 11th day of
M arch. IMS
Publlth March It. IS A April I.
A IMS
D E O IM
F IC T ITIO U S NAM E
Notice It hereby given n*et I
am engaged In butinett ot IMS
Howell Branch Rd Maitland.
F lo
H f J I Seminole County.
F lo rid a under the tlctltloul
neme of Protligt Defalt, end
that I Intend to reg.Her taid
name with Clerk ef me Circuit
Cdurl, Seminole County. Florida
In accordance with the pro
vittont ol the Fktltlout Name
Statute*. T o w ll Section MSP*
Florida Statute* IMF
RgbertO Duitamen
Publlth March II. It. IS. April
I. IMS
DEDM

TIP-

U|ht
m

Pert lime —

iii ten

SEWING MACHINE
OPERATORS
Eapertonced tewing machine
operator! wentod ell epere
tient epen We w ill train
doleiNed epeNcenlt In eer
advanced lockmquet. plut.
■tier prebellenery parted,
greet benelitt el I paid bell
d e yt and k e t p l le ll ii ll e n
Apply 0 to I Mend ey thru
Friday at Ilea Otd Leke Mery
Rd . Sentordi er cell 111 M il

L I V E IN H O U S E K E E P E R COOK
For retired Leke M e ry couple
Beautiful home Wife need!
tome pertonel attltlence
Nontmoker Mutt drive, car
e v e iie b le P riv a te liv in g
quertort *100 per month Ret
erencet required I 111 MM
or M l SOM

LIVE IN NEEDED
Mature, tattled wumen to cere
tor Nee to large heme. Private
bedreem B betfc Oeed eetory
permanent petltten ptve Beyl
•HI Celt m u t t
Nation l lergetl chain ol family
tun canton hot immediate
o p e n in g ! ter e m a n a g e r
trainee p rim a rily nita t A
weekend* Mutt be mature,
neat In appearance A bond#
bto Phone tor e#»1 M l «t&lt;D

NEEDED:

PART TIME HELP
E ic e itent opportunity toe the
future 111 llt t __________ __
N U R S E 'S A ID E S W A N T E D
Apply In perton. Lekeview
Hurting Center, t i t E Second
Street Santord
O F F IC E C L E R K S
Large company moving Into
booulitwl new off &gt;tet needt to
add teveval clerk* Type )»
WPM General office eip e n
ence required Perm anent
potugm* Never a Feel

TEM7 PERM PERSONNEL
7741144

�71-Help Wanted

7 1 - H e lp W anted

Light Delivery - m int have
small u r Cash dally Call
Tina or Bob »*» * 1J7

W O R D PROCESSORS

Santord m anufacturer needs
qualified T I C . M IC and ARC
watdtr with fabrication and
layout aipartonc* Only tipa
r la n c a d naad a p p ly 1* 1
R u d d a r C ir c le
S an ford
Airport Industrial Park

Immadlato opening* Parma
nont position Must have as
portonc* an a IBM Display
W riter * Lamar or * W A N G
Have- a Ire I

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
774-1141

S E C R E T A R Y R E C E P TIO N IS T
Plush ottlc* Canaral oltlco
skills T y p a a O W P M Phonos
Parmanani position Ntvar a
taat

TIMP PERM PERSONNEL

774-1341

Secretary-Typist
langwood A raa construction
oftlca A c c u ra 'a typist in
eluding
answering phonos I
and ganaral oftlca dutiat Call
uaa aio . i » to to » tor apt
Mon thru E r l _______________
S H IP P IN G R E C E IV IN G
Pt I labia strong with good at
tltude Parmanani and tampo
f ary positions Never a to# i

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL

774-1344
SUN S T A T E LA NDSCAP ING
Lawn 1 Maintananca Ground
parsonnoadad Call W OOS!
Supar
markal
tapanenetd
cistuar Attarnoon shill and
waakands Apply In parson
Park and Shop J$th and Park
Saomanagar________________
Telephone
Racaplloniil and
t &gt; p i si
t t s o w a a k , plus
hospitllltation and raliramanl
C *114*) tiM lur Inlarv io «
Van Driver
Day traalmant
worker Full tlma position,
d a a lln g w lk t h c h ro n ic
psydatrlc. disabiad and al
darly Call parsonnai 111 t i l l
altar 10 30 AM______________
W aitress w anla d Apply In
person only batwaan 1 and 4
P M . R ib Ranch. 1S4S S
F ranch Aua .________________
W A N T E D : 1 phono solicitors
F ta a lb ia hours Apply at
Associated Contractors 1100
Franth Aya
___________

WE WANT YOU!
S t e n t in g s S o o U t t p t n

Tfpttta Dtiwii Silnptopl*

AAA EMPLOYMENT
His All Tf [*i of lobs.
Call

323-5176
O E N E R A l O FF ICE.... to S»0
All around" otllca skills R
n a td a d hara
Fllln g /llg h l
p h o n o w o rk
C a s u a l al
mospharal
ACCTS. R EC . C L E R K ..... SIM +
Good with IlgurasT II tha answer
1s "ye s " this company needs
you now Accounting wilts
light otllca skills
R E C E P T IO N IS T ...... ........SIS* +
Bubbly parsonaiity gels you this
one I Phones word processing
Stable company
J'* -* C I-E k K ............ ..... u p y
Th is professional company
needs high energy parson lo
'*
• "* »• ? phonos
Banal Its and advancamanl I

323-5167
IN V E N T O R Y C O N T R O lt ir t *■
Never he *'_ck behind a desk I
East paced warahousa Blue
leans lob
O R IV E R /W A R EttO U S E to SIN
E C L Local warahousa needs
g o o d d r i v e r w ho has
supervisory capabilities Good
advancamanl
MOR T R A IN E E
.......te S4M
Do You Hava a Salas Ability?
This company Is ready to ham
lha right parson Retails plus
L A B O R E R S ....... ...................lisa
R U good with your hands and
want to work? Local company
wants to hlra ASAP Know!
edge ot wood a plus

* TOO MANY 10LIST *
Discount Fe e -1 W ts Salary
Law SI M Registration Fee
e toe Fee Until Hired t

2523 FRENCH AVt
Will train lor career In child
ca rs
F u ll and pari lima
positions available, laechers
aides, cook and clerical Call
m

HELP WANTED
O F F IC E H E L P - no o.pertencs
needed Good starling pay
Fulltim e Call 474 4X»
W A R E H O U S E W O R K - Im
mediate Will train Also Can
oral Laborers a n 4X50
C U S TO M E R G R E E T E R will
tully rain Good pay Start
now Fu lltim e 01*4100
TR U C K O R IV I R t - local or tong
haul W ith or without rig
Esc allant pay Call t i t 4100
C O M P U TE R O P E R A TO R S Good Pay Scale I Secure post
•tons. Call t i t 4ioo
T R A D E S M E N - all phases
E seal la ri pay S U M right
away *10 4100

Tiredat lab HsntSag?
Celt Futures. Nsey tan help'
Thar Nay# ISTs to ipaningt.
many with ns sapor Mace
needed Call tor Into

SALES MANAGER
Central Florida* largest Real
E slate mega i m* aspending
into Seminal* Mid W Orange
County Must he willing to call
an Mug realtors a day Salary
p lu s c o m m is s io n C a ll
ItU IW * 777) ar I M l 1447 M l

GENEVA CARDENS
APARTMENTS
O ff* SAW CSAT
• A d u lt A Family
Sections
• W O Connection*
• C able T V . Pool
• Short te rm Laos**
A .o ilo b l*
1 ,1 . ) It. tpts, 1 h . T A

91— Apartments/
House to Share
W ill share madam country
horn* SH0 par month Call
T O lias_____________________
Work log Sober female to share
horn* with single mother a ]
c h ild re n P rlrs t* bath A
kitchen privileges P I n i l

\

E v e n i n g H e ra ld . S a n fo rd . F I .

157— AAobile
Homes / Sale

e e * IN D E LTO N A s e e
e e HOMES FOR R E N T e e
* e 1141*14 e *

Christian Apts A Hamas
T V . kitchen, laundry, maid. UO
a k i g O I 411 swa m l « It
C lean, comfortable sleeping
room with private bath A
kltchannatto f?J a waak Call
» * t a a r m o * 4 T ___________
Females Only
Children Welcome
__________ Call H I T ilt _________
Room In prlvata home Ma&lt;d
Service, utilities and laundry
Call m SOM
S A N F O R D Furnished room* by
the wees Reasonable rates
Maid service Call H I *K7
ST PM 4IS Palmetto Avo

1 Bdrm . I bath Fenced yard
S47I
Grove
View
Call
H I 19*4
_____
1 bdrm on Sum marlin A r t
First. last and deposit r#
gulradw/ratorancas 177 4401
1 bdrm ivy bam new carpet,
cant tiaat ft air, appliances,
drapes, fenced back yard SMO
mo Day H I Dal. Evas i l l
n
1 bedroom house. 111? New 1
bedroom duple &gt; ouwl U i l
Laos# 1st. last and security
m &lt;nn

MARKHAM ESTATES

SANFORD
Rees W e e k ly A
Monthly rales Uhl Inc all
MO Oak
Adults I *41 m i

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

141— Homes For Sale

Fully agutppad. 1 bdrm . 1 balh
unlumlshad Cant heal ft air.
11* m o l d 4 X ) plus deposit.
Can h i ? m

117— Commercial
Rentals

m

m

w

t y

SANFORD RETAIL STO R ES
Fucn Apts tor Senior Cllliens
H I Palmetto A rt
J Cowan No Phono Calls
M A K E Y O U R S E LF AT H OM E
In a completely lurnishod studio
apartment Single itory living
al Its bast Sound controlled
walls Built In book raves d*
cor wall covering Also
1
Bdrm available
F lealble leases
Senior Cllliens discount
San lord Court Apartments

________ M IW .

_____

T w o b e d r o o m f u r n is h e d
apartment U U mo plus ID O
deposit Call M l * 0 4 ________
I bdrm , living room, kitchen,
c a r p e t , a ir No p a ls or
children A n e r t n i l t o l

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
BAM BO O COVE APTS
M t t Alrparl Bird
Efff#ncy 1
I &amp;#droom from
1270 month 1214470, 17)4401
I X D I k o u a I for Senior CiVI
ten*_________________________
C in tirb u fg i t the C io o in p
1 Bdrm . I a r ) balk Canda's
Prlvata Pane A Carper?
Wether/Dryer Heek up
Beeutllul Cavalry Setting
Children smell pets welcamed
Senter clttens tfiscewnl
___________ H I 1*11_________ __
L U X U R Y A P A R TM EN TS
Fam ily A Adult* Stclton
Pueistd*.} Badreamt
Mat*ar Cava Aparimants.
m rsa*
______ Open On Woakand*.

RIKENOOO ARMSAfTX
I and 1 bedrooms
» 1 4410. or m *4* I
Santera COME AND SE E the
Brand new I b d rm ll hath
U n it*
Screened p a rc h ,
w a s h e r and d ry e r, m in i
blind*. F r tm I4M a me
Located an Oak Ay*, al Park
Or behind Dairy Ouaan

Newly renovated retail lle rts an
F irs t I t . ta the H is to ric
Downtown O n iric ! ?)* ta
lt.Std sq H Prices starting at
S? per tg ft i n SSM

ts &amp; A A A s fa
New Ottice Building
C F R H on west Firs t St
Totally dacoraiad raady lor
occupancy St4 to 4)77 sq ft
___________ H I 1*1)____________
Ottlc* or Retail South Sanford
A r*
10*0 to 3140 sq It
4)4) SO sq It Totally restored
Brick Building H I 1*1?
S to rage ar m a n u la c t u rin g
spec* 1* hour security guard
Call H ? 1 * 7 ? __________
H U French Av*
1100 sq It
Stcr* Front Will remodel to
tenants spec lllcal Ions tw o
per month. H I 1*1?______

) bdrm./ 1 bath, gnalify built
void limber home, approt
1)00 sg ft under alrj high
energy values, dee* well,
septic link, custom wood cab
Inelt, pro*?? tone*
t l t t M4
Huskey Realty. R E A L T O R )
M l Mat .
Evtnlngs H M U I
O S T E IN
L A K E A S H B Y 141
acres B E A U T I F U L N EW
HOM E Lake access NO
DOWNto qualified boyar Lira
out where you can *n|ey
nalurt and clean alt i \
inlarett 11)0.000 Owner (1011
ait iit i
Senlord Owner w ill help linanc*
spacious convert**i# home e
bdrm . 1 baths or home I
mother ,n law apt Assumable
S'&gt; mortgage IS* 000 H I T tlt
Sanford and Dalton* homes tor
s*&gt;# by owner 1 bdrm porch,
fans, central air,heal, fenced
yard Convenient to shopping
Call 171 4S »
SANFORD O W N E R 1 bdrm
1*» balh. C M A, w w carpel
screened Iron! porch, work
shop H I 74)1
SANFORD Brand new 1 Bdrm ,
1 balk h a m * , la rg * lat,
etcelltfll le c a lltn
Builder
W a r r a n t y . I 4 t . ) 11
W A L L S ! C O M P A N Y .H I 1*4)
SPRING T IM E
TIM E TO P L A N T Y O U R S E LF
IN A HOME O F Y O U R OWN!

141— Homes For Sale
1 tNSrm , i » * b*»f*, tamUf room,
f t "»C • d h « f d t t i n i I
Attum*bi* * I X
E &gt; C « ll« n l condition* My|t
w # 1 Sanofi South 15* SCO
ro ll tv n n tn g i or w Nkim h
m im

149— Commercial
Property / Sale
SANFO R D1 Convtnf«nc« ttert
lor %A»t on Airport Rood Lot
*00 b 100 )i* 900 C A S H
P R O P E R T I E S . C all Tom
Multan# R ta ilo r Auoc liltm l i t ) E vtTsmgi 1)4 D U

153— Acreage
Lots/Sale
LA R G E LO T
IN S A N F O R D
i l l sue
Oslaan
S acres high, dry,
cleared on hprdroad Irunlag*
I ml from stores 41000 down
17*»jno_6£&amp;*rn*rj_niJCU4_

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale
Baaulllul wooctad avarsliad acre
with 1 bdrm traitor 171400
H I 411*. ettor 4 pm

COUNTRY VILLAGE

127— Office Rentals
ID E A L LOCATION 1 lurnishod
o lllc a t w llk break room ,
multi Una phone system and
copy machine R eady lor
Im m td la l* o c c u p a n c y
Associated Contractors 7100
French Av*. H I 044? ar MS
SHI
_________________
w

y v A

’y i y v y v d v

v fF JT ? •TTJIF?

m
)

m

ACRE)
LO W DOW N
Ganava Mobiles OK

In

INCOME Mobil* O K and cot
lag* Rani one II vo In olher
l h ooo
INCOME P R O P E R T Y
Brick
duplet with omtra lot In beck
Room lor trlplon tea 000
Owner will linanc*
SANFORD Handym an special
I too tg ft living araa Naw
reef F ire p la ce
in ground
pool guetl collage Finish and
tav*
S &gt; * 7 0 0 cash

P io I m s k h u I Office S p s c tNewly rtnevatrd an Firs t St.
In IN* Historic Dawntawn
Dittrict M* to l ee* tg h
starting
al
17.)*/ tg ft
including H)SI*a

Fam iltot .. ...... A ......... Adults
H O ) Hwy I ) t l
111 D R

see Santoro Av*
C O M S IO N M IN TS W E L C O M E I

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
Houses tor rant L . ____________
Deltona 1 bdrm porch, tan*,
central air/heat, fenced yard
Conran lent to shopping Call
____________ W 4 W &gt; ___________
D E BAR Y 1 Bdrm 1 bam, A/C
carpeted, washer/dryer,
tone* U t l discounted Sac
Dap Ragulrad IMS) *7*144)
toava name.and number or
110*1 l* f ?4H attar ? ID PM.

SANFORD - Rental ) B d rm .
I'tb a lh
1 4 0 0 mo
CALL A N Y T I M E
R E A L TO R &gt;11 a m

Adult M o b ili Homo r a d
S a lu id 4 | -S u n d ij
AAarch llrd . A 14th
Retrashmanls tram t to I
IO) *47 4047............... t*4 771 717)
I to* K. O r area
Orange City
J U S T O F F 14
A f O R A N O C CI T Y EXI T H4
'41 Cancord. I4&gt;S* AduM sec
Hon Carriage Cova I I I S00
H I )*si Looce message
l»71 Cypress II a 40 Newly
remodeled Must be moved
tJTOO Call 111 1741
_____

ftW ’ V 'W " V

SHENANDOAH]
VILLAGE -

*100 OFF
SECURITY
DEPOSIT
1 BEDROOM CKJPUX

to Cevgar..... .......
m m D m.
14 Mark I V . . . „ „ . „ . . _ ..SAM Dn
•tt Dative SW------------ _ . . O M Dn

Four IMS Bulck Rlvtoratl Ho
lima availabl* to res lor* my
toss your gain I Alt a w w o
Call JM 4B74__________________

Ott Shore Fisherman Tun*
Tower Cuddy Cabin Tw in
Engines. Complete and Ready
To Co With Traitor U4.S00
Call 777 447*

217— Garage Sales

143— Waterfront
Property / Sale

O A R A Q f SO F U L L T H E R E ’S
NO ROOM FO R T H E CAR?
C L E A N IT O U T W IT H A
O A R A O l SALE ADI

H E W SM YRNA BEACH
Ocpen from 7 l condo No money
down Assumabto mortgage

219— Wanted to Buy
Baby Bads, Strollers. Ctolhat.
Playpen!, E tc. Paperback
it 11)4)?? t i l S1*4

111— Appliances
/ Furniture

Stood Cribs, playpens, baby
tu rn ltu r* c lu th ln g , good
prices Alte r ? PM H I S74)
Paying CASH lor
Aluminum, Cant. Copper
Brass Lead. Newspaper
Glass. Cold. Si ivar
Kokomo Tool *14 W 1st
* &gt; 00 M l * I H ) 1100
WA N T E D DEAD OR A U V E 1
Ref r i ger at or s , w a t h s r t ,
dr yen m u s e

Heavy dsrty Iraerer Ilk* new.
1 )7 )
Upright piano, t i l )
STS 4)40
Recandlttonad A Reliances
tram MS W ARR ANTE E O
BARNETTS
CASSELBERR Y
4)0 S ill
lio sa»»
eRENTTOOWN*
Color T V s . tleraos watTwrs
dryers refrigerator Irtoiars.
furniture video recorders
Special Itl wuektrtnlSSi
Alternative TV A Aypf Rentals
la v re t Snapping Cantor
ms***
Tw o
oranga
naugahyd*
lor*swats 47) each 14* Sarsora
B lvd , Call H ) 44)4
Used Washers Parts 4 Service
tor Kenmaret ............ &gt;})***)
M O O N E Y APPLIANCES
W IL S O N M A IE R F U R N ITU R E
H I U S E FIRST ST
1711*71

•n Plato ..........................task On
'7* Ferd Caurtor P/Up 47t* CM
ISSI French Av* ............ IS ) I MS
Why Bvr H«W Yeu Can Rtnewf
E ipert Patot ft Bsdy Week
Free III,metes
...... H l a i tl
ISM Ford Bronco
41)00
_________ Call
i II)
*J Falcon Wagon ) Dr’ Rt
stored Sail or trade ter small
late modal travel traitor Call
17) t i t ) ______________________
7) Red Thtynderbird Looks and
runt good saoo Call H I o a »
M IW IBfts St________________
'77 VW, 7 passenger slick tnlh
blue while N uns ft looks
g re ii Good tires I1.SS4
H ) HI*______________________
• Tt H I R C U R Y C A P R I
HATCH BACK
Silver w red
m tot lor Very good condition
J17IIW from * )
Ask lor
Amy,or attar* H 177 4)71

m

235— T r u c k s /

Buses/ Vans
1*40 Ford )/* Ion pick sip dump
truck Now pointing, uphol
story luno up and front and
alignment Apple pto condl
tlon Yours lor 44)00 Dump
truck to*lure alone is worth
414 44 * day X tt 17*1741

’74 Pinto, 5250 Down

221— Good Things
to Eaf

Pay Balance Weekly I
too oeoo
...................... tsaaoao

U Pick Strawberries
Tvet Thur Sat . **)* Hatter Av*.
I ll tttl
411 *Mt

' l l F O R D F 1*1 n a p t l da
pickup p t. P-"b. o dr . custom
wheels Loar topper Like
new S74 7I0S

223-Mlscellaneous
O AR O EN IN O T IM E IS H E R E I
P L A N TA W A N T A D
WA T C H THE CASH OROW1
Rebuilt K I R B Y / l i l t *4 B ug
G u lir'P P d Mir by Co
VI4W Itl SI 111 M M
Mtollilo T V Srttom t
Comptoto All you naed I0OX
Flnonclng No money down
41 144 00 Universal 4)1 &gt;7*4

CO LO R TE LE V IS IO N
Zenith IS" color consol* toiavl
tton Original prtet Over t*00
balance due IM* Cash or lake
over payments ot t l ) month
N O M O N E Y DOWN Still In
warranty Free home trial, no
obligation Call 4*1 S1S4 day or
night

237— Tractors and
Trailers
Cu«fom bull! 1710 lb ttrvngtti
fl*» b#d tiogl# •■?• Good for
I a h t a lt r t ar law n car*
»quipm#n* j l M Call H I M il

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes
1*41 Kawasaki 440 L T D 1)00
miles, tic e lte n l condition,
MM Cell H I la p ____________

231— Cers
Car Ihapplng? Sava yeur she*
leatherl Reed ttve Went Ads
tor Best B uj*^

* DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION *

191— Building
Materials

Hwy SI .......... Daytona Beech
* * * * * Heldta * * * * *

R IO P A R T TIM E IN C O M E 11
M A JO R S t i l l B U IL D IN G
C O M P A N Y IS 1 IE N IN O A
P A N T T IM E D I A L E R IN
Y O U R A R IA TO SELL O UR
PRC I N O I N I E R E D S T E E L
R U IL O IN O I AND R E L A T E D
P R O D U C TS R E F U N D A B L E
Off P OSIT REQUI RE D C A L L
■OB CBANDALL AT
I 4*0 414 17*4

D IS C O U N T
A U TO
SALES

WE FINANCE

213— Boats and
Accessories

BeechtIda Realty. R EALTO R S
toaai? l i l t Open 7 Days I

a

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
M' CMC Motor Home, ovcoltonl
condition By owner 111,*40
Col) lor Appt 17 ) 0470

243— Junk Cars

PUIUC AUTOAUCTION
Every Wed Nile at 7, M PM

* Where Anybody *
* Can Buy or Selll *
F#r m e n details
im m im
D «b «ry Auto &amp; Mar Int V#l#«
Acroti fpfetr lvtr, tap of huI
IM Mwy 1/ *1 09b# ry U § I M

BUY JU NK C A RS B TRUCKS
from II* to 44* or nsere
Call m -lt s o m-4711
TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk A
U t* J c*r k. tr uc k 4 ft ho* vy
oqulpmonl 777 saso____________
WE PAY TOP D O L L A R FOR
JUNK CARS A N D T RUC KS
CBS A U T O P A R T S 7S) *S01

WE N E E D L IS T IN G S !

CONSULT OUR
141— Homes For Sale

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Beal Eilat* Braker
H4* laniard Av*
P IN E C R E S T Juki Ilk* Naw 1
B drm I bath New root,
carpal, cabinet*, pamt inside
and out. fenced back Conv*
menl location 1)4 too

321-0759 E v e 322-7443
COM M ERCIAL S P E C IA L IS T
LAKEM AR v R E A L TY
R E A L T O R ....................... n r nae
For Sal* by Owner Seniord
Nice 1 bedroom homo with
living room, dining room,
paneled family room, laundry
room, workshop and large
screened perch Call tor in
tormetion m lto&gt; t i l too
M A P P IN Itl IS...........
A K E Y TO A NEW H O M E I
F IN O IT H E R E !

★ LANDLORDS#
Tired ot th* headaches? Let us
m anage year rental pro
portlet Professional tow coat
ta rvk * H I H U Call anytime
United Sales Asset 14tot. Inc.
Prop Mgmt. Otv , RaatSar
New 1 bdrm . 1 hath. Cant heat
A air. tans. Minds, garage l/a
ml south at Lake Mary High
A 1 neighborhood I1 U A N C
Days Mr Latent. I l l SMI
Eras H I a m
1*0 Howard
B lu d . Lsngw aad La o s*
purctsoe* pasatoto
Now accepting applications tar
rantal 4 Bdrm . IW bath,
family room, central heal and
air. carpeted, tonrad hack
saM plus l*t last ft D D.
Available 41. Broker Owner
Call H I B1H_________________
Md I . I t h I I a Bdrm . IS* bath,
mbit candman. central heat
and a ir , tupar app liance
p a c k a g e . Ian*, n* s m a ll
children, n* pat* Kotovonce*
M l me 1*1 and Security
m n a a e r u i m i ___________

3734 591

SI

9 # Credit?

«TE FINANCE

FOR ( S T A T E
C o m m e rcia l or R esidential
Auctions 4 Appraisals Call
Dali t Auction 17? S470

A r* you galling Divorced bans
to*red lor*c loved naad quick
sato7CallDato H I 4V*7

British Antncin Knit)
«*_H11_____
SPACIO US A P A R TM E N TS ~
Lakalront. pool, lonnlt. adults,
no pats, laundry U l l to l MO
mo Call 111*141 lose*
I and 1 bdrm Alto lurnishod
attlctoncy from 111 wwek tlSO
deposit Nopals Call H I CM?
? 1PM 41* P a l m e t t o _____
1 Bdrm tented yard, pot o k
U l l mo 11*0 Deposit Call
H I M i l _____________________
1 b d r m . I bath, appliances,
upstair*, near downtown i l l !
month *100 security deposit
H I 0000 or H I III?

L I E AUCTION

143— Television /
Radio / Stereo

123— Wanted to Rent
I or 1 bdrm housa or trailer In
need ol repair Will pay tor
p a rt or all m a te r ia ls In
etheng* lor percentage of
rent H I 4)41

A U C TIO N E V E R Y FR I. N IO H T

1 5 9 -Real Estate
Wanted

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent

b d C rttt?

NATIONAL AUTO SAUS
1170 J.S*Rf#rd 3214075

L»rt*sl R m _.l_.IM Mobil*
Honw Dgatgr in Util Ana.

'l l 14 i SO 1 Bdrm . 1 bath
Assume
mortgage
Call
H J *774 altar S PM
17 Scott Mobil* home 14v4) 7
bd rm . ) balh, adutt park
Central H A 117 004 H I 44)4
t ) Skyline 14 X S4. 1 bdrm 7
both spin plan IO X 24 screen
porch, 10 a 14 shad, central
A H. gas stov* A heal Adult
sec bon |14 000 H I S»tl

B E A U T IF U L 1 bdrm 1 bath,
carpal, appliances screened
petto, laundry IM P 'H I H U
tA N F O R D DU P LE X 1 bdrm ,
)• ) bath. 14)0 mo . S4K&gt; secur i
ty depot11 No pels **» akal

231-Cars

199— Pets A S u p p lie s

213— Auctions

105— DuplexTriplex/ Ren!

Clean, prlvato. nice Isrmished
Washar Adults *14? 10)0

M o n d a y, M a rc h IS , l t E S - 1 8

Fro* Dog and pupptov M liad
Bread
1 mala. 1 tomai* t
weeks 4 mm old tomato Call
H I 4)04 ettor S PM

93— Rooms lor Rent

R ,,s s s s r
ISOS W. 25tb St
IIS-1

KIT N‘ C A R LY LE * b y Larfy W righ l

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

HALL
IRAUf m
VINIT0A
it i i m n n H N d

O N I ACRE plus
tbit trailer to the country 1
Privacy lis t**
C A L L H A L L ......... ......... H » 1774
ASSUM E NO O U A L IF Y IN O I 1
B d rm . I I ' l h a th , la rg*
toacad yardl U *** dawn. U l l
Me P ITH p f T V A e ar*. )•
yrt M ew right ia I Ua.ia*
C A L L N A LL.................... 111)714
M O V E BIG H T IN 1 B drm ., 1
bath haaulllal split plan,
leaded w llk a a tra s . aaty
l l t N I Call us gwteki la*.?**
C A L L H A L L ..-................I D 1774

CALL HALL
Naw at sec ialas wanted I Will
Nam tar a rewarding
M R E A L E S TA TE C A R E E R S !

323-5774
B N H W T . I M I ________
H E R A L D R IA L E S T A T E AO S
ARE PEO PLE M O V ER S.
C HECK T N I R E A L T O R AOS
A N D IN D IV ID U A L L IS TIN G S
TO D A Y I_____________________
L A N E M A R T- S b d rm .. Us
balh. aanhaneat Clean at *
LANDSTOCK B R O K E R S
x h i b __
LA K E M A R Y
Eacusiv* type pool home, vary
tp a d a u t *1 an a I lo r debt*
pried Far appointment attar
I P M Ciady Brown Realty
Broker 771 mi or &gt;71 1717

I

STENSTROM

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

REALTY*REALTOR
Sdflfotd's Sales Leader

To List Your B u sin ess-

WE L IS T A N D S E L L
MORE H O M E S TH A N
ANYO N E IN N O R TH
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y
C O U N TR Y S ID E I 1 B d rm . I&gt;v
hath m ab ll* h a m a l Split
bdrm , plan, eat In kitchen,
tlreyiac*. central heal and air.
laacad y a r d l s i t . l i t
LO VELY I 1 Bdrm , i bath home
with yrtat roam, central heel
end atrt A real plaatute la
s h a w l
i i i . i i i
WHAT A B U V I 1 B d rm . Ms
balk ham* with hug* brick
hreplacal Larg* warkihep.
naad heart, central heal and
air, lanced y a rd l S41 ft*
THIS It TH E O H E I I Bdrm , 1
hath ham* with split bdrm .
pl an, t a t - In k i t c h e n ,
m ilk e r In la w g u a r far t .
lirtpiar*. gam* ream! M l tea
SANFOBDI F a r toes* • 71 &gt;00
severe tael warehouse with
1.444 ptot attic* space I S*7
Airport Bird . avPItebi* NOW I
Call E a r t
B l a c k ,
STENSTROM REALTY
i t s
a
a
i
g

W ILL B U IL D T O S U IT ) YOUR
LOT OR O U R S I E X C L U S IV E
A O E N T F O R WIMSONG
DEV C O R P . A C E N TR A L
FLORIDA L E A D E R ! MORE
HOME F O R LESS M O N IV I
CALL TOOAV1
a O IN E V A O S C E O L A R 0 a
TO N E D F O R M O B IL E II
) Acre Country tracts
Well treed on poved Ad
M \ Down I l Y r s t I D V
Frans 414.SMI

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Accounting &amp;
Ta x Service
Prototsional Tea Eaporli Pro
par*, my atfK* er yeur heme
Besl prices ( I
44. A lit .
Long s i) Cell ettor 4 71*117)
Tea accountant 1* years tap*
rtonc* W ill prepare teats in
your hom e Personal end
smell business IM 4)44

E s p Handyman. Ref Reliable
Fro* EsI most any |ob Bast
Ratos H I S ill Call Anytime

REMODELING SPECIALIST
W * Handle
Th* W?ioto Ball Ot Waa

Home Improvement

B L LINK CONST.
322 7029
Float Ing Aval lab I*

Appliance Repair
Allens Appfianci Senki
14 hr. Service Me I air* Chaff*
17 yr tap 44* 44*1,1)4 44)1

Building Contractors
A D D IT IO N S B ( M O O I LI NO
B ill Slnpp Custom Bu&gt;totr
Ita to L K
.....
RROOIISM

695-7411

Center's Building 4 Rtmedeling
No J*h Tee Small
S11 Burton Lana, ten tor d
111 *4)1
Plumbing. Painting. E toe Ir k
Carpentry Oan’l la* 111 Ash Sol
10y r t Esp
BALH 10M I
1 P R IN G FIX UP
Special savings on Iharm al
windows, satin and facia,
siding, guitars, screen work,
and burglar bars F a m ily
o w n e d and a p t r a t a d
Associated Contractors, 7700
French Av* laniard Call
H ) 4447

Carpentry

TH O M A S A THOMAS. Siam*
repair, cleaning, lawn car*,
Call H I ISdt.

R E M O D E L IN G
R IP A IR IN O
R if t t t a o t
l9f4#M#
i n 9 tiy _____________m m m i

Home Repeirs

CALL A N Y T IM E

C leant mess ft m at T# Oadlmati
Can His belpenl
Guaranteed SorvK* Lap Ratos

1)441. Park, Senior 0
BBI Us. M a ry Btud. Lh Mery
Tpwnnouse 1 Bdrm l i t hath,
laundry room. dan. pood, ctoee
to shagging O wner Motivated
S4J 000 Maho attar H I i n s ar
77)7*77

Handy Man

TO W E R ) E IA U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y Harr tolls Beauty
Nook site h i si m s ? 4 i

Heed Car pot Cleaning Living.
Dining Room ft Hall 4)4 44
Sofa ft Choir, U S H I )!**

322-2420

Lawn Service
ACE L A W N S E R V IC E
Maintananca Sadding Pruning
Ctoaning thatching Fartlluing
Free Estimatos
M l 1711
Lawn Me intervene *
Landscaping Bush Hog Mowing
&gt;4* 10?J

Cleaning Service

MAIDS-Te-Oita

CALL NOW1 3390100
Electrical
r e s i d e n t i a l w ir in g

Indear/Outdeer Ughimg.
U r * to* Upgrades. Anyltoeg
(toe sr .cel Fra* I atMeat**
Smca 1*7*1 Call

Tam’s ItoctrM U rvK a

Painting

LAMMS MOWEDi TRIMMED
Spring Yard Clean ups

11) ISIS

Health A Beauty

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

It you ere leak tog tor a sue
casstul career in Real Eilat*,
ttomtram Realty it leaking
tar ya* Call La* Albright
today at 177 141* Evenings

m mi

Firewood/Fuel
T R E E S E R V IC I t FIR E W O O D
FO R SALE CALL A F T E R
4 P M 17)10*4

m 177*

CARPENTER
Rapairs and
ramodaling Ne lob loo small
Call H ) *44)
Maintonancial til typo*
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
and etoctrK 1D40M

Lendclearing
G E N E V A L A N D C L IA R IN O
Lot and Land clearing,
till dirt, and hauling
Call )4* S4M or S4S S7S7
LANOCLEARINC
P I L L DI RT. B U S H O C G IN C
C l a y a shale m u n

W Aarr a o s p a y b o t h u s e r
A N D READER E ( WISE .
B E BOTHI

\

ChrntiM B m .

'\JJ

Cats
Rsits

Com pitta U w r

1 )1 l i A i

★ TONY C0RIN0 *
Piolsssiontl Custom Petntinf
Serving Centre! Fla tor IS yr*
with comptoto quality paint
Ing service* Quality a Musi
Special wall coating 111 a* 11
WA L L P A P k MI N U P A IN TIN G
References
V ary Relit He
11)4*17............ ........ t**71» lilt

Paper Hinging
P A M R H A N O IN Q
Any type we Ik ever ing
ReeseneM* ................... H I 1S44

Pesf Control

Masonry

Plastering

M EAL Cancrate ) man quality
oparalian Pallet, drlvowsys
Days H I 7)1) Eves TV I H I
D H Ruby Central*
Haws* sltki * Drives t Pallet
LigNI Grading ............... H S S I M

PALL Phases at PlasteringP
■•pair. Stucc*. Hard Coal,
Simulated Brick. M l-W d l
Are yao a PtaarS Than toll
atotrs at yser service thrawgh
Wsat Adi I

Moving A Hauling

Plumbing

Nursing Care

* Sudds Ptewsbtng S a rvk t *
Repair a Replace a Rtmedtl
a Fra* I slime See e H I 4444 *

OUR RAT ES A R E LO W ER
LaSavtow Nursing Cantor
t l S I tecandSf.. Sanford
771 4)47

Ar# r#* i

Tb#*» M l
tfb ir i 9* fiw r M fv lc i th riv fli
Want Adtl

Painting
CALVINS T O M S
Maas* Ptlnfmg A Wall Paper
Yaabwy meter sell
Wesupplf Uber T* S A V E SSI
77) 111)
RaepantiSle Mae and help** will
paml yeur Slam* ar duelness
* k Civ* your problem* to w*
^9#
toriaBvlFlf
Ha lv
y r i tap H7 34*7 L k coni

N E V ER P L A C E D A W A N T
AD? DON'T IVOR R V w I 1 L
H ELP YO U W IT H TH E
W O R D IN O . J U S T C A L L
H I U ll.

Pressure Cleaning
P R IVATE A M O B IL E H O M E )'
C O M M E R C IA L

w im .

DIO V04J E V E R I I I SUCH
BARGAINS, a s l i s t e d in
TODAYS W A N T AOSt

Tile
S c t l l ma n n T I I *
P r a t lu r *
Cl eani ng C a r a m l c . V inyl
Asbestos A II Phases P C
■rich Homos Businesses
Free Eat Reasonable 77)SJ4I

Tree Service
ICHOllTREESERViCI
Free E 11 ,mas**' Low PncasI
Licensed'insured' H I 771*

’’1*1 the Pretosuenalsd* IT"
JOHN A L I E N * L A W N * T i l *
Dead Ire* removal L k ft ins
Fra* **1 H I 4MS

�4B— IvewtogJHereld, Sanford, FI.

BIONDIE

Monday. March 25, IttS

bycM
trouny Baldness

A Problem
Restricted Solely To Men

by Mon Walkar

BEETLE BAILEY
AW, YOU'RE JUST
MAP BECAUSE YOU
C A N 'T P O IT

THE BORN LOSER

by Ah Santom

by Bob Montana

ARCHIE

by Howla Schneldor

EEK A MFFK

[ B O rO fJL V A F TE m W H O
1 GRABS IS 7 M K U G M W/TH IT

r ALL G O O D TM IUG S C M \
I D ME UJHO U JM TS ... J

DEAR DR.LAM B - I am 68
and am surely going totally bald.
My hair has been coming out
since I was 40. I had a badly
needed hysterectomy at 29.
When m y hair started to come
out. I thought It was due to
tension and possibly the use of
hair coloring. I got a wiglet, then
a full wig. Now I'm retired with
no tension and no hair coloring,
but my hair continues to come
out. I don't dare appear without
a wig.
DE AR R E A D E R By all*
means, see a dermatologist. You
mi ght have an under l yi ng
hormone imbalance that causes
hair loss. Women do have hair
loss. It can be quite extensive
and Is similar to male pattern
baldness.
Some dermatologists claim to
have gotten good results by
using estrogen cream on the
scalp. It will not restore the lost
hair, but will stop the pro­
gressive thinning. Obviously,
this treatment Is not for men.
Using hair coloring will not
cause hair loss. Some hair pre­
parations. Including peroxides,
may damage the hair shaft, but
a new hair will grow In to replace
It In the regular cycle of hair
regeneration.
I ha v e d i s c u s s e d hai r *
regeneration cycles and hair loss
In The Health Letter 12-6. Hair
Care, which I am sending you.
DEAR DR. LAM B - I have a
problem sim ilar to anorexia
nervosa, called bulimia. I've had
this problem for five years.
Unlike most b ulim ics, who
overeat and Induce vomiting on
a dally basis. I overeat and vomit
only once a week, sometimes
twice.
Am I a candidate for heart
problems? A m I causing damage
to my esophagus? Lately I have
had a strange feeling at the top
of my hreasthonr. as If m y
esophagus has an Irregularity or
a weak spot. Th is occurred after
a weekend of three or four
overeat-vomlt sessions. Am 1
damaging m y health In any
way?
DEAR R E A D E R Many
bulim ia v i c t i ms do have a
danger of poor nutrition and all
that causes. These people, like
the anorexia nervosa patient.

Dr.
Lamb

often have a preoccupation with
thinness. Starvation, regardless
of how It Is Induced. Is a not
good.

damage to vour esophagus from
forceful vomiting. Retching can
lead to a tear In the esophagus,
w i t h a severe and sudden
hemorrhage.
Send vour question* to Ur.
Lamb. P.O. Box 1551. Radio City
Station. Sew York. S.Y.. 10019

You arc unlikely to get heart
disease. Staying thin usually
protects against heart disease.
Also, you are a woman, and I
presume a young woman, which
also means there Is little chance
of heart disease.
Yes. there Is a danger of
ACROSS

Answer to Previous Punt*

6 African

sntstop#
1 Exclamation
7 Skawai
S
[€n 1
4 Bora
o Mruith
RHonxn |sp)
9 Eggs
9 Mrs. Charts*
12 Oolite
Chaplin
affirmative
10 Engsgad in
13 Element
eontsst
14 Fuel
11 Bsvsrigts
15 Buddhitm type
19 Long timt
16 Study
21
Ovsr (post)
17 Bom
23 lots
IB Glacial ndge
24 Exhsustsd
20 Highway*
29 Dummy (si.)
22 Ear (comb,
26 South Amsricsn
form)
m
l ../»k
oimcn
24 Trouble
25 Husk of wheat 27 Soprams
grain
Egyptian daily
28 Any
29 Garman no
(d a l)
31 Loud cry
30 Old com
32 Wings
34 Electrical unit
33 Propwty
35 ParadiMt
35 Eiactncsl sngt37 Wave (Sp I
rvaar (ibbr)
38 Poverty war
36 Comps** point
agency (abbr)
42 Rackst string
39 Supprets
malarial
40 Pale
41 Slam
1
1
43 Compel* point
44 Shed blood
11
45 Navy ship
prefix (abbr |
It
47 Payment owing
49 — Vidor
IB
52 Baby’*

V E S T A
,X_ _E_ R _E_ _8 ■
O O l E N
Ri
E V j_E _N
I S I N O
t_
_A
_T
T
_L_
B
L
_P _A _l_
F _A M
t_ O _E_
O C O
L
C 2 _N □
E
■ s E _R A
L* T__T _U
t v t
_B _l_ T
n nI
1 £ t_
I
E T _N
E□ T E R v
u | R| S
V n n S
£ _E_
£ _l_
1□ n
_v £ T
E I B|B E D
£ □ 7 P_
£ E a 1T S
F O R T S
OE N E R
54 College group
55 Tall tale
58 Wood-chopping
tool

44 Actress
Benaderet
46 Nautical rope
46 Less than
49 Puts on
50 Lily genus
51 Relax
53 Obscure corner

59 Sprint

60 Tokyo's former
name

10

11

J2

1)

'
■
"

JO &gt;i
L

tuperviaor

56
57
61
62

Oil (stiff)
Having auricle*
Sorrel
Number*
(abbr)
63 Oore
64 Boat gear
65 Collection

is

DOW N

ji

1?

&gt;4

1,7

&gt;8

140

41

66 High male
singing voic*
67 Sunflower State
(abbr)
1 Leak out
2 Color*
3 Farmyard
sound
4 Put forth
5 Of age (Lot.
abbr)

IB

BO

m s m
1%1 M II

B1

%•

I •*

•2

[S4

SB

I 97
Id

isas

b?

n ia

i»&lt;

WIN AT BRIDGE

C c

-

1

M
w

by Hargraavaa A Sailers

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
C&gt;

P c? y o u A M N IP H A V I N G

L.

T E S T E R P A Y 'S ?

©2C30S

-

)

J

by Warner Brothers

BUGS BUNNY

50U.SP

l

CM ARSE

0 u S .g E P J K &gt;

By J u n e s Jacoby
The essence of a safety play Is
to sacrifice a potential overtrlck
to protect against losing two
tricks. When the contracl Is a
small slam, the best approach Is
to first sec If you can afford to
lose that one trick.
The contract was six hearts.
Declarer won the opening lead
with dummy's club king, and
played ace of hearts and a low
heart. His plun was to try the
heart finesse. If that failed, he
hoped the spade finesse would
work. Of course the bad trump
split defealed the slam Immedi­
ately.
Here Is the best plan for the
hand. Declarer should first take
the spade finesse. If that loses,
he must then take his best play
to win all the heart tricks. But
the spade finesse does win. Now

the declarer has the luxury of
guarding agulnst losing two
heart tricks
That Is easily done. He plays
the king of hearts, and then
leads low from his hand toward
the dummy's A-8. When West
follows with the seven, declarer
Inserts the eight.
If that finesse loses. South's
ace will pick up any remaining
high heart. If West shows oul on
the second heart lead, declarer
will win the ace In dum m y and
lead through the O - 10 In East's
hand. Barring a very unlikely
5-0 split, declarer can guarantee
I hat there will be no more than
one heart loser.
The key to making the slam Is
for declarer lo find oul first
whether he can utford the safety
play.

vtsts

N O R TH

♦ qJ 7
♦ All
♦ K J 101
♦ K 74

EAST
♦Kill
♦t
♦ q 107 4
♦» I 5
♦ 764
♦Still
♦ Q J 10
sol Til

WEST
♦ 954

♦ A 10 2

♦ K J 051
♦ Aqi
♦ A4 •

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South
Writ
Norik Kail
Pass
Pass 14
I’ass &lt;♦
Pass
Pam
Pan
46
Pais
Pass Pass
Opening lead +Q

Smith
IP
IN T
4 NT
»▼

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...
FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thaves

GARFIELD
MONDAYS. I HATL MONPAV5. IT
SUM S LIKE IJOVT GET PONE
WITH ONE ANP ALONG COME3
ANOTHER ONE!

by Jim Davla
f-

JTM rAyr»

YOUR BIRTHDAY
MARCH 20. 1905
More (ravel than usual Is a
strong possibility for the year
ahead. The many trips you make
aren't apt to be of long duration
but they will be both Interesting
and exciting.
ARIES (March 21-April 10)
Through a unique channel, you
may be the recipient of some
good news today that you'll be
euger to share with a few choice
friends. The Matchmaker wheel
reveals your compatibility to all
signs, as well as showing you to
which signs you are best suited
romantically. T o get youra mall
S2 (o Astro-Graph. Box 489.
Radio City Station. New York.
NY 10019.
TAURUS (April 2GMay 20|
Owing to the concern and efforts
of others, several good things
could come your way today.
Don't be too proud to receive
favors.

OEMIN1 (May 21-June 20)
Y o u r splendid leadership
qualities will be evident to peo­
ple with whom you associate
today. They'll sll back and let
you step forward.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
People In positions of authority
are likely to do things for you
today they wouldn't think of
doing for others. It pays to be a
nice guy.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Give
full reign to your Imagination
today and don't be afraid to test
out bold new concepts. Fresh
Ideas could prove lucky for you
VIROO (Aug 23 Sept. 22)
Conditions that have a direct
effect upon your standing In the
eyes of others are quite favorable
today. Your sense of duty wins
you points.
LIBRA (Sept. 2 3 0 c t. 23) A
relationship that was a trifle out
of sync will be brought back Into
harm ony today. Y o u r coun­
terpart will be the one who offers
the olive branch.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Actions and efforts you expend

today on behalf of someone else
will be gratefully acknowledged
In an unusual fashion In the near
future.
8AOITTARIU8 INov. 23 Dec.
21) T o be your happiest today,
you need Involvements that
have elements of friendly com­
petition. Make plans to play your
favorite game with pals
CAPRICORN (Dee 22 Ja n .
19) Tasks that are usually a bore
could turn oul to be pleasant
diversions today. The secret lo
being happy la to keep both your
hands and mind as busy as
possible.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20Feb. 19)
Your companionship will be
sought by others today and
wherever you go. more attention
than usual Is likely lo be cen­
tered upon you. Smile and be
yourself.
P IS C E S (Feb. 20-March 20)
Tides will be stirring today that
will contribute lo your financial
security. Your goods could begin
to Bow from more than one
source.

by Leonard Starr

ANNIE
by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS

"SgjW m im ,
J ^ w / H0LI,rr!

f

I

I

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152078">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 25, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152079">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152080">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 25, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152081">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152082">
                <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;, March 25, 1985; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152083">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152084">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152085">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152086">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="15241" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="14855">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/75866a29cba8b5cda97de29c6cf0c5b0.pdf</src>
        <authentication>9dc56f31b43caa3edd2fac76172d3fd9</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="152077">
                    <text>and fire
d epartm ents com e under
city m an ag er's control?
- EDITORIAL, 2D

77th Year. No 182 Sunday. March 24, 1985-Sanford. Florida

Evening

Herald —

By Js n e Casselberry
H erald Staff W rite r
A "dynam ic" managrr with com­
puter knowledge is the unanimous
choice of Imngw'ood City Commission­
ers to become the city's administrator.
William Thomas Powers. 42. assis­
tant city administrator and director of
finance for the city of Perry. Is expected
to he named formally at Monday
night's commission meeting.
The commissioners came to the
consensus ut u workshop Friday after­
noon in city hull, following two days of

(USPS

481 280)

—

Price

W illia m
Thom as
P o w e rs

Interviews and meetings between city
officials and stall with the two finalists.

SO Cents

Powers and Wallace A. Payne. 4H. city
manager of Crystal River.
Mayor Harvey Smerllson said he felt
Powers would work well with thr
commission and he liked his knowledge
of computers Commissioner Larry
Goldberg said hr was Impressed with
both men. but fcrls Powers is a
dynamic manager and likes his back­
ground In finance.
Commissioner Ed Myers Mid Powers
made a good assessment of thr needs in
iill of Ihr city departments and added.
Hr was my man from the word go
See P O W ER S, page 3 A

'Something Special'

Knowles Gets Topper
B y Donna Estes
H erald Staff W rite r
Sanford City Manager Warren E.
" I ’r lr " Knowirs was presented the
most preatlgous honor the Greater
Sanford C h a m b e r of C o m m e rc e
bestows - the John S. Krlder Memorial
Topper Award - at the chamber's
annual awards barupiet Friday night.
Ami former Mayor Lee I’ Moore
presented with a platpie In recognition
of "unselfish and exemplary service to
the community."
Knowles was completely surprised
the award. O n ly when master
Knowlss prodicti Sanford's future;
Moor* looks back. Stories, ID

ky iMiity V»*&lt;•«♦

Regatta Rigging

Participants In the F le u ry Foundation's all class sailing regatta benefit
re a d y their craft for the event held on Lake Monroe. Proceeds from the
regatta, held M a rc h 16 and 17 and sponsored by about 45 Florida
businesses, w ill total app ro xim a tely $40,000, said foundation spokesman
M a rg a re t D o rm a d y. T h e money w ill be used to further the organization's
purpose: prom oting independence for the disabled through awareness
development and the breaking down of altitudinal b a rrie rs . The F le u ry
Foundation was founded seven years ago and is based at 35 W. Pine
Street, Orlando.

48 Attend Wine-Tasting, Auction
I'oullly F o Ismc wun there. along with
plum churdoimuy .mil tmrdraux Mane.
There were also |M*n|&gt;lr who could
pronounce the numes ol dozens of
French wines along with a lot of people
who only knrw wh.il they like when
they lusted II.
Th e wine lovers, from the con­
noisseur to a person who thought
attending a wine auction would lie fun.

were present when scores of ruses were
sold to bargain hunters ul an auction
Frtduy In a warehouse ut the 1-4
Industrial I'urk. west of Sanford
The sale was to continue Saturday,
since only a small fraction of the 5,(X)0
cases up for sale were guvrlrd off
Friday starting at 7 p m Minimum sale
See W IN E , page 3 A

ceremonies Mack N Clrvrlnnd. In hi*
Introductory remarks. Mild the hnnorrr
had glvrn 32 years to thr city, did it
dawn on Knowles that It was hr
Cleveland J r . , u past " T o p p e r
A w a rd " w in n e r, has emceed the
Top|&gt;er presentation for several years.
Past recipients of thr award meet
each year to select the next winner.
Cleveland sold this year’s choice has
left an Indelible and everlasting mark
on (he community; he hus served In
c ivic political and religious endeavors
while he holding a full time Job.
working for the public and for a lot of
different bosses.
"He's got In Ik- something special.”
Cleveland Mid.
Knowles had a somlier expression on
his face as lie listened, shook his tieud
when the rrm urk atxnit the 32 years
was made and flashed a broad smile as
his name was announced Knowles'
wife. Ava. wiped tears away us she
heard tier husband tiring honored
See T O P P E R , page 7A

H*r*M H u s hr T w s i VlM*trt

"To p p e r" winner Warren E. "P e te " Knowles, left, shakes hands with
emcee Mack Cleveland. Lee P. Moore, background, was honored tor
service to the com munity.

More To Teach Out-Of-Field
B y Roger Simmon*
H erald Staff W rite r
Nlnrly-onc ut Seminole County's 2.460
public school Instructor!! are leaching
outaldr their field* nf study and thul
number should rise slightly In Ihr 1085-86
school year, according lo a rrjtorl prepared
for the county school tiourd
Ann Nelswcndcr. Seminole schools'
personnel director. M id there will la* 101
out-of-lirld leuehrrs who will make op 4 I
percent of the Seminole schools' work force
In Ihr coming ucadrmlc year. Ilrr projec­
tion Is a one-tenth of onr perernt Increase
from last year's total of 4 O perernt.

Mrs Nrtswrndcr Mid un educator might
(eac h u class outside of the area for which
they are ccrtlflrd by the slalc due lo u
shortage of qualified leathers In u
particular field, such as exists here with
exceptional education. Or (here may be loo
many teachers In a field, such us In
physlrul education.
Out of field teaching can sometimes tie
tar removed from thr teacher's urea of
s|&gt;ertall/utlon. At Luke Mary High School a
teacher certified In physical education
leaches maihrmutlcs and an Instructor

TO D A Y
2A
Action Reports.....
Business..................
6A
Classifieds..............
58B
Dear Abby..............
Deaths...................
2A
Editorial................. .
Florida....................
Opinion................... ........ 3D
People..................... ...... 1 3C
Religion.................. ......... 5C
... 1 4B
Sports..................
Weather.................. ......... 2A
3A
W orld......................

See T E A C H , psge . 8 A

Project Targets Agony O f Hom eless Teens

Judge S. Joseph Davis J r . discusses the C H A R L E E project
with Guardian A d Litem director Gretchen Gross.

Thwrw w csnl any doubt about tho
bast girls' baskotball player In
Sam Ino Ia County. Saa STOUTS, pag# I ft
l o r tho H mi u lJ § A l l - C o u n t y loom.______

»L

B y Susan Loden
H erald Staff W rite r
There's a glimmer of hope on
the h o r iz o n for h o m e le s s
youngsters In Seminole and
Orange counties who don't fit
Into the environments of foster
homes or the Juvenile detention
center or other Institutions.
About one dozen of these
hard to-place teenagers will be
the first residents of two new
sm a ll-g rou p homes, one In
Seminole the other In Orange
County, slated to open In Ju ly.
And there are plans In the works
a total of six such homes, three
each for the two counties.
S e m in o le C o u n tv C ir c u it

Judge S. Joseph Davis J r , said
the ho|&gt;e Is those homes will Ml
the bill for some of the 30 or so
Seminole County boys and girls
who turn up homeless each year
who don't fit Into the system.
The homes will establish a
long-term, home environment
for troubled teens who have no
place to go and who for various
reasons Including abuse, neglect
and abandonm ent, can't go
home. Davis said.
In most roses these youngsters
have not crossed the law They
ure victims of circumstances.
Some may be orphans. And
some may have also been sent to
Juvenile detention, mixed with

Girls' tonnls Is • family affair at
laka Howell High School. Tho Enriquez
and Dulco slstars aro unbeaten. A look
ot tho Lady Hawks, pogo I ft.

more serious Juvenile offenders,
after violating a court order by
running uway from a foster
home or their own home. Davis
said
Th e planned homes arc a
project of The C H A H LE E Pro­
gram (Children Have All Rights:
Legal. Educational. Emotional)
of w hich D avis Is a board
member and which has had the
housing projects In the works for
a year. Grrtchcn dross, another
hoard member suld.
T h e C H A H L E E plan la a
spinoff from a Mlnninger Foun­
dation project with a 35- year
history of success In providing
long-term homes for youths who

don't huve a nltch In society.
The first Florida homes were
established about four years ago
in Miami. The local homes will
be the second group In the slate.
Ms. Gross said
Ms Gross. 33. la ulso local
director of the state's Guardian
Ad Litem program, which pro­
vides representation to all
children involved in abuse of
neglect court proceedings and
until they are adopted, returned
to their parents. Institutionalized
or slip out of the system to try to
go It alone on the streets
"C H A K LE E 's not going to take
See T E E N S , page , 8 A

Soma games you win. soma you ___
Others aro colled by tho umpires. The
Oviedo Lions ran out of sunshine Friday.
SPOKTS. poga 2B.

�3A —Evanlng Harald. Santord. F I.

wmxw 'K\Z!% •» •r *i
f*, lit*
■ ! *7?

Sunday, M arch 34, I f f }

NATION
IN BRIEF
Savings-And-Loan Associations
Reopen For Limited Business
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) — Seven stale-chartered savIngvand-lonn associations, closed for eight days, have
received federal Insurance and approval to reopen
Immediately, Gov. Richard P. Celeste said Friday.
Celeste's office also said the other 60 privately Insured
savings association# still closed will be able to offer limited
withdrawal* of up to $750 beginning Saturday.
At the sumr time, it announced that lawyers for the
Home State Savings Hank of Cincinnati filed a $432 million
lawsuit In Hamilton County Common Pleas Court against
Alexander Grant A Co. That firm was the auditor of ESM
Government Securities Inc. of Fort Lauderdale which
collapsed, causing Home State to lose up to $100 million
and precipitating a $10 million run on Home Slate.

Goetz: Only Trial Will Clear Me
NEW YORK (Ill’ll — Subway gunman Bernhard Goetz
wants to go to trial on charges he tried to murder four
leenagrrs saying that, because of distorted press accounts
ol the shooting. It Is the only way he can clear Ills name
The confessed gunman told United Press International
Friday that he blamed the media for distorting the Incident
and singled out ABC's "20/20" program, saying the show
"butchered" hint.
Taped excerpts from Goetz's confession aired during the
program Thursday night quoted Goetz as saying that when
the four teenagers cornered him. he made up his mind to
"murder 'em all."
"If there Isn't a trial. I'm damned." Goetz told UPI
Friday. "There k/e too many things left unanswered There
has to Ik- a trial. Th is thing has gone too far."

Group To Tackle Budget Tiff
W ASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan and Senate
Republicans, having hit an Impasse on the budget for next
year, are going lo try to let n "working group" settle their
difference# over defense and domestic spending
The OOP-led Senate budget panel last week approved u
spending document for fiscal Hint; that slices $57 billion
off the anticipated $200 billion plus deficit. Their budget
allows military spending lo rise only with Infhiilon and
eliminates a scheduled cost-of-living Increase for Social
Security recipients,
Reagan, on the other hand, wants a 6 percent hike for the
Pentagon over the Inflation rale, and refuses lo touch
Social Security. He cut or eliminated many other popular
government programs In his budget pmj&gt;o*ul that the
Senate commit tec agreed to spare.

Teachers Play Hooky For Test
L IT T L E HOCK. Ark. (UPI) — State ofllduls put education
to the test Saturday with I he nation's first basic skills exam

for practicing Iruchcrs, sparking angry protests from
op]M)nents who claim those who full risk being brundrd

Incompetent for life.
A sizable minority of boyrottern faced the end of their
trurhlng career us u price for Ihctr protest of the Arkansas
Deportment of Education's controversial testing law
tilth l.tl-. ol Hit* Arkansas Kdiicul Inn AssucJullim. Hie
stale's largest teacher organization and which has fought
the testing program for I W years, said Friday that
statewide surveys Indicate about 8.000 teachers, ora third
of the slate's public school teachers, would play hooky and
not lake Hie test.
An assistant state attorney general said boycollrrs will
be giving up their teaching licenses.

Suspected drug dealers are making it
tough on police these days. At left is a
door to an accused dealer's base which
police tried to kick in Friday during an
early-morning raid and couldn't. Then

HOSPITAL
NOTES

, *T TsSMBT VSCMI

they tried breaking the glass but that
didn't work either. The glass had been
replaced with plexiglass. The suspect's
apartment Is the one on the right |
located on Palmetto Avenue, Sanford.

County Worker Held On Drug Charge
A Seminole County employee
has been arrested on a weapons
and drug charge along with two
m e n , o n e r b a r g e d w it h
possession of drugs and the
other for allegedly having a pipe
bomb at his home.
The arrests were made by
Seminole County drug tusk Force
agents, who armed with a war­
rant were searching a house at
109 H o lid a y La n e , W inte r
Springs, for drugs, a sheriffs
report said.
Wlille agents w rrr Inside the
house at about 0:25 p m Friday
the female county worker ar­
rived at the house ulorig with a
man. thr rrport said. Agents said
(lie couple usked to be lei In and
were. Th e agents Identified
themselves lo the pair unit the
m an rep o rte d ly dropped u
marijuana clgurclllr the floor.
The woman was asked If site
had any weapons In her large
purse and she handed over a
.22-cullber handgun, the report
said. Hrr purse was searched
and agents reported llndlng co­
caine und pot. Additional pot
was reportedly found In the
man's car and Ixith were ar­
rested.
While searching the house
agents rr|M&gt;rlcd llndlng a pipe
bomb, which was examined by
sheriff# bomb cx(a-rt Lt Marty
LuHruscLino. who reported the
fused bomb contained 05 grams
ol smokeless powder,
Sharon Jill Nesmith. 22. of
2017 *17 Eastbrook Itlvd .
Winter l’ark. tuts tieen charged
w ith c a rr y in g n concealed
firearm and possession of eo*
cattle and pot. Michael lanil*
Hemlsb, 24. of 12 Elkwood
Court, Winter Springs, has tieen
charged with possession of less
than 20 grams of pol and drug
paraphernalia. He lias been rc-

One-Legged Cheerleader Bothered
Only By Attention Of The Media
C H A R LES TO N . W .Vu. (UPI) - 1i appeared a
ho|N-lcss situation.
Alter three quarter#, the umber lights In the
Civic Center scoreboard told the tale: Coalton's
Bearcats were losing 48-32.
But Tam m y Prlmavrro. who knows something
about ohsturles, refused to give up.
Every time lire Bearcats udvanrrd die trail lo
tier end of the court, tire head cheerleader stirred
the Caution lull Id til Into a h r nr lie appeal to
overcome the odd* und win.
In iiuiny ways. Tu m m y Is no different than the
average high school cheerleader, with the wellHcruhlted face, hunted hy rich, auburn hair.
Her ryes blinked tears us the rural school was
eliminated hy B u rch (19-47 III a Class A
quarterfinal Thursday.
T u m m y , (h o u g h u sophomore, is head
cheerleader because the others. Angel Zlrklr und
Kim Miller, are only ninth gnutrrs.
Hut something else sets iter upurt, Tam m y only
has one leg und leads cheers with the aid of a
crutch She I* die victim of a malignant growth
dial piomptrd an umputullon when she was of
kindergarten age
Hounding alone uti her leg and crutch, the
Id year old girl Is a port rail of enthusiasm.
During most cheers, she lays hrr crutch on the
court. She help* hold up one of die other girls In
ilirlr liny pyramid routine.
"No, It doesn't bother me a hit," she responded
Was she nervous u Imhii coming lo the stale
tournament where a crowd of fl.51d people
wulctifd her prrlorm?
“ I was nervous because we were playing, nol
beeante of die one leg." she said.
And what made die only daughter of Eugene
and Dolly Prtmuvrro think shr could become u
t hen leader on one leg?

ttariMI

Fortified

” 1 don't know ." she said. "1 fust wanted to do
It."
Jum lr Kelly, ttie- cheerleader advisor at Coalton.
Is among Ta m m y's big admirers.
"She's great," die speech pathology teacher
said. "She's what keeps 'em going She doesn't
let anything get to her way."
Kelly said Tum m y Is luirrrd from further
competition In Special Olympics "because she got
so good in everything." Ta m m y, who has a
brother, Eugene. IB. said shr wants to lx- a nurse.
Spectators were startled the llrst time thr three
Coalton cheerleaders charged onto the Charleston
Civic Center court,
They were struck hy the stark ness of thr crutch
und the lack of a left leg showing horn Tum m y's
short, pirated blue a id gold chcerlradlng skirt
Hrr right leg bus a blue und gold, knee length
stocking with "C H S " Imprinted on two sides
The S-f&lt;M&gt;t-2Vti, 107-pound cheerleader never
eased up If she weren't cheering, she hud her
It a nd s c u p p c d u r o u n d h e r m n o th in
apprehension.
“C'm on. thud, till re's time." stir yelled as Brad
Phillips stepped lo the fool line and the Bearcats
trailing 51 36 with six minutes left. Burch called
timeout. Tam m y wrung tier hands nervously.
Coalton crept within 33-44 at thr 4:20 mark,
and Tam m y swung tier leg back und forth,
balancing herself on her crutch But Burch pulled
uwuy tou one sided victory.
One more time, with 18 second* left. Tum m y
whirled to her cheering section and started the
chant. "We're proud of our Irani: Yes. w r'rr
proud of our team: You bed"
No, Ta m m y wasn’t bothered hy the fans Only
by the small army of reporters und photgruphrr*
"It'sembarrassing." she grinned.

A c tio n R e p o rts

★ Firet
★ Courts
* Police Beat
Irased on $500 bond.
Kyle Martin Duncan. 24, of
109 H o lid a y La n e . W in te r
Springs, was arrested at bis
liornr at 1:25 a m Saturday. He
h a s b e e n c h a r g e d w 11 li
possession of a destructive de­
vice. Ms. Nesmith and Duncan
were being held In llru of $H,(XX)
bond each.
C H A R G E D IN R A ID S
T h r names id five additional
adult suspects arrested along
with eight olhrr adults In San­
ford (toiler raids on 11 suspected
drug stash houses have been
released. Among those arrested
during the predawn raids Fri­
day:
• Henry Lee Lewis. 31. of 43
Lake Monroe Terrace. Sanford,
charged with possession of co­
caine and possession of cocaine
with Intent to distribute.
• Jam es Harper. 32. bf 408
Palmetto Avr,. Sanford, charged
with possession of murrljuumt
mid possession with Intent to

■ell
• Hetty Knight. 2H, also of 408
I’almrtlo Avr.. Sanlord, charged
with possession ol cocaine und
nmrt|uima.
• Stanley Donnell Franklin. 21.
of C e n lrr Street at Midway
Avenue. Midway, charged wllh
possession of marijuana.
• John Robert Dennis, of 2300
Center St.. Midway, charged
with |M&gt;ssesston of marijuana
and two counts of sale und
d rllv rrly of cocaine.
SunTord poller spokesman
Keith Wright said at least one
juvenile whose name has not
been released was also nabbed.
All of (be adult suspects
except Hennlr Arnold, 35, of 43
l-akr Monroe Terrace. Sanford,
have been released on bond,
Arnold, who was charged with
possession of coculrtc. was t&gt;clng
held In lieu of $1,000 Ixmd and
also wit bout bond because he
was on probation when arrested
In the raids. |uil officials said.

SW IM r O R I T
An Altamonte Springs man
and Ills nephew who reportedly
fled from Altamonte Springs
police pursuing their car on a
traffic violation have been
nabbed. Police reported the the
unde was caught as he tried to
swim away In l-ake South In
Forest City.
The police pursuit began at
about 2:50 a m. Thursday when
an ofBcer received a report of a
(K)sslble drunk drive, wrstbound
on state road 436. An officer
H|x&gt;llrd the car and began the
chase, which continued Into
Forest City when the driver
Ignored the officer’s signals to
stop, a police report said.
The car eventually slopped at
a service station on state Road
436 In Forest City. The passen­
ger run from thr car and thr
driver refused an order to get out
of the car. a police report said.
The policeman radioed for
other officers to assist and he
drew his gun and pulled the
driver from the car. put him on
the ground and handeuffed him.
the report said. The officer
reported he could not see Into
thr car because It had tinted
windows and drew hts gun
because he didn't know who
might 1m- in the car.
Other man was pursued by
other Altamonte Springs police
who responded to the scene.
They reported capturing the
second suspect as he swam In
Lake South.
A small quantity of marijuana
was reportedly found In the car
along with a pipe believed to be
usrd for smoking pot and ciga­
rette rolling (tapers, the report
said.
Both men were charged with
(xtssesslon of less than 20 grams
of marijuana. In addition, the
driver. Robert Lee Hartford, 22.
of 520 Carllse Ave.. has been
chnrged with failure to maintain
u single lane and his uncle,
Daniel Hartford. 27. of the same
address, has been charged with
rests!Ing arrest without violence.
They have been released on
$500 bond each and arc sched­
uled to appear In court April 4
I L L IC I T P OW DER
A man captured as an alleged
shoplifter wus also charged with
possession of u controlled substuncc after the sheriffs deputy

CURBED. F O U G H T , J A IL E D
A man who reportedly fought|
wllh a Sanford man and hi*
daughter after the father tried liJ
slop him from cursing in front ofl
the 14-yrar-old girl has bet-tJ
charged with aggravated bat]
tery.
Sheriffs Investigator Marlon]
Matthews responded to a dlsJ
turbance call at the victims]
bouse at 118 S Sunland Drive]
Sanford, at about -I 45 p.m]
Thursday.
Matthews reported xrclng
man struggling wllh Camtnhj
Smith and pullrd the man awavj
from the girl The man ther,
reportedly lurnrd on the girls
father. Fred S. Smith, and strucf
him.
Matthews reported that Smltll
appeared io have been Injured
before he arrived and was latci
treated for a (tosslble broket]
nose, a gash on his forehead ami
chest Injuries.
Kobby Edward Sweat, 19. oi
Osteen, has bren charged In Ihn
case He was being held In lieu ol
$8,000 bond
1
DUI A R R E S T
The following person bus berij
arrested In Seminole County on
a charge of driving under t!
Influence:
— Leonard R Honakrr. 28. of
Orlando, was arrestrd at 11:2f
P in Thursday w hen his speed !
lug car was seen swerving on|
U S. Highway 17-92, Longwood.

Where A re Seminole's Handicapped?
H a rry I'tn k m a n . disaster preparedness
coordinator for Seminole Cotinly. Is charged
under slute law with registering the names and
addresses of handicapped person* here, so that
assistance can In- provided to them In emergen­
cies.
Hut although the power companies have sent
notices to the hand!cn|i|)rd in their bills telling
thrm they should call I'tnkman. and thr Meals On
Wheels program has
urged Its handicapped
clients to regl.slrr. 1‘tnkman's list of handicapped,
collected over a three-year period, totals only 25.
"I don't know whut the problem Is.” he said
"Hut we In Seminole are not the only county
having trouble gelling these lists togrther. It's
happening all over the state."
T h r Idea behind the law is that each county's
emergency operations center should have u lllc ol
thr names and addresses of handleupped persons,
the nature of their handicap and the name of thetr
doctor so that county emergency personnel can
ofler evacuation assistance during a toxic waste
spill, a fire, hurricane or other emergency.
"M y major concern I* a toxic waste spill when
persons would have to t&gt;c rapidly rvacuuled,"
I’tnkman said. "But with only 25 on thr list I
don't even know how many emergency centers to

set up to house handicapped evacuees.
"Maybe the handicapped don’t want to be |
Identified." hr said
i’tnkman said he would keep one copy ol the
Information In Ills nic at the county's emergency
operations center at Five Points A second copy
would be placed in the tile of the nearest fire
station.
If u dlsastrr occurs, "w r will have to evacuate
blg arras und w r have got to know where the
handicapped are who need help."
I’tnkman said It Isn't necessary for anyone to |
come Into hi* olllcc to reglslrr. They need only
call him und he will fill out the appropriate forms |
for them, I'tnkman can hr reached at 322-4795.
"If we have time, such as during a hurricane
when there Is curly warning, we can scout around
and look (or thr handicapped But If there Is u
hazardous waste spill or u fire, (here Is no extra
time.
"I know a lot of these people live alone — wr
have registered one man who Is In an Iron lung
and another who Is totally bedridden — but I
haven't the slightest Idea how many handicapped
Seminole County has." Plnkmun said,
— Donna Estes

Nazi W ar Crim inal Freed A fter 7 Y ears In Prison

T H E H A G U E. Netherlands |UI’I) - Nazi
wur criminal Plctrr M rntrn. convicted for
cwioitiMia *»*»M i hm « iui
bupcrvtslng a mass killing of Polish Jews In
Friday
1941. has been released from prison alter
AOMIMIONI
twM
serving seven years of a 10-yeurlenn.
N i Mm MarlUv
Mcntcn, 85. u Dutch millionaire, wus
PIKHAR01I
convicted of complicity In the killing of 20 to
Mary Chad**. Van Clark Jill Cahan. Paw* 30 Jews by German SS troops He walked
l idr Idf* tlliabath Hlchardtan. Not
Wtailington lawlat William*. and Vkklt out of Schcvrnlngcn Prison Friday und
drove away In a rented cut wllh hts lawyer.
Paartan andbaby girl
Dalton*
Adrtaan Oumrn
Puller prevented re potters from (ullowtng
Mrnteu's car but he was believed to have
Ituiat Mi Wan
Ctaagtotui
driven lo the town o( Ulartcum. southeast of
Jty &lt; « V * .
&gt;# »«U babr bey
Amstrrdum. where hts cx-wlfe Meta Puuw
HATH*
has a house.
Ways* and Mary BdOgta. a baby bay and
Ja rry and Tam m* Soaa a baby boy
The Irish government Thursday declared

who arrested him found a small
quantity of blur powder believed
to be an illegal drug in the man's |
possession
The deputy reported arresting I
thr man on a retail theft charge
a f te r he w a s n a b b e d by I
employees at Albertson's, stair I
Road 434 at Montgomery Road.
Longwood. The man allegedly
left the store with a headband hr |
did not pay for.
When searching the suspect I
the deputy reported finding the
powder, which he believed to he|
a crushed tablet of an unldefl.
tilled type of controlled sub
stance, inside a plastic bag In Ihej
man's wallet.
Michael Anthony Schnepp. 26,1
o f 16 J a c k s o n C o u r t . I
Casselberry, was arrested all
9:13 p m. Thursday and lalcr|
freed on $500band.

the art collector, a former Nazi SS officer, an
undeslruhlr alien and banned him from
entering Ireland
The ban followed growing controversy
over whether Menleti should be allowed to
return to hts luxury mansion. Conterugh
House, set tn 30 acres of wooded land In
Waterford County where he lived between
1964 and hts arrest und conviction for war
crimes against the Jews by a Dutch court In
1979,
Menten's Nail past came to light when he
tried to auction oil part of hts art collection,
some of which wus alleged to have been
looted from Nazi victims.
Alter walking out of prison at 124)5 a m..
Mcntcn told rr|Mirtcrs he might still t&gt;e able

lo enter Ireland.
"But I also huve friends In the United
States." he said.
Oomen said Mcnten planned to visit Meta
Puuw at the Blurtcum house and thut he
was also looking for aecommodatlons In The
Hague
Mrnten was convicted In 1980 but had
already served 20 months In prison In
prr-lrlal detention. He served Just under
seven years in prison.
A diabetic. Mrnten was tn and out of the
prison hospital since the start of his
sentence. Reporters who has followed his
case said Menten would probably spend the
remainder of his life traveling between
Holland. Spain and the United States.

Evening Ik-rukS
l U l P t *•• HOI

Sunday, March 34. ty#s
Vol 77. No. 113
Pabilkhad Daily and Sunday. aicagt
Saturday by T b t Santord Harald,
l*c. MB N. 7 ranch A * t , laniard.
Fla . 11771.
tacand C la n Patlag* Paid *1 la n ia rd .
Aland* 11771
Ham* D tllv a ry : Waak. t t . U j Month,
M 71: 1 M antht. 114 M , a MantM
*17 H i Y a a r . U I at- By M a ll; Waak
It.*4i M antk. M M i 1 M a nth i.
I1 I . N i 4 Ma.ith*. i n M i V ta r.
W4.M.

(Mil in m u .

�Evening H erald. Sjnlo rd . FI

Murder Suspect Released On Bond

WORLD

An Altamonte Springs man
charged with a second-degree
murder in connection with the
death of a Rhode Island man two
years ago has been released from
the Seminole County Jail on
85.000 bond.
Circuit Judge C. Vernon Mize
J r . set ball Friday for James
Carmine Palazzo. 32. Mize, how­
ever. placed some special condi­
tions on the bond, according to
court records.
Palazzo, of 109 La rkspu r
Drive. Is not to leave the state,
have a gun In his possession or
Initiate any contact with two
witnesses In the case.

IN BRIEF
Illegal Use O f Poison Gas
Resumes In Mideast Gulf War
U nited Press International
Iranian soldiers suffering from wounds apparently
caused by chemical weapons remained In Western
hospitals Saturday amid reports that Iraq foiled Iran's
latest offensive with shrewd engineering work and heavy
military nrepower.
In Western Europe. 33 Iranian soldiers were treated
Friday for severe burns and lung injuries, which Western
medical experts said Indicated the Illegal use of poison gas
had resumed In the 4 Vi-year-old Iran-Iraq war.
"Some were In severe pain and were Just crying out for
Allah. They were a shocking sight." said one witness who
saw eight of the soldiers arrive on an Iranian cargo plane at
Sell wee hat airport In Vienna.
The use of chemical warfare ts prohibited by the Geneva
protocol of 1925.
In Tehran. Iranian parliament speaker llashcmi KafsanJanl told hundreds of people gathered for Friday prayers
that "Iran will fire its fifth missile at Baghdad in the not too
distant future.**

Report: Cuba Smuggling Drugs
United Press International
The administration. In a report on Central America,
charges that Nicaragua has become a communist garrison
state and both Cuba and Nicaragua are Involved In drug
trafficking.
The rrport. "Th e Sovlcl-Cuban Connection In Central
America and I he Caribbean." charges:
"A disturbing u*|K*ti of the current Castro offensive
(against Central American democracies) Is the apparent
use of money generated by narcotics to supply arms for
guerrillas.
The report said the Soviet Union and Its eastern
European satellites are making heavy Investments In large
construction projects In Nicaragua. Including 40 new
military facilities

Palazzo was arrested Wed­
nesday and charged In connec­
tion with ihe shooting death of
Robert DlSano. 24.

...W ine
Continued from page 1A
was two cases and many of the
vintages sold for half of their
reported wholesale value. Some
well-known brands sold for as
little as $1.25 u bottle for 24
bottles. R e sta u ra te u rs and
dealers were expected to attend
S a turd ay's co n tin u in g sale,
which Is open to the public and
siartsat 10am .
The srde. by Sun Bank of
Orlando. Is to pay off a lien It
holds against Globe Importers of
Wine, of Sanford, and the eom-

O c a la Man Gets Heart Transplant
LOUISVILLE Ky. (UPI) - A
retired diesel mechanic from
Ocala who was dying from a
heart aliment received a hrart
transplant early Saturday at
Humana Hospital Audutxm.
George Parramore. 51. was
reported In critical tint stable
condition at the hospital's In­
tensive care unit following the
four-hour transplant surgery
that ended at 3 a m
A hospital spokeswoman said
Parramore was resting com ­

fortably. with his wife was at his
side.
I’a rru m o re suffered from
Ischemic cardiomyopathy, a de­
terioration of the heart muscle.
Ills personal physician. Dr.
David Sackln of Ocula. had said
he would not live long without a
transplant.
"The only other option he has
Is dying." Sackln said on Feb.
28. the day in-fore Parramore left
Ocala to await a donor In
laiulsvlllr.

Seven Electrocuted A fter
Power Line Falls O n Car
"W h y the line was down, we
JU P ITER (Ul'll - Seven peo­
ple were electrocuted Saturday have no Idea right now,** Ellis
when a power line fell on a car In said. "W e feel absolutely terrible
northern Palm Beach County, that such u tragedy could
happen in our community."
officials said.
Ellis said FP A L was notified ol
S h e riff’ s d e p u tie s a nd a
sjMikesman for Florida I’owrr A Ihe accident between 4 and 4;30
Light Co. confirmed the deaths, a.in. and Immediately sent a
but could not say how the team of Investigators to the
scene.
accident occurred.
Sheriffs spokesmen said It
"There was a line that was
down and It was resting on an was not immediately known
automobile.** Florida Power A whether the occupants of the car
Light s|xtkesmati Bill Ellis said. came Into direct contact with the
“ The |&gt;eoplc somehow came In power line, or whether they
touched metal ports on the car.
contact with the line.

Rezoning Request Turned Down
Because Of Traffic Problems
A developer's request to build the area and It would signifi­
u 246-unit multi-housing project cantly increase traffic.
The commission agreed, vot­
on 29 acres of agricult urulyzonrd property has been shot ing 6-0 to reject Ihe request.
In other action, the co m ­
down by the Sanford Planning
mission gave preliminary ap­
and Zoning Commission.
proval to a proposal to use about
T h e request w ill now go. seven acres at 3455 Orlando
tagged with the P A Z Com ­ Drive for a Chevrolet dealership.
mission's recommendation of The land ts zoned general com­
denlul to the Sanford C ity mercial
Commission for u vote.
"It will be a great looking
T h e commission Thursday d e a le r s h ip .’ * said p ro je c t
denied William Mack Miller's engineer E lrn rr Lam m on of
request for a zoning change from Tam pa engineer. "It's going to
agricultural to multl-rraUirnttal, look like an old home with a tin
saying It would create traffic roof."
p ro b le m s on a lre u d y
Developer Roger Dean will
overburdened Celery Avenue.
now have lo submit a site plan
At Its March 7 meeting, ihe for review.
Down the road at 3418 O r­
commission had told Miller to
lando
Drive two other develop­
revise his plan and bring It bark
for discussion. At that time the ers. Donald and Evelyn Bales,
commission said the high de­ w a n t to c o n v e r t a n o ld
nsity. 246-unlt project at 1701 w arehouse Into a new car
Celery Ave. would violate the dealership. They were absent
city's comprehensive land-use Thursday but had submitted a
plan. The plan calls for low- request for approval of the pro­
density development on thul perty for that use. It Is zoned
genera) commercial. The com­
parcel.
mission unanimously approved
Board Chairman John Morris the request with Commissioner
said then that commissioners J.Q "S lim ” Galloway saying "It
would look more favorably ut a looks like all the car dealerships
slx-unlt-per-acre project than are gathering there."
T h e com m ission also had
Miller's 8 Vi units per acre. Miller
said that would reduce his plan dealings wllh yel another car
by 70 units but he would business Thursday.
James Lash submitted a re­
consider the request and romc
quest for rezoning for part of a
back.
At Thursday's meeting Miller project at 4114 Orlando Drive.
was absent and hts plan was Lash wants to tear down ftvc
wood and metal buildings at hts
unchanged.
When the commission opened existing dealership and build a
discussion on Ihe project. Bonnie 45.000 square foot showroom,
Chlbbers. of 2330 E. Celery Avr.. office and service facility. Eighty
Sanford, said she objected to the percent of the structure would
proposed development because be in Ihe correct zoning —
It would Increase traffic on general commercial. But a cor­
ner of the building - 75 feet of It
“ what used to be a quiet si reel
— would be in a multiple family
Commissioner J .Q "S lim "
•Galloway then moved for the residential district.
Th e commission unanimously
request for rezoning to be de­
nted. saying the project didn't approved the rezoning.
— Rick B ru nson
agree with the land-use plsn for

...Powers
Continued from page 1A
"He did hts homework while lie
was here." Goldl&gt;crg said.
"He was on top of my list from
the beginning." Commissioner
Perry Faulkner said
Commissioner June Lormunn
said she had been leaning
toward Payne, hut was im ­
pressed by Powers' strong pres­
entation during Ihe workshop
and changed her mind.
Powers has been with Perry, a
city of 9.000 population with a
service area of 12.000, for four
years. Longwood has a popula­
tion of 12,000,
He started with Perry as 6*
nance a fflccrun d lias been
assistant city m anager and
director of finance there since
1982

DlSano died May 10. 1983
from a single gunshot wound
between the eyes. He was guest
at the time In Palazzo house,
according to court records.
An unldentlfed caller told the
sheriff's department that some­
one had been shot at 109
L a r k s p u r D riv e . W h e n I n ­
vestigators arrived around 3
a m .. Palazzo told them his
"buddy** had been Injured and
that he needed help.
Investigators said DlSano was
lying on the floor in the house
and had a .25-callber gun In his
right hand.
Although the death appeared
to be a suicide, a sheriffs
spokesman said Investigators
never believed DlSano took his
own life.
An uulopsy the following day

p an y o w n e r. Ja m e s W .
Hickman.
According to a civil suit filed In
circuit court, the bunk loaned
Globe $150,000 over a two-year
period and Hickman personally
guaranteed the loans. The bank
states It Is "insecure" about the
loans and got a court order to
rc|»ossrvH the wine and sell It to
cover the loans.
T h e w in e ts v a lu e d at
5300,000.
Friday, about 48 people, some
as far away as Rockledge as well
as Seminole County residents,
showed up at 6 p.m. to taste
about 40 different types of wines

With n base salary In Perry ol
524.800 annually plus benefits.
Powers Is asking for a $40,000
salary from Longwood and
moving cx|&gt;enses. He told the
co m m issio n that tie w ould
expect to get a $5,000 Increase
at the end of nine months If the
c o m m is s io n evaluated him
lavnnibty.
He suld that he will have to
give the city of Perry 30 days
notice. Powers said he would
expect to live within Longwood.
but would wait until the end of
Ihe school year to move hts
(unilly. He and Ids wife of 19
years have two sons and u
daughter.
Powers tuts a muster's degree
In public administration. He suld
Longwood and Perry have simi­
tar problems, except t-ongwood
"has a lot more traffic."
"I like the over ail appearance

- - -

showed DlSano could not have
shot him se lf, a cco rd in g to
s h e r if f s s p o k e s m a n J o h n
Spolskl. Deputies determined
the gun used in the killing was
registered to Palazzo, although
he reportedly Initially denied
knowledge of the weapon, accorlng to court records.
Prosecution of the case was
apparently delayed because the
state attorney assigned to the
case did not decide whether or
not to prosecute, according to
Bob Fisher, the assistant state
attorney now assigned to the
case.
He said Assistant Stale At­
torney Angela Blakeley was told
to make a decision in the case
and didn’t. Ms. Blakely has been
transferred from the Seminole

County State Attorney's office to
the agency's Melbourne office.
Sheriffs deputies completed
their Investigation of the case In
February. 1984 and the paper
work Is in a court file under
Palazzo’s name.
When the shooting was ini­
tially Investigated, deputies de­
termined that Palazzo and D1Sano wen*alone In the house,
Palazzo told deputies. *‘wc
were just fooling around." in
explaining how DlSano ended up
lying on the floor clutching the
hand gun.
DlSano was a w ell-know n
sports figure In his native state
of Rhode Island
DlSano and Palazzo were from
Warwick. R.l.
— Deane Jo rd a n

and vintages. Bidding began an ones sees the wine bottled In
hour later w ith participants France — the wines did taste, to
bidding on a price then staling him, as they were labeled.
how many cases they wanted to
T h e wine, imported by u
buy.
Delaware company during or
before 1983, was stored In Miami
While the auction was on a before being moved to Sanford
caveat emptor basis — that ts. no alter the business In Miami
refunds If your ease turned out
folded, according to an agent of
to be vintage vinegar — an
the fcderul Departm ent of
Independent wine expert at the Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms.
side said the wines for tasting
While Iherr was some con­
were selected at random from fusion Friday whether the auc­
the 5.000 cases nod were quite tion would gel ihe approval of
drinkable with only a few vin­ federal and stale officia ls.
tages showing signs n( de­ Roscdale Reality and Auction
terioration. He also said that
Company of Maitland dropped
while the exact authenclty of the the gavel at 7 p m . without
wine cannot bo proven — unless Incident.
— Deane Jo rd a n

of the community and Its at­
titude Is growl ti oriented. It has
so much potential," he said.
Powers suld he has gone as far
as he can In Perry and wants to
advance to manugcr of a city ut
lids point In hts career.

Until Powers and Payne re­
ceived favorable reports a s a
re s u lt of A r t ln g C it y A d ­
ministrator Greg Manning's trip
to their elites to Interview city
officials, businessmen and fellowemployees.

State Officials Urge N avy
To Base Ships In Florida
W ASHINGTON
- Gov. Wlilbbs In the senator s office
B ob G r u h n m . S e n . P aula T h u rs d a y .
Hawkins. K-FTu. and other slate
Th e Navy tn February pared
officials are working tx-htnd the
scenes to convince the Navy to the list of possible sites Tor the
base the U.S.S. Wisconsin and tmttleshlp Wisconsin, currently
Its support ships In Pensacola mothbullrd. to six: Pensacola;
Mobile. Ala.; Lake Charles. Lu.i
and Key West.
Nsvy Secretary Jo h n Lehman Pascagoula. Mlss.i Galveston.
m e t w i t h H a w k i n s - a n d Trxu*. and Corpus Chrtsll, Te x P e n s a c o la M a y o r V in c e n t us.

.

D ue to a printing error, p a g e 2 ol our
S u n d a y M a rc h 24,1985 a d ve rtise m e n t
for la d ie s a p p a r e l is in co rre ct. The
c o rre c t m e rc h a n d is e is show n b e lo w
a n d is a v a ila b le in y o u r lo c a l Kmart
stores.
W e re g re t a n y in c o n v e n ie n c e this m a y
h a v e c a u s e d our custom ers.

Save 30%-35%
FAMOUS Lee* JEANS
«!&gt; 4

Our Regular
2297-24 97

Sensational savings on classic 5-pocket
leans C h o ice oltradiiionai blue or
pleached pure cotton aemm Junior sues
3-13 a n d trusses 8-16 Hurry'

Knit Fashion Tops
O u r Reg
6 9 7 -7 9 7
A great collection of newest styles m
cotor-bnghtstnpes All ol easy-core
polyester cotton S-M-L
UytM on isp
0'tx-D

iW A f W
w iu ;

Sunday, March 14, IH 5 - 1 A

RHD

■:i-

■*.■&gt;**.

�*A

E vrm n g H erald, Sanford. F I.

Sunday. M arch 14, m i

Will County G et Out O f The Garbage Business?
B r Donna Rate*
H erald Staff W rite r
1 hr Srnilnotr County Communion is expec ted
to deride Monday If it want* to sell or lease the
county's solid waste disposal farlllllrs or stay In
the business Itself.
The m m mission on Jan. 11 turned over to a
committee for study and recommendation pro­
posals from three firms Interested In buying or
leasing and ojx-raHng lhe rounty'a sanitary
landfill at the old Osceola Airfield near Oviedo
nnd the transfer stations at Sanlando and Upsala
Road.
The Solid Waste Operations Committee has
ranked Ihr companies submilling proposals ns
follows: Western Waste Industries, which
operates lu ('can.! Cocoa bench. Cape Canaveral
and Lake Helen as well as In other stales:
Industrial Waste Services, whic h operates In 13
Florida counties, and llrownlng-Fcrrlx Industries,
which owns or operates 77 sanllary landfills,
many of ihem under contract wlih cities and
counties.
Western Waste Industries Is offering to buy all
the county's rolling slock used lu ihe refuse
disposal operation for $1 million. In addition, the
firm proposes to lease the county's two transfer

stations and landfill from the county for a
monthly payment of 5 percent of the gale
revenues.
Industrial Waste Services proposes to pay
Seminole County 8 2 .1 million at the rale of
835.000 per month to buy all equipment,
supplies, rolling slock and stationary equipment
at the transfer stations and landfill. In addition,
the firm Is offering to lease the transfer stations
and the landfill for 5 percent of all gross collected
revenues.
browning-Ferris Industries proposes to aid the
county In selling all Its equipment for 81.25
million. The firm proposes that the counties
transfer station sites be closed and the land cither
sold or used for "convenience" stations.
Th e committee headed by Public Works
Director Larry Sellers Is scheduled to report Its
findings to Ihe board at the 2:30 p m , meeting.
Sellers said the committee considered all three
proposals and found all three firms to be
"professional with substantial experience In
Florida and In other parts of the country." In
addition one of the companies was In the garbage
and trash rilsjxisal business In Europe
“ Our charge was to rank the three proposals so
the county commissioners could choose to

'M o n e y S h o u ld B e S p e n t
T o A id P r e g n a n t T e e n s ,
N o t D is c o u r a g e S e x u a lit y '
W A SH IN GTON (UPII - The
fedrral government should set
aside funds to help teenagers
with unwanted pregnancies, nut
advise ihem on how to avoid sex.
a congressman say*.
Rep Mickey Lclund, D Texas,
urged a House health nutxommlltre Thursday lo support Ills
bill lo provide money where II Is
"desperately needed" — lor
servl&lt; es lo pregnant Icons.
L c lu n d und other liberal
members of Congress are op­
posing rcuuthorlzalion ol ihe
Adolesrent Family Life A d of
IRHI, which expires this year.
T h r controversial program ,
supported hy Ihe administration,
prohibited federal funds for
alMirllon services and provided
money for pilot projects lo dis­
courage teenage sex.
Hill (.eland said the adolescent
pregnancy problem In the Unit rd Sbiles lias reached critical
pro|Mirllons and Is nol going lo
go away wlih administration
efforts (o promote family llle and
discourage teenage sexuality.
"Th e Untied Stales leads In diistrlullzcil nations In teenage

negotiate with one or more of the companies. Or.
the board may determine there Is no merit to sale
or lease of the operation." Sellers said. "Th e
commissioners will have to make that decision,"
The bad news about the proposals is lhat all
three firms bid for the county business based on
the proposition that the county would clean up Us
landfill operation at Osceola.
The county has been told lhat It could rost as
much as $500,000 to clean up the landfill to the
state Department of Environmental Regulation's
satisfaction.
The DER has told the county that garbage and
trash at the former airstrip property must be
enclosed in a "giant baggie." as County Commis­
sioner Sandra Glenn describes It. The order was
to "cap and cover" ihe refuse so that water can
neither get in nor nut
DER officials said the landfill was polluting
ground water on adjacent property.
The commission was also told it would have to
siphon off methane gas from the garbage and drill
wells to monitor the quality of the drainage water
from the tract to be sure the |x&gt;llutlon had
stopped.
For a time last October the commission
considered taking a California firm up on Us
proposal to mine methane gas. a by product of

Teens s h o u ld have access
to b irth -c o n tro l Inform ation:
— A T AGE 13 AND UP
— At 16 and up
— At 18 and up
— Not at all

P ending legislation 'e lim i
nates Ihe cu rre n t p ro g ra m 's
goal of deterring adolescent
s e x u a l r e la t io n s , a go a l
w h i c h It is e x t r e m e l y
doubtful Ihe adm inistration
can achieve or even should
be In the business of achlcv
Ing.'

(5 5 % )
(20V.)
(12V.)
(8V.)

Teens s h o u ld be able to obtain
b irth -c o n tro l pills o r devices:
(33%)
— AT 13 AND UP
(2 7 % )
— At 16 and up
(2 5 % )
— At 18 and up
(9%)
— Not at all

Law s h o u ld require parents to k n o w ...

-5
5
'

S

J

... If teenaga son obtains contraceptives:
.

-N O
(5 0 % )
births." Lclund said
In 19H3, 514,000 babies were
— Yes
(44%)
Ixmi In teenagers ticlween the
“ ... If teenage daughter obtains contraceptives: 1
ng* of 15 and lit. Nearly 10.(XX)
— YES
(5 0 % )
babies bad mothers under thr
— No
(46%)
age of ] 5.
Lclund said fils legislation
Nf A M
(Sourc* The Mont R+port)
"eliminates the current pro­
gram's goal of deterring adoles­
cent sexual relations, a goal Should teenagers have access fo b irth control inform ation
which It is extremely doubllol and devices? Yes. said mosl of the 1,200 adults taking part in
Ihe administration rail achieve a recent poll. H ow e ve r, there was a lack of agreement ove r
or even should be lu liie busi­ whether parents ought fo be told If a child has contracep
ness of achieving "
fives.
A companion hill. s|Hinsored
tiy Rep Rolicrt Garcia. D-N.Y,, ered beneficial lor lls emphasis
Hut l)r. James Mason, an
would provide family planning on lamlly and adoption and was oltlclal with the I’ubllc Health
services in teenagers and restore part of an imsueccssful proposal Service salrl ihe program Is
Medicaid binding lor ulmrtinii
liy the administration in notify Important In combatting the
Th e I0H I program, a de­ jiarcnis ol minors receiving birth epldrinlc rate of teenage jirrmonstration project, was consid­ control.
gnancles.

W y m o r e T o B e C lo s e d F o r 4 5 D a y s
Wymote Road will lie closed lo through traffic
tx*tween Wrslmotile Drive and stale Road 436 for
ajiproxltuulely 45 days, according In C A.
Benedict, D ls lrld Engineer for I lu* Florida
Dejuirlmrnt of Traiisixirtalion.
The work Is purl of the slx-laiilug of SR 43H and
the closure ol 2.(XXI feel of the road noiilh ol SR
430 Is necessary to make Intersection Improve
mcnls and construct drainage facilities.
Benedict sold local Iralflc will be permitted lo

use Wymore but through traffic will be diverted
ottto Wcslmontr around Hie construction. Police
and emergency personnel are Ix-lng notified of Ihe
closure and are being routed along alternate
streets.
Wiley N. Jackson Inc., ol Roanoke, Vu., Is Ihe
contractor on Hie six l.mlng project. The work,
w h ic h e xte n d s from llo slo ii A v e n u e lo
Weslmonle Drive, Is si liciluled to lx- completed In
Ju ly

CALENDAR
S U N D A Y . M A R C H 24
Sanford Big Book AA, 7 p in., oj&gt;cii discussion.
Florida Power and Light building. N Myrtle
Avenue, Sanford
Alarum meeting. 8 p m,, 1201 W, First St.,
Sanford.
M O N D A Y , M A R C H 2B
Central Florida Blood Hank Seminole County
Branch. 1302 E. Second St., Sanford, 9 a in. to 5
p in.: Florida Hospllal-Aliamonte Branch. 00! K
Altamonte Ave.,0 a .m . lo5 p.ni.
Free Income tax Itclji lor retirees, 9 a in to I
p.m., Sanford Chamber of Commerce. 400 E
Flist St.. Sanlord. Through April 15
Free blood pressure screenings. 10-11 a.m..
West Volusia Medical Services building. ItlHl
Providence IIIvd . Deltona,
Bowling league for mentally liaiulicu(&gt;j&gt;ed.
4-5:45 p.m.. Altamonte Lanes. 280 Douglas Ave.
Cull 802 2500 lor Information.
Retxm Club AA. noon and 5:30 p,m „ closed. H
|i.m , step, 130 Normandy Road, Casselberry.
Clean Air Rebus at noon, closed.
Ajxipka Alcoholics Anonymous. 8 p.m., closed.
A|xij)ka Episcopal Church, til 5 Highland.
Al Anon Step und Study, H p.m., Casselberry
Senior Crnlcr. 200 N. Triplet Drive.
Sanlord AA. K p.m,, closed. 1201 W. First St.
Fellowship Group AA. senior citizens. 8 p.m..
elosed.2(X)N Lake Triplet Drive, CasscUx-rry.
T U E S D A Y . M A R C H 20
Casnelticrry Ktwunls Club. 7 u m .. Lc Club, S
laike Triplet Drive, Casselberry.
Free Income tax help for retirees. 9 a.m to I
p.m ., Longwood Recreation Center. 175 W.
Wurien St., Longwixx! and Hacienda Village
Mobile Home Park. 500 Lamgwood-Ovledo Road.
Winter Springs. Through April IS. Bring copies of
last tax return, forms for the currrnt year and
other relevant mulcrlals.
Sanlord Lions Club. noon. Holiday Inn. In­
terstate 4. Sunfurd.
South Seminole County Ktwunls Club. noon.
Quincy's Kcstuurunl, Highway 17 92 und Live
Oaks Boulevard. Casselberry.
Central Florida Hluod Bank Seminole County
Branch. 1302 E. Second St., Sanford. 11 u m. lo 7
p.m. Florida Hospltal-Allainonle Branch. 001 KAltamuntr Ave., 11 a m to 7 p.m.
Sanford-Duplicate Bridge Club, 1 p.m . Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce. 400 E. First St.
South Seminole Chapter AA KP. I p.m ..
Casselberry Senior Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry.
Sanford Toastmasters. 7:15 a m . Village Inn
restaurant. 2505 S French Ave.
Sanford Optimist Club. 11:45 a.m.. Western

Sl/zlin Restaurant. Sanford
Sanford AA. 5:30. closed discussion, and 8
|&gt; iil .opcn discussion. 1201 W. First St.
Rrtxm Club AA, noon and 5:30 p.m.. closed. 8
p m ., step, 130 Normandy Road, Casselberry.
Cleun Air KcbosCUih, noon, dosed.
24-Hour AA group bcglniirrsojirii discussion. 8
p.m , Second and Buy Streets, Sanford
17 92 Grouj) AA. H p.m., closed. Messiah
Lutheran Church. 17-92 and Doglruck Road,
Overcalrrs Anonymous, open, 7 30 p.m.,
Florida Power A Light, M l S. Myrtle Ave.,
Sanford,
W E D N E S D A Y . M A R C H 27
Full Gosjxl Business Men’s Fcllnwsblj) In­
ternational breaklasl meeting. 0 30 a.m . Holiday
Inn. Stair Road 430 und Wymore Road. Alta
monte Springs For details call 656 4255.
Central Florida Blixxl Bank Seminole County
Branch, 1302 E. Second Si., Sanford, 9 a m to 5
p.m. Florida Hospltal-Allamoiite Branch. 11 a m.
to 7 p.m.
Frre Income tax help for rellrees. 9 a.m. to I
p in., Community United Methodist Church. 285
i),S. Highway 17-92. Casselberry. Bring copies of
last tax return, turms for Hie current year and
other relevant materials Through April 15.
Sanford Ktwunls Club. noon. Sanford Civic
Cenler.
Casselberry Rotary breakfast. 7 30 a m..
Cassell terry Senior Center. 200 N Lake Triplet
Drive.
Flmuulal advisory service for senior citizens
available by appointment. I p in., Casselberry
Senior Center, 200 N. laike Triplet Drive. Cail
831-3551. ext 264.
Medicare help for seniors. 10 u m. until noon.
Casselberry Senior Centrr 200 N. Trljilrt Drive.
Casselberry.
T H U R S D A Y , M A R C H 28
International Tra in ing 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 ly
Toast mist ress), 7:30 p in ,, Altamonte Chajx-l
Educullon Building on Stale Road 436. second
and fourth Thurdaya.
Seminole Chapter of Florida Audubon Society
meeting. 2 p.m.. Florida Power A Light Co..
Myrtle Avrnuc, Sanford. Dave Marsh. W ESH -TV
inrleeorotoglsl will sjx*ak Quests welcome.
Sanford Jnycees. 7:30 jun .. Jaycee building.
Sth und French. Sanford.
I hcaUc In Ihe Works presents award winning
plays from Thmuilngale A Ekpuroala Loop by
ikibblr Bell, 7:15 p.m., Ortundo Science Center
Auditorium. Frre to the public.
Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St.. 5 30. closed
discussion, und 8 p .m , ojx-n. speaker.

rotting garbage. In exchange for royalties ranging
from 850.000 to $ 150.000 per year. The Idea was
to convert the methane gas to electrical power.
Sellers said, however, the proposal was put on a
back burner while the possibilities of leasing or
selling the operation to private enterprise Is
considered.
In December county staff also considered the
possibility of building a giant Incinerator In
cooperallon with thr county's cities.
County Administrator Ken Hooper estimated at
the time that It would cost 837.2 million to build
an Incinerator capable of burning Ihe 700 tons of
garbagr and trash generated each day Id
Seminole. Hooper said ihe cost of an Incinerator
would require a 30-year bond Issue with annual
payments of 84.5 million.
Members of the special committee which
studied ihe lease-sale proposal. In addition to
Sellers, are: Craig llattcrson of Professional
Engineering, consultants; Deputy County A t­
torney Hob McMillan. Tim Clabuugh of the
county's environmental services department.
T o n y VanDerworp of the county planning
department. Fred Hlukeley of the county's refuse
and disposal department, and Penny Flemming of
the office of budget and management.

Vaccination Can Protect
Newborns From Hepatitis
NEW YORK (UPII - Babies of
mothers with hepatitis H InferHons may become lifetime carri­
ers of ihe virus It not vaccinated
shortly after birth, researchers
say.
Infants horn to mothers wlih
hrjratllls B have a 85 percent to
HO perernt chance of being
Infected them selves, m any
w it h o u t e v e r d e v e lo p in g
symptoms of the disease, said
Dr Cladd Stevens of the New
York Blood Center.
In adults, hejiailiis II is a liver
disease lhat can Iasi from a few
weeks lo a llfrilme und range in
severity from mild to fatal. Even
In asym ptom atic Infections,
such as in young children, il Is
associated with cirrhosis and
liver cancer.
An estimated 200.000 new
case* of hepatitis II tx &lt;h i cat h
year and ulxnit 800.000 Ameri­
cans arc carriers of the virus.
lu the j&gt;ast. newborns of
mothers with h r pal Ills II have
•wen given hepatitis B Immune
globulin, an antibody serum that
protects the baby from the
disease but dfx-s not stimulate a
protective resj)onse from the
Infant's Immune system.
Vuct-imiHon auttmrnls protec­

tion provided by antibody injec­
tion*. reducing the risk of Infec­
tion to 14 j&gt;ercent from 25
perernt. Stevens said.
"T h e combination gives Inrmcdlatr protection and It allows
the babies time lo develop their
own resjxmse* to the vaccine."
she said.
Stevens and colleagues In New
York and California screened
I H , 8 4 2 p r e g n u n t A s la n *
Americans and Identified those
positive for the virus.
Al the lime of the report,
published in l be latest edit ion ol
Hie Journal of Ihr American
Medical Association, 113 babies
iiad received ihe comhlnallon
treat me ni at hlrth and in were
carriers ol the virus hy 18
months of age
T o be protected. Infants at risk
imisi lx- Identified before birth
and vaccinated within a lewdays of tx-lng born
One problem Is that nioibrrs
may nol know llicv carry Hie
virus. Steven* said.
"T h e curreiu recoinmendatloif
Is that women who fall Into
high-risk categories for hepatitis
II should be leslrd." she said.

No Cost Cataract
A nd IOL Surgery
*

Without Hospitalization
Nearly one million Americans
will face the prospect of cataract
and intraocular lens implant
surgery this year. They want the
best care available. But what of
its cost?

C a ta ra c t S u rg e ry C o s ts I

Preoperative
t-xumin.ihi ins

NO COST I

Preoperafive
consultation*

NO COST I

Surgical fanlitv tin-

NO CO ST

At Florida Eye Clinic in
Altamonte Springs, we've
solved this dilemma.

Surgery fee

NO COST

If you qualify for Medicare or
most major insurance programs,
your cost is absolutely nothing.
Even Medicare's annual deduct­
ible fee is waived.

Transportation

Intraocular
lens implant
Rrtnvcry room fit-

NO CO ST
_

to anil from Clime

NO COST
NO COST

Postoperative
lollowup examination _ _ __ N O C O S T
Postoperative care

NO COST

And you needn't worry
about hospitalization. All eye
surgery is performed at Florida
Eye Clinic's Ambulatory
Surgical Center, and you can be
hom e with your friends, family
nnd loved ones that night.
And we'll even provide you
with complimentary transporta­
tion to and from Florida Eye
Clinic on our courtesy bus.

And Ambulatory
Surgery Center
Mitchell Stupiro, M.D.
John L. lsler, M.D.

For more information, call or write Florida Eye Clinic today
160 Boston Avenue, Altamonte Springs, Florida 32701
Telephone (305) 834-7776

�f

V

Evening H erald . Sanlord. F l . _

M X V o t e In H o u s e C a l l e d C lo s e ,
B u t B a c k e r s P r e d ic t in g V i c t o r y
W A SH IN G TO N |UF’II - Th e M X missile
faces two House tests this week and should
It clear both votes. President Reagan can
add 21 more of the weapons to the U.S.
arsenal. Supporters strongly suspect they
can win.
Hut opponents Just as strongly argue the
weapon Is virtually useless In the silos
where Reagan wants to house It and thus, a
wasteful, vulnerable and destabilizing pro­
position.
Debate In the Dcmocratlc-controlled
House opens Monday and Reagan will have
had six days In which lo lobby House
m e m b e rs before T u e s d a y 's vote on
authorizing SI 5 billion for 21 of the
missiles. He Is adept at swaying opinion on
Capitol Hill.
Should the missile make It past Tuesday's
hurdle, there will Ik * a second appropriating
vote Thursday, a procedure Identical to that
used In the Republican-controlled Senate,
where the MX passed 55*45 twice last week
H ouse A rm e d S e rv ic e s C o m m itte e
Chairman Les Aspln. D-Wls.. who was
Instrumental In the missile's survival (his
year, Is again promoting the MX as an arms
control tool. Rep. Charles Bennett. D-Fla..
also an A rm e d S e rv ice s Com m ittee
member, ami Rep Joseph Addabbo. D N.Y.,
defense appropriations subcom m ittee
chairman, will I k * among the opposition
leaders. House Speaker Thom as O'Neill.
D-Mass.. also has been a vocal opponent.

O'Neill conceded that Reagan’s powers of
persuasion are mighty, and Aspln s decision
to keep backing the missile Is a “ tremen­
dous factor."
“ We have all types of missiles out there.
T h is Is an unnecessary missile." said
O'Neill, adding. “ We're hoping lo be able lo
defeat the authorization. It's very close,
within a halfdozcnlvoleslcliher way.”
Another opponent, assistant Democratic
leader Tom Foley of Washington, termed
the “ bargaining chip" argument "perhaps
the weakest argument for the missile" but
at the moment the one opponents must
work hardest to overt-time
Reagan has argued repeatedly that the
U.S. arms negotiators should not Ik* un­
dercut two weeks after stnrtlng lalks with
Ihc Soviets In Geneva and that defeat of the
MX would do Just that.
Publicly, alt involved will say only the
outcome will be close. Privately, opponents
have not spoken of victory, but one pro-MX
analyst suggests the M X will win with a
majority of 20 or 30.
Th e analyst noted the margin of victor)*
last year was about seven congressmen
Th a i, couplrd wllh Republican gams In
the House during the Iasi election and
Democratic nervousness about suggestions
the party has been weak on defense should
add to the margin. Ihc analyst suggests
“ If the negotiations are going on, for
Congress lu go In and h r Ip ihc Soviets by
taking something nir ihe table Is goofv."
observed Aspln

FD A T ig h te n s R ep o rtin g Rule
O n Drug D e a th s A n d In ju rie s
W ASHINGTON |UP1| - The
government Is expanding
requirement for manufactur­
ers lo report deaths or Injuries
linked to prescription pro­
ducts bm a congressional
critic says more must be done
to p re ve n t d r u g -r e la te d
deaths.
The Food and Drug Ad­
m in is t r a t io n p ro p o s e d
Thursday that manufacturers
must report Immediately —
never taking more than 15
working days — any serious,
unexpected adverse drug re­
action or any significant In­
crease In serious reactions.
FDA rules now cover more
than 90 percent of prescriplion sales The proposal would
extend the rutrs to about
4 .2 0 0 d ru g p r o d u r t s .
primarily those sold before
Ihc FDA gained authority lo
approve new drugs in 1938
and more recently marketed
Identical, similar or related
versions of those older drugs
In a statement. Health and
Hum an Services Secretary
Margaret Heckler called the
proposal “an Important step
in protecting Ihe public health
because it w ill com plete
FDA's early warning system
for drugs.”
Some common products
approved before I93H include
m o r |i It I n e . e o &lt;1 c I n c .
epinephrine lor heart stimula­
tion and vitamin products
used in medical treatment.
A new Intravenous lortti of
one long-used vitamin pro­
duct. E-Fcrul. was considered
the (misslhie cause tit nhoul 30

Rep. Les AuColn. D O re .. countered that
“ all of the arms control rhetoric ... ts like the
booster stage — essential but soon dis­
carded."
And Addabbo argues that the missiles
already approved by an earlier Congress
provide enough of an inducement to the
Soviets to engage In meaningful negotia­
tions and thus. “ There Is no reason to
provide more ‘bargaining chips.' when wc
have already provided an ample number."
Approval of ihc 21 missiles for fiscal 1985.
m any In both the House and Senate have
argued, docs not mean that Reuganrau look
forward with any confidence at all to getting
the 4H missiles he wants lu fiscal 1986
Rather. Ihey say. II means only no one
wants to undercut ihc talks but Reagan has
pushed as far as he can In seeking major
defense boosts from Congress.
Eventually, Reagan wants to buy 223
missiles at a cost of 821 billion. 813 billion
of w hich already has hern spent or
obligated. Opponents argue the long-term
cost will end up lo be 84 1 billion. Some l(X)
of ihc missiles are to lx* installed m
Mlmilcman 3 silos, a place opponents say
makes them exceptionally vulnerable.
The Reagan administration, which re­
jected ihe Carter administration proposal to
put 200 In a mobile "racetrack" pattern to
provide them with greatrr protection,
eventually decided lo cut the number down
to l(X)aud use lilt*existing silos.

This Burglar Swipes Only Clothing, Showers
F O R T LA U D ER D A LE |UI’I) Police In Otis wlnli-r haven for
college students today were
seeking a mysterious burglar
who steals only clothing, a
shower anil a shave.
W h a t's more. Ihc b u rg la r

leaves the stolen garments
lx -h ln it at tils n r x i stop,
exchanging I hem for a fresh
change of clothes.
Fort Lauderdale police ollirrr
Ronald Centamorr said the bur­
glar struck four limes lu Ihc Iasi

w e e k . 11c a p p a re n tly was
frightened oil hv an alarm dur­
ing his last burglary on Wed­
nesday. Centamorr said, leaving
Ixhlud a pair of sneakers and
sonic underwear.
He II cniur In. use Ihc show­

er. borrow yo u r deodorant,
maybe get a shave and then go."
Centamorr said.
"The day alter Ihts guy breaks
into their house. I II show up
wllh some elolhes ami I II usk
them, 'Are these your clothes?"’

Microscope Sees Things Never Seen Before'
C H IC A G O |U1»I) — A powerful new
microscope that ran see. write and even
"taste" will have wide use In medical and
scientific research, says a scientist who
spent four years developing ihe 8 ) million
Instrument.
It can sec microscopic objects in much
greater contrast than other Instruments and
analyze the chemical composition of every­
thing viewed through it. University of
Chicago officials said.
"T h e Instrument has such a general use
We see things that have never been seen
Ik -fore at such a level of detail." said
university physicist Ktccardo LcvlSettl.
who developed Ihe microscope with scien­
tists at Hughes Research Laboratories
The new Instrument, called the scanning
Ion microscope or SIM. also ran etch lines.
Inters or patterns so srnnll that It could
write JCX) books, each containing 1,000
pages, on the head of a pin.
The scanning Ion microscope Is signifi­
cantly different from the two other types of
microscopes in use. The light and electron

Abcom II. INc »o Thom a i P Shartty 1 Wf
Karen A . LI FI L l k U i l e EC* . *41 eco
John Households* L Wl F trrl to John A
Out) A t i l l . U W Hit A. Ool H e, Mono*
w o n
John T Dunn A Wl Shlrlay to Don o
Ethenroder A Wl Nancy M . Lt 10 Siftpy
Hoi to*. 1101.000
J H Simon* A Wl Bermc# to Jam** F
Donnelly A Wf Patricia. Lt It Sabal Gian at
label Point, i m too
Marshall F Simmon* A Wt Linda to
Leonard Sail* A Wt France*. L I 2. BIX A ,
S*eet**l#r OaX*. Sec » 11X000
Margaret M Storll fa Cher lei M Ruttokov
A Wf Gall A , LI «. Wexira Club Elf* Sac I.
tttS JM
Jem et L Conildder A Wf Evalyn to
Dorothy B Surratt Krtcti. LI 2. BIX A . Lim a
W eXIvaEit* No O n a .U l WO
Lou la S Matthew* A Wt Mary fa Louie S
Matthew* Lt *t Unrec Plat LaXa Jettuf)

1100

LaXa Howell Arm* Cond Ltd to John A
Heine A Wf Ruth M . Un IIS. Late Howell
Arm* Cond , i l l 000
LX Howell Arm* Cond to Chariot M
F argot aid Un MF laXa Hawaii Arm * Cond ,
LM .no
Robert T O 'H ara A Wf Jantte to John T
M ra rt. Lt t. Highland*Sac On* Tr F.taOOOO
Joseph Kenter to Wetcolt Dev . Lt 4IS A all
f ia n k L. Woodruff. StOO
Nichole* J Marge A Wf merger#! W to
Roberta L. EhrSert, Lt (B. LaXa M arkham
E stale* H i 000
Jean A Arthur to Catherine P Gtester Lt
21. Seusalito Sec Three. 101.000
R C A to Salvatore C Lanara A Wt K ill f A Gregory J Gavel A Wf Kathleen L . Lt to.
Hidden LaXe Villa*. Ph IV LU *00
Cher ton* Newcomer to Orville G Adam* A
Wf Norma R . Lt 1 Clutter M Sterling Perk
Un 2e.Sti.no
Dorothy M . Singer, to Cynthia J G u ilt. LI
If. BIX I. Fo.m oor Un 2. M l MB
Wm R BirXhead A Wt Donna to Mono vac
Att'di A Manner Auedi Ghareibeih. it it ate
Woodland* East. f*4 *00
Cotton Homo* at FI to Jama* T Cullman
Jr A W t Cecilia W . LI I Shedowbey Un I.
S1IF.FM
Roy C. Jane*. J r to Key C Janet J r . N 1ST
at SW at Stoat SWt* at l * ' « net* E M ir etc)
Sec is 21 21. 1)00
,
Kenneth Me Intoetv. Tr to Teguetla Dev Co
land tat Sec I* JO 2* etc U.m JJOO
Hoyt J Turner A Wt Nancy to Lout* Wiley
A Wt I t n d i Lt 22. BIX G. Spring Valley
Gdnt. XI l*.000
Karwilth Ramsey. Hair A Repr E tt David
A to Rocha Intamallanal Inc . Beg P I IIS' E
at SW car a« E H a* N E H at Sac 2 2 S »2 0 e tc .
ttoo
Richard Nejereth, T r to Roche Interna
ttonal Inc. Lt 2* Commence NW cor at N E W
at S E W Sac 22 20M**c atal UeOOOO
Richard Nejereth. Tr. to Ftech* Internet I
Inc . 4 parcel* In Sec 22 10 JA S2M.OOO
Derek S B Qeviet A Wl Imrrto J to
Vladim ir Kale* A Wf A m e. Lt 21. Blk A.
River Run. Sec One. U J *00
Richmond Amor Home* to A rthur R
Austin A WI Merle. L I IJ Country Lane,
sej.oao
Stephen M Rose A Wt Suten to Cher let I
Grey A Wt CyntWe. Lt 2* Brantley Cove
*1 JO. 000
Daniel Drtggert A WT ketnieen to John T.
Daniel* A Wt Helen. LI A BIX H . Summer**!
No Sac L.SU.OOO
Sobol Point Prop to Fred G R u m o i I. L I AS.
tebel Groan at Sabal Point 1104400

Urod Boggie. T r la Jem et Porterfield Sr
A Wf E llie B . Un I ID Summit Village Un
II. AS! too
Sam* to tarn* Un 1*B Un II, SIS, too
Goorga E ManetX I* A Wt Susan to Onlar io.
Ltd LO II. Howell Ett* SUM
Swnnlland Corp to Viet Thl Vo. N lJO o l i
*40 ol Lt* I A I A all of 4. BIX F, B'own t
Beck HammocX. 111.400
OAK D tv , Inc to Joyce P Jemet. LI »
Cardinal OaXt. lU.eoo
Ann* E Itboll to Pedro R Leper A Wf Ana
B .114 Longdel* 04f 000
hacker Hornet. Inc to Michael H Webb A
Wt Georgania R , L I $4. Country Down Ph II,

sit too

Dove Brewer Hornet Inc to Donald C
Warrocha A Wf Trav* K . Lt Jl Waklva Club
Ettt Sac 1. SI 14.M0
G reater C o m f r C o rp la Frank E
Lublntkat A Wf Donna. Lt I I I Mandarin Sac
Flve.tH4.M0
Kentmgton Park Ltd lo Michael* S Petillo
A Wf Adrienne M . Un 104 Ken ting ion Park.
1*1.MO
Joteph Cowart to M errill Lynch Riloc
MGM Inc LIS .C lu tter L. Wildwood. Ail.MO
SuncraftEngr A Conttr to David L Stuart
A Wf Donna J . Lt to. Sabal Gian aI Sabal
Point, f 141000
Louit Patricelll to Thomas M WalctyX. LI
4. Blk F, North Or I Ranch** Sac 1A.SMM0
Ahmad A M at Iam am A Wt mary to
Benjamin E Price. Jr A Wt Pamela A . LI A
Eattorooe. V 4.000
Helen# 0 Duke* A Hb Phillip to Peter C
Chard A Wt Ingaborg H . Lt I*. Blk 10.
Eaitbrooe 144 JOO
John F Luca* A Wf Ann* to J E Wilton. Lt
IM A $i*at 114. Frank L Woodruff*.041 000
F M Carp to Jim Taylor C arp. Lt* J 10.
Blk A. SamInot* Indus Par* l l t j WO
Leuit H Tempi* A Wt Margaret to William
J t l John. Lt 4 A N 'y vac *1 blk J Tier A
Traftordt map of Sant XU 000
John H Hoyt A Wt Constance to Donald S
Wall* A Wt Rhea P . Lt SI A E 11 ol U .
Amended Plat #1 Magnolia Haights l i t 000
jom Century Hama* to Gaorge A llanley A
Wt Maryann. It f t Tutcewllle. Un IIB .
110.000
Dave Brewer Home*. Inc to David G
Samuel* A Wt E IU J . L I I WeXiva Club lit *
Sec L S210.MO
Herbert E Strum A Wt Kathleen to
Terrance L Barrett A Wt mary B . LI 410
WaXiv* H in t Club Foe Hunt Sec Two i n 000
Bruda Dev Inc to Donna M Oden A Care*
S Friday- LIS, GoldenGrev*. SNOOP
Attille F. Gain A Wt m ary L to Sharon N
Gilbert Un 1)00 Blkg I Waklva Villa*.
C a n d .s n .r n
Cantoa I tome* #4 F I to Ranald L Thame*
A Wf Redact* L . Lt SI. Sprlngviaw. 141100
Wuhalmlan Schuster to Ramon Gomel A
Wt Gloria. A Edna M Marano Un IM
Village*! W lndm eedn.ilNo i, AM Mo
Lou.*# Leonard to Louita Leonard Trust**
alt LI to Th* Forest. Ph tS e e l.IM S
Gian A Saveli* A W l Lmdtey to Wm F
Grey A Wt Jean P A Robert Pettigrew A Wt
Marttyrm. Lt 11. Blk C. Sec !A . Norm Orlande
Ranch**. AMISS
Myrtom I. King to Thame* Urt*. LI 10
Geneva Te rr Amended Plat. AF* *00
Martin Marietta Carp to Jama* Dartatt.
Jr A Wt mergaret A , L I U Wteiva Hill*.
Sac f. SI M.00U
Winter Spg* Dev to k G Adkmt Conttr
C # . Inc. Lt 01 Boar Creek E to* . M l MO
BG
Adklnt Cantor to Lawrence M
Gill lard A Wt Rhonda Lt *4. Beer Creak
Etta M l . m

Clittord V Rodger* A Wl Kathleen lo
Michaal J Davit. Leda J D a vit A Peril*
Adkins. Lt It blk B. Eet'brooX Un I ), ST* 000
H Wayne Wilton, to David K Robison A Wt
M ary K , Un U4A, Lake Howell Arm s Cond .
AM 000
Chariot L Klllam A Wt Brando to Richard
L Zartman, Lt* SanlandoEltate* to* 000
Brenda Tincher. lo Brenda Stone. Lt C.

Book#ffQWfl 1.2.000

M Scott Adamt A Wt I Altai* to William
N Greenwood A Wt Diane M . LI* H A 21,
Longdel# Indus Park.tUJOOO
David J Hildebrand! A Wt Judith to David
R Brook*. L1 142, B#i*lr* Hill*. Un 2. 1*4 000
Richard J Thai it A Wt Hop* to Lloyd £
Beeubien A Wt Judy A Kelly P Ream A Wf
Luanne Lt 10. Hunllngtn Hill*, to# &gt;00
Ralph T Lawton A Wt Merthe to Chart#*
A Brown A Wt Darlyn C . Lt IF. BIX D.
GreenwoodLakesUn I M l 000
O utran.* Cantor Co Tohow erdM Frost A
Wt E l i i . Lt as. Sabal Ridge at Sabal Potnt.
SZJS.fOO

deaths am ong 1.000 pre­
mature Infants given thr drug
In an apparent cflort to pre­
vent an eve problem.
T h r FD A learned about the
problem last yrar. several
months after E-Fcrol was first
marketed, when two hospitals
asked the Center* lor Disease
Control to Investigate ab­
n o r m a lit ie s and d e a th s
among premature Infants.
F D A officials said they
might have learned sooner If
the rules required adverse
reaction reports for all drugs.
FDA olflelals also an* mov­
ing lo require government
approval lor newer versions of
old products that, like the
intravenous E-Ferol produel,
are Intended for dltlcrenl uses
and not exactly alike In chem­
istry. strength, route of mi­
ll Unlst rat ton. pal lent popula­
tion and dosage
Hot Ihe government will not
require retroactive approval ot
such products already on the
market, which drew criticism
from Rep Ted Weiss. I) N V .
whose Government Operalio n s subcom m ittee held
hearings last vi-or on the
K-Ferol tragedy.
The new rules "wouldn't
have prevented a tragedy like
E -F e r o l." Weiss said “ It
might have had a role In
minimizing It There still is
more to I k - done."
Weiss said Hu- government
also should Include ironprescription products lu the
proposed requirement

Business Insurance?

microscopes can only magnify Images,
"W e are working toward the goal of
while the SIM also can etch, perform storing a tremendous amount ol Information
chemical analyses and Implant materials. In a small space." Levl-Settl said
Lcvl-Sclll said.
The Ion beam device may make It |wisslbhThe microscope could prove a great aid lo to store up to 10.(XX) times more Informa­
research allowing scientists lo perform tion on computer chips than Is currently
microscopic chemical analysis of everything feasible. Such miniaturization could lead to
from bone marrow to the content of the development of powerful, ulirn-smnll
meteorites, areas of study that Lcvl-Sclll Is computers he said
pursuing.
"T h e high degree of chemical analyses
"A nything we look al w llh SIM Is really u that Is ueitlcved Is quite astonishing in
revelation." Levl-Settl said. “ Ii Is a very comparison with what has been in existence
exciting new window on the slrurlure of up until now." he said.
materials."
Th e SIM can "taste" through Its chemical
Lcvl-Sclll said Ills machine could I k - used analysis capability by knocking tons tree
In many other arras of scientific and from a sample, hr said. The tons, which urtmedical study.
first used lo provide inagnifled linages of Ihc*
"T h is Is only a beginning." lie tuild. sample, pass through u muss nprrirom rirr
"Eventually II may apply In studies In where they are Identified by their Individual
i-ancer. It could Ik- used In research and elements.
diagnosis."
Lcvl Settl said he is currently using Ihe
T h e microscope also can lay down new device to make chemical maps of fibers
materials atom by atom, a feature that Is from Ihc Shroud of T u rin , which some
expected lo make possible the ultra- people believe was Jesus Christ’s burial
microminiaturization ol electronic c i r c u i t s .
shroud.

REALTY TRANSFERS

Sunday. March 14. IM S—SA

O ne name says it best.

T TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
i t

P h .

3 2 2 -0 2 8 5

• 2 5 7 5 S. F re n c h A v e ., S a n fo rd
A u t o - O w n e r s in s u r a n c e

1lit- Munir ( .ir, lliitontv.. tint- namt* \.n* u all.

KPIPELAND INC.
PVC PATIO FURNITURE
205 W. ST. RD. 434
LONGWOOD
(305) 339-5982

KEEP YOUR
CITY CLEAN

551 N. VOLUSIA AVE.
ORANGE CITY
(904) 775-6674

S e rf

'P ’i U c

O nly

Ths Sanlord City Commis­
sion has declared Ihe monlh
ol March as "Clam Up"
monlh lor lh« City of Sanlord.

07&lt;m v h

5 Pc. S p cc i.il

$ 1 C Q
1 3 V

Tha Sanlord City Commis­
sion urges all realdsnla lo
join in this elfort and keep
"The Friendly City" a claan
and beautiful city.

4 C h a lrs
I I.ih lr

O n ly

* _ _ ^
’ l O V

MARCH *85

2 C h a is e
Lounges
I Tote Table

F A C T O R Y D IR E C T • W E M A K E IT • W E S E L L IT

L v tfJ

"CLEAN-UP MONTH"

HOURS: TU K .-S a t. 10 5
Sun. 12-5
Closed Monday

£ 3 1 3
L ^ J

_______________________________ ________________________________________________ T____________

■

C o m b o

b

.b .

b

A

. B e t t e r

" l\ T

B a c k y a r d

1 / 4 Lb . o f 1 0 0 %
F re n c h
1 6

O z. C o k e

P u re

B u r g e r
B e e f

F rie s

o r

B e v e ra g e

YES, All For Only $1.97
•

S
V
m y
|MI|»|KI (ilY
S “|||
a i u

w l i r r r M m * r l N i i n * is y i w r s .
2501

S. F re n c h

Ave.

5 P *~

P h . 3 2 2 -9 2 1 2

S a n fo rd

�*A ~ t v t n ' nfl H sra ld , San lord, F I.

Sunday, M irth M. l»«S

A Little Snip
R ig h t -h a n d e d s c is s o rs w ielder B ra n d i Keogh, 5.
daughter of Keith and Vicki
Keogh, cuts the grand open­
ing ribbon for Left Handed
Irishm an and Things, Inc., a
Lake M a ry store catering to
southpaws, folks from the
Em erald Isle and gift givers.
Lake M a r y C ity Com m ls
s lo n e r C o lin K eogh a nd
Brandi's m other, Vicki hold
the ribbon under the watchful
eye of store owner Efti Jane
K e o g h , B r a n d i 's g r a n d ­
mother, and grandson Colin
Keogh, 8. Th e store, at 208
North C o un try Club Road, Is
site of the coun try store
owned since 1925 by the elder
M r s . K e o g h 's p a r e n t s ,
Homer and Lena Gleason.
The new store takes its name
fro m E f t i K e o g h 's le fthandedness and her husband
Richard's Irish ancestry.

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
Lake Mary Saab Technician
Honored By Swedish Automaker
•Janie* Sm e llie r of Lake Mary was honored by
Saiih Scania of Arnerlcu for successfully completing itir
highest level of achievement In the Swedish aiilomakrr s
technical (ruining program
S m e llie r. employed by 1)111 Bryan
Ini (Kiris, l he* Saab dealership In Wlntrr
Park, was conferred the* title of Saab
Master Teuchtilrlun
T o e a rn Saab'* h ig h e s t awarel.
Sm ellier bail in work bis way up through
ibrer Intermediate competency levels.
Then, after live years' experience al Saab
and passing every one of Saab'* technical
courses in addition loearning crrilflcaS m e lt x e r
lion by the Nallonal Insinulr for Aulomotlve Servltr
Excellence, Smellier was recognized as Saab Master
Technician,
"lie bad lo earn It," said F. William llryan. owner of Mill
llryan lni|K»rlx. "There’s no substitute for experience and
hard work."

U»r*w

by T i f f in ) Viffitml

B u s in e s s L e a d e r s :

Herald Expansion Under Way
Construction of un addition to the Evening Herald's
present facilities Is under way at the rear of Its main offices
al 300 N. French Ave.
The new 22.500-*quare-foot building will la* used for
newsprint storage, addition?! presses and related equip­
ment to accommodate the company's growth
The dock-height structure will have access off Fulton
Street for Us shlpplngartd storage areas.

Lending Officer Area Manager
Hubert Jones. Florida Federal vice president and regional
lending officer for ilic Aliamnnlc Springs area, has been
promoted lo area manager which includes supervision ol
several Florida Federal branch offices, lie will remain
regional lending officer
Jones came in Florida Federal as vice president and
senior loan ofllerr In IUH-1 from Landmark Bank nt Tampa
where la- served as an iihs IsI iiii I vice president and area
manager, lie Is a graduate of the University n( Sou lb
Florida , the Florida School of Banking and the Nallonal
Conimerclal Lending School.
Florida Federal Is a lull-service financial Insiliullon with
SB offices In most major Florida markets anti assets In
excess of $5 billion.

Palm Springs Center Sold
NEW YOHK — Palm Springs Shopping Center In
ALlamonlc Springs has been acquired by The KKKKI
Funds, a manager ol closcd-end real estate pension funds,
according lo Patrick J Callan. HKKKF principal in New
Yoik City. Th e property was purchased front BML
Invrslments/PMN Investments of Altamonte Springs
The one-story shopping center consists ol 121.000
square fret built In phases from ID74 lo I WHO. on 12 acre
It ts tocutcd al slate ituad 450 and I'ulm Sptlugs Hoad In
Altumonir Springs.

Repeal O f Unitary Tax Gives Florida Edge
By Susan Posttewnlte
UPI Business W rite r
MIAMI fill'll — Florida has rca|&gt;rd no
great bench Is slm c rc(M*nl of Its mot limaligned unitary tax. but stale business
leaders say Florida now lias an edge on the
rest of the Suit Belt in luring industry
"W in n we bad miliary they |osi put a big
red X on Florida." salrl Jo n Shrhel,
president of A ss»h laled Industries of Florida,
die business group that lobbied against the
lax
Sbelx'l said since tin* law was rc|M*alcd
Dec 7. In* has heard of "over a dozen"
companies tlull want to pot new investment
In tin* Sim Belt and arc evaluating Florida
lie dltl not identity th e m
"IhJorc they weren't even looking at
Florida Everyone has pot Florida bar k on
the list," h e said,
Tin* unitary lax Is iu i |h &gt;scD on Imclgu
earnings ol a corporation located in a state,
according to a formula, Instead of |ost
income on stale operations
Ol the doicii or so states that have unitary
taxes, about ball Ini hiding' California, are
considering allcrllig them
Several bills arc ladore tin* California
Legislature that would modlly or re|M-uI the
lax. tail none Is anywhere near passage.
Business delegation* (m m Japan, Great
Itiitam and West Germany have complained
the ("alliumIn lax deters Investment bv their
companies wauling to do hush less there.
Flo rida was the only stale In the

lie, a *hurp policymaker who
Bengali grew lo like, a former
Bepohlleioi Parly chairman who
even Democrat* admired lor hi*
|Hillilcal skill, and a conciliator
with organized latNir. which did
not always approve of Ills Beetrade |K&gt;llc|es that might have
cost some American Jobs.
Brock bad been chief n s
Ira d r negotiator since the
iK glnnlngol Bengali's llrst term.
A smooth talking Washington
Insider. Brock confessed he
didn't even know the Labor
Department's budget — it is
expected to spend $23.5 billion
tills fiscal year — much less any
ol the substantive Issues facing
him. Bill he promised bln llrst
priority would In* lo Increase
employment, particularly among
black youth.
Brisk was not always so much
a Blend of Inlxir. He Bud ail
cxltrm rly conservative voting
record during 14 years us a
congressman and senator —
oner getting a zero rating from
the AFL CIO on labor issues.
Yet in comparison lo the
relatively unknown Donovan, a
toug h -ta lkin g partisan who

W illiam Brock
ALL C IO eliiel lame Klrkluml
dismissed as "S icit iary Who?"
Hum k Is coming Into office as a
while knight
KBkl.iiul said u| Block. "We
have worked with him in many
ureas over the years While we
have not always agreed, lie bus
earned our rc*|K*ct We look
forward to a new and con­
structive relationship with the
Lai mr Department."

By B rad Sm ith
ASPEN. Colo fUPI) - The
median value ol a home in till*
m en u (or th&lt;- rich and l.minus l*
tlu* highest In the country, ut
$200,000 plus, and homes on
tilt* mountains overlooking the
old mining town ( tin easily sell
(or more Ilian 95 million
Go shopping at the corner
grocery and you'll hump Into
ladles In loll length sable coats
with diamond and gold Jewelry
dangling from their upprndages
The police drive Snubs with ski
racks ami race In International
competition. A quick trip down
the slopes ol Ajax Mountain
could bring you face-lo-facr with
King Juan Curios ol Spain or
Bariira Streisand.
It'* a story so oltrn heard:
Aspen Is the place to see and lie
seen. Everyone is rich. The lublr
Is lopped with the adage that
Aspen is loll ol snow and grass
Snow as lo cocaine. Grass as In

Over at St. Mary's Catholic
Church the real poor of A s|m- ii
sleep on (he (loor at night. In a
trailer court on the outskirts ol
to w n , fam ilies w ith yo u n g
children lr&gt;* lo gel hy In a
one-bedroom trailer. Three or
lour or five people work two or
three Jobs each and share u
two-bedroom home In town
Some of the elderly depend on
the com m unity center for a
nutritious meal.
"People sometimes gel the
Idea lhal the streets ol Aspen are
lined with gold." says Father
T o m B rudtkr, pastor of Si
Mary's for the past four years.
Hrndtkc opens the doors, and
Hour*, ol his 93-year-old church
to the homeless.iml needy.
"I don't know why they come
here without any money, but
people do end up here without
any money and show up on the
doorstep because the church Is
rlghl on Mam Street." he says.
A hall dozen people, most ol
marijuana.
But the linage Isn't true for them between Jobs ami some­
everyone It Isn't easy getting by times just (sisslng through, sleep
to a place like Ax|x-ii If you on Brudlke's floor oil an uvrruge
aren't one of the rich people night H r gets thrni up In the
People earning 925.1XK) a year morning, perhaps feeds them a
are considered poor just by breakfast of eggs donated by the
eomjiartvm
Bmedlellne monks at nearby

Snow mass, and then sends them
on their way Ho|&gt;rBilly. to Hml a
job
One ol Ills guests on a recent
night was a 25-year-old "ski
hum" with tired eyes, Brian
Borg Originally Bum Detroit.
Ilorg rattle to Aspen two years
ago to skt. Since then. Borg has
worked at a multitude of Jobs,
lived In a multitude of plurrs
and lost most of his material
possessions.
At St Mary’s. Borg sleeps on a
(hid lie losses on the floor of a
closet-sized room He pays for
the warm, dry place by doing
odd (ohs for Father Brad Ike.
"A one-bedroom apartment
ben* costs $700 u month." Borg
says. "You've got to have at least
two people (laying the rent,
maybe four. Usually I have two
jobs lo do It.”
Borg, who walls tables at night
so he ran ski during the day.
w ants to stay at Si Mary’s until
the ski season is over Then he
ta lk s u b o u t r e t u r n in g to
Michigan lo resume his college
studies.
Often" one of the fringe
tK-nrllisol working In Aspen is a
Bee season ski lift puss.

Fad Knows No Age Limit

SCHOOL MENU
SC H O O L MENU
Monday
March 25
Entrae
Hamhutger
l ater l ots
Tossed Salad
Milk
Express
Hamburger
Cheeseburger
Tuter Tula
Fruit
Julcr
Milk
Secondary: Fruit
Tuaaday
M arch 26
Entree
Chlx 1‘atlle
Wblp|H-d rotators
Green l‘ru »
Fruit Juice
Milk
Empress
Chlx Pattle
Dell Huh

Southeast with tin* lax Business lobbyists
charged multinational companies would
him kball Florida until the levy. Which was
lo clfect lor only one year lo raise money for
education, was ell initialed
Shcbrl said In an Interview that It won’t
be oreessary for Florida lo do much tillage
rebuilding. Dozens ol gray-soiled business
lobbyists were in Tallahassee the day tin*
tax was repealed
Tin* tax was perceived as being milch
more harmful In Florida than In California
because of favorable business tax rrputaIIons In iielghlKiriog Alabama and Georgia
&lt; orporuilnns can easily build plouls across
th e b o rd e r lo W a y c r o s s . G u ., or
Montgomery. Birmingham, or Mobile, Ala .
and do business in Florida, options that are
llmlled in California
Bob Glover, vice president of economic
development lor the Georgia Business
Council, said the Florida tax was repealed so
quickly I tint Georgia, as a competitor, did
not have time lobciuTlt.
He conceded Florida may have an edge
among tin* Sun licit states In the tourist and
retirement trades, hot said the Carolina* arc
an equally strong lore lor business.
One company that responded quickly to
the tax repeal was International Business

Machine*, whose Entry Systems Division —
which manufactures IBM s personal com­
puter line — is headquartered In Boca
Itaton. Blaming tin* tax. IBM in IBM put
2.(XX) acres In Alachua County near the
University of Florida up for sale ami
scrap|tcd previously announced plans lor a
major expansion in the Boca Baton area.
Within weeks o( tin* repeal. IBM look lls
land oil the market and announced tl would
add to two buildings to Boca. No plans have
been announced lor the laud
Stale olllelals said Japanese interest in
Florida also seems to have leaped since
withdrawal ol the lax
A Florlda-Japuil executives meeting Fell.
17 In Jacksonville drew U10 people. Ille lu d in g almost the e ntire Japanese
(Tiam bcr ol Commerce In New York, said
lo m Curtis of the state Commerce De­
partment
Japan Airlines wants to expand Its cargo
Bright lines In Florida, a move that would
pave a distribution network lor Japanese
manufacturer*. Curtis said JD C Co., of
I okvo. broke ground In February tor Its llrst
major development project In the United
States - a 27 story oilier building In Miami
Sony MCI. which changed its name March
I to Sony Professional Products, In Fort
Lauderdale also lauded tin* repeal, although
it has not announced any new Jobs. Sony
Corp of America spokesman Tom Suglyuma In New York said "our eommllniciu
has been reinforced tiy the repeal,"

Aspen Is A Tough Place
For The Poor To Live

B ro ck Exp e cte d
To Boost Sag g ing
Lab o r D e p a rtm e n t
fly Ira K. Allen
W A SH IN G TO N (Ill'll - The
itjipulnltnrnt ol trade negotiator
William B risk as labor secretary
will give new llle lo a demoral
lied department Inn also will
present him with a few head
itches as soon us he Is confirmed
for Hie Job. according to gov­
ernment olllelals assessing the
change In command.
Brock. 54. was President
Itragan's surprise choice lust
week lo succeed Kuym nm l
Donovan, who quit March 15
alter a judge refused lo dismiss
(rand and lareency charges
against him stemming from an
9H million New* Yntk suhwuy
contract awarded to Ills New
Jersey construction company
Since Donovan's indictment
List hill, some lalKtr lender* have
referred in the Inibor Depart­
ment a* a "ghost town" because
It lacked direction and purpose
Mall members have complained
the department was virtually
paralyzed with a large number ul
unlllled |M&gt;sitlons and a morale
problem throughout the ranks
After 22 year* In Washington,
Block seemed everybody's lavor-

'W h o n w o had u n ita ry they just
put a big rod X on F lo rid a .’

Taler Tot*
Frull
Juice
Milk
Wednesday
March 27
Manager's Special
Th u rs d a y
March 28
Entree
P in a
Vegetable Blend
Frull
Milk
Expraas
I T it s
Hamburger
I lot dog
Taler Tols
Frull
Juice
Milk
Secondary: Corn
F rid a y
March 20
Stall Development Day

Ja p a n e se R e ve l In Com ic Books
By Todd R. Eastham
T O K Y O (Urn — What do workers In the
world's most notoriously workaholic nation
like to do m their *|»ure Bine? Read comic
books.
The lad has no age limit Teenagers arc
big Ians, hut any night ol Die week one can
see "salarymen" in business soils and prim
"office ladles" devouring serialized tomes
like "Big Comic" and "Be to Love" as they
ride the subway or train home from work In
Tokyo and other cities.
Industry estimates indicate (bat close to
1.2 billion, or 10 comic tmoks for every
Japanese man. woman and child, were sold
last year In Du* Island nation. Annuul sales
ol "manga" — Du- Japanese word i&lt;&gt;r
comics — have sur|Ms*rd a billion copies lor
several years
Incredibly, there Is even u Buddhist
trio (ile d e vo te d to c o in le a r t . the

"Mungadrra" (comic trm plrl In Kawasaki, a United States and Europe.
“ There's u lot of trash In there. but also a
suburbofTokyo
Founded some 600 years ago us Joraku-jl lot of genius." said Schodt, the author of u
(Temple ol Endtess Fun). II now houses a book on JafKinrse comics. "I think Diey
collection of contemporary and !90» Centu­ approach literature at their best.
"M a n y of the stories depict human
ry drawings and paintings put together by u
monk w ith a healthy respect for the spiritual experience in u way that is just as
mcunlngful and valuable as films or books."
[tower of laughter.
"Laughter Is a gilt of the Buddha." Shuyu
Th e "trash" Schodt referred too Is not
Tokl told a recent visitor. "If you can'l laugh on ly mindless pablum for adolescents
ut your own folly and that of others you are seeking escape from the pressures of school.
not truly human."
A number of comics substitute lurid vio­
Ills collection Includes original works by lence and graphic smut for a storyline. The
some of Die most popular comic book worst combine the two In sadistic comic
artists, us well as caricatures ami comic pornography
purablcs illustrating religious themes.
" T h e trend toward violence Is very
Frederick Schodt. un American who has
made a study of Japan's comics, describes lamentable and artists and publishers
Diem us "u microcosm of Japanese popular should take steps to control tl before outside
culture" and coitqiares the thriving comics slept, are taken." said Osamu Tc/uka. one of
Industry to the rock music business In the Japan's foremost comic urttsts

�e d s U s e P u b lic ity In D r u g F ig h t
If

Y o u 'r e

C a u g h t

S m u g g lin g

W ASH IN G TO N (UPI) - The Customs
•rvlres has a new warning for people who
muggle small amounts of drugs Into the
Jnltrd States for personal use: If you are
•aught, your name will be publicized
Customs officials said the announcement
Thursday was unrelated to an exhortation a
lay earlier by Attorney General Edwin
leesc that occasional users of drugs ” are
supporting those who deal In terror, torture
and death.“
An ofTIclal of the National Organization for
Marijuana Laws said Thursday Meesc's
declaration and the new stance by the
jCustoms Service are signs of desperation
prompted by Increasing drug Importation.
Customs Commissioner W illiam Von
Raab said In a statement that those caught
smuggling small amounts of Illegal drugs
have not always been arrested and pro­
secuted In the past.
• Some people who sm uggle sm all

L o a d e d

In

T h e

D ru g s ,

Y o u r

N e ig h b o r

amounts of drugs have been previously
allowed to walk away with Just a fine and no
one would ever know about It." Von Raab
said. "Now these people will not only pay
the fine but they will also have the word of
their crime made available to the press."
Customs spokesman Dennis Murphy said
personal-use amounts could range from I
ounce to 6 ounces of marijuana and about a
half gram of cocaine "depending on case
loads" of courts In the areas where the
drugs are discovered. He said the fine for
smuggling an ounce of marijuana Into the
United States Isabout $75.
Beginning later this month. Customs will
make available weekly each Individual's
name, address, occupation and the type and
quantity of drugs being smuggled.
Murphy said newspapers were already
requesting the Information.
Kevin Zeese. national director of NORML.
said the new policy Is "one more piece of

W ill

evidence that law enforcement Is getting
desperate."
"Th e biggest assistance to marijuana and
cocaine smugglers Is Illegality.” Zeese said.
Prohibition caused the same kind of violent
underworld crime that is now seen with
drugs and the solution Is to decriminalize
marijuana, he said.
In a speech Wednesday to the Washington
Press Club, the attorney general called drug
use part of a "seamless cloth that covers the
underworld."
"People have to learn there Is no such
thing as a harmless recreational drug, but It
Is a part of this greater evil we are fighting."
he said.
The entire list of names will be made
available each week by the Customs Service
office In Washington, and a partial list by
each Customs rrglonal olTlce In Los Angeles.
Houston. New Orleans. Miami. New York.
Huston and Chicago.

Board Seeks To Throttle Drunken Engineers
said.
He said the safety panel, which
has only an advisory and In­
vestigative role, recommended
more than 10 years ago such
regulations be adopted, similar
to those required for airline
pilots. Hut. he said, the Federal
Railroad Adm inistration has
Ix-cri stalling on the Issue.
"And while we wult. the fact Is
that railroad accidents Involving
drugs or alcohol have con­
tinued." he said.
Hurnett said at u board hear­
ing Thursday the railroad ad­
ministration should hand down
"Immediately a xjx-cllic regula­
tion with appropriate penalties
prohibiting the use of alcohol

and drugs by employees for a
specified period before reporting
for duly and while on duty."
The hearing was called to
Investigate two separate acci­
d e n ts on th e B u r lin g t o n
Northern Railroad In April 1984.
The first. In Wiggins. Colo.,
killed five crew mrmt&gt;ers and
Injured two others The second,
near Newcastle. Wyo . killed two
crew m em bers and In two
others.
The board concluded T h u rs ­
day the prohahlr cause of the
Wiggins accident was that the
cnglnecr and other locomotive
crew members fell asleep and
missed the signal lights The
board said the men had t&gt;ceu

and southern Pennsylvania.
Heavy snow and gusty winds set
off avalanches In the Loveland
Pass area of Colorado und In the
northeastern part of the state
w in d s peaked at 59 m p h .
Warnings also were Issued to
cattlemen In South Dakota for
falling temperatures and rain
changing to snow. Travelers'
advisories for snow und blowing
sn o w were Issued for the
Cascade and Olympic mountutn
ranges of Washington and gale
f o r c e w i n d s l a s h e d th e
Washington coast. While tem­
peratures were chilly across
northern New England, with
highs predicted In the 30s.
moderate temperatures In the
60s and 70s were expected from
the southern A tlan tic coast
across thr lower Mississippi

valley. Southern Florida con­
tin u e d to enjoy 8 0 -d e g re e
weather
A R E A F O R E C A S T : Saturday
night lair with little trmjH-r.itiur
changc. Lows ntld to upper 50s
Lig ht w in d . Sunday p a rtly
cloudy with 20 percent chance of
showers. High mid to upj&gt;cr 70s
Wind becoming northwest IO to
15 mph by ufternoon.
B O A T IN G F O R E C A S T : St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — Southwest wind to to
15 knots Saturday night and
west 15 knots Sunday. Sea 2 to 3
feel Increasing on S u n d a y.
Partly cloudy. A few showers
Sunday.
EX TE N D E D FO R ECA ST:
Chance of showers Monday,
otherwise mostly fair through
Wednesday. Lows In the 50*

drinking
In the Newcastle accident, the
tmard also found the crew was
asleep or In the case of the
engineer. Impaired by the use ol
marijuana.
"Among the reasons dial lilttwo accidents are tn-lng consid­
ered al the same time Is that I he
Investigations lound one ol the
common Issues was the use ol
alcohol and illicit drugs hv train
crew members." Hurnett said
A s p o k e s w o m a n lor the
rallrisid administration said tin
agency Is w orking on linal
alcohol and drug rules that
should tic handl'd down In the
nearluture.

WEATHER
N A T IO N A L R E P O R T : Spring
snow and cold rain dampened
spirits from the northern Plains
to the Missouri Valley, and
b lu s t e r y w in d s t r ig g e re d
avalanches In Colorado, hinder­
ing searchers of a missing plane.
T it u n d e r s t o r m s d r e n c h e d
s o u t h e r n O k I a h o nt a a n d
northern Texas early today,
producing goHbaR-stcr hall along
O k la h o m a 's s o u th w e s te rn
(•order. A tornado touched down
at Dcvol. Okla., overnight, but
no damage was reported. Three
small tornadoes were spotted
Friday Just south of Hollis. Okla.
Rain showers, mixed with snow
In northern areas, stretched
from the Rocky mountains to the
Atlantic coast. Slrct and freezing
rain advisories were posted over
the higher elevations of cenlrul

...Topper
Continued from page 1A
Knowles Is scheduled to retire
on April 30 after working for the
city for 32 years. 31 of those
years us city manager.
Cleveland said the award wus
In recognition of Knowles' out­
standing leadership und distin­
guished service to the communl-

«y-

Sunday. M arch 14. 1H5—7A

K n o w

L o c o m o tiv e

W ASHINGTON (UPI) - A top
ledrral safely official says two
freight train accidents that killed
•even people last vc.ir might
have been prevented If the
government hail rules banning
alcohol and drug use by railroad
i rews.
dim Hurnetl. National Transportatlon Safety Hoard chief,
said It Is "truly Incredible" there
is no "federal regulation that
prohibits a locomotive engineer
from operating a passenger or
Irclghl train after using Illegal
drugs or alcohol to excess."
"In fact, as far as federal rules
are concerned, that engineer can
consume a bottle of whiskey
while al the controls." Hurnrtt

Evening Herald Sanford. FI.

Fond Farewell
Sanford City M anager W a rren “ Pete" Knowles says goodbye
fo Doris Harrison after her last Planning and Zoning
Commission meeting Thu rsd a y. Ms Harrison has been clerk
of the commission since June. Before that she worked In the
c it y ’s building department tor 11 years. She will be leaving
Santord to manage an apartment complex in Daytona Beach.
Clift Miller, acting cha irm a n of the commission said Ms.
Harrison will be "sorely missed."

COUPON

*10 OFF
E X P IR E S J U N E 30. 1905

To N e w C u s to m e rs F o r O n e O r A ll O f O u r
S e r v ic e s • IN D O O R P E S T C O N T R O L
• LAW N SPRAY
• T E R M IT E C O N T R O L

B&amp;R PEST CONTROL
123 W. Wilbur Ave . take Mary

322 0730

Free Extimate

BEAT-UP BODIES MADE BEAUTIFUL

When Knowles reached the board of directors, addressed
podium. Cleveland told him, Moores
"You led the city with dignity.
"You received this award the
old-fashioned way. You earned You represented us In a good
way. You threw In a lot of good
It."
com m on sense In your de­
K n o w le s said the aw a rd
caught him by surprise and that cisions."
he considered It nn extreme
Moore told the more than 350
honor. "I humbly appreciate It." persons at the annual banquet
fir said "Some of us Just helped that It was a great honor being
muyor of a small community
guide the ship."
Howard Hodges, out-going and u humbling exj&gt;erlrnre.
"T h e most Important thing
chairm an of the cham ber s
was getting lo know und having
the privilege of serving with
those |&gt;eople who make you look
like a good or a bad mayor." he
said.
Hodges presented Knowles.
Moore und their wives with
year-long pusses to EP C O T and
Disney World.
P rio r to C le v e la n d 's a n ­
nouncement of the '85 Topper

“W E SAVED ‘43,000 THIS YEAR.
AND NEXT YEAR
W E ’LL DO EVEN BETTERI*

Highs averaging near 75.
A R E A R E A D IN G S (9 a m ):
temperature: 64: overnight low
53: Friday's high 82: h.ootnelrlc
pressure: 30.00. relative humidi­
ty: 84 percent: winds: northwest
at 8 mph: sunrise: 0 20-ji.m .
sunset 6:38 p.m.
S U N D A Y T ID E S : Daytons
Beach: highs. 9:49 a in . 10.02
p.m.: lows. 3:29 u.m.. 3:31 p.m.:
Port C a na ve ra l: highs. 9:41
u.m.. 9:54 p.m .: lows. 3:20 u.m..
3:22 p.m.: B ayportt high*. 2:311
u.m.. 2:12 p.m.: tows. 8 29 n nv.
9:41 p.m.
M O N D A Y T ID E S : Daytona
B e a c h ! highs. 10:21 u lit.. 10:36
p.m.: lows. 4:03 u.m.. 4:03 p.m.:
Port Canaveral: highs. 10 13
u.m . 10 28 p.m .: iows. 3:54
u.m.. 3:54 p.m . B ayport: highs.
3:15 u lit.. 2:31 p in.

winner, he Invited to the front of
the civic center others In the
uudlencr who had tN-en similarly
honored In years past.
Persons who have won the
award over the years In addition
to Cleveland are: Moore. Waller
Glelow. W. Gurnelt White. Robeit Daehn. W. Scott Burns. John
Y. M ercer. G e o rg e T o u h y .
Thomas McDonald. Ned and
Martha Yancey and Dr. Karl S
Weldon. Three others, now de­
ceased. Include Krldcr. past
chumbcr manager for whom the
award Is named. Harold H.
Kasiner and Dr George Stark

STOP IN AND
SEE “ THE
GENERAL’S”
64 IMPALA
Station Wagon

1

RICHASD HOLLANDS WITH VAN
AtlTO AtD FOA CHAALK JACKSON

It's nams la T L C Custom Body Shop and Oaiaga and **TLC" la what owner
Richard Holland a and hla alatt Qi»# to vahlclas that corn* Into tha ahop.
Richard lovai cart. Ha's worked for IS yaar* In painting, body wort and
machanical rapalra and he's not afraid to taka on lough Job*.
"W a apaciati/a In ruat work and fabricating our own parts." ha said.
Tha shop, locatsd al M i l k 8. Orlando A»a.. Sanford, la buty with work
programing on aavarsl Cara at tha tarns lima
And what cart thay ars vintage Mustangs, O TO a, #5 Falcon convertible*
and a 19/# Eldorado. Som# ol thorn hays boon towad In aa amply hulks, but
thay will leave aa baautlfully raatorad cere
Richard alao has a unlqua call back systsm. Ha wants cualomara to bring
thalr vahlclas In ovary ala months for a chock up. If problems arts* or malarial*
don't hold up aa they should, ha'll make thing* right.
Thai * all part of tha high quality aarvlc* Holland* delivers. "N o Job la to
big or loo small," ho tald.
TL C I* equipped lo handle machanical rapalra aa wall.
Richard would b* glad lo discus* any automobile problem* you may have
by appointment only. Fra# written estimate* ate mad* on all work lo b* par
lormad at TLC.
So com* In and sa* whal TLC can do lor your car or call Richard al 3210149

“...from E’stoA’sin
just two report cards!

CALL T O L L rilC E
I-M S M l IU I

TRANSM
ISSION
That’s results you can see!”
-Joseph &amp; Ruby Gaidry &amp; Joo □
FL

OF THE MONTH

■

12 MONTH OR
12,000 MILE
WARRANTY

Your child can do better In school.
Call today for your free consultation.

869-6868

A n , QM-350
Standard Transmission
From 1978 to 1978
"\\l* did what FPL suggested: we implemented some
sophisticated energy saving techniques and put into prac­
tice some common sense ideas. \Vb intend to keep our
energy program going. And keep saving."
feu can save toa Start now by calling for a Commercial/
Industrial Energy Survey 1 -8 0 0 -4 3 2 -6 5 6 3 .

SB8SL

2484 West Hgh«ay 434
longrvood FtomU 327/9

II You Are Having Transmission Trouble —
Let Us Check It. A Stitch In Time Saves Nine.

KEN KERN TRANSMISSION
323-3040

"We wore totally frustrated The Tutoring Center was our last
resort - and whal a diflorertco' They're certified, professional
educators who set-up a learning program specially designed to
be lun while toachmg Joe basod on iho way ho learns And
they look a porsonal interest and built up his sell image Now,
he actually likos school! Sure, we were skeptical al first, but
Joe s report cards are prool we can soe Wo wholeheartedly
recommend T he Tutoring Center to our friends!"

500 Uural Ave., Sanford

FREE TOWING WITH MAJOR )0tS

671-3343

b V %UnwwMy b*vd
Wm*« Pam Fiona* 32/92

THE TUTORING
CENTER
' O r c itiU c U n K 7s4f 'D u iC j*

*M &gt;

�I A —Evening H srs td , Sanford. FI.

In the Orange County schools
tills year, n total of 121 of the
district's 2.500 teachers, or 2.2
pcrrctil, arc Instructing out-of-

fleld. In Volusia County, the oul-of-ficld teachers, but she said
number of teachers working the requirem ents are more
outside their field of certification rigidly enforced for vocational
this year lo 75. or 3.4 percent of and exceptional education In­
structors.
the district 's 2.400 teachers.
Seminole. In Ju ly 1982. Im­
Even though Seminole County
has a grraler number of out-of- plemented a three-year rule,
fleld teachers than either Volusia prohibiting the district's In ­
or O ra n g e c o u n tie s . M rs. structors from teaching out of
Netswendcr said other county field for more than three years
school districts In Ihc state, such without school board approval.
ns Hillsborough and Duval, are Mrs Netswendcr said that re­
having trouble Just finding duces the number of out-of-field
teachers.
teachers,
Hut the numbers have still
The stale and the Seminole
C o u n ty school board have gone up. In Ihc 1982-83 school
a d o p te d r e g u la t io n s th a t year. 81 of the county's 2.268
supervise Ihr use of teachers teachers, or 3.6 percent, were
working outside lheir field of out-of-fleld. In 1983-84. It was 4
percent. And. there Is the .1
expertise.
"Out-of-fleld teachers are re­ Jump predicted for 1985-86.
T h e task of f in d in g out
quired to lake a minimum of six
semester hours of courses" each w h e th e r a teacher w ill be
year that will help them become classified as nul-of field Is a Job
certified In the area that they unto Itself. Mrs. Nelswender
teach Mr* Netswendcr said. The said Workers In the district's
state requirements cover all personnel department must go

ih c w o rk s for O c to b e r at
Heathrow In Lake Mary. Th e
Roal Is to raise 8KXJ.OOO from
thatcvcnl
The money will Ro to cover
co n s tru ctio n cost, costs of
furulshlnR the homes and to
fund the first three months of
o|M*radriR the two homes. Sun
Hank ha* also hacked the project
with a (.Imitation ol $10.(XX) and
a pled Re of $l5.fKX* more, she
said
Hut Davis said lots for the
homes must lie found and the
group would welcome the dona­
tion of suitable residential sites
fur the larRe homes, which will
have five or six lied moms. The
Rroup has lo meet a stale
timetable to complete the homes
In order lo ipiallfv for stale
hinds, he said.
O n c e th e h o m e * a r e
established. Florida will pick up
the approximate 850 per-day.
per-cldld operadtiR cost, M*
Gross said
" T h e concept Is these arc

pretty normal kid* from pretty
abnormal environments, so If we
can provide a relative normal
environment for them we're goluR to reduce the number of
m hool failures and we're Rolng
to rrdurr the further systcmlzalion of the children." she said.
The hope Is Ihey will "become
re g u la r k id s In a reR ular
neiRhorhood. maybe rldltiR ihclr
bikes lo school," Ms. Gross slid.
Th e waters haven't been
tested to determine If the Rroup
will he welcomed Into any
specific nelRhborhood. "T h a i
brldRe hasn't been crossed yet."
Davis said. "Hut they should he
In a residential settlnR."
"The most Important thlnR Is
» t want the ktds lo t&gt;r wanted In
the nrlRldiorhood.'’ Ms. Gross
said "Wr don’t want them lo
have to face resistance. These
kids don't belmiR anywhere and
IF* real 'important dial they
belmiR In a ticiRhborhood. I 1s t
ihcy’rc more supervised than
the a v e r a g e k i d . "
The

...Teach

Sunday, March 11. IMS

Continued from page 1A

FLO R ID A

of business
education
Is
teaching social studies. At
Ovldro High School, a teacher
certified In music is Inslructlng
students In an agriculture class
and an Instuctor who majored In
English and specific learning
disabilities Is an art teacher.

IN BRIEF
Bombing Suspects To Remain
In Jail Until April Trial

Mrs. Nclsivendcr said most ol
the out-of-fleld educators have
minor* In Ihc areas ihey leach or
arc very close lo gelling certified
in that subject matter
Nevertheless, the slate re­
quires a report of teachers
working oulslde of Ihclr urea of
certification, she said.

PENSACOLA (UPl) — Tw o religious youths accused of
last year's bombing of four abortion clinic* were told by a
federal Judge that he was “ not convinced" they had
become less dangerous and must remain behind bars until
their April 15 trial.
U.8. District Judge Itoger Vinson, after hearing testimo­
ny from Ihree witnesses at an hour-long hearing Friday,
said he understood the "humanitarian
grounds for
releasing Matthew Goldsby and Jam es Simmons, hut said
the defense failed to show It would be safe lo release (hem

...Teens
C o n tin u e d f ro m page t A
care ol all the problem;). There
are to many of them and the
average person doesn't see It."
Davis nald. "It I ears you apart lo
we some of these kids. They Jusl
.don't have a chance In life, Ihey
really don’t.
"This Is something better Hum
what we've Rot. It's no) the total
answer, but If we find a place for
six children. It may work, il may
not. Hul at leasl this Is an
omtortunlty lo Rive one or Iwo a
chance." he said,
Ms. Gross said there are no
local foster homes available lor
IrenaRers.
"We don't have appropriate
places for them. W r siruRRlcJusi
to find a bed. It's not that wc
have a choice of what would be
approprlale lor dial child, bill
where do we have a bed where
we ran put dial child. When II
doesn’t work, some times the
children run away and can be
found In contempt of court." she
said.

place lo grow up.
"W h e n kids get Into the
system we sirlp them of dietr
I d e n t it ie s . T h e y h a v e no
possessions." Ms Gross said
" T h e y ’re removed from their
family, Wc pul diem Into some­
one rise's home and that's not
Ihclr home.
"Foster families arc wonderful,
hul lor teenagers It's more dlfU n til for Ihcm to adapt lo
someone rise's home and we
Jusl don’t have foster parents
who want dial responsibility,"
she said.
The flrsl iw o t’H A R LK F homes
In Ihc area, with a star) up cost
ol $80. (XX) each, have si rung
backing from ihc Winter Parkbased Home flullders Axsorkilon
of Mid-Florida, Individual builders have pledged $-10.(XX* (nr the
projects and will build dir lirsi
Iwo houses til coat, making each
a weekend project, Ms Gross
said.
The home builders also have a
luudralslng golf tournament in

AREA DEATHS
H O S K IN S JO N EB

MW* Hoskins June*. fK* ot
1700 Monroe Avc.. Maitland,
died Krlduy at Winter I’ark
Memorial Hospital Horn Kept
II, IHfi-l In Ohio. slit- moved in
Sanford In 1930 (mm Olilo. She
was a retired aerrelary and n
I’rrabylrrlan.
Ilrlssnn Guardlun Funeral
Htmie. .Sunford. I* In charge of
arrangements.
F R E D E R IC K J , R EEK

Finally, the dtstrlct must check
the Florida Course Codes Dlrcclory to find out what ccrtlflcatlons are required by the state
fora teacher In each class.
Once Ihe teachers’ personnel
files are put in a computer, she
said. It w ill save her department
a great deal of work and tht
department should lx- able to
make Its out-of-fleld teacher re­
port to the school board In the
fall Instead of the spring.
Mrs. Netswendcr said children
are better off having an out-offleld learher than no teacher at
all. Seminole's out-of-fleld teach­
ers "are the most qualified wc

The goal Is to create a lov­
ing-hom ey atmosphere. Ms.
Gross said, hut Davis said. 'T i l
tell you. somr of these kids are
hard to love You see some of
them, they're so obnoxious. Hut
Ihey need someone Young |&gt;eopte give up.
"Something has lo lx- done by
thr community. The citizens
can't dose their eyes and ignore
It. It's not fair lo these children.
"We have an obligation to
these children to save as many
as wc possibly can. This pro­
gram appears to be a step In the
right direction. This will glv(&gt;
some the type of environment
where they can hopefully grow
Into useful citizens.
"It's a small step and an
expensive proposition, bill you
know It's expensive to pul proplr In prison, loo. and to keep
them on welfare. Tills program
Is Jusl going to touch a small
number of people."
" W r really aren't doing as
much as wc should." he added

NO BATTERIES TO BUY
NO VOLUME CONTROL TO ADJUST
F R E E electronic heaing tests will be

given March 24 Thru April 15, 1985,
9:00 A.M. To 5:00 P.M.
|0H OH!
H E A R IN G A ID
iB R T T E R y J U S T
U )E N T D E R D .

lHOLU DO you

HEAR (JUITH
i t 9/ b e p u t if u l '^
IT IS MUCH
"QUIETER THHN

B R T T E R 9 f a r e you s t il l
\ USING BATTERIES IN U0UR AID?
] / ~ ~ ] f S U R E - H N D I'M H L lD h y S "
~ M y Y 1 R U N N IN G O U T .

^M yO LD STyLEf

I H E A R IN G AID^

BHTTERU
MODEL.

IS THE NE(JUj
ELEC TO N E

RECHARGEABLE^
|flND I DON'T HftVETO1
.CHANGE BUTTERIES.,

A L E X J . H A JD A 8 Z

Mr. Alex J . Hujdusz. 37, 025
Diane Circle, CaHelberry, died
Thursday at Florida Hospital
Allumuntc. Horn April 23, 1027
In Ulleu, N.Y., he moved lo
C a a a c l b c r r y from F o r t
huuderdale In 11*83 He was a
disabled veteran and a Catholic.
Survivors Include two non*.
Alex Jr. und David, both of
Casselberry; four daughters.
Dawn Ftlgrruld. S haion. Murle.
and Kimberly, all of Casxrlherry:
four brothers. Steve, Jo e .
Ilrownlc. ull of Utica. N Y . Stan.
CaMhuge, N.Y.: •later, Olga
lllu/ek. l.ax Vegas, Ncv.
Garden Chapel Home for
Funcruls. Orluudo. lx In charge
nfurtungcmriil*.

&lt;

Hearing
Made Easy

A lot of Icenn don't want lo be
adopted. The y Just waul a secure

Mr. Frederick J. Reek, 40. of
338 Dog Trm k Road. Longwood,
died Tuesday at South Seminole
C &lt;•m m u n l t y 11 o * p 1 1 a i .
laingwood. I torn Fell. 13. 1030
III Rhode Inland, hr moved lo
lamgwood from Maine In 1042.
I Ir wan a mailer plumber.
Survivors Include hi* wile.
Patricia; two daughters. Melanie
FI aIK uml Sherry Driscoll. ImiII i of
Orlando; two stepson*. Steven F.
Ilrady. Utica, N.Y.. and Michael
A. Ilrady, Font Hampton. Conn.;
two strpdnughcin. Ilarhara Ann
Ilrady. Winter Park, and Lynn J.
Ilrady. Rome, N.Y.: brother.
George W „ Luke Mary.
t'nx-Purkrr Guardian Funeral
Home. Winter Park. I* In chargr
nl arrangements,

youngsters, a mix ol six boys
and girls, ages 12 lo 18. will live
In each house with carefully
selected and trained house
parents, she added.
"Th e first year will be rough as
Ihey stabilize," she said, but the
hope Is that the youngsters will
come to feel that the home Is
truly Ihclr home.
" T h is Is so simple and II
makes so much sense," she said.
T h e youngsters w ill also
benefit from the services of a
full-time education counselor
who will oversee their school
work and will act as a link
between the teens and the
school system to help Insure
ihey get the most out of their
educational opportunities, she
said.
The youngsters will be free to
have a normal, supervised social
life. Ms. Gross said. She doesn't
e n v y the h o u » e p a r e n l s ,
especially with their duty of
dealing with the sexuality of the
Irens, she said.

though files on all of Seminole
County's 2.500 teachers b y
hand. They must then check
what teachers are certified to
teach and the classes they will
be teaching In the coming year.

MU AID SITS BEHIND My EARjUES.IT IS CUSTOf
I NOTICE yOURS IB INSIDE jr^JMrtDE TOFIT,
OF HOURS. ;7My EARANDMUL
(HERRING PR0BLIM1
(|5 IT VER9 EXPENSIVE?' "
NO! INTHE LONG RUN ) 1
IT WILL SrtVE A LOT
OF MONEH THAT yOU
ARE N01U SPENDING TO
P*Uy BATTERIES! f

This is all you wear

N o V o lu m * C o n tro l T o AO jo at

IMatM
w i tat
■k a i

tmrnm
tarn mmm&gt;»f — Wmfamm m* m$

■ON-

OAKUWN
n M U A l HOMLCUHTIRY
Ov»

m m

X I i Funwti Homs, ol ,
St

AM O M rW A M *

ja k H g ib gwr

1X247*)

s»rw s—

Flower* fu r All Occasions

(Collins
aVST.

323-1204

TO REDUCE WAITING
CALL COLLECT

904-775-4191

FOR APPOINTMENT
FOUR TO W N E S
H E A R IN G A ID C E N T E R

2435 South Volusia Avtnuo •Orange City, FI.
Whispering Pinas • 17-92 Aeroea From Dufl'a

I

�SPORTS

Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Sunday, March H. 1M3-1B

Lady Hawks'Tennis Success Is Fam ily Affair
Jo h n Nelson
H erald Sports W rite r
With less a week before the
Five Star Conference Tennis
Tournament. Ihe Lake Howell
girls' learn has yet to lose Us first
contest.
This year's record Is the girls'
opportunity for a second con­
secutive undefeated season, bul
Iasi year, the girls were upset by
Lake M ary In the d is tric t
tournament, denying them a
spot tn the state championship
Nevertheless, ihey have re­
bounded back from their dis­
appointment. and now look not
only to repeat Ihe perfect season,
but go one step further. "I don't
want to blow It." said coach
Mike Hargis.
However. It's not the record
that makes this team such an
unusual combination. It Is the
relationships between them. It's
more of a family than a team,
with a set of twins on one side,
slslers on the another, while the
other two share the number five
position.
Of the six players on the learn,
four are unbeaten this season);
seniors Calherlne Enriques,
Patricia Enriques, Junior Ederllta
Dulce and freshman Emmy-lou
Dulcc. The other two. sopho­
m ore M in d y G a rd b e rg and
freshman Bonnie Oliver, both
have winning seasons.
C a therine started p laying
lennls along with her twin.
Patricia, a year before she en­
tered high school. Since her
freshman year, when Catherine
assumed the top (xisltlon on the
team. She has played Ihcre ever
since.
II seems a girl of her build
wouldn't hit a ball hard, bul
looks arc deceiving. The slim
and tall senior bangs away at her
opponents with Incredible accu­
racy and consistency to to put
one more notch on her raquet
handle.
"Basically It's a baseline game
and Pm aggressive sometimes,"
said Calherlne.
Most of Catherine's matches
have been somewhat easy for

though she had Just picked up a
raquet five months before the
tournament.
Oliver, started tennis a lewmonths ago but still challenges
Gardberg for the position Ac­
cording to Hargis, both players
have great poirnclal and are
Improving tremendously.
Strangely, ihe doubles teams
aren't made up of the Enrtqueses
and the Dulces, but a m ix of the
sisters. The spill was decided by
Hargis to create a stronger duo.
and to stop the slbhtlng on-court
arguemeiils.

The Leading Ladies: (from
her. but one match In particular
early this season, gave her a
scare. Her arch rival since her
freshman year. Lyman's Kim
Faulkner, went the limit but lost
In Ihe lie-breaker. 5-4.
T h r o u g h o u t the y e a r s ,
Faulkner has been Ihe toughest
competition for Caihrlnc; they
have split most of their matches.
The last time Faulkner defeated
Catherine was In the finals of the
district tournament last year.
"M y position Is going to be
hard this year." said Cathrrlne.
"Everybody Is really payched for
conference. I try lo be well
prepared for It."
The contrast between Patricia
and Catherine In build. Trtsh Is
shorter and more muscular,
makes her seem lo be the better
of Ihe two. but Catherine has
held off her twin to hold her
position.

"It's not so much they were
fighting." mild Hargis. "T h ry
weren't supporting each other as
much as Ihey should."
The slslers. however, had a
different version. " T h e reason
we fight Is because were sisters."
said Catherine "T h a t's what
sisters arc supposed to do. We
get mad at each olher when we
make stupid mistakes,"
Nevertheless, the result was
Catherine and Em m y-lou com­
Her&lt;M P*mT» ky T*m m , Vincent
bination at Ihe num ber one
and Trlsh and Ederllta
left) Emmy-low Duke, Ederlio Duke, Catherine Enriquez and Patrica Enriquez. position,
in the number two spot. Both
teams are enjoying a successful
Patricia has played second to academy* In New York City. pushrs us," said Ederllta. "We season going Into the tourney.
her elght-mlnute older sister The y also gained experience were taught lo till hard, and
"If our number one doubles Is
through high school, which fronul the Dulcc family who arc when we have a chance we try to working as well as our singles."
bothered her "A t first," said all tournament players, which make a winner."
said Calherlne. "W e should do
Trlsh. "But now I'm used to have resulted In a llvlngroomThe Iwo play Ihe same style well."
playing two, l guess." For Trlsh. full of trophies.
with an u n u s u a l iwo-flsted
All the girls and Hargis are
her domination has lasted for
The older of the two Dulces by forehand and backhand, which optimistic about the tourna­
two straight undefeated yrars. one year Is Ederllta who pluyn seems to udd strength to their ments. bul they were In the
Including the conference and the third position for her second sinull frames. Combined with same situation last year. "We re
district championships last year. year. She. too. Is undefeated lor Ihe accuracy and the experience going to have to play cxrllrnl
"P e o p le th in k I'm w eird two years, winning both confer­ from tournaments in their native games and not get slouchy."
because I say I'm playing bad. ence and districts last year. New York City, they dominate said Hargis. "I feel the two
but I win." said Trtsh. "When I Ederllta hasn't had loo many this area.
favorite trams are Seabreeze und
play peoplr that are really good. challenges, ns she has tx-alrn all
"W e th o u g h ) O hm lgosh,
Lake Howell, with Lake Mary
It really helps my game."
of tie r o p p o s it io n e a s ily
Florida ." mild Emmy-lou, "But r e a d y l « luke a n y upset
The two learned their baseline throughout the high school.
II wasn't us lough as we thought
possibilities, Where they arc
banging gume from their father,
F o r the first year tea m
It would he." Edrrllla agreed placed In Ihr druw Is a big
und "Mom has been an Inspira­ member. Emmy-lou. her w in­ with her sister. "II we were (rrxh factor."
tion." said Calherlne. which Is nings haven't been as complete from New York, we would have
T h e Five Slar Conference
similar to the Dulcc sisters who as her sisters, but she has still been tougher."
seeding meeting will take place
were also trained by their father.
come out wilb an undefeated
T o com plem ent the tram . In DcLand on Monday. The
There's no difference between record. Her closest match this Gardberg und Oliver share the confrruce tournament Is sched­
the sisters Is the styles and the season ennir from Bernadette number five |x&gt;*ltlon. Gardberg uled fur next Friday and Satur­
backgrounds. The Dulces were Peters from Lake Mary
was the conference winner last day at Bed Bug Luke I’utk In
taught at some of the top tennis
Our dad Is always the one who year at the same position, even Casselberry.

Mona
Out O f 3 For MVP
By Chrla Plater
Herald Sports W rite r
W hen talking uhoul girls basketball In
Seminole County ih r past Ihrre year*, more often
than not the first name to route in mind was
Mona Uenton. The 1984-H5 season marked the
third consecutive year the standout guard lor
Sanford's Lady Seminole* has made the Evening
Herald'» All-County First Team and. for the
second time In Hirer years, she was named the
county's Player of the Year.
lie in on received I ‘20 of u possible 120 vote* In
the balloting for the All-County team which was
chosen by the six county coaches. Herald Sports
Writer Chris Flster and Sports Editor Sum Cook.
As a sophomore. Benton led the county In
scoring and was the player of the year. As a
Junior, her scoring average dropped while her
assists average went up with the emergence of
Dtctdre Hlllery us the team's leading scorer. This
season, the crafty senior led the county In scoring
and steals and ranked high In assists and
rebounds as Seminole won its third Five Star
Conference title In four years.
Her unanimous selection confirmed her stellar
all-around year. Benton, who hasn't made a
decision on where she wilt play college ball, was
selected as the Burger King Player of the Year
Wednesday, Benton said she will deride on a
school by April 1.
Joinlng Benton on the All-County First Team
are Lake Mary guard Klni Averill. Lake Mary
forward A llrrn Patterson. Lake Brantley forward
Michelle Brown and Lake Mary center Courtney
Hall. All five of the First Team selections are
seniors.
Avcrlll. a four-year starter for the Lady Bams,
led the county In assists and was one of the best
outside shooters In the area. Avcrlll was also the
top free throw shooter In the county and she
sealed many a win for the Lady Hams with her
cool shooting from the line. The senior point
guard helped Lake Mary upset Seminole for the
4A-9 District Championship. In her four years ut
Lake Mary, the Lady Barns won three district
title* and were runnersup once. She has started
every game In the school's history.
Patterson, an underrated player by many,
proved hejself as one of the top forwards In the
county time and time again this past season. Her
strong play Inside was vital to Lake Mary's quest

Joe B.
...G o n e
DENVEH (Ill'll — Saying
h r wanted to see how "other
people live without Ihe pre­
ssure." Kentucky coach Joe
II Hall resigned Friday after
Ihr Wlldrul* season-ending
loss lo SI. John’s In an NCAA
Tournament West Hrglonal
semifinal.
Midi served 13 yrats at the
Kentucky helm, compiling a
297-100 record. He su c­
ceeded I lie legendary Adolph
Itupp following the lff71-72
season.
Th e Cynllilartu. Ky. native
read a brief statement on his
post game show from Den­
ver. right alter his Wildcats
w ere e lim in a te d b y S I.
John's 86-70.
"Till* season has been a
very rewarding one In lhal
the players exceeded whal
had been rxpeclrd of them.
It's been exciting to watch
this team develop.” Hall said.
Kenlucky lost four starters.
Including NBA first-round
draft choices Melvin Turpin
and Sam Bowie, from Iasi
year's learn, bul managed lo
compile an 18-13 record,
There wus criticism over the
Wildcats making the NCAA
Tournam ent field w ith a
1 6-12 re co rd , b u t Ih e y
quickly silenced It with two
victories.
"Il's u Hide hit ironic that
Cmy retirement! huppened
here In Denver where 1 lx-gun
coaching at Hegl* College."
Hall said.
Hall played under Hupp at
Kentucky for two years be­
fore transferring to Ihr Uni­
ve rsity of the S o u th at
Sewunre, Tenn. He started
his coaching career at Shep
hrrdsvllle High School, then
moved on to Begis for five
yrars and Central Missouri
fora season.

B a s k e tb a ll
AucmnuiuimuL
C h m hM n h ««—
6 - U » » «*r«. Itu «*r,
»-*•%*•r**%n*&gt; im vwi
t ■t o n I ' m UM Sirtwt

6 l » ' l Immr Iw M
»*♦
SI

si
SI

Istui turn
G v * "i h m u u *•«*"»!

(.k M M a m a
r
w~m«
V-»i«iimwiiB*&gt;

c Irw
L w V lW ll
TM Tw
G - &gt;«r*&gt;0&gt;V**» l*MO*n

*i

a
m
•*

GL M w Lilt Samti
I - C**i T m »S ' i

C- Wi la n S a i

m m im s u b
- lim it m *m l i s t
IMt. U r*
U H * »i l'«

i w w hft **»« OiM*
Ira/*» - cmm m tmw
m mm Oi«w OmH* ISms l
/mirnm lm*m u

»•**

II

IM* - 0Vtr* SrcmW tmtm* IS &lt;

a

CmSO M S I

for the district title as was her hard work on
defense.
Brown was not the quickest or biggest forward
around, but she outshined many of her faster,
taller opponents with her never-ending desire and
hustle. If there was a loose ball, you could be sure
Brown would be In the area. For the second year
In a row. Brown was among the county leaders In
scoring, rebounding, assists and steals.
For three year* at Lakr Mary High. Hall played
In Ihe shadows of the Glass Towers, 6-2 twins
Laura and Peggy. Hall took over Ihe center spot
for Ihe Hams In 1984-85 and was one of the moat
consistent performer* In the county. Hall usually
saved her best effort* for the big game*. Including
the district tournament and the regional game,
where Lake Mary losl a hcartbrrakrr to Orlando
Evans. Hall edged out Lake Brantley's Kirsten
Dellinger by one vote |42 411for first team center.
The All-County Second Team consisted of Lake
Brantley's Sherry "Ice" Asplen and Seminole's
Andell "Soul" Smith at Ihe guards. Seminole's
Catherine "K itty " Alexander and Lyman's Kim
Forsyth at Ihe forwards and Brantley’s Dellinger
at center.
Asplsn. a junior point guard, was at her best In
Ihe pressure situations. She made the shot at the
buzzer that beat then top-ranked DcLand and
made the key free throws down thF stretch In an
upset of Seminole.
Bm C O U N T Y , Pag* 4 B

Vlllanova........................... 46
M a ryla n d ...........................43
North Carolina................. 62
A uburn............................... 56

• sm
\ »W■ :
L -

Kim ATerlll

a

N .C . Stale.......................... 61
Alabam a............................ 55
H*(*IZ SIMMSr *MM W.,boM1

T

St. John's........................... 86

J

Alleen Patterson

Courtney Hull

Michelle Brown

Mona Benton makes her patented baseline move. Seminole's
senior guard was a unanimous choice at Ihe Evening
Herald’s Most Valuable Player on this year's All County
G irls' Basketball Team .

-W!

Kentucky......................... 70
Sea Page 4B Fo r NCAA

m an

�i l —t w i l l Ht i M, Sanford, F I.

lu n d s y , M arch M , IMS

1,

|

Tm

mm

Am

|

Hawks' 10-Run 1st
Submerges 'Noles
B y Rob L a ris
Special to the Herald
It was simply one of those innings for youthful
Seminole High, when Inexperience leads to costly
mistakes, resulting In defeats. For Lake Howell. It
was an upturn In a x-aaonlong roller coaster ride.
The Sllverhawks used five flrsl-lnnlng hits, plus
four walks and an error to score 10 runs cn route
lo u 17-5 thrashing of Seminole F.-'day afternoon
at Lake Howell In Five Star Conference baseball.
Lake H o w e ll's K e vin L le n a rd was the
beneficiary of the outburst, going all the way.
Seminole's talented Jam es Mersey suffered
through a horrible outing, recording Just one out
before leaving to take the loss.
The Silver Hawks, now 9-10. hosi Mainland
Monday afternoon. Ace Jorge DelMonte will get
the start. Meanwhile. Seminole will hope to
Improve upon Its 6-11 record when it visits Lake
Brantley Monday night. Brian Sheffield will get
the starting nod against the explosive Patriots.
Both teams banged out 11 hits Friday, but It
was the opening mistake-filled frame that spelled
the difference l-ake Howell catalyst John Canfield started things off with an Infield hit. A walk
to Mark Schnltkcr put runners on first and
second for Ernest Martinez, who loaded the bases
when no one covered first base on his bunt lo
Mersey. Bed-hot cleanup hitter Ed Taubensec
promptly did Ms Job. singling home Canfield and
Schnltkcr to begin the onslaught After Scott
Munson whiffed. Terry Gammons singled lo
again load the bases. The next hitter. Vic Roberts,
then delivered a double to the right cenler field
fenre, clearing Ihe bases and making II. 5-0.
Seminole Coach Mike Ferrell replaced Mersey
wllh Torn Wilks, who wulkrd Bobby Miller and
yielded a hit to Jlm rny Daniel, scoring Roberts.
Miller scored when the relay was mlsplayrd. A
walk to Canfield und an error by Sheffield at
shortstop on a Schnltkcr grounder set the stage
for a sun aided triple to right field by Martinez,
clearing the bases for a 10-0 lead
Technically the home train because It doesn't
have a field. Seminole got a one back In the
bottom of the first and another In Ihe second on
runs scored by Larry Thomas ami Roy Jensen
but could not dig out of the hole

It w a j one of those days (or
Sanford's Fighting
Somlnoles. Everything Lake
Howell did was right and
whatever the Semlnoles tried
was wrong. Above, Ernest
M artinez dropped a bunt In
the first Inning. M artinez
reached when no one covered
first base for the Trib e . At
the right, Scott "T h u rm a n "
Munson does his best 'twostep' to avoid a wild pitch.
Munson took It on the hip and
eventually scored In a 10 run
first Inning by the Sliver
Hawks.

Lake Howell udded a run In the third on more
Seminole mlstnkrs. making It. 11*2. In the next
Inning. Seminole rarne back with two of Its own.
utilizing two hits and two errors to cut Ihe
margin. But the Silver Hawks kept the pressure
on by tallying two In the fifth to give Coach Blrto
Benjamin plenty of breathing room. "I wouldn't

— Mike Forroll
1

-■

'

say It was a good ballgame for us." he stated. ;
"The y helped us. Their pitcher (Mersey) was kind
of off. and we got some breaks. That was thq
difference.”
I
Seminole plated another In the sixth before
Lake Howell uddrd Insult to injury by scoring
four more on two long home runs by Taubensecf
and Miller. For Taubensee It was the culmlnatlor^
of a four-hit game and the continuation of aj
streak in which he's gotten a hll In 12 of Ills last!
I5nt-hata.
"I've been hitting thr hall good." said Ihd
soft spoken junior, who also handled Llenard welf
from behind Ihe plate. "The coaches helped mri
with my stance earlier Ibis year, opening It up
little more, and It's helped. I'm on a streak right)
now. and I felt good today. So did thr team. Wo
got our acts together today."

TU B E
.-ITVI***
liU lT U U
M l | * - UK* I 4, (»:«•* *CU
Slpwvl l*p&gt;t*«l IMil
fane*— « 0*w&gt;* T « t lU

IH |&lt; - UTIL ill InS* t&gt;

B a s e b a ll

•M l IMA
lr »
SMV, P li I S t o C V s *

MlwsiMiaiU

'That (calling tha gamo)
raally smalls. Tha kids
workad so hard to gat
back in tha aama only
to hava it taxon out
of thalr hands.'
—

H o w a r d M o b lo

hy Oviedo Houlhpnw siurlcr
Kevin Kewley. Louis Tom ro then
drew u walk hut he was rut
down slrnling by catcher Mark

Hofmann.
Bishop Moore run ihelr way
nut of a ihrrul again In the
second frame. Klnuldl walked tu
Iradoff but he strayed Uni fur off
first and was picked nfl by
H o f m a n n . B r ia n P e n ro s e
followrd wllh u walk hul he was
picked off first by Krwlry.
The Hornrls look udvanlagc of
u pair of Oviedo errors lo lake a
3 0 lead In (hr third. Wllh one
out. Sieve Mlrell drew a walk
and Buy Monlrro followed wllh a
hunt single. Poindexter then
lined u single to left and l«&gt;th
Mlrell and Monlrro scored when
the bull scooted underneath
Lester Cabrera's glove In right
field. Poindexter, who look third
on the play, scored when Mlkr
Pusslllu reached on an error by
third basetnun Tim Watson.
Oviedo came back with a run
In Ihe bottom of the third lo
make It 3-1. With one out. Eric
Shogren singled up Ihe middle.
Klnuldl (hen had Shogren picked
off. but was cullrd for a balk
sending Shogren to second.
Bobby Bradley followed with a
single to right lo drive In
Shogren.
Bishop Moore upped Its lead to
5-1 In thr lop of the fourth.
Penrose led off with u walk and,
wllh two outs. Mlrell drilled a
Kewley fastball over thr fence In
left center, some 370 ferl away.
The Lions bounced back with
u |uilr of runs In Ihe bottom of
Ihe fourth. Wllh one out. Tony
Belflowrr smacked u line shot
right ut the center fielder, who
misjudged It and It rolled to the
fence lor a triple. Belflowrr
scored on Jim Barrett's milch!
single. Watson blooped a single
to right to put runners on first

Kevin Llenard may be losing his hat but he
didn't lose anything else Friday. The 6 5
right hander had an easy time with a 17-5
victory over Seminole.

SCOREBOARD

Umps Pull Shades
On Oviedo's Rally

|

Thoy hov# a good hitting taam
and whan wo mad* a fow mistakes,
they relaxed. Before I knew it, I
looked up and it was 10-0. It was
a nightmare,*

"In this league you can ufford to have un Inning
like that." said Ferrell.
"It's Hie first time
anything like Ituil has happened. They have a
good hitting team and when we made a few
mistakes, they relaxed. Before I knew It, 1 looked
up and It was KM). It was a nightmare.
Everything they did was right, and everything we
did was wrong.’’

MstpM Ph»t*x fcy Tommy Vlnc»«t

B y C hris F itte r
Herald Sports W rite r
OVIEDO — Here's it nrw wuy
to kill a rally — call the Kumc.
Just when Ovlrilo'a Lions had
worked their way hack within
one run nl Hlshoji Moore's
llornele Friday, the umpire*
derided there wasn't enough
dayllftht left (or one more Inning
of play.
The Lions were deprived of
Ihelr final al hal and another
shot al already ahukrn Bishop
Moore pitcher Jeff Itlnald! us the
Hornets, an honorable mriillou
choice In the mosl recent stale
(3A1 poll, came away wllh a 7*6,
slx-Innlng victory In Orange Bell
Conference action at Oviedo
High.
"That really smells," an Irate
Oviedo coach Howard Maine said
of tile umpires' decision. "The
kids worked hard In get hack In
the game only to have II taken
out of Ihelr hands."
The Lions fell tu 4-13 overall
and I-ft In thr OIK! wllh the loss
while Bishop Moore Improved In
10 3 and 4-1.
According lo Mabl&lt;\ the umps’
reasoning for calling Hie came
was that there was not enough
daylight left to record six more
outs. Actually, the lime It look
the umps to explain It to Mahlc
would have been good enough
for two outs while Ihe time It
took the umps to walk hack lo
their rare was good enough lor
al least four more.
For Oviedo. It was a lough loss
to absorb. The Lions hud c o m e
back from u 7 3 deficit with
three runs In the bolium of the
sixth. Craig Duncan hud come
on In relief fur Oviedo and had u
lot left In hint while Rlnuldi was
no doubt tiring.
The decision lo stop the game
was even harder for Mable and
his team to swallow considering
the game was started late due lo
Bishop Moore's tardiness.
"Bishop Moore showed up latr
but Ihe umpires still allowed
them to warm up." Mable said.
"W e were supposed to start at 4
but didn't get going until 4:30,"
Some heads up play by the
Lions and poor baserunning by
the Hornets kept the game
scoreless for the first twu In­
nings. In the top of the first.
IradofT man JefT Poindexter, a
former Lake Howell High stand­
out. reached on a dropped third
strike but he was picked oil first

B a s e b a ll

ro o tu u
• pm - ties, u tn la
Auras ill
■UKlUAStOVt

I ■ »-

IW I

»»* « - K r U M W i i W i

U M S M S lia iliT S

O v ie d o 's M a r k H o fm a n n
picked two runners off first
to cut short Bishop Moore
uprisings Frida y.
mid second and Barrett scored
when thr center fielder mis­
judged Hohnunn's line drive.
Bishop Moore made It 7-3 with
two runs In thr lop of the fifth.
Poindexter led oil with u single
hul was caught striding by
Hofmann for thr first out. Tom ro
followed with u widk and Pusslllu
singled. An rrror on the pluy
sent Toinco to third und he
scored on another Oviedo error.
Passllla later scored on Penrose's
single to left.
Duncan pitched out of u jam In
Hie top of the sixth und Oviedo
came back lighting in the bot­
tom of the Inning.
Wllh one out. Barrett singled
to left, Watson drew a walk and
Holmunn singled to right to
score B urre tt und cu t the
Hornets* lead to 7-4. Shogren
followed with a single to left
center to drive In Watson, mak­
ing It 7-5.
Bradley's sacrifice bunt moved
thr runners to second and third
und Hofmann scored on Murk
Men hunt's check swing Infield
single us Oviedo cut the lead to
7-6. John Lowrtr then grounded
out to short for the third out.
T h r slxlh-lunlng rally fired up
Ihe Lions und they were ready to
do the same In Hie bottom of Ihe
seventh, but they never got the
chance.
"We made some early errors
und got behind but the kids
worked hard to get bock In the
game." Mable said. "We've got
som e g u ts y k id s . It Ju s t
shouldn't have ended this way.
I've never been screwed like that
before."
Due to a gag rule” of the
association, the umpires and
officials are not allowed to
comment on Ihelr decisions.
The Lions return to action
Saturduy uftrrnoon at I when
they host Father Lopez.

uti un
I •• - lies l***f* M l Can* a
I I I * - W ill ( , * » , ! __ __
****** I'M * * la M m DMen »•"

VanlwMI.1
tpm - ties t«M* Mm a
III
t ilM T U U
i &gt; - l i e s cm * scut

i s m *- lies cat* kuawmmu
ia
- sen* easy* sou
Iw t a M r s M ll)

i *a - *cm i cau*» sou Tans

a n n a s , f im m a . m i n i s a
n s r « * -m i a n
Illf lO a tS a
’I S IS IN
IW tlr c
IN IN
ICnwa
IN
• IM laNi fltlin M , TU I IMNM
• w t - VM.A IUI
*tMN*es»
IN IN IN
)»&gt; * * »«*
IN IN
n a iM ia w *
««
m u m s a iiii it a. t i i i i i m s
iN n w -in p S s a
IW ilH *
a s IN IN
S t* * «l* K *
IN IN
i .m n A t s
IN
• li n n s . err u s * . I i m i i m n
isa n a -V W IrM N
lanaasaua*
IN IN IN
l» * * lw *
a s IN
la n s S M
IN
• lillN W e m ill a. tu r n s * a
IINraw-VS.1 » a
I k 'W ,
IN IN IN
I XT, la* ip
IN IN
iG rp a M r
IN

•arrow pimisn . u i i u m n

Pm lu lil** «ri, i m m , i a * m p
u a s ta a s a u N i
i a w - » i im
i»a * a * a * a
in in in
U a s a s
IN IN
l* * l” S
IN
•ii n ii m r n n N w r i n * iu a
UNraw- V t i SN
H W s* iln*
is in i s
t X lB — t
IN IN
I unia** (*•
in
• iiai i n , • in i a x r n a il s a, h

OawPU a * M « i

OMaptlSUiWn* i

***NJfrm

Sr* (a l till i tahav* r
l»**s n Caw** a T**p» (S . I
r* I«*»■&gt;»■* n *
a •,*a* SM
IU ' I* a
•m ap* rt *Sp* »a a «n* P m
■ • pill*.i ■**
M P n tr I M a I* W a t

fu ll|*

s n (a l ISO n St* tax till a M
L*P&gt;IM I S . I Spa
im p rt t*,m a *»■*»» i s . i &gt;
pa
■a**** Ca* n C*u *n IU I a
tana* IS •Spa
•*»s**t * * M , a [ &gt; n i I s . i S

• » i * - s m * u owa* a la
M p,-nl.M rilll

llllliVM
i *•

•o h m
l » *• - lie s naxw ia c w s
S w a n nan* •&gt;•**,
TOOT t i l l
I » * ■ - s e n X UIH t a p U
ia a s a W Jav* Am at (l I
l t a - lie s u u i la S p a a

•fas*
s o ciir
I pm - 1
11 sail

mi ?
ii if it
It 14 t
h a m
n a ti
a ii i

•K Imn

«
n
»
a
u

h»

m
am
mm
}m Nl
m is

) at at
i v ut ar
i i) ta mi

n h im

m v
v v

0 M l| » I *
ii ii • a at im

•itt ia|an

VlKRW

I'Nlit *IfMpffl

l

1

N T Irg K i}

l

I

(»■(•}! 1 Ci'i**1r »
Omrm ¥ Horf«r«

* RMMfkF

USPL
l

• rm.Agtap*

•if
fatWf

T**a

a *
tl ir
&gt;1 il

11«

Wiutrr*

•

l**mw*i*
Or

i r M W

11
11
i•
i•
11
tt
i•

Ii

riiCfuian*
'm P L I ia i

IIM U W M M .II

at n

l i» a m

• at n 4
I • mi ii 4
I•
S &lt;4
Ii t• IM
is si 4
l l• rs
IM m sf

I
I
i
Ii
t&gt;«

LM

Orman ...... ....... I
OfsianU I4 M I
III

m in
m in
m a
m m
mw
tn a

• i Mi

0**4
ifimm

It S S O -u ia n U
11| Ipaap &gt;1

liP Tw M ltTl
a ****** • pa
W « f * * a l * A * n l Spa
O t a i lU la a x I Spa
&gt; &gt; ' M a a , « l spa
&gt;*np* I n a Sr* a * T I N p a

laVltit*** • tttl«ii
U M liu a iU M I
N l

i *a -

h* ja
ai ri
hi m
io m

n ii u
d a «
UB «

h***

UHTIB KiTII lootliu UiUt

V -B A L L
*

• I

t » » -U U IS T w a T a a
a iu iu u io v t
« M * a - SU M |. Ip*,t***,i«

m is

n* nr

Tvv»«f

SiOOSil U M I f U U ilM C
la in * * D ltllK *

B A S EB A LL

i v s i ll i H a l * .

MN t

nun

•

NBA

IW M

lie s Cats* law d a w

W iW h a lM W -S i

HI V

Hor**v# •&gt;
x*fN
N t fvandtnnn t 1

« &gt;M «C»a«*ilJ
* • « - K O I Cast* SOU Tan*

T - U»**e «H'SW* SU V W l
a sm.CaSMtM.il I
!«** SUV MU IsM I

a

••

anartt rt In Mpra* a Wa* lw *
Is . I spa
la Ouw n Caupa iSi I a Sn* i n j .
Ip a
l a I'arni* « Om u n «’ *****,
in i.Ip a
( ******** U.MMM*aW*C*i in*
Is a
Ca-Sra* Ml rt W * a la***
irll.lp a
i *&gt;m s * isa •« Caw*s m i a
Paa la-*** cat i p a

I) il I

n u %

l** WWW a Omm I pa

r &gt;

ii

i

M I8 L
SOKC
NlwStSNWaN
- c a l sm
*0*a**D*x
IIS 4M 14
l ('**•* I m a
IM 14
lC«»*.a,0*p
IN
•l u i s w i s u n w r u t s s i n
M ra w - V IS S S
lin s x a iw *
i n 41 IM
iNsnaSW
I1N IN
IMwpaOvi
ON
•i m s x i a n a w lu m is w
M lt U N N
H w -ia a u
INwalwrWk*
SN 14 IN
US U * a
i n IN
IMs m m Qm m
IB
•i i u n w p u i i m w t i u n m n
N m -n ilS

la***mu

•Srawi M
•OSitspwa

SiXM tSOOM VXl 11 U M w t

»WS&gt; M CSasW UP
Own* 'Q S * twwy M
a s m i * HI PMMtsesitr
r a w O f m iisns Si
Mm » » l
Tm h
a
Mimuiiuwi
im toftf

M*(sxiS us***ill

U L M n lX H M M W
M S I SI I n vans iu
U'*i H i I m m s II
t ii* * s * i‘ i 1*8*1
U S TM n llTI
MSP a Saanpaa I Npa
S S S S C i n S S Ip a
C S s r P M a lN i*
S*a (a* a tNM I CP*. I B p a
w w a n a i i * ip a
U C w n p S rtM S Ip a
I S * a Casa* Was ii pa
Sam a la *
C a u p a i* &lt; n

as is in

Oww a is uwv *spi

IN IN
IN

•snww ri&gt;*isus niaiiwa

NHL

• w -ia t u
iM tlsa a*
14 IN IN
ila pa a * *
in in
n**Ww Wear
IN

RATfMAl SOCIIV lllf tu t

•ns sw iua ww r nauin n

N « r -M L U
ISapnWr*
IN IN (N
lia a ia i*
UN IN
rtwaSnar
in

------------. •S ( m a in

l*r*'**M*ll**0*n&gt;

st

i*r&lt;

S l
a »
4 N
N N

I
I
l
I

PS IP
n m
n in
«i B&lt;

Li
n&gt;
ta
N*

o s a s n is

tw D a p a s s w w iN p s
M ia n a U a w O m S i a
•anws a CannaW I s | •

�Evening H erald. Sanford, FI.

Sunday. March 14, 1H3—JB

SPORTS

Myron G ates Rolls A 278

IN BRIEF

Myron Gates, bowling on the Blair Agency
Mixed League, rolled the high game for the
week at Bowl America — a beautiful 278.
A1 Bowling was also on a hot streak as he
bowled 247-200-211/658 on the T.G .I FLeague, and 222-208-211/646 on the Unprofessionals Men's League. Six deuces out
of 6 games Is terrific bowling. Al.

Kosar Prefers NFL, Says
He's Worth Much As Flutie
MIAMI IUPI) — Doug Flutie and Bemle Kovir matched
passes In one of college football's greatest games last
season, and now Kosar Is looking to match Boston
College s lleismann Trophy winner In the salary depart­
ment.
Kosar. who earlier this month announced his Intentions
to lorgo his remaining eligibility at the University of Miami
to become eligible for the NFL draft, has not disclosed the
amount he Is seeking In the pro ranks. However, he
expects to make In the vicinity of Flutie. who signed a
5-year deal estimated at $7 million with the U S. Football
League's New Jersey Generals.
Kosar gave up his college football career on March 14 He
was eligible to play another two seasons at Miami, but
decided to graduate with a degree In finance this year.
"If I had m y choice. I would still want to play with the
N F L ." Kosar said. "But this (the USFL| could be an option
for us down the road. The USFL right now Is really Just an
option If things don’t work out In the NFL
"Houston Is doing the best thing for themselves. You
can’t blame them for that. 1 think they're going to wait as
longas they can."
Kbsar s agent. Dr. John Geletka. will meet next week In
Orlando with the Orlando Renegades owner Donald
Dlzney. The Renegades own Kosar's territorial rights.

• Thornton: Damage Looks Minor
United Press International
Usually, people go to Arizona to regain I heir health.
When Indians designated hitler Andre Thornton found out
he had torn a cartilage In his left knee, he decided to head
back for Cleveland,
"Right now. It looks like a minor tear." said Thornton.
"But the knee really has to be evaluated more definitively,
so I'm going back home."
The Injury was diagnosed at the Indians' training cainp
In Tucson. Arlz. prior to Cleveland's 8-1 exhibition loss
Friday lo the California Angels.
The 35-year-old Thornton, who trailed .271 with 33
homers and 99 RBI last season, will receive a thorough
examination Monday at the Cleveland Clinic by team
physclan Dr. John Bergfeld.
Thornton said he had no Idea how and when the Injury
ocurred. but said the discomfort had gradually Increased.
In Friday's exhibition, Mike Brown's two-run double
Ignited u five-run second Inning to lead the Angels. Brown
scored the third run In the Inning on lkibby Grlch s double,
and Bob Boone and Wally Joyner added mu-scoring
singles off starter Vern Ruble. 2-1,
_____
Elsewhere. Kansas City downed Pittsburgh 6-2. Cincin­
nati lopped the Pirates' spilt squad 0-2. Chicago dubbed
Toronto 8-2. the New York Mets nipped Montreal 6-5,
Atlanta dumped Texas 9-5. Boston wallojied Houston 9-3,
St. Louis defeated Kansas City 5-3. Minnesota trounced
Philadelphia 10-2. San Francisco edged San Diego 3*2,
Oakland outslugged Milwaukee 13-9. law Angeles eclipsed
Detroit 8-7, the Chicago Cubs slugged Seattle 5-1. the New
York Yankees decisloned Baltimore 5-4.

Moxness Up By 3 A t Oakmont
G L E N D A L E . Calif. |Uril — A two-round score of
11-over-pur would usually make u member of the LPGA
Tour a spectator when round three begun.
However, this week's stop on the lour Is not a normal
one. Because the Oakmont Country Club rourse. with Its
narrow fairways and treacherous greens. Is an unusual and
difficult layout.
But Barbara Moxness tamed the monster, matching her
ojMmlng-round 2-under-jnir 70 Friday to open a threestroke lead over Jan Stephenson midway through the
$250,000 tournament.
The scores were so high on the demanding. 6.328-yard
Oakmonl course that players shooting I l over 155 made
the cut for the final two rounds — the highest 3ti hole cut of
the year on the LPGA Tour and only four stokes away from
the all-time high L1*GA 30-hole cut set Iasi year at the
British Open.
Nancy Lo |k -z fired a 71 Friday, moving her Into a third
place tie with Japan's Atsuko Hukagc at even-par 144
llakagc shot a 74 to fall horn a share of the first-round lead.
Pearl Sinn, a 17-year-old high school senior from nearby
Bellflower who shared the first-round lead with linkage and
Stephenson, was alone In tilth place at 145 after a round of
75. Veteran Am y Alcott. who shared the low round of the
day with Moxness. was alone ul 146.

Unglued Sixers Lose 3rd In Row
U nited Preaa International
As the Philadelphia 76ers are coming unglued, so Is their
coach
The frustration of losing a third straight game for the first
time this season, and having the Boston Celtics pull further
away In the Atlantic Division standings, provoked Billy
Cunningham to a fit of pique Friday night as his learn was
crushed by the Milwaukee Bucks 131-112.
"Obviously, he was more upset than usual tonight." said
assistant coach Malt Guokus after Cunningham was
ejected with two technical fouls. "It's something thut's
been building up because of the way we've been playing.
"We've had so many defensive lapses of late and our
concentration Ia|&gt;ses have been gigantic, especially tonight,
lie wanted to get a message across to the players."
He made his mood quite clear to the officials, as well.
With 10:22 left, Cunningham was ejected by referee Bruce
Alexander after receiving his second technical foul, and
responded by kicking the basketball downcourt before
departing.
Elsewhere. Boston dumped Cleveland 129-117. Denver
edged New Jersey 113-111. Kansas City trounced Atlanta
121-102. New York topped Indiana II8 -M 3 . the Los
Angeles Lakers walloped Houston 130-107. Dallas defeatrd
San Antonio 123-114 and Utah crushed Seattle 110-85.

On the dtstalf side, Alice Densmore of the
Sophisticated Floozies Ladles League rolled
a 241/614. Way to go. Alice.
S te ve P a g e , b o w lin g on the U n ­
professional* Men's League, rolled a tripli­
cate Tuesday night, and will receive a patch
from ABC. I won't mention what his three
Identical scores were, but you can ask him
at his "Page's One Hour Photo Shop." Don't
worry Steve, the jtatch doesn't say what the
scores were cither. Whew!
Other high scores bowled Inst week were:
Islander Vacation League. John Smith 216.
Charles Shaw 229. Mlkr Hartman 205 Dot
Smith 200 and Annie Richmond 211: the 3
M's Senior League Gene Dykes 218: the
Drift Inn League. Vernon Butcher 202.
Angel Ocalso 208. Ronnie Heaps 230. Marie
Hensley 214. Chuck Sllmley 222. Rich
Williams 202 and Bob Meyers 204; The
Sophisticated Floozies League. Mary Bargels
200 Debbie Varndell 215: the Country
Corners Ladles League. Nancy Wldener 214
and Carolyn Betts 202.
The Hurricanes Senior League. Barbara
Richards 210 and Bill Little 203: CFRH
League. Skip Catttl 201 and Maggie Peenles

.

Herald
B ow ling W rite r

200; the Tues, Night Mixed League. Art
B ro w n 2 1 2 . A rt V a u g h n 207 . Don
Burkhardt 201. Don Gorman 203. Jay
Smith 200: the Unprofessional* Men's
League. Ron Lemond 213. Bob Richmond
201. Jim Steplowskl 211. Jerry Farella 244.
Alan Prtmka 200. Dan Dougherty 214. Gary
Larson 212. Len Grover 208. Sieve Richards
200, Danny Hale 208, Bob Adams 221.
David Masionet 223, Richard Heaps 222.
Bob Meyers 213. Steve Van Ness 200 A 201.
Jim Morace 213. Harold Sundvall 213203/609. Ronnie Heaps 221. Don Witt 201.
Dan Nenl 215 and Charles Shaw 222
The Gators Senior League, John Dorman
210. Harold Robinson 204 and Rollle Rocllll
204: the Shooting Stars Ladles League.
Ju d y Wllkerson 214: the Blair Agency
League. Strve Blair 224, Harold Sundvall
229. John Noel 227. Alina Ortiz 209. Max
Smith 201 and Nancy Moyer 200; the
Scratch on Th u rs d a y League. Larry
Picardut 212 A 209. Phil Roche 201. Van
Tlllev 216. Chris Huff 200. Pennv Smith

210. J a y Sm ith 201-228/616. Dennis
Dolgner 217 A 213. Donnie Gorm an
201 211-201/613. Don Gorman 223-222: the
Thurs. Night Mixed League. Tom Larson
207 A 201. Jerry Farella 212. Buster
Anderson 213, Orval Pollard 202 A Richard
Heaps 213.
The Moose Lodge League. Rick Chasser
211 A 212. Tony Dunklnson 213. Steve
Richards 223 A Aaron Kaufman 202: the
Plnbusters Senior League. Marcel Vandrbeck 201 A Tom Htndoon 201: The
T .G .I.F. League. Pee Wee West 208. hut
Rich 219. I)r&lt;- Hogan 211, Jack Burnett 200,
Lurry Pieurdt 205. Jim Middleton 209 A
C h u ck Hostetler; the Southeast Bunk
League. Marc) lwtnskl 211. Vince Cura 201.
Mary Del Hurdv 201. Lien Bui 204. Mike
Humbles 201. Gary Larson 256 212/624. Ed
Wallers 211. Hal Rich 207. Cubit Mulong
203. George Mansfield 207, Challos Cruz
234. Ron Robinson 201. Grace Siarr 203.
Bill Gilhrti 225 A 217 and Larry Plcnrdat
212.
The Saulord City League. Vatt Tilley. Sr.
20-1. John Noel 217. Don Spangler 212. Bill
Oiler 211. Dean Hamilton 207. Richard
Williams 207. Bernard Hudlry 220. Hob
Powrll 205. Ron Kramer 212. ik&gt;b Hosfonl
222. Jim Carver 204. Kli Johnson 210.
Donnie Gorman 200. Gil Henton 202. Brian
O'Boyle 232. Hobby Barbour 201 A 200 and
Mark Fowler 202. Th e Mulch Point Ladles
League. Shelby Barnes 232 and Marilyn
Zustrow 217. The Ball A Chain League.
Peggy Moon 217 and Chris Dellarcosc 205.

Chamber Tourney Fills Coffers
It was a big week ul the old club. The Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce had a great
tournament last Friday afternoon. Bud Layer,
chairman of the sports committee, did an
excellent Job organizing thr event which ended
up with a field of 110 Needless lo say. a good
lime was had by all and the coffers of thr
chamber were enlarged appreciably.
Now for the main evcnl of Ihc week, namely the
members* St. Patrick's D ay To u rn a m e n t
sponsored by both I be Mayfair Men's Goll
Association and ihr Mavlalr Women’s Golf
Association Sixty members, both men and
women (mostly couples). Iced off at I p m . last
Sunday.
Alter the tournament a delicious chicken ala
king dinner was enjoyed by all Th e winners wrre
as follows: Low Gross Team (68): Tom and
Murgurri Bolts und Dick and Jonnle Elam:
Second Low Gross Team |72): Joe and Belly
Kurlmal and John and Suzy Dickey; Low Nel
Team (56): Harry and Gcnelevc Woodruff und Ed
and Mlulam Andrews; Second Low Net Tra m (57):
George nnd Peggy Billups and Jack and Alice
Danlrls: Th ird Low Nel Team (57|: Herb and Joan
Pitman and Stun and Alice Putter; Fourth Low
Net Team 157): Bob and Ada O'Neil and Charlie
and Kathryn Park: Filth Low Net Team (58): BUI
Sweeney nnd Hally N o rris and Hud Hteharda anil
J o Thom son.
And finally, the closest to the pin on number 5
was Joe Kurlmal and the closest to the pin on
number 16 was Lawanda Sandon.
Last Wednesday an Invitational was held at
Mayfair Country Club by the M W GA. Seven clubs
(Mirtlclpalrd Including Glen Abbey (old Swallows).
Dubsdreud, DcLund C.C., Tuskitwlllu. Wrklva,
Casselberry and Mayfair. T h r 4-ball. Best Ball

50th
Anthrarury

Rudy
Seiler
M ayfslr
Golf W rite r

DOG
RACING
NOW!

Tournament produced the following winners:
Low Team (51): Alice Poller. Maylalr; Stella
Brooks. Mayfair; Mary Hlndy. Dttbsdrrad: Jane
Jones, Casselberry: Second Low Team (53f Grace
Sauers. Muyfalr: Evelyn Antar. Mayfair; Eileen
Stadelman, Casselberry; Phyllsa Norgart. Glen
Abbey,
Closest to the pin on number 7 was Jo
Thomson. Mayfair C.C.. and closest to the pin on
number 16 was Stella Brooks, also from Mayfair.
Door prizes were furnished by Krdmon Nursery
In Lake Mury und M aylalrC.C.
The weekly dogllghl Iasi Tuesday was won liy
the following teams selecled by blind draw:
Low Net (311; Stan Potter and Buddy Williams.
Second la»w Net (32|; Ken Echols and Dick Klum.
And last but not least, the weekly scramble last
Wednesday bud the billowing winning trams:
Cow Net (H under par): M a rc .Junes. Util Craig.
Ralph Nunn. Rich Barnes: Second Low Net (7
under par): Klin Young. Red Clrvrlcnd, Wrs
Werner. LeoVrzlna.
One lust Item: Dr. Charlie Purk Is gelling all the
publicity out nnd wants to remind everyone about
the annual cancer tournament scheduled for
Friday, April 19, Make plans now lo participate In
the I p in. shotgun start. Slay timed for more
details later.

T H E A D V A N T A G E TM

RADIAL M U D TE P R A IN Tm

RAISE YOUR STANDARDS Of fl/DE
AND PERFORMANCE,

GIVC YOUR TRUCK RACE PROVEN
PERFORMANCE
■■Jftei * nW

NIGHTLY 7.30 P.M.
(Ciospt to n.)

MAT.: MONJNH) SAT I PM
PLAY THE EXCITING &amp; HIGH
PAYING "PICK*" &amp; "BIQ Of

THURS FREE
GRANDSTAND ADM.
FOR LADIES
Visit our two climate
oontrotted ctubbouM* lor
your tons dining and

omsriainmsm plsssurs

Clutchoum reewvstions

831-1600

Sanford-Orlando
Kennel Club
North of Orlando
Just oft Hwy 17-92

SMI S»s frret 1st IsyaN
Sorry No Minor*

HOW MUCH IS YOUR OLD
AIR CONDITIONER WORTH?
Let Air Specialists Show You
in the

Goodrich

Goodrich

----------—
—................—1
H K d H TE C H 3 n r MAKE CANS fc w rw M a
T/ARADLALS 1
1
__________ __ __________ J
JSb tq o o d r ic h S

AW K T I K I ! M A IIT
____■ _—to

Catfgft

MON FRI a 5-30 SAT 0 3 00

3 2 2 -7 4 8 0
24 13 S. French Avc.
* * *

AT&amp; T
O p p o r t u n it y
C a l l in g '
- s w is w '

SA N FO RD

WE CAN DO IT...
Welding &amp;
Repair

Watson Putts Past Nerves
LA S VEGAS. Nev. (UPII - When Tom Watson lees ofT. he
has the calm and collected look of the six-time PGA Player
of the Year that he Is.
But one would never guess that below the surface he Is
waging a winner take all battle with nerves.
“ I still get nervous out there." Watson said, showing a
human side to his mechanically near-perfect golf game. "I
still feel that push in the back when I'm near the lead. But I
think the nerves affect me a great deal less now than when
I first started. "
Watson laid his anxieties to rest Friday by canning a
35-foot putt to birdie Is first hole. He went on to a round of
3-under-par 68. giving him sole possession of first place
after three rounds of the $1 million Las Vegas Invitational.
"It (blrdylng the first hole) was a nice way to start the
day." Watson said. "It eliminated the nerves right away."
Watson went on to birdie the seventh and eighth holes to
make the turn at the Las Vegas Country Club at 32. He
hlrdled the first hole on the back nine, but then ran Into
some problems as he bogeyed the 14 th and 15th.

,

W E W ELD ANYTHING!
E L E C T R IC BRAZING
AND A C E T Y L E N E
W ELD IN G ...
IIEL-IARC-ALUMINUM
AND STA IN L E SS
H ^ ^ M T E E L W ELD IN G .
TR IC K S — TANKS — BOILERS
FARM EQUIPMENT

Now Carrier, the
world's best selling air
conditioning brand makes
it easy for you to trade-up
to a quality efficient air
conditioning system at big
savings. Only Carrier
dealers have O fficial Blue
Book trade-in guide for
at-home
appraisals.

Used

Air Conditioners
and
Heat Pumps

Carrier

THE BEST COSTS NO MORE

C A LL 3 3 1 -5 7 7 4

G e t th e

Money Saving Facts Right on the Phone.
Get Extra Savings with Power Company Rebates

Let us Check Your A/C Unit NOW !
Just before The Cooling Season Starts
S P E C IA L *29.95 Per Unit.
Special Of f e r . . . A FR E E N. Carolina
Vacation with purchase of a new
Carrier Air Conditioner or Heat Pump.

PORTABLE EQUIPMENT

Get Certified Welding A t . . .

SANFORD TRUCK &amp; AUTO SERVICE, INC.

Your neighborhood Carrier Dealer

Samp morwy tor ibu
Erm/ty lot Arrmct

A IR S P E C IA U S T S
777 ■ « Tr*« Dr.

1012 SANFORD A V E., SANFORD. FLA .
ItM IO t

Mte I

a U7te

OAILY 1 A.M.-S P.M., SAT. $ A.M. NOON

:

* v N r .V iT T V

(305) 331-5774

�E v u t O f t k n i d , h n t o fd , F I.

Sunday. M arch 34, I f U

B r a n t l e y 's D e p t h O v e r c o m e s R a m s ' T a le n t
B y C h ris Plater
Herald Sports W rite r
Lake Brantley’s Patriots lined their depth to
overcome Lake Mary’s talent In the distance
events Friday In a triangle relay meet at Lake
Mary High. The meet was held as a substitute for
the Wildcat Relays for the three teams because
high qualifying standards set by the Wildcat
would have kept a number of athletes from
performing.
Th e Patriots came away with 51 points Friday
compared to 36 for the Rains und 25 for Lym an’s
Greyhounds.
Brantley dominated the field even! relays (top 3
performers combined), the hurdles and the
sprints.
In the field events. Lakr Brantley won Ih r shot
put (110-8). long Jump (62-l'Al. high Jump (18-4)
and triple Jump 11I7-2W).
Th e Patriots won both hurdle relays as the
team of Sam Sears. Oavld Delflacco, Tom
McCormick and Rex Black combined for a lime of
1:05.6 In the 480 shuttle hurdles relay (4x120|
and the team of Sears. Delflacco and Black won
the 330 hurdles (lop tlitre times combined) at

T r a c k / F ie ld
2:11.1.
Brantley also took first In the 440 relay as the
team of Rich Pearce. Cornclllus Friendly. John
Mondo and Steven Emmons blared to a lime of
45.1 compared to 46.6 for Lakr Mary. Brantley
also took the sprint medley and the mile relay.
l-nkr Mary received strong peformances in
winning the two mile relay, distance medley und
learn two mile. In the two mile relay. Jim
Shepherd. Anthony Surles. Jefr Johnwlck and
Harold Pills teamed up for a lime of 8:39.9 with
Pills anchoring with a 2 02 spilt In l he 880,
The distance medley team, which posted a lime
of 11 09.8. consisted of Harold Pitts |B80|.
Richard Burkett (440|. Matt Palumbo (1.320) and
Ken Rohr (mile). Rohr anchored wlih a -I 37 mile
Rohr also came In first in the two mile and the
team score came from adding up the top three
finishers. Lake Mary’s top three limes added up
to 30; 16.2 Rohr keyed the first place finish with a

9 57 two mile while both Palumbo and Bobby
Howard ran under 10:10 for an Impressive top
three.

UDiWiUniM
Tm* m i - iiu t-v-uv |1 .N «r&lt;

’’Brantley led unill Iasi leg of the distance
medley.’’ Lake Mary coach Mark McGee said.
' But Ken (Rohr) got the baton and ran a 4:37
mile. He caught Brantley righi away and ran the
rest of the race by himself. He came bark to run a
9 57 two mile. Th a t’s a heck of a double to run
considering they were within 20 minutes of each
other."
Lyman took first place In a pair of events Friday
including the discus (354-1 lVi) and pole vault
131 6).
‘ We let everybody run as many guys as they
wanted to,” McGee said. "We had a good lime, a
lot of kids gol Iri perform

1 IM 4/****i

Ito r i O r to n *

1 L to S rt

■— ..

"Orange County might tell us we’re afraid to
compete with them." added McGee. "But I think
lls ridiculous not to give kids a chance to
compete They’re eliminating Ihr majority of Ihc
|&gt;coplr with their qualifying standards. So we
derided to do this and had a good lime.”

Smiths
BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (DPI) - The Cinderella
story Is over for one Smith, hut ll lives on for

another.

L E E . T IS D A L E S Q U A R E O F F
D ALLAS (UPI| — Memphis Stair und Oklahoma
have combined for u total of only right losses this
season, making ihcrn obvious targe is lor hungry

underdogs.
"You get that gunflghter Image,'' said Memphis
State coach Dana Kirk. "Team s want to kill the
blg gun.
"W e played Ihc University uf Pennsylvania I in
thr first round of the NCAA Tnurtuiinrnl) and
shot 50 percent In thr llrsl half und made Just 1
turnover.
"But we were only ahead hy I. That shows you
how trams play against us.”
At this stage ol thr tournament, however. Just
about everybody led Is u big gun. and dial Is Ihe
case today In the Midwest Region finals in which
founh-ninkrd Memphis Slate. 30-3. will fuer No.
5 Oklahoma, 3 1-5.
The winning coach — either Kirk or Billy Tubbs
of Okluhumu — will win a trip to the Final Four
for the llrsl time.
Both trams won thrilling rrglonul srinlflnal
contests, and another close game is expected wllh
All-Americas' Wayman Tisdale of Oklahoma and
Memphis State's Keith Lee likely to be key
factors.
But when these two trams last met (in the 1984
regular season). Oklahoma's big gun wus T im
McCalister, who scored 24 points.

Hi

IU

I irto
tor*
I UH !'»*’’♦,
S to w l

.UM

l lew*
tiw to

'»•
aimpii

t iu t •mu#*, i■1it* !*••••»

s » im
1 lew*
i hm Mitt

a1!
»s

*•

TnaW nto

1 iw Ur. t o w Veto tow**
&gt; -i

I

IS *

i i «

I i i u
Mr**,

i *I

............... i i

I

i i

i

|i

I

t um Ife'ft Sru F’W . wen
a*
1 u*i S r .

I Lrw*
iswan

at

VI

l m i l'i* 'iti liii'i 0*'* m i

twt&lt;

UWWi
11*»*»
'*•&lt;

I liw S***'&lt;o

no

J*i
is»

M ** ScCl/- :l

94
•l

t UM w r , IMS. toM " I w i t o
..11M
ti 8 4
DM
, »

1
} (ill

1 UM •'•*«**
f,
mI
2 81
2 (.jut lAarf
------- I t l l
t b.-*•
_____ I HI
t i l * *w*
f l ««« Wi'f l i$8r,
*e*
h i
» m
Ji V%
1 tf*R|R
1 1as* Be
DIt
ftltVMi
i
ilcRiRiMi#**. W m
HI
til
1 *.*»• B'a'rtvv
Dftftf
1
|¥tk*| *l»v»»M|'l*
848*1
** !
,
--------J a n .
1 Lm I'M**?
2 L#t* 01^*1
8ft* j
MMratev
1 IR I llR 'F i iWftt 1mrv Hftfti
) in
J ti
f i«M Marf
.
.
1 MI
j i$mm
Thru
I m m Mt
1 IR I •*•*"*?
£ to&lt;|1
w r*
8ft 4 i
I
| I sm Mr,
1*1

F a s t-T a lk in g
Italians V ie
In East Final;

Cinderella Story Ceases
For Sonny But Not Dean

Th e storytrook season of Coach Sonny Smith
and his Auhurn team ended Friday night us
seventh-ranked North Carolina stopped the
Tigers’ seven gume winning slrcak with a 62-56
victory In the NCAA Tournament Southeast
Regional.
Auhurn became revitalised alter Smith an­
nounced Ills resignation earlier this year, refusing
to let ihe season — and llirlr couch’s tenure —
come lo an end. Hut North Carolina’s Inside
strength uml dead-eye frcc-lhrow shooting wrote
the final chapter of the Tigers’ season.
The triumph, however, keeps alive Ihr Cinder­
ella season of Tar Heels coach Dnin Smith and
his team. Wllh Ihe loss of All-Aincrlcas Michael
Jordan und Sam Perkins this was to Ire a
rebuilding year for North Carolina
However, Ihe victory over Auhurn Improved
North Carolina’s record to 27-8 anti left It one
triumph away from the school’s eighth Final Four
appearance.
North Curotlnu will play Vlllunovu, a 46-43
winner over Maryland Friday. In Sunday’s
rrglonul final.
"T h is ts great." Dean Smith said. "This puls us
In the flnul eight. The rest Isjusl gravy."
For Auburn’s Smith, the rest may simply tic
goodbye. Sm ith, who has hinted lie may
withdraw Ids resignation, wavered again Friday
night, hut salt! he had not changed Ids mind
"Th e only lime 1 have second thoughts ts when
l took In the eyes of my players.” he said "1 marie
m y decision not on the hlgiis and not on the lows,
but on things (lint Ituve happened over a long
period of lime.”
North Carolina, with 7-foot Warren Martin and
0 -1 1 Drari Daugherty dominating play In the early
going, powered In O 23-8 lead midway through
Ihe first half.
“ We lost It In the first five minutes.” Sonny
Sm ith said. ’’We were Its) pumped up because of
Carolina’s tradition.’’
Auburn, 22-12. cut the margin to 33-23 at the
hall and — fueled hy a partisan crowd — battled
back to within 2 points with 18 seconds
remaining,
Hut the Tar Heels, with Ketllty Sunt)i leading
the way, fill 7-ofH free throws down Ihe stretch to
hold onto the victory. Kenny Smith, who gut 13 &lt;&gt;•
Ills career-high 22 points In thr second hull,
scored 5 of the Ta r Heels' last 7 points —
Iiu hiding a breakaway dunk al the buzzer.
Murtln had 12 points In the first half, hut did
not score In the second. Daugherty und 6-10 Joe
Wolf had lOpolnlxruch.
‘'Auhurn played with great emotion," Dean
Sm ith said. “ It wus u scnsutlnnul comeback. We
didn't let them comeback. They came bark.”
Vtllunova also used a second-half spurt to move
Into Ihe regional finals. The Wildcats trailed
Mat vl.nut hy 5 wllh 2:10 letl to Ihe llrsl hall, hut
shuluul thr Terrapins over thr next nine minutes
to lakr u 30-20 lead.
“ W r hat) a bad start Ihe second half.” said
Maryland couch Lefty Drlrsell, “ We did a good |nt&gt;
of coining hack, hut we let them get rrhounris on
missed free throws and lhut wus the game.”
Kd Pinckney led Vtllunova. muring 13 of his It*
points tn Ihe sreoud halt. Pinckney was Just athlg a force on the defensive end. holding
Maryland’s high scoring Lett Bias to only 8
)mln Is.
"I thought our defense was outstanding," said
Vlllunovu couch Rolllr Masslmliio. "W e only
wunted to give them one shot und wr did that in
Ihe second half.”
Adrian Brunch scored 21 points to lead
Maryland. Dwayne McClain added 12 for
Vlllunovu.

Crtoilant

gmrf
2
4 1 —-—

Sun Bank

Honors SCC
Semlnolo Com munily College
held Its Sun Bank sponsored
awards dinner Wednesday.
In Ihc back (left to right) are
Llnny Grace (M V P ), Greg
Bates (Best All Around), Sun
Bank v ic e president and
br anch manager Bob
Douglas and Greg 'S lim '
Johnson (Best Rebounder).
In the front row (left to right)
aro Kenny Edwards (Best
Offensively) and Mike Lan
dell (Best Defensively). At
Ihe r ig h t , D ouglas jo in s
cheerleader Debbie Harvey
(le a d e r s h ip a w a rd ) and
sponsor Joy Hinkle.
Ptwl*« b, Jim C***at*Wfl

Sanford M iddle W ins Mat Title

DEN VER IUPI) — The main course will have red
sauce.
St. John's Lou Carnesecca and North Carolina
State's J im Valvano, two fast-talking Italian
coaches from New York, will square off in
Sunday's Western Regional final with an Invita­
tion to Ihe Final Four going to the winner.
"I told you this tournament was the Italian
Open. That's what It corncs down to. my breeding
against his." Valvano said.
The Final Four will be played al Lexington, Ky..
home of the Kentucky Wildcats, but no longer of
their coach.
St. John 's ended Joe II. Hall’s long and
successful coaching carrrr at Kentucky Friday as
the Redincn ousted the Wildcats 86-70 In a West
Regional semifinal.
About 90 minutes after the game. Hall
announced his retirement, which had been
rumored for a good deal of the season.
Chris Mullln did the most to end Kentucky's
season, scoring 30 (Mints.
"We tried a little bll of everything. It's wishful
thinking that you're going to stop him ." Hall said
of Mullln.
Walter Berry's 22 [Mints and 12 rebounds, and
the Redmcn's domination of the boards In Ihe
second half was more than Ken lucky's star
Kenny Walker could counter.
Walker, a sceond leam All-America, was accutomlv hit in the rye bv Mullln rarlv In the
game. The 6-foot-9 Wildcat forward developed a
tinge red well near the eye. tail continued lo play,
scoring 23 points.
"They Just seemed lo lose some fight after
Kenny gol hit." Berry said.
Roger Harden and Troy McKinley kept Ken­
tucky close In the (Irst half by hitting 9-of-9 shots
combined from the field In the second half, while
St. John's was scoring 47 [mints, those two failed
to score In the first 19 minutes.
Valvano. who watched the St. John's game
alter Ills North Carolina State leum brat Alabama
61-55 In the curlier semifinal, said he would not
retire If the Wolfpurk loses on Sunday.
His players did not mutch the performance of
St. Jo h n ’s. He rirsrrlhed the victory us "gutty"
ami less than perfect.
With Alabama |&gt;arkrd In the lane. NC Stale
guards Hrnntr Holton and Te rry Gannon com­
bined for eight field goals w hlie 8-7 Spud Webb
added 14 points.
Alabuinu matched the Wolfpat k In the first half,
but Its young guards, Jtm Funner und Mark
Gottfried, missed everything down the stretch
and failed to get Ihe ball lo Ilobby Lee Hurt and
Buck Johnson Inside.
"Those guys gave us Ihe lift we needed.”
Valvano said of Ills long-range shimlrrs " W r
didn't play well. And If you can tell me how we
can have un advantage (over St. John’s) wllh
them having Mullln. (BUI) Wennlngton und Berry,
you’ve got something on me."

Pringle. Ed W hack. W llberl G E O R G IA T E C H T A K E S S H O T A T HOY AS
McCullough and Aundra Hunt.
PROVIDENCE. R.l. (UP1) - Th e East Regional
’’We’re really happy. It’s the of Ihe N CAA Tournament shotdd dispense with
firs t tim e w e ’ ve w o n the referees and bring on ramival barkers; Step right
trophy," Sanford Middle coach up and take a turn al knocking off Georgetown. •
Second places Included Kevin
John llrudy suld. "W illie Th o m ­
Georgia Tech gets Us chance Saturday 14 p.n).
Naihun 1109 pounds). David
as was the most outstanding EST). Only It’s not three tries for a quarter will) a
W illiam s (115). Paul Mnsler
lighter weight and Shane Lee stulfed animal ihe reward. It's a one-shot deal
(120). Carl Hergman (130) and
was ihe lop heavyweight."
with u berth tn next week’s Final Four at stake.
Sean l.riliuh (140). Third place
Lee. who weighs III at 278
"If w r play well we're capable of playing with
wus turned in by Tyrone Boide
pounds, had little trouble dis- anyone." Georgia Tech coach Bobby Cremlns
(80 |&gt;minds) and Corey Johnson
|x&gt;Mng of his two opponents, said Friday. "But we have to play well."
look fourth at 149. Also wrestl­
according to Brady.
ing lor Sanford Middle werr Erie
The sixth runked Yellow Jackets. 27-7. face a
leum many were prepared to seed Into Ihe Final
Four without any games being played.
The lloyas ure No. I In the nation with a 33-2
record. They huve won 15 In u row and look
decidedly intent on retaining their NCAA title.
Dellinger gave Lake Brantley’s Lady Patriots
Thus far tn the tournament, they have beaten
just what they needed to tie contenders — size
Lehigh. Temple and Loyola |lll.|.
The 6 1 senior led thr Patriots In rebounds and
But If the rest of the tournament field Is to find
was second In scoring. She also led the county In
hoj»e. It might look to the lloyas' 65-53 victory
blocked shuts. Dellinger’s presence wus In­
Thursday night In the regional semifinals. Loyola
strumental In Lake Brantley’s record-breaking
led 28-26 ut Ihe half and perhaps offered some
Continued from IB
23-6 season.
Indication Georgetown can be taken. Th e
Smith, a senior, wus otic of the quickest gourds
Ramblers were not awed and that ts an Important
All-County
Th
ird
Team
prrlormrrx
Included
tn the- state and she wus among thr county's
first step against the Hoyas.
Seminole's Alexander und Lake llranlley’s senior
leudera In scoring, assists und steals. "Soul" alien
"We're not trying to beat the Georgetown
Kim Lubcnow und Lake Mary Junior Karen
took the heat oil Ucnlon wllh her outside shooting
mystique."
Georgia Tech guard Bruce Dalryrnple
DeSheller al the guards. Brantley senior Caml
and quick bunds on defense
said "W e re trying to beat the Georgetown
Twaddell at forward and Oviedo senior Mary
team."
Inkers at center.
Anderson, a Junior, was three votes short ot
The Hoyas rallied behind Patrick Ewing against
making thr first leant "K ilty” was the county's
Honorable Mention guards Included Lyman's
Loyola. The All-America renter hud 21 points. 14
Irudlng rrbuundrr this past season and among
Lutunya Johnson (Junior!. Lake Mary's Liz Slone
rebounds and 5 blocks. He und swingman Regg’e
Ihr leaders In scoring and steals, too. With Ihe
Williams sustained slight ankle Injuries In that
(senior) und Larra Hall (senior). Lake Howell's
return of Anderson and gourd Tetnlku Alexander,
game, but should be fit today.
Erin Hankins (sophomore) and Oviedo's Natalie
the contlurd Improvement of Klin Johnson and
Harth (Junior)
Georgia Tech freshman forward Duane Ferrell,
Yolanda Knblnson. and Ihe addition of u few new
heavily bandaged because of stretched ligaments
Honorable
Mention
lorwardt
were
Seminole's
frrshmun. the Semlnoles will tie contenders again
tn his right knee, hurt hts left knee Thursday
Kim Johnson (Junior), Lake Howell's Jolee
next season
night. He loo should be ready.
Johnson (Junior). Oviedo's Stephunlc Nelson
The Job of containing Ewing falls largely on the
(Junior)
and
Lyman's
Denise
Stevens
fiutilor).
Despite bring a Junior. Forsyth was Ihr most
Yellow Jackets' two big men — 7-foot John Salley
e x p e rie n c e d p la y e r for L y m a n ’ s L a d y
Honorable Mention centers were Seminole's
and 6 -11 Yvon Joseph. To counter Georgia Tech's
Greyhounds. She was sreund In the county In
Heatrlce Smith (senior) und Lym an's Kelly
size, the Hoyas figure to make greater use of 6 -11
scoring and among Ihr leaders in rrltomids
Ralph Dalton.
Turm an (senior)

Sanlord Middle School com­
piled 174 |M&gt;lnln to cla im ihc
Middle School Wrestling title
Friday at Lyman High ll wax the
(IrM time Sanlord Middle had
ever won ih r title.
In d iv id u a l cham pions for
Sanlord Middle Included Lurry
Nullum I I 15 |Miund rloaa). John
Mnllcl (120 pound ft), W illie
T I ioiuun (136). Julius Bcunt-it
(149). P rlr Pirdrn 1185) nnd
Shane Lee |heavyweight I

W re s tlin g

...County

{

�Reagan Recalls Kampelman
To Lobby For MX Missiles
W A SH IN G TO N (UPII President Reagan,
pressing Congress hard to vote for the MX
missile, has summoned Max Kampelman. chief
U.S. arms negotiator, away from talks with the
Soviets to personally lobby wavering House
members.
In u brief announcem ent. W hite House
spokesman LarTy Speakcs said Kampelman. head
of the three-member U.S. delegation to the arms
talks w ith the Soviet U n io n In Geneva,
Switzerland, will meet with Reagan Monday
morning "to give him a private assessment of the
progress of the talks."
Later In the day. "The president and the
ambassador will talk to members of the House of
Representatives and the Senate on the rela­
tionship of the M X program to progress in arms
control.'' the announcement late Friday said.
A spokesman later said Kampelman would also
visit Capitol H ill during the day to meet
Individually or In small groups with House
members the administration considers uncom­
mitted on the Issue.
Speakcs said Kampelman probably would not
return to Geneva In lime for the regularly
scheduled Tuesday sessions of the talks
Reagan has argued that failure to approve the
construction of a second batch of 2 1 multiplewarhead missiles will undercut the U.S. negotia­
tors at a time when thr United States must
display "resolve" to the Soviets,

After Senate clearance of the missile program
this week, the House takes two votes next week,
either of which could kill the missiles, although
passage Is expected.
At his news conference Thursday night.
Reagan said. "Now Is the testing time for the
House of Representatives. The votes there will
answer the question of whether we stand united
at Geneva or whether America will face the Soviet
Union as a nation divided over the most
fundamental questions of national securliy."
"N o request by an American president for a
major strategic system deemed vital to national
security has ever been dented by an American
Congress, It Is that tradition of bipartisan unity
on national defense that brought the Soviets hack
to Geneva.
"Unless that tradition Is maintained next week
In the House, there's little prospect of success at
Geneva."
Congress has alrrady approved an initial batch
of 21 MX missiles, and the current votes arc on a
second butch of 21 in fiscal 1985 priced at $1.5
billion. Reagan ulso is looking for $4 billion for 48
more missiles In fiscal 1986.
A congressional source said It is not unusual for
arms negotiators to meet with members of
Congress before such a key vote. In some cases
telephoning from the site of the talks He said the
plan to bring Kampelman buck is not surprising
and had been rumored for weeks.

Booster To Dump Communications Satellite

Atlas Rocket Launch 'Flawless'
CAPE C A N A V E R A L (UPII The world’s most sophisticated
commercial com m unications
satellite will be nudged Into Its
final orbit Sunday following a
successful launch atop an Atlas
Centaur rocket, officials say.
The flawless blastoff at 6;55
p.m. Friday demonstrated the
space agency had overcome the
trouble that led to the loss of a
similar satellite during the last
flight of an unmanned Allas
Centaur In June.
T h r $41 million Intelsat 5A
relay station carried into orbit
Friday Is capable of handling
15,000 telephone calls along
w tih three color television
channels a nd is the most
advanced co m m e rcia l co m ­
munication station ever built

"It was just gorgeous." said
space agency spokesman George
Hiller. "The health of the satel­
lite Irxrks good"
The spacer rail was placed In
an cgg-shajM-d "transfer orbit"
by thr two-slagr Allas Centaur.
About 7 a.in. Sunday, engineers
plan to fire an on-board solid
rocket booster to circularize the
orbit at an altitude of 22.300
miles.
Objects take 24 hours to circle
I he globe once in such orbits and
thus upprar stationary In the sky
to ullow continuous service.
The satellite Is owned by the
10 9 - n a 11o u I n t e r n a t i o n a l
Telecom m unications Satellite
Organization, or Intelsat, which
paid NASA $61 million for the
launch The satellite and rocket
were Insured for $ 102 million.

The new relay station Will Join
15 other Intelsat satellites cur­
rently In orbit carrying two
thirds of the world's intercon­
tinental telephone traffic and
most of the television pro­
g r a m m in g that is beam ed
around the globe.
The last Intelsat launched by
NASA In June was lost after Its
Cenlaur second stage rocket
suffered a rupture In its liquid
oxygen lank, sending the boost­
er and satellite tumbling out of
control In a useless orbit.
That loss coupled with the loss
of two shuttle-launched satellites
four m o n th s earlier Jolted
aerospace Insurance u n d e r­
writers, who quickly raised their
rules to up to three times their
original value.

Adventures For Rent
Pat Senfell, far right, of the Greater Sanford
Chamber of Commerce, looks over the
selection of home video movies for rent at
Movie Adventures II, 2491 Airport Blvd„

Legal Notice

Legal N otice

a tto rn e y , and the amount
(■aimed H the claim it not yet
due the dale when II will
become duo than be t'ated It
me claim it contingent or unit
quidated the nature at me
uncertainty thell be ttated It
me claim it tecured the tecurt
ly thall be de ten bed The
claimant thall deliver e copy ol
the claim lo the clerk who thall
Mrve the copy on the pertonal
repretrnleNve
A L L C L A I M S A N D DE
M AN0S N O T SO F IL E D W ILL
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E O
Dated March 14. IMS
M ACK N C L E V E L A N D . J «
E S Q U IR E Attorney
C L E V E L A N D BRIDG ES
AGRAY
P O Drawer Z
Seniord F L 11)11 D ill
Telephone (MS) H I 1)14
Publish March 14, Jl, tttS
D E D 110

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O UR T
FOR S EM IN O LE C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
P R O B ATE O IVISIO N
File Number I M N C F
IN R E E S T A T E O F
J AMES ED W AR O WOOOS.
Dec rated
NO TICE T O C R E O IT O R S
IW m n in i M m ln lilr itR n l
TO ALL PERSONS H AV IN G
C L A IM S O R D E M A N D S
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E
E S TA TE
P i h u be N i i H d (M l *n
Order of Summery Admlmttre
lion hat been entered by ise
ebo.e Cried Court end met me
total &gt;eiue ot me above relate le
i f a to oo (o m ittin g ol teal
property located at I I I Florida
Avenue Santord. Florida valued
at approximately. 141.10000.
following pertonal property
Some turnleSlnge and tiatufee.
two 00 and antique furniture.

1100000

and that taid etteit have been
ettigned to F R E D EDW AR O
W O O 0 . SR
and L U C Y
JO SEPH IN E H E A T H
Within three monthe trom the
time ol the Itrel publication ot
thle notice you are required to
tile with the (le ft ot th# Circuit
Court ot Sem inole County.
Florida Probate Dlyltton. the
addrett ot which It Seminole
County Courthouw. P O Draw
er C. San lord. F L . Mill, a
written itaiement ot eny claim
or dem and you m a y have
agemtt the et'ale ot JA M E S
EDW AR D WOOOS dec raved
Each claim mutt be In writing
and mutt Indicate the batH tor
the claim, the name and addrett
ol the creditor or hit agent or

IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
OF 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 N D FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A
CASE NO l l t U C A O t K
J U L IU S E T T I N G E R
OON
Z lP E R N and A L E X ZlP E R N .
Ptaintllilt).

vt

M A R IA E S M IL D A LONOONO
a Mart led Woman.
Defendant,
N O TIC E OF AC TIO N
TO
M A R IA E S M ILD A LON
DONO
YO U A R E N O T IF IE D mat a
mortgage lorecloture action hat
been tiled againtt you on that
property known at

Her4Id Phete by Tam m y Vincent

Sanford. Helping her during Ihc store's
g r a n d o p e n in g w e r e co o w n e rs T e r r y
Hughes, left, and EI la M ae G ra h a m .

Legal Notice

Legal N otice

The Wet 11*1 n feel ot Lot 1)4
E U R E K A HAMMOCK et re
corded in piel Book 1 Page 10a
Public Record! ol Seminole
County Florida IL E S S the
W e t t 1 ] I le e t lo r r o a d
right ot wayl. together with the
Im provem ent! thereon A N D
The Weil tel ft leel of Lot 111.
E U R E K A HAM MOCK, at re
corded in Plat Book I. Page 10*
Public Recordt ol Seminole
Counly, Florida (L E S S Ihe
W e t t ] ] 1 le e l lo r r o a d
right ol way), together with the
Improvement! thereon
And you ere required to terve
e copy ol your written detente!
it a n y . to H O W A R D A
S P E IG E L . ES Q U IR E , 4)0 S
O rlando Avenue Suite 101.
Winter Park. Florida. TU I* and
tile ihe original with Ihe Clerk of
Ihe Seminole Counly C ltcull
Court on or before Ihe lift day ol
April, IMS, or otherwlte a
Ju d g m e n t may be entered
againtt you tor Ihe relief de
mended In the Complaint
(S E A L !
D A V ID BE R R IE N
C L E R K O F THE
C IR C U IT COURT
't 'C h e ry l R Frentlin
Deputy Clerk
Pubhth March 1 10. I). 14. I f f !
D E O 14

TO W IL L IA M f ZANE 4 Eett
B road Street A p a rtm e n t A
Gibbtlown New Jertey OBOlf
YO U ARE N O T IF IE D that an
action tor dlttolubon ol mar
riage hat been Med egeintl you
and you are required lo terve a
copy of you written detente! It
eny, lo It on Jed Berman
petitioner'! attorney whote
addrett It P O Draw er 10
Winter Park. Florida I into be
fore April ID. IMS. and tile Ihe
original with Ihe clerk ol thtt
court either before tervlce on
petitioner t attorney or Immedi
etely thereafter otherwlte a
default will be entered againtt
you tor the relief demanded In
me complaint ol petition
D A TE Don March &gt; tttt
ISEA11
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
at Clerk ot the Court
By SutanE Tabor
at Deputy Clerk
Publlth March 10 I ) 14 )l.
Ittl
D E D II

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O UR T,
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A
CASE NO : *4 It t l
IN RE T H E M AR R IAG E OF
J U L IE T A M YZ AN E.
Wife.
and
W IL L IA M F ZANE.
Mutbend
N O T IC E O F A C TIO N

F IC T ITIO U S NAM E
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In butlnett at Bov
Sit, Late Monroe Seminole
C o unty, F lo rid # under Ihe
liclllloul name ol A D V A N C E D
T I L E , end that I inland lo
rogltler told name with Ihe
C lark ol the C ircuit Court.
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance wllh the provltiotit
ot Ihe Ficlillout Name Statute!
lo w ll Section Besot Florida
Statute! i n i
/!/ Sue Glbbt
Publlth March 14. I I A April 1,
14. IMS
D E O 141

- T

Meal Planning
Budget Shopping
Nutrition
• New Taste Treats
There are great menu ideas, clever recipes,
and new and different ways to serve and en­
joy the simple everyday foods. Keep your
scisso rs handy as there will be scads of sug­
gestions youfll want to save - plus all those
coupons that will save you money at the
checkout counter.

Each Wednesday in the
E v e n in g H e r a ld

For Home Delivery

�* B —Evening H erald, Sanford, F I.

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N jtiea II h a rtb y glyan thal w*
»'• angagad In b u tlft* i« •&gt; t i l l
S lt lk m in C l , Long nood,
Saminola C ounty, F lo rid a I I I I t
undar tha tlclltlo w l nam a ol
D E S IG N E R S H A D E S , and that
« e Inland &gt;o re g u la r la id nama
atm tha ClAfli ol (ha Circuit
Court, Saminota County, Florida
in a rc o rd a n ra a im tha pro
r'tlo n t ol tha F icltllow t Noma
Slatwlai. to a l l
Sac lion MS pa
Florida Statutaa IM F
/|/ R u lia ll J Sop into
/If Nancy Soplnka
Publish M arch ). 10. If, Ja. m s

DEO 71
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF TH E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY ,
F L O R ID A
CASE NO IS I I I C A * I E
JOE JACOBS E L S IE LE V Y .
M A U R I C E D R A L U C F and
SMIRLE V C M A F T .
P lainlllld l,
n
MARIA E LO N U O N O a Mar
nad Woman. S U P E R IO R TR IM
A DOOR INC . B R ITTS , INC ,
B R U C E R O B E R T UN
D E R M Ilt and P L Y -M A R T S
INC and Q U A L I T Y C A R P E TS
A S H EE T V IN Y L .
Oalandantlal,
N O TIC E OF A C TIO N
TO M AR IA F LO N D O N O a
Marrlad Woman, S UP ERIO R
TRIM A DOOR INC BRIT IS,
IN C . B R U CE R O B E R T UN
DERM ILL and P L Y M ARTS
INC . and Q U A L I T Y C A R P E TS
a s h e e t V IN Y L
YOU ARE N O T I F I E D that a
mortgage forecloture action hat
taan Iliad agalntt you on Rial
proparty known at
Begin 7*00 01 teal Watl ol the
Sou th r a t i c o r n a r of lha
Norlhaatt la. ol Saclion 7,
Townthip 70 South. Ranga 10
E at' Saminola County Florida.
Ihtnca run South IIS S fatl.
Ihanca W atl 700 leal (hence
North m S leal North lo '«
Saclion lin#, Ihanca E a tl lo point
ol beginning, together with tha
improvemenlt lharaon and lha
lirlurat and equipment therein
contained and which premitei
a/k/a 7170 Ridgewood Avenue
Sanlord. Florida 17771
And rou are required lo ter ye
a copy of your wrIlian detenter
i l a n y . lo H O W A R D A
S P E IG E L . E S Q U IR E , 410 S
Orlando Avenue, Sulla 701.
Winter Park. Florida, 11J it and
hie lha original with lha Clark ol
lha Saminola County Clrcull
Court on or before lha (th day ol
A pril ta ll, or olherwlta a
Judgm ent m a y be anlarad
egeinti you lor lha rebel de
mended in the Complaint
IS E A l |
/»/Cheryl M Franklin
CLERK

OF

TH E

Sunday, March J4, 1TES

Legal Notice

N O TIC E
Johns River Water

Tha I f

The St Johns Rieer Wafer
Management District has re
calved an application for Con

C I R C U IT

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In b u im e tt at I77S
Hey
17 »7 N
Longw ood.
Saminola Co unty. F lo rid a 77710
render tha llctltro u i name of
A T T O R N E Y 'S
L IA IS O N
S E R V IC E , and lha! I Inland to
regltler ra id nam e with tha
Clark ol lha C lr c u ll C o u rt,
Saminola C o u n ty , Florida In
accordance w ith tha provltlont
of lha F IcR tlo u t Nam # Sralutat
lo w ll
Saclion MS 00 Florida
S t* M e t IFS7
f t f Diana M H o ilm a n
Publlth M a rc h 10. 17, 14. J l,

IN I
DE D 7»

IN l i l t C IR C U IT COURT
O f IM E E IO H T E t N TH
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
CASE NO I I I I ) CA ot K
H A R R Y R E IN
HARRY A
MI I I A R E I N ) W R O S
H A R R Y R E I N at Iru tte e lur
H A R R Y
F E I N
M O P A
P IN S IO N P L A N
am i HE
11RI M l N T IN C
Tru tle e lor
H A R R Y H E I N Undar D u l l lor
H A R R Y H E IN M O II R
10
Plan deled 11/IS 'la
P le in t llllt ).

V§
M A R IA f
L O N D O N O e Mar
r le d W o m a n
and B R U C E
HOB I HT U N D E R H IL L
Dbtgnddflfttit.
N O T 1CK O F A C T IO N
TO M A H IA r
LONDONO «
M a r r la d W o m a n
BRUCE
R O BER T U N D E R H IL L
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE O that a
mortgage foreclosure at I ton hai
been Iliad a g a m if you on that
fir lit* H y known as
B a n a l I, T r a i l I. all of thal
p a r i of L o t 14 S A N T O H O
SUBSTANTIAL
TAHMS
TRAC T N O I a&lt; cor cl ing lo Ihe
Mlal thereof at recorded In Rial
Book I Mag* • I and 14 Public
Record* of Saminola Count,
H o n d a together with tha im
pro vfm en t* lharaon and lha
flito ra t and •quipnvanl i N r n 't
i©nl lin ed and which premises
a t a a id S C o u n te r C lu b
Haul* v ar d, L at a M a i y f lor Ida
And you ar# required fa serve
a iiFpy of your written detenus
if a n y . fo M O W A H D A
SMI IO I L
E V Q U IH I
4/0 S
O rla n d o A v e n u e
Sulla 101
Wmtar M art f lor .da i ) t | i «nd
fil# tha original with Mi# Clerk uf
th# Sam inola Counfy Circuit
Court on or Imptor a th# Ith d a , of
A p ril
itl$
or otherwise a
J u d g m e n t m a y be a n la ra d
agamy! you for th# relief da
mended in tha Com pi a ml
I l f AL)
/&amp;/Chary! N Fra nklin
C L E R K O F T H E CIR CUIT
COURT

lu m p ! )#* W ater Use from

FR EED O M
S A V IN G S
TR U S TEE
PO
BOX 1*20
W I N T E R
P A R K . F l
J77t9 application *?U7 0I7*AN
on 0I/J1/IS Th* applicant pro
poses to withdraw 100 M G D of
G R O U N D W A T E R FROM TH E
F L O R ID A N A Q U IF E R VIA 1
P R O P O S E O W E LL FOR SOO
A N D C A T T L E t© serve appro*
'me»*«y t*S acrelst In Seminole
County located tn S*cf*on IF,
Tow nship

70 South

Rang#

J7

East

LA M E T R IM B Y G R O V ES
IN C
P O
B O X 7I5J O R
LANDO
F L 371S* application
#7 U / O I7 4 A U . on 17/I7 4* The
applicant proposes to withdrew
077 M G O of G R O U N O W A T E R
FROM
THE
FLORIDAN
A Q U I F E R V IA t E X I S T I N G
lily. PilotA#, Florida 31071
W E L L F O R C IT R U S to serve 1 $
1479. or in par ton at H t otto# on
e c r* (s | In Sem inole Co unty
S la t # H i g h w a y 100 W a t l.
located in Section 71 Township
Pa'afka, F lo rid a 904 1711)71
,71 South R eng* ?t E eif
W r it t a n o b j e c t i o n to t h «
The G overning Board of the
application m a y ba m ad t but
D is tric t will take action to grant
Should h# received no later than
or deny the application!t) n©
14 d a y i from , tha d a ta ©I
-sooner fhen 70 da y! from fh#
publication W r iffan objections
date of this notice Should you be
chouId identify th# ohter tor by
interested in any of the listed
nam e and address and fully
applications you should contact
describa f'ha ob|action lo tha
the St Johns River Water Mian
application
F ilin g a written
ag#m en! D istrict at P O Bor
©traction do#! not anfitia you to
1*79 Pa ia fka . Florida 17074
a Chapter 170 Florida Statutes,
1*79, or in person at1its ©thee on
A d m in istra tive N aaring Only f S t a t e H i g h w a y HJO W e s t
those person! wh©%e substantial
Peietke
Florida 90* 174 1)71
interests ara affected by fh#
W r i t f a n o b je c t i o n to th e
application and who ftNt a peti
application m ay be- made but
Hon m ealing lit# requirement*
should t*e received no later than
ol Saclion 71 S KM. f A C , may
I* d a y s f r o m th# d a te of
obtain an Adm um ttrehv* Haar
publication Written objections
ing A ll tlrrvafy Iliad writfan
should identify the ob|*&lt;lor by
objections will be presented to
nam # and address and fully
the Hoard lor its eontuderehon
describe the ©bjection to Ihe
in i t i d e li b e r a t i o n ©n lh a
a p p lication
Filing, a written
application prior to the Board
objection does not entitle you to
faking action on tha application
a Chapter 170 Florida Statutes
Dennis# T K e m p Director
A d m in istra tiv e Hearing O nly
D ivision ot Records
those persons whose lu bifePillil
St John* Hi ear Wafer
interests ere effected by the
M anagem ent District
application arid who t l* a petl
P u b llih M ar rh 34 194)
fi'On m etlirwj the requirements
D E D iat
ot Sec tion 71 I 701 F A C . m ay
obtain an Administratem Hear
m g AM tim ely filed written
IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T
ob|e&lt; fiont w ill be- presented to
O f T M IE IG H T ItN T M
the Board for its consider a I ion
J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT
•n its d e lib e r a tio n on the
IN A N O F O R
application prior I© the Board
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
tak mg ac lion on the epplir at ion
F L O R IO A
Danmsa T Ramp. Director
C A S E N O I t 41* CA Ot I
D ivision of Records
M M f A R E IN
St Johns River Water
Plaintiff
M anagem ent District
at
Publish M arch 7*
M A R IA E L O N D O N O a Mar
D E O 144
f le d W o m a n , a n d B R U C F

a m e n d m e n t
the

R O B E R T U N D E R H IL L
Defendant I *)
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO M A R IA r
LO N DO N O a
M a r r i e d W o m an
MR U ( f
R O H f R T U N D E R M ILL
Y O U
A R E
H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D that a m ortgage
foreclosure arfion has lieen tiled
against you on that property
known as
Parcel It Tra ct II all of that
p a r! of Ldlft it am* || SAN
E O H D S U B S T A N T IA L fA H M S
T R A C T N O 1 according to It#
Plat thpraot a i recorded In Plat1
Book ) Pag# 81 anti &gt;4 Public
Records ol Seminole County
f for Mia, together with the im
prove m e nts lharaon and the
fu tu re s and equipment therein
contained and which premises
arb/a 4*0 S Countr y Club Head,
I akr M a ry Florida 177*4
A nd you are required to serve
a copy of your written defense*
M a n y
fo H O W A R D A

S P E IG E L

C S Q U IR f

*/0 S

O r la n d o A v e n u e . Suits 701
Winter Park Florida 177*# and
III* the original with the Clerk ot
ihe Sem inole County Circuit
Court on or ftefofe the *lh day of
A p r il
lf | l
or otherwise a
J u d g m e n t m a y be en te red
against you for the relief d#
m ended in the C om plam t
I SI A I |
D A V ID It! M R U N
C L E R K OF TH E
C IH C U lf C O U R T
11.1C tier y I R I r arik I«r»
Deputy i lerk
Publish M a r c h ! 10 1/ 74 IV«S
D E D 14

F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Notice It hereby given that wa
are engaged in business at 101
Hunker Ln
Sanford Seminole
C o u n t y , F lo r i d a J777 I lbs
m ailing address at P D
Boa
10494 O rlan do F L 174*7 0*941
under the fictitious name of
A IR
HE F I N I S H IN G C O . and
that we Intend to register said
nam e with the Clerk ©f ihe
C irc u it Court Saminola County
F lo rid a in accordance with the
p ro v is io n s ot th* Etc tit lout
Nam a Statutes to wit Saclion
441 09 E lor Ida Statutes 1917
E d w a rd I Hubbard
S Dolores M Swiercjynski
Publish M a rth 17 74 Jl 4 April
f, 1941
D E D 111

Publish March 1 10. IF. 14 iH t
0 1 D IS

N O T IC E
The St Johm River Water
. M anagem ent District has r*
i c i wed an application tor Man
a g e m rn t and Storage o* Suftare
W ater s from
C I T Y OF L O N G W O O D
171
a i m
W A R R EN AVI
L O N G W O O D
F L 17710
A p p lic a tio n *4 t l 7 0041AG on
10 IQ M The proieM if located
in Sem inote C O U N T Y
SE f
T IO N Jl Township 70 S O U T H
Mange K) Fast The appiecation
IS lor a 1 1 acre F LO O D C O N
TR O L P R O J F C T to tw known as
H I G H L A N D M IL L S F L O O D
c o n ! WOL The leralvm g water
la d y is W f ST L A # f
Tt»e Governing Board ot the
D is trict will lake action to grant
or deny the epptlh etiwrlsj « #
suuner Ifnan 70 days If urn th*
(fate of this notice lnould you t**
interested In any of the fisted
applet ah u m you should lonfat t
the St Johns River Water M an
egem enl District at fp O Bo*
1479 Patatka
Florida 17074
I *79 w# tn (lersctn at ill of fit e on
S t a t e H i g h w a y 100 W « s t
Ftolatka tlo r.d e 904 )71 4171
W r i t f a n o b l et lio n to th a
application m ay i# mad# but
*.hnuld ft# received nu later Itian
14 d a y s h o m th# d a te o l
pub Ilea t ton W ' 1Me m 0*11«* l1ion s
! should itfentify the otxector t&gt;y
1 n a m e and address and luMy
ilescntj# live objec bon to tn#
I a p p lu alton
f ilin g a wr Mten
| otijec lion does not entitle you to
1 a Chapter I JO Florida Statutes
A d m in istra tiv e Hearing O nly
those persons whose substantial
interests are affected by the
application and who lit# a peti
lion m eeting the requirements
ol Section 78 I 70! F A C m ay
obtain an Adm inistrative Hear
mg
A ll tim ely tiled written
ob |act Him will tw presented to
the Board tor its consideration
in Its d e lib e r a tio n on the
application prior to Ihe Board
tak ing at I ion on the appHf at ion
Dannise T Hemp Director
D ivision of He&lt; ord l
St Johns River Water
M anagem ent D 'ltf 't t
Publish M arch 74 1991
D E D U7
N o I ICC
U N D r R F IC T IT IO U I
N A M I STATUTE
T O W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N
Notice 1% hereby gi*en that the
undersigned puiiwant to tie
F te l lo u t N a m e Statu*#
1 hapfer m i Of Florida Stafiws
w ill f #g 1%t#r with the Clerk ot
th* C ircuit Court in and lor
W m thole County I lar ‘da upon
receipt of proof ot the public#
t'on of this Notice ft*# hcititou*
nam e, to wd
M il H H S BA I T A N D T AC h * F
under which we are engaged in
business at «4 lt Forest City
M 0 a cl A 11a fn o n I « S p r i n g 1
Seminole County F lor id# J/71*
That the p a 'ty interested in
sa*d business enterp#is* is as
follow s
h I A TO N C M l l L F R and
M A R T H A S M IL L E R His wit*
D A I E D a I C a 1 1 * I be r r y
Sem inole County f londa on
M * r 4h IV 1941
M A IO N C MI L L ER
M A R T H A S M il L I R
Publish M a rth 74 )1 A p ril 7
** 1941
D I D 141

N O TIC E UN D ER
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E S TA TU TE
T O W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N
Notice Is hereby given that the
undersigned, pursuant f© the
E lc t if l o u i N a m e Statute
C hapter le t Of F lor ida Statutes
wilt register with the Clark ol
tha Circuit Court m and tor
Saminola County,. Florida,, upon
r ec eipt of proof of the public a
fion of this Notice the fictitious
nam e to wit D U N C A N S B A IT
A N D T A C K L E under which we
are engaged in business at 111
S u n s h in e L a n e
A lta m o n te
S p r in g s
S e m in a l* C o u n ty
E lor id*
That th* party interested in
said business is as tulfows
M i l L E R S H A IT A N D
TA C K L E CASSELBER R Y
IN C
By B E M N A H D D D U N C A N
President
Publish M a rc h IF 7*. Jl 4 A pril
7 I9 «l
O E l) 174

z o n in g

IW O tU Y ,

J iAillT WM A \WHA1TIKI*&gt;

CM AJllM US JhAJKtfUCr
As utrm not ovum ak&amp;j

lO N M f iJ if r J A

oom

juwKAaaor

fur m m

asp

SUPSANPASMATIONSI

ihso.JJ11X1HO

8:30 A M. •5:30 P.M.
MONDAY Mini FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 ■Noon

TO DA Y i
t r a a

RATES

a w iw '

IB

322-2611

21— Personals
•ABORTION •

S P R IN G IS T H I T IM E TO
B U IL D B IG B U S IN E S S
TH R O U G H L I T T L E ADSt

tito M aditaid t i n

tiso Gyn Saryltai »I5 P r t
gnanty Tall F raa Countaling
Protait.onal Cara Sirggortiva
Atmoi(&gt;hara Cont ctantlat
F l o r id a
W OMEN'S H E A L T H

&lt; t

#*■##’

27— Nursery &amp;
Child Care
Bab ysitter needed weekdayi
1 yf old References Lake
M a ry ere# 3338)7*
C ap mother with babysit tn my
hom e
intents to toddlers
Sentord era* U l )•)*

h e w l o c a tio n

t)(M W Calarwal Dr . Orlando
m i m a a ii
i too n i iu a

nf

Balloon Magic
A J

Far tender, laving A qualify
ch ild car#, c a ll A C h ild s
War Id )1 J 443*

SOS 5(S 0400

Nv*
Cradu
C a rd 1 No on#
rtlu ia d V ila W aita rca rd
Caitl la tusaao iaj

L I N D A GIFT

W ITH A L I F T '

....... BALLOON
..... BOUQUETS

Legal N otice

31— Private
Instructions

W# Dallyari
Fa* tvary raaian a vtry aaaian

©

F IC T ITIO U S NAME
Notice il hereby given that I
am engaged in business at
1437 A Landing D r
Sanford.
Seminole County, Florida under
the fictitious na m e of L O L
G I F T S and that I intend to
register sa»d nam e with the
Clerk of the C ir c u it C o urt,
Seminote County. F lo rid # in
accordance with fh* provisions
©f the F iftilious Nam e Statutes,
to wit
Section 4*109 H o n d a
Statutes 1V17
S Rosemary L Crawford
t Date F C ra w ford
•
‘S' Thereu* L N # r»h
t Marcia D W eary
s Jennifer L Webster
Publish M arch 17, 74, Jl A A pril
7. If f )
D E D 17*

p ia n o l e s s o n s

CELEBRATE
A BIRTH!

14 par lattor'
i n ##I4 attar 1 PM

B u tira tt

JOBS T R Y O NE AN D SEE
FOR Y O U R S E L F

iZ

•HVV

Y O U A R E IN V IT E D '

Thinking si a# it in* a
Raat E itata L lta n ia f
Join u i al our Caraar Night
A p ril l»th f ta t PM
Wa altar Fraa tuition
a n d ta n lln io u l tra in in g'
Call D irk ar V K k y tar d a li'lt
l i t U l l i n Jiao E ra Ft* 'Ola

To b r o w s e t h r o u g h a
superm arket ot terrific values
in today i Classified Ads

A aya i ol Florida tnr
I f Y a a rt Eapariantal

• M A R Y K A Y CO SM ETIC S e
Ik in care and cater flair

CO NNIE
m 77)4
P H O TO G R A P H Y
Cell Rkiph
•J4I4J7

C a p 'U i

H O OOfl to

t! 0D0000 #"d o*#' P 0 Bo*
1411 Wm*ar P» Fla HIT0

AVON EAANIN GSW O W M t
O P E N T E A A I T O A IE I NOW tit
___
111 H U a r n lO A M
A C CO U N TS A E C t IV A B L E
C L E A N Strong background In
paymant polling to computar
ly ita m
mlth am phaili on
p-oof procaii Mult ba oral!
organ.jad niti' good clan&lt;Al
i l n il tntaraitad Candida*#
Uiould contart Harcar Alurtii
flllft)
____ ______________
A crylic Apffi»ca»ors needed to
ebply protective coat'ng on
cars boats and planes I ) 'o
) H per hour We h e m For
work m Sanford area call
Ta m p a 113 44* 71)1
A D M IN IS T R A T IV E
A S S IS TA N T
A C C O U N T IN G C L E R K
SECRETARY
K E Y PUNCHER
W AN G O PER ATO R
CLERK TYPIST
CRT O P ER ATO R S
Im m ediate ettifam ents avail
able in Lake M ary and San
tord Area Call Attest Tam pa
ra ry Services I I I 1444Agressive fam ily owned home
center h is mad# an opening
for a sates train** Must b#
egress, ve ambitious willing
to learn *nd take rtsponsibill
ty Aik© n##d part time ca
shier and stock person Cell
for appointment
esk for
A lvtn K ilpatrick Call 37? 0100
A V O N Miring Smiling F a c ts !
F a ll A p' time Call (m m adt
atelyt H I SttOor 111 1074

33— Real Estate
Courses

M r f la r h 'i atilt
m aliat lar a Itlatim#
at m am attat. gitti A alll
L IT T L E W A N
T AOS
Call
Linda DO
I I I tBIO
ilt

Bookkeeper Receptianrst
Mai I1y r e e ■per i#n&gt;ct d imduv id ua i
for bookeeptng through Ilnan
ctai Payroll Federal Deposit
Q u a rte rly end Annuel Re
ports W7 i Accounts Payable
and Receivable audit answer
telephone correspondence
'Mail cover letter or resum e
with references to Bov tea. C -0
S anford H e ra ld , P O
Bo*
1A)7 Sanford f\_ I V n 14S7

N E V E R PLACED A W A N T
AD? DON T W ORRY W E L L
H E L P Y O U W IT H T H E
W O R D IN G
JU S T C A L L
m

i* n

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To

L is t Y o u r B u s i n e s s -

D ia l 3 2 2 -2 6 1 1 o r 8 3 1 - 9 9 9 3

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service

Handy Man

Professional T a i Evperil Pro
pare, my office or your heme
Best price* E2
U A H I.
I l l Cell offer * 774 1)7)
Tea accountant H years evpe

Rales 171 0t It ( a i1A n r i

ft-*

W* F i l It Alll
Roefin*, Painting. Carpenfry
Fret Wrlften |%t________ 32) 197)

r'ence Wilt prepare t# *#t in
your ham #
P e rs o n a l end

small business 711 i U i

Health &amp; Beauty
TO W ER S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H a rrla tl't H r* ,',
Nook II* E III SI I I I Sf41

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
Wa Handt#
Tha Who'# B a llO t W a i

Center's Building A Remodeling
No Jab Tee Small
) l l Burton Lane. Sanford
li t M il
Plumbing Painting Electric
Carpentry Don f See IIP Ask Bof
IQyrs Evp_______ B l L JJ1 0*4!
SPRING F IX UP
Special savings on tharmai
windows, soffit and facia
tiding, gutters screen work
end burglar bars Fam ily
o w n e d and o p e ra te d
Associated Contractors 7700
French Ave Sanford Call

B l. LINK CONST.
322-7029
______ F macrng Xuaiiatjtg______

Appliance Repair
Aliens Appliance S*rvtci
14 hr W rvice Ne E a tra C h a rt#
t7yr evp S R )*4t, )7* 4*1)

Building Contractors
A D O tn O N S R E M O O E L IN O

HI 4417_______________

Bill Sfripp Custom Builder
Vote Lie
WWOO Jl )M

THOM AS A TH OM AS Heme
rtpatr. cleaning, lawn cere
Call » ! 7)t9

855 M il
Carpentry
R E P A IR IN G
Vary Raliah4a
k * a m t i4 t

Cleaning Service
Hoad Carpal Claanlng (.lying
Dining Room i&gt; Hall l i t 00
Sola k Chair US m j M *

Home Repairs
C A R P EN TER
Rapaift and
ramodaling No lob loo tmaH
CallWlkkaS_________________
Mamlanan&lt;o ot an lypat
Carpantry, painting, plumbing
ondaia&lt;trt&lt; m a o x

Landclearing

MAIDS To 0m«t
Claanllnati H n a il TaGadlinati
Call H iihalparti
Guaranlaad larylaa . Law Ratal

CJUL NOW! 33SOIOO
Firewood/Fuel
TR EE SER VIC E ft FIR E W O O D
FOR SALE C A L L A F T E R
4 P M H J 9044

* * » . - n x/A R
( t o e [O S N

A6AIS

[|

l a n d c l e a r in g

F IL L D IR T BUSHOGGING
C L A Y A SHALE I I I 141)

Lawn Service
A C E L A W N S E RVI C E
Maintenance Sodding Pruning
Cleaning Thatching Ferfiliim g
Fre e I stim elvs
H I )711
I a wm M ain»t w c *

Lerdsc aping ByV! Hog Mowing
J49

Home Improvement

REMOOILING SOCIALIST

R E M O D E LIN G
Ralaramai
I B R II

Painting

Landclearing

Evp Handy men. Wet Reliable
Fre* Est most any job Best

G E N E V A L A N O C L IA R IN O
Lot and l and i laar mg
till dirt, and hauling
Call 14* sawor Sa* SFS1
N E V E R P L A C E D A W ANT
AD T DON T W O R R Y WE LL
H E L P V O U W IT H T H I
W O R D IN O
JU S T CALL
I I I M il.

Shopping For A
New Or Used Carl
Tau can i l a i y i fin d tha
p r t I d r a li In tho I r o n i n g
Hot a id # C l f t l l l o g root Ion
Hr ad Friday a I r t n i n g H n o l d
lot lha b a it u l o t t l o n *

S e r lk I r e a r Ik % t r
k e e le rd , • Iw rid a
S S 9 -M II

r

Can 177 4477

25— Special Notices

c en ta a l

’ / / 7 r r\ T

r

Tw o airline tickets Qriando to
G ran d Rapids Michigan K )
each M ust be used April 4

I wit not be responsible for any
debts In c u rre d by anyone
other than m yself as of March
it i f f ) A r vaster Money

I ) 14 w i t

IM

t

E V E N IN G HE A ALD.
INCA EASE IHa A E A 0 E A S H IA

M a ry K ay Casmetics
Free Camphnsenfary Facial!
Far e Great Spring Lae4 33) &lt;4)7

Evening Herald

* * 9

At a cia ttitiad adyartiiar m m#

al &gt; a wr ad Ay witng tta rtt
G lva aur va tat raat a call at

tit Tfimailay abortion t I I * n

61 — Money to Lend

7 l-H e lp Wanted

That we have

2i — P erso n als

Tw o desirable cem etery to*! in
0*kf*pwh M em orial Perk
Catt WJ HQ*

T O K A V ff A O A R A O C S A I .I
* U T V O U DO N f 1 0 A
W A N T A D C A L L TO M il

NOW

ctr, M r MY
UKcAM
H tR O iA N Ji

★
★

? our

17— Cemetery and
Crypts

l » * » t I J * * * - *•**
____________________

r o iT b b a r T h i c d * o a * a o e

D E A D L IN E S
N o o n T h o D a y Before P ublication
S u n d a y ■ N o o n Frid a y
M o n d a y - 11 :00 A M . S a tu rd a y

C I T Y OF
L O N G W O O D F L O R ID A
N O T IC E O F
P U B L IC H E A R IN G
T O C O N S ID E R
A D O P T IO N OF
P R O P O S E O O R D IN A N C E
T O W H O M IT M A Y C O N C I R N
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
liy the C i t y nf I on gw o n©
I iurula
(hat the C ity Com
mission w in hold a public hear
ing to consider enactment of
O r d *nani e No *41. efitl f led
AN O R D IN A N C E O f
TH E
C I f V O l
I ON G w o o D
F L O R ID A A M E N D IN G O R D I
N A N C E N O 491 A N D A L L IT S
AMENDMENTS of
s a i d
CITY
S A I D O R D I N A NC i
I! E I N C I H I
C O M
P R I M E N S IV I
Z O N IN G O R
O iN A N C E OF TH E C I T Y OF
L O N G W O O D F L O R I D A S A ID
AMENDMENT CHANGING
fin
Z O N IN G O f
t i n 1 Airy
f f R R t T O R Y F R O M R f Si
Of N t IA t
MUL T) f A MI L v
i R it TO C O M M ! R t l A L Of
li()
( ( |!
P R O V ID IN G AN
EFFECTIVE
DATE
RE
P f A l IN G O R D IN A N C E S IN
C O N f L I CT ttf RE W I T H
* #gal Lot 11* and West 1 1 ot
Lot |J4, Town of LcmgwtKMl
at &lt;or d&gt;ng to the pi„*f Hher ecit as
recorded in Plat Book l Pages
it through 71 of Public Records
r»f Seminole County F &gt;©# ula
B ein g m ore g e n * ra lly de
U n tie d as &gt;41 E as» Pm # St
Said Ordinance wat placed on
tust reading on M arch It I f f )
ami th# City Commission *.11
&lt;ons&lt;d*r w m # tor final patsag*
and sdosihqn after the public
hearing whtc h w&lt;h l# held In
'he l ty Man 171 West W arren
A ve
LongwcxHt F lo rid a on
M cuh1.»i th* lit) da y of Apr il,
A D
it* i parties m ay appear
and tw heard with respect to the
proposed Ordinance This hear
mg m at be i ©nhnued' tra m tim e
!© time until final action is taken
by the City Commission
A copy of the proposed O rd i
nance t% .penled at th# C ity Hall!
longw ood Florida and copies
m # on • # with the Clerk ot the
City and sarn# may be inspected
by the public
A taped record of this m ealing
*s made by the City to* its
convemefHe T h u record m ay
net ionstitule an adequate re
c ord tor purposes of appeal from
.s dectston made by the Com
m ission with respect to the
foregoing matter A ny person
wishing to ensure that an ade
qua** record, ot the pfocewdmgs
*1 m a in ta in e d far a p p e lla te
purposes ts advised to m ake th#
necessary arrangem ents at his
or her own eapense
Date this u ih day of M arch.
1941
C I T Y OF LO N G W O O D
Donald L ferry
City Ct*rk
Publish March J4 A p r .1) 194)
DE O 147

L

,r*ormat«)r pOona SAVINGS

1 tim *.................. 67C t line
3 cORMCirtir* timti 61C $ lin*
7 cofitvciftiv* tint** 52C • lin*
10 conitcttMv* timet 46C * lin*
CMtriet Riltt AviiUbl*
3 Lines Minimum

H O U RS

c e r t a in

out

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

noiAHuiewd

JO

OW N Y O U * OWN 1 U S IN E M I
Hat ion# I fran ih lia cot** you
1, ooc C o " f*luai&gt; • u « t « K " a
Hying your t in t .# • ' fo r *“■'

Orlando ■Winter Park

322-2611

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

Ar/uGU*Kfvroff,wntrt

M € U N H A C K U JW S M H ta

Seminole

T E R R I T O R Y F R O M IN D U S
T R I A L P A R K (I I) T O C O M
M E R C IA L
G E N E R A L tC ) ) .
P R O V ID IN G AN E F F E C T I V E
DATE
REPEALING O R O i
n a n c e s
IN c o n f l i c t
HF r e w it h
L
*
g
4
1
j i 70 jo xw o n e 000000
The West JO) M feet of the
SE « of the SW * of Se&lt;hon j i
T ownship 70 South Range JQ
F a i t lying South of Longwood
Paim S pring ! Road and N orth of
S t a t e R o a d 4) 4
S e rr in o 'e
County, F lortda
B e in g m ore ge n e ra lly de
K r 1bed as the land on the N side
d SR 4 M appraiirnefefy 400
•net E O' *he intersection ot W
W arren A re w d h S R a ja
Satd Ordinance was pieced1Gun
first reading on M arch 11, I f f !
end the City Commission wilt
consider same for final passage
and adophon after the- public
hearing, which will be h*fd in
the C ity Hail 17) West W arren
A ye
Longwood F lo rid a , on
M ondey the |th day of A p ril
A D . 1941 parties m ay appear
and be heard with respect to the
proposed Ordinance This hear
mg m ay be continued from time
to time until final action is takan
by th* C»ty Commission
A copy of the proposed O r di
nance *s posted a* the CMy *taH
Longwood Florida and copies
are on Me with the Clerk of the
Ci ty and same may It# inspected
try *h* public
A taped record of this meeting
is made by the City for its
convenience T h u record may
not constitute an adequate re
cord for purposes ot appeal from
a dec I non made by the Com
m illio n with respect fo the
foregoing matter A ny person
wishing to ensure that an ade
quale record ©f the p fo&lt;endings
is m a in ta in e d for appeltate
purposes »s adr*sed to m ake fh#
necessary arrangements at his
or tier owneapense
Da*e this 1)th day ot M arch
•941
C i t y of l o n g w o o d
Donald L Terry
C ity Clerk
F’ ubhsh M arch 74 A p ril J te tl
D E D 1 4#

Doonesbury
rum.s nun rcvcMurmrn

CLASSIFIED ADS

c h a n g i n g
of

55— Business
Opportunities

25— Special Notices

C I T Y OF
L O N G W O O O . 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 I0 E R
A D O P T IO N O F
P R O R O S E D O R 01 N A N C E
TO W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
b y the C i t y of L o n g w o o d .
F lo rid a
that the C ity C o m
mission will! hold a public hear
mg to considef enactment of
O rdinance No 444 entitled
A N O R O IN A N C I OF T H E
c i t y
o f
l o n g w o o d .
F l o r id a a m e n d in g o r d i
N A N C E N O *91 A N D A L L IT S
A 7/f M O M E N T S O F s a i d
C lTv
SAID O R D I N A N C E
B E I N G
T H E
C O M
P R E H E N S I V E Z O N IN G O R
D fN A N C E OF T H E C I T Y O F
L O N G W O O D F L O R ID A S A ID

N O T IC E

M anagam anI D is trict hat re
calved an application for Man
agamani and Storage of Surface
W a ta n from
E V E R E TT E HUSKEY, RO
B O X m M A I T L A N D F l 377)1,
A p p lic a tio n #*0 111 0079A on
01'M/SS Th a protact it toe4lad
in Sam inola C O U N T Y . SEC
T fO N V , J ) 1*. Tow nthip It
S O U TH
Panga 39 le s t Tha
application it for a IF i F acre
S IN G L E F A M I L Y R U R A L
E S T A T E S U B D IV IS IO N »o ba
known at R IV E R C R E S T Tha
r e c e i v i n g w i f i r b o d y »%
W E K IV A R IV E R
Action will toe fake© on th#
a b ove lis te d e p p i ic a ii o n li i
within JO day* of receipt of tha
application Should you ba inter
t i l e d in a n y ©f tha 11H a d
ftppi«cai&lt;on'i. you shou'd contact
Mia SI John* R iver W atff Man
agamant D istrict i t P O Bo#

COURT
Publlth March I. to 17. 74 Iklt
D E D 11

Legal Notice

mnmp

LAWNS MOWED 6 TRIMMED
Spring Yer d Cleanup*

) 11 1*51

★ TONY CORINO a
Prolmiotiil Custom rimtini
Sarwmg Canlral F la tor IS y r i
with complata quality paint
mg la r y iia i Quality a M u tt
Spaclal uiall taating I I I M i l

W A L L P A P E R IN G
R alarancai

ni**tr

P A IN T IN G
V ary Raliabla

...........**4m ro t

Paper Hanging
P A P E R H A N O IN O

Any lypa*all&lt;a va rlng
Raaianabla

Chmtian Bios

..........

IT I 1*44

'J*

Cotnpltlt Uwn Cm

Rtnonibl* *it*s
173 4401
Masonry
H EA L Cock ret# | man qualify
ckperqtiort Patios, driveway!

Days JJIT JO Ives 177 1)71
O M Ruby Concrete
House slabs e Drives e Patios

Nursing Care
O UR R A TE S ARE LOWER
Labavw* Nurttn* Canlar
t it I Sac and SI laniard
I I I «Ft»
______

Painting
A I A P A IN T IN G Inlarlsr and
a a la r ia r
l i t a m i t and
bandad It yaart aipananra

caii m mi
CALVIN A TORTS
Huuta Painting A Wall Ptpar
Taubuy matariali
Wa I apply labar la LAVE l i t

m in i_______

Ratpaniihia Man and halpa' *IH
point your Homy or Butinaai
Ot( G ird your problamt lo ut
W E CARE Quality «*rk »
yrk oap m M J L k coni

Plastering
• a l l PhaM ial Platlarlnga
Rapalr. Stucco Hard Coat.
U w n td M W e t, m i t t t
Ara you a F lia rt Than tart
eftsers at year service through
Went Adst

Plumbing
• Rudds Plumbing Service e *,*
Regeir e Repiece # Remodel • Free f iftmetes * J l ) M U •

Pressure Cleaning
P R IV A TE A M O BILE H O M IlT .
CO M M ER CIA L
M t t t ll

Tile
S c o i lm a n n I l i a
P ra n u i
C la a n ln g C a r a r n lc . V ln
A ibatloa All Phaia* P C
Brick Hom at B u tm a tia t
Ftaa E n Raaionapip H J *J

Tree Service
ECHOLS T i l l SERVICE
Fraa Eitim aiatl Low Pricati
Llcanaad Inaurad' m m t
’■Lai tha Pr«4at liana It da i f
JOHN A LLE N S LAW N A TREE*
DeadIraaramoral Lie A m t
Fraa ail 111 SM0

�f % %

71— Help Wanted
C LARK A P P A R E L . 1 M CM
L »k « Mjf|r Road. Uni I t » .
Lak*
* M a ry .
t&gt;p*fi
•need kawring m Khin* o p tfi
tort H I IIM ____________
C L E A N IN G L A D Y I or 1 b iT* #
• »* » In G qrw va on la ka
Hornoy M utt bo 6tt&gt;*nd*l&gt;**
A hav* owm trontporiofion
C »n B ill stootont E m l i t
tlAR D*yt 477 0441

CIERR TTf 1ST
Maft.atod individual ter a lim y
•t&gt; pormarwnt »• tit law mini
typo to W P « a » »
Coll Today Work Today!
Akteit T amp i o n k t i

IH -W ............. .........UP HIT
EM PLOYM EN T
O P P O R T U N I T Y W ITH
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY
GOVERNM ENT
F IR E
P R O T E C T IO N INSPECTOR
Oradwalten Iro n tw*h uhsci
tvpotemontod by thra* &lt;11
yoart ol fir*t»gMiwq oipori
onto I or an aqviralant combi
nation ol rotated framing and
oiportefKO Mvtt pot ta n and
m aintain a valid Florida
O rlvor't Lironta I Definition
of V A L ID : Tho Ittirod llronta
It not otpirod nor hat nithm
fho pail thro* l i t yoari boon
domod. rotfricted. lorokad or
tutpondod A copy of tho front
and back It repaired prior to
naan ol the elating date I Matt
moot ropulromontt ter Fir*
Intpoctar at tat forth by the
Flo rid a Slat* F lro lig h lo rt
Standard! Council and the
N FP A Pamphlet l i l t . Chap
tort t and I, Prolotilenal
Qualification! tor Fir* In
tpoctor I and II Mvtl p o iitli
a certificate of compliance
from an approved State *1
Florida Minimum Standard!
Fire fig h tin g C avria M utt
pottott tho Slate ol Florida
M unicipal! Fir* Lately In
tpoctor Certificate Salary
l&gt;*4 to U l l «**kly Ctoting
d a le M a r c h I t , I t * ]

71— Help Wanted

E X E C U T IV E S E C R E TA K T
A D M IN ASSISTANT

Light Delivery
m ut i have
w-tall car Caw daily Call
Tma tor Bobaae aiS7_________

Eaocufiv* office oacoitenl u n i t
mutt bo protettional t ’ S OOO
Permanent por tion Never a

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL

774-1141
F in a n c ia l B ookkeeper tor
orthodontltt! office Career
minded Good phono etiquette
Computer orpertence dot red
Call Gayte V to i ! Monday
through Thurtdey 1T14SI1
Full and pan tima pooiiiont now
available ttourt can be tteai
bie tor tchooi o» Jnd iob
Benetitt available after quail
tying Apply in peraon at
w a x t 1000 W
Hwy tie
Hard working, energahe pertem
needed tor work on tree term
Call between t j A ■ weekday!
n i laoo
MOSTESVCASM1ER
Apply 1 to i PM ttohday Moute
Retteurant tfwy 17 *7 nea'
Lake M ary________________
H O U S E P AR E N T S C h n ttla n
W elle' lor abutad A troubled
teem lev sort
LABORERS
ASSEM RLERS
W A R EH O US E W ORKERS
Attignmenlt available In Lan
lo rd
L a te M a ry and
Longwood area
No lee
A b ie tl Tem porary Larnca
171 TV1 0 _________
L A B O R E R S Strong reliable,
general laborer! needed Im
mediately Different local tom
Phone end trentportelion a
mutt Naver a lee Apply

KEUY SERVICES

660-2339_ _ _ _ _ _
LET AM EMPLOYMENT
SHOW YOU THE NAY
* TO "SPRING" INTO *
AN EXCITING CAREER1

* 323-5176 ★

C O U N T Y E N G IN E E R
Graduation from an accredited
collog* or untvonfty with a
bachelor i dagrot in civil,
mechanical, or public amrkt
engineering and lour yaart
totpontible engineering tip*
rienco In the ompteymont ol
othert or in private practice
that would quality the Individ
ual la r t a l l i l a c l a r y ad
m ln ltlra lw n ol engineering
operation! In public omrkti or
on equivalent combination ol
training and otperlanct Rag
m u t to n a t a prateulonal
a n g ln a tr In lha Stale al
Florida It required Rogiitra
•Ian ot a protettional tend
turuoyor It highly datlrabla
Ctoting dole April 1. lot]
Apply by NOON of the elating
d a ta , S t m ln o li C tu n ly
P t r t a n n t l O lllc t . Caonly
Sorvlcot building. 1111 E lit
SI . Laniard F L Appllcalleni
given and accepted Monday
through Friday, l b AM lo
NOON
Equal Opportunity
Employer Valorem Prater
once Oivon on Initial Mire
Eacollonl income for part time
home attembly work For
info call IWCIAfiaOOl Eat.
mo Open Sun
__________

K IT N C A R L Y L E ' by L a rry W right

71-H elp Wanted

Light Houuwork— some
T jp m i

Part lima

..................I l l 4471

SEWING MACHINE
OPERATORS
E •perlvneed tewing machine
eperatort wanted all apera
liant apen Wa will train
qulalllad applicant! In pur
advancad technique!, plut.
alter prebatienary parted,
great benafiti al 4 paid hall
d a y t and h a ip ita llia tlo n
Apply I la I Monday thru
Friday al H4e Old Laka Mary
Rd Laniard, or call 111 Ml*

L I V E IN H O U S E K E E P E R
COOK
For retired Lake Mary couple
Beautiful homa W ilt need!
tome per tone I attitlenca
Nonwneker Mutt drive car
a v a ila b le
P riv a te liv in g
querlen 1100 per month Rat
e n r u e i re q u ire d
o r 177 00 la

Evening Herald. Sanford FI

Van

p iy c ia tn c

d iabiad

and

W in

W a 'f r t i i * anted Apply in
panon only ba^naan ; and 4
PM
R ib Ranch JS4S S
F ranch A r t ._________
W ANG O PER ATO R
Opaningt in Laka Mary No »aa
C aM A b l a i f T a m p p r a r y
Stfv lc tt 12t Nao

93— Rooms for Rent

7 1 -Help Wanted

LIVE IN NEEDEO

iehaphone
Racaphonlit
and1
t &gt; p ii t
USB * itk
p lu i
hoip^tilifatton and ratiramanf
Can la ; ailttor m t»fyin»
TRUCK DRIVE R for tamporary
run
Atlanta Raply to Bo«

Sanford m anufactvrtr n ttd i
Ova' f-ad T IG M IG and ARC
•elder olfh febr'cabon and
iayovt aapartanca Only aipa
r ie n c td n a td ap p ly
]t |

Ruddtr € if eI*

Sanford

Airport Indvitrial P a n

SecretaryXTypist
lengnood A ra l cCMilf ruction
off tea
Ac cur at* fypiif in
eluding an ta vrin g phonei
and gonor at offica dufiai Can
•34 4910 • 30 to 10 30 for apt
Mon thru Fri

O F F IC E C LEB K 5
Large company moving into
beautiful nta offica* naadt fo
add eevoral clathi Typo l i
WPM Gene* a i offica •apart
anca rtQ uired Parmananf
pouf tom Never a Faa'

Its C 0 E waning Mara&gt;d

Fern Apt* tar Senter Cllliani
)H Palmetto Ave
J Cowan No Phcm# CaUi

T O U DON T NEE D A O AR AG E
TO HAVE A GARAGE SALE
B U T T O U OO N E E D *
W A N T AO CALL 111 li l t

Parma

t bdrm living room kitchen
c a r p a l air
No p * tt or
Children Attar *37) J9*3

nant potitioni Mull ha*a *«
par 1anca on O lB M D&lt;kpi*y
Wn*ar# Lamar or a WANG
Navar a teat

71 — Help Wanted

Miter*. willed woman to cart
tar two in largo Nama Privata
badraom A Bath Goad lalary
par m ananf petition plut dayi
aft f Call m r m

opam ngi

97— A p a rtm e n ts
F u rn is h e d / R e n t

*! ,pO" in Likl «1 k410_

Clean comtertabia ftieeping
vcom with driyate bath *
kUrhennette 1*1 a week Call
171 te ll O' 17&lt; #*al

W ORDPROCESSORS

•

Room in private h©me Maid
Service utlMtiai and laundry
!40 »aak Call 33? •Oae
SANFO R D Ewenl'ihad room* by
♦►e vraak Raaionebia r*»ai
Ma^d lervica Call 333 440*
I 7 PM *14 Palm*t*o A v*
S A N FO R D Real weakly A
Mem*wy rate* UNI inc tff
m30 Oak
Aduiti l 141 7ttJ

Chrlttta* Agtt k Hemet
TV kitchew louhd't maid I V

F avib la h o u r» Apply #1
Aitociafad Contrac’ort 2?0C
Franch A v#

i ■ -

Imn.adJata

I ac*lt*nf
for IN#
»wt¥r# m i n i
Needed 3 people Of or»c# No
*«p*r*#f9&lt;t nacaiiary Work
S a n fo rd b ra n c h of
Florida Company Wt will
train thota p*opi* at cap tod on
b a m of vocational aptitude
tatf M oil be able to itprt
* o r k im m e d ia t e ly a n d
on IJ tt a a w » or do
not apply Call 33» Uac Mon
AAAJ© Noon Only!
O F F IC E BOV
G ood *77h
num ba'i run arrandt help In
office Mutt ba il A hi v t valid
driver* iicani# CaH Mr Webb
attar ) 30 p m l i t %i«a

Call 322 3*33

moefarn country

333 Tjaa
Working lobar fyma1# *0 iha»e
heme with i nglf moth#r A 3
ch ildren P ria a ff bath a
kitchen prty M*g#l J3133IJ

potittoni ava 'ab‘a Nachari
a&gt;dat. cook and ciarical Can
322JA44

PART TIME HELP

ih a ra

hc,ma 13)0 per month Call

Will train tor career in child
car* Full and part tim*

«

Can m T tl»_________
Fur milled and Ufltvr m i had

331 oaos ___

»'

WANTED' I phona toHCilori
i

Children Welcome

Lady will Ihara h#r apartmanf
IV ) par
payi all Call

aftar to 10 A M

NEEDED:

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
77*1141
» !« D O LLA R BILLS t
envelope you rece&lt;vo« Thit It
a NEW All Pro!it P togramt
Ruth a SALE &gt;0 1V10 S
LantordAve Lantord

PO

Bo* l i l t Sanford Fla w n

K IS H R E A L E S T A T E
REALTOR

321- 0041

O f te n

'% o u 4 e

NOW LEASIN G
IN DOWNTOWN SANFORD
NEW SPACE IN FIRST FEDERAL
OF SEMINOLE BUILDING FOR
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY

SUNDAY 2 To 5 PM

S E C R E TA R Y IIE C E PT ION 1ST
Piuih offica General offica
u n it Typo 40 WPM Phonal
Parmananf poyihon Never 4
♦ee'

TEMf PERM PERSONNEL
77*1141

TEMP PERM PERSONNEL
77*1141

PART TIM E
S A LE S M E LP W A N TE D
R e t i r e d or t a m l r e t i r e d
gentlemen experienced in
calling on tmali to medium
tite butmettet A totally new
idee Commlttlon and fypente
a llo w a n c e ! W rite
Don
Lproet P O Boe rleoe De
lend, Ft 117J0

S U N S T A T E LAN D S C A P IN G
Lawn 1 Mai m tana nr a Ground
porton naadad Call ati oov
Super
mark at
eaper fenced
cfiihier A ftarnoon ihlfl and
*eekend» Apply in perton
Park and Shop 34th and Park
See manager

-

GENEVA GARDENS
A P A R TM EN TS
Oft It SATURDAY
•Adutf A Fomlly
Socffont
* W D Connoctioni
i
•CobId IV iPo-ol
•Short Term looiot
Availoblo
1. 7.1 It M&gt;, 7 1/ TH
Faa * 1 0 0
1

• J Bedrooms ( l? » '6 4 Matter With Walk In Closet
And Dressing A re a ) • I Balhs • Great Room
t i l I t l O l With Volume Ceiling And Fireplace
• Form al Dining Noom U I k 17) • Kitchen With
P a n try • Breakfast Nook (S u l]) • G a ra g e
(7?'S«I7 S) • Porch • Patio • Large Lot

A v o id tra flic tie u p s IS Minutet From 414 IB From 4V1
P le n ty ot tree, c o n vo m e n t park in g
P ro fe s sio n a l a tm osph ere
S u ite s o v e rlo o k in g Lake M o n ro e
C o m lo rla b le e fficie n t o llic o s fin is h e d to suit you

‘ 7 BtOROOM our li t ’
r ' fAIAIlKS WllCOMt - &gt;
3 2 3 -2 9 2 0
'
^4220S. ORIANOO DRtVt

M N ,0 "°

L*

NEW HOM E AT
3454 C O U N T R Y C L U B RD.
Easy walk to courthouse, city hall and eicellent
restaurants.

uy,

S H E N A N D O A H .^
V IL L A G E
£
■
*100 O F F A
S E C U R IT Y 3
D E P O S IT
l

11S-1MS

Female! Only

traatmant

darly Call parionnai Hi 2aIt

Nation t largetl chain ol family
ten centtrt hat Immediaia
o p a n in g t lo r a m an ager
trame* p rlm o rlly nllot A
•eetendt Mutt b* mater*
neat In appearance A bond#
b*e Phone tor app l H i «V01

I H I I tee

Day

w jrk fr Full flma position
d i a l i n g w » k » h c h r o n ic

111voet_________

1505 W. 25th St.

D riva r

93— R oom s fo r R e n t

91— A p a rtm e n ts /
H ouse to Share

71— Help Wanted

Patio up people needed S TA R T
N O W ! Notional Pubiith e'
Call 475 0045_________________
POLICE O F F IC E R
Salary til.7170V 0*adt‘n* lor
appucatwm March n
ivgj
In d ivid u a l m u tt b* via**
c tr lllla d
C ontact H a r r y
Benton Pole* Chiel Requett
applicatlont Irom Lake Mary
PoltC* Dept
14$ E Wilbur
Avenue Leke Mary. F L J77aa
Can X » 177 n i l EQE
Retpcmiibte perton &gt;o care tor ]
childran In my home Evening
hour i Mutl be on on can"
bat t Will pay S&gt; 10 to U M
per hour depending on eepen
enca Phone lor interview
appomimani Laaw mettege

Sunday. March 14, It E J —7B

1

• Living Area IS78 Sq FI
Porches 174 Sq F t.,
Garage 4A4 Sq Ft . Total 1161 Sq Ft

C O N TA C T:
C O N TELLA M A N A G EM EN T
312 W . l i t S t r e e t • S u it e 202
S a n f o rd , F lo r id a

E C O N O M IC A L L Y P R IC E D A T

•8 1 .1 30 0

PtMwe (305) 321-6S6&gt;6 or 67S-R000 tStTS

LEVEL

*54,900
IN C L U D E S L O T

* 5 3

ON S E L E C T E D
H O M E S IT E

m

:k
IL- -

.

UNDER A PPRA ISA L
F R E E FIR E PL A C E
EQ U ITY ON T H E
0 0 DAY O F PURCHASE

iV.'vfJ:vkakiitif j k. •*w-y1

$4 1 4

s 1800

i i r -t k\

LEV EL 5 M O R TG A G E"
5* D O W N "
ON S E L E C T E D L O T

*200

3 lli-iIrtH m iM

St-fcimi KltMtr

linilih
SUN M C K

N -t -o n t i M ftttr
K trry rre n

urf reen a*t

FREE

*lw.m.‘la i l j h i

• •

P*

t;-- ■- . i

Tin* Ever^riM’ii Flo or Plun

t TYING

it 4 "all 4

TO HOME BUYERS
THRU MONTH
OF MARCH
11

f *‘I i- . &gt;&lt;;

PLUS WE PAY ALL CLOSING COSTS!

FIREPLACE

4, , * #’ hi*1. * i l T O T

y

•3500
•1 8 0 0 *

n rr^
KltCHCH

tta-.ttr

INNING
i| f i l l *

ON TH E
EVERGREEN

MODEL

l ’ir»i KJtHir

POftCM

ONLY.

E s rrg rv c n

II t i ) 4 4

C H A LLEN G E! ^

r

(J

MAStm secjwoou

M Of40044 7

? tt-ritor

i4 'i-* ir* ”
GAMAGi

tl A'ill 2*

HOMES OF DELTONA ARE BETTER THAN OUR COMPETITION.
WE’LL PAY YOU »200 TO PROVE US WRONG.
We actually dart you 4200 to find a homa with more
than Homaa of Deltona. Compare our architectural
designs, our exciting floor plana, our great locations,
fabulous features and amcnltiea. And then compare the
price! We're so confident of our product, to sure of our
m am

Our 5a/t« Coniu/tanfg
Are Waiting To Help You
Qualify For A Home
Of Your Own.
CALL US NOW!

&amp; 574-4285

reputation, well pay you 4200 If you buy a new home
from anybody else. Mo other builder stands behind their
homes like Homes of Deltona. Come to our model
center and find out ethyl

...

245

...

efm'

!l

• I l l I le l l o n u lllv t l., I l r l l o n n , E l . 32725

20

10 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM
M O D ELS OPEN

A N D T H E N EW

5

ill

riu* IloineH O f D eltona* Inc.

F .I I .A . • • *V .A .
VKL

J ----------5
aiwtoou i
®l T IW '-IW

Oflqr Ooo4 Through March. I M i .

SELECT FINANCING.

245 B

J Z

Home
Buyers

M O RTG A G E.

earn as

W a rra n ty

M O N .-S A T . 10 A .M .-.l;.10 P .M .. S U N . 12 N tM IN u liW P.M .

34 Yearn Oi Home Building Experience &amp;
Over 1800 Homes .Sold In Central Florida

B R O K E R C O -O P 3%

*4 h. V

* fU

�I B —Evtnlng H erald , Sanford, Ft.

Sunday, M arch 24, 1*13

141— Homes For Sale
f7— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

117— Commercial
Rentals

Ml — Homes For Sale
Fgr S «i« by Own*/ Sanford
Ntet 3
hom» with

M A R I Y O U B S E IF A T HOM E
In a comptataty furnished studio
aperlmenf Single tfqry living
at II* best Sound controlled
■•alii Bum In bookcases. 0*
cor avail cov*rlng Alto
J
Bdrm available
Fie title la a w i
San lor Clllrant discount
Sanford Couvl Aparfmanlt
M l 11*1
T w o b e d ro o m f u r n i s h e d
apartment USO mo plus IMO
*11 Call m u u

f t — Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
BAMBOO CO VE A P TS
S att Airport Bird
EffttfKY I
J Bedroom from
079 month 1714470. 121441)
»
DltCOun! for W ltOT C»»»

Canttrbury *1 the C m u n p
1 Bdrm , I *r Jbath Condo's
Private Pall* B Carport
Wather/Dryer Hook up
Baaufltul Cevnfr y Salting
ChMdrea, tmall pall walcamtd
Sanlar rttien* dltcawnt
1)11*11
A P A R TM EN TS
Family B Aduilt Sactlan
Poaltld*. 1 Bedrooms
M aiNr Cava A parlm aM t

l u iu b t

m 1*00

Open On Weehsndi

O
S

p e n H
A

w

N F O R
Sundif Noon 4

D

Brttish A m iricin Realty

m in i
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APIS
I and 1 bedrooms
JJ) 44JC, or JJJ aaai
I P A C IO U IA P A R T M C N T f
Lake front. pool, lonnlt. aduilt.
no poll, laundry I I I ) to Mao
mo Call 11) ora) to to*
I and ) bdrm Alto lurnithad
offlclancy from ITS waak IJV)
dtpotil No pot* Call } ) ) aw/
) TP M ailPalm otto
I B drm , fenced yard pal o k
IJM mo 11SO Depot* Call

m oa)i
b d rm ,

t ball),

applianctt.

mantfi SXK) tacurlly dapotlt
H i t too or ) ) ) BID

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
Houses tor rant In Sanlord and
Dalton* ) bdrm porch, font
cantral air/haal, t*n&lt;*d yard
Con vanlant to if upping Call
H I **»
O B B A B Y I Bdrm ) bath. A/C
c a rp a ltd w a s h e r/ d r yor
fane# I J t l dltceunlod Sac
Dap Raqulrtd (JOBS ar* Hay
iaav* nama.and numbar or
(H U T* * ran attar r » p m
a a a IN D E L T O N A a a a
a a HOMES POR R E N T a a
a a sra iasa * *

★ LANDLORDS*
flrtd ol Ih* haadachat ’ la i ut
managa your ro n la l pro
porllat Prolottional low to il
tarvlco H I la i) Call anytime
Umlad Salat Associates. Inc
Prep Myml Dtv . Realtor
Haw &gt; bdrm , 1 bath, C'M/A.
I*nt. blind!, garog* J/4 ml
toulh ol lake Mary High A I
nalghborhood I D ) A tac
Dayt Mr L o rtn i, 111 tool
E v t s I H lf O )
)*0 Howard
ttlvd , lo n g w ood
L o o t*
purchatapottlblo
Now occoptlng oppllcollont to*
rental 4 Bdrm . IS* bath,
family room canlral haal and
air, carpaltd. tancad back
IHO, plut lit latt A 111)
Available 4 1. Broker Owner
Call H I B)W
NO B. IHb It 4 Bdrm . l i t bath,
mint condition control haal
and a ir, tupar appliance
package, le n t, no tm a ll
children no poti Haloroncot
IN S mo lit and Security
nsgtMor ut )u&gt;
) Bdrm , I both Eencedyaid
*4)1
Orovo
Vlow
Call

WWW

S bdrm on Summorlln A , a
First loti And depoill to
pelted w/rotorpneat l)| *tOi
S bdrm It* bath, naw carpet
C't*/A» applianctt, drapes
fancad back yard 1*00 mu
D g i - a i l W . t v w W SBS4
) badruorn house t i l l Nan ;
bedroom du p le. quiet *M*
loot# III. loti and tacurlly
WWW__
4 Bdrm t] baiti.
bath wall wal
carpal trr porch appliances
1100 101) W )nd Straw*

B B A U T IE U l ) bdrm I bath
carpal applianctt tecaanad
J WBO H I US)
Nica I bdrm . air. w / » carpal
lurnithad l)a ) mo . t Ml da
pot** No pelt laate H I aoal

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent
Ctaan prlvata, nlco turnitrud

)

Newly ranavotad retail t tar at on
F lr i f SI In the H ltla rlc
Downttwn O llt r lc ). 714 to
l*.*M 14 ft Prlcet tfarting at
! l par t4 If H ) SIM

flaw Office Building
naar
C F R M on wot* F irtt St
Totally decorated reedr lor
occupancy M 4 lo 4 )7 )i4 It
H I 1*11

127— Office Rentals
ID E A L L O C A TIO N ) turn Ichad
offlcat with braak room,
multi lino phon* tyttom and
copy machine Steady for
Im m td lo l* o c c u p a n c y
A tux ulad Contractor! )M0
French Au# 1)1 044f or MS
US)

f loftuKMtl Office Spice
Newly ranevatad an F lrtl SI
In the Hltlarlc Downttwn
Dftlrlct MO la 1.000 14 ft
itarTlng
at
If M/ 14 ft
including H T 4SM

141— Homes For Sale

BATEMAN REALTY
1W9 Sanlord A v i
P IN E C HE S T . J u if lib* N*w 1
B d rm
I b a th
N t w roof
carpal, cabfnaft, pa m l Intlda
and out fancad back Con*i

nianl location |&gt;4 900

lia s

MM

Bdrm , I bath, p a rtia lly
lurnithad Includot I lac trie
I H ) mo &gt;4* 1BA4

117— Commercial
Rentals
041it# ar HaCail South Sanlord
Ava
10*4 tp 1)44 ill It
e * ) U tg ft Totally tailored
Brick Budding H I 1*11

ItB fBfB ar tnanulBctwrlna
■pact 14 hour kacuelty guard

CaHWSS/T_____________

1411 f ranch Ar*
IMO 14 If
Sturt Front Will r.modal to
tananlt tpoc itu a tio n i DOU
pocmardh H I lots
ft 04 Office or 1000 of
Office and 1*00 P of Stwoago
wtHi 1* aero pi packing Zoned
Indwtfr lal H I 4/U

M ARKHAM

Hotkey Rvetfy. R EA LTO R S
44) 1400
E eenlngt H ) ))4S
O S TE E N
L A K E ASHBY 10*
a c re !
B E A U T I F U L N EW
HOM E
Laka accatc NO
OOWN*o qualified buyer Live
out whore you con en|oy
"* lu r* and claan air l \
in ttrtii 11 to 000 Owner IMS)
u t im
Sanford O w n * . Mill help I,nance

spec 'Out row vert abi* homa 4
bdrm , ) bath! or home ►
m o'hor in tow apt A uum ab t*
* 'i m ortgage IS*.00* m l* )l

Sanford and Deltona home! tor
141* by owner ) td 'm porch
tan!, centra* air /haal. fenced
yard Conuomenl to chopping
Call H I e*M
SA N FO R D O W N ER 1 bdrm
I 1) ba*h. C M A « / « carpet,
tcreenad tronl porch, work
thop H ) Tas;

S A N F O R D O P E N HOUSE
1) 000 below VA appraisal )
bd'rn
1 bath. C rH 'A large
■ol
fancad back yard FHA
assumable mortgage non
qualifying 14* y » cl) Belh
Drlvo Mfrcrifls Per! area
Must w * 1 Sa&lt; * Sun J ) ) *
)4 i t 10 00 la I 00 Further
detail! Own*r I I ] t u tier or
•D *a* oat*
SPRINO TIM E
T IM E TO P L A N T T O U R S IL F
IN A H OM E OF YOUR OWN!
fownhout*
) Bdrm 111 b*lh
laundry room, don pool c&lt;OM
In shopping Owner Motivated
14)000 Make otter H I O il) or
M l TOT)

nr O W N E R

ta t VOO 1 Bdrm 2
bat h i ar ga k l f c h t n
H A
Flrtplaca, utility room, 2 car
garaga qwJal cornar. b ig o a b i
Call 121 MOO or 12) O lf )

• V OW N F R
Cutlom built artargy athciant
mgdarn horn# 5 ya a rt old

Spill plan

J llrfrm

j fgll

bafhl ifudy. largw dan wifh
lio n # lir a pl aca. ft * 10
Florkla Room a a lln lllr h a n .
Indoor laundry room , actra
Iarga 2 car garagw with built

work bwnch ale.

ia rg a thadbd yar d privacy
fancad in back with full motor
h o w a h oo k u p
i l a g a rvl
landw aping t o&lt; a'ad « l M i
P lu m o ti Dr Sanford &gt;99.500
CaM 12) &gt; »•

C O M M ER CIAL S P E C IA LIS T
LAKE M A R Y H f A L T Y
HI Al TOR
IJJ T IN
D f BAR f
i
f 14
r oom, ut i l i t y
carport
Furnithad Ia r g a lot %)S 950
Alta* | p m a t 4420

•i « i I o a t

STem

per

I ACRES
LO W DOW N
C »n « d* Mobil*« 0*

in

INCOM E Mohfi« OK «nd cof
M«nf orvy Iivb* in oth#r
110.000

IM T E D
A S S O C IA T K S

REALTOR

121 900 M«ndy M4*' )
K 111 Lot
2

CALL MALL

Ntw tttaclaltc wantedi Will
trim tar a rawardlng
S I B I A l ( S T A T E C A R E E R ))

3 2 3 -5 7 7 4
&gt;404MWV If *1
Ml P A ID R I A L (S T A T E ADS
ARE P E O P L E M O VER S
C H IC K TH E R E A L TO R ADS
ANO IN D IV ID U A L L I lT I N O t
TODAY I
JUST R IO H T FO R YOU
I tlUcm

l&lt;t bath brick lu m a it
•Cady and p ric e d tig h l al
See *00 Recently redecorated
l a r g e l ot
C a l l to t ee

CALL BART
pm 1,1 ooe
LANDSTO CK BRO KER S
M UM .
LA K E M A R Y
f icvhv* type pool hum* very
•ptciout al an affordable
price Few aptxrinlmenl alter
S PM Glady Itruwn Realty
BrOklt IJ) JtfCOf 17) Silt
la ktlc ant
Laka (Camay, a
luomt. bath carpofl and cep
atal* gar*4* apartment with
k itche n, b a th a n d la rge
bedroom Chain link lance
lo t III ' • ISO Priced below
appraisal Coll H i Slot

SANFORD AREA
AFFORDABLE HOMES

I idem | bath home canlral
haal and air. dtvbta garage,
ettumable mortgage Ml MM

&gt;7 »

90

Newly

Mult be mevad

‘I t Concord, U r 54 Adult fee
bon Carnage Core ltd 500
171 595 i Lea re message

b d rm
7 ba»h adult park
Centra' M A |t)000 121 44la

I ) Skyline 14 K Sa 7 bdrm 7
bath tplif plan '0 K 7t terpen
porch 10 • 10 ihed„ centra"
a M gat if ova A heai Adu'f

159— Real Estate
Warned

Oek I f

W

af Park Awe, ) loft i«H

H 3— Waterfront
Property / Sale

City t#«r«r * MfafffdllU too
2 M tl 2orspd for apft

eee«#r l « w « f all ) loft 122 900
T f i H 4 Plea L o f/ N w ir f i t 900

Wooded 3 4 Ac rat Build a dream
hom# Nortet OK
I K&gt; 000’
Airport Bird near f l/t2 II •
Acrtt.ionod 40 umft etrfi
• ••••••••••••••a
COMM f R C IA l LISTINGS

Lake Mary Offite Commercial
building prime t ife U ) 000
Longweod H m y 4)4 «»poture
near Spnrvgt Plata |M7 000
Santerd Buty Grocery Store*
pat ha r
*4edu&lt; ed
1M 9 000
PA IM F C O M M F A C IA L/A P T
f t l TCS A ll u fiM ift

t l 000 000

Reechiide Reiity. R E A LTO R S
904 47) 121) Open ) Oaytf

1a1— Appliances
/ Furniture
A P P O IN T M E N T

★ LIST FOR LESSar

King tffe m aftret! A bo* tprin g
with frame E«caiiant condi

tion IDS. 127 9&gt;45attar I PM
e R EN T TO OW N •

orange
na uga h yd e
lova!eat! lt&gt; each '09 Sandra
B ir d Call 121 4414

Uted Wather* Part! A Service
tor K in m e r tt

l 4 »•

)3 )0 4 9 )

M O O N E Y APPLIANCES
W IL S O N M A lE R F U R N I T U R E
111 U S E F I RS T ST
177 &gt;422

pool. gu*%f €Qff*g« f inish #nd

t 11 2 0 0 ( A t h

SAN FO N D
N«nfnl I bdfm
I
ti it I h
| 4 0 0 rn a
C A LL A N Y T I M I
Ml A LTO N 122 4991
W l NC I D LIS TIN G S !

too

«no

10 EROS*

n
in

im unit

S A N F O A D Lear down payment
w ill moire you info fh*t 4
Bdrm , home erilh ureened
Florida room I year home
warranty
O n l y t i t . 900

LA K E M AR Y lacellent value )
Bdrm . I* 1 bath 'heme near
Seminole Community College
Screened perch Offered at
t
t
r
0 0 0
S AN FO R O Well cared far tplll
bedroom plan

STENSTROM

Intide utility,

large fenced yard, attvmable
Aski ng

M* too

S A N FO R O Nice 4 Bdrm . brick
home an quiet tfreeL partly
fenced

Pr i c ed

to te ll

at

REALTY*REALTOR
171 SOOS
I bdrm
WE LIS T A N D SELL
M O R E H OM ES THAN
A N Y O N E IN NO R TH
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY
S TA R TE R H OM E I I Bdrm I
bath In quia* areal Brvaklest
bar. Inside utility, central heal
and a ir, lo t! ol ile ra g tl
I
C
)
0 0 0
C O U N T R Y S ID E ! ) Bdrm.. )
bath mebila hem* an live
a c re s ! La k e lre n t, double
nld*. porth, central heal and
4 I r I ! 1 I , 4 g 0
TH E N A T U R A L ! I Bdrm l&lt;i
bath ham* with paneling In
living ream and family ream!
Paddle tans, canlral heal tab
c a b I n a I 1 I E 4 t . 14*
C O IY I ) Bdrm . t bath hem#
w ith aunban living ream,
tireplac* cantral heal and air.
ta t in kitchen, community
pool and tannic court! Itt.taO

PARK SITTING1 ) Bdrm ,
bath hame with aet in hitchen
malhar In taw quartan,
cantral haal and alri tl! loo
U N D E R C O N S T R U C T IO N )
Chaos* hem many! I Bdim I
bath home! with cantral haal
and a lt. ipaciaut claials
custom tr a ile d c e b ia tti
much morel Starling tram
s
a *
a o o

W ILL B U IL D TO S U ITl YOUR
LOT OR OURSl I k . l U S I V I
A D E N ! F O R W I N SON G
O IV
C O R P . A C EN TR A L
F IO R IO A L E A D E R ! MORE
HOM E FOR LESS M O N EY!
C A LL TO D A Y I
0 0 1 N E V A OSCEOLA RD a
r O N E O f OR M O B ILES '
t Acra Cewntry fraclt
Wall tread on paved Rd
H \ Down I* Vrs at I I M
From 111.loot

good iocafibn

big

lanced yard * m any eafrat
Owner r r bring to ftse toun fry!

Attumabie M l 1 &gt;07__________
) (Idem r i bath family room
fenced hard
•alratf
A ttu m a b ie 9 &gt;N mortgage*
E a c e lie n t c o n d itio n ' M u ll
tee! Sanora South itf.tOO
C a ll everungi or weekend1
!
771 IISS

149— Commercial
Property / Sale

183— Television/
Radio / Stereo

S A N F O R D Convenience store
tor sata on Airport Road lo '
*00 • *00 (11 *00 G A S T I
MROPEMTIES
Cal l T o m
M ullan * Realtor Associate
'M 471) E v e n ln g s u a D M

153— Acreage
LoYs/Sale
LAR GE LOT
IN SANFORO
in m i
O S T E I N * A lot* t'JOD down
Term s
la k e P r»,iie ge » No
mob* if t
K erry I D reggort

S P O R TS M E N ' 4 ml

II

IS" RCA COLOR CONSOLE
IIM or Beil Offer*
Cell UJ li lt

B IO P AR T TIM E IN C O M EM
M AJO R S T E E L B U IL D IN G
C O M PAN Y IS S E E K IN G A
P A R T T I M E IM A l l H IN
YO UR A R IA TO S E L L O U R
PflE E N G IN E E R E D S T E E L
B U ILD IN G S ANO R E L A T E D
P R O DU CTS R E F U N D A B L E
D E P O S IT REQUIRE O C A LL
BOB CRAND ALL AT
I 400 4)4 5)44

o u tb o a rd m o to r, F r a n k lin
stove PA tys^em, rabbit pent
turn . color TV , m ite
______

FORD

F t 00 l*4p t'd e

ms

Custom bull! ■*SO lb ,'re n g 'h
fi*f bed single *■'* Good to*
) w h e e le rs o r l awn care
equipment ( ) M C*H )H )* ))

THt LARGEST, MOST
PICTURESQUE DEALERSHIP
IN LAKE MONROE OTTERING

GREAT SAVINGS!

A U C TIO N E V E R Y FRI N IG H T

L &amp; E AUCTION
&gt;04 Sanfard Ave
C O N S IG N M E N T S * ! LC O M Et

111 9049

3231393

157-Mobile
Home* / Sale

FOR E S TA TE
C o m m e r c ia l or Rek'dentiai
Auction! &amp; Appraiia'! Ca"
Dell ! Auction 17) WTO

•1888
•3292
•2895
6 0 0 DOW N

1979 Chevy 3/4 Ton
We Have The Work Trurk For You

1979 Ford Van E-100
Run# Greit Aulo P.'B P'S

1973 Chevy C IO
Blue. Runs Like A B 'a n d Hew On*

T H IS O N E
IS AN A N T IQ U E

1963 Corvalr
2 Dr . On* O f The Classics

U - Rick Strawtoamai
Ts/e% Thur &gt;a' 44)0 Hester Av*
.................. I l l 4411
177 1)4)

19 6 1 C h e v y C a m a r o
7 Dr Loe Miles
All Th e Toy*

223— Miscellaneous
G A R D EN IN G T IM E IS H E R E I
PLAN T A W A N T AD
W ATCH TH E CASH GROWI
MomffT 4de King t i lt qu'M or
spread end pillow! 777 4974
after 1PM
Rebuilt KI RBY/ f l i t 90 A up
Guaranteed Kirby Ca
f 14 W lit St 121 &gt;440
latellite T V ly t t e m !

Complete

Ail you n#wd

*00%

Finarning No money down
|i 341 00 Universal 1)1 ))44

I I L L T R A O I B A R T E R M AKE
O
F
F iR
1 &gt;eaM Rett kitchen
compactor* I W ard 1 hp gas
adger
I V a t *a D e I u a e
range Oven Vi
I bathroom
vani t y
I p in g p o n g fable
•aridul u ' s golf club ! bag!
Can evenings 177 WOT

4*17 U I I L I I Y T R A I L E R
IN C L O S E D 1550

*r..R*T t*. * u

1979 D o d g e Tra n * Van
low l u » Miles E ilia Clean

•NO M O N E Y D O W N
W IT H A P P R O V E D
C R E D IT
1

a a n c T
I » l t J o l

1981 G M C p i c k u p L o . Mile. Belle
Than A Hew One Aufo. A/C P B P/S

1973 Ford Pinto
Engine Runt T r a n t D o n tG o

H D I T / P
U K 1 V C .

•5444
•117

MANY U n MODILS TO SIUCT FROM ..
SOME WtTN LOW OR NO M0WT DOWN

€AUIIN MOTOR SRL€S
Ulholeiol* To Tht Public
1-4 At Eill 52 •Lake Monroe

..
y&amp; ffi

3 * 1 U » I • 3 t l t41B ^ 9 ®
Low Of No Ooupi Ptvnanr tilth Approved Oadt

COURTESY PONTIAC

USED CAR
EXTRAVAGANZA

231-Cars
Bid CnditT

No Credit'

m FINANCf
)• Cauf«r

NMI0NAI AUTO SALTS

1170 5 knfoid 321 4075

★ DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION ★
Hwy 9)

Daytona Beach

a e • e • Molds a • e a a •

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION
Ever (W ed Nile i l l N PM

Where Anybody *
* Can Buy o r Sell I *

a

For mere detail It
I 944 ) » AIM

lime available lo resfora my
loss your gain* All 4 I1S00
Call IJJ *•'*

w D IS C O U N T
e&gt;
A U TO
SALES

WE FINANCE

'! » Pint* ...............
SIS* Dn
t# Ford Courier P/U* (To* Dn
IS*! French Ay*
111 IMS
t*M Ford B vcvho
1)100
C a ll))) II I)

41 Falcon Wagon. ) Or Re
stored Sail or trad* lor small
•ale modal Navel trailer Call
IJJ »I*S
!| Red Thunderbird Loots and
run* good 1*00 C*U JJI MSO
40J W joth SI
'Jf VW ' passangar stick sniff
bfua.whifa Runs 4 look*
great Goad tlra t I J ISO
JJJ M U

It

1979 HONDA PRELUDE
LOADED

9444Dn

f« Mark IV
.................. 9440 On
74 D atum SW
9700Dn

F RE I TO GOOD HOMC Small
Cute m iied b r««d female
17) SIS)

211— Auctions

THIS IS THE M A R K E T T H A T
CAR B U Y E R S T U R N TO
FIRST Y O U 'L L F IN D CUS
T O M E * ) Q U I C K L Y BY
LIS TIN G H f R f l ___________ _

Wilh Topper Go** Anyeheir

221— Good Things
to Eat

Free

P'fl! tor Sat* La^d Race
)
week! 12)00 Call ))4 1974
after 4 PM

Wt PAV TOP DO LLA R f o r
JU N K CARS AND TR UC KS
CBS A U TO P AR TS )*&gt; 4SCS

1980 Suburu Brat 4a4

WA N T E D D E A D OR A L IV E '
Re f r i g e r a t o r s , w a s h e r ,
dryer* ) ] ) Ota

About V w k i

203— Livestock and
Poultry

*qu.pmeni jn s e e g _

WE HAVt TRUCKS!

P a v n g C A S H for
Alum inum Cant. Copper
B r a d L tad Newspaper
Glass, Geld. Silver
Kekpmo Tool *1* W It l
• ) OO Saf * I U J IIOO

Four IH ) lu K I RMSfasI No

199— Pels &amp; Supplies

Calf I D l* )4 H ) &lt; )H _____
TOP Dollar Paid for June A
Used cars trucks A heavv

____________

237— Tractors and
Trailers

Debar y Aufo 1 Mar In* Salas
Across Ih* river lop of hill
114 Itwy IT » D eba ry M l ISAi

Good 24 Rider Mower

to good! home
old 12) 4777

Fro m II* I* M l ov more

499 0900

NEEO A
W H A T C H A M A C A L L IT ” OR
TH IN GAM JIGIG
’
ADV E RT I S E f o r i t w i t h a
W ANT ADI

193— Lawn &amp; Garden

A B A N D O N E D P U P P IES

BUY JUNK CARS B TRUCKS

new 5'4 MRS

Car snappingf Save yeur shoe
leather I Read th* Want Ads
tar Best Buytl

191— Building
Materials

243— Junk Cars

Pay Balance W eekly'

pickup p ft p to i d ' cut tom
wheel* L e e ' topper- Like

44 Rod! ree ! camp eiyu'p

Beds. Strollers Oofhet

cond-

'74 Pinto. $250 Down
*9! *u400

W

PI a y p e n t. E tc
P a perback
Book! 27) 1 ) )) 177 9944

p*

Yourt tor 14)00 Dump

170 00 a day » 9 5)*7?9i

COLOR TE LE V IS IO N
Zenith 2) color console feleyi
non Original prwe over taoQ
balance due 1244 Cash or fake
over paym ent! of fl&gt; month
N O M O N E Y D O W N Stiff fn
warranty Free horn# trial, no
obligation C a " M l 9194 day or
night

Realtor )49 191)
O tlean tf) acre parcel t void
Only I left Improved1 Good
a c c e tt
Good w a itr
14 000
down 1)79 per mo |)0 00U
G Jeffery Garland. Realtor

SAN FO R D SPUI NG C L E A N
ING* 7577 Highlewn A ve Sa*
u r d a r A S u n d a y . • to 5
Location near Sam note H igh

Apple

:t GM C Vcjkor Hom e pBCtllpht
ctf^diiton 8 r Owner S2t *00
Ca't tor App* J*7 4AT4

truck feature atone ii •rorm

GARAG E SO F U L L TH E R E 'S
NO ROOM FOR TH E CART
C LE A N IT O U T W ITH A
G AR AG E S*LE ADI

444 M i l

Call )7 ) J ’«i

Business ami torn** property
Zoned GC ) W*(&lt; Is* St
Sanford Can 1)1 SfS)

alignment

1)9 4 &gt;40

Color T V »
itareot w a ih a n
dryert, r#lflgtf#tor free f a r !
furnifure. video recorder!
Spec al lit week! rent h (
Alternative TV A Appl Rental!
Zayre i Stepping Center
12) 1400

294 W Lake Mary Bl»d

241 — Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

iffO Ford J 4 tpn pick up dump
truck New painting, upho*
ttery fun# up and front end
tion

ONLY

E*C cond Frtgidaire (heavy
du t y | wather 4 d r y e r
freafer. king life bed com
plate A ac Imfr iguare mgrb&gt;a
tab*# J21 ))S4

WC W ILL LIS T. A D V IA T IS C
t f L I YOU A HOMC FOA IN
W HY PAY M O AEf

321-3833

217— Garage Sales

Baby

use C*'13,1&gt;*;s_________

depTTt finder

live well sa SOOobo 13t Sa))

N EW SMYRNA B EACH

IT

SS hp

Need Cribs playpen* b*ft»
f u r n lf u r * . c l o t h i n g
good
pm a s A ltar t P V W t S R )

H eavy duty free/tr lib# new
t )Ft
U p rig h t piano »77S

F A C E COM PU T f AI / E D
Marta! Ana I nrtu gf Ytur
Heme Call USA TO D A Y !

m tr , elec m tr

&gt;g&lt; K*«a**kl **0 L TO )M0
miles, e ittlta e f coidlllow

235— Trucks/
Buses / Vans

Call 122 4 T I

10 Terry 4 5 bait boa*

Ocean fronf J 2 condo No money
down Attum abi# rnow-tgag#

Lake M ary Showroom W trohto
H Idg pi ut m eflm f pr oper t1y

f t pert Paint A Body WorkFree Cttimatet
277 414)

Engine! Complete and Ready
To Go With Trader tj4 VX

219— Wanted to Buy

tect.pn t l 000 271 S ltl

A re yOu Qetfmg Dworced tra m
ferred fore&lt;io!ad need quick
va 'e v Cali De'e )7i 4f«7

M U L T I F A M IL Y LOTS
PA IM F B U ILD IN G SITES

1 V Off Shore F «th e rm a « Tuna
Tower Cuddy Cabin, Tw in

1)700 Can 7711?&lt;7
7 mobile homes with ia*d Sail
Of trade 150 COO tor both

culfo m home fief. GOO

MERCURY

CAPRI

H ATCH BAC K
Silver a red
interior Very good condi Iron
IJJ IfSO from 4 ) Ask lor
Amy or altar* K l J J i l f l

m i HONDA ACCORD
LOADED

1981 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE
ONE OWNER

1981 TOYOTA CEUCA SUPRA
BUCK, LOADED

1982 OLDS CUTLASS CALAIS
ONE OWNER, LOW MILEAGE

1983 PONTIAC GRAND PRiX LS
LOADED, LOW MILEAGE

1983 TOYOTA CELICA
S SPEED, LOADED

1984 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
LOADED, lo w MMIAOC

1984 PONTIAC TRANS AM
BRASS HAT, LOADED

1984 CHEVROLET Z-28
I SPEED, LOADED, 1,800 W L U

1984 PONTIAC TRANS AM
T T0PS, LOADED

COURTESY PONTIAC / - ’d

iiiiiii NOBOOTWALKSAWAT! ■
1211 &gt; HWY t M 2 -

SANFORO

COUNTRY VILLAGE

5 STAR AUTO SALES

It yen ar* looking tar a cut
cental career in Real Iilata.
Slenslrom Realty la leaking
ter you Call La* Albright
today at i n )a)g Evenings
H I IM )

C A LL A N Y T IM E

Adult Mobile Home F itk

322-2420

Saturday Sunday

ISAtS Path. Laniard
*ti U M ery Bled. U . Mary

SUPER PATIO HOME

M erit) Hrd. D a ta
Rett eshmenla tram * ta I

MS *47 *04!
D M E Gravaa

.... ag* i n i d s

Orange City

7UST O FF I 4
A T O R AN G E C ITY E X IT *14

) Bdrm Atkvmtbl* mortgage
Nice landccapcng large pall*,
icrtanad porch, taviced yard
Canvenlanl lac aHan I Set too

Ifeeuty thru eul t bdrm /] bath
plut dan
l i t r a t include
paddle fans, vortltalt. tract
lighting, light earth law*!. *
much mar*I Screened parch
to waadid back yard Far
detail! contact i Coral Sapp.
B ialler A^secietf

TONY CAfPOU ASSOC. INC
REALIOI............... 13443)1

Arch A Rswcultvlnc
Rsilton

Uf|tst H e r ., t Uud Mobil*
Home Ovalar in this Atti

I Bdrm i cantral heat and air I
year) New Large cornar 1*1
eatyacceitta If t i set too

C y p r* !!

ramode'ed

Duple 1 fully r#nt*d pos
liv f C*th flOAf 149 »O0(
H e r«■ Bench $ ecret nrlfh

Sanford's Sales leadei

C O M M E R C IA L T O N IN G I
Bdrm t I /1 bath Canl heat
and air, garagat Brick B0O
and pattal Fancad yard' Bar
in lieing room l 149.ago
CALL HALL
m site

1)2

D v iirib 'l* C tu A fry H o m » on
' j ac Ft Only |41 000
Pool Horn# F (« room b#r pqfio
) t&gt;0rm 2 b*lfh ft»4#
000

mo r t g a g e

RAM BLE WOOD 2 STO R Y with
ipariling pool I Huge itona
tiraplatal Cathadral Cailmgit
All tha a ttra tl Anum a no
q u a lify in g ! A lm o s t new I
147,14m
CALL H ALL
77) t ))8

5 t*«ghful Acre!

By Owr*#r

•1 14 ■ eO 7 Bdrm
7 path
Anum a
mortgage
Call
17) 9774 alter 5 P V
•3 Scott Mobile homa ) « i ) l 2

SA N F O N1D H #n«l ym #n tp#c 1#I
1100 141 ff hiring am *4 N * «
rouf
F ir « p l0c »
iri ground

1 £ 1 IA
^ 3 7

LO V ELY T R E E D CORNER
LOT Racarttly remodeled )
Bdrm home w ith fam ily
roamt Claan and carad lari
Eaty term*' 1)7,104
CALL HALL
m in i

122 000

Owner financingCa'i U* '!Fia4

SALKS

INCOM E i'H O P f N T Y BfiCk
dtiplffa «F*ith ■■!#« lot m t*«ck
Doom for f r ip l« i 14 4 000
0*r&gt;*FF Mid flrvqnct

h
1 i

H ALL

I f » H #r
177 4 I U attar 4 pm

T bwo

H APPIN ESS I I .........
A KEY TO A N E W H O M I I
E IN O t t H E R E I

H4IIT. MIC
414(100
H TC441 I IN *«ktl

w ith 7 p d rrn

ttfj

R E A L E S TA TE
R EA LTO R
)))!* * *

ESTATES

Why Buy New Yeu Can Renew?
Beeubfu' wooded c rdf tile d acre

with Mobile Home* 1
b d rm / l l i be*h in O ftedn
S19 900 Attar 5 PM 773 Ft It

CALL BART

) bdrm / ) bath, duality built
wild timber home, epprov
) (00 cq H under plr, high
energy vatu*!, deep well,
wptic lank, cuitom wood cab
mete, privacy fence
tISOMO

321 0759 Eve 322*7643

R EAL E S TA TE
R IA L TOR
I D M r,
LAKE M AR Y
) b d rm , H ,
bath applianctt Ctaan ac a

10J— DuplexTriple*/ Rent

A d u ilt

W

SANFORD RETAIL STORES

In thaivat

upttalrt. naar downtown s ill

W athtr

W

Lie Heel ( K i l l Brok tr

COMB AND SEC th* Brand naw
) b d r m / ) b a th U n l i t
Screened parch, w ither and
dryer, mini bllndl Frem MM
# m# Lacatad an Oak Av* at
Park Or. boblnd Dairy Ouaan

]

W

H yin g ro o m , din in g room,
pgnolod fam ily room , laundry
room , w o rk th o p and iargt
K r t t n t d porch Call for in
formation 131 D M M l *0Q

S P R IN G S A R O U N D T H E
C O R N ER Old you know that
1* acres covers 4 whole city
blocks? Located Os'ee" erea
Better Cell N b n M I

239—Motorcycles
and Bikes

2 3 1 -C a rs

215— Boats and
Accessories

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

8 6 2 -3 8 0 0 .... 7 8 8 -3 6 0 8

I

GOOD FOR 3/23 THRU 3/27

Families
B
(M l Hwy IE * )...............

Adult*
))) DM

5 STAR AUTO S A LES
541 SO. WOODLAND BLVD„ DELAND

*100 CASH REBATE
OR APPLY TOWARD PURCHASE
904-738-2097
904-738-2560

�PEOPLE

Diamond In The Rough
N ew ly Licensed Pilot, 75, Puts S p a rk le Into D aily Living
By Susan Loden
H erald Staff W rite r
C,H "Pete” Schlrard. manager of a Geneva
Bunt club, has hern a hunter for most of his life,
hul he Isn't a killer,
A hunting accident a decade ago. when he
was mistaken for a turkey and had both of his
legs blasted with buckshot and broken, turned
him away from killing wild game, but 75-yearold SrhIrani, who moved to Sanford in 1917.
Mill enjoysthe pursuit
In fart, since recovering from his wounds
Schlrard. who was a Seminole County school
teacher of most every subject but math.
Including coaching, for 21 years, has made a
point of enjoying and living life to the fullest.
"M y hobbles." he said, "are music, ceramics,
pamilng china and chasing women I said
chasing, not catching. Catching them is too
much work.”
In March al age 75 Schlrard earned his private
pilot's license alter .i Ihiii I a year of lessons He
now uses his airborne skills to spot game for the
15 members of Ids hunting club, but they, like
Be. lor the most pari shoot game only with a
camera, he .said
h's in my nature to hunt My father taught
me to hunt back in the '20s and I just love It I
love calling the turkey or the deer, seeing It.
hiding, slipping around In mask and camoutlugi It s an art Hul to pick op a gun and shool,
n.ili There's a difference between hunting and
killing A big difference.
Our pleasure, the modern day hunter. Is In
hunitng. not killing Anytime I pul my gun up I
pm It hack down. I don't want lo kill that
iN-auiifut thing with beautiful leathers or that
deer I gel goose humps talking atmut it."
Schlrard said
I don't like to kill, hul I like to
hunt
'Once you lav on tile ground al the point of
death I mold have died rlghl there (when he
was shot bv a trespassing hunter). II makes you
appreciate Ills- I can't kill anything That
Im-.ih i itnl ilrrr standing out there. I can't bring u
p.tln I can I do It." St iilrard said with Ills voice
choked with tears
It makes you appreciate life. That's why I'm
living Thai s why I do my ceramics and china
putnltng My leellng goes Into It." he said
Although he describes himself ns the black
s h e e p ol Ins Inmlly, ih r one willing to do th e
daring, the unexpected. Schlrard shows a
sensitive, senllmcnial side.

tsixes hr Inis filled with Ihr mechanics needed
to transform them into music Boxes
As a musician ot note he lavored the sax and
clarinet and al one lime headed a dance bund
Ihal played In Seminole County, bm now. as a
student ol the piano Schlrurd's more likely lo sit
down and caress a tune out of the ivories or lie
might fuck up his uutnhurp
Schlrard also imds lime to leach Sunduv
school and lo Is- active hi the Upsata I’rr
slH-irrtan Thurch
"Once yon lav on (hut giiumd near death von
hod lime lo do what you want lo do." he said
"You don't use any excuses You tlnd time II
you wantu

C B. " P e t e " Schlrard, 75, examines a piece
of delicately painted China he created, as
well as the ceram ics magnolia blossom and
colorful Christm as tree featuring a music

box in Ihe base, lighted with 305 tamps and
t r im m e d in 14K gold Schirard also painted
the wall pictures and China in the cabinet

An antiipie hone and silver mirror a wedding
gill lo his mother, lies on a lirdrnoni dresser and
nearby Is a pencil sketch ol ihr Victorian t'alalkn
home where he was Ixim. And several decades
have passed since his only son llrucr skulled
around In the liny brown cowboy bools that
have a place ol honor on the lie.m b of Schlrurd's
home, but they're there along with other

memories
Schlrard** home is filled with ceramic objects
and delicately pain led china — Bis creations
And he has more In the works m Ills home
studio.
Having attended I tie University ot Florida on a
music scholarship, his love ol music is reflected
lu Ills collection of antique, European jewelry

Schlrurd's brush with death came when hr
was on Ills wav to Ins hunting blind and stopped
behind a tree lo make a quick ititkci call in see
U he could scare up a bird he said
I was calling I leaned im gun against ibi­
ller I look iwo sicjis and down I went
Schlrard said "T h e gu\ heard me calling and
came on the p o s te d projiertv IB- was bunting
ilrrr He saw my legs moving and he tired l In
llrst thing that m m ed he tired
'Down I went I thought I had shot myxrll I
thought my gun had fallen and I hail shot
mysell I said . ‘Oh my lord, what am I going m
do now ’ I didn’t holler out I knew I coiilrln t get
luck to the eat Doth my legs were broken
lluekshoi went through bodi legs Fourteen
buckshot The ones that lilt Ihe Ixme d lilnt go
through Kiev mangled the Imiiic No jialu just
bin nlng
"I was wondering what I was going to do.
crawl hack'’ I |ust walled a minute and the old
man came uji H r s.utl Where's im turkcv'' I
said. I in your tin kev
I dlilni pass niu | was so d.milled mad lo
think a grown man would shoot at a motion I
laid him mil and said Damn vom soul You go
get help You're too old lo cam me mil ol the
woods '"Sr Iilrard said
I he mail got help and Sehlnud made II to tin
hospital It took him 2*s years to recover hum
Ins wounds and u was a year bcloic lie dared lo
go into the woods again
"Th e doctor said either go hack oi you never
will I made mysell go 1 sal out lu an open Held
wherr I could see. I goi behind a little bosh unit
called I hail goose humps l was sweating It
S « « S C H IR A R D . ac

Pet Health

What's With The Lump
Animal Owner Finds?

Concert Association Presents Duo-Pianists
Hodgens and Howard, duo pianists who
recently celebrated the tenth anniversary ot
their New York recital debut with their first
ap prjrance at Carnegie Hall, will appear at
Lake M ary High School, at 8 p m ., Wed
nesday, M arch 27 under the auspices of
Seminole Mutual Concert Association. Delores Hodgens and Samuel Howard, who are
husband and wife, were each born In
Alabama and began piano studies at an

early age. Upon graduation from college,
they went to New York for advanced studies
at the Ju llia rd School. As the recipients of
many honors, Howard and Hodgens are
Included In The International Who's Who In
Music and Muslclans’s Directory. They are
cu rre n tly A rtists In Residence at the
University ot Alabama in Birm ingham .
Admission to the concert is through m em ­
bership In SC M A only.

"Well. Mr Snitih. bus Corky
hail any problems shier vom ln*l
visit?*'
"Not really doctor, except ihal
we nollerd this lump on her lell
side a few weeks ago "
The owner jHilulrd out a small
mass about I ln&lt; h In diameter In
ihe area of ihr dog’s ehest Ih r
veterinarian palpated (exam
tried| the lump al ibis ...... . mid
found that II was suit, pliable
anil apprarrd to he located
between the skin and must le
layers ol the clirsl
Now that the veterinarian has
learned of the lump s existence
the owner could easily gel a
variety ol opinions on what lo do
next. These opinions on how to
handle till* growth will dlller
hast'd on Ihe educational buckground of Ihe vel. Ihe vet’s
Interest and Ihr familiarity with
certain diagnostic techniques
The general approach to an
unknown growth has rhanged
over Ihe years Many of these
lump* and hump* were *linply
dl*m!**rd wuh Ihe rationaliza­
tion that It's not worth worrying
about unlit It gel* bigger In
certain cases tills may not fir the
best approach especially II the
growth turns out to Im- a ma­
lignant tumor.
What follow* I* a discussion ol
what cuuses these lump* and
how medically they can he
approached, especially lor those
owners who like lo keep In­
formed.
A growth can Ik - caused by
many things. When a diagnosis
Is tiring sought, before any tests
are done. Ihe possible causes are
assembled as a list, the differen­
tial diagnosis. T h e n using
v a r io u s tests t h is list Is
shortened by eliminating those
posstbllltlrx which do not fit die
lest results. This same approach
should be laken when dealing
with an unknown growth
The differential diagnosis for a
growth Includes an abcess (an
In fe c tio n ), a g ra n u lo m a (a
granular growth which may be
vlewed as a solid abccss), a
seroma (an urea containing
serum , the fluid portion of
blood), a cysl. a hematoma (an

M ich a o l T.
W alsh,
D VM

area containing blond) and a
minor (canrrrl
The anil mil's sjm-cics anil age
are Important considerations
especially when considering the
jKisslbllllv ol a tumor lu general
.iiilmal* less than a thud of the
way through ihrlr lifespan are
less likely Mu have minors To
every generality there are Indl
vldual and breed exceptions
For dogs the boxer breed
comes lo mind as *» sja-des
which has u higher Incidence ol
tumor* even when lairly young
In B ir d * tB e b u d g e r ig a r
(Australian grass parakeet) also
gels minor* al a young age. even
less than 2 years
Now that you know thul a
Ilimp may have many faces and
(hat other variables are Involved
let's go back lo lhal vet .tiler ihe
lump has been examined One
(|iirsllou Ihal may lie asked ol
the owner Is whether the animal
has received any Injection* In
Ihe last few mouth*. Some
Injectable drugs can cause Ihe
development of a tump tiial may
persist for 3-10 week* If there is
no history of injections then ihe
num ber of possibilities i n ­
creases.
There are three basic ways to
diagnose a grow th The quickest
method without sedation or
s u r g e r y Is by a s p ir a tio n
cytology. A small gauge needle
on a syringe is inserted mm the
mass Suction Is ujipllrd If fluid
Is retrieved Its uppearance may
Indicate the presence of un
abecss. Small amounts of tissue
or fluid can be placed on a slide
and Hineured lulu a thin layer.
This Is stained and examined for
die presence of cells which are
characteristic of different tis­
sue* While lid* technique Is not
IU0% diagnostic. It Is quick.
Inexpensive, and can In- done In

Ih r oilier It I* an option lor
those owners who would like an
Idea now whether they have a
serious problem Fills technique
Is onlv as good as Ihe person
who uses It so il someone is not
used to liilrip ic lln g Ihe resolls II
may uni lx- lirlp lu l However
slides laken can lx- s e n t In a
veterinary eylnloglsl (utdlvduals
trained iri Interpreting the cells
mi die slide) al universities
wlili li have veterinary colleges.

A second technique which Is
more accurate Im diagnosis Is a
1Issue biopsy II the mass Is solid
Tills Is done with a local am s
ihcllc In some eases Fills tissue
Is sent lo it piilhologlsl lor
evaluation. A th ird related
met hod involves die removal ol
a suspected minor wlih *ul&gt;
m ission ol a p o rtio n lo a
pathologist. The cost ol a biopsy
may range from $25 lo $-11) hul
It Is highly recommended when
a malignant tumor hi type which
lends lo gel worse or spread) Is
suspected
So die Ideal approach lo die
lump on tills dog would In- lo
llrsi perform the fine needle
aspirate ami see whul Is prcsrni
Tills will. In many rase*, help lo
d I r e c t y o u I o t h e ii e x I
upprnprtiilr step It may ulso
Increase dir i hum e dial ihrrnpy
will I m - dln-cled at the right
cause If Ihe lump Is a result of
an Injection such as hookworm
medication thrn you can request
an oral irralm cni next time
which Is Jusl as effective lu ail
animal which Is not vomiting II
Is also less painful
The duty of u veterinarian Is lo
give die j&gt;et owner die available
option* for diagnosis as well as
treatment and to discuss the
pros and eons ol each choice.
The best way lo approach a
lump on your |m- i i * m lind out
whul II Is. not to put It oil till
later.
We will discuss tumors al
length In u lulcr column
For the answers to your jwl
health qnr*dons write lo l)r.
Michael Wal»h. CTO The Evening
ller.ihl T O ll&lt;i\ /&lt;■&gt;/ Sari/onf
32771.
+

•v 1 I ‘•‘-*4

�J C —Evening H#r»ld, Sanlord, Ft.

Sunday, M arch 14. I f t J

Engagements
FowlerLipscomb

Mrs. Connie Fowler. 208
MrVay Drive, Sanford, an­
nounces the engagement of
their daughter. Christine J.

Christine J. Fowler, Robert W. Lipscomb

Marva
Hawkins
Itt-ill*

Fowler of Winter Park, to
Robert W. Lipscomb of O r­
lando, son of Mr and Mrs,
Th o m a s Lipscom b. 18-14
Anchor Avc . D r Land.
Born In Huntington. N.Y..
th e b r 1d e ■e Iec t Is th e
maternal grandaughtrr of
Roljrrt and Mary White of
Sarasota.
Miss Fowler Is a 1975
graduate of lllshop Moore
High School. Orlando, and a
1981 graduate of Seminole
Community College. She Is
em ployed as project ad­
ministrator by AAI Corpora­
tion. Orlando
Her fiance, born at L yn ­
chburg. Va.. Is the maternal
granddaughter ol Mrs. Earl
Parker. Princeton, W. Va..
and the paternal g ra n d ­
daughter of Mrs Bllzaheth
Lipscomb. Dr Land
He Is a 1977 grailuute of
DeLand High School and Is a
graduate of ihr University of
F lo rid a
Mr Lip scom b Is
employed as a project man­
ager
The wedding will lie an
event ol April 27. al 1 p m .,
at All Souls Catholic Church,
Sanford

A Flam b o yant
Fan tasy W ith
Pizzazz Set
A Flam boyam Fantasy with Pizzazz will be
prrsentrtl al Ihr Seventh Annual Fashion and
Talenl Show, March 30. al H p in al llie Sanford
Civic Center. Sanford Avenue and Seminole
Boulevard.
Serving as Master and Mistress of Ceremonies
will hr Eddie Sllles and Jeanette Wimberly. Some
of Sanford's talented young men und women
have assembled to present a night of pure
entertainment,
Models for the evening are the flamboyant
Rrvonda Caldwell and other noted models of the
elty Including Sabrina and Valery Hurkc. Jackie
Fort. Sheryll Snell. Karen Harrington. Carol
Washington. Annette Menefee. Cheryl Kmghl,
Kamanlha Williams Glenn Jackson. Vincent
Williams. Craig lllllsman and Ken Kendrick
This dynamic show is prixhu cd l»y Marvin
Henderson and the models arc under Ihe
direction of Samrlla Phillips Fashions are
furnished by local merchants Tickets are $2 In
advance and $3 at Ihe door Tickets are available
Irotn the models and hv calling Marvin Hen­
derson. 321-0178 This show will la-rtrllt the
Untied Negro College Fund

DriskellLove
Mr and Mrs Gerald Dennis
Driskell ol Geneva, announce
the engagement ol ihelr
daughter. Pamela Yvonne, in
T i m o t h y A la n L o v e ol
Geneva, son of Mis Doris L.
Love of Casselberry and the
Ullc Mr lllllv II. l.o\ r
H o rn In Sa nlor d , I h r
brlde-elei l Is the maternal
granddaughter ol Charles K
anil Opal M Karraker. San­
ford, and llie paternal grand­
daughter ol Leslie E arid
Kveiyn A Driskell ol Losley.
Ala
Miss Driskell Is a I9HI
graduate u| Oviedo High
SolaH»I and a HIH.'l graduate
ol Orlando College. She Is
employed as a title clerk In
llie oilier ol Seminole County
Tax Collector.
Her (lance, limn in O r­
la n d o . Is the m a te rn a l
grandson ol Evelyn Moore.
Orlando, and l&lt; 11 liryani.
Lakeland lie Is the maternal
g r a n d s o n o f l l l l l a n il
Ernestine laive. Orlando.
Ml. Love Is a 198-1 gradu
ate ol Oviedo High School

Fann- Fink
TJCT M I ,

Th e L rs Hon Amies Club will have Us
Thirty-third Candle Light Servler at Zion Hope
Missionary llapilst Churih. located on Orange
Avenue and Eighth Street. Sunday. Mar&lt; h 31. al
7 p rn Come and enjoy a spiritual program and
bring your candle and Join in this celebration of
Christ's Resurrection Mrs. Ik-sste Chambers is
president and Mrs Mahle Matthews is advisor.
Seminole Chapter of Ihe NAACP will hold Its
Insinuation service March 24 al 3 p m al Trinity
United Methodist Church, fith Street and Sanford
Avenue Hhonvla Wynn Is president
11-ippv lllrihdav was the occasion lor ihe
Kobrrls l-anillv as they gathered in cclrhralc llie
M7th birthday ol Ihelr tailo r Charlie Roberts Sr
Joseph, of Washington. D C Verticil. Charlie.
J r Hein Arttetha and Waller Ware were on hand
lot ihe birthday dinner with the honoree
Happy birthday to Wilfred Miller Ji . Calvin
Moore Maria ll.mksniid Martha II Dim lor

Pamela Yvonne Driskell, Tim o lh y Alan Love
•

and Is employed by Gary I.
I ten ion Const ru n inn
Tin- wedding will be an
event ol April li. at 7 .'1(1 p in
Mi and Mi s. I lonald M
Funu Si . 109 Klngswood

In Ih r Sanlord Christian
Church. Airport Boulevard,
Sanford. Friends and rela­
tives
are Invited

Continued From 1C
look me a couple of years lo get
over It. Now I'm back In Ihe
wood* railing again," Srhlrard
said, hut he's not killing
In thr years following Ihr
shooting Srhlrard lias pursued a
srlllenienl through the civil
courts from the man who shot
him and all hough hr has won
lodgments he hasn't collected
any cash The man, he said,
either gave away or sold all or
his property after suli was filed,
but before Schlr.trd gol Ihr court
order to collect.
That hasn't nl&lt;ip|M-d him from
gelling on with his life "I know
tiring at the point of druth
changed my outlook. I appreci­
ate tirauly more I know beauty
when I sec tt. Proportion, color
and beautiful women. It's a
bruuUlnl thing and I appreciate
It." Srhlrard said
He's enjoying his new freedom
ol Ihghi and said "I was amazed.
I can't believe It yet how easy II
Is lo control that plane — with
your lingers "
Flying isn’t a long hrld dream
H r became Interested a few
years ago when he thought an
ultra light craft would Is* Ideal lo
sweep him ovrr Helds so hr
could check pastures and search
lor game.
Alter his llrst crash landing m
an ultra light, on his first (ltghi.
when (he nose gear crumpled.

Com l, .Sanlord. announce the
cngagemeni ol Ihelr daugh­
ter I'alrlelti Louise, to Mark
Edward Fink of Sanlord. son
ol Mis Ell/alarlli C link.
Ilri Kiev. W Va/
Horn al Fori Henning. Ga .
11n bride elccl Is a 1979
gradual*- ol Seminole High
School where she was a
mem ber ol ihe National
Honor Soctelv, and president
nt tin- CHE during tier senior
Veal Sbr abends Seminole
Cnrnrmitdtv College where
she is a member ol Pin Theta
Kappa and Is employed as a
secretary by Cardinal Iti
dnslrtes hie.. Sanlord
Her llance. I m i i i i al Hecklev.
Is a 19419 graduate ol the
Idgb school lhere He Is a
member ol AF and AM Lodge
*95. Scottish Right and
Shrine and Is emplnved by
Dixie Hunting C o m p a n y.
Sanlord

Patricia Louise Fann, M ark Edward Fink

The wedding will be an
event ol April 13. &gt;d 2 p m
al Upftula I'r e s h y tr i lan
Chun b. Sanlurd. where both
at&lt;- members

The highlight ol ihe afternoon
was a musical program pres­
ented by "Destiny/' a Seminole
High School choral group These
outstanding students under the
direction Ol Laurel Elm ore,
chotul director al NHS. enter­
tained with varied repertoire
Including a rock ty|»c number, a
Harry Manllnw snug and a mrdly
of George M. Cohcn'a works Soft
shoe and choreography accom­
panying the numbers were de­
signed by the students
The tiurposr of ihe meeting
was lo form ait "Over 50" group
to meet on a regular basis.
Welcoming Ihr group was Ihe
Rev. Richard Daniel,ik. who de­

( ^

General Nutrition C e n te rs ___

e

W

f f i e

n

s

S

*

IF YOUCANFINOALOWER LOCAL RETAIL PRICE. WE’LL MATCHITI
SO Mt

500 MG

VITAMIN

VITAMIN
l *100(1

*0037

50 MG ZINC

e

COUPON8AVIN6S ONVITAMINS, HEALTHYFOOOSACOSMETICS
COUPON
F0TENT CAICIUM600 1
•Will

Its IfN

9960
*1

120
0* 1 1 . I t
I I I P IIACI
A II

( O'UfKi-H

to u t

6

■HI!
• u $ 2 «»

r a ■oo

un

GOLDIN HARVEST

\

MEDIUM

RICE CAKES:

«
rM 7a 9
•U

m an UH

PRUNES

c41u i!iN
Q Q c\III
:&gt;
omi&gt;* *
iW

IlflHI* U U
;
coopom
x o iiu u iu
; COlOfN HARVEST
C
I
COU*OH

BREWER S
YEAST nit
••Ml

COMPLEX

m

a*oii mm

ALMONDS

.&lt; S |4 S

A P R IC O T S

TEA

HI •19(I

•M i l

vt* U no •i*
250-83.49 i 50 0 - 8 2 .6 9 1It M 9 9 « j a 8 9 «
m i n i ! / « ! I1PINI4 •r*4 I m a n u n
COUPON
COUPON
CALCIUM SOLACI • ••mi in n ti SI Ml Bllvflf

GARLIC
c m

a llt l

$449

■tl

fined Ihe role ol Ih r rln u c h In
providing lor the social, rum
ttonnl and recreational needs ol
II* members lie expressed the
hope lhal that role would lx*
lullllled hv Ibis group

The tnrmut ol Ihe mcrlliig
remains in be determined. It ts
projected to Include arts and
cralts. games ol various kinds,
possible travel to near by places,
entertainment ol various kinds
and other Isle-tests
It was unanimously agreed to
cuitlliuic the Hirelings, liu- next
ol w hich will lx- al 2 p in ApiIt
I I . After this meeting. Ihr llrst
Thursday In the mouth will be
(he scheduled dale Member* ure
eneouragid to u tlrn d these
meetings and bring another
member with them.
A social hour and refresh
meins Inllnwrd ihe program.
Mt-ndM-rs ol the planning coin
m i lle r were O llie H u n te r,
chairman. Muriel Stevens. Ruth
Warner. Mildred l.lnd. Kathleen
Purnel. Heity Snyder. Peggy Fox.
Mala-I Piety. Genevieve Hrumley.
K H / a h rlh W ilke and llellc
liumblcy — Kate Nash.

he derided "T o hell wlih this II has his career In addition to hts
li can't lake more licking than n-achtng and coaching duties, he
that I don't want n From there served in Ihe IJ S Army for five
he went on to lessons In a years Schirard has worked as a
Cessna.
makeup artist and lecturer on
Srhlrard s pastimes, which beauty and Is a licensed cosalso have Included two trips to metologlal. For seven years he
Europe, have la-en varied, but so managed a drive In theater

Now its your choice

N e w O v e r 5 0 C lu b F o r m s
Iheak dancing Is "In " amt ovet
40 members ol llie First Pre­
sbyterian church nl Sanlurd
w itn e s s e d a b re a th ta k in g
example ol Ihls dance craze al
an nrganlzntlonul meeting In
Fellowship Hall Performing the
itance were Seminole Coininunl*
ty College niudciti* Antonio
Redden and Steven Grey, Steven
Is representing Ihls area In a
state wide break dancing com­
pel It Ion.

• •

Revondn Caldwell is one ol the featured
models in Ihe Seventh Annual Fashion and
Talent Show on March 30

SNACK ! CORN­
BONE MEAL
•M U
: CRACKERS : FLAK
ES
•it Q Q c • i l l l a i o u ;
H IM

i nr ip. *u iit
I « ”t u
COUPOX
ALOE V I M
STICK

D EO D O R A N T

1 IQB T ' » 9 9 i i U f i Q c
$4 4 9
500-85.99 I 500-84 49
■
In
i d 7 9 cu : »•
I1SMI tIM i i m n t i « F M » :H m .V J t f . s'.. M M V jiiS L
. H f.V LV .V . j __________________________
• I M W I I O X O F C O U P O N ! U W t r t O T O o s * IICMIWDMI FAMILY *

If M

IN -STO R E SPECIALS T O SAVE YO U EVEN MORE MONEY
GOLDEN HARVEST

, „ ME

JQ c

B A N A N A C H IP S
m o

,

■ ^ »* i

it I4 « u r »

CLOVER

PRETZELS
M O

1 0 0 -1 4 .8 8

iim i
n n v v w WHEAT
iin v n i
WHOLE

M

HONEY
M O |l I t M l ! )
B iU U

9 9 *« .

p0 TA S S IU M

e

FIG B A R S

9 9 *’ .

M IO ItM tM tt
U fllU L ISMS

2 / $ « 0 0 TOOTHPASTE Q Q C

rw u n *

'■* ’*“

mo

li T a m il

one 8x10. two 5x7's,
eight wallets
WtHAVM

10 portrait t*&gt;r\**e * a ** kmg
o'* ip e » ira- sue**! •1 1«u* s*ik

»&lt;» *

G R A P E F R U IT
D IET

porVgzt t*

J+t iwtsA or m* mgfecii paceagat

PORTRAITS FROM

u

m w

- i ! » l * II l » *

Si W

YN» *4| mmM u p g lU D*e« •*wt O w *
P M r a i N N M * Mperteiarai

►
Two w iik

SANFORD PLAZA 323-9975

Wv

SQ99
9
*0782

*to *
■*'*~mm
§ supply

B4MMI |4K** #•! **•« M •leK.eiM * Owf , 1HK*
e* *t-4te*
m *4***. n . i s

* MH-

*S *W ^

—

C3 General Nutrition Centers

Sanford Piaza

*&gt;

■••^ z

_

WITH GLUCOMANNAN

JCPenney

Pholographar Hours
Monday 10 to 1 &amp; 2 lo 5:30
Tuasday 1 to 4:30 &amp; 5:30 lo 8:30
Wednesday 10 to 1 &amp; 2 to 5:30

k

»

a^ar~t ftr_ J a ,» a * * t
’• "
**

■ ■! 'LL * -K

4T8M091 MU. M Y |I F**l M il
I U M 1% M l

*

• - * a aw.

»

*t«L

*

�In And Around Sanford

E v ening H erald. Sanford, FI.

Sunday, March Id.

ins—JC

SHS Class of 1948
Honors Mona Walker
T h r Seminole High School
class of 1948 has met frrqucntlv
slnce graduation to socialize at
festive gatherings.
The social director, public re­
lations expert and Marque" of
all class trades through the years
has been Mona Ruth M ills
Walker who is among the J04
class graduates.
According to Hetty Tollelsrud.
during the past 37 years sinr e
graduation, Mona now Mrs
Richard T
E Walker, "has
maintained extensive records
scrapbooks, correspondence and
in-touch' communication with
every 1948 class member except
three- whose whereabouts have
somehow eluded her tracking
abilities."
On Mare'h 16, on Mona s
birthday, classmalrs honored
her with a birthday partv In the
cafeteria of the- Sanford Middle
School, formerly Seminole High
School During ihc week. Mona
received congratulatory birthday
m essages Ireun classinales
throughout the- U S who e-eiuld
not Join the- 50 whet at tended tlit
festivities.
On be-Jiatf of the class, John It
Root J r. of Altamonte Springs
presented Mona with an cm
grave-el appreciation plaque Iroru
Ihc class and Dan I’rlh a m .
school principal, was pre-sentcel
a c h e c k from the class to
purchase an em-rhe-ad projector
for Ihr school library
The projector will bear the
In s c rip tio n
‘ ■|‘ rcscnte-il by
Seminole High School Class
I94H m honor of Classmate
Mona Ruth Walke-t
Man li Hi
1985."
Following the- prpcscniutton.
I’rln c -ip a l Re I ham |e-d the
lieitteire*e. hosts aliel gue-sts on a
tour eil ihe-ir Alma Mater
The Garden Club e»l Sanleird
hie- ushered m spring with theannual card parly, tune tie-ein and
fashion show.
According te&gt; Mary Klmeire*.
those attenejed played cards and
either games and "nisei a elellrlous luncheem was serve-el "
('Inti mrmtiers modeled lash
Ions from Slim and Sassy. Digger

D o ris

.

D ie tric h
PE0PIJ-:
F-dltor

j

*1
V
itV "

M a rie ." and " T h e
Marietta."

N aughty

Da I let G u ild of S a n fo rd Sem inole is performing this
weekend In the annual spring
concert. " T h r Time of Yeiur Life.
at Lake Mary High School.
Saturday. March 23, at H p in.,
and Sunday. March 24. at 3 p m.
Ojtrn to the public, tickets are
available at thr door

and Heller In Sanford. J.C . Ealy.
Mary- Kay Cosmetics consultant,
was makeup artist for Ihc
models whose coiffures were
arranged
by Headliners of
A n Easter Fashion S h o w
Sanford And in krrptng with
the spirit of the season. Sanlord f e a t u r in g In la n ts th r o u g h
Flower Shop presented each teenagers will be held m the
Children's Department of J.C .
model with a green carnation
Florence Kurgan was the fash­ Penury's. Sanford Plaza, on Sat­
ion commentator Models wrrr urday. March 30. at 11.30 a m.
F.my Sokol. Mildred Townzcr. Local children will serve as
Anne Warner. J o Stanktcwlcz, models,
Favors will be presented to
Jackie Partnln. Pauline Spivey.
Claudette Ik-hretts. Mae Greer. children attending the event
L i n d a D e I f 1o r e . M 11d r e d which Is Iree and open to the
M c K e n ilre r. M a rth a K rltl. public
Barbara H ra sh aw and Ann
The Sanlord Klwunls Club will
Brinson
honor the women who have
Emv Sokol has a delightful received the Roberta Gatcllel
friend. Monique Richard, visiting Woman of thr Year award at the
her from Parts France More annual luncheon Wednesday.
During that lime the club will
about the two friends later
announce t h r 1985 winner
This week Mrs Charles W
ITonll H o b s o n was hostess at her
Lake Mary- home at a luncheon
Pastels by Sanford Artist Det
honoring the French visitor.
lye Reagan will Is- exhibited at
A guest commented it was the G. Sander Fine Art Gallery.
"very elegant
while Hu* guest 310 Seabreeze DIvcL. Daytona
of honor said the lemon pie (or Bruch from March 25 to April
dessert is ihe best I ever ate In 20. Also. Deitve. a multi-award
mv whole hie
winning Floridian artist, will tie
Mur\ Anne Rolx-rts returned
to Sanlord during the spring
break limn Emerson College,
Boston where she Is a sopho­
more and miisti al lliratre/publlc
relatlons major
Mary Anne, daughter of Dr
and Mis W Vincent (Sheila!
Roberts, Is a graduate ol Mount
Dora Christian Home A DibitSchool. Mount Dora, and is a
former company dancer with
Bullii Guild ol Sanlord Seminole
and the Seminole Community
College Bailee Company
Mary Anne has Itrcn cast In
Emerson's 32ml Annual Spring
Musical. " L it t le Mary S u n ­
shine." a rnusle.il comedy re­
miniscent of operettas like "Rose

Innmred at a cocktail reception
and private preview of pastels
Monday evening
Acceordlng to the gallery
owner. G Dckrr. " Dellye Is very
able to capture the |oy and
sadness In the [K-ople she paints
Her colors are very sensitive and
well chosen."
Th e gallery owner, who says
she Is "very proud ol having
discovered such a lln&lt;- Floridian
artist.” predicts a "great future
lur Hetlyr Reagan,"
Read Susan Lodcn's story- all
■i Immii the ucrompllshrd artist In
next Sunday's Herald
Another Santmd artist. Judith
A bernrthy. Is exhibiting her

M»f»M

Timmy Vlfw#nt

Lynne Dickey as a butterly In Ballet Guild's concert this wookond.
works now through April 25 at
the Dig Empire ol America. In
the lobbies ol the l Mat ml office.
•145 N. Woodland Dlvd

KEEP YOUR
CITY CLEAN

Krista H en ry, daughter ol
Patricia and l.ottnle Henry nl
Sanford and a senior at Seminole
H ig h S c h o o l, re p re se n te d
Seminole Count v In the recent
Florida Jun ior Miss scholarship
program held In Pensacola
Congratulations are in order to
Krista who was winner of Ihc
Creattvc and Performing A r t s
competition lot her dramatic
monologue to Neil Simon's "The
Star Sp.mgled Girl "
Dawn D e fra y. Jacksonville,
was named Florida's Junior
Miss
The Junini Miss Program tn
Seminole County is sponslrctl liv
ihr Altamonte South Seminole
Javeees

^ \ ,\

The Sanford City Commis
sion has declared the month
of March as "Clean-Up"
month lor tho City ol Sanford.

,E
T R AD E IN SALE
Trade In Tour Old

Wolor Coodilionot

The Sanlord City Commis
sion urges all residents to
loin in this effort and keep
"The Friendly City" a clean
and boauliful city.

MARCH ’85
"CLEAN UP M O N T H ”

Finn teams ot Wot Id Class
('loggers will dance Saturday
and Sunday. March 23 and 24.
at Flea World. I I S Highway
17-92. hum I I a m to 3 p in
each day. The continuous cnlerlutnment Is tree ol charge

araiummr
9 0 4 -7 3 4 -3 7 8 4

• Doljnd

•tU l«
Oarrn

W e d d in g
In v ita tio n s

1 0 0 For *2 3 .9 0
Saafsrrf PUrj
32249*2

"One O r The Largest Hallm ark
Shops In The Southeast . "

H EN D ERSO N
It's called the Baby B f f V f B V R V V ir
Lock' , but it*s no K U U i H i i i i y i f i
baby when It comes
Professional Repairs On
to sewing. Baby Lock
Femilf l Industrial
is like three machines
Machines
In one. It (1) sews a
'
flexible straight stitch,
(2) overlocks the edge to prevent ravelling,
and (3) trims the excess seam allow­
ance...all in one operation. The seam Is
completely finished exactly like the seams
In your most expensive factory produced
garments. You will also be am azed at the
price. So competitive, you can own one
even It you already have a conventional
machine.
Moa«t*oB

H »r* M T M M t* Tim m y V lM M t

John B. Root Jr. congratulates Mona Walker.

Anno Warner models at G arden Club ovont.

{ i c l u n f u l y A!

Hsndarton't

North Of Grave* Ave. Next To M*nd#,,on • .‘•**-'1
Marllnr* Restaurant
_iL C TiZ j}l ll
Orango City

Abused Woman Needs More Than Prayer
D E A R A B B Y : I've been mar­
ried for 22 years. I've been
pregnant 14 times and have nine
llvlng children
I weighed 98 pounds when we
were married. My husband likes
little women He oltru told me
that if 1 ever got as lat as hts
sister-in-law. he'd divorce me.
(she weighs about 300pounds)
My first complaint Is that this
man likes sex. I like It too. but
oner a night ts enough for me
(Not for him.) He does not allow
me to use any kind of birth
control — says hr never has and
never will.
I’m u God-(earing woman. 1 go
to church and pray and pray at
home. loo. but the Lord doesn't
hear my prayers, I got so fed up
with m y man's demands and
abusive ways I started to gain
weight on purpose so he would
divorce me. I’m up to 207
pounds, and I still can't get rtd ol
him.
Now what do I do? He makes
good money, but he's as tight as
a size 9 shoe on a size 12 foot.
Help me.
S IC K O f HIM IN M IS S O U R I
D E A R S IC K : You're right, you
do not have to put up with this
kind of treatment. (No woman

children with others.

LEARN ING

Dear
Abby
dors.) You nerd mure than
pruyer lo solve your prohlrm. If
your mlnlsfer can't do some­
thing about It. see a lawyer.

D E A R LE A R N IN G : You make
a very good |&gt;oini — one that
many parents would not think ol
questioning, and they should.
I hope you mentioned this to
your nelglitxir She needs to hr
reminded that children should
never be left alone In a public
place — even for a few minutes.

D E A R A B B Y : In a recent
DEAR A B B Y : My sons. 7 and column was a letter from a hurt
5 years old, arc asked oc­ gra n d m o th e r w hose g ra n d ­
casionally to a movie by our children never acknowledged
ncxi-door neighbor — who has a her gifts. Advice was offered
from another reader to "gift"
6-year-old boy.
I Just learned (hat on one those grandchildren with an
occasion the neighbor took her unsigned check the next time.
son m the bathroom, leaving my
Abby. several years ago you
sons alone In the theater. And ran a letter from a mother who
another time, she sent my two offered wiser udvtcc regarding
troys to the bathroom alone the same problem. She said that
while she sat with her son when her children received a
watching the movie.
gift, she would not allow them to
Our boys are aware that play with It. eat It. read It. wear
children their age have been It. spend It or bank It until they
molested and some leave been had written a thank-you letter.
kidnapped, so naturally they She said they would guide the
were Irtghlened. but didn’t want hands ol the little ones who were
lo complain.
too small to write themselves,
Abby, pleuse urge parents to And this Is how her children
question how situations will be formed a valuable lifelong habit.
I am another grandmother
handled before sending their

\

’

(904)775*4275

Open Moo

who lias Bern hurt many times
when gifts I have sent with love
were never acknowledged.
Sign me

Sat 9 AM 6 PM

/

YOUR

baby lack ,

A R EA D ER IN
S A L T LAKE C IT Y

HEADQUARTERS

S u n s h in e

N

9 S u r f

P a g e a n t

W IN A N E W CAR

GIVEN TO O VER ALL WINNER A T NATIONALS
A LSO OTHER G REAT PRIZES AT PRELIMINARIES &amp; NATIONALS

f P

H

j n

S U N ., A P R I L 1 4 , I B B S
S / ll, A P R I I , 1 4 , IB 8 5
S A N F O R D W O M A N 'S &lt;1,1 II
:iOW S . O A K A V K .
S A M OHO
BABY c o n t k s t
I I O Y S A U H L S 0-2 V M S .
D IV IS IO N S
G I R L S O N L Y • 3-30 Y H S . 0 1 . 1)

' g u m

■
B

_

B E A U T Y

M

O D E L

T A

L E N

T

C O N TA C T:

LO C ALLY
V E R D IE E G G E R S
(305) 7U-7AV1

M IC H E L L E B A IL E Y
4521 S. SHORE R D ., O RLAN DO , F L 32809
(105) 157-3442 E V E N IN G S

W

s

�4 C - E v o n i n g H « r « l d , S o n fo rd , F I .

Sunday, March 24, IMS

Adventist

...THE HOPE
OF OUR COMMUNITY,

m u iu n u i

t m a m r caw ca
t u r n to T » • IM

The
Church...

»H u
I I M •■
M l am.

Assembly Of God

tom na a ia
U 3 1223

r m c m t i u m n ca ve *
111 • A t a -I Ota*. Ittla *

I AM

fra* Art a,
i Sta*1
J M tn taf
tn ata| Sanaa
&gt;Ctata

7 aa *m
a* aoa
lA IA ta. Att At
*41
MB*
• aa
ISO

Bsptist

Mta to vt m u t t n u a w u a a
IIA taa* Imtw a*

nu

. Ft*. 117*4

T M am.

I n t a l tat,mta
tat*. PrtTt, Aantaa

V * Tterrttf
t .M * m
ta n tn Praataa* fa. At la n k n

acnwotiT cauaca
i. IM la lP t a
AM tm
IB M a a
I B M am

t r p t r i n tpiscopti cauaca
Lata M a i 1la* tator, M a *
Lata Bay. Fit
Baa. lataW A«**» m
Vita
SoNMMy $fbepf &amp; H#r•1#f
AM tm

CAlFAfT
N t u M U n u n t i l cause*
■I I I t a n 1 1 » h
A n laaraa « Want*
A M am
I I M am.
Itttan AanAn
IM *■

££

Bsptist
c u m * * aaaritt c a a t *
t i l l Oal A n ,
t»H | 4

NonDenominational

fa n i a a p t iit cauaca

a 4) u
ll:f t i b

AM a ■
7 a* a ta
7 M am
i

Wrt Pftyta, U itaa

TI4M AAPTIIT cauaca
r CtaA Aaa*. It* . Nan
Ann N Ua«
U t o l AaAaal
AAA a m
Praatataj A W in H * i.« 1*41 a a
(NAtSta*?
A M a*
I t o t a A Prvt«M-to«
7 M am
■a* Praia, Nn*
7 M *m
Mtaniry
n a n a* p i n r
I I I Part l i m
Pat* I. Nma*1 . A.
ta. Pa**,, NtaAtta, af f.
I at**
a* I
H I •a
IA M am

BaAaH ilatal Part*
Itaa tka«i

Paata,
*41 am
1*41 am
Ti
I A* am.
A M am.
I N *m.
ta i l l , , f ly la nttn
Praia, A am . I to*,
I M *m

i

7a* aa
A M am

I*
A

I

***** t a r r m cbuocm
a n uawi« u
h tla
I a a* am
U n tM
I I a* am
f M *m
U rn .
7 M *•
0*4 Tn A a l a a ta t Atay

tu in ia u n t il i
IM U i n t a . It* . Mary H I a il*
*41 am
11 ** am
ra a * m

A M am
I AAA am
IA4A am
to o *m

|"* h » « * »
tat*. Ittataf

Catholic
law* CATBauc cauaca
*U a*A An. la.lt.4. ft*

fataa, tala t a w
&gt; t .l.l.(r.to,
M « «M N ttt
A M am
•— ■ * ..
A M 1AM. I I M
Cmfaaata*. Art. 4 *m la A M a •

I Ctttaa

c a t a aiau cauaca
1**4 la l a , a t At*
111 I I M
*41
IIM
7 JO
Wrt. Pray#, Santa*
I JO

out u i r aa rta u*n
CAmauc cauaca
111* MnMMLaa I I . Otoi-i*

[■he

am
tarn
am
pm

Pm Im

A IA Am I I taaa
latarta, V.«k t a i w t pm KacBrtl

F:M am (Umirtl

*n*4*i Naat
A M *m Maa f,t
Caaltaaia**
UtarAay ta4 In a af
Bata Bart
IN IA l.a

W IN D S

Christian
naif CMRiTiAa cauaca
ItaMtatoa Of Ctartatl
IM T I t o f — 4 An
A I A" a,A M a m
Pula,
•I I t taaa,
*41 am
Mantal*
II 00 am
Bana,! An ***It
laartk li t . a . at lal Aa* Ar*
» ■ *■!■
AM am
taa*att*.y Praia,
k r t AIM,
7M a m
c a m r u a cauaca
I l f W A*tar! &gt;1*
1111
Mlalt la,
A M am
1AM am
A M *m
Praia, Natata« taa*
f M * aa

T h e P r o v e r b s o f J o h n H e y w o o d p r in t e d in
I f)4 6 . is th e e a rlie s t c o lle c tio n o f E n g l i s h c o l ­
lo q u ia l s a y in g s .
w in d c

171 A t r l t o . I M N
C tna r BFI S . I H i a u i W .

Pm to,

AAA am
I I M tm
I , it at1 1a, Atrtitti
A M am
taat Prtft, A MWa lto*T 7.M * ■

in a d d it io n

to “ a n

ill

os 'I k n o w

o n w h ic h s id e m y b i e a d is b u t te r e d

and

th is

h itteth th e ri.uJ o n th e h e a d .

Is thorn an ill wind— and does it blow In our
friend w o rr ie s a b o u t o u r lack o f

la n d ? A c lo s e

c o n c e r n for r e lig io n . H e b e lie v e s th a t th e r e ­
C**PfM

Church Of God
CMiacN or coo
M l W 11*4 I t ,» t l
Rta. BIN TMat a i m
Pat la,
U rt**y ItltMl
t AS tm .
atanttaf Want,*
10 SO Am.
l,M (* a tiH s * ,»«t
1 00 a * ,
ftatofi la ik taH tl
s*,,K* tat*M&gt;*ar
i oo a ■

cauaca o# too of r » o r w c i
I N I V I ha, Aaa
At* ItatM I lltaa,
Paata,
*41 am
II M a rt
I ,M|*A.ttt t o t o ,
r M am
WiAaat*ai T m * tanka I M at*.

•

•

ligious education provided by our churches is
essential to our moral and spiritual character as
a nation. He's hitting the nail on the head
But when the opportunity for religious
education is neglected you have religious
Ignorance.. . ‘that bloweth no man to good."
In spiritual matters we need to know on
which side our bread is buttered!
»*•uk»Of The

A «* * * * * * * tlBtaUMfiMl W -te* P 0 Oue BOOS CtA^M l .M V* 71SOS

r m r crnmcn or a m ttt

1C*(HU 7 lOMtaAM

H e re

w e fin d s u c h b its o l w is d o m

Christian Science

1 aa * m
P Au ano Anm a
* * m » i cauaca
1*1* Pita til# An.

coMMuam a a u iTty
M M 1 taa,a* I n m
la .,a t . Ftortaa
B n Malta Ban,, at A Baa Inti Natl
lataay larttay
11 00 a .
I n a a i taaatof
7M *m
tartMatay It*— ( P,tya
A rt taM* 1total
T;M * aa

Congregational
coaanunoau
caaitriAM cauaca
14*1 1 Part Aaa
I H MBA
aa Bar* A (M a t t
MMtta,

BtimVc*if

Spanish
canruaA
aiTMii
Paataa, Pttata f t t i w
1111717
i m D.toM* a*
la.fart, fit
ic u u a

M M
I B .M l l t m
I I M tm
Na* Plain Mw to|
A H k IM ,

A M pm
f M am

(a.

I I M am

i V Orton*

lAiw oat taouu of p o a iu
111 Mafta Ah
Cata,— 4. i n 7 M f
Attaa W M&lt;Da-La, 0.
Paalrt
la«* 11 Ma.— 1 t o u t IA JO a —
laa*a, I — a, Jam a
7 00 * aa
T— 4 a , A t f i a , Pray—
10 )0 t m
, l i t — | pya»a
Alta tan toto
A W *m
Art!* Itotay
7M am
f,total l n M ( tatoa Itotay f M a m

Lutheran
lliTMNAA cauaca Of
m tiM iM *
"Tta UNtoraa BaW art
TV •-Ttoa ta Tta Ufa"
M M Oat Aa*.
I n . Iltoar A. A a m ta
Paalw
tartay k t a *
A l l *m
Wanta* tank*
1010 a to
Ata*a,|*,taa art Manary
COOA IMPMAO
lu ra iiA a cauaca
M i l Oftortt It. 11 *1
;Lato*, a. Ctawt ta Atoanni
A l l am
1AM t a .
ta na, | Pit i tatA
i t . m a r t iu t m a a b cauaca
IA AM A Bata Ba« M .
Paata,
A l l a■
WaraAta* tamtaa A M A I I M a m
Wa tototltta a CtoHBt* tatm4
I l&gt;|Pto taa*.

iTho Following Sponsors Make This Church Notice And Directory Page Possiblei
A T L A N T IC N A TIO N A L BANK
Sanford, Fla.
Howard H. Hodges and Staff

C ELER Y C ITY
PRINTINQ CO., INC.

C O LO N IA L ROOM
R ES TA U R AN T
Downtown Sanford
115 Eaal First SI.
Bill A Dot Painter

Bt, A taiftaf Hirttay

SUN BANK a n d Staff
200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Dr.

JCPenney
Sanford Plaza

O R EQ O R YLUM B ER
TRUE V ALUE HARDWARE
500 Maple Ave., Sanford

K N IG H T'S SHOE STO R E
Downtown Sanford
Don Knight and Stall

HARRELL A BEVERLY
TRANSM ISSION
David Beverly and Slat!

L.D. PLANTE, INC.
Oviedo, Florida

TH E McKIBBIN AGENCY
Insurance

MBL'a
G U LF SERVICE
Mel Dekla and Employees

OSBORN'S BOOK
AND BIBLE STORE
2599 Sanford Ave.

Paata

laat. ta Paata
! Manta* I 10 » K M I a m
* J A II am
Saaitaaa a rt itaaaaa la a* *(»*
fa ta a ilu Caffva fcaf.aa. laaacat
IT T a n
S M aa
to o a m
I M am
Wa* A-to. ttotay
7 00 * m
i t i a i n u a in i m i aoo, i t cauaca
S l« t o , - * Am A lin k I I
■aa trtay la* IB
Paata,
l — a* IUa
t a w l . af Malta
WM— Mat,
U n i t totMl Avtattt,
A M tm
I I M am
Wta* Otata itotay
7 00 am.

Nazarene

ia m fo o o

ai i

ia m fo o o

&gt;*• Pnato t r a m MUM to, .1

I IA K IU C A I COaCMUIMMAl
l i t Mat* Kraal
Paata
1AM am
taa, atto
1*00 am

I M am

1

AI* Part lata.
I l l 4171
Cm . |t I. kata M
l a w A. Ik— *a h n i lt t
■ tf| , Ctarta. tfracta, af
C kltfut I tautto.
■tanatf Nanta) A M S I I M a m
A A S tm
a m *m
ta, . , . , Cut* * &gt; n to |
I I I Mm * .,
CM I t , TtaM
Ntaa'a Praia, IrtaAlaal
lal Tiara**,
A M tm

a o o caosi
401 Part Aa*
TM Aaa U n i A. I * .

AAA a m
II AA a m
A M am
7 aa am
I N *a

taanta*

IiMgtfril
IB M l a .
I I M tm
(M am

Episcopal

ta iim it a u n t i l

aa
a*
*m
am

aua wmo

1000 t m
i Ctata 7:10 * a .
tatrata* Strata* tat
II M :
•Mi

AM am
A M *m
A* l l l | P,11l*t&lt; ft.

a a a m m it

Methodist

cauaca or c w m r

AAA at
ii aa t i
i n a*

I A** am

MFoataAnea c a u m m i

Ataaarl tart A I
Baa J. Bait,
*Mi
A M am
taartta* ta n lu
II M i a
Taarit Ittatataa
A M *m
T m U „ Btata tta*i
1AM am
t a n t n *,*ilia* taa a* a n a n
r a n uam A

t ill Pat A,

11 aa t&gt;

fo b

Church Of Christ

rn irn

I ta A4k *rt*t
AanAn
AAA * m

V n * t( M a i A
AAtol BAta O ttt

OUR NATION!

in ■■ m r*a*
tala

*04., caott i v m t i H cmuocn
of c a m N t r r

n a il cauaca
or t « aA lta i ac
1 U I tota,* A n
tat. 1 NtolM
Paatrt
* 41 * to
10 41 am
l" * t a «
100am
lyaafatal to rt*
1 00 , .
■ 4 n a t tarata* (Mata | 7 00 a ■
Btratry Ptantaata taa a* tarn,at

Pentecostal
fia ii m m c o m i
c»v«Ck of lOMcwooe
M l Otatata Kraat (a ic » n *
•a, t. OtaW C,a*l
Plitef
t«t*ar Wfctaa,
JO 00 I S
Mi,— a Warata*
I I 00 • a
la ■*,, 1H — |
7 M p m.
Wrt tatta Italy
I M pm
Ctata,'an Martin
Ctata*,,
A M pm

n t i r p t n im a iA N cauaca
Oat A n A Irt l i m ,
C.Paitox
Baa 0, r«|M L tayt.1
■aa 6 Bata,* Dtanto
PtaM 111 7U 1
IUttM| Manta*
A M tto
Ctank tatato
*41 tm.
M » ,.» « Wantap
I I 00 t m
Bintary
Wa*. Pit,a, N n to| A Btkta
llrty featawatap art
r oapa.
n a ir PM itrnaiA M cauaca
of u u a m
W*ta, Aaa.. L tt, Ha,,
■•a AF l l l t o l
Mtoaita,
Ctawl Praia, M n to j
A11 t m
C t o U toInto
AAS tm .
Itanwii Wantap
IIM ta
7m to tatotp
A M *m
W rt C M , PraaUa*
7:10 p to.

Other Churches
vKToav tiH P tt of eoo. me
M l Ptat 4,M M
tatfart. Ftaatot 11771
tatarl L atony
Paata,
A A lp m
I I M tm
tCTB
S AS p m
I m m ( Wantap
I M *m
W U A ir UIY1CI1
T m «4«,
I M pa
ttarataay
T M pm

STEN S TR O M R EA LTY
Herb Stenatrom and Staff

PANTRY PRIDE
DISCOUN T POODS
and Employees

W ILSON-EICHELBEROER
MORTUARY
Eunice Wilson and Staff

PUBLIX M A R K ETS
and Employees

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE CO.
Mr. and Mra. Fred Wilson

SENKARIK GLASS
A PAINT C O ., INC.
Jerry A Ed Senkarik
and Employees

W INN -DIXIE STORES
and Employees

'SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY
U tlM to l Of AO*
fail Attf W , to ta*. Tfto 0 l i t
Atatot Aiif tly *1 Art Cataa, to Cartt,, CtaA tart art Wtota At*. ltt, I
Iraataato A.......... *4 Art. 1111 W Ito K . I total*
I frta*to,* II* lata Itort 04 lit* Man ft UI44
itr m t
■ to Cntito latt A Irt. Ut* Mary
Ottto, Ctaatt. 17* litotoatl AM
Cato'to OartMf ttrtat t i l l Oat tta
Ctataitt fktl OapBal
Oat,, tot, tan aan, |a,lill I
t f P yrti ■ «* «) ( t a i l ( a r t , CtaA Oh * lata Man
Futaay OapMat Clara&gt;. Ota totarta t* to 0*111, Ah
l » » tart*! Ctato l i t Part Ah
fail to ta l Ctata to Itr tia ii Itort* H AM. Aattotaaa Itort*
I M Oh m , ctrtH *1 !***« Ca,
fail OaptMl Ckato to Atatil
l» il Oapttol C r t it to Ut* Wta,
laat to ta l Cta.it to lata Matoto
I M OapBal CtrtH to la rtM rt M l 1,11 U AM
ftto Oatttal Ctato to I
I M to ta l Ctata to I
I M OaptH, Ctant to I
I M Ittat t a w r
Otartk 1101 W IMO M

toI

Ir t r t t Aa*H I Ctaatt. I M O ia V r t If , CMtaWany
f a ta l Otpaial Ctata MIA Part*,,a
11 titaH O a ta m BapMf C rtta K 04 H I Oirta
II Irt* Hatartun tatolal Ctataat to Cttatrta Ca, taa
U Pato Oh m Ctata I I I Ptat Aaa
14 Malrtaai taprtl Ctata Ctrtrt tall
•ta»*fW4 Want*an Oarttal llw 0 Crtta
U tart a Mtaataaan lapaf C tata AM Cfftart K
•aaa*la latBal C rtal part t a H , t t I
■■Wa- Ctato* Itoataata, Oaplrt Ctata Mart 0 MHata VI Aa— toil !•&gt;—*&gt;
Itaa taaa Irt&lt;aI Clank I I I fttrt* Art
CAIB0UC
Ckta'fc to taa I r t t y. lata Mary
ta t a a CanM Ctata I I I Art Ah . t o t a l
Ota Irt, Oh m to Paata Citaata Cla-al. Ml 1 Mam«0a Ah .
II Ah a Citaita Ctata P.|a aa, Ira*, art— y
II Irttaltaa Citaata Ctata I toato la a a to k
K M— y ............... .... total ■ Ctaaik toaalto* Alt,
0-a Irt , to taa lakai Citaata Ctata l i l t
caoittita
I n , Ctatala* Ctaik IM I 1 Cart— f *h
t o l l ! Ctatttata Ctata IM M 4-ton Ih4
» lrta,tot ChaUa Ctaluk. ft—taa Batto It
laka,a* CtataBrt Ctank Otaa U U IA . to fa-tart

(■artIit* Kata
I n i Cta— k to Ctata, ItoartWL *11 Martitaa a tort 04. lrt«a ..A

I n tar. AaWaiaa Uattk. M tart Itaywtl— Crtpto. V 1 Bay I 1 U . fan Pot
ffral
c a a tM u n o a ti
CrttratMtaMt Ctafaltaa C rtta 74*1 * Part Ah . C art-,
IPtKOPAl
latairttf Crtrat to Wa Aaa ( . t o tal 171 I n t — Wt t-a* Wrt
fit Cl— it to Wa Oh * la— * HtoBaal. I l l Ut* Art
AA I— at l — .aato Cl—H I M a y tta. I n — —m
Ctata, Iftaiato C trtH liif t a *
My Cian I — , Hal. Part Art . at AW H . I nfra*
K Itartr* a Ctatait t i l l lata t a r t A4. M a rt Part
It fatal
into — a* to Uta Wan I Wa— , Irk— lataa M— y

to wa to,a, art. I M I I ttoa,* Ah
to rt to wa H u m l l A* 4nan
r H u t to Wa Bt,— . IM I Cryaito Irt* Ah . lata Wan
Waataa Ctatart to W* auaaan. i t *4 I ■, Wrt* W to 14 a, taa
Ctatait to Wa Baa— art. Baytaaa A ftoto* Art. I
I Ota* A Anto Ah . *■■■■.
Ctort Art Ah A M K
Cta—rt to AaOrti. I W ^rt
rttoarto C trtH M l ] *a« I

1011I

■ Will
u rm u a
Aaa— a I— — to C rtta AitrtHaA ta . f n iaWarn
* «4 Irt to- , total* M t a - t i l l I K i l l , It.
LaW-w Ctatait to N a f l l . Altai, I
Ink— aa C rtta to Wa Altai— 1*1 W IIW Pina
Ml, IM* Ink— to Cl—l l Allan Ia n ta I r t , If U Ctn aOltay
M Carta la w -to C trtH « t 4JO, Han*
U liaarta la W v n Clank. AM -af » n , to 14. ! — ■■*
■toy Craaa law— aa Cl— It to Lata M—y

ci a t ilt *a i AOaurni
faaaaa Uta laaartt toy M a r t i C trtH Btay I M f-ato Cay

rwt irt
a r t , CtataH M l Waaa 14
C trtH M l I la* K . Into*

(IB*
ta na

MftotaOrtrt
».*

U rtH . I MO tart Ah
tatoa Ah
AW Ac 0 W ill,, Ah
fa,aal Cky CaaaaaA, Carta*, ftraaf Cay
■ to ll IIM W IIW *4
O t o M I t a t a l M A IIW It
IIM Paw Ah
AMI I. Irt* to rt f in Many ft U7M
n u a mw u
IM I W I M t a r t taa**,*
111 W Arttal tart
&gt;04 fart Part

C tort to CtrtaC t i l l 0 Part Ah
C tort to CtaM, to lata I t * 01 I I U * Caitartr,
C-nk k a r t Ctort to U n i t M i l Uta Batart 14
Ctaai t to O n e At* Part tana,, la , taa— fa tact
U n i t to CtnC lata, ,
ttrtat to Ctnl. laaaan*
Ctatart to Ctnc B I7W H
■aOtatWa U n i t to C tn c fit Bant ta . Manila*
U n i t to A H
Ctort to A H M l M U H M
Ctort to A H *na*a
Ctort to W
Ctort to ta*
Ctort to A H I r t ! ■ l*M M
C tort to Art M O n e *-a*a
C tort to Art to Piaat i n . IM * 1 tm Ah
Ct o r t to I r t to tartto, If** I
•at— Ctort to O H I I N I lOM
I— Ctvrt to Art I IM Ortt-a n * A n . to * -*
lA in o o ootaoooi
, M tta— i* t U Ca— art Cl.
, It Attain a to O C A. I l l Mata I t . I m

■o llw

, ctfia* to UWn 0a* 1

1111 Par* Ah

0am IM I ■ Itaa* Kaan
rito t— . Cktart to a - Ctato "uta,1— .
Itaa* Ctatart to CtaM. Im .Oat 10— 0 4 m* t o , M.

M
U
U
It

. 0 0 1 4 Plata
ta—r t A M I Aw to Cytaata
Crta M l Ctort to (*— « Oh. tta. Ota—
t o ll M l
Man a A M I C to rt IA Ol 111 f
Pato a MatataWa* Ctatart t a i n 0
I C to rt 1 taOtay
n r t M AM art C4 &gt;!■«»■■*
I Ctatart Cat to tar*— *- * Mn&gt;ay U . On—

Mata Itotay C toH toM * ta UaM. IU A I
tm fto Atattato Ctrtrt to t o L— a ta— C tnc ,
ta— Otata Ctrtrt M M 1 In to * t

^ *T

�Briefly
Jews For Jesus Presentation
On Passover And Last Supper
Steve Sllverstrln. stafT evangelist for -Jews for Jesus will
explain what Ihe Jewish Passover and Jesus’ Last Supper have
in common as hr presents Christ in Passover at First Assembly
of God. 304 W. 27th St.. Sanford, at the 8;30 and 10 a.ni.
services this Sunday.
Ancient and modern customs will be discussed with an
emphasis on the aspect of redemption. A table will be srt with
the traditional Jewish Passover Items, including representative
foods that are explained, but not eaaten.
Members of Jews for Jesus have given this demonstration In
more than a thousand churches. It was originally written In
1050 by Molshe Rosen, founder and leadrr of the group based
on writings of former rabbi Leopold Cohn, who came to Christ
In 1894.

r -

Easter Drama Scheduled
The Music Ministry of Central llaptlst Church, 1311 Oak
A vc., Sanford, will present an Easter drama on March 31 and
April 1 at 7 p m. The presentation will feature eight scenes of
events during Ihe last week of Christ.
It will Include 70 singers and actors and 35 In the behind the
•CCHM CTCW.

The services arc open to the public.

H * riU H a s t S r Tamm* Vlnraat

'B.J .' Presents Mini-Concert

Sunset Service

t

liarbara "H J . " Johnson Jenkins will present a mini-concert
of Christian music during the evening worship service at First
llaptlst Church of Oviedo this Sunday at 7 p in. It Is open to the

Sanford M ayor Bettye Smith, on right in pholo left, and
husband. D r. Robert Smllh, lend group a hand to erect
cross In Veterans Memorial Park during recent sunset
service conducted by Sanford youths. The cross will stay
up until alter the Easter sunrise service to be held in the
park April 7. The mayor Is scheduled to play the piano at
the service. Seminole Com munity College student Je rry
Walsh, photo on right, emphasizes a point while speaking
to the youth Seminole High School chorus sang lor the
event.

public.
She has appeared as special guest on the Blackwood Brothers
television programs, w ith evangelist E .J. Daniels Christ tor the
World, and on Christian TV' telethons and radio stations.

Joyful

Voices

Sing 'Hosanna '

Joylul Voices ensemble, under the direction of Helen
Mclneckc. will present an Easter musical llosann.i on Sunday.
March 31 at 8 p in. at Church of the Annunciation. 1020
Montgomery Hoad, Altamonte Springs. It will also be presented
April 1 at 7:30 p m. at St. Mary Magdlrn. 801 Maitland Avr,

Palm Sunday Celebration
Messiah Lutheran C h u rc h , 510 N. H ighw ay 17-92,
Casselberry, will celebrate Palm Sunday at the 8 30 and 1 I
o.m. services on March 31. There will be special music by Ihe
Sen,or Choir and Distribution of Palms at both services.
On April 4. a Maundy Thursday service with Holy
Communion Will be celebrated. On Good Friday. April 5. there
w ill lie a Tcnnebrae service. Both will begin at 7:30 p in.

A 'Kid's World'
New lull time m inister ol
m u s i c at F i r s t B a p t i s t
Church, Santord, rehearses
children, grades 15, lor the
musical, Kid's World. Re
hearsals are held Sundays at
5:30 p.m . and on Tuesdays at
3:30 p.m . Children are trans
ported Irom area elementary
schools In Ihe church bus on
Tuesday and enjoy an "Ice
c re a m b a s h " a fte rw a rd s.
The musical will be pres
ented af Ihe end of the school
ye a r and participation is
open to all children In the
com munity.

Retreat On Sex And Dating
Plnccrcst Baptist Church has a Joint youth retreat on God’s
View of Sex and Dating planned for April 1-3 at Deerhaven
Campgrounds. DeLund. Th e cost is $ 17.

Prospect To Preach
Plncrrest Baptist Church will hrar a prospective pastor. Dr.
To m m y Jacobs of Balnrs City, preach at the 1 1 a m. service
this Sunday. He has his master’s degree front Southwestern
and a doctorate from Southern Baptist Theological Seminary.
He Is married and the father of three children.

Sing-a-long \Messiah'
Th e public Is Invited to lake part lit a “ Slng-a-long Messiah."
which will lx- held Sunday, March 31. from 8 p ut until 9:30
p in . at First Presbyterian Church. 106 E. Church St..
Downtown Orlando Minister of Music Jack Wilson will dlrrct
the massed choir accompanied by a symphony orchestra,
made up mainly nl Florida Sym phony musicians
There Is no charge. Scores arc avalluhlr for participants to
buy or ttorrow II they do not have lltetr own. There will also be
spare for listeners.

Peace Vigil Planned
In observance of Central America Week, the Cmutril of
Com m unity Bused Organizations o( Central Florida will
H|K&gt;iuMtr u candlelight vigil this Sunday from 6-9 p.m. at Ilit*
Bennett Hu.nl Gale of Ihe Orlando Naval Training Center In
support of peace and Justice In Cenlrul America. For more
Information t all 422-3479.

Lichfield Choir To Sing
The Lie hi leId Culhcdrul Choir from England will perform
April 12 ui H p in at ihe First Unlied Mrlhodlsl Church. 142 E
Jackson St.. Orlando. The concert Is co-sponsored by Cathedral
Series and the Central Florida Chupirr of the American Guild of
Organists and Is supported by the Special Projects Pool of the
Aris United Fund. The performance Is tree to the public.

Methodist Men Meet
Churtes Brunt, the church’s music dlrertor. will lie speukerat
the United Methodist Men’s breakfast meeting tilts Sunday at
7:15 a m . in the fellowship hall of Com m unity United
Methodist Church. Casselberry.

Sanford's Central Baptist Church Has A Vision
Central Baptist Church. 1311
Oak Ave.. Sanford, has a vision
ol being "ihe Church In Ihe 20th
Century" and |&gt;art of Its llvr-year
plan launched In January In
eludes raising hinds lor con­
struction of new rhurch facilities
on a 17'.Vurre she on Wesl First
Street between Ihe overpass and
lntrrstuie-4.
The 1500 plus member con­
gregation Is ahead of schedule In
paying olf the S220.000 debt lor
the properly purchased two
years ugn and the pastor. Dr
Fredc'le Smith hopes to finish
paving It off this year.
Morris Jones, vice president of
U n ite d T e le p h o n e C o .. Is
chairman ol the master sltr plan
committee which Is working
with the architect Ed Thomas of
Orlando. The first phase of the
hulldlng plan will Include a
worship center. I.unity activities

Ihe four-member stall. training
100 to wlliicss lor Christ. In
voicing 200 mcmls-rs lit spci lllc

hulldlng. educational space, of­
fices and nursery
T h e ehttreli plans for ihe
I til tire on the site a settlor citizen
retirem ent complex and an
outdoor amphitheater.

^Cube's

The 46-year-old rhurch. which
has been worshiping ai the Oak
Avenue location since 1953. has
since acquired adjacent houses
and parking lot across the street
lo allow for Sunday School
growth

^Cutfjeran

dUjurcl]

"Th e seven-man Vision rotnm iller mudr recommendations
lor all phases of the ministry."
said Smllh. ’’’there Is noi ade­
quate room lo expand In our
present location. We want to
have an Influence and Impact on
Ihe area for Christ."

Highway 426 &amp; Red Bug Road, Ovlodo 32765

SUN DAY W O RSH IP S E R V IC E S
8:30 A.M. and 11:00 A.M.
SUN DAY S C H O O L • 9:45 A.M.

J U t&amp; ld . . .

Am ong Ihe other five-year
goals are a Sunday School
enrollment of 3.000. expanding

CELEBRATION O F WORSHIP IN
TH E SPIRIT AND TH E WORD.
SUNDAY SC H O O L ................................................ 9:45 A.M.
M ORNING W ORSHIP ............................................ 10:50 A.M.
EVENING W ORSHIP .............................................. 8:00 P.M.

Music Series

Recital Features
James A . Thomas

Organist Jam es A. Thomas

The fifth program In the music
series or ihe First United Meth­
odist Church, 419 Park Ave..
Sanford, will feature organist
James A. Thomas In u recital of
works by Bach. Handel und
other early composers. The
program will be presented at 4
p.m.. Sunday, March 31 In the
church sanctuary.
It Is open lo the public free of
charge and a nursery will be
provided
Dirrctor of music und organist
at First United Methodist slnrc
1980. he has been has been
organlsl-eholrrnaster at the
E p is c o p a l C h u r c h of S i.
Elisabeth. Princess of Hungary
since 1966

mission projrds. ami mission
giving In excess ttl 8200.000
— Ja n e Casselberry

William Thompson, Pastor

Sanford Church of God

M l Watt 22nd Strati

While In high school. Thomus
was awurded an organ scholar­
ship lo attend Trinity-Pawling
School. Pawling. N.V. He was
organist and assistant glee club
d ir e c to r and ch a p e l c h o ir
director while there.

“f y o u

A w

323 3141

in v it e d ...

“ A SUNDAY AFTERNOON ORGAN RECITAL”

F E A T U R IN G MR. J A M E S A. T H O M A S
O R G A N IS T AND D IR ECTO R O F M USIC A T

He received his bachelor of
music degree from Columbia
U n ive rs ity In N rw Y o rk , a
masters degree In music from
the American Conservatory In
Chicago and a master in educa­
tion from Northwestern Univer­
sity. Evanston. 111.
He lias held church positions
In Connecticut and Illinois and
at the post chapel at the U.S.
Military Academy. West Point.

FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH OF SANFORD
SUNDAY, MARCH 31. 1985, 4:00 PM

F IR S T U N IT E D
M E T H O D IS T C H U R C H
419 PARK A V E.. SANFORD
CHILDCARE PROVIDEO

V

-A

\

�B L O N D IE

StMPlV

*C —Evening H erald, Sinlord, F I.

-v

1

WONOIRAA.

Sunday, March 74, ir is

HOROSCOPES

TM AT } s — i M u . t V A T ‘5
MG
f i / O t S S ^ 'W B . S

—

ACROSS

by Chic Young
f io n V

...

m

Whot The Day
Will Bring...

THE BORN LOSER

by Art Sanaom

tro-------- cr fl

ARCHIE

DQ

by Bob Montana

EEK &amp; M EEK

~ ~ @

/A

y"

y

M E A L j
c

^V

/ 1

/
l

L trra / te
IASAGAJE.

by Howie Schneider
— 7“

)
J

/

/ r ./ m u A f j
/ j

M fW rru x O
TM CCK ‘&amp;M

1/
/

7/1
//
V

•
’5
A
f 1/

tf/ ,.

V jv

by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers

MR. M EN AN D LITTLE MISS
f net«**•*&lt;« H
{ . ^ r - ••

/ Y E 9 . OFFICER , N
\ I T ! 5 s\y c^A? /

THE 1KAWSVM-^IC&gt;N
H A 1? •^TOf’ P E P
I L'*At It . A\ 1, . 1 I 11.IS~X I

W H AT ^Ef

BE
TR O U B LE

W W IT H IN O

\

/■

r/£ 5
)

vf

A

'^

W R*YJ(5,M k» «* ^

D J“"

by Warner Brothers

BUGS B U N N Y
X T H E T -c V

5 /UE.1

3^2 5 - T w &gt;/V £:

-.».u.

|

V-ft

WA

M

&lt;^ y j -

t

g

W

i
" ~

A=T£ ^

s

-

1

'-s T s

S

#■ I t w

1

1 Shsrry
8 nornsri hMrtti
goddsti
11 Smoother
13 Of Ihap fib#r
14 CoxstMt
15 Coming up

Ra

c k

°

u

T

fu / H iN S

FIFTY
TH^vti I i|

GARFIELD

by Jim Davit

□
□
□

12 Actuel

Belgium

13 Tussle

Im E 0 A
[m e a n

A _T_T
-L T\
r — 7] _N JJ _A^
_0 R n A
0 _A
M A 1
A M
0

c_

E L M O
S S E N

_C

L

1s l _H
[t O _T
[T □ E
1□ D

I

K A _2 A
U s A f
□

IS Dutch
commune
17 Notod
19 Buddy
20 Common
(comb, lorm)
22 Rtver in

9 Cord
eombtnotion
10 English |comb
form)

23 Somewhtt
(mus.|

K__L__l_ _E_Vq M
_A _L T
A _L_ 1 A l I t
N 0 A H u ~
H

21 Revolves

41 Hedge plants

43 Edges

33 Srfl
34 Ascribe
35 Nevertheless

24 Evening in Italy
23____ Moo
26 Bring into
25 Nurse’s
hirmony
assistant

45 Turn sharply

46 Taka in Mil
49 Popular dessert
51 Brother (hbtx)

37Quantity

38 Passionate

28 Smell pert
30 Ceu«t&gt;c
■ubstince
31 Fith

D E E
D E O
_i_ n E
□ 0_
_s T
M A _L_
s T
N
D
A
£
39 Err

27 Dry of
Phoonicie
29 Horrors

18 Clam genus

S T

LO LA
U N I T
A T S

□ □ n o n n n

32 Comma • feu*
pee

33 Sodden
36 Sioilien voice no

39 feminine tide
40
42
44
45

King |Sp |
Belonging to ue
Those in office
Elector

47 1501, Romen
48 Gunmen

50 Like duck's feet
52 Cattle
53 Calm
54 Proprietor
55 Mtlitiry

mitellettons
DOWN

Kiieet t&gt;,Nt* inc

1 Boat

side.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23 Dec
’i l l Weigh your words carefully
today or you mtghl accidentally
blurt out something that another
shouldn’t know It’ll be hard for
vou to cover up
C A P R IC O R N |Dec 22 Jan
10! Hr realistic today regarding
som ething you w a u l. Don't
expect It to be handed to you
wit (tout doing anything yourself.

A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20 Feb. I‘J|
In important family matters to­
day. let everyone have a chance
to have a say, lUltcntesn will
result II you try to Impose your
wilt upon others.
P ISCES (Feb. 20 March 20)
Before unexpectedly dropping In
on people you wish to see today,
lx- sure to cheek In advance to
s i t |( they are at home so your
irip won't lx- In vain

many of your objectives can be
realized.
V IR G O I Aug 23 Sept 22)
Your imagination can earn you
special rewards today. Have
fait It In your Ideas and don't In
others dissuade you from them
before you're able to try them
out.
L I B R A (Sept. 23 Oct 23)
Gains are probable today In a
Joint venture. However, nothing
will hnppen If you don't ride
herd on the project yourself.
SCO R P IO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
Partnership situations will pro­
vide you with greater bruelHs
today than will actions you take
Independently of others, Don't
lx- a toner.
S A G IT T A R IU S |Nnv 23-DeC
21) Pay close attention lo your

work today and try to perforin
your duties to the best of your
abilities. There will lx- extra
dividends (or jobs well-done
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22 Jan
191 Make a concerted effort to
establish a good rap|xirt with
someone you may meet socially
today. Th is person could turn
out to tx- u valuable contact.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan 20 Feb. 19)
If you don't dillydally today, a
matter you've been anxious lo
lluullze can now tx- settled to
your advantage. Strike while the
Iron la hot.
P IS C E S (Feb. 20-March 20)
Your mental faculties will be
especially krrn loday and you
should be able to do almost
any Hi Itig to which you set your
mind. Have specific goals.

C E L E B R IT Y C IP H E R

CMMwffy C&lt;|J#m 1

erne v i &lt;raa f»l Rom QL#ot«twm« by famous p**H 4* pstf an*) |» m w (

lac*«fiv mt*« c&lt;p*at efeimU fo*ano**a* Totf-ay•cAm Vagw**U

fcy CONN* Wlf urn
08WVLF
WN

HSMFX

ONNM

WNOFLSWFK
XFOXF."

—

VBNO

ENI X

SQK

DULOX

XN

WJFI

A SG

VGWUO

WJFI

SAPVULF

HUOOUSM

OING

0NTF0I

EF
XNHF

BJFOBX.

tdPMd00*1 UitiiMM—, mum »ujo* tutnbsoAuto|i|unpaiu,aiu|
SOLUTION oqu*3A*m o, uodn ,001 01 A|«*oi t|i&lt;0 pus »&lt;o&lt;jm*iu«

/ WHAT WOULP \ / JU S T SOME S
YOU LIKE FOR ) JU IC E ANP &lt;
yBRE/kMFAST ?

/ ANP A ROAST PIG/ S
t ANP SIX I’INf APPLES.1 /
\ ANP A TOUNP OF
)
AC APAM iAN UTS/^

By Jatnes Jscobjr
Because bridge players have
freedom of speech, no one ran
(ait a gun 10 South's head to
prevent him from making an
opening hid or three s|&gt;adrs with
only a six-card suit h may not
tx- good bridge, but stranger
ililngs have happened.
Nortli felt that there would Ik a good play for grund slum It
South held Ittc K-0 of spades.
Ilh assumed a seven curd suit.)
The leap to live no-trump wus
the gtaml slam force, asking
South to hid sevrn with two of
the tup three honors In spades.
South may not have followed
(hr dictates of good sense with
Ids opening bid. but he did obey
(winner's request now. He bid
the grund slaini
As usual, the worst bidders
mukc the best declarers, comMnlnq skill with (1 hralthv dose

of luck Declarer could see only
I I tricks on lop. II clubs divide
4 3. he could establish a fourth
club by rulllng one round, tail
that still comes to only 12 tricks
South decided to take a very
thin chance. He won the ace of
spades In dum m y and Immedi­
ately cashed both red ares. Now
lie ran all his trumps, leaving all
the clubs In dum m y. On the last
trump, poor East had to come
down to five cards.
If he throws a club, dummy
will Ik * good. What II he throws a
red king?
Declarer can now cash the
queen ol that suit, and East will
)&gt;c squeezed again. For this
progressive squeeze to work, one
defender hud lo have the clubs
guarded, as well us both red
kings. Skill and luck brought
home the slam.

A NNIE
TU M BLEW EEDS
WHO WA* yXJK CKILPHOOP H»ftO f

□

A

by Bob Thaves

He THpfw Hi/

I J J j POUBT THATs

YOUR B IR T H D A Y
M A R CH 2 9, 1083
There will t&gt;c greater stability
In your material affairs In the
year ahead Your returns won't
How in at an overwhelming rate
hut your growth pattern will tx*
consistent.
A R IE S (March 21-April 19)
Measures con be taken today to
build your material security.
F o c u s y o u r e n e rg ie s a n d
iboughls on ways to strengthen
your present position. Major
changes are In store lor Arles In
the coming year.
T A U R U S (April 20 May 20)
Devoir as much time as possible
today to projects that are Im ­
portant to you personally. Much
can lx* accomplished now In
advancing vour self-interests
G E M IN I (May 2 1-June 20)
You ran tx- more productive
today by working In an atmosphrrr where you have soli­
tude and others can't break In
on your concentration.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
You m-rd to tie around friends
loday who share Interests simi­
lar lo yours. Each will Inspire the
other to have a more positive
outlook.
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Hr both
patlrnl and |x*rslstrnl today and
take things u step at a time. If
you don't rush forward blindly.

3 Pino tor
hydrocortxrn
4 Noun suffi*
5 Portonolity
6 Empty ptoco
7 Grook dotty
8 Easily put-on

WIN A T BRIDGE

FRANK A N D ERNEST

VOO tDOK MUCH BETTER THIS
MORNING. YOU MUST BE OVf R
THE HAWAIIAN CAT FLU

TO U R B IR T H D A Y
MARCH 2 4 . 1983
In the year ahead you may
become Involved In a promising
enterprise However, take pains
lo lx- sure I he contacts and legal
agreements arc tied down pro­
perly.
A R IES (March 2 1-April 191
Today If someone wants to
borrow a possession that you
prize, have a clear-cut u n ­
derstanding that you expert to
get It bark In (he same condi­
tion
T A U R U S IApril 20-May 20) If
you find yourself in the company
of Influential people loday. It's
Important that you make u good
Impression. Don't txiasi or be
pretentious.
GEM INI |May 2 l-.June 20| Hr
of assistance to others loday
where and when your help Is
needed. However, don't let your
generosity be taken advantage of
by thr greedy.
CANCER (June 21 Ju ly 22)
You won't be lagged Mingy,
you'll just lx* using your com­
mon sense If you refuse to make
a loan lo a pal that you really
can't afford
LE O (July 23-Aug. 221 If a
present objective doesn't have
values In accord with your
highest standards, drop II and
&lt;oik nitrate on goals that do.
V IR G O lAug 3 3 Sept 22| Be
sure your skills are commensu­
rate to the types of tasks you
Intend to tackle today. II not,
you may start ililngs you'll hr
unable lo complete.
LIB R A ISept 23 Oct 23| He
cxlrrm ely careful if you ure
managing a complex siiualltm
lor another today. Don't lake
risks nr gambles you wouldn't
take It II wrrr you r own.
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
You may find yourself caught In
the middle loday when trying lo
appease two dissident factions.
Don't step over the line on either

Antwor to Previoui Pulila

2 Etcapat

by T. K. Ryan

I I* ttttt TO
(tOLOOH FOR
WORE?

A

r

YOU N’T FIT
60 LOOKIN' FfTf
N oaooxw !

; v r ,!

NORTH
lllll
♦A1
♦ A 74
♦A ll
♦ A K Q 52
WI-ST
EAST
♦ 7 54
♦ 41
♦ J» J
♦ K III5
♦ J»«4
OKIOi
♦ lOI J
♦ J 9 74
SMITH
♦ Kg J to »i
♦ go j
♦ Q7 J
♦4
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer South
W «i
North Ko,l
Pam
i’u i

S NT
Pui

I'tu
Pm

South
Jl
74

Opening lead *4

by Leonard Starr
„ IF ANYBODY 60ftf
IT U K M f* .

; ‘f u l f i l
1 *77

»

�Evening H ertld , Senlord. F I.

Sunday, March 24, 1*SS—7C

TO N IG H T S TV
SATURDAY
AFTERNOON
£0 0

0 ® fa n ta s y S U U C
I t PS) w ove W«
FnBUng
B«c» MM l| K#«n Mahon. Elgin
JO"*» * » . *(X! City yOjIM (torwto
10 bond log*!** and fght negh-

0

M0) GREAT PERFORMANCES

".udy Garland Th* Concert Yaw*'
Lome Luft hoata mn m e * of the
at* a concert and latwrmon perbvmencaa to (he 10a md tOa
Nwod atth ramauacancaa by Tony
Barman, AUn King. A*. Faad. Sla-

■n&lt;} NMon M M i

0:30

"w* on ■ danger out mount** ffl*.

0 ® UNDER ONE ROOF (Pramtor*) Thro* general tone Ol on* fanahr. mcbrdmg a amgto mother and har
two taon-og* chddran. mar* th*
earn* houaaheld Star* Utmt Ken­
nedy Boat Ham*

a Bm u I iAJ tonu to *c*nti»l mono

9:50

ffl i *oi f o c u s

on s o c ie t y

a II) wove "T*rg*1 2*ro (19M)
AWttrt COM* P*gg* Ctttto A
K orw i w «

hautarwt to*)* hw

U HIGH CHAPARRAL

thtw tf

1030

2:30
0 3 1101fOCUS ON SOCIETY

3:00
O ® S O 10 TEST Th* iK ti and
Mbon of m i art pr*»anlad by boat
Or fiana f &lt;*m and gu*«t* Sandy
tkmcan. Patti Li l W i Nancy MartA*nd and Paggy Caaa

® O BOWUNQ I I so000 Lit*
B*« Open, Inr* bom Nad Carpal
CatabnTy Lanat
ff)(*0) PPE8 E N Tl

3:30
O ® s f o r t s w o r l g Sebadmad
World bottled ihayngwniNp bom
Camnia. Italy. World invitational
aupar baaryieeqnt kiting cbampion.
W e bom Toronto. Canada
® O C O U E O f BASKET RAIL
H l . n l regional Anal bom OaAaa

0 ® HUNTER iSarto* Rafumai
Rrcb and Da* Da* art on Ft* verge

01 a breakthrough in lh* CbMcrm*
drug bad* ahan thaw tnard* acute*
to auddamy rwaaeed to toaiPy n a
Haw Yorb t v M r can IPart lo fll
J O COVER UP Tha imminent
eipeafion ol th* tiatut* gf brrut*.
bona on th* ervn** ol a Ihaving too
toad* Jack «nd Okrv to poe* u a
rnarrwd coupto in an aftorl lo trap
® O FINGER OF LOST LOVES
Cary • caAad upon to locata a bnd*
After ah* Uavaa lh* confuaad
groom el th* anar Daray a tea ad to
bnd lh* brother of a hottcauat turnvor (R )n

a t (38) IN0EPEN0ENT NEWS
CD (81EISCHIED

ffi MO) T o n BROW* a JOURNAL
Uodaia and agency baada a acuti
profacawnal and attucai laauaa ralalad la poeng nude IR)

0

(10) NICARAGUA

0 (I) MOVIN' ON

405

It WILD, WILD WORLD OF ANI­
MALS
4 30

® U WIDE WORLD OP SPORTS
ScKaibAad Atlanta S00 tlock car
&gt;aca world tai Hiring cbampionarup
bom Plane* Tugoaian*
03 (10) HEALTH MATTERS

4:35
11 MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED
500
O ® UTTLE HOUSE ON THE
PfUURiE
11 MS| GREATEST AMERICAN
HCPbO
0 I toi W A U ITREET WEEK WITH
LOLAS RUKFTSER AN INVEST-

a Mutual lunda. op.
bona and commodity bmdt are do
cutaad by commodilaa conauilmil
Robert Sbubnan mvaaior Am Hogart. Linda Singer |top*y Jaltrt,
MopwoodL Brut# Lipmck (Wharton
Anal Managarnani Corp | Paler
Lynch (Tidabiy lAagaian fundi and
Ota f atnan (Tha TaMcnona Smith
Nauru. Mar l
m in t primer

11 00
0 31(1 O 730HEW S
a t (Ml PUTTPr ON THE HITS Uplynched renddioni ol Jungto
Love." "UK* A Vagin." Orivran
-America. 'Soad and Mam*
W* r* AS Crayy Now
0 ( to) M0NTV PYTHON'S FLTBaQ
CIRCUS

® (t| HONEYMOON! RS
11:30
O (I) SATURDAY NKJMT UVE
Hoat Michael McKean Muateat
guaat Chari Khan ('1 Taw For
You ) |R)
H I a STAR SEARCH Gu**l* Glo­
ria Lormg Hoyt Alton |.Y)
® O LP15TYLI3 OF THE RJCM
ANO FAMOUS Robm laarh nlar.
*&gt;*wt M&lt;lay Mantle. Robert
Vaughn. Bobby Vinton and Pltnce
Wymote Flyrm. widow ol Errol
Flynn (R)
11 (Ml MOVIE Rad Mountain
MM 11Alan Ladd Litabath Scott
CD m VISIONS ss Tint apacuK
highhghi* ndaoa by P m . Bruc*
Sprmgaaaan Cyndi Laupar. Duran
Our an and ottera a gumpa* ol
whai a ahead m mute lor 1B41

11:50
1 1 n ig h t t r a c k s

CD (() BARETTA

U PtSHIN
SON

5:05

WITH ORLANOO WIL­
5:35

12 WRESTLINO
EVENING

600
0 14) (1) O 1 U NEWS
1! (U ) BLACK BHUP SQUAD­
RON
ffl MO) SURVIVAL Richard K*ey
narralaa Ova atudy cJ the nvgrabon
af one warm amiaaered loo an­
telope acroee the Soma puma of
tha Sudan and tha hunting Inbaa
•hoaa Uvea arc gemmed by tha
hard* mo.amenta g
CD l»&gt; VEGAS

630
i ) 4 1NBC NEWS
I O CBS NEWS
j I o ABC NEWS g

700
O ® DANCE ftVER CatoC.il,
ludgaa Chan Bry laranca Knot.
Madge Suitlav Brian Urlcha* Van
n* Wh.it Pal Sajah Partormanca
by RiiaCookdga
111 O H U HAW Featured tea
111
Greenwood. Tha AxM l Hath WM
lay. Tha Naggart Roy Acuh |fl|
i l l □ SOLID OOLD Noil Rck
Daaa QuaeM Gudra Krvghi and
lha P'pt Jarman* Aackaon and Pu
/adore Autograph Oanaral Pubkc
t aana Mate Don WAuma
ill (M lBU CK ROOTRS
03 ( MM SING ALONG WITH MITCH
CD III TALES FROM THE DARKSCC A booka bait agamtl hu own
M* with a gambler returned bom
lha dead

7:30
O 33 FLOfaOA S WATCHING ToP* Pkbn Coaat in* &gt;aivamant calabratun
CD 1*1 NIGHT GALLERY

7:35
12 NBA BASKETBALL Beaton
Caflica M WaWngton BMUta

12:30
H I O MOVIE Maatban ' MITSl
Bat Murray Chna Maaapaac*
® □ AMERICA S CHOICE C*&lt;*gori« mate atar great Amancan
(R)

1:00
0

r a ,I GARFIELD N THE ROUGH
Garhatt and Na owner
Aon embark on a campng trp m
lha mnunlam* where tha cal haa
coma buarra conbonlaoona with
imuauar toraci arumat (Rl
(J ' O U F E IT V L U OF THE RICH
ANO FAMOUS S A L U T II THE
WORLDS B U T A vtaa of lha
eortt • beat raaorta hoMN and ra*
lam anil where tha rich and larnoua
gamar Ouaata
Favcfatt H
In d a Ivan* Aoon Count Suc r
Hoatt Room Leach

ConmaStevana
I t (M l MOV* TWO Shot (1ST*)
Tony CiTRO- Richard OaPOun* Orgamed enma aNmanta nirViad
rnlh a computer read gambang
a ham* conaprr* to itvdat lh*
w orld l haarywai^l beang Champion fftjrimg t lilki bowl

0 ® KNKJffT RIDER Mchaal and
KITT race atar a b-g ehaai n tha
bucatng mduttry who wama to
tore* indapandant trucker* out ol

1035
QOOOOW W S

10:30
O ® M OW
O FACE THE NATION
_ O F W B T BAPTIST CHURCH
MB) A MOUSE FOR all SEA

S

10:35
12 M O W Zubr 11984/ Stanley
Baker Jack Haakm* A *m*a Sm­
ith patrol bio* to hold on an
onaiaught of thouaand* of Eubi war.
nor*

1130
® D THIRTY MdfUTES
ffl (TO) NEW TECH TIMES

11:30
H) O
®

bla ck

O

th e

1230
® O M OW "Say Goodbye Meggw Goto' (tITJI Suaan Hayward
Darren McOtwn A racantty wttowad doctor torgalk her Iroubto*
end grief when to* become* n
*o*w«J witN • jrOyng girl ttpsrtng to
tM ■ doctor
11 (M| M OW The Don tv [toad
(H TJ) Anthony Quinn. Frederic
Forratt Whan a Ma'a ctoeflam
diet a maaarv* and tar-rtaifung
poww Itruggi* aruptt among oppoamg tyntocal* tamtoo* vying lor
ffl M0) GOOO NEIGHBORS
0 It] M OW It Pan* Bur rungY"
1 itdii Laab* Caron. Orton Wane*
Jutl prior to lh* 1 bar aton th* oc­
cupying Nana plan to bum Pant to

12:30
0 ® MEET THE PRESS
®

O

11 NKJMT TRACKS

300
a t (M) MOVIE

The Pherui Cny
Story' (1M1I Richard K«*y Ka­
thryn Gram
m (II MOVIE Nauroaia ' |1M0|
Howard Vernon, Dental Vaban

305
12 NIGHT TRACKS
3:30
® O MOVIE Th* Young On**
(IS81ICMI Richard Robert Money

405
12 NKJMT TRACKS

SUNDAY,
MORMMQ

5:00
11 (M l NEWS
m m is R Y

W A U STREET JOURNAL

REPORT
0 ( 10) HEALTH MATT IR S

130
0 ® LOVE BOAT
I j j O WHO CAN I TRUSTY A look

to taken into in* probtom ot chad
0

(10) MAITtRPIECE THEATRE

"th# Jawal In Th* Crown ' Tan won
Hmdu* and Modem*
onto* eve of Indian mdapenderua a* a train carrying F&gt;*rron. Sarto and Suaan to attacked
to* tala ol Han Kumar remain* a
myttary (Part 14 ol I4 )Q

1:30
®

O

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

National Championafvp regional h

505
5:25
® O HOLLYWOOO ANO THE
■TARB
800

( J ' O LAW ANO YOU
® O AQRCULTURE UI
: (M ) RAPACT

8 30
0 &lt;23 FL0RKJAS WATCHING
1 O SPECTRUM
(7 O VNWPOPfTONNUTRmON
H p S IW V GRANT
0 (S| ABBOTT ANO COSTELLO

® O BILL DANCE OUTDOORS

1:35

0 3 ) r a COMPANY
H 10 ROBERT SCHULLER
iT: u p ic tu r e o f HEALTH
f I (M) BEN HADCN
12 WORLD TOMORROW
0 (I) JAMES ROBISON

0 (W) GALA OF s t a r s 88 From
th* Brooetyn Academy of Mutto a
lakj'l to to* performing aril with
hoal Bevariy S*l and nhrac dirac­
tor Jama* lavma Among tchadiPad performer* lubaa Foal Ocl
Hyman. Clao Lam* and John Dan*
worth. Hobart MarrW Leonard Pannano Kin T* Kanawa and mambar* of to* Twyc* Tharp dance
group

000
0 ® HALF NELSON (Premier*)
Whan to*mar New York City COP
knd Mewing actor Rocky Natoon
la** a Horry-wood tcraan taat bacaua* ha a too ahort ha become* a
prtvttt datactive with a Bevariy HR*
agency that protect! cawbritwe
Start Jo* Paaci Victoria Jackaon,
Frad Wekemaon g
® O CRAZY LIKE A FOX Harry
team* up atth a German toepher J
to amaah a drug Panicking img
® o MOVIE Caittornia O N
(Pranvarai Hobby Benton Martha
longtay inticad by to* mag# of
th* California kfattyt* a bored Nee
Jartay auto macharuc haadt lor to*
Watt Coat! lo find a n*w and licit
motto g
i f (Ml QUINCY

200
(D M O W
M tfll

Th* Laat Plctur*

1005
12 NBA BASKETBALL Gabon Pit
ton* at Lo* Angela* i alert
1| (M) BOS NEWHART
0 (I) CAROL BURNETT ANO

0 THIS ■ THE UBFL
(Ml M OW Th* Oraal WMdo
Pepper M4T8) Robert Bedford Bo
Sventon A buttrated American
hghtw pdol become* a bameiormmg Hunt man m tea toeti tor action
during World War I
0 M0) M OW Th* Mute Man
(108/1 Hobart Praalon Shvlry
Jon** A laal latomg aawaman
coma* to a amaa loan m km* lo
urgent* a boy* band and mad-

8

variantty taaa in tov* with an unmar.
nad kbranan
2:30
® O USFl FOOTBALL Tamp*
Bay Bandrti at New Jartay Ganarat*

3 30
® O COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Naiwnal Champejnahp ratonal ».
nal
I t (M) HAWA4 FTVl-S
0 |») SWITCH

4:30
0 ® SPORT8WORLD Scheduled
Supertlart A bald ol ton IBS*
Olympian* nckxhng t*«r Phe
Mahra and boaar Mark Braland
compata lor bertha n toa champ*
onafvp round bom Kay Btocayrto.
fto
a WORLD OF AUOUGON ■ An in­
to w after Cron**# and a
I of pioneer environment*MI
Rachel Canon
(M| DAMEL BOONE
(B) BARETTA

1130

0 MO) ADAM SMITH * MONEY
WORLD

1130
O
(D ENTERTAJNMCNT THIS
WEEK r aaiured Jecquehn# B-taet
® O MOVIE Voyage Of Th*
Damned (1B/7I Fay* Dunaway,
Oatar Warner
(7 O AT THE MOVIES Scheduled

Roger (ban and Gan* Srakal ta­
me* Mata," "Tha Laat Dragon
and Baby
11 (Ml CrOCO ANO THE MAN
0 (I) M O W Showdown At Boot
HR (ttM l Ghana* Bronaon John
Carradma

12:00
® O SUN COUNTRY Guam
Mot Bandy Tanya Tucker
H (M l WU&gt; KPfOOOM Jvn Fcwtor
and Markn Parkin* cokact trumart
on an aapedmon to Anion* a Sono­
ra Daaart

12:20
Q JERRY FALWILL

12:30
0 ® FANTASY MLANO
i J ' O NA8HVKLE MUSIC

1:00
O MOW
The Work) Th*
Fteafi And Th* Dave I IBM) Marry
Bataiont* ingar Si a.ana
O (I) THE AVENGERS

®

1:20
12 M O W "Th* Delphi Bureau
MIT?) Laurence Lucambd. Joann*

i n MaanrTkraatit

5:35
O WRES1UNU

6:30

^ WORLD TOMORROW

M OW

w

Of Ktcd pew
to N*S and Add| t « n on ao
®

O

AWWOLF An ott biend af

H#w*a • raw** (her X yaara *1
myetonoualy brute on BtoFlna.po*mg a danger oua new 1

( )0| FAJOfTINO CERAMCS
MVOLTRON, DEFENDER 0E

I

9 .3 0

9:38
O ANDY QRBFITM

1 ( (M) ANOY GRIFFITH

11:35
12 LUCY SHOW

8:05

AFTERNOON

Q BEWTTCHE0

12:00

830

0 T im e x ja y
O lX O NEWS
(M l SCWITCHf D
0
f *01 NATURE OF THWfOS
(MON)
ffl |I0) DIONNE WAKWCK IN
CONCERT (TU I)
0 ( TO) M THE SWING (WED)
0 ( TO) NOVA (THUI
0 (10) WONOERWORKS |TR0
0 (t) MANNtX

S

a i (M l PtHK FAHTMIR
0 (TO) MISTER RO0ERSIK)

0 (•) MY FAVORTTE MARTIAN
8:35
12 I LOVE LUCY
9:00
0 ® DIVORCE COURT
J O OONAMUC
J O BARHASY JONES
Tl (M)WALTTJNS
0 (1 0 ) SESAME STRCEYg

1235
12 PERRY MASON

0 ID PARTRIDGE family

1230

9:05

0 T l SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
1 O YOUNG ANO THE REST.
LESS
O LOVING
(M l BEVERLY MILL SILLIES

a mow

9:30

$

0 ® LOVE CONNECTION
0 1 (1 MERE'S LUCY

10:00
) TIME MACHINE
I HOUR UAGADNC
(J O SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
11 (M l BKJ VALLEY
( 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
(l| MAYBERRY RF O

1:00

O

T DAYS OF OUR I M S

l?

o

a u my children

J l ( U ) DICK VAN 0YKI
0 110) M O W (MON, TUE. THU)
0 (10) CONGRESS WE THE PEO­
PLE (WED)
0 (101 FlORiOA HOME GROWN

500

Q t ANYTHPfO FOR MONEY
I □ THREE'S COMPANY
T O LETS MAKE A DEAL

2:30
(J i O CAPITOL
) I (M ) GREAT SPACE COASTER
0 ( 1 0 ) PEOPLE WHO MEAN BUStNCSS (MON)
0 (TO) ROBERT RUSSPf WYO­
MING SCULPTOR (THU)
0 (TO) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
P AINT1NQ (FRll

I I (Ml 0UKIS OF MA H A R0
(MOW-THU)
I T (Ml MY LITTLE PONY I (TTB)
( tO) 0CEANUS (MON)

(10) UNOERSTANOtna HUMAN
8
BEHAVIOR(TUE)
0 (TO) NEW LITERACY AN INTROOUCTKJN TO COMPUTERS
(WEDI

3:00
Q T

0 (10) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)

SANTA BA OHARA

Li nauiOtNOLGHT

0 (10) ART Of BEPfO HUMAN

(7 o GENERAL HOSPITAL

(FRT)

0 |l) HAPPY DAYS AGAIN

ll] (Ml BUGS SUNNY
0 (K)1 FIORIDASTYLE

0

505

(SI VOL IRON. DEFENDER OF

12 LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

THE UNIVERSE

5:30

3:05
12 BUOS BUNNY ANO FRIENDS

0 x PEOPLES COURT

3:30
11 (M) SCOOBY DOO

7 O news
at (J!|MY LITTLE PONY II|FRI)

} o m -a - s -h

0 ( 10) MISTER ROOERS(R)
0 (I) INSPECTOR QAOOET

0 (10I0CEANUS (MON)

335
IX HECKLE AND JECKLE (MONTHU)

0 (101 NEW LITERACY AN MTAOOUCTION TO COMPUTERS
TWED)

12 THE CHARMKPtS (FRT)

0 110) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)

0 1101UNOCRST ANOtNO HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)

0 (10) ART OF BONO HUMAN

4 00
O

®

(FT*)

L m u HOUSE ON THE

0 |l) LAVERNE A SHIRLEY

S
'Mask' Is Out, But Bogdanovich
Promises To Take Issue To Trial

8

Bogdanovich reacted angrily to the decision
and s a i d he woidd lake Ihe case In trial.
" I don't believe the Judge undersinod the case
at all." he said outside court. “ As he correctly
said, he Is nut a movie critic. We will pursue any
means lo pul the correct version nf lids Hint
before the public."
Bogdanovich (tied u mulllinlllttm-doUur suit

O STAR TREK
Q MERV QRiTFIN

5:35

12 ANDY GRIFFITH

against Universal and producer Martin Siargcr
last monih. c la im in g 10 minutes of Bruce
Springsteen m usic was replaced w ill) songs by
Ikih Srgcr. and (hat several scenes were removed
without his permission.
T h e Seger m usic was substituted fur SpringsIren's when Universal and CBS Records could nut
agree on a percentage of the record company's
proflls from ihe vldeocussclle that might he made
irom "M ask."
Universal lawyers said Bogdanovich's contract
gives him certain editing rights, hut specifies that
lu the event of a dispute Universal Pictures
President Frank Price would make decisions on
what should he cut
Th e movie, based on a true slory. stars Cher as
a hlker inother and Erie Stull/ us her deformed
teenage son and Iris battle lo accepted as a
normal human tirin g ll was released last week 111
key cities lu high critical praise and was released
u a U c m w t d e F r i d a y I n a b o u t H iK ) i h e a t c r s .

t i Floyd TTw trw a |

'Wo Are The World' A Record Record
L O S A N G E L E S (UJ’II - "W e
Are Th e W orld," Ihe anthem
recorded by 45 nf Am erica's
leading singers and songwriters
In h e n e f l l f a m I n e - s l r I k e n
Ethiopia, has become ihe year's
highest debuting single and
shows signs nf breaking other
m u sic Ind u stry records, say
BlHttnurd Magazine officials
T h e song zoomed to No 2 1 on
Billboard's Hot IOO list alter Ms
first week of release March 7 and
vaulted to the No. 5 s|M&gt;t In tills
week's list, ll Is now second on
Ddltm.ird's all time list Inr dr
b illing singles, behind Michael
Jackson's "T h rille r."
To rn Noonan, head ol churters
for Billboard, said more Ilian .'I
m illion copies of "W e Arc Th e
W o rld " have been shipped lo
record outlets world wide.
If the hit reaches the No I spot
nest week, It will become the
first stnglr lo ro n qurr No I In
Just three weeks since T h e
B e a t l e s ’ "G et Hack'* In May
I9 6 0 ,

Ken Ikirnrs. editor of the trade
mngazinc Itu llo Am i Heconis.
said “ We Are Th e W orld" was
aired In Its first week by 91
|H*rrrnt of the 2541 radio slalluns
regularly (Killed by Ihe publlc.iHon,
"T h is Is absolutely unheard
of." Ikirnrs said "T h a t Is proba­
bly as close as we will ever gel to
Ilk) percent."
C B S Records p rndurrd the
single free ol char ge.
Olflrlals of U S A For Africa, the
group id artists who recorded the
song m a 12-hour, all-night
session following the American
Musk Aw ard* ceremony earlier
this year, said they I i &lt;i |h - I i i raise
•200 m illio n to aid A im an
Inmlnr victim s. T h e y will release
a double album April I.
Proceeds fro m the sale nf
T-sh lrls, sweatshirts, posters,
videos and a tine-hour IIB O
special f e a t u r i n g r ecor di ng
session Interviews of various
artlsls will also go toward Afri­
can famine relic!.

, in IW

H A/A (W INI

99.

rn u t

mm

in

SALLY F I E L D

PLACES
IN T H E
H E A R T {p g t
Mr AWARD NOMINATIONS
BEST ACTRESS. BEST PICTURE

ACAD!

17T7S0?

PLATA TWIN II

(

* " h* n aailad a l u c k y b r a a k l
T h a n o n * d s y Bha m o v d In _ j

MOVUIAKPO'I

2.50

l// I

$2.50

E D D IE M URPHY

Is on v a c a tio n

laem pLH iU tS

48 HOURS

3:20
3 50
Q THAT Girl
4:20
® O M OW Gang War (ItM t
Chartaa bronaon KaH Taylor
'
O SEVERLY HILLSfLUU
4:50
12 WORLD AT LARGE

I MONDAY I

5:00
(M IW W S

rrtY O U N M s u ^ ^
CHSDREN-S FUND (WED)
M M C U L TU N f UJuA-IFW)

5:15

§i

8:35
WGO, WILD WORLD 0E AM-

730
0 ® CMB-DREKS HOME SOCI­
ETY OP FLOMJA AUCTION
3 aSO M M U TU

® O H OUYW OOO ANO THE
STARS (TU f. THU)
J

® O O U N T R Y (TUI-FR()

8:00
t ® NBC NEWS AT I
0 MORMNG STRETCH
O CVfWrTNCSS DATBRiAK
bOS) OOOO DAT)

*&gt;"S
CM

TALES FROM THE DARK-

O N LY

6:30

8.30

CAN kb
m u
«

Shrimp ’/* Lb .....*4i95

5:25

) IN JB4 BAJULIR

IS

0

E A R L Y B IR D S
OLD FL O R ID A
3-6 PM Mon.-Kri.
CRACKER ST Y L E
4:306 PM Sit. I13l&gt;6 PM Sun
Prime Kib, Flounder,
M ahi Mnhi, Fried S c a l­ Flounder V* Lb...*4 .95
lops, Stuffed Flounder,
Broiled Rock
Fried Clnmit

Q WORLD AT LARGE (THU)

lA S C W W E g

0

Is Back With A New Menu Doinfi What We’ve Always Done
Best, Serving The Highest Q uality Seafood A n d M outhw atering
Steaks And P rim e Rib At Very Reasonable Prices.

EARLY MORMNG

a part af to* terror bahmd toa doort
Ml
t l a doom at * gradual* kbrdanfi

(28) POFEYl
Q FUNTBAE

8:45
7.35

0 WREITLStO

a aivwwnMMOAifWiAa

S

1(101 A M WEATHER

*5

9 5

Includes: Fam ous Conch
Chowder. Baked Potato and
French Fries or Klee, Fresh
Garden Salad or Cole Slaw.
Hot Bread and Butter.

Seafood Platter . ,*6.95
Above Served With
French F rie s , C o le Slaw
and Hus h Puppies

PAN HANDLE S T Y L E
STEAK,BAKE &amp; SALAD
Tender l*oin
Chunks................. * 5 . 9 5
Prime Kib and Dimitri)
Ixibster T a ils...... * 8 . 9 5
Above Served Wit It Baked
Potato and Fresh Garden
S a la d . Your C h o ice Of
Dressing.

F rom O u r C on ch C how der T o O u r Key L im e T a rt , Y o u 'll
S avor A n d A p p recia te E v e ry th in g A bo
b o u t Baham a Jo e 's
In c lu d in g The Check!/

® 0 ABC NEON TMS MOMNBfO
(M l P M PANTHER
l(M | JOY OF PAMTSiO
) (•) NSPtCTOR GADGET

0 | 101 SURVIVAL (WED)
0 | 10) JOY OF PAINTING (FRT)

12 OCT (MART

CHURCH OP ORLANOO

9:00
0 ( C OB4ME A BREAK Nearly Pi*

11:30

!1 a«TST0NE8 (MON-THU)
11 MY UTTLE POPTY N(FRT)

Murder On Ttghf

i

F O H D T M OSCARS FBm ertkea
Roger tbarl and Gang Swear an-

boo* on mage *1 to* ibr ary (A)

8:00

4:35

O ® ANOTHER W0RL0
C T O ONE LIFE TO LIVE

“ ) SCRABBLE
I RYAN'S HOPE
0 (101FLORKJASTYLE

at (M) WOOCY WOOOPECKER
0 IS) FAT ALBERT

4:30
9T (M l HE-MAN a n d m a s t e r s
OF THE UNIVERSE
0 (II WORK ANO MINOT

230

1135
Q C ATUM S

7:35
12 I DREAM OF JEANNIE

O AJ THE WORLD TURNS
|M) OOME R PYLE
0 (TO) CONGRESS WE THE PEO­
PLE (VYED)
0 (101 PAINTING CERAMICS lFRO

M2" H I T S ) -----------------

•30

930
0

7:30
I I (M l TOM ANO JERRY
"RIFT Q
I t 101 SESAME STREET
) (I) PtSPECTOR QADorr

12 m y i t t o e p o n y i (FK/t

I

2:50
® O

8:30
0 Of DOUBLE TROUBLE K*t*
and Aauon dacida may i# going to
try and gal to »no* the* Aunt Mar­
go o km* batter by beating hat ta a
•paow weak and bp
1 O
r r s MAGC. CHARUE
M O W N Ana
• MagM-oFI

a

gr
t r iv ia t r a p
T J ( M ) e i g h t is ENOUGH
O (101 MAGIC OF OR. PAINT**)
0 (S) FAMILY

7:15
ffl 110) A M WEATHER

435
12 FLBfTSTONES (MON-THUI

® O CBS NEWS NKJHTWAICH

(VtNMG

•30
SUNDAY MASS
DAT OF OBCOVERY
ORAL ROBERTS
PORKY toO
&lt;M»FOf
t SLMOA

2:30

6:30
0 (10) NOME FREE. RETURN OF
THE BALD EAGLE A dvoncto of
wadhfa photograph#! Jack 8wad
barg a *•tempi to n *

(M ) JACKSON FIVE
) MO) SESAME S T R U T M g
i ALVW ASM) THE CHWMUNKI
&gt;|S) FANTASTIC FOUR

) VOCE OF VICTORY

1130
0 ® WHEEL Of FORTUNE
3 Q PRICE IS RKJHT

1:30

12 MOW

6 30

® ® 0 7 ( J NEWS
(M| GRIZZLY ADAMS
1 0 M O W "Summer
11M t) Judy Garland Oana KeSy A
iroup* ol actor* paruerpato* n dai­
ly term chorea m techanga Igr toa
ua* af a CotmacHcui bar* to act to.
0 IS) VEGAS

830

TT(M )FL*fTSTO NES
(C t ’D) FARM 0AYI
0 (* )H E A TH C U F *

1:05

91 (Ml SUPERFRIENOS
01 ’01SESAME STREET Q
0(l)HiATHCUF?

0 (1 ) MOW

1 L (Ml SANPORO ANO SON
0 It) HONEYMOONERB

11:10

alar m a ime* Taata town of to*
t*S0i prepare* to (Jot* to* kvaa of
to* town I lewd*nu become in­
tertwined

O ® SALE OF THE CENTURY

l7 a fam ry feuo
ffl IT0)S-2*1 CONTACT(RJO
0 IS) REAL MCCOYS

L O S A N G E L E S IU P I) D ire c to r I’ c tc r
rlk&gt;Udunov1ch. angry over Universal Studios'
removal nf scenes and inualr Iron) III* movie
"M a sk ." has failed lo convince a jnrfgr to btock
release of i he film
Ikigdatiuvlch askrd Superior Court Judge Jo h n
Cole lo Issue a preliminary Injunction preventing
935
12 spor ts p a g e
release of the critically acclaimed film so I lie
10:00
film m aker could reinsert scenes and music
(J) O TRAPPER JOHN- MO
removed b y the studio
Trigpar. J T and th* hoapitaI art
Cole denied Ihe requesl Wednesday, ruling that
auad tor nagbganc* by tha paronlt
01 a young tihiet* who dwd ol mtorBogdanovich's conlracl with Universal was a m ­
nal btoeding m ipn* of ahort* to
biguous and did mil s[&gt;eclty an absolute right lo
tan him
final musical and theatrical cut of the movie.
1! (M) PiO€PENDENT NEWS

• T K D S » &lt; 7 )L

7:30
0 4 } HARMONY AM) GRACE
® O ISSSNCI ON TEUVMKM
(M IE J OAJaELS
( IT M WRITTEN
O iS )W V GRANT

taamg ptac* attng lh* Amataa Rtv• Q

8:10

12 PRE-SEASON BASEBALL At­
lanta Brava* V* Lea Angela*

7.00

Tha Future

835
Q nba o l d tim e Rs g a m e

4:35

K8IFOOUB

i l l OOUETEAUAMAZON Wvar

®l O MURDER. SHE WROTE j*ai c i travel* lo San ftoxoaeo ahar*
to* Hitmen to clear a C»■dagroomlo-be of a mghtckib owner a
murder |R)
® O U F T I MOST EMBARRASSPtQ MOMENTS Slav* Alan hoata
to* bAtodar* ot catobrtoa* mcbiding
P#nny Martoal Cmdy WWomt.
Baft* Daw* Diet Cavail and Mr T
IRI3
U (Ml CHARLIE S ANQILJ
0 (10) PLEDGE BREAK Regular-,
achadutod programming may be
delayed Out lo piadg* break*
0 (I) M OW "Th* Day Ot Th* LOcutt (ItTJI Donald Sutherland
Karan Btock Baled on to# nova! by
Nathan**) Wail In itJOa Ho«ywood an aatMlani i*t daaignar
tnat lo capture on canvta to* tym
bott of corruption and lata' Button
toat parvad* hia communfy

1030

4:00

12 toQHT TRACKS

6:00

naf

1:30
2:05

WEEX WITH DAVID

AFTERNOON

U NIGHT TRACKS

m IS) MOVIE Haadlaaa Eyaa
1 tSTSt Bo Brundan

AWARENESS

BRMOfY
0 (10) GOURMET COOKING

1:05

0 ( IO| UN O ALONG WITH MITCH

f

41 2 ROCKS TONKJMT

(7 1 O MOVIE wad in Th* Coun­
try 11981) Etna Piaalay. Mop*
Lang*
(U (M l MOVE Imp m u ' ('**•)
Alban Dearer Barry SuRvan

8:00
B ® DWF RENT STROKES Altar
be I mugged on a New York City
Street Arnett aultmi bom emotion­
al problem* and uwtl a paychott-

O (M l MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAMTMG
0 (*) M O W "Tha Prtvat* Ww Of
U*|or Banaen (t M j) Chwtton
Heaton AW* Adam* A tough Am y
man • toflanad by a tomato doctor
after ho to berufarrad to a mwtwy

10:50

REPORT

fr o m t h e f r o n t

730
0TTO O A Y
Q O CBS M0RNMG NEWS
J O GOOO MORNING AMERICA

at (Ml BOB NEWMART

5 1 iM i c h ip s

10:30

7:30
0 ® FUM Y BREWSTER Puniy
•acapaa trom to* chudran a toeflar
and Hanry goat to eourt to obtain
cuatody |Part3of3)(R)
0 IDTBOitT GALLERY

10.30

12 NKJMT TRACKS: CHA IT BUG-

4:00

1030
0 ® ) TAJUNO
TAI
ADVANTAGE
l O ITT O
I WRITTEN
i r im iI MOV*
u
Mmma And Moakoaitr (18TJI Gena Rowland*
Saymoia Cataw A rreamatchad
K'vggto to ram«m logalhar

CHILDREN’S DINNERS *2.95 to *3.95
SUNDAY -TH U R SD A Y 11 30 AM 10 PM. FRIDAY II 30 AM 11 PM. SATURDAY 430-11 PM

am

2508 FRENCH A V E. (HWY. 17-92) SANFORD

^

fT i

�1C—E v w l i n

i i iH w d , F I.

t w d i y , M arch 14, m s

YOUR DOUBLE COUPONS
SAVE YOU MORE AT WINN-DIXIE!
ws h on or c o u p o n s u p s o a u o incluoing h oo value
vii a c c e p t cm*id tt coupons
v ou m ust p u r c h a se tmi s p e c if ic p n o a u c t with i « ch c o u p o n m u r e q u e s t
w m ih you ■* t w o o « m o re o» r hs v * u f h i m vit a ii i oou m f * cou po n p rn
u so n
!H I FIRST t wot wt I I I U S A ll O THfR COUPONS OF THAI A l'M |t(M A l i i Bl RFOI f U l O FOR
FACi v a l u e
COUPON VAil/f CANNOI I ( C U D T he VALUE OF th e m u

M A R C H 24. 1985 O N LY
IMS OF'IR «Al *J rn tME FOLLOWING COUNTIES
ORA HOC SEMINOLE OSCEOLA BREVARD VOLUSIA
LAKE CITRUS SUMTER MARION INOlAN RIVER » ST LUCIE

( r i s_co

\m y jj

^•^CR ISCO -*^

LARGE EGGS

DETERGENT

*FABERGE ORGANIC CONDITIONER or

PILLSBURY (ALL VARIETIES)

m

FLOUR

4 9

SH AM PO O i

SHORTENING

ICE CREAM \ \ Vt FRYERS
$ 19 9

'

TISSUE

■JuuMl

PRESTIGE ALL FLAVORS

rfU m r

,

WHITE or YELLOW

REGULAR or BUTTER

W . ;,i

M

BREAD

$ 15 !

EACH

&lt;

•UNDwriusiwmioovnuniiuii

YOUNG 'N TENDER
12-oz. PKG. CHICKEN PAniES
CHICKEN BREAST PAniES
&amp; CHICKEN NUGGETS

^

BONNIE M A ID
VEAL PATTIES

3

SAVE 30*

SAVE 50

SAVE 20*

COMPAMSAVt

W O ARANO UtOA CHOICE
M l ! CHUCK ROM!ICSR

CHUCK
ROAST

HUNT'S
KETCHUP

GROUND
BEEF

Ground Beef

HAMBURGER
BUNS

Fruit Drinks . " 9 9 &lt;
* i‘+

SAVE 70

OFF

16-oz. REGULAR or PARMESAN

□d M
'f 1
13?
?i f H
' SAVE 40*.. i

l# V

SAVE SO

l
M O HMANU MHO HOT
ot POLISH I N O if f t t

ECONOM Y
PORK CHOPS

SMOKED
SAUSAGE

&lt;

Towels
.

im m u s u
PRICE M U I I WHOLE PEELED
TOMATO** CHUMAT MlllO VlGtlAAlIt

VEGETABLES

’COMPAitiSAVtf*
I
\ M

l

LAV » l o t REGULAR
1
. • ' » « DARMCUC SOUR

POTATO
CHIPS

$179
Bologna
(om iitu n

l PLANT CITY

STRAWBERRIES

Kosher Dills

L Sausage
SAVE 70

ICE MILK, SHERBET
) or ICE CREAM

Fl.il

OAANC.S

ARCI

ORANGE
JUICE

FAMILY
MEALS

BARBECUE
SPARERIBS

$099
Topping

�VIEWPOINT
Evening H trald, San lord, FI.

Sunday- M arch 14, I t U — ID

End O f A Political Era In Sanford G o ve rn m e n t
nowles Sees
rbanization
Sanford
By Donna Eatea
Herald S t a f f W rite r
inford wan a community of 11.935 people In
t f p area encompassing 5.4 square miles when
W.E. "Pete" Knowles, then barely 30 years old.
« m e to the city on April 20. 1953 as Its city
engineer.
. ™ H t had already served as manager for four
ars of the cities of Berwick, Maine, and Derry,
lew Hampshire. In his native New England
fore coming south And within 10 months of
M b employment with Sanford, he was Its city
^M a n a g e r.
8 Today, the city's population Is near 27.000 and
ijte city's limits contain 13.2 square miles,
i After 32 years on the Job — Knowles celebrates
Js 62nd birthday March 27 — will retire April 30.
ot to go fishing." but to search for new
allrnges. new solutions and new and Invatlve ways of managing cities. He plans to
come a consultant to city managers In the state
♦ho want his advfce on municipal matters, and to
Allies that need Interim managers while they
irarch for permanent ones
When Knowles came to Sanford. It was a
mmunlty with an agricultural background,
jpplemcntcd by the railroad Industry und a
aval airfield. None of the three were "growing
■onomlc stimulators or Job producers" and It
as Important that the economic background of
re city change for the community to grow, hr
ys.
All that has changed. The naval air station
losed and agriculture and rail service are
echoing.
Knowles secs Sanford today as "receiving
rcognttion as a community with a stuble
overnment where municipally-elected olTlcluls
lave shown their primary Interest In the
rommunlt&gt;■ as a good place to live, and who avoid
go trips Into jxtilllcs In other arenas." Of all the
mayors and commissioners over those 32 years,
Knowles can recall only two who have sought and
won higher political office outside the city
He foresees a Sanford with 50.CXX) to 70,000
people by the year 2000. and more living on the
fringe areas, with city government using In­
novative approaches to meet the nerds of the
growing population.
What will Sanford lx- like then?
Knowles says the city limits will extend
westerly nlong state Hoad 46A, which, he
predicted, would be extended to Interstate 4 altd
then north to the St. Johns River. The northwest
quadrant of the city will be developed Industri­
ally. but the city primarily will be a residential
community, with populations climbing as part of
the "ripple effect" from Metropolitan Orlando. "It

Moore Doubts
Rapid Growth
An Advantage

...formation of
city employees
info labor unions
can be expected
— Pete Knowles

...I'm not sure
doubling Sanford's
population is to
anyone's advantage
— Lee Moore

Ptwtot St J»mmy ytscMl
will ripple out from the center of Orlando." he
says.
Industry will move from Orlando to Sanford as
employers try to avoid Orlando's traffic conges­
tion and as they work toward providing "pleasant
surroundings for their employees to enjoy their
working place."
And, he warns. If Sanford's people are con­
cerned about traffic congestion today, they
should be reminded that the situation Is the best
now that It will ever be.
Knowles also secs Sanford's residents becoming
more urbanized, willing to live close to each other
In smaller households. "Fewer will want u garden
In the backyard "
People will want to work closer to home
because the cost of commuting will be so great.
They will want to live close to shopping centers,
centers of culture and sports events, he says.
They will no longer want a one-stop comer
store. They will want a nearby shopping center
which has all the good* und services they are
Interested In buying, he said.
Knowles says he Is not one to look Iwck. "If you
stop and look over your shoulder, you will get run
over," he says.
And he adds he would change very little In the
work he has done for the city over the years
Nevertheless, he Is proud of the "firsts" Sanford
accomplished under his administration, such us:
• Implementing In 1953 a Military landfill,
what was an Innovation at that time. Sanford's
lundflll was frequently visited by officials from
other cities. Including Atlanta, to see how the
garbage and Irush were burled and the land
ultimately reclaimed for use and development.
Th e state's Bureau of Entomology, the precursor
of today s state Department of Environmental
Regulation, used the Sanford facility to demon­
strate a means of replacing old garbage dumps
where garbage was spread upon the ground and
burned. In those days, the Sanford operation was

called a "model method."
Soon after Knowles came to Sanford he was
sent to Inspect the city's garbage Incinerator to
find out why It wasn't working The only way to
Inspect It was to climb Inside the grimy facility.
Inside he found the fire brick dome had fallen Into
the pit and ihe Incinerator was one step away
from collapse. He rrcommrnded It be razed
Today he Is recommending a giant sophisticated
Inclncerator for the disposal of garbage and trash
countywide.
• In 1955 Sanford became Ihe first city in
Central Florida to adopt subdivision regulations
requiring developers to Install water and sewer
lines and paved streets within their developments
ut their expense and then turn those Improve
ments over to the city. These regulations saved
the city millions of dollars and gained the city
untold millions In assets. Knowles says
• In 1956 the first written Job descriptions and
pay schedules in Central Florida were created lit
provide equity and uniformity In employment
und salary while rewarding merit.
• By 1958-59 the city began a "slurry seal"
treatment program which used hard, sharp
“ ggrrg'df t° resurface streets, providing durabili­
ty as a low cost means of pavement treatment.
• In 1962. a condemnation program for
dilapidated buildings was begun to reduce the
slum effect of such housing That same year, the
city Initiated the program of acquiring surplus
federal property, such as the 191H vintage post
office, today used us u county library on First
Street.
• it was in 1974 that Sanford hud Its first
(rained emergency medical technicians In Ihe fire
department, something that, has become the
norm In other departments throughout Ihe state
In recent years. By Ihe next year the city was
paying Incentive allowances to firemen with

By Donna E s t e s
Herald S t a f f W rite r
Lee P Moore sat In Ihe mayor's seat chairing
the Santord City Commission's semi-monthly
meetings for 16 years before stepping down Jan.
H. little more than two months ago
He hadn't run for re-election and he says he
doesn't miss the city meetings or the re­
sponsibilities of the mayor's office. But as he
speaks, he qualifies his remarks, reluctant to
make statements that might Influence others In
their thinking of the current happenings at city
hall
And. he has no Intention of analyzing the
performances In office of his successor Betlye
Smith or of the new city commissioners — John
Mercer und Robert Thomas
He prefers to look bark to the years — 17 In all.
16 as mayor und one us city commissioner —
when he was Involved.
The major accomplishments during those
years. In his opinion, were the construction of the
new city hall In 1977 and the comprehensive
program that resulted in all but a few portions of
streets in Sunford being paved.
Those Improvements came about through Ihe
use of federal funds, a grant In the case ot Ihe city
hall and federal revenue sharing money In the
paving program
With the construction of the two story city hall,
designed to lit the future needs ol a city of 50.(XX)
Inhabitants. — rsllmnlrd to come by the vr.ii
2&lt;XX) — Moore says for the first time in 25 years
all city functions could lx- located at one facility.
Prior to the new building, Sanford operated
from ihe old facility containing only 9.(XX) square
feel. City officials used to say the old city hall
remained standing as long as It did only because
Ihe termites were holding hands II they ever let
go. the olllclals said, Ihe building wotdd tumble to
the ground
"l never thought we could build a city hull I
didn't know where we would get the money. But
Pete (City Mauuger W .E. "Pete" Knowles) had no
question about It He felt It was Just a matter ol
liming He worked In city government on a dally
basis und he knew things a mayor couldn't
possibly know. And he was right," Moore says.
W ith the comprehensive paving progrum,
Moore and other city olllclals trlrd to convince
property owners lu go along .with paying front
fool assessments for Hie paving. When they were
unsuccessful, the decision whs made to use
federal revenue-sharing funds for that project.
"So. It didn't cost anyone a n y t h in g ." he saya.
O f Sanford’s future and the high growth rate

S e e KNOWLES. Page 4D

Se e MOORE, page 4D

Will Mississippi And Friends Survive The Audit?
For those who feared there would lano more movies when Hollywood
writers decided to go on strike, I have
good news I have Just obtained a script
for a new. Incredibly exciting, disgustI n g I y v i o l e n t , a c t i o n -p a c k e d
blockbuster.
It Is a movie about tax shelters.
The title of this sensational epic Is
Mississippi Smedley and Ihe Shelter of
Doom.
" S h e lt e r ” Is cle arly aim ed at
cxjriolllng the current uproar about Ihe
fairness of our tax system, and the fact
that some people wtth lots of money are
able to hide It In clever little shelters so
that tax collectors can't find It.
The movie opens In a sleazlly opulent
gambling casino In Macao. The thick
red velvet on the walls Is stained a
brownish hue from decades of rich
cigar smoke. The walls are dotted with
badly patched bullet holes.
The camera pans In on a man ut the
roulette table. He wears baggy khaki
p ants and a b ad ly soiled sh irt
purchased from the Land's End cata­

logue. A bit of yeslcrday's egg yolk
clings to his unshaven chin. His
floppy-brimmed hat looks as If It has
been on the floor of a stable for several
years. He Is. In short, the sort of man
that drives women wild.
The m an's name Is Mississippi
Smedley. adventurer, klllcr-for-hlre,
and professor of classics at Vassar He
Is accompanied by Ills faithful sidekick.
Debit, an unscrupulous little accoun­
tant from somewhere In Hung Kong.
Suddenly, u very fat man In u very
crisp white linen suit approaches
Mississippi The man looks like Sidney
Greenstreel. He hands Mississippi a
white handkerchief Mississippi, who is
unaccustomed to Itandkerchlefs that
have not been used In the overhaul of
diesel trucks, opens It gingerly.
The camera zooms In to rev-al a
dozen perfectly matched rubles. Debit
gasps. Mississippi asks what Ihe fat
man wants:
Fat man: I bought these In Bombay
for $ IOO I want you to take them to a
place in Nepal, where you will find a

Quirks

Dollars
&amp;

(Non)Conts
Tim othy
Tregsrthca

man who w ill appraise them for
Si.UOO.OOO. He will then set up a profit
foundation run by my mother. I will
donate the gems to Ihe foundation und
take the million us u deduction. 1 figure
to net $499,900 In tax savings on the
deal.
Debit: Boss! It's the gemstone gambit!
The script calls for a huge, disonanl
chord In E-mlnor al this point, cut oft
suddenly when a gorgeous blond
woman, wearing a sliver, sequlued
gown purchased from Ihe Frederick's of
Hollywood catalogue accidentally
knocks some chips off the roulette
table, chips that would have been on

DOONESBURY

winning numbers.
A huge, pointless brawl ensues, lu
which Mississippi distinguishes himself
by recovering Instantly front 18 tribal
blows, performing 14 Impossibly heroic
feats, killing 112 Innocent byslandrrs.
und. In the end. rescuing the woman,
who suffers only a torn dress and a
broken null In the fracas.
Debit: Great work Miss!
Mississippi: Don't call me Miss.
Grateful to Mississippi, the woman
Joins him and Debit for the long trek to
Nrp.tl They enter the Shelter of Doom
through u rave behind u Howard
Johnson's In Barutnagur. The cave Is
dark and creepy.
Mississippi. Debit, and the woman
endure one grisly scene after another.
Their attackers Include six moray eels,
millions of locusts, a bladdernose seal.
32 IRS agents, and Ralph Nader.
Mississippi triumphs every time. The
tired trio finally enters the dingy office
of Murray the Gem Appraiser. Murray
glances at the gems, und hundx
Mississippi the certification that the

almost worthless baubles are worth a
million dollars.
Just when they think they arr home
free, they are seized by 100 Mr. T
look-ullks. and dragged off to the
scariest, most blood-curdling thing yet
seen In the movie
It Is (hr tax audit! Mississippi. Debit,
and the woman are made to sit In
strulght backed chubs uernss from Ihe
battered metul desk of Harold the Tax
Auditor! Harold squints harshly ut Ihe
frarful trio. The woman sobs quietly:
Woman: Oh. Miss! Can you save us
again?
Mississippi: Don't cull me Miss,
Can Mississippi and hls friends sur­
vive the audit? Will the fat man shelter
hls million from the government. Will
the gorgeous blond fix the rip In her
dress Will Mississippi ever gel a new
hat?
You'll have to see the movie.
ITIm olhy Tregurthen welcome* the
upiiortiinlly to (wres/xiod with Traders.
Write him ut the Evening lleruhl.l

by G a rry Trudeau

The Lottery Giveth
Priest $1.7 Million
By Ualttd Praia
International
NEW YORK lUPtl - A
Roman Catholic priest who
has played the same lottery
numbers for the post two
years won a Jackpot worth
$1.7 million. He plana to
give moat of It to charity.
The Rev. Joseph Farannc,
37. will receive the first ol
20 Installments of $55,766
in about two weeks. About
20 percent will be deducted
for taxes.
Ordained 13 years ago.
F a ra o n e e a rn s 8300 a
month as assoc late pastor of
S t. P a t r i c k ' s R o m a n
C a t h o l i c c h u r c h In
Yorktown Heights.
St. Patrick's opened last
year and owes $2.2 million

In c o n s tr u c tio n cost s.
Faraone said he plans to
give half of every Install­
ment check to the parish,
but keep a small amount for
hls pension.
The rest of Ihe checks will
be donated to charities.
Including the parish youth
group and Its Ethiopian
hunger drive.
Fa rao n e said he has
played Lotto In moderation
but played the same num ­
bers every week for two
years.
Tw o other New Yorkers
will share the $1.7 million
Jackpot with Faraone. They
a rt Clive H e n ry of the
Bronx and another winner
In Fete County.

usrtti a u p xxj
m u m jym rK m tt
V &amp; W tA m n G .
s—

vm oAae
iMOHOAff
im h j *

�Evening Herald
tliSP S «I1 ] M )

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Are* Code 303 .122 2 6 11 or 831-9993

Sunday, March 24, 19*5 — 2D
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Th o m * i G lordf no, M «n * gin g Editor
M alvln Adkins, A d v tr lliln g Director

Home Delivery Week, •1.10; Month. M 75: 3 Month*.
•14 25: 6 Month*. *27 00, Year. »5 I 00 by Mall Week.
• 1.50: Month. •« 00: 3 Month*. *18 00, 0 Month*. »32 50
Year. *60 00.

City Manager
Should Control
Police, Fire
W hatever It takes, the Sanford City C o m ­
m ission should continue to pursue one of Its
latest endeavors: B rin ging the police and fire
departm ents under the control of the city
m anager.
A s It stands today, the heads of both those
departm ents, by charter regulation, are hired
or dismissed b y the city com m ission, and
both are directly answerable to the c o m ­
m ission for the proper handling of their
respective departm ents.
T h e present system Is outdated. Under on
effective city m anager-com m ission form of
governm ent, all departm ent heads coordinate
their activity through the chief adm inistrative
officer of the city, who In turn Is responsible
to the ci t y co m m issio n for the overall
operation of all city departm ents. Under the
Ideal m anager-com m ission system of g o v­
ern m en t. city com m issioners function us a
board of directors, laying d ow n policies they
want the city adm inistrator to follow. A n d
that entails the chief adm inistrator setting u p
an orderly chain of co m m a n d so the entire
adm inistration and Its departm ents function
as a team, carrying out the board of directors'
wishes.
S a n fo rd ci t y c o m m is s io n e rs , and the
m a yo r, arc not full time representatives of the
city, though one m ight not guess that w ith
the n u m b e r of hours most of them put In
tending to city affairs. Nonetheless, they arc
part-tim e positions and as the city grows and
city stufT and departm ents expand, co m m is­
sioners’ tim e will lie at u p re m iu m , having to
deal w ith com plex Issues that accom pany
rapid g ro w th . T h e y will have to rely m ore
heavily on the chief adm inistrator to curry out
their policies and to oversee nil departm ents.
E ve n though the city churter puts police
and fire under the direct control of the city
com m ission, the chiefs of both departm ents
Insist they favor hu vln g their departm ents
under the control of the city manager. Indeed,
both also have said they more often than not
have ro n s u ttrd w ith the city mannger In
m a n y areas of their d e t r im e n t s ' functions
for advice and direction,
N ow . M ayor Hettye S m ith Is profroslng a
sort of com prom ise. One that hopefully will
not be construed as a m eans to circum vent
the charter. S h e ’s suggested, and most of her
colleagues tend to fuvor the Idea, that the
police and fire departm ents come under the
direction of the city m anager by designating
h im "p u b lic safety a d m in istra to r." T h a t's u
w o rth w h ile Idea to pursue.
C ity Manager W arren Pete Knowles also
likes the Iden. He points out that since the fire
chief and police chief cu rre n tly often go
th ro u g h the city m anager’s office In handling
their departm ents, c o n tin u in g to do so w ith
the c i t y rn u n u g cr us p u b lic safety a d ­
m in is t r a t o r w o u ld n ’ t c o n flic t wi t h t he
cha rter's Intent.
K now les also points out that most cities the
sire of Sanford operute that w uy — w ith fire
and police under the control of the city
m anager. T h e practice tightens the c ity ’s
organization and ensures thut the day to duy
actions of all city departm ents are m onitored
m ore closely. Sanford's present set-up "Is a
v e ry bad o rga nizationa l s itu a tio n ," suys
K now les, because the police and fire chiefs
are not as accountable us they should be.
" T h a t 's the secret of organization — everyone
has to be accountable to som eone."
F ra n k Faison. Sanford's newly-hired city
m anager w ho will rcplucc Knowles (Know les
retires A p ril 30 after 32 years with the city)
says he too favors h u vln g both departm ents
u n d er the adm inistrator's control. Indeed,
w hen Faison was here for his Interview and
the Issue came up. he em phasized the
Im portance of ull departm ents com ing under
the chief adm inistrator: " T h e president of
Qeneral Motors doesn't spin off two divisions
un d have them report to the board of
directors.”
T h e city com m ission says It will wait u n til
Faison reports for work und ask hint to review
the m a yo r's proposul then uct on It If he
agrees It's the way to go.
W e think It Is and we urge the city
com m ission to take appropriate action.

BUSY'S WORLD

"For my next number, I would like to do Cyndl
Leupert 'AM Through The Night."'

DICK WEST

And Shoe Sizes Will Need Updating, Too
W ASH IN GTON (UI'lJ — It Is only natural that
somebody should start tampering with the
typewriter keyboard.
If high technology can't Improve the ar­
rangement devised by Christopher Sholes more
than a century ago. then my faith In modern
automation has been badly misplaced.
What I particularly object to are the "home"
keys — " a s d f for the left hand. ":lk j" for the
right. That semicolon has got to go. even if It
turns millions of touch typists back to the
hunt und peck school.
Far from deserving a finger of Its own. the
semicolon belongs on the lop row with the
asterisk. In these days of high deficit financing,
the dollar sign Is used much more frequently.
The same Is true of the alphabet at large. It
has 26 letters, of which only five arc blatantly
vowels. Yet every word In the English language
has a vowel sound. Some of the consonants that
nre easily reached obviously are being un­
derworked.
Although certain reforms are needed. I fear
the modernists, who already have presuaded
some government agencies to experiment with a

new keyboard, won't slop at the typewriter.
For one thing, the calendar that you and I
know and love, especially on Friday. Is vulnera­
ble.
I'm not saying a seven-day week Is perfect. An
eight-day or a six-day week might work better.
But weeks at least are symmetrical. Months, on
the other hand, are downright ridiculous.
Some have 30 days: some 31 (ah. there,
punctuation mark). And one has but 28. except
In Leap Year. We have to learn an Imbeclllc
poem to keep It all straight.
Timekeeping also may be In for another type
of overhauling.
A clock, you know, has only 12 hours,
although a day. the last lime I looked, had 24
Digital timepieces correct the discrepancy to
some degree by designating PM periods. While
this may be a boon to those who have difficulty
distinguishing 2 o'clock In the morning from 2
o’clock In the afternoon, It does nothing to clear
up the ancient mystery of whether noon and
midnight are AM or PM.
The only solution I can see Is the Army way of
designating noon a* 12-hundred hours and

midnight as 24-hundred hours. The Navy
system of marking time with bells only adds to
the confusion.
And what of the piano keyboard?
A seven-note scale with five half-tones Just
doesn't hack It with Eastern music-lovers, who
arc accustomed to scales with more than 20
steps.
Can we expect a revision of the piano along
with the typewriter? Will Beethoven, Bach.
Mozart and all that crowd go down the drain
alcng with their fugues, sonatas, concertos and.
oh. 1don't know what all. 1fear the worst.
Nor are Fahrenheit thermometers entirely
safe.
We are told that metric weights and measures
provide a more logical method of Indicating the
size and extent of things than whatever means
we use now.
Thu* far. a determined rear guard action has
prevented replacing the old with the new In
non-sclenllflc endeavors In tills country. But If
the typewriter keyboard falls, can the Richter
scale be far behind?

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

RUSTY BROWN

Slogans
And Such
Don't Go

Learning
When To
Let It Go
Dear Kale.
I hope this week had a few happy
moments for you. It looks like an
early spring here, and I wish the
same for you. Nothing like looking
at a field of daffodil* to lift the
spirits.
I had a helpful conversation this
week with a woman by the name of
Ruth Jean Loewlnsohn. She 1s a
family therapist who was In Albu­
querque to help with a new program
here for widows.
It's called W idow ed Persons
Service und It focuses on training
volunteers (all of whom have been
widowed 18 months or more) to
advise und counsel — one on one —
those who have recently lost a
spouse. It's un outreach program of
the American Association of Retired
Persons, and there are 163 such
groups around the country.
Maybe you'd like to write AARP to
learn If there's such a group near
you 1009 K S t. N . W . .
Washington. D C.. 20040.
I was surprised to learn there are
more thun io million widows In the
United Slates and that the average
age Is 56.
Like Ihe other experts, Ms.
I^oewlnsohn suys there's no way to
hurry through the mourning pro­
cess. Your bereavement will come to
an end only at Ihe right lime for
you. It's normal, she suys. not to
wunt to go out much for a while, but
It's abnormal to in-come u recluse.
She suggests you might wunt to do
some Inform al entertaining —
starting out. perhu|&gt;s. by Inviting u
few friends over for dessert and
coffee.
Have you thought about Joining
Parents Without Partners? It's for
widows as well as divorced persons,
you know.
In time, you may want to try one
of Ruth Urewlnsohn's "letting go"
exercises. You write on one side of u
paper the 10 qualities you liked and
respected most alxiut Frank: on the
other side. 10 things you didn't like.
Say them uloud as you write them,
expressing anger or uffectlon for
each.
You might even pretend to talk to
Frank, saying: "Frank. I waul to say
goodbye to your strength, which
helped me through many situations,
but I can't lean on It anymore.
Goodbye, Frank's strength."
I'm so looking *forward to your
visit. Until then, keep writing. and1
will, too
With love.
Rusty

SCIENCE WORLD

Making Of A Zombie
By Olno Del G u ercto
UPI S c ie n c e W r it e r
CAMBRIDGE, Muss (UPI) — Wade
Davis, a Harvard University botany
student, was asked by his advisor
three years ago to fly to Haiti and
Investigate whether there was uny
truth to ilie voodoo myth of zom­
bies.
After a series of expeditions over
two and u half yearn, he returned to
Cambridge with malaria, hepatitis.
Ihe malerlul for a non fiction book
said to read like a spy novel — and
the secret formula for creating
zombies.
"I left knowing nothing about the
country und arrived with only my
wits." said Davis. "| was lucky,
extremely lucky. I opened a Pan­
dora'* box that consumed three
years of my life."
The blond, blue-eyed Canadian Is
currently In seclusion on a Virginia
farm recovering from his Illnesses,
working on Ihe book to be published
In Ihe fall by Simon and Schuster,
culled " T h e Serpent and the
Rainbow." und finishing his Ph D.
thesis.
The first thing he discovered was
that voodoo und zombies were very
different from the way they have
been portrayed In the movies.
Voodoo Is a sophisticated religion
with African roots. It is practiced by
the vast majority of Haitians as well
us people on other Caribbean
Islundsund In Brazil.
"It hus a system of medicine, u
system of education and u system of
law and order ll ap|w-.us tli.il Ibis
zombie thing may be linked to the
whole system of social sanctions."

said Davis, whose Virginia log cabin
Is filled with book*, voodoo masks.
Indian heud bund*and skulls.
Zombies are not people who have
risen from the dead. Instead, they
are people who have been given a
drug that mimics death, paralyzing
them und reducing their heart and
breathing rates to almost nothing.
Yet they remain conscious.
Davis. 31. was sent to Halil by Ihe
Harvard Botanical Museum, the
world s foremost Institution for the
study of psychoactive drugs, most
of which arc made from plants. As u
graduate student at the museum, hr
was an expert on plant-derived
pharmaceuticals.
If there was uny trusts to the myth,
experts reasoned, It probably hud
something to do with a drug made
from plants.
In addition. Davis had worked In
the past with natives of the Amazon
Jungle and the Indians of northern
Canada, his native land, while
working as a lumberjack.
As ll turned out. Ihe active
Ingredient In the secret formula for
creation of zombies was a poison,
called tctmdotnxln. which Is taken
(com puffer fish und Is 500 times
more powerful than cyanide.
" It 's the most powerful non­
protein (tolson In the world." Duvls
said. " A drop that can rest on tinhead of a pin Is enough to kill."
He keeps a 2-inch vial of the
formulu with him. ll looks like dry
black dirt. The formula also con­
tains parts of toads, sea worms,
lizards, taruntulas and human
bones. "It's basically u potpourri of
weird things." said Davis.

You never know what problem
will surface next.
Last summer, everyone feared
that the foreign debt crisis would
have a devastating Impact on
America’s money center banks In
early 1985. That crisis has eased, ll
has passed out of the news. Now the
big news Is the fann crisis. If It Is
Indeed a crisis. AI the very least,
there has been an explosion of
concern about problems In the farm
states.
Who knows what lies ahead?
National problems have a way of
emerging In a most unexpected
way. Certainly, no one expected
that farm problems would be front
and center In the new Congress.
T h a t’s Ihe way It Is In the lives of
Individuals and families as well as
nations. As much as people and
Institutions are future-minded In
the late 20th century, and spend
heavily on projecting developments,
life provides endless surprises. One
can't be sure where and when
difficulties will emerge
The farm problem, of course. Is
nothing new. Farmers have faced
difficulty und become Involved In
|&gt;oi!t!cal activity since the I9th
century. Periodically, American
farm s have engaged In o v e r­
production which caused major
problem*. During the first World
War. for example. American farm­
er* were urged to bring huge
acreages Into cultivation, which was
responsible In part for the farm
depression of the 1920*
A healthy, farm economy is Im ­
portant to all Americans, whether
they live In rural or urban areas. As
one look* around Ihe world, one
find* that the strongest, most stable
countries are those with healthy
agricultural systems.
As Americans appraise farm legis­
lation. they ought to bear In mind
that the United Slates, without an
explicit declaration, is assuming
responsibility for feeding millions of
starving people In Africa. Clearly,
the American people and Congress
haven't thought through the indi­
rect commitments that are bring
made. The Congress Is authorizing
more food assistance without rec­
ognition of the fact thut famine In
Africa may continue for decade* to
come.
In many African countries, condi­
tions are steadily worsening. It will
be m a n y years before the 25
countries with famine conditions
will enjoy the quality of life they had
when they were colonies of Euro­
pean powers.

JACK ANDERSON

Group Aids Miskito Refugees
W ASH IN GTON - Twice In recent
months 1 have reported on the
’ ’ p r i v a t i z a t i o n " of the a n ilSandlnlsta war In Nicaragua since
Congress cut off the CIA's funding
of Ihe contra forces.
My reporter on the scene. Jon Lee
Anderson, witnessed Ihe (low of
private money and supplies to the
rebels and their families, including
aid front the Unification Church and
Soldier of Fortune magazine.
Another group we mentioned was
Friends of the Americas, formed last
year by u Louisiana state legislator.
Louis "W oody" Jenkins, and his
wife. Diane, u lawyer und former
Louisiana aaaistunt attorney gener­
al.
Friends of the Americas con­
centrates un helping Mlsklto Indians
who have fled Sandlnlsta persecu­
tion and taken refuge across the
border In Honduras. Most of the
Indiana are In U.N. refugee camps.
Hut the United Nations, appar­
ently hoping to maintain a political
Image, will not assist refugees who

are within 40 kilometers of the
Nicaraguan border. Th e re are
thousands of Mlsklto* living In Ihe
Jungles within the 40-kllometer
zone, and it Is these unhappy
refugees that FOA la helping.
My reporter personalty watched
armed Indian contras help deliver
one FOA shipment of supplies to the
refugees. And Indian guerrilla lead­
er Steadman Fagoth told him that
the deliveries of food und medicine
to civilian Mlskitoa enabled his
soldiers to "concentrate on the w a r'
against the Managua regime.
But Dtane Jenkins wrote me nn
im (Missioned letter, and from several
conversations with the Jenkinses
since then. I've concluded that our
reports, while accurate, did not do
full Justice to the efforts of two
honest, well-intentioned people
whose motives In aiding the wret­
ched Indian refugees are humanitar­
ian. not political.
"We have the same policy as
World Relief, (a private agency)

which operates the U.N. camp,"
Diane Jenkins said. "W e help all
civilia n refugees, regurdlrss of
whom they are related to Also like
World Relief, our only concrrn Is
that they themselves are civilians,
not combatants."

don't cure where the refugees are. If
they are In need and we a rr
permitted to help, we will. We arr
even willing to work In Nicaragua If
the Sandlnlsta government will
allow us to aid the refugees there
without political Interference."

The reason the FO A supplies werr
being delivered In rebel Jeeps, she
said, is that this was the only
transportation available In the re­
mote Jungle. "We never set foot In
the military camps." she said.
FOA's goal Is worthwhile beyond
any question. It is to provide food,
medicine, seeds, tools and schooling
for the Indian refugees. "Nearly 70
p e rc e n t of the M ls k lto * are
children." she said, "and they are
suffering from malnutrition, ane­
mia. severe parasites and malaria.
Friends of the Americas is the only
private organization providing any
significant assistance in the border
region. '*
Diane Jenkins added: “ Friends of
the Americas' attitude is that we

Her relief work keeps her In
Hondurus about half the time, she
said.
From donors In the 50 states and
Canada, the Jenkinses have col­
lected about 20.000 "Shoeboxes for
Liberty." each containing a pound
of beans, soap, toothpaste, a
toothbrush, socks, underwear, a
pocket knife, eating utensils, fis­
hhooks und line, vitamins, candles,
vegetable seeds, canned meat, a
plastic cup. u small toy and a letter
and snapshot from the Individual
donor.
Anyone who would like more
Information about Friends of the
Americas can reach them at 912
North Foster Drive. Baton Rouge,
La 70806.

�OPINION
Private Handling Of Government Tasks Saves
Freedom s Foundation Featurea
.
When the National Oceanic and
• Atmospheric Administration INOAAI
. was planning In 1981 for the next four
; years of operations. It was recognized
• that costs might be reduced by having
; some lo n g t im e NO A A a ctivitie s
performed by private firms operating
under the watchful eye of NOAA
; managers.
I The decision to try the process railed
; privatization has culminated in savings
• of $7 million slncr 1980. One action
! produced multi-million dollar savings.
■ reducing N O AA's costs by almost
one-third the previous expenditure.
T h e privatization experience at
NOAA is now being viewed by the
Office of Management and budget
IOMH| of the federal government as an
excellent example of the dramatic
reductions that can be made In gov­
ernment spending through privatiza­
tion.

The concept Is simple: where the
government Is performing activities
I hat are also provided by firms operat­
ing in private business, a study should
tie conducted to determine If a private
company could provide the product or
service at less cost. OMU has now
directed all government agencies to
start capitalizing on tnls opportunity to
cut costs without reducing programs
This approach works for big as well
as small agencies The Department of
Defense (liODl for many years has
successfully contracted activities on a
small scale to private enterprise It Is
now putting the method Into even
wider usage.
Secretary of Defense Caspar Wein­
berger has strongly endorsed the pro­
gram In letters to Congress. In a letter
of late 1983. Weinberger said: "Under
thrsc procedures, commercial activities

million to $| million through six
studies: the Department of Commerce
has saved over $7 million through 13
studies done from 1981 through March
1984. and the Department of the
Treasury has reduced costs by over
S4 5 million after 32 cost comparison
studies.
The President's Private Sector Sur­
vey on Cost Control, quoting from a
General Accounting Office report of
several years ago. said In its (Inal
recommendations that there arc uboul
11,000 commercial and Industrial-type
activities now Ix-ing performed In the
government at a cost of almut 820
billion per year. The report went on
"In 1983, OM b estimated that adhering
to the policies sci forth in Circular A-76
(the OMb document selling rules lor
making c o m com parisons! could aav&lt;
$5 billion annually five years alter
implementation.

OUR READERS WRITE

Students Suffer
Each quarter a student Is enrolled in
college, lie must register for classes
needed toward his degree While this
sounds relatively easy, students soon
experience problems with classes
scheduled at conflicting times, or
offered with only a small number of
sections. Schools differ In the registra­
tion process, and most students find 11
extrem ely difficult to obtain the
perfect schedule. Registration at most
colleges today has been computerized,
but even with tills technological
advancement students run Into major
problems over which they have no
control.
During registration for the spring
semester at Florida State University In
198*1. a friend of mine signed up for a
finance class at night Tins class was
cancelled by I he school due to lack of
students in the class. Students In lids
class were unaware tlinl the class was
cancelled until they arrived at the
room and found a notice on the door
stating. "Tills class has been can­
celled due lo the lack of students."
While cancelling the class may have
been advantageous for the school, It
left the students In the unfair position
of scrambling for the limited number
of vacancies In the remaining classes.
These students lost large amounts of
time In drop/add lines rather Hum
tiring In class or studying. Vet even
worse, problems such as tills may
cause students a delay In graduating
or a loss of financial aid due to a lack
ol hours.
Clearly the University should lake a
more rrsjxinslblr stance lo registra­
tion, because the universities exlsl lo
serve the students and the students
arc paying for this service, the student
should not he the patty madr to
suffer. One solution to lhe problem ol
cancelled classes would be for Ihe
school lo guarantee the students an
opening In another section. This
solution wmdd eliminate the problems
for the studenls and correct the
mistakes made by the school.

that arc not needed to be performed
In-house arc studied to find the most
cost-rffrrlive method of performance.
"This Involves a thorough review of
Job requirements and the development
of a new streamlined In-house organi­
zation that then comjretcs with private
contractors for the work, In the past
four years, these streamlined In-house
organizations have been successful In
winning about half of the 700 competi­
tions that were conducted. The average
savings of In-house and contract w in­
ners was about 27 jicrcent of the
original cost. Our most recent estimate
places these savings at over $300
million annually."
Other civilian agencies have made
the competition process pay also. In
addition to the recent example of
NOAA. which reduced the cost of
warehousing and mailing out nautical
ami aeronautical charts from $2 8

Reunion Word Out
Thank you so much for the help you
have given our committee In gelling
the world out about Winter Park High
School's to-year class reunion. Wc
have been able to contact twice the
number of classmates with your help.
Recently wc were forced lo change
the dale ol the reunion due to hotel
accommodations It would lie a great
hrlp If you could ohner again assist
us.
Our 10-year reunion will now be
held Ju ly 5-8. 1985 ai the Wvndliam
hotel. For further Information gradu­
ates should write lo 75 ( lass |(,
union. P.O. box 2328. Winter Park.
FL 32790.
Thunk you lor your continuing
support. If 1 can supply any lutihcr
Information, please do mil hesitate to
call me at 629-5017. Should anyone
cmitai t you ai search of a committee
contact they can cull 423-1117
Peggy Ramsey
Publicity Chairman

Kiss No Cause For School's Tough Action
W E L L ! Since when, lias a goodnight
kiss become an Immorul act? ("School
Fxpeln liov. 18. Over Goodnight
Kiss." Evening Herald. March 17.
page 2A| A kiss that says. "Th a n k you
for a lovely evening" or perhaps a kiss
of romance. And what Is romance?
FUNK A W AG N A LLS D ICTIO N A R Y
defines R: A kind of love between the
sexes, youthful, non marital, charac­
terized by high Ideals of purity and
devotion, strong ardor.
Evidently tills young couple live In
Christian homes, or they would not
have treen enrolled In a Christian
school. With ihls background It isn’t
likely that the young man would have
asked the young lady for a dale If site

hail a had reputation.
A wholesome kiss usually leads lo
the alter. T h e kind ol kiss UW school
officials had In mind must have been
the kind that gets the face slap|H*d, or
leads to the aliortlon clinic. Do they
consi der themsel ves ho ller than
Jesus? In first Corinthians 162 0 I
quote. "A ll the h rrth rrrn greet you.

Greet ye one another with an holy
kiss." and In Tuan I 15. you will llnd.
"Unto the pure, all things are pure."
Another quotation Is. "Nothing Is
good or had hill thinking makes II
so.”
Was it a Jealous Ixiy. or envious git I
that spied ami rrjwirlrd II alter giving
It a good coal of dirt? lias this school
no counselor to get the families and

their children together, listen to what
ihey have to say und determ ine
wtiether disciplinary action should I ktaken? ,lJ|(

The damage done lo the reputations
of Ihls couple Is Inexcusable nud
Irrrpurahlr. Th e humiliation, the
taunts and sneers, the snubs, will
never tie forgo!ten. Even u person
suspected of committing a crime Is
dra!i with more fairly They will be
tried to determine ihclr innocence or
guilt, before being sent lo prison.
I would not want a child ol mine In
go to that school again, but I would
wunt my tuition ft-c refunded, und the
mulielous charges retracted.
Kathryn Htugncr
Sanford

bo Graham

Considerate Carriers Sidestep W ren’s Nest

blackshrar. Ga.

Festival Success
Thanks for ull your help! Our 7lh
Annual Goldcnrod Festival on March
2 was a tremendous success and the
crowds bigger than ever.
O u r annual non-profll community
festivals couldn't continue to grow
each yeur without your generous

support.
We really appreciate everything that
each of you at Evening Herald did.
Lavrrgnr Ryan
Executive Secretary
A Publicity

Three days ago. I discovered a wren
had moved Into my mailbox to hulld
her nest there. A quick phone call lo
Mr. Carpenter. Postmaster, and the
mall carriers are now pulling my mull
In the newspaper box. Therefore. I d
like lo lake this opportunity to thank
the postmaster and his carriers.
O S. Premlergust

Nest In mailbox

a t 8270

Via

Bella, Sanford,
leaves no room
for letters.

Goldcnrod

f

Growing

\
s

Older

_____ Claude Pepper

Nursing Home
Involvement
Improves Care
g. I am a 65-year-o ld woman who
has Juat re tir e d a f t e r 4 0 yeara of
governm ent service. My m o th er. BO,
re c e n tly had to move Into a nursing
home and 1 want to become more
Involved In aoaurtng th a t ahe and
oth ers In nursin g home are g e ttin g
proper c a r e and a tte n tio n . W here
do I s t a r t ?
A You |msc a very Important, but too
Infrequently asked question. Many
people in nursing homes never receive
visitors Over half have no living
relatives, and friends cither live far
away or just don't visil
This Is truly a shame. For people
forced to live In a musing home,
contact Irum outside, rsjieclally from
loved ones. Is very Important. Visitors
with smiling faces can add so much lo
a nursing home resident's day.
There arc many ways you can
become more Involved In your mother's
nursing home and other homes In your
community.
Many nursing homes have com m uni­
n' councils. These groups, made iqi of
relatives and friends of Individuals
living In (h r nursing home and con­
cerned others, work with the facility
administration, resident council and
other groups from the community to
enhance the quality ol care am) life for
i lie nursing-home resident.
Community councils have arranged
regular visits to nursing homes hy area
school children, provided Iransporta
linn to and Irnm community activities
and religious services, und coordinated
activities of local civic and religions
groups assisting miisliig-hnmr resi­
dents.
You may also Increase your In­
volvement with area nursing homes
Htrough your state's long-term-care
ombudsman program Evrry state Is
now required lo linve such a program,
which is prim arily responsible lor
resolving consumer complalnis rt-lwUog
lo mu sing homes and hoard and care
facilities.
In addition, ninny ombudsman pro­
grams work to Increase community
Involvement In area nursing homes and
olleu work with community councils
and even help such groups gel
established.
In most stales Hie heart ol the
long-term ombudsman program Is Hie
citizen volunteer. These volunteers
regularly visit area nursing homes to
monitor the quality ol cure provided
ami lo Investigate and work to resolve
complaints Most of these volunteers
receive Initial and ongoing training hy
Hie state ombudsman.
In most stales, the long term-cure
ombudsman program tso|ierated under
the auspices of the stale department on
aging Or your local agency on aging
should lie able to put you In cnniuct
with your state ombudsperson.
Another excellent way to liecome
mure active Is to Join an area group
concerned w ith the well-being of
nursing home residents In many areas
there are line organizations whose
pmjMise Is to Improve the quality ol
cure and life ol nursing-home residents.
These groups have activities ranging
from organl/lng visits (rum urea groups
to advocating regulaiory reform In Hie
state leglslaiuie

What Newspapers Across The Nation Are Saying

Teens Need Sex Education, Get Hypocrisy
B y United Press Internstlonsl
T h e Boston Globe
American teenagers get mixed messages about
sex. Television, movies and magazines portray It
as a titillating or romantic exercise, but the
traumatic consequences are Ignored. Although
Mime parents, educators, and policy makers
mistakenly contend that teenage sexual activity
can be controlled by pun It Ivr measures and
extolling the virtues of abstinence, the United
States Is the only developed country where
teenage pregnancy has Increased In recent years.
In the United States ... ambivalent. If not
purtlancial. attitudes about sex education and
contraception prevent teenagers from preventing
pregnancy. ... Countries with the most effective
sex education programs have the lowest rates of
teenage pregnancy. abortion and childbearing.
In Ihls ocuntry. teenagers need help, but loo
often get hypocrisy. Unless mistaken assump­
tions arc challenged and policies revised, unless
parents, educators and policy makers emphasize
the importance of avoiding pregnancy and make
contraceptive Information more widely available.
America s children will keep beating children.

The Nsw York Times

No modern war has been more lawless than the
savage conflict between Iran and Iraq. One side or
the other has slaughtered civilians, spewed
poison gdn. sent children Into battle, bombarded
neutral shipping, abused prisoners. And now.
they have spread the war lo Uie cities.
Alas, there Is no sheriff available to end Ihls
4 Vi-year shootout. ... Sadam Hussein, the presi­

dent of better-armed and less populous Iraq, has
widened the war In the hope of forcing a
settlement. Hut Inin shows no sign of settling for
anything less than his "punishment" for Igniting
the conflict.
The only promising gleam Is that neither side
wants to appear wholly barbarian. This gives
International agencies a modicum of levrrage,
and ll's high time to make better use of It ....
Yet as the war grinds on. the Securtty Council
still cannot bring Itself to pass real judgement ...
The savagery can be blamed on Baghdad and
Tehran, hut not this moral rollapse.

The Commercial Appeal. Memphis
It has become Increasingly evident that tranks
und other financial houses often are unwitting,
and sometimes witting, handmaidens of drug
smugglers.
They "launder" huge amounts of dirty money
by passing It through clean hands, thus making
Illicit drug-trade profits look legitimate.
Law enforcement officials recently suld they
believe that S i.2 billion transferred through the
Bank of Boston was tied to drug trafficking. The
bank was fined $500,000 for falling to report the
transactions ...
Claiming that bank officials and employees are
often lax or uncooperative, prosecutors want
tougher laws to help them crack down on money
laundering. One piece of legislation, for example,
would ... Impose criminal penalties on bankers
who deliberately Ignore evidence of money
laundering....
Illegal U S . drug trafficking Is estimated to

generate us much as $80 billion In cash a year. ...
If hankers don't eoojierair belter with luw
enforcement In following the Mafia's money flow,
they may full under some tough new laws, which
they will entirely deserve.

The Detroit News

If Ihe Republican leadership of Ihe U.S. Senale
wants to reduce the federal deficit. It's going to
have lo try something other than budget cuts and
tax Increases. The budget committee last week
proved Itself Incapable of the former, and the
president has rightly ruled out the latter. If those
seized with panic at the sight of deficits Insists on
trying to wipe out red Ink. they have one othrr
option; tax reform. As Individual Americans
struggle toward April 15 and the deadline for
filing their lax returns. It's obvious that this Is an
Idea worth trying.
Recently released Internal Revenue Service
statistics suggest how tax reform can help. They
show that federal government can trim the
deficits simply by reducing lax rates. A flat rate at
lower levels would be best at all — or at least a
system with less " progress!vlly." Several such
plans have been Introduced In Congress by
Democrats and Republicans.
... The final tax cut In 1963. like the first two
cuts, not only generated more tax revenue than
previous years — 11 percent more last year. In
fact — but redistributed Ihe burden of payment
dramatically.

Dallas Times Herald
As strange as It may seem. Rkhard Nixon has

done some thing that deserves emulating The
former president has decided lo give up his Secret
Service protection In order to save U.S. (uxjMiycra
an estimated $3 million a yeur. ... Obviously the
safety of former chief executives and their
families Is u matter of public concern. But one has
to question bow much protection Is ... designed to
preserve an Image ufter a president has left the
White House. One worthwhile proposal that has
been offered hy Sen. Lawton Chiles. D-Fla., would
Until Secret Service coverage for former presi­
dents to five years, unless the government
iH-lievrd that a threat existed.
we hope It prompts the nation's (wo other
ex-chlcf executives lo reassess their own Secret
Service protection.

The (Burlington, Iowa) Hawk Eye
Abortion Is a national conlroversy. but It's a
much hotter argument In some cities than In
others. Dubuque. Iowa. Is one where It's hot.
... In other stales, bombings have followed
threats. ... A non violent but equally offensive
antic has found Its way to Dubuque, however,
Thai's Ihe puhllr display ol photos of aborted
fetuses. In Dubuque, huge pictures are plastered
on billboards, showing fetuses with legs twisted
off.
Call It what you will. Sickening. Ill-advised.
Grotesque. Uncalled for. Gruesome.
Simply. It's too much The hope It that this latest
assault on the public's senslblltles will remain
uncommon because It Is unnecessary.

I
f • » * *

• I $ • • •

�« D — Evening H erald. Sanford. FI.

Sunday. M i r th 14. t » t l

•••Knowles Predicts Urbanization Of Sanford
C o ntinued from page I D
certified emergency medical training.
• In 1975 Sanford became the first city In the
state to submit a comprehensive land use plan for
state approval and was the first to have Its plan
approved by the state.
• In 1977 Sanford's new city hall was built
with a federal grant paying all costs.
• Also In 1977 Knowles began the legislative
drive to allow municipalities to get out of the
state's retirement system after It proved to be too
costly In relation to the benefits It was providing
city employees. The Legislature during Its 1985
session Is expected to adopt the legislation.
• In 1983-84 faced with a water shortage crisis
when seven of Its 11 city w ells became
contaminated with the pesticide EDB. the city
undertook a rehabilitation of the seven wells. The
approach used was to pour a new well casing
Inside the old one. but to a greater depth to
by-pass the ED B . The process worked In five of
the seven wells, allowing those to be salvaged and
put back In use.
• And this year, the city became the first In the
state to complete Its KXJ percent changeover of
street lights to the high pressure sodium vapor,
considered a more efficient method of street
lighting.
Among the other firsts Knowles points to with
pride, are the city's providing employees with
group health and life Insurance since many years
ago; the c ity 's central water system and
municipal sewer system serving the entire
co m m un ity, and the city's conversion of
municipal utility billing and posting to data
processing
In the near future, data processing In the city
government will be expanded. Knowles says, to
accommodate electronic payments of utility bills
uway from city hall. He also sees water meter
readings being accomplished by a portable,
hand held computer In the field with direct Input
to the central computer which will compute and
prepare the Individual monthly billings, without
handling by personnel
He also foresees expansion of the use of Impact
fees, levied against developers, to cover growth­
generated needs for expansion of police, fire,
traffic control and other needs.
He also sees a futue when the development of
departmental leaders as adm inistrators of
services will require Increased experience and
education. " T h e re will be a departmental
necessity to provide real planning of service
functions, personnel management, productivity,
budgetary control. The day of the 'g«x&gt;d ole boy'
or the ' best damn worker' being the dr(uirtmental leaders will lie past and It will not be
sufficient qualification." he said.
As Sanford grows. Knowles said public works
activities will encompass engineering and lx&gt;th
public safety departments will need to be brought
Into the city organizational structure for account­
ability. supervision and responsibility coordina­
tion. He said building, zoning, m inim um housing,
rode enforcement and planning will lx*come

functions In a future community services de­
partment and future changes will be accom­
modated.
A n d . he added, the future formation of
municipal employees Into labor unions can be
expected. "Constant consideration of the
municipal work force, with fairness and u n ­
derstanding. must be the rule for all municipal
leaders to avoid the work force's Idea of their need
for any union.
"T h e dividends of a fair, equitable handling of
personnel will be reflected In a non-union labor
force with better production, lower costs and
more employee satisfaction." he said.
During the 32 years Knowles has manned the

helm of Sanford, he has worked with dozens of
city commissioners and 16 different mayors. But.
the official who stands out most clearly In his
mind as the best, is Lee F. Moore, who served 17
years on the city commission — 16 of them as
mayor — and who did not seek re-election In the
December. 1984 city election.
"Lfe was a very special public servant. He was
astute, had finesse, a great ability to communi­
cate. He has a very quick grasp of facts, figures
and problems. I have the utmost respect for him."
Knowles said "T h e people of Sanford never
comprehended the quality of leadership he gave
the city. He was never a politician. He felt he had
a duty and obligation to serve.”

...Moore: Growth No Advantage
Continued from page ID
anticipated. Moore doesn't see much advantage to
It.
It will be advantageous for business, he said he
expects.
" I see apartment complexes popping up
everywhere I'm not sure doubling Sanford’s
population — from 27.000 to 50,000 or so — Is to
anyone's advantage. Traffic Is already fearful.” he
says.
"Looking at the growth from a businessman's
standpoint. It Is good. In m y business —
Sunnlland Corp. — as an example, the more
building In Seminole County, the more shingles
m y company will sell and the more fertilizer will
be sold for lawns. This Is our primary market.
"If Sanford's population doubles, twice as
many people will lx* here to buy our products. 1
suppose." he said. Hut Moore also reminds that
one national chain department store was built
here a number of years ago. and soon afterwards
u second, then a third, and now a fourth Is
coming. He pointed out that growth brings
competition and a division of the market for all
the department stores to survive.
Meanwhile. Sanford has ulready lost some of Its
small community atmosphere. Moore notes.
"Seventeen years ago. I knew everyone In town.
Today I don't."
Sanford has always been a friendly and
unusual community. In Moore's view. "It has a
way of taking strangers In and making them part
of the community." he says, reminded that when
Navy personnel were stationed at the naval air
station here muny became an Important part of
the community.
From Mcxirr's experiences while he served In
the U.S. Army, that same friendly approach was
not the standard In most communities where
military personnel were stationed. "Sanford's
atmosphere Is the reason why so many military
families from the old naval air stutlon decided to
settle here after retirement.”
Is there anything In Sanford Moore would

change If he had the opportunity again?
Moore Is still chafing from what he calls the
county's "blackmail policies" against developers
and builders that required his company, the
Sunnlland Corp.. to pay some $37,000 for
Improvements to the Intersection of state Road
419 at U.S. Highway 17-92 when his company
built Its office at the northeast corner of that
Intersection.
Hut, he says, he wonders If the city Is doing as
much as It should along the same lines by
requiring Industries, which bound Silver Lake
Road and Airport Boulevard near state Road 46.
to contribute to paving and drainage costs for the
city In exchange for the privilege they receive
from building their businesses and operating In
Sanford.
Moore said when he decided against running
for re election In December 1984 he wanted to
give more time to his business and family.
"Hut most of m y family Is not here." he said.
One daughter lives In Texas, another In Georgia,
a third Is at school at the University of Florida
and another Is at the University of Central
Florida.
Ills son. To m m y, however. Is In business with
him and Moore sees him dally Moore also has
four grandchildren — two boys and two girls. And
he quickly displays their pictures for viewing to
anyone w ho Is Interested. T h e youngest
grandchild Is two-year old Lee P. Mrxire. not the
second of the name, however. The toddler's
middle name Is Peralta, different from his
grandfather's middle name. Fermenter.
Moore flashes his familiar broad smile as hr
looks at little Lee's picture.
With city responsibilities gone. Moore Is
spending more time at work and watching
television a little more.
"Being mayor requires Just as much time as
you will allow It to and still have time for self,
family, community and your Job." he said.
Of his close working relationship with Knowles
during his ycurs In city government Moore says.

Books ^
'Linden Hills': Black Aspirations
Statement Ripples With Discontent
By U nited Press International
L in d e n H i l l s , by Glorlu N aylor.
(Tlcknor A Fields. 320 pp.. $10.95).
Somcwhul of u thriller and somewhat ol
a statement concerning black uxplrutlona
In Amcrlcu. "Linden Hills" ripples with
discontent.
Glorlu Naylor won the 1983 American
Ikxik Award for First Fiction for her
portrayal of black life In "The Women of
Brewster Place." Her second lxx»k seethes
with the same pain, ambition and fears of
the men und women who Inhabit this
affluent black suburb. It Is u piece Ihut
can only further Naylor's position as a
leading contemporary writer.
The story line Is difficult to describe,
but Imagine If you will. Dante's “ Inferno"
moved Into u 2()th century, relatively
affluent bluck suburb and you will
discover the Bnesse with words und
thoughts that Naylor oilers
The lair Is told through Willie Mason
and Lester Ttlson. who are out to earn
Christmas money by cleaning guruges
and yards In Linden Hills As they move
down through the hillside suburb In
which the largest and swankiest home­
steads arr near the bottom, they begin to
see the to rm e n t their successful
neighbors have gone through
Their last slop Is at Luther Nedced's
home, the landowner and mortician who
manipulates every move made In Linden
Hills and whose own life Is a living
nightmare
— Jc a n n ln c E. K lein (U P I)
Asim ov's New Guide to Science. h\
Isaac Asimov. (Basic Hooks. 969 pp.,
Illus $29 95)
This fourth edition of Asimov's expla­
nation ol science lor the non-scientist
Includes the many developments that
have taken place since lilt Ixxtk List was
revised In 1972 Whether he's talking
about bluck holes, molecules cancer or
the radio, Asimov's explanations are
umazlngly understandable and always
Interesting
T h e S e c re t A r m y , by D avid J .
Hcrcuson (Stein A Day. 278 pp . Ulus..
$17,951
This Is the story of the army made up
of prtvutr citizens from the United States
und other countries who went to Isrucl to
fight on Its bchulf lintnedlalely alter the
country's formation Hcrcuson tells of Its
recruiting, und of how Its weapons were
purchased and delivered

r *•

Sanford has been fortunate In the qualify of
commissioners. Knowles says. 'There are only
two I can recall who ran for higher office and both
were successful."
He noted that the late John Krlder served llrst
as a Sanford city commissioner and then was
elected to the county commission. And Thomas
McDonald, a former commissioner and former
mayor, was elected to the Florida Legislature.
"A ll the commissioners placed the city first.
None was In the process of climbing the ladder to
self-advancement or to go on to higher public
office." he said.
"A ll exerted leadership, seeking better ways of
doing things."

Best Sellers
By United Press International
Fiction

— Michael Mott
6. C ry of the Kalahari — Mark Owens
7. The Frugal Gourmet — Jeff Smith
8 . T h e One-Minute Salesperson —
Spencer Johnson
9. Surely You're Joking. Mr. Feynman
— Richard Feynman
10. The Courage to Change — Dennis
Wholcy

1. Thinner — Richard Bachman
2. Family Album — Danielle Steel
3. If Tom orrow Comes — Sidney
Sheldon
4. The Hunt for Red October — Tom
Clancy
5. Glitz — Elmore Leonard
6. Inside. Outside — Herman Wouk
Mass Paperbacks
7. Mlndbend — Robin Cook
1. The Aquitaine Progression — Robert
8. The Finishing School — Gall Godwin *
Ludlum
9. Mexico Set —•Lcn Delghton
10. See You Later. Alligator — William F. 2. Separate Beds — LaVyrle Spencer
3. Almost Paradise — Susan Isaacs
Buckley
4. Lord of the Dance — Andrew Greeley
5. Mafia Princess — Antoinette Gian
Non-lletlon
cans
1. Breaking with Moscow — Arkady
0 . O n e Mo r e S u n d a y — J o h n
Shevchenko
MacDonald
2. lacocca. An Autobiography — Lee
7. Smart Women — Judy Blume
larocca
8. One Police Plaza — William J .
3. Weight Watchers Quick S u m Pro­ Caunttt
gram Cookbook — Jean Nldetsch
9. Evergreen — Bclva Plain
4. Citizen Hughes — Michael Droenln
10. The Raj Quartet Vol. 1. Th e Jewel In
5. Seven Mountain* of Thomas Merlon the Crown — Paul Scott

Abortion A n gle Irks Reviewer
Mlndbend, by Robin Cook. (Putnam.
368 p p . $15.95).
From the author of "C o m a " and
"Godplaycr" comes a new medical terror.
In "Mlndbend." Robin Cook ventures
Into drug research and development.
Once again Cook, a graduate of Columbia
University Medical School, displays a
working knowledge of the medical field.
But In his choice of topic, he treads
dangerously close to the distasteful.
This latest fictions! offering centers on
the relationship of the Julian Clinic and
Arolen Pharmaceuticals. The company’s
Influence is known to penetrate Into the
physicians’ world, but Its extent and
accompanying horror Is uncovered by
th ird -y e a r m e dical student A d am
Schonberg.
He has been forced to drop out of
medical school with hts dancer wife
Jennifer’s pregnancy. Against the advice
of friends and colleagues, he signs on as
an Arolen salesman.
Adam soon discovers that many pro­
minent doctors leave their lucrative
private practices for the Julian Clinic
after they take a weeklong cruise-seminar
Arolen offers. Jennifer’s obstetrician Joins
the Julian after such a cruise.

The doctor Informs the couple that
amniocentesis tests show thetr unborn
child has multiple birth defects and must
be aborted. Then Adam finds the test
results have been tampered with. Coupl­
ing the news with the doctor's about-face
decision to Join the Julian. Adam decides
to sneak aboard the next Arolen cruise.
There he discovers the doctors ore put
through a mlndbendlng array of torture
Including electric shock and. In some
cases. Implantation of electrodes. Adam
also learns that a key component for
Arolen's new wonder drug is drawn from
aborted fetuses and the main supplier of
the same ts the Julian.
In "Godptayer." Cook explores the
concept of mercy killings. In the af­
terword of "Mlndbend." he notes that In
real life, drug firms attempt to sway
doctors to their products through a
variety of methods. That surely offers
endless possibilities for writers to explore.
However, abortion Is too sensitive and
controversial an Issue lo be used In the
manner Cook has used It In his latest
medical thriller. For that reason, consider
"Mlndbend" the wrong prescription for
leisure reading.

—Jcannlnc E. Klein

"Fete was and ts the outstanding city manager In
the state of Florida; well, at least one of the
outstanding He Is dedicated, a professional In the
performance of his duties and responsibilities and
stays out of the public eye. The good things that
have happened In Sanford came about because
they were part of Fete's responsibilities.
"Fete will be sorely missed. But 1 don't mean to
take anything away from the new city manager."
Moore said
Of the city's continuing battle with the state
over whether Sanford should be allowed to dump
Its sewer eflluent Into Lake Monroe rather than
going to the more sophisticated and more
expensive method of land spreading. Moore said
there Is something to being able to battle old
adversaries.
H r said while Knowles and Alex Alexander,
who heads the St. Johns District of the state
Department of Environmental Regulation, have
claimed to lx* friends over the years, they have
fought many fights.
Th e problem Is now out of Alexander's hands
and under the control of the agency's officials In
Tallahassee. And within the next few weeks,
Knowles also will no longer lx* In charge of
leading the city's side of the fray. "Alex Is out.
und Pete will lx* out soon." h r said
Moore, a native of Palmetto. Fla — hr calls
himself a Florida cracker. Ix&gt;rn and bred — . has
claimed Sanford ns his home since 1946 when he
and his wife. Ann. married.
Moore Joined the U.S. Arm y In 1941. and hr
and Ann met while students at the University ol
Florida H r got out of the Arm y In 1948 and
rejoined In 1949 He served during the Korean
conflict. He and his wife bought their first home
In Sanford In 1952
Although Moore separated from the active
A rm y In the IBSOs alter deciding. "I could do
something better and more profitable" on the
outside, he remained In the A rm y reserves After
4 | ■.* years service, he retired lusl year when he
was 60, as a lieutenant colonel.

Reporter Fulfills
Dream: Tells Of
Blacks In Vietnam
By Frank Spotnlts
UPI Feature W rite r
NEW YORK (UFH - Wallace
Terry takes a last sip of milk
before heading to the podium.
He glunces at the first line of tils
notes, which reads " Holly worxl,"
and tells of how movies have
u n f u llln g ly Ig n o re d b luck
heroism In American history.
He makes Jokes about the
Ironies, then hammers them In
with not-ao-funny stories of the
black men and women who have
died — und been Ignorrd.
T h e re were 5 .0 00 blacks
fighting In the American Revolu­
tion. 250.000 who fought In
Union blues during the Civil Wur
— a cascade of sacrifice leading
Inexorably to the focus of Terry's
riveting, painfully honest book
about Vietnam. "Bloods."
"Th e y had less to fight for."
Terry says of the black soldiers
In Vietnam, "and they would go
home to less."
He Is proud, unabashedly
proud, of the soldiers who
learned to forget color In the fare
of death. He Is enraged by the
num ber of blacks killed by
"friendly fire" and the GIs who
raised Confederate flags after
Martin Luther King J r . was
assassinated.
The speech ends and the slides
begin, accompanied by taperecorded voices of black veteruns. Shots of serene sunsets are
followed by those of destroyed
villages, decayed corpses, the
horrible pockmarks a bomb
leaves on the face of the jungle,
the face of a Vietnamese child.
"There's some degree of hor­
ror behind everything I see
there, even when I see a little
c h ild ." T e rry says a couple
hours later, sitting In a restau­
rant not far from the Columbia
University classroom where he
lectured.
Across from him Is Robert
Holcomb, one of the 20 soldiers
of various backgrounds whose
stories "Bloods" relates. In the
book. Holcomb tells of how he
reluctantly went lo Vietnam, the
hell he lived through and. 11
years after he came home, meet­
ing the son he sired there but
never knew existed.
Tonight. Holcomb is talking
about raising money for Vietnam
veterans centers and a memorial
that is to be erected In Manhat­
tan. He Is happy to see Terry
again and. when the two men
p art, they hug each other

warmly.
Terry has become something
of a veterans' hero since the
publication of "Bloods" last
August.
The txxik has drawn nearly
universal high praise and called
attention to the Injustices en
(lured by black soldiers. wh&lt;
accounted for 23 |x-rcent of tin
war's deaths, although black*
only comprise it) percent ol tin
nation's |x&gt;pulallon.
Its publication Is a persona
triumph for Terry, who s|x*n

REVIEW
two years In Vietnam as i
correspondent for Time maga
zlne and 12 years after tha
trying to get published u book nr
what he found there.
T e r r y . 4 6 , an o r d a l n e c
minister, hud covered the clvl
r i g h t s m o v e m e n t for tht
Washington Post (Martin Luthei
King was godfuther lo one of hi*
three children).
He first went to Vlqlnum to
write a story about the racial
Integration of the troop*, news
that so pleased the Johnson
administration that officials had
T e r r y b r i ef the pr esi dent
personally.
After the wur. he wrote u book
In straight narrative form and
began shopping It around He
has 120 rejection letters from a
decade spent employed as a
broadcast commentator so he
would have plenty of time to
work on his obsession
"It was not a commercially
viable s to ry ." he was told"America does not want to hear
any more about Vietnam. They
mo«t certainly do not want to
hear anything connected to
blacks who were In Vietnam."
When the acceptance letter
finally came. It wus not for the
book Te rry had written. He
could write his book about
blacks In Vietnam If It was an
"oral history." a book told In the
w o r d s of t h e v e t e r a n s
themselves.
Finding the veterans was not
hard. Telling their stories, which
read like well-crafted short
stories, was.
After the Interviews. Te rry
spent hours on end In a small
room with quote fragments
taped on the walls surrounding
him. working on each man’s
story.

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152068">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 24, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152069">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152070">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 24, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152071">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152072">
                <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;, March 24, 1985; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152073">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152074">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152075">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152076">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="15240" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="14854">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/b4adea462de98cec7d4aa5814c69a962.pdf</src>
        <authentication>c5bf3730d02c50c8564ceee38406bb22</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="152067">
                    <text>11 N a b b e d In S a n fo rd P r e -D a w n D r u g R aids
Eleven pcrvm s were arrested and a "large
quantity'* of cocaine and marijuana were seized
today during I I simultaneous predawn drug
raids hi Sanford and the Midway area of Seminole
County. jxillce officials said
The raids shut down whal polite suspect lo be
the major drug supplying bases of (he Qoldsboro
an il of Sanford anti Midway district of Seminole.
The sweep was a Joint effort of Sanford and
l.ongwood poller officers, Seminole County
sherlirs deputies, and the Seminole County and
Volusia County SW AT iSpeelal Weapons and
Tuctlesl teams, according to Sanford police
s|mkrsrnan Keith Wright.
The raids followed a month of undercover

Investigations In the areas by Sanford police and
Seminole County sheriff-s deputies. Wright said
Eleven teams of seven officers each raided one
of target at about 6 a m., according to Wright
Search warrants were served and dogs were used
to search for drugs No shots were fired and there
was only one Injury — a sheriffs deputy who
banged his knee on a door.
Seminole County sh eriffs Cap! Jay Leman
said deputy Wayne Murphy, a "point man" on
one of the trams, shattered or bruised his knee
whrn entering u doorway. He was discharged
today from Central Florida Regional Hospital in
satisfactory condition.
While the raids yielded a “ large quantity" of

drugs, the amount or how much It was worlh had
not yet been determined. Wright said.

controlled substance with Intent to distribute
$5 000 bond.

Arrested were:
• l.urr&gt; Felton. 26. of 2323 West 18th St..
Sanford, charged with possession o f cocaine,
possession w ith Intent to d istrib u te and
l&gt;ossrsslon of less than 20 grams of a controlled
substance, held In lieu of $8,000 Inind
• Augustus Malone. 49. of Rt. 2. Sipes Ave..
Sanford, charged with possession o f a sawed off
shotgun, held In lieu of $5,000
• Alice Mae Franklin. 46. of 3032 Center
Street. Midway, possession of a controlled
substance less than 20 grams, possession of a

• Robert Jackson. 37. 1121 7th Street.
SAnford. possession of a controlled substance,
possession with Intent to sell, possession of less
than 20 grams of a controlled substance. $5,500
• Herman llarrlng 23. ol 2340 Haudall Street.
Midway, disorderly conduct. 8 IOO bond
• Minnie Marian Cashe. 35. ol 1305 Sheppard
Ave.. Sanford, possession ol a controlled substanre over 20 grams, possession ol cocaine and
possession of controlled substance with intent to
distribute. $8,000
See RAID, page 14 A

Wine Sale
Will Be
Monitored

P&amp;Z Says No
Home C alls
On Business
By Rick Brunson
H erald S ta ff W rite r
The Sanford IMumilng and Zoning
Commission Thursday unanimously
recommended denial of a proposed
nmrndmrnt lo a zoning ordinance that
would have allowed professional and
business (Moplc living In residential
arras to conduct business on their
home phones.
The amendment, suggested by City
Manager Warren 'T e le ** Knowles,
would have allowed physicians, den­
tists. lawyers, clergymen and other
professionals to use their homes for
business communication by written or
telephone contact only. The city's law
against making, selling und advertising
products In residential ureas would
have remained In force.
K n ow les plans to operate as u
t s m a u lia n i o n c it y a lla lr a
h o m e u tte r h e re f Ires A p r i l .30

fro m

h ia

He h a s u rged p a s s a g e o f the
amendment In the past saying It was
needed to legalize what he estimates to
Ire about 150 home businesses thul are
alrrudy o|&gt;erntlng In ''technical vio­
lation'* of city law. He said trying to
enforce existing law Is virtually lmpossible.
He had no comment toduy on the
commission's recommendation

'You m oon getting (business)
phono calls at hom o is ille gal?'
The amendment, tagged with the
commission's displeasure, will lie sent
to the Sanford City Commission for
their final approval or denial
In opening the discussion on the
proposed amendment Thursday, acting
commission chairman Cliff Miller said
the commission Is trying to prevent
commercial zones wllhln residential
zones. He suld the amendment was
drawn up because the existing law Is
"too ambiguous" and difficult lo en­
force.
Robert Keith, of HOH Clinton St..
Sanford, told the commission he op(rosed homes bring used for businesses.
"Residential zones should be for
residents." he said.
He said doctors, lawyers and the
o th er p rofes sio n a ls listed In the
amendment should be nble to afford
ample office space und answering
services since "they are among the
highest paid In the country.**
C o m m is s io n e r Brent C a r ll e m ­
phasized that the Issue was not using
homes for offices but home phones for

MwaM PSaS Sr Ora f r y OaKni

S to p o v e r

S a n fo rd

M c G ru ff, the c r im e p reven tion dog. has a talk w ith A n d rew Sykes. 2,
of B urlington. N. J., du rin g a stop over of A m tr a k 's O peration
L ife s a v e r Express at the S anford A m tra k station. T h e train, w ith
special s a fe ty exh ibits fo r you n gsters, w as g r e e te d by Sanford
M a y o r B e tty e Sm ith and a 4th g ra d e class fr o m W oodlands
E le m en ta ry School. Th e pupils rod e the train to W in ter P a rk w h ile
stu dyin g e x h ib its fo cu sin g on p re v e n tio n o f g r a d e ccossin g
accidents. T o p m essages a re : ob ey the w arning sign s and signals at
h ighw ay ra ilro a d Intersections and don't w alk or p la y along railroa d
tracks.

See C ALLS, page I 4 A

Lake Mary Stalls Proposed Staff Pay Hikes
By Roger Sim m ons
H erald S ta ff W rite r
z\ committee's recommendations for
pay Increases for Lake Mary city
employees "distress" at least one area
resident and city's com m issioners
voted lo hold off on the proposal until a
special workshop next month.
During the citizens' participation |&gt;urt
ol Thursday night's city commission
meeting. George Duryea said Luke
Mary should nol compare Itself lo
larger cities paying higher salaries.
"Frankly. I'm distressed." Duryea
said "K vervtlm r I turn around I feel I
am being Ix-truyed."
Duryea said Luke Mary Is u small city
and Is not capable of paying the higher
salaries that other area cities are giving
their employees. "W e need to lixik at
the salary study und realize we are not
the city that we think we ure We are
not as big us we think we ure." he Mid
Duryea Mid II Lake Mary employees
did nol like their salaries they should
look clsewherr for employment.
The pro|&gt;oMl war presented lo the
commission at u special meeting on
March 14 and recommends that (hr
city bring salaries up to the level other
urea communities are paying In most
cases, the committee found Lake Mary
city employees were paid well below
the uveru ge In the co u n ty . The
personnel group also called for as much

'We'vo oponod a flood goto
horo rocontly. Than wo turn
around and toll tho pooplo
wo nood to raise taxes after
wo go on a spending spree.'
-Colin Ktogh
Lako M ary C o m m lu lo n tr

as $ I0.CXX) a-yeur hikes In the salaries
ot some city employees
C om m ission er Russ M egon cga l.
chairman of the Personnel Committee,
said the commission would thoroughly
review the propoMl
C om m issioner Colin Keogh suld
spending money to Increase city
em ployees' Mlarles would be Just
another example of the commission's
willingness to s|x-nd funds and then try
to raise taxes later. "W e've opened a
flood gale here recently Then we turn
around und tell the people we need to
raise taxes after we go on u spending
spree." Keogh Mid
Megoncgal defended the personnel
com m ittee's findings "T h e recom ­
mendation Is purely an extension of the
average Mlarles In the county.” he

TODAY
Action R eports.... 2A
Classifieds........ I-13A
Com ics................ I0A
Dear Abby............ 9A
Deaths.................14A
Dr. Lam b............ I0A
Editorial...............4A
Florida..................2A
Horoscope...........10A
Hospital................ 3A
Nation...................JA
People...................9A
Sports................ 4 &gt;A
Television.... Leisure
W eather................2A
W orld....................3A

"N o one can present something ol
tills sort without looking at the avail­
able lunds.
Megoncgal then recommended the
commission set a dale for a workshop

M id

meeting to go over the pay hike
proposal "W e need to adopt r salary
schedule and then place our employees
In that schedule." he Mid.
The workshop was set for April 11.

Reagan: It's High Time'
For U.S.-Soviet Summit
WASHINGTON tUPII - I'rrsldent
Keugun. putting aside his flrst-lcrin
rhetoric. M y * It Is "high tim e" for a
superpower summit and there are some
Issues that could lx- advanced In a
m eeting with new Kremlin leader
Mikhail Gorbachev.
At his news conference Thursday
night. Reagan acknowledged for the
first lime that hr Invtlcd Gorbachev lo
the United Stulcs for a summit and Mid
chances are good for such a meeting.
Reagun. ending a long simmering
policy dispute, also Mid some Issues
now "being discussed at the ministerial
level" now could probably "be further
advunerd If we met In a summit."
Previously, Reagan had Mid a sum­
mit would have to have u well prepared
agenda and u reasonable chance of
results In signed agreements.
“ What I always meant by an agenda
of things they want to talk about,
mutual problems dial confront us. and
I think It's high time that we did this."
hr Mid.
Reagan Mid protocol dictated that he
Invite Gorbachev to the United Stales
because "It's our turn to be the host."

Administration officials have sug­
gested the most convenient place und
time for a summit would tie In Nrw
York In September, whrn Gorbachev
m ight address the U N G en eral
Assembly.
A summit agrndu and perhaps the
arrangements are exjx-cted lo lx- dis­
cussed In Vienna In mid May when
Secretary of Stale George Shultz and
S o v ie t F o r e ig n M in is te r A n d r e i
Groinykourc scheduled to meet.
In making the summit overtures.
Rragan has set aside his first-term
rhetoric of calling the Soviet Union an
"evil empire" bent on fomenting revo­
lution around the globe.
Hut with U.S. and Soviet negotiators
meeting again In Geneva. Switzerland,
to discuss nuclear weapons reductions
and the change In Kremlin leadership.
Reugan has moderated hts tone.
During the news conference. Reugan
also said he Is ready to compromise at a
meeting today of Senate Republican
leaders whose budget plan differs from
his.
Hut he seemed to reject their In­
sistence on defense cuts.

By Deane Jordan
and
Roger Sim m ons
Agents of the federal Department of
zMcohol. Tobacco and Firearms were
bxiklng Into the |xndlng Mle today and
Saturday of 5.(XX» rases ol French wine
at 14 Industrial Park west of Sanlord to
determine If the sale Is Ix-tng conducted
according to an agreement Ixtween the
seller und the ATF
Approval of .the wine Mle — the
wine's valued at $3(X).lXX) wholesale —
by Globe Inqrorters of Wine and owner
James W Hickman, was being studied
today by the ATF to determine If the
agency was notllled of the particulars of
the Mle. Mid an A TF agent.
Hickman Unlay M id hr no longer
owns the wine and that Sun Hank of
Orlando became the sole owner of the
wine Thursday by court order.
The agent, bused In Atlanta, said an
Immediate conference wus scheduled
today to determine whether the (tend
tng side should go on. lx- stopped or
monitored by agents
"Y ou caught us behind the right
b a ll," the agent. Joan Karr, said
referring to Inquiries by the Evening
f/rra/d altool the auction, scheduled to
begin at 7 p m. today utter s 6 p.m.
wine-lusting session. A second sale Is
scheduled Saturday at 11 a m., both
auctions to be conducted by Rosedale
Realty and Auction Co.. Maitland.
ATF Is Interested In thr Mle because
the feds' agreement with Globe and
w as c o n d itio n a l und a one-tim e
agreement, according to Carroll Dukes,
an agent with A TF based In Tampa. A
condition ol thr ugrrcm rnl was that thr
agents be notified o f the Mle. which
they would then approve or disapprove,
according lo Karr
S. Joseph Piazza, of Orlando, an
attorney for Glove. M id trxlay as far as
he knows, all the necessary agreements
have been met and there should be no
problem with tonight's or Saturday's
auction
Dukes Mid an Importer cannot sell
wine or Import It without a permit,
which he said Globe did not have to his
know ledge. H o w ev er. Piazza said
Dukes has agreed to give Globe a
three-month wholesaler's license lo be
authorized prior lo tonight's and Sat­
urday's Mies, and that should allow the
auctions to proc eed without problems
Piazza Mid as far as he knows, the
authenticity and drtnkublllty of the
See W INE, page 14A

SCC P ark in g Lot Robbery Nets M an 3 Y e a rs

Wallace Payne. &gt;&lt;8, city manager of Crystal
River, right, and William Powers. 41, asst,
city m anager of P e rry , are being In­
terviewed today by Longwood comissioners seeking a city administrator.

A Daytona Beach man found guilty
by Jury ol armed robbery received 3
years for the Incident that was con­
nected with the abduction of a woman
In the parking lot of Seminole Commu­
nity College.
Ossie Thomas Stanley. 23. was sen­
tenced by Ctrrult Judge Robert U.
McGregor. Stanley, who was dubbed a
pathological liar by Assistant Slate
A tto r n e y Don M a rb lc sto n e. to ld
McGregor he was a victim of cir­
cumstance. McGregor said Stanley did
not know what truth was

According to the victim. Barbara
Anne Chasse. 31. of 3123 Falrwood
Court. Winter Park. Stanley approched
her Oct. 3 1 at SCC. Sanford.
He told her hts car had brokrn down
and asked for a ride to the front of the
school Ms Chasse agreed and as she
drove Stanley pulled a knife out of a
pair of atheletlc socks and told her he
needed her car to drive to Daytona
Beach.
Stanley threatened to kill Ms. Chasse
and ordered her out of the car on

Hot ROBBERY, page I4A

This is just a fraction of the 5,000
cases of French wine set to go on
the auction block tonight and Sat­
urday. The wine Is stored at the 1-4
Industrial Park west of Sanford.

�1A — Evewlwg Her* Id. Sanford, FI.

Friday, Ma rch 11, I f t S

Lake Mary Puts Halt On Growth

NATION

By R o ge r Simmons
H erald S ta ff W riter
The Lake Mary City Commission has
voted unanimously to adopt an eight-month
moratorium on new growth that will give
the city a chance to upgrade llsordinancc*.
The morftorlum. passed Thursday, will
apply to all applications for Ihr construction
of commercial buildings and residential
subdivisions, and will also cover rerun lugs.
Lake Mary Mayor Dick Fess said the
moratorium w ill give commissioners a
chance to review city laws and bring them
up to existing slate standards.

INBRIEF
Doctor lo v e Kidnapper'
Pleads Innocent In Plot
MINEOLA. N.Y. (UPI) — A woman physician pleaded
innocent to planning the love kidnapping of a retired
celebrity obstetrician-gynecologist who has treated Mia
Furrow. LUa Minnelli and Angle Dickinson, police said.
Dr. Rochelle Konlta. 42. appeared Thursday at her
Indlrtmenl on rharges she plotted with undercover police
agents to drug and kidnap Dr. Robert Feldman and bring
him to her Long Island home.
" I want to kill him with love.” Konlta allegedly told the
agents.
Knotts Is charged with offering the two agents §500 and
narcotics If they would kidnap Feldman from his Fifth
Avenue office In New York City.
On Thursday, allorneys In the case said Konlts
apparently had never met Feldman.
Konlts' scheme against Feldman was discovered when
undercover police agents began Investigating the woman
physician for allegedly selling drugs.

"It will allow us to set up appropriate
regulations on ordlnaces that are grossly
Inadequate." he said. "It will give us the
breathing room that we need.”
As an example of what will be done during
the moratorium. Commissioner Colin Keogh
cited a current regulation that allows
construction o f subdivisions without the

developer having to set a s id e . land for
rrrreatlonal use.
"I'd hate to see 400 kids living In an area
and have no place to play except in the
street." he said.
The growth moratorium was originally
proposed for four months, but tt was
extended to eight to make sure the
commission would have adequate time to
deal with all the necessary ordinance
changes. Fess said. He added that he would
rather have an right-month moratorium and
finish early than have a four-month ban
which might have to be extended for several
months.
According to Keogh, all building and
growth-related requests "now in the the
sy s te m " w ill not be affected bv the
moratorium.
In other action, the commission voted to
table the proposed adult entertainment

ordinance until its next meeting on April 4.
The ordinance would replace a current
city rrqulatlon governing dance halls. The
proposed statute would require the licensing
of adult entertainment facilities and permits
for employees who work in them. It would
also prohibit the sale, dispensing or con­
sumption of alcohol in such facilities.
Commissioner Harry Terry wanted the
delay for two reasons. First, he said the city
sh ou ld r e q u ire adult e n te rta in m e n t
establishments to be further than the
proposed 500 feet from schools, churches,
other adult entertainment businesses and
stores which dispense liquor. Secondly, he
nald that the proposed $50 fee to investigate
appllrats would not be enough to cover the
cltv's administrative expense*
There arc currently no adult entertain­
ment establishments in the city. Commis­
sioners have said the proposed law is an
attempt to make sure It stays that way.

G ra h am 's G ro w th
Plan W ould Cost
O v e r $100 Billion

Siblings M e e t'For Life'
HOUSTON (UI’ II — A 24-year-old man fighting leukemia
must wait until next week to learn If he can receive a
life saving bone marrow transplant from the brother and
sister he met for the first time at an emotional airport
gathering
Doctors at ihr University of Texas M l). Anderson
Hospital and Tumor Institute were to conduct tests on
Itarhura Davis and John Davis today to determine If either
has bone marrow compatible to Steven Akin, a chemical
plant worker from Victoria. Texas who has had leukemia
for two years.
Akin was given up for adoption In Amurtllo. Texas, in the
early 1960s, I.ant month he liegan searching for two
missing siblings he learned were left in foster care In
Chicago In 1957,
Publicity ubout his search brought the three together.
T in excited ubout meeting my family.” Akin said. "This
was n meeting for m y life.”

New Moto Patrol

'How Do I Land This Thing?'

Casselberry police rolled out three new
motorcycle patrol units Thursday with the
hope Ihey will help reduce traffic accidents
and fatalities. Consisting ot traffic homicide
investigators, left to right, Al Caplan, Rulon
Romanowskl and Ralph Mellon, the patrol

I’KORIA. III. fUPlJ — A businessman who hud never
llnwn ti plane took over the controls of a Cessna
Turbo-Centurion after Its pilot died and landed the craft
safely with coaching from Instructors on the grountl and In
the air.
Roger Dakich. 31. St. Louis, was returning from a
business trip Thursday ns the only passenger on a private,
single-engine plane en route from f’ulwaukee Airport In
Wheeling. Ill when the pilot rollupsed at the controls o f a
heart atlurk and died.
With coaching from an Instruelor on the ground and
another plane flying beside him. Dakich became familiar
wllh thr controls und landed the plane about 40 minutes
later at Peoria Airport. Wllh 000 feet to s|&gt;ore on the
0 .000-foot run wav.

Consum er Prices Up M odest .3%
WASHINGTON (U l’tl — Consumer prices went
up 0,3 percent In February, an Increase th.it
krrpt tlu- Inflation rate in the 3 5 percent range,
thanks to lower gasoline and meal prices, the
Lahor Department said today.
Rut when energy and food were excluded, the
rest of the goods and services *hol up 0 II percent,
‘tile most Itt neatlV three years, with clothing
(it lers skyrocket log after months of sides
Tfte price Index, up 0.2 January, lias not risen
more than 0,3 p e rm it slnreSeptember.
The Consumer Price Index tn February reached

FLORIDA
INBRIEF

Alt 82-year old Fern Park man
was In rrttleul condition today In
the burn unit of Orlando Re­
gional Medical Center Inllowlng
a Thursday (lie that destroyed
his trailer home
Sem in ole C ou n ty Flrr In
spcclor Ray Pippin said although
he hasn't had the opportunity to
talk with the victim, Norman
Dursttn ol lot *2 . Seminole
Mobile Homes Park. 656 ll.S.
Highway 17-92. he believes
Dorsitn may have been asleep
when the 7; 15 p ut lire broke
out.

VKKO HKACH (UPI) — Police stepped up their vlgtlunce
of soulhrust Florida beaches today for strollers picking up
more Hum rare bottles and shells.
Du (Tel bugs chocked full o f cocaine have been rolling onto
the bcurhrs und bobbing In the water close to shore along a
lo o mile front since Tuesday.
Ily Thursday night, federal and local law enforcement
IK-rsounel hud collected 10 duffel bugs containing u total of
1185 pounds of coculne. Three o f the hags were empty. No
one could tell how many bags the authorities may have
missed.
Despite high winds und rain along southeast Florida
treadles Thursday, a Customs Service helicopter spotted
people gathered on the beaches, keeping a watchful eye uut
for the olive-colored duffel bags, said Kilty Pryor,
spokeswoman for U.S. Customs In Miami.
Pryor said Ihr source o f the cocaine is still unknown.
There havr been no reports of planes dropping their cargo,
or dlslrrss calls from sinking ships.
The federal Drug Enforcement Administration estimates
Ihut each pound o f cocaine sells for $200,000 on the street
after Ire lug cut. Therefore, the 685 pounds recovered off the
coastline and on the beaches of Palm Reach. Martin and St.
Lucie counties so fur Is worth $137 million.

Dorsun was burned before
making his way iti Ills (runt
porch where a nrlgldxir pulled
him Irotn (he horning home.
Pippin said
Pippin believe*
Dorsan might have made it out
sooner ir bis $23.(MX) mobile
home had been equipped wllh a
smoke detector
Four Seminole County Fire
Department units rc*(xmdrd in
Ihr scene and had Ihe blu/c
u n d e r c o n t r o l w it h in 15

Gay Nuns Detail Their Lives

r s n * IVOttHoni prpaMM Sr IW W W l * '
O m u m tt iecerinee Dt**trt
I t rwfrtttnfshvt Inter O H r pthtt M tt

mWmenWnf w a r
insist mreu*Aevr me a*r Eras* tt mt
tSCMM rtHtl mnr*t#. merkOevt*
OM Oak

Fiar I4l Fewer

If*
.

&gt;■*«&lt;-■• 40
^

1*

40'$
^

I*

a LtfM
Fix Prefree*
FreeOom tevtnft

HCA..................

II
)4 S

A Fir ei
* Courh
A Police Bea t
minutes. Pippin said
Although a cause of the fire
had not itcen determined early
today. Pippin said he believes It
was accidental,

KKHISTER CHARGED
A Lnngwood man stopped
aflrr bis ear was clocked travel­
ing about 45 mpli In a 35 mph
/one on Hunt Club Boulevard.
Longwood. has Im*cii charged
with driving under the Inllurncr.
resisting arrest with violence
BUROLARIE8 $ THEFTS
anti battery on a sheriffs deputy.
Three air conditioners wllh a
S em in o le C ounty s h e r iffs combined value of $-1,700 were
deputy Dale Wagner reported stolen from behind (fir business
slopping the man’s ear at about o f realtor Murtr FlgnerTcdo at
3 p m Wednesday. The driver 2731 and 2735 slate Road 434,
nppenrrd to hide som ething Longw ood, on Tuesday, a c ­

NATIONAL REPORT: Wintry snowstorms
whipped through the mountains o f ihe West
today, slicking roads and threatening livestock,
while Southern thunderstorms produced snow In
North Carolina, raising hopes for another
weekend of skiing Snow today prompted travel­
ers advisories in Ihe mountains of Washington
and central New Mexico. Winds trailing ihe
storms guated lo 60 mph Thursday at Crulg.
Colo., and combined with the snow to close the
Rabbit Ears Pass. As the storms moved east,
trmperuturrs tell sharply, dropping from 45 to 22
degrees In three hours near C raig. Colo
Stockmens advisories were (tosled today In
Montana and South Dakota because of the threat
lo young livestock. In the South, thunderstorms
that slopped trulllc with 4 Inches of ball in
A labam a T h u rsd u y exten ded tod a y from
Arkansas to Kentucky and the Carolina.*, where 2
Inches of snow frostrd Avery County. NT* .
authorities said. A travelers advisory for snow
covered the northern m ountains o f North
Carolina. Mike Ellenburg. an Avery County
Shrriirs Department deputy, said roads were
slick "in most places," but that ski resorts needed
Ihe snow. Th r thunderstorms In Ihe Southeast
dumped nearly 2 'i Inches of ruin today on West
Palm Reach. Orlando received 4 06 inches of rain
Thursday night und ubout 5 Inches Tell earlier In
ihe day at tlooihvllle. La. Gale wurntngs were
posted today on the Atlantic Coast from Florida to
the Carollnas Winds gusted lo 60 mph Thursday
near Jackson. Miss . where the National Wruther

STOCKS
me a t M

A c t io n R e p o r t s

under the seat of Ihe car and
gave W a g n er permission to
seaielt the vehicle, a sheriffs
re|x&gt;rt said.
Wagnt-r reported finding a
pl|M- believed to have been used
to smoke murljuana and the
man reportedly grubbed It from
bis hand and threw It across the
roadway. The suspect refused to
lake a roadside sobriety lest, the
report said.
fit- then reportedly got back in
Ills vehicle and tried lo start II.
but Wagner interceded and the
man began hitting him. the
report said.
The man was subdued and
arrested. Charged wits Steven
Douglas Daniels. 18, o( I I I Cove
Lake Drive. He has been released
on $1,000 bond and Is scheduled
to appeal In court April 8

WEATHER

TALLAHASSEE (UPI| — A new book about former und
current nuns who are lesbians Is already causing a stir In
the publishing world, the work's small lesbian feminist
publishing firm Buys.
Nulud Press Inc. said it had orlglnully planned to print
5.000 hardcover und 45.000 soflrovcr copies of the book.
"Lesbian Nuns: Breaking Silence." but because of the
Initial response. It bus Increased the press run to 10.000
hardcover and 110.000 paperbacks.
In uddllion. thr firm said, a major New York publisher
haa acquired mass market paperback rights for next yeur,
excerpts have been sold to major magaxlnes arid the work
will Ik - u topic on at Irust two national television talk
shows
"This txaik is Important because It breaks the silence
over the existence of lesbian nuns." Rosemary Curb, one of
the work's two editors, told the Tallahassee Democrat “ It
diminishes thr taboo against lesbianism and homosex­
uality by having these strong, courageous women tell their
stories."
Curb, an English prufrssor at Rollins College In Winter
Park. Is a former nun, divorcee and mother.

B
O ifn
f' ftl Hant
• |,I&lt; •|d( iil« SAC

317.4. equivalent to a cost ol $317.40 lor tlie
governm ent's sample "market basket" of goods
and services that c nsi $IOO in 1007
G asoline prices in February dropped 2.5
pereettt and meats, poultry and fish slipped 0.2
percent.
Fruits and vegetables. stiU registering the cited
o f live winter trrr/e. shot up 2 H (serceiil
New ears, up 0.8 percent, and used ears,
gaining t.H percent, were another big upward
pressure on the price Index.

g iiu lr Florida's g ro w th unit d ry .

H opm rnt In w ays that will
"preserve and enhance the qual­
ity of life for (be people of our
state."
— Donna Estes

Elderly Fern Park Man Burned In M obile Home Fire

Beachcombers On Lookout
For Stray Bags Of Cocaine

A1Unix Sank

will focus on enforcem ent of traffic laws
with special attention being given to high
traffic areas such as the intersection of state
Road 436 and U.S. H igh w ay 17 92. The
m otorcycles are Casselberry's first.

Calling Gov. Hob Grahams
proposed growth management
plan for Florida "grandiose."
stale Sen Richard Langley. R
Clermont, said implementation
of thr plan would cost more than
$100 billion.
" It was u nrealistic of the
governor to propose such a
grandiose plan without provid­
ing some means of m rriin g the
c o si o f Im p le m e n tin g I t . "
Langley said.
Langley and Sen, John Vogt.
D-C’ocoa Reach. both members ol
Seminole C ounty's legislative
delegation, have been appointed
by Senate President Harry A.
J o h n s to n to s e r v e on the
S e n a te 's S e le c t C o m m ittee
charged with (he responsibility
ol studying the plan and making
changes ll necessary.
Growth management is one of
the top priorities o f the 1985
legislative session. Langley said
"li seems tlu* governor's plan
would only encourage growth In
those areas where growth is
already it major problem. I think
we need to direel growl It away
Irotn Ihr coastal areas of the
slate and Inio the interior where
ih r water and other natural
resources are more available,"
Langley said ihe plan, as ll
currently reads, would have to
I k modified signlliearilly unless
a funding method can Ik agreed
upon.
Johnston said the goal Is fn

US
|4W

IS
«V|
*4
.
tnrffi lim it
19 i&gt;tm banned

lit*

JAorrltttii
..... .
th i i ;n
NCS Cora
F t a a y .... ................... .
&lt;11 un'Cti AnQid
keiti t
...............14*9 U S
lav'nexel tent
- 10
MS
Sun lenAi
30S JOS

I

Service said a tornado hrtrlly touched down In a
lurm field
AREA FORECAST: Today (tartly sunny with a
high In Ihe upper 70s Wind west 10 to 15 mph.
Rain Chance 40 percent. Tonight lair und cooler.
Low to mid 50s Light wind Saturday mostly
sunny. High mid 70s to around 80 West wind 10
mph.
BOATING FORECAST! St. Augustine to
Jupiter Inlet out 50 miles — A small craft
advisory ts In eifect. Wind west 15 knots this
ufirrnoon (hen west around 10 knots later tonight
and Saturday. Sea decreasing to 3 to 5 feet this
afternoon and 3 Teel or Irsa tonight Wind and sea
higher tn scattered shuwers and thunderstorma
In-coming partly cloudy this afternoon.
EXTENDED FORECAST! Variable cloudiness
with a chance of showrrs ending north by
Sunday night and south Monday morning then
mostly (air and cooler through Tuesday. Lows
averaging 40s north lo 50a south except mid 60s
In keys. Highs averaging near 70 north (o upper
70s south.
AREA READ1N08 (0 a.m j: temperature 67;
o v e rn ig h t low 63; T h u rs d a y 's high: 67:
barometric pressure: 29 88. relative humidity: 93
percent; winds southwest al 12 mph; rain: 4.06
inch: sunrise 6 27 a m., sunset 6 38 p m
SATURDAY TIDES: Daytona Beach: highs.
9:17 a m.. 9 30 p m.: lows. 2 56 a m.. 3 02 p.m.:
Port Canaveral: highs. 9 09 a.m . 9:22 p m.;
lows. 2 47 a.m . 2 53 p.m.; Bayport: highs. 2 04
a in . 1 53 p m : lows. 8 07 a m.. 8:41 p.m

cording tn a report filed wllh
deputies
Kim Kav hub ol 2364 Seiera
lame, Maitland, reported to drp
idles that an $1,800 gold charm
bracelet disappeared from her
home between Jan. I and March
20.

FIRE CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department
responded lo the following calls

Wednesday
— 3 30 p 111 . 950 Mrllnnvlllr
Ave.. rescue. A 76-year-old man
who had a possible slrokr was
taken lo the hospital.
—4 17 p m , 1601 Sanford Ave.,
rescue. An ll-yrar-old boy was
treated for a nose bleed and left
In the care of his mother,
—5 45 p tn . 110 Academy Ave ,
rescue, Doris Jackson. 45. of the
same address was found dead al
her home. She had terminal
cancer, according to the rescue
report
—6 45 p m.. Grovevlew Village,
lire A brush lire was handled by
Sem inole County firelighters
because 11 was in their Jurisdic­
tion.
—7 25 p m.. 1008 French Ave..
fire. A (rash can fire was put out
without damage or injury.
—8:49 p.m.. 1307 Railroad Ave..
rescue. A 53-year-old woman
w ho had kidney problems was
taken to the hospital.

Thursday
—9 06 a m.. 2904 Orlando Drive,
rescue. A 25-year-old man ac­
cidentally cut his wrist with a
box cutter. He was treated at the
scene and went on hts own to
thr hospital.

I

/

�E y n iw g Hsrstd, Santord, FI.

WORLD

Israelis Defend Shooting Newsmen
CBS Team Hit By Tank Fire In 'Deliberate' Attack

INBRIEF

Despite Defeat, Khomeini
Pledges To Continue War
BEIRUT. Lebanon |UP1) — Iran's Ayatollah Ruholiah
Khomeini vowed to counter Iraqi "w a r mongerlng" and to
press ahead with the 4V4-year Persian Gulf war despite a
major Iranian defeat In the southern marshlands bordering
Iraq.
Iraq's state-run news agency warned residents o f Iran's
southern city o f Ahvaz to flee Impending attacks.
Ahvaz Is east o f the Howctza marshes, where Iraq last
week crushed an Invasion by tens o f thousands of poorly
trained Iranians.
The Iraqi victory was confirmed by U.S. officials Iraq
said It had killed 30.800 Iranians.
Iran s official Islamic Republic News Agency said Iraqi
warplanes hit several cities In the central zone of the
frontier Thursday.
Iraq reported Its planes shot down two Iranian U.S.-made
F-5 warplanes in a dogfight over the area. In the first air
tallies since Iraq declared Iran's airspace a prohibited zone
T uesday.

Fires Devastate Galapagos
QUITO. Ecuador (UPII — Fires burning for weeks on one
of the Galapagos Islands where Charles Darwin researched
the theory of evolution have forced giant tortoises and
other species he studied to abandon their offspring.
The report came as scientist Gunther Reck speculated
Thursday that plants destroyed by a stx-monlh drought In
Ecuador's Pacific Islands must have caught fire when one
of the Islands' 700 residents threw out some matches.
Reck, the director of the Charles Darwin science station
on the islands, said the fires have raged for 22 days. He
ruled out the theory that underground volcanic activity
heating rocks on the surface was responsible for the blaze
on the 1.782 square-mile Island o f Albemarle.
The Universe newsfvapcr of Quito said the fire has driven
penguins. Ilarnlngos. Iguanas and the "galapugos" or giant
sea turtles, for which the Islands were named, to flee —
leaving their eggs and young behind.
About 350 Ecuadoran IroopS are fighting the fire with the
help of a U.S Forest Service e x p e rt.

HOSPITAL NOTES
E Imor Howard
Jo* P Lamkm
L i x m « ll Sion*
Patricia A B***cmo. Altamont* Spring*
Jtn n la J McCormltk. OtBary
Monro* G Bowl** Jr , D*Hona
Jo*I*M Ho**. CJ*iIon*
Mart* M Ondo. Long wood
Paul H Mlnkl*. Orang*Clty
■ IRTHS
Jam** 0 and Star** Murptir, a baby boy.

C«fltr*l FtorxU R ffw n il Hol*&lt;t*l
Frta*r
ADM ISSIONS

'Sanlord
Von A Clark
Elo&gt;*» R SlailMjrm
J m k C Dud*. 0*1ton*
Anil*Onalll. DtIlona
Tomml* K Rot*. F*rn Park

OISCHAROIS
, San lord
Cltaltia Flalctwr

A m e r ic a n s

Dalton*

L iv in g

L o n g e r

JERUSALEM lU I’ ll - The Israeli army
defended killing two CBS newsmen In
southern Lebanon, saying Journalists who
go Into areas where guerrillas operate "take
upon themselves the risk ol getting hurt."
Cameraman Touflk Ghazzawl, 45. and
soundman BahIJc Mctnl. 35. were killed and
driver A yad llassan Harake. 45. was
seriously wounded by Israeli tank fire
Thursday In the village o f Kfar Melkt. a
suspet led guerrilla stronghold near the port
of Sldon. 24 m iles south of Beirut.
CBS News President Edward Joyce con­
demned the killings and sent a message to
I’rtmi Minister Shimon Peres demanding an
official Israeli Investigation.
Peres was not Immediately available for
comment
President Reagan called the newsmen's
deaths a tragedy, but said he needed

‘ Health and Human Services
Secretary Margaret Heckler, who
released the report, wrote In Its
preface: "Progress Is the word
that best defines and drscrtbrs
the health status o f the Ameri­
can people

pared with 3.5 years for whites.
The Infant mortality rate con­
tinues to decline, reaching 10.9
deaths In the first year for every
1.000 live births In 1983 But
the m ortality rate for black
Infants remains almost twice as
high as for whiles.
T h e lowest rate for black
Infant mortality tn any state Is
still 31 percent higher than the
highest rule for whiles, the
report said.

"It is clear from the taste
health yardsticks that the United
Stales Is m oving In the right
health direction; Both men and
women urr living longer: infant
mortality rout In lies its decline."
she said.

There Is "substantial variation
in Infant m o rta lity " am on g
slates, with whites ranging from
nine deaths per l.tXK) births in
1979-81, to 12.5 deaths per
1.000, (he report said. For
blacks, the range was 16 4 to
25,9.

The report. "H ealth United
S t a l e s . 1 9 8 4 . " s a id l i f e
expectancy Is at a record — 74 7
years for an American born In
1983

T h e r e p o r t s a id I n f a n t
m ortality still !» considerably
lo w e r In o t h e r In d u s t r ia l
countries. Sweden's rale Is lu ll
the U.S. figure.

Most recent Increases In life
expectancy com e because of
gains in the middle and elder
yrurs. Americans who turned 65
in 1983 could expect to live
another 168 years, the report
said.

A d m in istration critics say
progress In reducing the Infant
death rale tins stalled since the
dramatic gains of a decade ago.
The Children's Defense Fund
said recently II Is doubtful the
nation will reach the U.S. Sur­
geon General's large! of lowering
deaths to nine per 1.000 live
births by 1990.

W o m e n s t ill h a v e a life
expectancy advantage over men
— 78.3 years vs. 71 years for a
baby tarn In 1983 — but the gap
has narrowed since the mid1970s.
I
Whites still live lunger than
Marks — 75.2 years vs. 6 9 6
years — but "th a t racial gap Is
narrow ing." the report said.
Since 1970. blacks gained 5.5
years of life expectancy, com­

COLUMBUS. Ohio lUPII - A
special prosecutor has been
named to Investigate jxiMlble
criminal violations leading to the
shutdown o f 70 stale-chartered
savings and loan associations.
One firm. Century Savings
Bunk n! Cincinnati, with bran­
c h e s in Columbus and Toledo,
reopened Thursday with no sign
of customer "ru n s " on deposits.
"T h e y felt tt was a very
positive opening." said Kenneth
R Cox. director o f the Ohio
Department of Commerce, ad­
ding other Institutions are “ very
d o se" to quollfvlng for reopen­
ing
Cox said it was likely more
savings and loans would open
Monday under bolstered Insur­
ance,
The appointment of Lawrence
A Kane «Jr.. a Cincinnati at­
torney. was made Thursday by
stall Attorney General Anthony
J Celcbrezze. who granted Kane
"the broadest possible latitude"
to Invesllgulc. and said he would
operate independently of the
attorney general s office.
In his first comment on the
Ohio situation. President Reagan
laid .i nationally televised news
conference Thursday night that
lie c o n s id e re d the problem

Than

Referring to the Federal Re­
serve's promised extension of
emergency credit If necessary.
Reagan said. "That situation Is
being taken care o f by the
federal government. There Isn’t
anything else for Ihc federal
government to do."
Cox said ll probably will be
M o n d a y b e fo re th e th r ifts
awaiting eligibility arc permlllrd
to oiler limited withdrawal of
S750 to customers. He said
about five SAL's tried It Thurs­
day. but were asked by hls
agency to close.
The Century Savings opening
reduced to 68 the number of
privately Insured savings and
loans still closed since Gov.
Richard F. Celeste ordered them
to shut their doors last Frldav
The Society Corporation, a
Cleveland tank holding firm.
T h u rsd a y beca m e the first
closed savings and loans to be
turned Into a commercial bank.
It was given permission by the
Federal Reserve Uoard to absorb
Scioto Savings Hank of Col­
umbus. which It had owned
before the shutdown

E v e r;

men smoked t-lgarrltes. a slight
drop from I PRO. About 30 per­
cent o f adult women smoked, a
rate no different from 1980.
—Motor vehicle accidents arc
I he lea d in g cause o f death
among 15- to 24 year-olds, with
three Western states — W yom ­
ing. Nevada and New Mexico —
having I he highest rates. But
rates lor young whiles are twice
as high as fur young blacks.
A m o n g y o u n g b la ck m en .
homicide is the leading cuuse of
death

w

Mrs Artzner Is suing for loss of
her hutand's companionship,
s e r v ic e s , com fort und c o n ­
sortium.
—Deane Jordan

* W O R K ■G U A R A N T E E D
fir LO W EST P R IC E S
F A T H E R A N D SO N O F F E R A T IO N

4 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU

FREE
Road
Teal
Service In
Moat Cased

.* 0 .9 5
—

^

F lu id

^ C h a n ge

ifrans©are VSAVK
))

= A r a n a m is s io n s

*10

323-2288

2710 HWY. 17-92 SANFORD

i Y
»

ATCHLEY
I
♦
*
l
♦
i
1
»
*

SAVE
O N LY

limn** T* O* IMM

Magic Chef.

—In 1983. 35 percent of adult

Artzner states that he was
Injured In the accident and has
suffered physical and menial
pain as well as loss o f thr
enjoyment of life and the ability
to earn a living.

In Boston, public broad­
casting station WGBII played
"Bach around the Clock." 24
hours of Bach music.

APPUAKXgE &amp; W

Am ong the other highlights:
— Death rates, adjusted for
age. dropped by 26 percent
tat ween 1970 and 1983 from
heart attacks, the leading cause
o f death In America For stroke,
the decline was 48 percent In
those years.

ford, at 8:05 a.in. when a school
bus at the boulevard's Intersec­
tion with stale Road 46 pulled In
front of him. He said he had to
take evasive action to avoid
h ittin g the bus which then
caused an accident.

m

duced every lorm of musical
composition except opera.
"M o s t o f hls m usic Is
associated w’lih the Lutheran
church." said Fred Callaml.
music comnu-malor tor Na
t Io n a I P u b l i c R a d io in
W a s h in g to n
" L u th e r a n s
didn't approve of opera.”
In Washington. Thursday
was declared "Bach Day."
and Philadelphia renamed a
si reel Bach Place.
In San Francisco, all news
radio Kl'BS planned a series
of "six or seven " one minute
spots featuring Bach's music.
The station received so many
calls and le lle r s about a
half-hour tribute to llarh aired
during Ihc weekend that "We
decided to run II again on hls
birthday," said News Director
Ed Cavngnaro.
At St. J a m es Episcopal
Church In Keene. N IL, or­
ganist Jean Travugllul gave a
m idday r e d i a l o f Buell's
music.
’ 'l l a eh Is w o n d e r f u l ,
glorious, fulfilling, lie ’s Jii M
my sold food." she said

B u ild in g T ra n sm ission s

1 D ay

"CLEAN UP MONTH"

The shooting occurred as Israeli troops
were raiding several Moslem villages in
southern Lebanon The Israelis killed 21
suspected guerrillas, confiscated weapons
and ammunition, demolished several homes
containing arms and arrested dozens of
people. Israeli military sources said

U n ited P re ss In tern a tion al
Fans o f Johann Scbasilan
Bach celebrated the compos­
e r 's 300th birthday w ith
parties, rccllals. lim erickwriting contests and cerem o­
nies dedicating museums and
a street In hls honor.
About 15.000 members of
the East Gernum Communist
youth movement In Bach's
birthplace of Eisenach. East
Germany laid a wreath ai the
Bach memorial Thursday, the
official East German news
agency ADN reported.
T h e 3 2 n d S t r e e l- U S C
Performing and Visual Arts
elementary school threw a
birthday celebration featuring
an 8-by-5-foot cake frsloonrd
with 300 candles. The 900
children heard student per­
formances of classical and
Jazz music using Ihc works of
B a c h , th e fa th e r o f 20
children,
Whal might be the biggest
Uach bash of all began March
19. two days before the com ­
poser's birthday. In the Eust
German city of Leipzig, where
he spent nearly hall hls life
and wrote many of hls major
works.
Bach, a devoted member of
the Lutheran church, pro­

The Sanford City Commis­
sion has daclarsd Iha month
of March as " C l a a n - U p "
month lor tha City of Sanford.

MARCH '85

"T h e IDF does not fire on civilians.
Including Journalists, w ho are clearly Iden­
tified as such.” the statement said " I f
Journalists are approaching an area where
arm ed terrorists are. they lake upon
themselves the risk of getting hurt "

* 2 0 YE AR S EXPERANCE

KEEP YOUR
CITY CLEAN

Tha Sanford City Commis­
sion urges all residents to
Join In this short and keep
"The Friendly City” a clean
and beautiful city.

the village of Melkt In southern Lebanon
spotted armed people who had taken firing
position." the statement said.
" A lank that was In the area opened fire.
It appears that the CBS people reported hurt
were among those armed people.

Bach A rou nd The Clock

"lim ited to Ohio."

MODEL M11A-2
Compact Cabinet
Operates on 120-Volt Household Currant
500 Watte ol Microwave Power
Sea-Through Door And Interior Light
Removable Olees Tray

C asselb erry Couple Suing
School Board O v e r W reck
A Casselberry couple Is suing
the Seminole County School
kfciurU and a bus driver, claiming
he driver caused a Dec. 3, 1982
c c ld c n l Ih u l In ju r r d the
husband
I David G. Artzner and hls wife.
Irtarah. filed null In Seminole
circuit Court Thursday asking
or an unspecified amount of
lumagrs In excess o f $5,000
A'hlle the school bourd Is named
n the suit, the Identity of the
&gt;us driver Is not known, acordlugtn the complaint
• Artznrr states In the suit that
pc was traveling northbound on
pnm gc Boulevard, west of San

complete details of the Incident before he
would make a decision on whether to file a
protest with the Israeli government.
"1 am sure this was not a deliberate
killing.'* Reagan said during hts nationally
televised news conference Thursday night.
A CBS spokeswoman In New York quoted
wlincsses as saying the three newsmen —
all Lebanese nationals — were attacked after
stopping to film a car belonging to the
UP1TN television news agency that had
been hit by Israeli gunfire.
French television reporter Marine Jacquematn. who was helping the UPITN crew,
described the attack as "deliberate" and
"not preceded by a warning."
The Israeli army defended the shooting tn
a statement issued Thursday night.
"A n IDF (Israeli military) force that was
engaged tn military duly on the outskirts of

Special Prosecutor Appointed
To Probe Ohio S&amp;L Closings

Black Infant M o rta lity Remains Hit
WASHINGTON IUP1J - Amer­
icans are living longer than ever
and the r a c ia l g a p In life
expectancy Is closing but black
Infants still die at far higher
rules than whites, the govern­
ment's annual heullh report said
today.

Friday. March II . I t U - I A

(E26AA)

Sunray
Large, Recessed Cooktop
Up-Angle Panel with Sefety Controls
Infinite Heel Controls
Plug-In, Lift-out Surface Units
Uft-otf Oven Door
2 Seif-Stop Oven Recks
2-Ptec* Smokeless Broiler Pen end Grill
Oven end Surface “On" Indicator Lights

MODEL TTK 140
Kelvinator
• Trimwall* construction
•
•
•
•
•

28“ wide
14 cu. ft. total capacity
3 4 cu. ft. freezer capacity
Reversible doors
adjustable sliding shelves
Nwy. I7-F2

S o w in g Central Florid* Over t t Yeere

PRICES F O B. ATCHLEY WAREHOUSE

70* Merit* Hwy. 17-PI • Ungwsed ___

M a « * * - is « e . #

u s s * - ! 0" * -0"
ATCHLEY1*
SALES: (305)831-3101

* 4y s

*

J

�i

E v e n in g H e r a ld

BEN W A TTEN B ER G

( u s p i m-iM)
300 N. FRENCH AVE . SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-0993

Friday, March 72, 1885— 4A
Wayn* 0. Doyls. Publuhtr
Thomat Giordano, Managing Editor
Malvin Adklnt, Advertising Director
Home Delivery. Week. 81.10: Mdhth. 84.75: 3 Month*.
• 14 23 6 Month*. *27.00. Year. SSI.00 fly Mall Week.
• I 50. Month. SO 00; 3 Months. $18 00:6 Months 832 50:
Year. 80000

Maggie Beats
Marxist Scargill

The Fair, Flat Japanese Defense Tax'
A* you may have noted. America (aces some
serious economic problems. Luckily. I know
how to solve them
There Is the delicti. Our government spends
more than we take In. In Washington, they are
trying to figure out how to knock 850 billion ofT
the deficit. People are concerned because It Is
believed by many that high deficits are
responsible for high Interest rates, and high
Interest rates sooner or later cause recession.
There Is the trade deficit. We buy more goods
from foreigners than we sell to foreigners —
about 5120 billion per year more. This Is
because the dollar Is priced so high In foreign
currencies, which Is caused by the allure of our
high Interest rales. All that makes American
goods too expensive abroad — which means
unemployment for some American workers who
make goods for the export market.
There Is I he Japanese problem. The Japanese
are firm believers In one-way free trade. They
sell us cars, videocassette recorders and cam ­
eras. But they make It very difficult for us to sell
anything lo them. Every year Ihey say they will
relax restrictions, but they rarely do. Tills
one-way street further Increases the trade
deficit.

A lth o u g h (h e c o lla p s e o f th e B ritish
m lneworkeni' year long strike m arks a victo­
ry for Prim e Minister Margaret Thatcher's
governm ent, the triumph was a costly one In
terms o f both lost revenues and social unrest.
As for the m lneworkeni and their families,
the strike was a disaster — and It did little
good for the trade union m ovem ent as a
whole or the Labor Party, either.
In all. Just about everyone ended up with
the short end o f the stick.
Am idst all the suffering, bitterness nnd
recriminations It Is difficult to find any silver SCIENCE W ORLD
lining, but there Is a lesson or two In the
tragic affair.
One lesson the strike against the stateowned National Coal Board Is the danger to
trade unionism o f com m ingling politics with
economic objectives In a Job action against a
governm ent em ployer.
It Is generally assumed that state owner­
ship o f industry favors workers over man­
agement.
And where purely economic disputes are
By United Press International
Involved, this Is largely true, since govern­
People who use skin patches
ment managers have polltlcul Incentives to containing drugs to prevent motion
aid workers and — unless the state Is sickness should wush their hands
sincerely Interested In making a profit, which after applying Ihe pads to avoid
It rarely Is — have u few econom ic Incentives contaminating Ihclr eyes, a Boston
physician says.
to resist workers’ demands.
Touching an eye with fingers that
H ow ever, the d yn am ics ch a n ge when
handled the patch could result In
state-employed workers have hidden (or. in
dilation of the pupil for six to 12
the case o f the m lneworkcrs* avow edly hours, wrote Dr. Bruce H. Price.
Murxlst and pro-Soviet president. Arthur Beth Israel Hospital. Boston. In the
Scargill, not so hidden) political objectives Journal o f the American Medical
beneath their demands.
Association.
Because, while u governm ent may be a
Scopolamine patrhes — small
benign em ployer, It also Is the sovereign medicated bandages placed behind
Ih e cu r th u l s l o w l y r e le a s e
polltlcul authority.
No self-respecting democratic government medication — are becoming more
will, or could afford to. cede Its sovereignty to |&gt;opular us treatment for seasick­
ness. dizziness, vertigo and tinnitus,
what amounts lo a revolutionary movement,
ringing In the cur. But few doctors
whether the rebels brandish guns or Just go and fewer patients aware of this
out on a wildcat strike.
adverse effect, he said.

There Is the problem o f fair taxation.
Everyone Is trying to figure out how to make our
tax code simpler and more fair. That means
eliminating tax breaks Bui many Interest
groups do not want the breaks eliminated
because It would raise their taxes. Accordingly,
they lobby the politicians, making It difficult to
change the tax code
So. what we need Is elementary: a device to
lower the budget deficit, lower Ihe trade deficit,
send the Japanese a message, and make taxes
simpler. My all purpose solution: "T h e Fair.
Flat. Japanese Defense T a x " — hereafter called
the "FFJD T."
You see. Ihe Japanese only spend about 1
percent of their gross national product for
defense. The Unlled States spends about 6
percent of GNP.
That's not fair. After all. the United States
defends Japan. We have pledged our armed
forces and our nuclear retaliatory ability to let
the world know that Japan Is off limits This Is
an Important guarantee to the Japanese, who
happen to live near Russia and China.
For many years we have urged the Japanese
to raise their defense budget. Each year they say
they will: each year they do very little. They say

that It Is a ticklish political pfoblcm After all.
they lost a war they started, they were bombed
with atomic weapons, millions were killed. The
country was traumatized and wants never to
rearm.
Our policy should be this: "O K. we un­
derstand your problem. Japan. Just pay us the
money.”
The Japanese GNP runs about S I trillion per
year. If they spent an additional 3 percent per
year of that on defense — that Is. the same rate
we spend — It would cost them an extra $50
billion. Under my plan, we would levy a flat tax
of $50 billion on japan.
Such a payment would meet the current
target of bud get-deficit reduction.
Il would
curtail our trade deficit with Japan by an
Immediate $50 billion. Finally, some of the
bonus from the FFJDT could be used lo cut
American taxes: this could be an Inducement lo
special-interest groups not to oppose the US.
flat-tax proposals. All of our problems would be
solved.
We sim ply make the Japanese an offer they
can't refuse: Pay up. or try to defend yourself
against your potential enemies.

ROBERT WALTERS

Skin
Patch
Advice

The great neet In Britain now Is to salve the
wounds left by the Btrlke.
Notwithstanding Scarglll's threat to con­
tinue gucrlllu warfurc against the coul board,
the miners would do best to settle back down
to business and refrain from reprisals against
either the governm ent or those miners who
returned to the pits on their own.
And while the government bus vowed not
to rehlrc m iners who were fired for picket-line
violence, som e form of limited am nesty for
those culpable might hasten the return of
(trace In the mines.
If there Is any silver lining. It may be the
chastening that has been administered to
Britain's fractious left. It w asn’ t Just Con­
servatives w h o opposed thr strike.
Muny people In the trade union movement
and the Labor Purty ulso were disturbed by
the unauthorized walkout, Scarglll's violent
tactics and his open courting o f financial
support from Soviet-bloc countries nnd Libya.
If they w ere sufficiently unnerved by these
signs o f the directions In which the radical left
would take the country, they might Initiate a
m ove back toward the political center.

Please Write
Letters to the editor are 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.

BERRYS WORLD

Family's
Victory
For All s

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Ken and
Fran Nathanson's political odyssey j
— an exceptional Journey that has
s e e n th e ir p e r s o n a l g r ie f
transformed Into enlightened public
policy — began on a stormy day,
almost a decade ago.
On Ihe day after Christmas 1975.
the Nathansons were driving from
thetr home In the Washington
su b u rb s lo v is it r e la tiv e s In
Massachusetts. Their holiday irlp
came lo a tragic end on an Interstate
highway In Rhode Islund when a
tractor trailer plowed Into the rear
o f Ihe car. killing their 14-year-old
daughter, Kamy.
The operator of the truck, the
Nathansons later learned, held a
__________
t&amp; itynrw s sejencs
driver's license from his home state
o f New J r r s e y — bul II was
suspended at the time of the crash.
ROBERT W A G M A N
In fact, hla driving record was so
poor that the New Jersey license
Instructions for this prescribed
had been suspended on six prior
drug, marketed as Trunsdcrm Scop,
occasions — bul when Ihe accident
advise users to wash their hands
occurred he w as d riv in g with
after application.
another license. Issued In Artzonu.
Once In place, a bucking layer
lor example, one Indiana thermostat
W A S H IN G TO N INKAI Th e
The Nathansons embarked on a
should shield the medicated layer
plant
permanently
cut
tts
workforce
Kcngmi administration tnkrs pride
personal rrusnrtr to ensure thal the
from being touchrd. according lo
by 334 workers. Today that plant ts
In Ihe furl dial more Americans artfederal government maintained un,
CIOY-GEIGY. the com pany that
operating profitably and more lhan
working. and that more Jobs have
a c c u r a t e , c u r r e n t and com-*,
makes the patches.
?X)
(icrcent
of
the
fired
workers
have
been created.
prehrnslvc National Driver Register.-The eyes have It
found new employment.
Others see a grimmer trend —
It would provide the license-issuing
A University of Florida graduate
muny o f those workers are barely
officials of all stales with Informa ,
This ts a success story, says the
student Is trying lo find out Just
making It. and most of the new Jobs
Don about drivers whose licenses’
Reagan administration An Industry
how good u shark's vision really Is
jray very little.
had been canceled, suspended,
streamlined Itself and' returned to
In a study thul could undermine the
Today's unemployment rate Is a
profitability w hile the econom y
withdrawn or denied In other slates.
belief that sharks see their &lt;|uurry as
vast Improvement over the January
expanded and created new Jobs for
The NDH theoretically had been
blurs of movement
1982 level of 10 I percent, the
those who were displaced.
in existence since I960, when
“ It's really a lack of Information
post-World War II record high. That
l e g i s l a t i o n m a n d a tin g Its
H o w e v e r , c r i t i c s c la im th e
I hut has led people to say shark
occured at the height of the re­
establishment wus signed Into law
specifics
are
as
Important
as
Du­
vision Is poor." says Robert Hueler.
cession . In February, lire un­
— but neither stale nor federal
num bers.
Scientists have long assumed that
employment rate of 7.2 percent
officials had been enthusiastic about
a shark s vision Is limited and
Only aliout half of Die men fired
rem ained up slightly from the
actually Implementing Ihe statute.
corresponds roughly to human pe­
from that Indiana plant lound Jobs
(our-ycur low of 7.0 percent last
A b a n d o n in g th eir successful
rip h eral vision. But H uetcr Is
comparable to those they held. Only
November.
advertising and public relations
.working lo show the shark's vision
u ImhiI 15 percent of thr women fired
The Bureau of Labor Statistics
business, ihe Nathansons dedicated
Is speclull/ed on a more subtle level
were able to replace those )obs with
says that the continuing recovery
themselves to the task of reviving
than previously thought.
similar-paying ones Seventy per­
created 300,000 new Jobs In Febru­
and sustaining thr NDH.
Working at thr Whitney Marine
cent of the women found serviceary.
They had m ade considerable
Laboratory near St. Augustine, Fla..
business Jobs und makr an average
Experts within the government
progress toward attaining that goal
Hueler Is looking for evidence that n
of 40 percent less than they once
say lhat the latest unemployment
by 1981. when President Reagan's
shark's brain has a larger working
did. More lhan one-third of the
figures show that since the 19H1-82
new appointees at the Department
area for certain (wrts of its visual
women ami 15 percent of the men
recession, the nation has been
of Transportation decided to termi­
field by correlating paints In the
could find only purl-time Jobs — and
shifting from a manufacturingnate the en tire program us a
brain o f a lemon shark with (mints
although the government defines
based economy to one centered on
cost-cutting measure.
In the shark's field of vision.
them as "w ork in g." they no longer
service Industries
By then, the Nathansons hud
earn a living wage
The recovery ha* created millions
Solving that sunken look
considerable evidence lo support
Plastic surgeons from Emory Uni­ of Jobs In the past two years. But an
their contention that as many as 20
T h ls r e s h a p in g of the U S.
unusually large number of them
versity in Atlanta say thul "sunk­
million drivers — most of whom
economy frightens muny analysis,
have been In service Industries,
en " fuclal look can be solved with
have been convicted on alcoholwho say thul we must lierotne as
w h ic h p a y v a s t ly le s s th a n
padding made from a fat-laden
related charges or are chronic vtoc o n c e r n e d a b o u t Ih e u n •
manufacturing and heavy Industry.
Intrrnal membrane.
lalors of other laws — hold llcensea
derrmployed as we are about the
This warns of critical long term
" In patients with a condition culled
Issued by slates unaware of thetr
unemployed.
problems for the entire economy.
hemifacial utrophy. the fal on one
records elsewhere.
If Ihe trend continues, they say.
Last m onth alone, says Ihe
side o f the face dissolves und
Refusing to allow the program to
the nation might find Itself with
bureau, while Ihe economy gained
underlying bone und muscle are
be killed. Ken Nathanson went
almost full employment — but with
3 0 0 .0 0 0 Jobs, il lost 8 2 .0 0 0
destroyed. Their atrophied und
directly to the federal officials who
lens of millions who can'l provide
manufacturing Jobs, one-third ul
sunken faces can be helped with the
had proposed eliminating all NDH
th e ir fa m ilie s w ith a n y th in g
them In the auto Industry.
patient s own tissue Instead of
funding and argued that they made
approaching a dr cent standard of
Several recent sludlrs examine
silicone padding, said Drs. M J
a mistake After hearing him. they
living
Oils problem During the recession.
Jurkicwirz and Dr. Foad Nahal.
acknowledged Ihelr error.

More Work For Less

JA C K ANDERSON

Congressman Still Fighting To Cl ear Name
W A S H IN G T O N - T h e r e Is
nothing so devastating us an ugly
political scandal that rages fur
months and ruins some |x&gt;wrrful
figure.
Hundreds of eager InvestIgaiors.
with Ihe scent of blood In thetr
nostrils, are now wulling fur Ihe
ch an ce lo en ga ge a big name
udveraary In such a mortal battle.

"A M now tor the latest update on the presi­
dent's lower intestinal tract..."
I ' - *•

I

•

I

Unfortunately, this hus produced
u number of mlnl-Wulcrgules and
t n ln i- A U S C A M s . w h ic h h a v e
exploded Into the headline* only to
fizzle later. Too many Innocent
people have been recklessly ac­
cused. then exonerated only ufler
months of defending themselves.
The headlines fade, but leave a toll
In rulnea career* and broken live*.
T h u Is the story of one victim.
Krp. Carroll Hubbard. D-Ky-. who
was pul through tw o years of
anguish.

You huvr no Idea how I've
su ffe re d , und what I 'v e been
through." he told my associate Indy
Usdhwur.
Hubbard, now serving his sixth
term In Ihe House, was accused of
using congressional stall members
to perform campaign chores during
an unsuccessful bid for the Ken­
tucky governorship In 1979 On
orders from the Justice Depart­
m ent'* publlc-tntegrlly section, the
U ll spent 19 months digging Into
the charge
During this period — June 1981
lu February 1983 — unnamed
Justice Department source* re­
peatedly leaked Information to Du­
pres* on the progress o f the In­
vestigation. Hubbard said
.Hut at the end. Die FBI came up
ctnply-huudcd: the Inquiry was
closed and no acllon agalnsl Hub­
bard wo* recommended
The congressman felt he was

entitled to some redress for Ihe pain
he had sulfercd. He was convinced
Dial he was set up and thal Ihe case
(lies wuutd prove this. So he asked
for the d o cu m e n ts under th e
Freedom o f Information and Privacy
acts.
Months later, to his utter dismay,
the Justice Department Informed
him lhat "th is file number could not
be located .” Furious. Hubbard
wrote lo the attorney general:
■ Docs the Justice Department
Investigate one of the 435 member*
of the U S. Houae of Representatives
for 19 months and then Inexplicably
walk away, washing Its hands?"
Hubbard had hts suspicions about
those missing flic* und demanded
angrily In the letter: "Did tho*e files
contain ihe name* ... (oil Kentucky
politicians who were pushing the
Investigation for personal and-or
political reasuns?"
The Justice Department attorney

In charge o f the Investigation. Rob
ert Andary. spent "m ore lhan a year
In Kentucky, where he got lo know
some of my political opponents."
added Hubbard.
A Justice Department source in­
sisted that Andary did not a d out o f
malice but. In fart, was responsible
for closing the case after he realized
lhat the charge had no foundation. ,,
Last m onth, (h r missing in ­
vestigative files mysteriously turned
up. But Hubbard Is still not satisfied
that he has received the full record
In his case.
"I'm a victim of political target­
ing." he said, "b y a lew Kentucky
politicians and thetr friends Inside
the U.S. Justice Department."
Who were Hubbard's tormentors?
The files don't say. Under the
Constitution as It's suppoacd to be
administered, the congressman la
entitled to know.

�** * *

Could Be 5 Times Worse Than The Stuff Outdoors

"Closed systems, combined with the
ever-increasing number o f cherntculs used
In building materials, pose new problems
which are little understood and which are
made worse in some situations because
design and occupancy recommendations
have been Ignored." said Michael Slenburg.
director of the Air Toxics Unit o f the
Environmental Protection Agency. Region
9.
For Instance, partitions have been used to
make space for two offices where only one

•*

\

‘Closed systems, combined with the
ever*increasing number of chemi*
cals used in building materials,
pose new problems which are little
understood and which are made
worse in some situations because
design and occupancy recommenda­
tions have been ignored.'

-Michael Stenburg of the EPA

was intended, or copy machines placed In
small closed sjwces without ventilation have
Increased the area's contaminants.
"Jurisdiction Is a problem slnrr no one Is
sure whose responsibility Indoor air pollu­
tion should be." said Lee Baxter, director of
the western region of the U.S. Consumer
Products Safety Commission.
The EPA has set no standards for Indoor
air pollution.
The problem Is reflected In the number of
lawsuits filed by workers, which has
skyrocketed from a handful five years ago to
several thousand, said Washington. DC.,
attorney Laurence Klrseh.
The pollutants and their sourers vary, the
experts said, citing in particular:
—Carbon monoxide Irom gas stoves and

%

»

%

\

. I

&lt;*

Friday, March 2J, 1t t J — 5A

Police: Drugs Removed
From Kennedy's Room

1

■Contaminants that once would have been
released Into the outside air are in some
cases recirculated throughout buildings,
said Jerome Wesofowskl. chief o f the Air
and Industrial Hygiene Laboratory o f the
California Department of Health Services.

**

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI,

Office Pollution
.SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — Air pollution in
the office may be two to five times worse
than outdoors, warn experts who blame
modem, energy-efficient buildings and a
lack of federal standards.
1
."W ith the advent of airtight buildings,
constructed with energy conservation in
mind. Indoor contaminants have become a
major health hazard." said Philip Morey of
the Environmental Investigations Branch of
the National Institute of Occupational Safety
and Health In Morgantown. W.Va.
"Pollution Is In some cases two to five
times higher Indoors than outdoors," he
said.

*

WEST PALM HEATH fUPII
— A chemist says two drugs
found in David Kennedy's
Ixxlv also were discovered lit
the toilet in his hotel room,
adding to police suspicion
that drugs were removed from
the room before the Ixxlv was
discovered.

furnaces that may cause headache, nausea
and unconsciousness
—Nitrogen oxides from gas stoves and
heaters that may cause headache, nausea
and lung problems.
—A radioactive gas called radon from
building materials, groundwater and soil
that has been linked to cancer.

Jay Plntaciuta. a chemist
with the Palm Beach County
Sheriff’ s Department, wild In
a deposition that Inters of
cocaine and the powerful
painkiller Demerol were pres­
ent tn two vtals of water taken
from the toilet in Kennedy's
room at the Brazilian Court
Hotel in Palm Beach.
Plnlacitda said in the depo­
sition llled Tuesday mid made
public Thursday that hr could
not determine II the cocaine
had been thrown Into (he
toilet or was part of some
mucus also found there.
He said tt K possible 1 1it*
cocaine was in the mucus
Itreatise it is often snorted,
but It Is doubtful tIn* Demerol
was snorted
Kennedy was found dead ol
a drug overdose in the room
April 2.1 Police have said In

—Asbestos Irom fireproofing and Insula­
tion. also linked lo rancer.

—Formaldehyde from foam Insulation,
parltcle board, plywood and tobacco smoke
that may cause respiratory Irritation,
nausea, headache and Is a suspected
carcinogen.
—Hydrocarbons and other organic chem i­
cals from copiers, liquid paper, a rm * 's and
floor and furniture polish that may cause
respiratory Irritation, nausea, headache and
eye Irritation.
— Particulates such as dust, pollens,
tuictcrla from tobacco smoke. Ilbrous mate­
rials. combustion products and aerosols that
may cause allergic reactions, respiratory
Irritations and rashes
Baxter recommended gelling “ as much
fresh air in your life as possible." and. il
symptoms persist. seeking medical help
Morey said many Indoor pullullnn pro­
blems could be reduced Ihrmigh pro|&gt;er
maintenance, good lilu-rs and effective
ventilation systems,

sworn statements they are
Investigating the possibility
someone removed drugs from
the room iK’fore the body w-as
found.
•'Police have charged Pctrr
March an I and David Dorr
with selling cocaine to Ken­
nedy. 28. son o( the late Sen.
Robert Kennedy.
Plntacuda also said cocaine
found in a plastic bag tn
K e n n e d y 's w allet w as 70
percent pure, which, he said
is p u r e r t h a n c o c a i n e
normally sold on the street
Police arr also looking Into
whether the Demerol found In
Kennedy's body came from
ihr Kennedy home In Palm
Beach. Family members have
said there was some missing
Police Investigated a tip that
Kennedy had been given a
high grade of cocaine because
s o m e o n e w an ted him to
overdose for not paying his
drug hills, but they said later
they had discounted that
theory.
Assistant State Attorney
Pablo IVrhaes said a trial dale
for Dorr and Manhunt will
probably be set during a
hearing July 3,

Canada Joins U .S., A llie s
In Space Station Project
O TTAW A (UPI) - The Cana­
dian government has decided to
Join the United States and other
allies In producing an orbiting
spore station, agreeing In prin­
ciple to spend up lo $600 million
ovrr the next 10 years.
Canada had been courted by
U.S. spare officials lor more than
a year to join the U.S.-led project
which already has the participa­
tion o f the European Space
Agency and Japan. The two arc
exjiecteil to spend about $4
billion
Science Minister Tom Siddon
said Wednesday Canada's In­
volvement In the spare station
could produce economic benefits
valued at more than $2 billion
by the year 2(XX).
"For the remainder of the
century, the space station will hr
the predominant civilian Inltla
live In ■pare." HJildmi mild

A m em ora n d u m o f u n ­
derstanding to be signed by
Canadian and NASA officials in
ihr nrxl lew weeks will contain
"diplomatic w ording" to guaran­
tee the station will be used for
only |M-aeelul purposes. Siddon
said.
The space station, as now
i - n v l s l o t ie d , w i l l h o u s c
la b o ra to rie s , o b s e r v a to r ie s ,
manufacturing facilities, a main
lenance and storage dr|«&gt;t. a
servicing station lor satelllles
a n d l i v i n g q u a r t e r s (o r
astronauts
C an ad a has not yet d e ­
term ined the natu re o f Its
participation hut Is looking at
several options. Including pro­
duction of robotic devices for
servicin g s a tellite s or solar
energy collecting devices that
could provide auxiliary power
fo r th e ia|NM-r M in im i

Longwood Commission
OKs 'Too Tall' Building
The L o n g w o o d C ity C om ­
m is s io n h a s u n a n im o u s ly
granted a conditional use re­
quest from Richard II Garland
to permit construction o f a
three-story office building on 1lie
south side of slate Road 434.
The building would exceed the
35-foot height limitation In gen
eral commercial zoning by 12
Inches.
In a d d ition tn the height
variance, the commission also
voted 4-1 Monday night to grant
a conditional use requested by
Mary E. Doan lo operate a
wholesale/rrtull used rar sides
business at 800 W slate Road
434 (next to McDonald's and the
Rebel Rod and Gun Club).
Commissioner June Lormnnu
said she voted against the re­
quest because she did not think
the site was large enough to
accommodate a car lot.
The commission unalmously
approved a site plan submitted
by the Regional Construction
development firm for a Federal
Exprrss warehouse, office and

distribution center on lots 21
and 25 In the Florida Central
Commerce Park
Establishment of u city parks
and recreation advisory hoard
was given preliminary approval
Monday nlghi and a public
hearing and final action wrrr
scheduled for April 15.
The following zoning changes
wrrr given unanimous final ap­
proval:
• l-ols I, 2. and 3. block 4.
Entzmlngrr's addition *1 on rite
west side of county Road 427
Irom industrial to general com­
mercial. requested by Thomas
II Hutchens.
• tails 139. 261 attd west half ot
lot 259. Town of Longwood. on
south side o f Hay Street, front
residential multi-family to com*
mcrclal/offlce at the request ol
Joseph L. Abrams
• 1-ot 17 and west half of lot 18.
Framers addition on south side
of Evergreen Avenue from restd r n lla l/ d u p lr x tn co n im rrctal/offire. requested by Stella
/-•tills.
—Jane Casselberry

Health, Safety Seminar
For Elderly Thursday
A health. Information and
safety seminar will be sponsored
by the Greater Sanford Chamber
of Com m erce Senior Citizens
Com m ittee on Thursday 1-4
p.m- at the Sanford Civic Center.
Open to the public. It will be of
special Interest to senior adults.
There will be free testing for
blood pressure, blood sugar,
tuberculosis and hearing pro­
blem. The Neuman Eye Clinic
will test for cataracts. Flu shots
also will be available

The Seminole County Sheriff's
Office and the Hanford Police
Department will have informa­
tion on personal and home
security.
Various groups such as the
Alzheimer's Support Group, and
local nursing homes, will have
Informational displays
Compuler printouts assessing
retirement and recreational In­
terests for the elderly also can be
obtained

April 29 Trial Date Set
For Accused Obscene Caller
An April trial dule has liccn set
in the case of a Casselberry man
charged with making obscene
telephone calls
Cory R. Griffith. 29. of 2860
Red Bug Road, has been ordered
Ip appear for trial In Seminole
County Court April 29.
Griffith was arrested on the
charge March 10 and Is out of
jail on 9100 bund awaiting trial.
According to court records, an

Orlando woman received several
phone calls a day Irutn a man
m aking se x u a lly su ggestive
rem a rk s d u rin g a 3-m onth
|&gt;erlnd ending In October. On one
particular day. the man called
the 45-yrar-old wife eight limes.
The phone calls were trared by
the phone company lit October
and Griffith was subsequently
arrested
— Deane Jordan

Funds are in this account for an 18-month
period, and additional deposits can be made at
any time. SKX) minimum.
FIXED-RATH TIM E DEPOSIT
ACC X )UNTS: Lock some or all of your funds
into various high rates lor differing lengths of
time with maturities from 3 to 60 months.
SI,(XX) minimum.
Shi.I -I )1EHC 1 HD IRA: A combination
MONEY MARKET IRA and DISCOUNT
BROKERAGE SERVICE to buy and sell
stocks and bonds at your discretion, and at
commission discounts of up to 70% less than
full-cost brokers.
Rut your IRA fund to work at full
capacity. Visit any Atlantic Bank or call our
toll-free financial hotline, t -800-342-2705.

Anyone can give you an IRA. But arc
they giving you ways to make every dollar
work to its full capacity? We do. And we’ll
custom-design your IUA with any or all of
these options.
MONEY MARK I T IRA: A highyielding account for the short-term investment
of your funds. The interest rate changes with
current market rates. Your funds are never
locked up in this account, and additional
deposits can Ik* made at any time. A m ini­
mum deposit of SI(K) qualifies you for money
market rates.
IK-MONTH VARIABLE RATE IRA;
Extremely high rate ( a full 1% above our 6month C l) rate with an H% per annum
minimum) that is subject to weekly changes.

Atlantic Bank

The Best Bank Around“

Atlantic National Bank of Florida with IIS Branch Officer Statewide
Member H C

h
.

�SPORTS

4A—Evtning Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, March II, t*U

Lady Hawks' Win Streak,
Rainy Reputation On Line

Track Teams
Split 3 Ways
For Weekend

BjrChrla F ilte r
H era ld Sport* W riter
The pint two years, n gixxl gctrlch-qulck
scheme would have hern to set op an umhrrllu
stand ut Red Hoy Park, That'* where the Lady
Hawk Softball Tournament i* Iteld ami where Ihc
*kle* have d im q xd rain on the tourney the pant
(w o year*.
One of tin- wickedest rain storms In recent
history took phirr on l&gt;ie day of the tournament
lost year. There wa* so mueli water on I he field
that Oak Rldgr, whlcii i ante out o f the loser *
bracket, conceded the final game to Lake Howell,
which Milled through tin- winner'* bracket.
“ Thiil was the most unbelievable storm I've
seen In my life," Lake Howell roach Jo Luciano
said of last year’* monsoon. "T h e field was
fhMxIrd so Oak Ridge conceded that one game
since we were In the winner's bracket. '*
So. It wasn't surprising In see the wet stull start
falling Thursday because the L ady Hawk
Tournament Is scheduled for Saturday.
Hold on though fans Don't break out the scuba
gear yet, According to the weather people. It Is
siip|N&gt;sed to clear lip for tile weekend
“ Thank G od," Luciano said. “ I just heard It's
clearing up. Hopefully, It'll miss us tills year "
Luciano's Lady Sliver Hawks arc Hie two-time
defending cham pion* of the tournament and take
an eight'game winning streak Into tills year's
double- rllm liiiillon rompcIHInn which stalls
Saturday morning with a pair of games at !) at
Itcd ling I’ark.
Lyman'* Lady Greyhounds |2 d) and Sanford'*
Lady Seminole* (3-5) go up against each other in
one ft a m. gam e while the oilier pit* Oviedo's
Lady Lions (5 -5) against Oak Ridge's Lady
Pioneer*.
Al 10 ID. Lake Mary takes tin West Orange in
the lop bracket while Lake Brantley tangles with
Colonial In the bottom bracket At I I 30. Lake
Howell plays the Semliiolc-Lyinun winner In the
lop bracket while Evans lakes on the Oviedo Oak
Itldge winner In the hoi lorn bracket.
The finals are scheduled (or H:|5 p m with a

C o llie r

Softball
second game, if necessary, at 9 .TO.
Lake Howrll again has a good shot at the title as
I'u Lady Ih-wk* have one of the most defensively
sound leant* In the slale. The Infield of Ava
G,under (llrsl base). Sandy Gillie* Iseeomi base).
Grace Ley (shortstop) and Erin Hankins (ihlrd
base) |s a talented group which has combined for
I 5 double plays so far ibis season.
Left fielder Eileen Thlebauth has one of the
strongest arms around. Joining "E .T ." In the
outfield are Jatldon "P e e W ee" Jonas. Allclu
Olnkelacker and lleih Saunders. Chrlsly Tlhhltis
has been Impressive on the mound for the Lady
lliiwks during their win streak.
"Defense will probably win It," Luetano said.
"A n d ours Is one o f the strongest In the
tournament."
Lake Howell also has a good combination of
speed and power In Us hailing order. The Hawks'
leading hitters Include Gillies (.4711 and Jennifer
Wallace (.444) Wallace also leads lit the tram In
runs hatted In with I I. which ranks second
among the county leaders Wallace. Gillies and
I hlehmilii provide the power while the speed
comes from Jonas. Hankins and Ley.
Lake Mary and Lake llrantlry nrr also very
sound defensive teams but have had trouble at
the plate.
T he Lady Kama. 8-3, have a strong Infield with
Valerie Smith at first, Lisa Slmklns at second.
Klin Avrrllt at short and Laurie Lellfrr ut third.
Pitcher Hcth Watkins Is also an excellent fielder.
Lake Mary also has *|x-rd In the outfield with
Karen DeShctlcr. Amy Adams. Lisa Santulll and
LI/ Slone
Lake Mary coach Cindy Henry hopes Ihc Lady
Hams can get thrlr hat* going for the tournament.
The leading hitlers for Ihr hums arc Avrrlll 1.011,
second In county) and W'utkln* 1440) Santulll
See R E PU TA TIO N , Page 7A

M a g n if ic e n t ,

♦IAt KSO.SVII.LK Il l'll
Higgle Col­
lier and Mike R o x lrr loughl In a
stalemate, tail the Jin ksottvllle Hulls
managed to milslug the Orlando He
liegadrs.
Orlando tpiurirrhack Collier rushed lor
tour tnurhilowns, im hiding Hie lying
score wllll 55 seconds remaining In
regulation. However. Ill* effort went lor
itiiughi when J a c k s o n v ille '* llrluu
Fratieo eotiueelcd on a 29-yard Held goal
9 17 Into overtime lo lilt Hie Hulls lo a
T I T I victory over the Kritegadr*
Jacksonville running hack Hurler, the
llelNtnau Trophy winner &lt;&gt;1 iwu season*
ago. reverted to Hie Inrin hi’ showed In
college al Nebraska, sim lng lour limes
— three no Hie ground anil one mi a
reception.

Football
Hurler opened the scoring with u
5-yuril louetutuwn rrerptlun (ruin Kd
l.uilii i Ih added TD runs of 1.2 and 0
varils an lie carried the ball TH lim es Inr
I HO varils
" A l l those yard s w ouldn't have
sounded rigid II we didn't Will.” Hurler
said ' I In olleuslve Hue did a great job
n|&gt;ciilng up the holes."
Collier earrletl IB Hines for 171 yards
and completed 14-ttl 27 passes fur 1H7
voids He had touchdown tun* of 1, t&gt;,
30 and 18 yards.
It s kind ut a shame that either team
Inn I to lose," said Orlando roach Lee

Mera'd Pfwlo by Tommy Vmctnf

Sem inole's Sheri Peterson jumps on o high pitch.

'G a d e s

Corso. who Is sllll searching lor his llrsl
professional coaching victory.
"T h e
moKl gralirylng pari about the game is
dial wr played as hard us we can play. I
ibought Hcgglr did u rnagnllleent Job."
The Hulls Improved to 2-3 tx-torr
TI.HHT hometown fails iiud a national
cable television audience. Orlando re
m,lined wlnless In five starts.
Alter Hn/ler's tuuehdnwn reception, lie
and Collier exchanged I-yard I'D runs In
the second quarter. The Renegades' J rff
Hum khans kicked a 42-yard Held goal
with one second left Hi the hall to move
Orlando within 14 10
Orlando Imik a 17-14 lead on Collier's
(i-yurd TD scamper, but Hu/ler put
Jacksonville buck on top entering the
lourtti quarter by going in from 2 yards

L o s e

out.
Collier gave Orlando Its last lead ul the
game. 24 2 I . wllll a TH yard TI&gt; rim I 18
Hilo Hu* (mirth quarter. Jacksonville
thru scored Ibe next 10 ( mUi i i *. getting a
24-yurt! Franco Held goal and a Oyuril
TT) run by Ho/lrr.
Alter Collier’s run lied the score with
88 seconds lelt. Franco had a chance lo
win Hie game in regulation, bill his
T I -yard Held goal nltcmpl was wide lell.
Orlando was forced lo punt In overtime
and Lu lbrr engineered u drive to set up
Franco's w inning Held goal.
"T h is Is our reward for working bard,"
said Jacksonville coach Llndy Infante.
"When things looked had. we rehiseil to
give up We llgnrrd out a way to pull the
game m il."

Payne, Brooks Enjoy Week — Grace Is MVP
Hill I'avne had a good lime Wednesday
and an even heller one Thursday. S C C s
l bin! year basket ball coach honored Ids
'B4-85 eager* with a luncheon and Ihr next
day signed Lake Howell s Elrem Brooks to a
scholarship
On Wednesday. I'avne named sophomore
Unity Grace, his standout forward, a* th e,
team's must valuable player. Sophomore
G reg "Skyw alker” Hales was the best
all around, (leshmau Greg "Shin Johnson
was the Itest rehnunder. freshman Mike
l.am lell w a* the best defensively and
sophomore Kenny Edwards wa* tin* lx**l
olfenslvely Cheerleader Dcbhlr llaivry was
tiled Inr her outstanding leadership by
s|Hiiisor Joy Hinkle.
ItiiHiks said In* was Impressed with Payne
anil Ibe program, which made Brooks'
coach. Greg Koblnsmi. extremely happy. " I
wanted Im Elrem all along lu go lo SCC. hut
I wouldn't tell him that,** said Robinson. "H
w as Ills decision and he made a great one "
Rohlnaon. who played al Crooms High lu
the laic ‘flOs, played on S C C s grrat teams
Im two year* before going nit to a line career
H*f *M PSm M hr I m uim WxtoMI
at lllnidtighant Souliirm
Llnny Grace, S C C s M VP,
(trunks, like Payne, had a pretty good
m oves the ball upcourt.
Wednesdav lie was selected as the llurger

S am

Cook
Sparti Editor

King Ikiys Player o f ihc Year Mona Denton
won the tionor lor the gills Sunluolr s
Chris Mutlelti* was the Uoys’ Coach nl the
Year anil Lake Mary's Dill Moure was the
Girls’ Coach of the Year.
The baseball and sultb.ill act tun was
washed away by Thursday's daylong rain
hut Saturday should provide enough
diamond action (or any appetite The girls
start play al t) a m In the Lady Hawk
Softball Invitational al Hcd Hug Park and
there are two big base trail games Saturday.
At Lake Mary, the Hams, ranked No. 9 In
the state, and Lyman, ranked No 5. bailie
In the most Important Five Star Conference
encounter to date. At Ajxqiku. the Dlue
Darters and Lake Brantley try In bang on In
the conference u# each has four losses Doth
games begin al lp .m .

Lake Mary hold* a 1' j game lead over the
Greyhounds. The Hams are 10-1 and have
played one more conference game. Lyman I*
H 2 "T h is our opportunity In control our
destiny.*' said Lyman coach Hub Mc­
Cullough
Lyman and Lake Mary have split this
year Lyman won a close one before Ihc
conference season started hut Lake Mary
came back lo blow out the Hounds and ace
pitcher Derek Llvernntson March I.
Llveruots. a very hard-nosed competitor,
said II will tie dtllerenl HU* tune. "M y arm
was tired the last time." tie said Wednesday.
"I'd pm hut In relief a couple of limes. I've
had my rest Hu* time. I'm really looking
forward to Saturday."
I.lvernols t* coming off one ot his best
performances ol Hu* year. On Monday, he
struck out 17 against Scabrcc/e and rame
close lu a no-hlt ter Hr Is 5-1 fur the year
anil lead* the county with 03 strikeoutsI.lvernols' arch-rival. Mike Schntlt. will
hurl lor Lake Mary. Schmlt doesn't have
Ltvrrnots' velocity or curveball but he Is one
of the smartest hurlers ever to pull on
stirrups.

liASEHALL LEADERS US RACE HA

Tisdale, Turner Make Final Unsafe For Faint Of Heart
United P ress In tel nstlunsl

If the NCAA Tournament Midwest
ltrgiou.il seiuiriiials wen* any Indication
ul the closeness of the cunipclllloii. then
Huai* on Saturday between Memphis
Stutc and Okluhumu should tx* declared
unsafe lor the faint ut heart,
Wnymim Tisdale ami Andie Turner.
Iwu very likely heroes, put the No, 5
Sooner* and fourth-ranked Memphis
State Hilo the Midwest (Inal* with
hud-seruml shot* m thrlr games Thurs­
day night ut Dallas.
Tisdale provided ihr game winner for
Okluhuma In an HO H4 over lime victory
over Louisiana Tech, and Turner did the
same for Ihr Tigers Jusl as rrgulallun
ended In a 59-57 thriller against Doxltm

College.
The Tigers and Sooner* Iare each
olhrr Saturday uHemoon with a nip to
the Final Four at stake
In the East Regional* at Provide m e.
ILL, Nu. I Georgetown lopped No 17
Loyola (III ) 65-83 and No. U Georgia

1

t

Basketball
Tech defeated No 10 Illinois 01-53. The
Hnyas and Yellow Jackets meet Satur­
day In the East 11rials.
Tonight. In the Southeast Regional at
H lrm ln gham Ala . M aryland fa ces
Vlllunovn and North Carolina square* oil
against North Carolina In the West
Regional at Denver. Alabama pluvs
Sort It Carolina State and No. 3 St.
John's take*on Kentucky.
Tisdale hit a 0-foot Jumper with three
seconds remaining In overtime to bring
i iklahoma Ha victory.
" A lot o f guys didn't have the point
total they want, so they want to play five
more minutes 1 think Wuymun was one
ot those. He wanted a lew more shots."
said Sooner* coach Hilly Tubbs
T M u lr. a 6-lout O Junior who played
the llnul nine minutes with 4 fouls,
scored H ul his 23 |&gt;olnts lu overtime.

Louisiana Tech overcame a 4 point
deficit In overtim e to tie the score with
IH seconds left on two free throws by
Robert God boll
Oklahoma worked for the I Inal shot,
with Louisiana Tech trying its best to
deny Tisdale the ball
Hut with three players surrounding
him. Tisdale got the ball Just outside the
lane, turned and tossed up a soft
Iclt-handedshot.
"It seems like It took forever on the
rim ." said Tisdale, an All-America. "|
Just wanted to turn and shoot It as soft us
I could. I wasn't trying to run oft as
much time as I did."
Turner's jumper came alter Boston
College had tried to run as much Him olf
the clock as It could
With the score 57-57, ihr Eagles held
the lull for the llnul two tmm ilrs and
ruled timeout with 14 seconds remain
mg However, Vincent Askew stole the
lull from Roger MeCreudy alter Ihr
ensuing Inbound* puss with 10 seconds

* •/ •

lelt and led Turner, who moved left
IxTurt- hitting the winner Just prior to the

butter.
At Providence, K.I.. Patrick Ewing
provided 10 of hi* 21 points In the
second hall and grabbed 14 rebounds In
the Hoy as* triumph. He also served
notice to Ihr rest of college basketball.
" I ’m not ready to go home y et." Ewing
said.
Andre Moore had 19 points for Loyola.
Allredrtck Hughes, averaging 27 a game
and a double-figure scorer for 94 straight
games, had 8 (mintsbn 4-of-13 shooting
"It was a great season." Moore said
"It's too bud It had toend losing."
Georgia Tech was led by Mark Price
w ho scored 20 points on 9-oM 2 shooting
as the Yellow Jackets withstood a
second-half scoring assault by the llltnl's
Doug Allcubcrger. who hud 24 points
"A n ytim e you have a player who cun
shoot Irom the outside like that, he can
really hurt you." Illinois coach Lou
Henson said ul Price.

I*

By Chris F ister
H erald Sports W r ite r
While Seminole County's girls
track tram* head for Gainesville
and Ihr Lady Gaior Relays, the
bov* will be spilt up among three
m en *
t Sem in ole's boys learn wilt
Journey lo Jacksonville for the
Dot) Hayes Invitational at Ralnrs
High School. Bob Hayes, former
Olympic gold medalist and world
record holder In Ihc 100 yard
da*h. will be on hud for Satur­
day's meet which gets underway
al 9a.m .
The Seminole* have been the
dominant force In the Central
Florida area so far this season
and Saturday they will find out
how the competition from the
rest of the state Is like as teams
from Miami to the panhandle are
expected to tx* on hand.
In the rcrenl county iruck
honor role. I he Moles have the
leader In 10 nl 14 Individual
events and all ihrrt* relays. In
the tong Jump, the Trttx* lias 5 ol
the top 0 leapers and li also has
5 of the top6 in the 440 dash.
S e m in o le's lop perform ers
going Into the Hot) Hayes meet
ure Frank Harnett In the 120
hurdle* (|3.6|. (Till Campbell In
Ihc 440 (state's lx-*t 4H 1) and
220 I2I.H). Hilly Penlck In the
mile (4126 I ) and Leo Peterson
I4HG) and Alvin Jones 147-7'y)
In the triple Jump. Seminole l*
also among Ihe best In the state
In the 440and mile relay*.
M ean w hile. Lake H o w ell's
boys will lx* competing In the
Wildcat Relay* al Showlaicr
F ield In W in ter Park
Hot.
1Krause of stiff qualifying stan­
dard*, Lake Mary. Lake Brantley
and Lyman have decided not to
go lo the Wildcat meet In fact,
the Wildcat qoalllvTng standard*
are set so high ih a l o n ly
Seminole would have inulHptr
qualifier*, and ihr Tribe l* not
going lo that meet anyway.
Ilist cud. Lake Mary will host a
relay meet with Hranlley and
Lyman Friday. Action at Lake
Mary High begins al 3:30 with
Itclil event relays. Other events.
Include the 1HD low hon tlr
sh olllr relay, the Iwo mile relay,
Ihr 440 relay. Ihe 330 hurdle*
relay. Ihr distance im dley relay.
Ihe sprint medley, the team two
mile and (he mile relay.
The tram two mile should lx*
one of the most competitive
race* of the Lake Mary meet.
The Hams have four talented
Iwo mllrrs |top three tim e* are
added op) In Mall Palumbo. Ken
Rohr. Hobby Howard and Erie
Petrrsen. l-akr Hrantlry's top
distance runners Include Jose
Calvlno and Chris Ross while
Carl Hrhmalmaack and Robin
Rogers lead the way for Lyman.
Top flrld events performers
Include Uike Mary's Troy Stott*
(pole vault). Lym an's Ralph
P h llp o t t (h ig h |ump| and
Hrantlry's Mark Ikmxquct (shot,
discus).
This year's Lady Gator Relays
Will be held ut Santa Fe Com­
munity College In Gainesville
Ix-cnuse the University o f Florida
track facilities are In the process
ol com plete renovation. The
meet will attract some or the
best talent In Ihe slate so
Seminole County will have a
charter to ser wlirre II stack* op
before Ihe big meets britln.
Among Ihe top performers for
Sun lord's Lady Seminole* arc
Kalrlim Walker and Glenda Hass
(200 and 400|. Sliownda Martin
(400. H00. long Jump), Dorchelh*
Wrbster (800. 1.500. long Jump),
T u m m y J ohn son (h u rd les ),;
C atherine " K i t t y " Anderson
thigh Jumpl and Adrian Smith
(shot put)
Luke Mary's Lady Hams arc
keying on a pair of relays, the
distance medley and two mile.
The same four |x*rformcrs will
run on both n( those trams
inrludlng Fran "Flash" Gordon,
Jill Huddrnhugcn. SnnJa Walker
and Heather Hrlkkllu
Lake Howell will tx* u team to
watch In the distance events and
the distance relays with talented
p e r f o r m e r s su ch as L is a
Satnockl. Am y Ertel. Nancy
Nystrom. Martha Fonseca. Mary
Fonseca and Angle Smith. Other
key performers for the Lady
H a w k s I n c lu d e K o c h e l l e
Spearman Ihurdlrs. long Jump).
Michelle Spcarmun (100. 400).
Kim lUm m ontrrr and Cheryl
Brinkley (high Jump) and Mary
Kay Scott (discus)
Leading the way Tor Lake
Brantley's Lady Patriots are
Debbie Lovelace (discus). Cathie
Wild (hurdles). Joanne Hayward
(BOO, 1.500) and Bar tiara Panlo s o (400)
Lym an's top performers in­
clude Tracy Fisher and Julie
Greenberg. (1.500. 3,000) and
Maybelle Bryant Ihurdles).

�Friday. March 22. 1H5-7A

Evening H trxld . Sanford. FI

SPORTS
INBRIEF

SCOREBOARD
'*tiOsM&gt;
ta i b
IM »i* n h n
IS
annua M i m a m i n u s

TUBE
asm i r» i*r*

u u tm u

U nited Press In tern a tion a l
Thr New York Yankrcs are losing outfielders faster than
they can lose games these days.
One morning after right fielder Dave Winfield had to
check Into a hospital, rain kept New York from playing
Montreal Thursday.
Winfield, sidelined since fouling a ball o(T his left Instep
Saturday against the Chicago White Sox at Sarasota
entered a local hospital suffering from a severe Infection In
his left elbow He Is expected to be hospitalized for five to
seven days.
Winfield fell on the elbow after fouling the pitch off his
instep.
1 he veteran outfielder received Intravenous antibiotics
while In the hospital and Is not expected to be back In the
lineup for a least a week to 10 days.
Hickey Henderson, who the Yankees obtained to play
center field this season, ts already sidelined whlth a
sprained led ankle, which will be re-examined Friday. He.
loo. Is expected to be sidelined for at least another week.
Games between Atlanta and Montreal, Toronto and
Houston. Pittsburgh and St Louis. Los Angeles and Boston
and Philadelphia and the New York Mets were also rained
out.

Sinn, 17, Loads A t Oakmont
GLENDALE. Calif. (UPI) - Betsy King, the 1984 LPGA
Player of the Year, shot a 77. and 1984 Rookie o f the Year
dull Inkster had a 78. Thai's a shame.
A 17-year-old high school student, however, shot a
2 under par 70 And I hat 's a Sinn.
Pearl Sinn, a senior at nearby Bellflower High, tamed the
treacherous Oakmont Country Club and vaiilted Into a
four-way He lor the lead Thursday after the opening round
of a 8250.000 LPGA tournament.
The tournament Is sponsored by GNA.
Sharing the lead with Sinn were Jan Stephenson.
Barbara Moxncss and Japan's Atsuko Hlkagc as only six
players In the 144-player field bettered par on the tough.
f&gt;.328-yard Oakmont layout. Fifty-three players failed to
Itreak HO
Hut Sinn, who has played golf for little more than seven
years, had four birdies and two bogeys. Jumping Into a tie
lor the lead by posting birdies on the final two holes.
On No 17. she hit a 7-lrnu to within a foot of the cup and
on No 1H. till a wedge to within a foot, sinking both putts
lor birdies.

Blazers Lose In Many Ways
U nited P ress In tern a tion a l
Portland Trail Blazer coach Jack Ramsay can tell you
why bis team lost to the Phoenix Suns 124-114 Thursday
— oh. let him count the ways.
Tonight, we had 15 turnovers at the half, we shot about
UU percent Irom the floor In the first quarter. It's
incredible." he said. "W e mliuu-d six layup* early. I don't
have on answer.
"Y o u 've got to bring yourself to the game every night. If
you don't, there Is not u team In the league that can't beat
you.**
Kyle Mary scored 24 points while Jay Humphries had 19
and H assists. Maurice Lucas 17 points and Jones 14.
Clyde Drrxlrr led the Trail Blazers with 26 points while
Klkl Vandeweghe had24. Steve Colter 17. Sam Bowie 14
aiul Bernard Thompson 10.
"T h is one is certainly high on my list of disappointing
gam es." Ramsey said. "We've had some frustrating games
In the past, but
(Just have nocxplanllons."
In I he only other game Thursday. Detroit defeated
Golden Slute 122 I 13.

Dr. Carter Favored A t Hialeah
HIALEAH IUPI1 — Favored Dr. Carter will be out to break
a string of upsets in the Wldener Handicap when he runs In
the 4Hih ruim lngof the $125,000 race at Hialeah Park.
Not since Jeffrey Fell rode Private Account to victory In
I ‘ 180 has a favorite captured the Wldener. Mat Boy
surprised World Appeal a year ago while Land of Eire. Lord
llarntcy and Swing Till Dawn scored upsets In the three
previous years.
In all. favorites have won 1H times In the previous 47
races.
A victory in thr I G mile Wldener would put Dr. Carter
in a strong position for consideration as the winter's top
handicap horse The 4 -year-old son o f Caro scored an
Impressive triumph In the Gulfstream Park Handicap last
month
But he'll face strong challenges from Nepal, who tied the
track record March 9 in the I G mile Seminole Stakes, and
from Mo Exception, thr u|&gt;set winner of the Donn
Handicap
Darn Thai Alarm and Rexson's Hope also could be
factors

Boat-A-Cade Begins June 15
KISSIMMEE — Boaters, be sure to mark the 361h Annual
Kissimmee Boat-A-Cade on your calendar. This year's trip
will begin June 15 at the Kissimmee Yacht Club and cruise
tiOO miles through Florida's waterways, returning to
Kissimmee June 23.
Planned overnight stops include Lake Okeechobee.
Punta Gorda. Port of the Islands. Ft. Myers and Lake
Wales. Registration fee Is 825 per boat, and meals and
accommodations are extra. Boaters may stay aboard their
vessel at each slop or at nearby hotels.
As part of cruise events, there will be a barbecue, two
|kx »I parties, a fish fry. and the traditional Boat-A-Cade
Banquet. Several day-long layovers provide plenty of time
for fishing, sunning and exploring. Hundreds of dollars in
prizes will be given away throughout the cruise.

&gt;!*« - « u » c« *t&gt; tea

S tM

» i« - in* »-i&gt;* «

n tVMtrH
Incan*
w s tim

i w usn o

i.

t q a M U lt H M h lt

s w im

i' a is ia
ta ta

I-• I

&gt;■ «a ta
is
IB

0 tin tJa. * »•&gt; r * t a m i s *

M an m b
H r m -v w a an
s a ta is
U ta fn lM V
IB IB
'CjrrtMBmar
«B
• (M in a u n i n * . i m i h i i

B n n -V X » « n
ta is is
" w a
ta ta
I t&gt;l*N CM*
lB
n u t it* r a » n a . Ttix im a
«*&gt;*»- a n a
•u * b m
s a ta ta
'OMrtwan
ta ix
iW D m
ns
•an o b . » an i s i itt&lt; w a
* i n - V U nH
• tv ttd h
11* IB is
m aw *
ta is
it m t lM
la
S a n a a z o rin a t o m i k *
S r w - M ( sit
i
Cjn»ia ta i*
’ •I IBM
ta is
I K i Om M
IB
Slum a. ra n * * . Tu n is ia
u m im v

a w - u u nu

iV * ««n
ti* ta
iu b « w* om
i*
’ i e*«i
sunn a t i m ib *. iiu m a a
H w - I X t si&gt;
h m u i
ia ia
l»flm
IB

ia
ia
i*
ia
IB

I*

su e s a »iM j«* ,n n tira s
B w - t u an
ta ia IS

KC«rr*

I l l SB
na i s ta
IB IB
IB

MtKMUl ItlllTItLL illOC
lit lt fi Oiftlii*

M

4(Mina r m u a i i H i i M i

1CUMikw

Sanaa Tinm am m ibb

NBA

WIIB-VWI 111

in C tiM a
i C«&lt;Cm M*n
!«*•»•*

IB IB IB
IBIS
IB

4 -ret NtMtotn'

aiMfesoiM*

M -•

IJ*•«■*&gt;.*■
I SB* |0&gt;N*
IB ih s*

« (Ml m s » mn bib r mu
i*ia hsibbuuk

SOKC
IM )
I 't M i n

ITB u*

■
iM lw W
Kalla*

hum

iw x h

us «a is

iTMtsatCe
ia
a n n a a * n intis r.n ti at*
N I* illt t l 111 t mwn K I M
I M n o - lW I BU

m

s i* -n z s a w e *

****&lt;•

(CrWMii

* B Ctmu.i, I * B

■
Bat***

IM*

• l

• taf*"
•Ai

9 c1 6•
IS ta
&lt;
»’ 1
n ta W »
B m Pl
TJ «• m S

•*e )rwi
Now Tpft
CMTUOnw
■a. Adw
4f 1’ Ml
V C til 0
Crop
u V *• It 1
C*iK4iRi
n fl LI n
V *J P’ r
n ft im a
mm
U SFL
CjMtreetii
Nbewii fltapp
UHITIO IUTII POOTUU LI48UI
• i
61
I lib-' Ud P if
M
•D*kv«*
M
i » k*
« l 1 *1
HWlftpi
A a m r»
I 1 • re ■p IF
u
1
M
Sent
ta n u* i' * Temp* t*t
1 I1 m
W
Mnta ft
1 1 1 m ta ta
0 ta m 4
L**
t) V *Tl 111 ta*e Jr*r»
t t 1 m * tai
v:
JMltaRtdta
(JAM C-*»
Ma rr 4
1 11 m
P*&lt;r*KOhrSM
ESI
L'-arft
l 1 1 in m H
» L* LSMrft
OM i
« *
1 I • ME n (ta
W«1thK*C—tar—&lt;8
0V
1
tawsi
1 • 1 ' M A. »
hM V
B n * ' ta
ft m
W*e
■ 11 4J1 ■ 1 OefttaN)
1 11
14 Cipn
n at w tar *'ia*ta
1 1 &lt; m ft u
16K m B
Vim
Hr**m
1 1 1 IN 61 »
Or'vd'
1 1 1 pi ta taf
rdevteiPNMMMfta
1 1 • m *» ta
LM tafpftft
TVt4it 1lrwr*i
V** 4«(e* •
1 1 • IM *4 id
«14
«•
tW W niiw I
D»**&gt; ’ll Cette Hn 1U
JtatMP*** ta even* v OT
9t l l l f 't ( t e n

C

t

« Sr* B-ter *I ; ¥ sM e f ^
i r ■ §•
*tn\*i C»» •' 4*er*4 FB6«

•are»fl * ‘&lt;*—4 » Ip*
i 4 lttPtl*HM&lt;» ll| *
DMDWAMm I I f *
sre •»
i i I*

Wtait i ta*ti
lewiy.ga gl 8e*

HAIU TOUM STANDARDS O F IUDC
AMD rmrOKMAJtCZ

Midland Advances In JU C O Play
HUTCHINSON. Kan (UP!) - Tevtln Blnns scored 27
(mints Thursday night, helping Midland (Texas) post a
79 63 victory over Allegany (Md | and advance to the
semifinals of the National Junior College Athletic Associa­
tion Tournament. Midland. 31-4. will face Dixie (Utah) In
the semifinals Friday The Rebels, paced by Averaln
Parrish's 19 points, held off Erie (N.Y.183-73.
4

W 0—p f Ct&lt;t‘*¥ t 11— tp

¥ ■»».«•• (I Wi framieti t

C*

W***l

CNfjgp il l 11
%Cmcw* 1. ft**
M—tate*ml &lt;t Altptlt *m

RtaMPtaMn tareY«rt (till i*w*
WLM •%v.mmry
let** in) it im*"fM—
•un’w *%T«r—tar#m
ta—*reei ml &lt;
f%Newv«r| lAU »».*

Mkr m) n Cta*e*

NHL
V iflvi Inn'Htl

1Mat*•s' or )

HVIft^vii
LtareJm* t
'Aitai \ I t
•
f *111f • Gib m
^

t I »* «

iap r.M«t (tT)

0- e* «•*»*-*» t I lp*

^
H¥ Bs-^rti»

’ llgm
f |)» m

¥an***a »•
I Mg *
t iP M P le a n e r * )tg et

CMgp *• C¥fe*i i n i *

*» Dense* i » *

Stevens, at shortstop, and Kaiser, first base, are
the defensive leaders lor the l,ady Greyhounds.
Seminole has bad little problems hitting this
season, but defense has been a problem. Th r
Lady Semlnoles have made as many as 13 errors
In one game II the Tribe is lo flghl for thr title. II
has to tighten up on deiense
Leading (be way at I lie plulr for Seminole is
Mary lllcks who also leads the county with a .007
average which Includes three triples Janet
ILiuck Is hilling at n .520 clip with a learn leading
lO RBIs. Leadofi hitter Alycia "F a t" Dixon Is
hilling .500 and is (led for the county lead In rtins
scored wttli 11.
Oviedo's U d y Lions have the talent lo mukr
some noise in Ihc tournament but again defense
will Ire the key. Oviedo gave up three unearned
runs In a 3-0 loss to Osceola Tuesday.
In (he billing department. Caroline Chavis
leads the way wllh a .516 average and 11 runs.
Chavis, also u fine shortstop, has drove In 10
runs. Mikkl Eby (.469) Is (tie county leader In
runs balled In wllh 15 and Is tied wllh Stevens for
the home run trad with two.
Among the Orange County trams, West Oruuge
Is tfie strongest In the toumarnrnl.

Strong Mound Staff Helps
Astros Pick Up 3 Victories
Baseball
Yankees lo a 7-4 victory over the
While Sox. Ronnie Perk started
off Ihr rally for Ihr Yankees wllh
a solo home run over Ihc fence In
left center. C.J. DIFlumcrt added
a two-run double In the Inning
while Eddie Howard and John
Young added RBI doubles.
H ow ard was Ihc w in n in g
pitcher (or (he Yunkees while
JocO'Donnrll look the loss.
In Rookie League play. Danny
Potldore. Tim Frazier and Shawn
Whlllock had four hlls each lo
lead the Cardinals over the
Astros. 19-13. Mark T o lon r,
Curios Torregrosa and Chris
Wilson added three hlls each
The Cardinals also picked up a
23-7 victory over the Angels as
Polldore and Scott Kuhn had
four hits each and Craig Moser
had three. Including a home run
• The Angels bounced back to
take a 30-27 decision over the
Indians. Johnny Lynch and
Tracy Wlstrom each clubbed a
1 -m run *&lt;» •
Gi«rc|*

R A D IA L M U D T E P R A IN m

am you*

CtauplRUHOtt-tata

IM tafwt •* 4r jba* I $n

Van

Continued from 6A
leads in KBIs with live.
Brantley's defense Is keyed by middle Infleldrrs
Michelle Brown (shorstop) and Kim Wain (second
base) along with slick-fielding first baseman
Sherry " Ic e " Asplen. Laura Davis and Deana
Jeffers are a pair of fine outfielders for the laidy
Patriots who enter thr tournament with u 3-5
record.
Lake Brantley's leading hitters arc Davts (.380)
and Heather Meyer I.37S). Brown leads In RUIb
with five.
Lyman has experienced Inconsistency both at
the plate and In the field this year. The Lady
Greyhounds got It together offensively this past
Tuesday as they scored 23 runs In a win over
Spruce Creek. But the defense had It problems,
allowing 13 runs against a wrak-hlttlng tram.
Leading hitters for the Greyhounds Include Lori
Helms (.591. third In county), Krlslle Kaiser (.571.
fourth) and Denise Stevens (.550. fifth) All three
have six RBIs and Stevens has two home runs.

THE ADVANTAGEtSf

TlerM*f ft(m*nh

i*kMta 1 » •?re* In f kw tartr* I S #«

...Reputation

Unveiling a strong pitching
staff, the Astros picked up three
wins In a five-day span In
Altamonte Little League Major
Division action.
Last Thursday (the 14th(. the
Astros rallied for five runs In the
last two Innings to take a 6-5
vlrtory over the Expos as Jay
Kane picked up the mound
victory. On Saturday. Andy
Spolskl hurled shutout ball for
four Innings to lead (he Astros
over the Cardinals, 5-2. On
Monday. Chris Plcicones turned
In an Impressive pitching per­
formance as the Astros trounred
thr Braves. 14-2.
In the win over the Expos,
Spolskl cranked a home run
while Plcicones smacked a RBI
double. Nell James unloaded a
two-run homer for the Expos.
Against the Cards, the Astros
built up a 5-0 lead behind key
hits by Mark Plelronea, Spolskl
and Danny Gastl. Against the
Braves. Chris Plcicones ripped a
pair of singles while Spolskl and
Dave Robison added doubles
In other Major Division action,
a six-run fourth carried thr

I »iii'iti•• Ii i«ii* ti

lUWHTl

iM T iw tltfl

•*

BASEBALL

l i l i i i l f l S lit

m u c k racc p h o v in

nnroAW Utct

NIGHTLY 7:20 P.M.
(ftioof8 Son.)

HAT.:MON.WH) SAT 1PM
PLAY THE EXCITING A HIGH
PAYING PICK 6 "A ' BIGQ"
THURS. FREE
ORAN DOT AND ADM
FOR L A D IE I
Visit our two climsiB
controllod eiubhousa* lor
your hn* dining and
antortarnmant pt*aaura
O u b h o u ts rusefslioni

Don't Got Caught
Cold...

WJUi 1m&gt; tenet* 0*w»

A

831-1600

TRANE

Sanford-Orlando
Kennel
Club
North of Orlando

Wxalhsilron

Host Pump/Air Condltlonar
OmlishmIan 41*4*1 *p* (*♦■*

W A L L ftft^S^^l^lt^X^^I, l«*«.

JustoM Hwy 17-02

Ml lag Trtrt t a t inf—M

1007 S Sxnloid Ava
Sxntord______

T

m

- m

Sorry No Minors

M

i

i t

i i t

w&lt;

i

TravelCountry
%
QUALITY OUTDOOR EQUIPMENT |
/ S

T
—

R
w

436

i^ ±r-

O utdoors

•

1101 HWY 436. A LTAM ON TE SPRINGS.
305/631-0777

ACTIVE &amp; CASUAL SPORTSWEAR
T

i

l

l

A L X

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES...
P e r s o n a l lo a n s a r e a v a ila b le
R e v o lv in g C r e d it L i n e .

m T 4rsMs*ft

t

W e a ls o m a k e 1st a n d 2nd m o r t g a g e lo a n s
o n R e s id e n t ia l o r C o m m e r c ia l R e a l E s t a t e
u p to $100,000.

lp**BB«|lr« fSS

Joyce's Homer Salvages Tie
James Joyce's solo home run enabled Sanford to lie
lumgwood, 3-3. after five Innings and. after live more
innings, it was sill) tied and that's the way It ended In Pony
leagu e action at the Seminole Pony Baseball complex.
Joyce also added a single and pitched the first three
Innings for Sanford. Tomm y Kelger went seven Innings on
the mound for Longwood before giving way to Joe Taylor.
Sanford left fielder Bill Drtscold threw out the gaahead
run at the plate In the top of the 10th while Longwood
catcher Kelger picked off the winning run at third In the
bottom of the 10th.

LAS VEGAS. Ncv. (UPlI - The
Icadrr o f the 81 million Las
Vegas Open. Bill Glasson. is
running a race with lime.
The personable 24-year-old
u n k n o w n c a p p e d a s o lid
4-under-par round o f 68 Wed­
nesday by canning a 40-foot,
uphill birdie putt to maintain n
slim lead over Tom Watson.
Glasson stood at 11-under-par
130 a fter tw o days o f the
tournament. Watson was also
11 under-par. but had a total
score of 13 1.
The difference In the two
scores come about as a result o f
d llfcren l pars on thr three
courses the tournament's early
rounds are being contested on.
Glasson is forced to play with
elastic knee braces on both legs
as tlie result o f four knee opera­
tions He said his physical con­
dition docs not ufTecl his swing,
but hampers him when he walks
on the course
"M y problem is not In the
suing. It's In the walking," he
said "In Tour school, w r played
six rounds and 1 did well the first
four days. But the last two
rounds were a grind "
Th e Lus V e g a s O pen ,
sponsored hy Panasonic. Is I he
riehrst on this year's Tour
Unfortunately for Glasson. it Is
also thr longest running at five
days.
I think my knees are gelling
t•mi much attention." Glasson
said disgustedly " I don’t want
lo he kn ow n on I he T ou r
because o f my knees."
The native of Fresno, Calif, has
ralllrd this season alter losing
his playing card lor a second
lime He lied lor eighth in Sail
Diego and lilt Ii at the Hav, Hill
Classic so far In 1985

i s w - i x l Bit

H* - r u x u u t H w i

-WrrwB* « w w u

Winfield Cheeks Into Hospital,
Joins Henderson On Injured List

Glasson Walks
Race With Time

Ploy Better Golf with JACK NICKLAUS

in c lu d in g

Goodrich
ire JtMJCr CAMS FEHTCWWa

AOkTlltl&lt;: .MAIIT

Family Credit Services, Inc.
ABBMX&lt;wy&lt;4CSSrimatpo Cn\*m*rt\

MON rm H S JO SAT B 3 00

3 2 2 -7 4 8 0
2 4 13 S . F r e n c h
S A N F O R D

A ve.

I Vs A T &amp; T
OHpm JNm r
I
Gau jng '

ON SJL 424. NEAR 17-S2
In Th* Park Square Shopping Ct7.
Longwood, PL 32760

unt

nom a,

mol

831-3400

�Friday, March 11. ItlS

•A-Evening Harold, Sanford, FI.

• r1 MlRE TLJC.f !_
Lwilid
Jra

Lyman, Mary, Brantley Girls
Dominate All-County Choices
By Chrla F it t e r
Herald Sporta W rite r
Slate Champion Lyman, district runnrrup Lake
Hraniley and Lake Mary plated three players
apiece on the Evening Hcntlil's All-County Soccer
Team while Sanford's l-atly Seminole**, in their
second yrar of girls scarcer rornpetltion, had two
selections on the First Team The voting was
done by the county coaches.
For Lyman, which finished tit 24-0 and won ihrslate crown after finishing second the previous
season. First Team selections Included Junior
forward Dawn Hnyesen, Junior midfielder Alyson
H arries and s o p h o m o re d e fe n d e r K aren
Alx*rneihy. All three were All-Stale selections as
well for coach Tom llarnes
Hoyrsen was second on the learn In goals
scored with 27 nod led In assists with 111
Hoyrsen and Sheila Mandy combined to sr ore ,r&gt;f&gt;
o( the |.a«ly Greyhounds' 104 goals this past

Soccer
A L L COUNTY
f wit Tif*

&gt;#****. Lt*-4t

L*/|
l*MMr|
fm v i
Stemioriy k
*•'*? !?»■

VKff

••• *rt

W**»*l|

ir*pi
Lr***
f'Tip* i-rws L«*« th*t

* nop 4*rhfi LfT#-

0d—dm

D-enelam*" ifmm

v*

&lt; &gt;1*** L M l'r'W i

* * f*******i*******

ip •5fc»«

WraM ?h «

l %t

wemmn

% » im i m p
- C-^#r
t«fh*e Dcnmert
T'RVyfnttf ,ww*c*ur»
lt»#* - f • MrHApi
y«r«]er*t

5fT*atLMv*rt
L**t

UH *M« - #P HI Khtsi
OPtfMMl
loW NU/f D v'gfN rt

lf

fr«p | i

i«re

season.

Haines contributed seven goals ami eight
assists and was Impressive at midfield where
Lyman ihrouuughly dominated Its opponents
Ala rnethy was not only an Imposing figure on
defense, she also contributed eight goals and
three assists Abrrnethy also (lacked |mwrr In her
right foot as she took most of the Lady
Greyhounds' free kicks and corner kicks
Lake Itia n lley 's three selections, all un
detclusHinrn, Include junior defender I'ain An­
derson sophomore forward Kristin I'alm and
fresliman defender Itrenlr Denver
Along with Ahernelhv. Anderson was one of the
most domloatlng tlefeuders In the slate f he Lady
Patriots Jiio Ioi leader was also named to the
All Stale team
Paine was the leading scorer for Hntnlley lids
jiasl season while Heaver. Ihr only freshman on
the llrsl leant, combined with Anderson to give
Ihc Lady Patriots rate rtl the toughest defenses
around.
First Team selections lor l-akr Mary s Ladv
Pains Included sophomore forward Kelley llrncn.
senior defender Marianne D lTm t l anti Jmilm
jpialker per Laura llcllrgaartl
One ol the most explosive players In Ihc stale.
Ilmen led Seminole County In goals scored to Hie
regular season and cupped oil a lint sophomore
season hy being named lo the All Stale team
Oi l in cl. the only senior on the First Team, was a
mainstay for the Hams' defense the past three
years llcllcgaard. in Iter first season with the
lauly Kants, used lu r 5-10 Inline and excellent

'4 _
■-

-

(PPy
k,
Y
'.TJb^li r . 1 s

i

* l

athletic ahllltv to catch on rpilek In goal for Lake
Mary
First Team se Ire I Ions for Seminole High
Included Junior defender Angela Freeman and
sophom ore forw ard -keeper Sherri Rum lcr.
Freeman, one of the quickest defenders around,
combined with ( Indy Benge to give Seminole a
si rung defense and help the Lady Tribe lo a
14-0-3 record
Homier was one o f the most versatile players In
Ihc county as, lor most of the season, shr spenl
the llrsl hall In goal and the second at forward. In
it I I Hr against rival Lake Mary. Homier turned
in a stellar llrsl half In goal anti came on In I he
second to score For her outstanding play this
season. Homier became the first Seminole High
git Is soccer player named to the All Stale team
Lyman placed five more players from its
talented squad on All-County Second Team
including |nnlor forward Sheila Mandy (2!) goals),
senior midfielder Alyson Wright (the lone senior
on the tram), sophomore mtdllelder Stacey Hoy.
sophomore defender Olana Hoyrsen ant) Junior
goalkeeper Lisa Chatman (allowed Just 14 goals
III I H games)
Mandy was a Second Tram choice In All
County hut wax also named to the All State team
With all hut one starter returning next season,
the Lady Greyhounds will Ik- odds on favorite to
w in Jt all again
Second Team selections lor Seminole Intruded
settlor forward Hrlh Nelson anil sophomore
forward Vicky "SpufTy" Pakovlc. two of the
lending suiters in the county Nelson, despite

l I T 71

f j J
i

J

Mai aid Mali bf Tamm, ViihmI

The trout row members ol the All County
Soccer Team are (loll to righ t) Lake M ary's
Haul Holm es, Eric Zim m erm an and Andre
Sanders. Lake Branlley's M o Moghaddam,
Scan Putegnal and Aaron Klndcl In (he

missing half Ihr season with a broken collarbone,
went on a scoring hinge when she returned as she
had three hat tricks and IH goals while playing In
14 games.
Second Team selections for Lake Mary Included
senior forward Fran "Flash" Gordon and junior
midfielder Krlslen Jones Lake Hraniley s Second
Team choices w rrr Junior mldllcldcr Susan
Toepfer and sophomore m idfielder Michelle
Herbs!

Honorable Mention (ticks were led by Seminole
with five Including licngc. Kachelle Denmark.
Kim Walsh. Tracey Fartellv and .Janet Haitck.
Honorable Mention selections lor Lyman Included
Kim Mitchell. Nancy VauVonrhts and Kellie
Straw Honorable Mention choices lor the first
year Lake Howell Lady Silver Hawks were Melissa
Mearus. Megan Lane and Harry Mlslak Lake
M ary’s Oorrle Elders also made Honorable
Mention

By Chris F ilt e r
H erald Sporta W r ite r
Lake Howell's Stiver lluwks. the lop-runkrd
team In the state (4A) much of the season, hud
lour selections to the First Team lo lead Ihr
voting for the tCvriilnjl 1/rruJtJ‘i) AII-County Soccer
squad. Lake Hrantlry and Lake Mary had three
First Team (ticks each while Lyman had two and
Oviedo one The voting was done hy the county
coaches.
First Team selections (or Lake Howell, which
was stunned In the district tournament hv Lake
Mary, Included senior defender Kevin Kyter.
senior defender-midfielder Jim Morrissey, senior
forward Mike Serino and Junior forward Eric
Krrsmun
The Sliver Hawks wrrr Ihr Five Star Confer­
ence champions with a H O I record under coach
Norm Wight. Lake Howell lost Just once In the
regular season before flowing out to Lake Mary
For the state |4A) runnrrup Patriots. Junior
goalkeeper Aaron Klndrl and senior forward Mu
Moghaddam were the only unanimous choices lo
I he First Team. Also making the team for
Hraniley Is senior defender Scan Putegnal.
Time after time this season Klndcl pulled the
Patriots out ol dose games with a key shutout I Il­
ls one of only three |uulors on the seniordominated All-County First Team.
Moghaddam, onr ol the most prolific scorers In
Central Florida. Is one of the most skilled players
to ever suit up for a Seminole County learn, His
settlor leadership this season was Instrumental In
Brantley's quest for the stale crown which fell
|usl onr win short under coach Jlnt llrodv
Lake Mary's First Team selections Included
settlor mldlirldrr Paul llotmrs. senior forward
Andre Samlets and senior defender Erie /.tin

|

J

(le ft lo righ t) arc Alt County first team
choices Sherri Rum ler ot Seminole and Ihc
Lake M ary trio of Marianne D iT u cd , Kelley
Broen and Laura H ellegaard

Hawks Top Boys With 4

J&lt; * '

»

*j

W ^

%

Meral&lt;f Photo by Tommy VirMffft

Lym an's state champion girls soccer (earn
placed four players on the All State First
Team. In the front row (le ft fo right) are
Alyson Barnes, Karen Abernethy, Sheila
Mandy and Dawn Boyesen *n the back row

hack row are (le ll to right) Lake H ow ell's
Kevin Ryler, Jim M orrissey, Eric Reesman
and Mike Serino. Lym an's Brian Ocasek,
Keith Young and O viedo's Greg Brick.

Soccer
A L L COUNTY
'&amp;)•»••»»»
Off Gts.itI
yt*«r Iwrt
(XvNdsn
MeP'VYkfr* Iff* !»«**»*
*0O&lt;4f
PmjPj*do U*t Mpeffl
k«nPuier^* in* •fr’ki
IfS#
******
f it A«w«fin OvftSB
ifff If***
Mbdi.iMtn
ee&lt;»
NkM-MsM
T»u«*64 144» BriMtTrf
1440H0W
B^l^F Wof
*0*4*
If**
wn*er
i 04* l
*****
IjimMu*l&gt;i Iff* ««»
•tiiktfcFH
(erte* Hji%L|*P4f
Ferwerii
femui-r•«
|*#i«T
UllkAI 1 **&gt;w
4“
P0****** iffRIR
AndFtWvkKl l*b* V#-*
muai
H*"**
&gt;0**VNtF IM#
S*c¥,jg*
L*41
•MnerMM*****
%*-*4o 040* lt"*r
tils
- jervf frfi 11**» ■'W &gt;•*
f*&lt; •m-e' mini*
I***
O'
MleO8* »
!&gt;ff +4% 0*#4t
ksaiN - Be« *0* M*rW-i SrMvt O
WcBMi?M*»
left Me^Mi* 0#*^•*«
Cr*S4Mp»»
DvtHf - &gt; lr t ^
Iff RbRlI .Ill Hjf*
l*B
WnfAT*
fm tm*
G*«iiB&lt;r»v#

merman Holmes turned In an outstanding
season at mtdlleld where he often slngle-handldly
dominated a match Sunders was the leading goal
scorer lor Central Florida 4A schools and a
All State team selection Zimmerman's defense
was Instrumental in Lake Mary's district upset of
then lop ranked Lake Howell
Lyman's high-scoring Junior Brian Ocasek was
a ls o a First Team choice along with Greyhound
teammate Keith Young, a senior midfielder.
Oviedo's Greg Brick was the only sophomore
selected to the All-County First Team Brick led
the Lions In goals scored and led the way In a pair
of upxrtsof powerful Montverde

COUNTY BASEBALL LEADERS
Dtit
t 1
42
91
91
44
19

}9
00
29
1•

All
1) )
II J
••
12 2
tl 1
• 10
4V
4 10
4 10
2 II

Hemi f uni
Idim ltt

till 111' (MlSlIHi
tomlnoi* ot l ob* Hu&lt;t«ll 2 Xlp m
O u a f i Sell Cw S i h i i
llit/xjfi Moor • *1 O v M i . p m
(Ovlodo 4 III OSC 1 41

* O . &gt; *. « . ' J - f

1S b

H AVO
21
u&gt;
12
471
U4
14
II
All
1*7
2)
Ml
11
M0
f
Jr*
n
12
Ml
11
M2
IS
Ml
II
Ml
1U
IS
14
U)
IS
U)
12
U1
IT*
It
770
14
11
in
1)
in
JU
20
12
n»
20
in
14
h i
IS
)i«
u
•
M
•
b •

OaeAket
Canfield. LaAa Howell
Al#gre Lyman
Mati Lake Mary
Odom Lyman
Co
u
v Me
11**
f . lLake
■■■ Brantlev
w* ’*t*j
(}a Y
atii*. kSSB
l b|o BI
Hrsnliev
kr•
■lll'*T
Derr, Samlftol*
B a tt LaAa Brantley
Verthant, Oviedo
Urad Dunn. Lob* Srontloy
ttrubobor Lymon
UvormNb. Lymon

2
1
2
i
i

1*11*110 Lob* Mary

COUNTY H IT T IN G L I *01 S*

.■

Tr l*l*i
Alafr*. Lyman
AnllwvLi* 1 oka kior.
CoMty Lake Br#ntt«y
B fu P fk ff, L r men
» k
1 ■■
oka
Mat
X tun.
TVTTII,
V rV
A#* f»
[)#vi%- LaA* Brantley
S u n 1 oka ttr onllov
UiaBiaM Um inola
\Jtpg« yq Ov &gt;eiJO
Hr ad Dwe%n. LaA# Brantley
Urbcto* W iu l Lake Mar*
H frn M v m laAa BraoHty
Henley Lyman

4
4
)
2

Me» y

UndvtwowJ Lobo AAory
Brad Dunn Lob* Utantloy

i
i
i
i

Oov't Lob* Stonltoy
Andy Dunn Lob* Srontloy
Hunt to Hod to

MSmil lob* AAory

T4

IPF*W!».
IT*"’ r
fio .ii 'te*1
i oka
onlLa■
tMiv'lf.
* Hr wit
b« t
O rlifid l eke M«rev*M
Co»»*y lik e BffhMfy
Odom tym en
l l i m i L i l t Iffh lle y
Aloft* Lyman
UyfrryNk. Lymftn
f rn*tl
1*4* Moee*H
Myntan, L i h i How*ll
ShoOftn 0 »4 4 #
LiftAt Bf*nl:l*y
1eutw^k** 1*4* i*0Nk#l*
M# i vihe-C1 Ov ifsJbJ
BruSobor. Lym an
Honoy tom Inot*
LIU* Lobo AAory
C*o. tom.nota *
Lottorlo. Lob* AAory
Oort, tom mot*
Wo'ion Ovlodo
Hr ad Ounn. Loba Srontloy

10
12
IA
IS
IS
14
14
1)
11
12
It
12
II
H
10
10
Ip
10
f
«
t

bWi « * ■ b. W S . •

..........

.

....

t
1
1
•
•

1 eheM e-r
Henley L yrnett
B *»« leee Hreniley
Hob*r»%. Lake Moweu
Miner Lake kkeweil

JOS
J00
Iff
204
J t)
224
222
224
124
240
M2
Ml
no
no

II
II
11
12
Ift
12
tl
14
12
It
II
12
II
1)

I ! rv*ii M ir iIn*f . 1 *k « How* 11

lym o n ol Loba Mar y, I * m
Lob* Srontloy ot Apopbo. ' V m

Ai
44
14
14
M
M
M
n
AI
4t
M
44
44
4)
41
4S
»!
M
to
41
41
4J
14
44
41
42
M
M

NO
M
4j
1)
4J
42
M
42
U
41
44
44
SI

Lott*y lob# Utantloy

lotwdoy tf*nt*(

So MlOf A iotof*
etoytr
Toom
AAoll. lobo AAory
Itwqron Ovlodo
IcSmlt. Lab* AAory
B ia.b. Lymon
AA*t( Sant, Ovlodo
Alafr*. Lymon
l o l l Ok Lab* AAory
Cottoy, Lob* Srontloy
U#»* Mar lotto Howolt
Lowtlo.Oiiodo
Cobroro Ovlodo
Odom Lyman
LIU* Lob* AAory
Brad Dunn, Lab* Srontloy
Cat. tomlnoi*
ttoiMy, tomlnoi*
S oil. 1 **• Srontloy
Teuton too Lab* Howoil
( I k M * rtiro, HeWOll
Dorr, tomlnoi*
Davit. Lob* Bromley
Lottorlo LaA* AAory
Booty. Loba Srontloy
i c ii l abt AAory
Calnay. tommal*
Wallot* L*k* AAory
Brodlay. Ovlodo

Ifke H ffn M ty
Uvw nolt. ly fn «n
Moll* l eke
Ndttwtorv l eke Mer y
Hrutvaher Ijrm in
Htftify Lymtin
\f»eff-*it1 Wmlrvolt
AAyinisork. lull* H om «M
E rn tH M e H ln il Moeell
Ml 11«f i dk* Nowf'll
itfMNvn Wminoif
Umltf •'M l L fk f Met y
Lym^n
fenf.fid l eke Howell

i

)
1
1
1
1
I

w

1
1
1
•
2
4
4
4
I
S

................. s
4
4

4

UUm M h i
12
AAorcKont, Ovlodo
1|
(L ’itl*
1 Aka ml#T
fyUrvf
■'■ keOf
11
B r u t ik t r . Lyman
11
Ifu m e i Wmiftti*
__ _
rwuvto
10
Alofr*. Lyman
Mar boy. tomlnota
f
b 'e tb . Lyman
D*rr. Lob* AAory
Cabrara. Ovlodo ... —
Andy Ounn. Lobo ironlM y
B
D a vit Lake By an Tiey
1
tl
m
(flry
iiijr
Ob
ledo
Iff ' Tm *m 0 wdrVtPVnr
j
Bornboum. Lob* BrontMy
A
Hill. Lob* AAory
i.*i*&lt;Bi*«*t*.**bt**yo*i V
Bor roll Ovlodo

■wot
And* Oven. Lob* Hr on Hoy
D o . it. Lob# Sr amtoy

2C
..............

20

Kevin Bass
...0.42 ERA

M ike Sehmlt
...24 RBI

Undo .wood. Lobo AAory
I*
Cottoy. Lob* Srontloy
••
Con Hold. Lob* Mow*ll
tl
AWfr*. Lym an
.
IT
B’ ubobtf. Lym an
&gt;*
AAorttiom. Ovlodo
&gt;*
Boom*, i . . . Sr anttry
I*
(m o il MarSnot L*b* Hawaii
I*
tohmll. Lob* Mory
II
Motl. Lob* M ory
II
Vw fron. C M a d * .
&lt;4
lot«*r&gt;o. LoboMory
14
Hobart*. Loo* HOW*11
&gt;4
Llvomol*. Lyman
H
Odom. Lym an
—
~ ™ -.U
Toubonooo Lab# Hawaii
IT
Brad Ovnn. Lab* SronlNy
U
OvMdb.
IT
Minor. Lobo Ho**n
n
Sou. Lob* Sr entity
Louoic. Lob# Mary
II
Sana. Lyman
U
Boucher. Laba t boo* 11
■
......*•
C O U N TY B ITC K IN O L I A D B S I
iSotSoldb lamina!*
DolMont*. Lob* Hew* 11
Brad Dunn. Loo* Srontloy

41by

Ov#r»tr**t. Lyman
Im llS. Laba Sr ant by
Llvernolo. Lym an
l«hm it, Loba Mary
L*bi*K. Lob* Mary

Mbi
so
15
...„.S 4
■..■ XJ*y

..

...B2VT Innings

O-uncan, Oviedo
Luik Lake1Brantley
Damon MaHerte Lake Howell
VUifltn, Laka HoweII
BradHy Ovkedo
Ramrom. LaAa Howell
dfatton. Oviedo
Hagen Lake Mary
Baker Lyman
B a n LaAa Brantley
Mayor. Lyman
Horrl*. Lab* Mary

. |p4y
!2 ‘ )
11
22
IH l
IB*.
1241
12
12
14**
l* 'i
14**

WmiLotbot
Brad Ounn. lob* Br*nti*y

2

Bobor. Lyman
Sh*tti«td SomlnoM

S
4
4
)
S
|
2
J

Hofon lob* AAory

|

J

11&gt;)
«4
t]

H*r**y. Sommo** ■

B rian Sheffield

DeiMonte Lake Howell
Hortoy tomlnoi#
C ir nod r*a #»*r of*
S o u . Lob* Bronttoy

i
]
}
i
)

0
o
1
1
1
0
s
o
o
o
0
1
I
)
i
s

t *J

Chrla Brock
...423 average

Morn*. Lob# Story
■radtoy Ovwdo
Bobor Lyman
L iv*r not*. Lyman
Martin. Lab* Howell
VmtS, Lobo Srontloy ■
iM B S K i L*0* Mory
Ov*r*tro*t Lyman
V H m il Lobo AAory
DolMonto. Lob. Howoil
Oomon Mort*tt* Lob*Howoil
Oration Oytodo
LueO. Lab* BranlNy
Hortoy iomeno**
Brad Dunn. Lob* Branltoy
H*e*n Loo* AAory
Mayor Lyman
tnottiotd iominoi*
Duncan. Ovedo

IbSnd*
Livomo.*. Lyman
Htrooy. tomlnoi*
Duncan Ovioda
Brad Dunn. LaO* Srontloy
UwtKoid. lorn mot*
Ov*r*lr**t. Lyman
VcSmlf. Lab* AAory
Lv*b Loba Bronttoy
Smith. Lab* Srontlty
DolMont* Lob* How*ll
H*f*n. Lob* AAory
V O U S C I Caooty Coochot
Com*.lad By lam Coo*

0*0
117
I lo
lip
I ft
IB )
| ta
J IT
141
1 !B
1 )4
1
1
1
J
I
I
4

i

M U tB S S

IT A N U IN O *
\ \»*r
Toom
Lob* Mary
10 1
Lymon
•&gt;
Lw I oimI
9)
t4
Lob* Hranlloy
Ayuftba
*4
49
Lob* How*ll
49
Ctoob
S**4rr**t*
II
Vormnol*
)•
AAoInland
1«
TSvrbdoy tro to lt
0*1 and ot Vomlnol* P4*f» r«ln

�PEOPLE

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, March 22. i t U - f A

Gardening

Cannas Brighten Spring, Summer Landscape
If you have a bright, sunny garden spot that
needs some summer color, why not try cannas
this season. These tropical flowering perennials
are very easy to grow. You've probably have seen
them growing somewhere. They have showy,
tropical looking foliage with leaves resembling
those of u banana tree. The bright, large flowers
come In a wide variety of colors. Including Ivory,
yellow, rose, salmon, and red. Plants may reach a
height of ten feet, depending on the variety you
choose.

Alfred
B e sse se n
Urban
llo rtlc u ltrls t
323-2300
Ext. 181
satiny flowers.
Low-growing cannas shouldn't ever gel larger
than three feet high They m akr a nice addition lo
a small gardens, along terraces, and In other
arras where space ts limited. The low-growing
cannas have green leaves and large, wellproportioned flowers

Even the foliage Is attractive, with colors
ranging from green or greenish-blue to copper,
purple, or ruby. Som e varieties arr variegated
with green leaves with white stripes If you're
interested In adding cannas to your landscape,
you should know that the plants are classified In
two ways — flower type and growth habit.

Dwarf cannas grow from 10 to 18 inches tall.
They're used most often as accents in front ot
shrubs, err In rntxrd flower tied plantings

Cannas come In tw o basic (lowering types
G ladiolusflowering cannas have wide flower
petals on (lower spikes spread closely on long
stalks. Orchid-flowering cannas arr more looselyspaced and they have narrow petals
By growth habit, cannas are classified as
tall-growing, low growing, and dwarfs. The
tall growing plants nerd quite a bit of room. They
should be spaced about two feet apart Most of tintall growing types will reach a height of four to
six feel. They bear very large spikes and huge.

Like most garden plants, cannas grow best In
well-drained soil that's rich In organic material
and plant nutrients. They will grow- In most soils,
without extra amendments, as long as they get
enough fertiliser and water.
No matter what kind ol soil they're planted In,
cannas like plenty of plant fond The more they
get. the more they bloom Fertilize your cannas at
least once a month with a complete 0-6-6
fertilizer. Apply about two |miuik Is |*«-r IOO square

Pankhurst m em bers, seated
•from left, G r e l c h e n
Schapker, president; Norma
Ragsdale, board m em ber;
and B elty S ta n ley, m e m ­
bership chairm an; register
F ra n G ordon, le ft , Lake
M a r y H igh s e n i o r , and
Janine D u llm eyer, Oviedo
High senior, at Pankhurst's
Discovery '85 for area high
schools. The annual event,
featuring 11 sessions, was
held al Lake M a ry High
School Janice S prin gfield
was fhe mistress of cerem o
nies, and keynote speaker
w as Carole N elson , news
c o m m e n t a t o r at W C P X
Channel 6.
H«tU PtwMkrr Tmmr VIikw I

In And Around The County

5CC Ensemble Rated
'Superior' At Festival

A roods dem onstration on
money saving teelpcs using eggs
cnililed "Eggortomlcs." free and
open to the public, w ill hr
prrseulrd on March 27 from
1-2:30 p m ., and again that
evening from 7:30-8 30.
V a 11n d a H e n z e , l i o n i r
econ om ist with the Florida
Pultry Federation In Tampa, will
give this Demonstration ai the
Seminole County Agricultural
Center.
US. Highway 17-02,

He careful pruning you can keep cannas
blooming all summer A s soon as the Mist tlnwci*
wither, remove the pan ot lit. stein dial bote
them Usually there will be a second ilowcrlng
shoot growing from the joint Just below tin top
(lower ol die tlisi shoot Just couiltmc this
process, removing each stem a* (lit tloweis
wither Finally when all the dowering shoots
finish humming cut the entire strut at or just
above the ground 1e\ cl
Alter the blooming season, cannas should he
dug ami stored mull the next spring Clean ot!
any sand or organic materia! clinging to the roots
Separate them and throw .mar am rhizomes
without "eyes" Cut oil the remaining stems, and
let tlit rltlzonicd dt\ lor a week oi mi til a cool
area Cut oil all lire dried mots pul the rlil/ninc*
in a Hat woodrii hox cover them with peal moss
atul store them under cool &lt;oiidlttnu* Do not
telrlgcralc llifiu though thc\ w ill itclct lorali ai
lettt|&gt;era(tire- ol 15 degrees I'ahienltell and
below
Since cannas cart grow qrnti large lliev should
Im- used with care lit the average I.iuiIm ape A li w
plants mighl lie Inn hut too mam in Mu saintarea should Ik- dlsasleions I t v some cannas Mils
season
riit-v II brighten up von spring and
summer landscape
llappv Hardening

Neighbors Do Slow Burn While
Firemen Refuse To Fight Fire

A Day For
Discovery

The Sem inole C om m unity
(College Jazz Ensemble recently
■returned from the Loyola Uni­
versity Jazz Festival In New
O r le a n s w h e r e 30 J a z z
Ensem bles participated. The
baud brought buck the only
Superior Performance trophy the
lodges awarded to Community
College Jazz Hands.
Under the direction o f Dr
William Hinkle (lie group literal­
ly "b le w " Ihelr way Into the
Judges and audiences' hearts,
according lo Hinkle. The NAJE
(National Association of Jazz
Educators) adjudicator's com­
ment sheets read; "n o crlllcfsm ." "this band sw ings," and
"outstanding."
R e c e iv in g " O u t s t a n d i n g
Musician" trophies were J.H
Scott (trumpet). Kim Cosat (alto
saxophone) and Jose Hetancourt
Ibaritone saxophone).

feet of garden area
Cannas ran be grown In the garden two ways
First, they can be grown In containers Four ot
rive gallon plastic pots are Ideal. To gel them
slatted. IHI the pots with good organic soil and
plant the cannas Then, space the pots out and
set them In the ground Make sure the soil In the
pots Is about level or slightly shallower with the
surrounding soil Add a layer of mulch and no
one will ever guess that the plants are growing In
containers.
This method may sound like a lot o f extra work
but It lias advantages that make li worihwhlle
For one tiling. It's easier lo be sure the plants
have enough fertilizer when the root systems are
In pots And. since there's practically no leaching,
you'll get good results with less fertilizer The
plastic pot* cut down on soil-borne Inseels and
nematode problems, too. Finally, cannas growing
In pots usually need less water, because the
organic soil holds more moisture than the sandy
soil* so common In our landscape.
As you know or soon will, cannas grow from
rhizomes — special food-storing roots You can
also plant the rhizomes directly In the flower
beds Mix about one-third of a cup o f a complete
O fi ti fertilizer Into the soil for each rhizome you
plant Cannas planted this way usually won t
flower as soon as those rooted ahead of time in
(Mils.

Five Points. Sanford Agricultor­
al Extension Cenler.
Tills program Is one of several
In a series named "Use It or Lose
l( — Use Your Consumer Skills
nr Lost- Money." The purpose is
lo help consumers save money.
For Information, call Harg.ira
H u g h e s . E x t e n s io n H o m e
Ernnomlst. al 323-2500, Ext
179
Th e Central Florida Uuliters
Guild will meet at 7:30 p ro. on
March 28 g| Mu- First lluptlxl
Church, 519 S Park A vr. San­
ford. Helen Gorltschr will give a
demonstration on binding quills.
Visitors are welcome.
Entries are now being ac­
cepted for the fourth annual
Calendar Art Contest sjMtnsorrd
by Empire o f America and the
Gainesville Department o f Cul­
tural Alllars. The eomepelttun Is
oj&gt;cn lo area high school siudrnts.
T w e l v e w in n e r s w i l l be
srlcclrd. This work will Illustrate
Ihc months o f the year In the Hlg
E's I960 calendar A cash award
of $200 will lx- presided to the
first place winner, and Ihc other
eleven winners will each receive
•100.
The deadline for entries ts
April 15. More Information and

entry forms may lie obtained
from your local Hlg E ofllre or
from Sue Wagner al the Empire
ol America District olflee In
Gainesville.

DEAR A B B Y: What a strange
coincidence! On the same day
you printed a letter signed
"Grateful In Mlllsboro. Del,."
praising the heroism of volun­
teer lirrmen. this Associated
Press Item appeared, datellned
Salem. Ark .:
"Volunteer firefighters refused
to light a lire that destroyed
A n th on y B r a z il's $150,000
house and killed the family's dog
because they said he h;id not
paid $20 in annual fees.
They Just sat there and
w atched It bu rn. W e have
nothing lelt but the clothes on
our tsirks and our ears.' Brazil
said.
"T h e chief ol Sulrm'n volun­
teer fire departm ent, Ronnie
Courtney, sold. 'W e've had a
policy for a number of years If
you're nol a member, we don't
flghl fhe fire. The flrr association
charges $250 in pul out a lire,
bin the lire victim must Im- a
tnriuhcr whose $20 annual dues
are paid.'
Brazil ami his wile were at
church when Brazil's brothers
discovered Ihr blaze Sunday
morning. Courtney said flames
were (aiming out ol windows
w hen lltellgliiers arrived In three
trucks, staying near the house lo
make sure the lire d ld n l spread
"Neighbors offered lo pay the

S te rlin g Park E lem en tary
School Is h a vin g Hs spring
carnival. Saturday. March 23.
(rum 10 OO a.m. lo 3 00 p ut., al
the school located In the Deer
Hun Sundlvlslou.
The festivities include loud,
games, prt/es. moon walk, a bake
sulr and a plant sale. Th e
carnival Is open o the public

glad to pi uu a

Abby

h enju i ked
mi*lt&lt; atctl
in
gift-letI ot imha|ip\ In claim s in
Ik
ts slO|ilil iltlel t heap

$20 and the adilllloii.il $250 il
dishorn *a ..nil *h&lt; msight. .1
the department would light the
BONNIE
lire. Inil ihc firelighter* tchtscd
'"T h e llrellglitei* were |u*i
D EAR BONNIE: I did
standing around A* a mailer ol
fact, they were out hosing thcit
new flrr truck down In the sireel
lo kcrji II clean, said Barite)
Ta&gt;,or. a memtier ol the church
l he Brazil* a tten d "
PETER W. M A N Y JR..
N E W ORLEANS
The Snnfotd City Commis­
D EAR PETERt Thank* lor
sion has declined Ihc rrionlh
sending I Ik- lu-m I received
ol March as "Clonn U p"
several from oilier pans ol the
month for llto City of Sanford
country.
I cannot understand how am
The Sanlotd City Commis­
person could justilv the art Inn*
sion urges all tosldonls to
ol the Salem. A ik
volunteer
join in this ««f fur I and keep
firelighters
"The Friendly City" a clean
II ihelr eblt-l. Ronnie Uourlnev
and beautiful city
o r a n y o f th e v o l u u l r c r
(Irrllghirrs who stood In rein*
MARCH '85
lug to fight a lire iliai desiroyed
a house anti killed a famllv dog
" C L E A N UP M ONTH"
ha* anything m sn\ in ihrii
defense, please write I will Im-

K EEP YOUR
CITY CLEAN

WOW!!
BLOOMIN’
TOWERS!!

United Wag

SIDEW ALK SALE/
SAT. MARCH 23

IMPATIENS OR BEGONIASa
SOLID COLUMNS OF
■ LOOMING PLANTS
IN A SELF CONTAINED
TOWER. 24" Rag. 2* *9
J4" Alto Avail at)la
LIMITED QUANTITIES

10 AM T IL 5 PM

22

HANDMADE CRAFTS
Com. Early for Boat Salactlon*

A

&amp; $

D EAR ABBY- Who u.is ihi
\\I*, soul who unite
Am
woman who will a, &lt;. pt at tent ton
Irani a mat t led man
no mailt i
Iran hotel\
III 1*11 title |st o o d

Dear

8 8

SORRY NO RAINCHECKS

(Z'K X fcl

ZAYRE PLAZA - 1214548
AIRPORT OLVD. * 17 W
SANFORO

TERRA-COTTA

HEN
PLANTED WITH
BLOOMINO BEGONIAS.

Rag 6 99

25th Street
LA W N &amp; G A R D E N C E N T E R
And So Will You With Non Clams. Sa* For Yoursalf
How Much Bottor You Look And Fool!!

S p r in g F lin g
VEGGIES

DR. HUEY STOCK

6 PK.
TOMATOES. PEPPERS,
LETTUCE. BROCOLU
COLLARD GREENS

ROSES

59
2400 W. 25th St.

BUSHES
TREES
321-2525

Ml
IM

WHITE GLASS LENSES
SINGLE VISION

- 00
* 2 5

LARGE SELECTION OF FRAMES

5% DIAZINON
COVERS 5,000 SO. FT. REQ. 11.99
11 99

7m m !

Super
Special

Two A Ptot. Coy Aim UM*. Vm t Dactarv Prmr1.UM T M Clasm

Pet0tato4. AZuntwwU A ■•gafra.
!8 8

.“ 1588

_________________

TOUR litGlASStS

SAVISC CtStitt

■788

n u t ruses

aw . iim z i
121*0*0 SANTORO

271 W. UU MARY BLVO

MON THRU THI 9 AM 3 I’M. SAT ft AM I PM
( h ~ d Wed Al I I’M • Ck *cd Last Sal Of The Month

LAKE MARY
323-0133

SANFORD

1

BOTH NUIUItlfS
NOR Of IN SUNDAY 125
OPEN DAIIY 1)05)0

2035 MWY. 17 92

M AITLAN D
834 2080

J

�BIONDIE

1°A— Evening H f a ld , Sanford, FI.__ Friday, March 72, i m

by Chic Youn j

0O»J*T r e f X X T 1

-o h *, -~ e

y
r &lt; W T ■* r—V

F&lt;a*rr
&lt; I o ver
t v To»*&lt;&gt;rrX *■- e

tm b

t&gt;4
' — \D

BEETLE BAILEY
WHAT ARE
YOU POIU6
NC7W?

nor ue*a&gt;_v
AS (3 0 0 0

by Mort Walker

INVENTING

YOU PON'T KUO//WHAT
YOU'VE INVENTEP TILL
YOU IMVEKIT IT/

SO M E TH IN ©
TO HELP
&gt; M A N K IN P

TH E BOHN LOSER

by Art Sansom
L ViA»r 40L) TO TMPC
TWO /X'RPO;fOMLtlY.E

... c o b l e -s m c e
TUG CARBONS,

..A u o c o u e t t IT!

TOO, L TAKE
IT ?

ARCHIE

„

by Bob Montana

EEK A MFFK

by Howie Schneider

I’M WOT GETTING) t\ FMR
SHAKE- ABOUND HERE... J

N C ft X V R K 0 G M I2 E S
MV SLPERJOR OUAITTIES

I CONSIDER THIS A MANDATE
TO GO OUT AMD DEAL WITH
TV IE IMPORT AMT ISSUES OF
OUR TIME

~~y ---------- --l

‘r V

Hysterectomy Pushes
Woman Near Suicide
DEAR DR LAMB - Three
years ago, at 5 1. 1 had a needless
h y s t e r e c t o m y th a t s o lv e d
nothing. What It did do was take
away my libido, which was very
strong, and left me with no
Interest In sex. I was a very
orgasm ic w om an before the
o p e r a tio n a n d n o w I fe el
castrated, very depressed and In
agony abort m y loss None of
these effects were ever men­
tioned to me.
I also now have bladder and
rectal problem s.
DEAR READER - Your leller
suggests that you need help. I
suspect that you need hormone
replacement and are not taking
estrogen. You might have had
the same reaction when your
o v a r ie s s lo p p e d p ro d u c in g
estrogen with your expected
menopause. At 51, It could not
have been far off. The doctor has
lo think about the possibility
lhal cancer of the ovaries may
occur. If the ovaries will not
provide any needed function
because of the menopause any­
way. he must consider whether a
woman should be exposed lo the
risk of ovarian cancer.
The removal o f the uterus has
no effect on libido, but female
hormones do. I do not know
what you m ean by bladder
problems, but If you mean re­
current Infections, these, too.
occur when a woman Is low on
estrogen due to the natural
menopause or surgery.
Your comment about suicide
suggests strongly that you need
to see a psychiatrist. Anyone
with such thoughts needs pro­
fessional help. Despite your hos­
tility toward your doctor. I must
Insist (hat you see him and ask
about your hormone status. If
you are not getting estrogen, you
may tie on the road to bone loss
and other problems,
D E A R D R. L A M B My
husband Is Iri his 80s and has
trouble with drooling He Is
active and his health Is fairly
good for his age. He asked his
doctor, bul the doctor didn’t say
what causes It. Is there a cure for
It?
DEAR READER — Perhaps the
two most common causes of
d r o o lin g In a p erso n your

husband's age are poorly fitted
dentures and weak muscles from
a previous stroke or disease that
affect the nerves that control thq
muscles o f the mouth. He should
have a dentist check his dentures. If he wears them.
Som etim es an excess produc­
tion of saliva also contributes to
the problem. In some cases,
medicines can be used to de­
crease the saliva production, but

ACROSS
1 Truck part
9 Million (pr*f I
13 Using two
hands

14 Stingy
15 Oktihoma town
IS Odd (Scot)
17 Sailor's pstron
saint
18 Crtm
19 Month (Fr.)
70 City In tha Ruhr

Earth daily
High nota
9 Franeh woman
(abbr |
10 CIsetric fiah
n Whitt
13 Presently
20 Ona [Oar.)
2 1 Omars
22 Whala
23 Vidas at
tribasmsn
2* Pad of Arabia
25 Author Gray
____ tf oeuvre
Sticks togathtr
Island off
Scotland
Cut langthwita
Nakst lacs
Lagsl cltim
Band
downward
Carman goblin
Navigation davtca

Vallsy
21 Mountain pats
22 101. Roman
23 Songstraaa
Lame
26 Jula laadar
31 Air dafanaa
group (abbr.)
32 Fortuna
33 Actraaa
Albright
34 Ruaiian hamp
35 Indignation
38 Whola
37 Waaring
apoaral
39 Engliah poat
40 Articla
41 Tha (Bp.)
42
________ light
48 Throw
47 Christian
11
14
symbol
50 Oiacontlnua
11
51 Modarn pamtar
62 Stags mats
M
53 Othsrt (Ltl)
54 Mott litlls
S?
56 Biblical haro
57 Qrainiait

DOWN
1 Construction
baam (comp
wd.)
Opara by Vsrdi
Moslam pnstt
Tha (Fr.)
Sundial arm
Of tha aar

4&gt;

41

some o f these have undesirable
effects.
If the prob lem is strictly
m u s c u la r c o n t r o l, s o m e
exercises to strengthen the facial
and Jaw muscles may be of some
use.
Send your questions ro ur.

Lamb. P.O Box 1551. Radio City
Station. New York. N .Y . 10019.
•newer to PraviOut Punla

48 Ban Car­
twright's boy
49 Paving stone
51 First copies
(abbr.)
55 Chinese
maatura

42 Onantal ehiaf
43 Franeh
composer

44 Dorsal bonts
45 Settlement in
Oreentend

46 Peru's capital
47 Concept |Fr.)

[•

11

10

11

14
11

it

li

It

44

i a is

41

&gt;0
•&gt;
14

•t

(C|ISSI hr Nt A Inc

WIN AT BRIDGE
t)y J a m e s J a c o b y
1JA

by Hargroavea A Sellars

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
—

Cl teen
•**
twnhwiri &gt;■&gt;M * *

'W ''
I WIGH J U S T O N C E 1H EYP
HAVE AS GOO p A A\o&gt;VIC
T H IS WEEK. AO IH f YK L‘ &lt;V&gt;iN&lt;5
l O HAVE N E X T WEEK &gt;

E X c , t/Ng J

''

D &gt;'^ ' ^

^

O

SENSATIONAL l

^ athtak^ W

-

by Warnor Brothers

BUGS BUN NY

J

|^7

fa
r

-o'

c'
ui

a

7 ^
;
i v&gt;:

/ s O )V j&lt; V )

0 0 3a c «
V T
-££* ££ rr ss rrm?
m? V
v.&lt; 0 ^

2

C - 0 = w « f f «£ • f a J ?

--9^ W 2J
VlrSjj r - "
I
/(s i

.

c o_o

%
FRANK AND ER N EST

by Bob Thaves

NO, Th a N|c5 — a l l x
IM e F O

TO

KNo

XGNOPANCE

iv

\$

Is T H A T
\$s :

TilNfct- I -II

A leopard cannot change its
s|m11 h, nor cun you. as a bridge
player, change the spots on the
cards. But you can certainly
notice what the spots are and
use thrm to your best advan­
tage
The three-heart bid by South
was ail ellorl to gel lo three
no trump If North wanted to hid
it When Nortli returned lo only
lh ire spades. South would have
bren well advised lo pass, but lie
fell (hut his spade aee and A K of
hearts outweighed the Hut shape
ot tils distribution, and tie car­
ried on lo game.
Declarer ducked Ihe opening
lead ol diamond king am) won
the diam ond c o n tin u a tio n .
Though chance* were dim. he
had In lake them He led a heart
from (tummy and pul In Ihe
jack. Next came the heart aee
follnwrd hy the heart king

W h en

W e s t r u tte d It w i t h I h e

spade to. declarer discarded
d u m m y ’ s r e m a i n i n g lo w
diamond West now played a
third diam ond and decla rer
carefully ruffed It with the spade
six In dummy. The king of
spades was played, and then the
nine of spades to the ace.
Do you see the lm|xirtauce of
declarer's handling the spade
s p o ts r o r r e c t ly ? S a v in g
d u m m y 's deu ce o f sp aries
created a second trump entry to
declarer's hand
Declarer now led a club up
tow ard ihe K-U In dum m y,
ducked by West Now tic led
dum m y's H|»u1c two. overtaking
It with Ids four-spot, to lead a
second club toward dummy. By
watching the spots and using
them properly, declarer hud
brought In a very lucky game

north
♦ K 942

ru n

V* 1
♦ A95
♦ K q 42
WEST
EAST
♦ J 107
♦ W*

V 104

*&lt;247542

♦ KQ J 7
♦ A 1011

♦ J9

♦ 104 J

SOUTH

♦ AM J
♦ A K J
*441
♦ 74 J
V u ln e ra b le E a s t-W es t
D e a le r N o r t h
W&gt;»1
I ’a u
I’ a u
l-an

N orik
)♦
!♦
!♦
Pass

East
Pass
P ais
Pass
Pass

Soalk
1♦
1*
&lt;♦

Opening lead 9K

contract.

HOROSCOPE
W hat The D ay
W ill B r i n g ...
YOUR B IR T H D A Y
MARCH 23. 1B8S
A sign iIlea id goal you've been
unable to get a handle on can be
achieved In the year ahead.
When It’s accomplished. It will
raise your standing In the eyes of
your peers
ARIES (March 21 April HI)
Today you are apt to tie a hit of a
daydrcanirr but your Imaginings
will be positive and practical and
could lead you to ways to add lo
your resources. Major changes
arc In store for Arles In the
com ing year. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions ttiday.
Mall 81 to Astro-Graph. Box 489.
Radio City Station, New York.
NY IO0I9. Ik- sure lo stale your
todloc sign.
TAU RU S [April 20 May 20)
This Is a good day to devote time
ami study to your long-range
plans. Keep your tomorrows In

mind, not Just your immediate lective action Is now In order.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
concerns.
OEM1NI (May 21 Ju ne 20) D ecision s y o u m ake today
Someone extremely fond o f you should not be bused upon their
Is aware of your present needs
mutrrlal or financial aspects
and will help alleviate a respon­ alone. Consider other factors
sibility that you thought you'd
that are equally as Important.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23 Dec.
tiave to shoulder alone.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) A 2I| The ways and means may
present them selves today to
friend you'll be associating with
today may provide you with a make It possible for you to
fresh outlook that will be of great acquire something you've de­
help to you In making a business sired but always considered too
expensive.
decision.
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Speak
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22 Jan.
19) Companions will be swayed
up today If you feel credit or
other acknowledgments are due by the exam ple you set today.
you for service you recently
Your Influence over others Is far
performed. Your demands will more powerful than you think.
be recognized.
A B U A RIU B (Jan. 20-Feb. 191
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You Restrict current sensitive or
have a charismatic manner and secretive activities to yourself
style about you today that others und those directly Involved.
will find quite appealing and Don't tip your hand lo outsiders.
pleasing. You'll be a standout In
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A
any group.
pal might tell you something In
L IB R A (Sept 23 O ct. 23) confidence today and leave It to
Everyone should be In harmony
your discretion whether another
today regarding a common, con­ (riend sh ou ld be Inform ed.
fidential family Interest. Col­ Weigh the decision carefully.

by Laonard Starr
I MUSI HAVE WVEPJ ML ,6t€*
OFF- bOrl 10NQ _Tlug£ i rrtvE
MAS THE CHILP I GOT TO TM'
seen aoNc. e d general sr»ie
HOOTlE?
BY NON, ASP..

i i

*: t . t *.

*. :

l tf. O

t &gt;

4

II U *t«|i ft

.

an'W e u

seputotr

AQIfT Ttf CURRENTCOMM" \
M CKtUT EVEN 60.1
Q cn m iA re .

SOT r 0*43 HOLD
O’ $o*emrr^

THAT dJtA/rCti-.

�Legal Notice
HE SOLUTION NO *JF
R E S O L U T IO N O F T H E
’ Y OF A L T A M O N T E
TIN G S F L O R ID A . P R O
I I N C F O R T H E IN
ULLATlON O F a P O T A B L E
I t e r m a in r u n n in g
[ l.E R A L L Y E A S T F R O M
1«C E L O T U S I N T H E
1 N ITY O F T H E S O U TH
f in o l e

co u n ty

l im it s

S TA TE R OAD «Xi M O R E
TTlC U L A R L Y D E S C R IB E D
IE IN. IN T H E C I T Y O F
TA M O N TE S P R IN G S .
3RIOA. AND P R O V ID IN G
TH E A S S E S SM E N T O F
E CO STS T H E R E O F
IIN S T T M E A B U T T I N C
tO P E R TY O W N E R S
ECIALLY B E N E F I T I N G BY
CM IM P R O V E M E N TS
kHEREAS. Hi * City Com
twn at I N City ot Lltomanto
Florid*, doom* It *d
ON to lntl*ll A poKbi* Motor
1 ot hereinafter deter ,brd
CEREAS. Oil improvpmenlt
I bo don* in compliance with
plont. tpeciftcatienv ond
nolot on til* with m* City
ot ttN City at Altamonte
gt. Florid*, which told
i n t . t p o c lllc o t lo n t . ond
notot or* hereby approved
City CommlMion ond
ttilutot th* plont. tpoollco
. ond ottimotot ot call tor
propatod Improvement*.
[ m* City Com m ittlan ot th*
If ol A llo m o n tt S prlng t.
ndo don hereby doc loro tn#
cotoity tor th* Inttollollon o t «
ON w*t*r moin ot d o u r 1bod
otod ot * n*c*ttory public
irovement
■now. T H E R E F O R E . BE IT
‘ S O LV ED B Y T H E C IT Y
FISSION O F T H E C IT Y
A L TA F F O N TE S P R IN G S .
LOR1DA. AS FO LLO W S
I That in* City Comm 1it .on ot
City ot Altamonte Springt.
* id*, doomt it odntobl* o t *
cattery public lmprov*mont
mttoll 0 patobi* wal*r mom
Fong th* touth lino ot tho
q p lh t e t l q u o r t o r ot tho
*rn*ott quortor (S E W ot tho
?"*) ol Soclion 30. Townthlp tl
nth. Rongt 3t Eott. * dlltonco
topprorim «Nly SSO toot, ond
otang th* touth lin* ot th*
pthwett quort*r (SW VII ot
II. Townthlp I I South
It t o il, o dittonco ol
ro rim o ttly 1.000 loot on
Rood, ond olio Along
through tho S o g th w tti
r ot in* Southeatl quorNr
l* of S E N ) ol Soctlon I I .
•mihip I I South, Ron** It
ERtt. odltlonco ol oppronmot*
r 1.0*0 Not
Tn*i oil toid improvomontt
holl bo don* in tfrlct compll
c* w ith th * p lo n t . ond
»ffc&lt;
clfkolunt. o »d etlim etot ol
■cotl ot told Improvomontt
| an til* In tho ottic* of th*
Clark of tn* City ol Alt*
|m«nt* Springt. Florid*, which
(to ld plont. tpoclllcotlont and
rih m o H t or* h*r*by approved
by' th* City Com m ftiion ond
lOPthtuttt in* plont. tpecllic*
|tiant. ond ttlim o ltt of cott tor
propoted improv*m*ntt.
I old th*
City Com m itt ion ot th*
City ol Altom ont* Spring*.
Florid* do*t h*r*by dot lor* in*
npcettily tor th* intlolMtlon ot *
polobl* w*t*r moln 0 * d*unb*d
olorttoid ot o n * c * tu ry public
improvement

BE IT F U R T H E R RE SO LVE 0
Thoi in* m * i cotl ot t*&gt;d
mpror*m*nit including cott ot
*11 labor ond motoriolt. pro
i*t*ien*l t**t. ond land ocquitl
IUn ( M i l It rellmatoa to b* T wa
H u n d re d , F o r t y t* v * n
Thouund Flv* Hundred end
F g .tr Dolton ISJtt.SeOOOl and
th* turn ot Tw o Hundred ond
NSw Thautond. Throo Hundred
O o lla rt 11700 )00 001 lo b*
euetted ogomtl all ol in* lot*
end lendt *d|oinlng ond con
liguout or bounding and abul
Hog upon tuch alorrtaid im
p L o v e m e n lt o r t p o c l o l l y
b*n*fil*d ih*r*by ond further
dougnoNd by th* ottottmont
plot now on III* In th* offic* of
tho City Cloth ol th* City ot
Altomont* S p rin g t, Florid*
S*ch remaining cott* tholl b*
agporlionod to b* paid tram in*
Wetor. S*w*f. Drainage True!
F(md of tn* City ot Altomont*
Springt. f lorido
HE IT F U R T H E R R E S O L V E D
The! th* tppcial attainment*
Id b* mod* ond *nl*r*d tg*lntl
Ih* aloreteid benefited pro
p*rli«t thell b* mad* upon *n
•quel b*tit. that It to tey. that
lit th* praporotioii ol th* tp*ci*l
*tt*ttm*nl roll covering In*
contemplated im provem ent!
Inch tpec lot b*n*lltt tholl b*
determined end prorated *c
u»ding to on equal b o u t ot Ih*
retpocllv* proper!,** odiolnmg
end contiguout or bounding ond
abutting upon tuch tmprov*
m*nl| tpoclolly benefited by
Mid Improvomontt
Thai Ih* City Cl*rh ot th* City
et Adamant* Springt. Florid*,
in accordance with Ih* pro
vitront ol law. tholl procood lo
m*h* ond proper# a tpociol
attottmonl roll, allotting
tpociol banal,it lo be r*c*ir*d
at Ih* retud ol M id Improve
m *nti agam tt th* to ll ond
land* *d|Otning and contiguout
or bounding and abutting told
improvomontt
BE IT F U R T H E R R E S O L V E O
That th* tpociol att*t*m*nli
provided by thlt Retpiution tholl
tv payable ol th* option pi th*
property ownert *1 follow*
In cam within thirty (jot
day* ot th* confirmation at taut
tpociol attottmonl roll or In
annual Inttollm ont. told
torrod payment to boor Intorott
*1 th* row ot eight percent I I M
per annum, th* deterred pay
m*nt plut Intorott *0 be due and
p*y*bW On* ( I ) yoor from th
dot* ot confirmation at toottottmont roll
BE IT F U R T H E R R E S O L V E D
Thai thlt Retolulion tholl b
publilhod one* o week tor a
period *1 two I D weat 1 in
Sontord Harold, a nowtpopor ol

g*n*r*l circulation In
County. FlortBp^— —
BE IT F U R T H E R R ES O LV E D
That thlt R e to ld ton mall be
ond become effective Immodi
•Niy from and otto* IN pottage
and adaption
PASSED A N D A D O P T E D
TH IS ---------- D A Y O F -------------A O IN I
FFAVOR of Ih* City of
Altomont* Spring*. Florid*
A T TE S T
City Clark
Publlth March 77.1*. IMS
D ID in
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O UR T
OF T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
C IV IL D IV IS IO N
CASE NO. M 11SO CA ** I
VERNA M
P O R T E R , oh*
VERNA M
M O N TELLO
PORTER.
Plaintiff.
vt
M IC H A EL J O IS T E F A N O .
N O T IC E O F SA LE
Notic* It hereby given thol
purtuonl to th* Final Judgment
ot Farectotur* end Law daWd
March IF. lets and entered In
th* cout* pending in th* Circuit
Court of th* Eighteenth Judicial
Circuit. In and tor Samlnol*
County. Florida. Civil Action
No I t 11S0 C A Of E. Ih* un
do'tigntd Clerk will tell th*
p ro p e rty t l lu o le d In to ld
County, deter ibod a i
Lot S. Block 1. Weather it 1*Id
Firtt Addition. According to Ih*
Plot thereof at recorded In Pl*l
Book II. page m A *7. Public
Record* ol S*mmol* County.
Florida
*1 public tow to the higheti and
bett bidder tor com at 11:00
A M on th* lath day ol April.
INS. al th* W etl F ronl Door et
th* Samlnol* County Court
hout*. Sontord. Florida
O A T E D th i» tfth day at
March INS
(C O UR T S E A L !
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
CWrk of th* Circuit Court
By /t/O ian*K Oakley
Deputy CWrk
Publlth March 11. If. IMS
D ED ISf

N O TIC E OF IN T E N T
TO V ACATE
P O R TIO N S O F
C E R T A IN P LA TS
IN S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
TO WHOM I T M A Y CONC E R N
TA K E N O T IC E Ihol a Petition
tholl be tile d p u rtu o nl to
Chapter 111 101 ot th* Florida
Stolutet. w ith th* Board ol
C ounty C o m m l t t l o n o r t ol
Seminole County. Florid*, lo
vecel* portion* ol cortoln plait
ol th* tubdivltien known at
Want Fo rm , according to th*
plot thereof recorded In Plot
Booh a. P o g o lt l M . Public
Record* ol Samlnol* County.
Florida dotcrlbod at tollowt.
W wit
All ol Lot aa ol Watt* Farm.
Plat Book a Pag* 00 and that
portion ol South Drive abutting
lot *• ond all ot Bird Rood
abutting lot *a Wtt right el woy
ol Eott Lok* Drlv*
Thlt P tlllio n mould bo w b
milted on behalf ot Joaeph k
Thalma Lew lt datad the Xtn
day ot March, IMS
by Thelm a L Lewlt art*
Jrteph R Lav.it
Publith M arch 17. If. IMS
O E D ISF

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
OF T H E IITM
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT,
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
G E N E R A L JU R IS D IC TIO N
D IV IS IO N
CASE NO 0* MIS CA *t O
TH E N E W Y O R K G U A R D IA N
M O R TG A G E E CORP .
Plafntltt.
vt
L A R R Y
B
F E E and
M A R G A R E T £ C F E E . hit
wlW. SUN B AN K N A TIO N A L
A SSO CIATIO N,
Defendant!
TO L A R R Y B F E E rtttdenct
unknown w h o m latt known
oddrtkt wot 1 Orange Wood
Court Apopka Florida 7719)
M A R G A R E T E C F E E ret!
danca unknow n w hom lo ll
known addrett wot 1 Orong*
Wood Court Apopka. Florida
1FF01
YOU A R E H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D that a Complaint
hot boon Iliad ogalnal you M th*
above tty Wd Court to toroctoe* *
mortgage encumbering th* tot
towing dotcrlbod real property
tituet*. to wit
Lot SI. FO X W O O O PHASE
III. F I R S T A D D I T I O N . *c
cording to Ih* Plol Ihoroof. *•
recorded In Plol Book II. *1
Pag* U . el Ih* Public Recar Ok
ol Sam mol* County Florid*
and you are required to aerv* *
copy ol your Antwor or other
pleading* upon Ih* ptainliltt
attorney*. S H O R E N S T E IN 9
LEW IS If f Brlckell Fleia. SutW
m . Miami. Florid* H i l l , end
IIW Ih* original *1 tuch Antwor
or other pleading In Ih* Oltke *1
m* Clerk In Ih* Circuit Court *1
Seminole County, Florid*. on or
betort the fth day *1 April. IMS
It you toll to do ta. a default will
relief demanded to th* Cam
pie ml
O R O I R E D at la n ia rd .
Seminole County, Florid*, an
1helm day ol March. IMS
It(A L )
O A V IO N B E R R IE N
et CWrk ol ta&gt;d Court
By JeonBntlanf
Deputy Clerk
Fublim M arch L 1L 11. If IMl
0 1 0 FI

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO UB T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
O F FLO R ID A .
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY
CASE N O ee lM I CA-f* I
G E N E R A L JU R IS D IC TIO N
D IV IS IO N
A M E R IC A N S A V IN G S AND
L O A N A S S O C IA T IO N OF
F L O R ID A .
Fielntitt.
vl
M E L V IN W A L K E R . SR end
L A C E IN E A G W A LK E R , hit
wWt.pt at..
Oetondenlt
N O T IC E O F SALE
N O T IC E l» hereby given that,
purtuonl to the Order el Final
Judgment entered m m u ceut*.
In t h * C i r c u i t C o u r t et
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY . FWrld*.
I wilt tell the property tltvfttd
in S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y .
Florid*, deter,bod ot
Lot e and Watt IF tee! ot Let L
M l th* Alter. Elect 1. BEL
A IR . according to the Plot
thereof *1 recorded In Pt*t Boo*
X Peg* Ft, ol th# Public Rotordt
Ot Semi not* County. FWrldo.
i t public t*W. to m* high#** and
bott bidder, tor cam. al the
W ell Front Door at the Seminow
County Ceurthout*. Sanford
Florida at 11 00 A M . on April }.
IMS
(S E A L !
O A V IO N B E R R IE N
Clark ot th* Circuit Court
By: t v Dion* K Oakley
Deputy Clerk
Publim March IS. 11. IMS
O E D IIF

C IT Y OF
L A K E M A R T , FLO BID A
N O T IC E OP
P U B L IC H E A B IN O
TO W H O M IT M A Y CONCERN
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
by Ih# Planning and Zoning
Board ol th* City el Lake Mary.
Florida, that told Boo'd will
hold a Public Hearing al F 00
P M . on April f, IMS. to
Contider a Petition to cWe*.
vacate, abandon, dltcantmu*.
dlkclolm ond to renounce any
right ol th# City ol Lok* Mary, a
political tubdivltien. ond th*
public In and to th* following
da ter (bed right of woy. to wit
Comment# ot m* Southwet!
corner of th* Southoott I* *1
Soctlon 1. Townthlp FO South.
Rang* M Eott, thence North
t r a r t f ' Eott IIF at Wet along
Ih* South tin* pt told Soctlon F to
a point on tho cantor lino ol Lok*
Mary Boulevard, thane* North
0 9 * ir « l" , Wet 1 ad toet to * point
on th* north Right et Way line ol
Laka M ary Boulevard and tn*
Point al Beginning: thane*
South B r e r I f " Watt. » Wet
along th* Norm Right ot Woy
Una ot Lok* M ary BouWvtrd to
* point. Ihonc* Waving told
Right of w a y. Norm ootofTS"
Watt 47 St toet to a pomI an *
curve on tho North Right et Way
lino ol Sun Drlv*. thence along
th* North Right ol Way line ol
Sun D rive and ta,d curve cart
cave to th* South having #
radiut ot I N a! toot through a
control angle of lftot l f an
arch dittanc* of It* at toat to a
point ol langoncy, thence can
t l n u l n g a lo n g th* N e r th
Right o l Way lino ot Sun Drlv*
North 4S*0r I t " E otl. 11I » toot
to a point. Ihonc* Waving
North Right pi Woy lino ol Sun
D rlv * . North f f a T I f E o tt
111.SI tool to * point an * curve
an tho South flight *• Way line
of Sun D rive: thence slang m*
South Right ot Woy lino ot Sun
Drive and told curve concave to
the South having * radiut ol
1M l Pt toot through * control
angle *1 01*11 S* on arch dit
lone* of n #9 toot to ■ point of
to ngtn ey: Ihonc* continuing
along tho South Right ol Way
lino el Sun Drlv* South k l-O rir*
Wett. la* M toet to a point on a
curve concave to th# South,
having a radiut *1 Sal!S Wet.
thane* continuing along tho
South Right et Way lin* at Sun
Drlv* ond M id curve through a
central angle ot U ' U ’lt" on
arch dittanc* al it I Ft Wei to a
point, thence Waving th* South
Right of Woy lino *1 Sun Drlv*.
South w o r n
Eott. 11*1 '**'
ta the Point ol Beginning Icon
laining • M acre* more or itttl
The Public Hearing will be
held In th* City Hall. City ol
Lake M ary. Florida, an me fth.
day of April. IMS. «• F CO P M .
or a* toon morooftor at petti
bio. ol which Hmt mwrtitod
p a rtia l tor and ogaimt Ih*
rtcommondod roquetl will be
hoard Sold hoofing may b*
continued Irom lima la lima
until I Inal recommendation It
m ad* by tho Planning and
Zoning Board
T H IS N O TIC E tholl b* potted
In thro* 111 public ptocot within
Ih* City of Laka Mery. FWrldo.
al th* City Mall within told City,
and pubfimad In Ih* Evening
Herald. * nawtpapar *1 general
circulation In th* City of Lake
M ary. In two weekly Itauot *1
le e tl IS day* prior I* th*
atoreaaid hearing In addition,
nolle* m oii b* patted m m* area
W be candldered *1 Watl II d ayl
prior to the data *1 th* public
hearing
A taped record *1 m il moating
It made by th* City tor Itt
convenience Th lt rtcard may
not conttiivt* on a0*Quito r*
cord tor th* purpetal al appeal
Iro m a doc It Ian mad* with
roepprt to m* toregamg matter
Any pertan Wimtng to enture
that an adequate record *1 the
la maintained tar
la adrited to
make the rwceatary arrange
manta et hto w her awn tipartae
C IT Y OF
L A K E M A R Y . FLORIDA
/*/ M A Thempean
Deputy city Clark
D A T E D March I. IM !
Fu b lim March IX H . IMS
D I O IBS

F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Motic# it hereby given thol 1
am engaged tn butmeti at ISF)
Je r ic h o D r .. C a ittlb e r r y .
Somiroto County. Florid* HF0F
unde- Ih* h d 11tout name ot A
T O U C H O F CLASS C A R P E T A
U P H O L S T E R Y C L E A N IN G ,
and mat I Intend W rag itor 1* d
name with th* Clark ot th*
Circuit Court. Somlnoi* County,
Florida In accordance with th*
p ro v lllo n * of th* Flctltlou*
Nom# Statute*, to wit Section
MS Ft Florid* Statute* IfSF
/ V Bernard B Ctetbe'
Publim March U . I f t April X

C ITY OF
L A K E M AR Y. FLO R ID A
NO TICE OF
PUB LIC H E A R IN O
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by th* Planning and Zoning
Board el th* City of Lok* Mary
Florida, that told Board will
hold a Public Hearing ai F go
P M . on April t. IMS to conoid
or 0 Chong* at coning from A t
Agriculture, to P U D (Planned
Unit Development), on th* tot
towing d ttc rb td property
A tract ol land lying In Section
4. S and t of Tewnmtp 10 South.
Rang* X E tit deter,bad **
ims
tollowt
D E D IIS
C om m e nce al the N o r th
quortor corn#' 0t ta d Section I
a* th* Point ol Beginning ta d
Point *110 begin the South***!
corner ol Government Lot ] ot
C IT Y OF
teid Soctlon 4: thence run North
L A K E M A R T. FLO R ID A
00*1) ** ■ Writ, along th# E a ti
N O TIC E OF
line ol ta d Lot 1, a dittanc* o'
F U B L IC H EARING
11)1 Of teat, thence run South
T O W H OM IT M A T CONCE RN
a M rfl* " w**t U l t IS 'eel to a
N O T IC E IS H ER E B Y G IV E N
Point on th* w**t line ot M id
by the City Commotion ot th*
government Lot ) laid Point
C ity ot Laka Mary. FWrldo that
b*mg t i l l FI feel North of th*
kaid Commluton will hold o
South we* I comer ot laid Lot ),
Public Hearing an April If. 1ft).
thane# run Nerth 00*19’) « ”
al F 10 P M . to contldtr an
Wett along laid Weil Lot line
ordinance entitled
t i l ) bo Net, thence run South
A N O R D IN A N C E OF T H E
tf * ll )*•• W«*t. life t l toet to
C I T Y OF L A K E M A R Y .
the Eett Right otW ay line ot
F l o r id a , a m e n o in g s e c
R lnehert Road thenca run
T IO N SS IS o f TH E CODE O F
North 00*Qt 44 ‘ Wett. along aaid
O R D I N A N C E S
Right ot way lint. ISO* t) toet to
E S TA B L IS H IN G NEW W A TE R
th* South tin* ot th* North
S Y S T E M IM P A C T F E E S
•**1140' Eat', along teid South
P R O V I D I N G
F O R
lino, t t l l 00 toet to th* Eatt lin*
SE V E R A B I L I T Y . C O N
ot th* Wet tarty IfaAOO toet c»
F L IC T S . AND E F F E C T IV E
told Section S. thence run North
D A T E O F PASSAGE
OOtop aa" Well, along laid Eatt
A copy of M id Ordinance m ail
Line 5*1 00 toat. to the Southerly
be available *1 th* oftlc# of the
Right of Way tin* ot Pool* Rood
City Clark. City Hall. Ito Nerth
(SR 4*A1. n o i l loot, thence
Country Club Rood. Lake M ary.
run North F r j l ’lf ” Eatt, along
Florida. Irom I 00 A M until
to id Southerly Right ot Woy
4 10 P M , Monday through
Lin*, run South 00*7S 07 Eatt.
Friday, tor all parton* dtklnng
Parallel with th* Eott tin* ol
toeaamlnotam*
told Soctlon S. IIS* at teat
The Public Hearing mail be
thane* run North I H D a O ' Eott,
held in th* City Hell. IS) North
pat allot with th* North flna ol
Country Club Road. Lake M ary.
told Soctlon S. * dittanc* of
Florida. *1 F X P M , on April
ISO I I loot N th* Eatt line of the
IB. INS. or at toon lharaattor at
North wait quarter, thence run
pottibto. at which lime Inter**!
North i a » i r t r Eatt. Parallel
ed part,*« tor end agemtt th#
w ith th* North line ot th*
requetl ttattd above will be
Northoatf quarter ot laid tec
heard Said hearing may be
Hon 1 a dittanc* el l ) i f S3 toet
continued from time ta lim*
thenca run South 00*IS 01 ’ E att
until final action it taken by tho
parallel with told eatt taction
C ity Commltalon
tin*. 4*100 (eel thane* run
t h i s n o t i c e man b* potted
North t f W l J " E a tt. **0 00
In three ( ) ) public placet within
fool. Ihonc* run South 00*1S 01
ih* City el Lake Mary, at th*
Eatt. along tho Wett tin* ol th*
C ity Holl. and publlthad In th*
E att *40 00 teat ot Soctlon S. a
Evening Htrald. a newtpaper et
dlttorwt
of &gt;101 14 faot, thonc*
general circulation within the
run North M*S4 00 ’ Eatt. *A0 OS
C ity el Laka Mary, one* each
teat to the Eetl quarter corner
week tor tour contecuHv* weekt
ot laid Section S. thence rim
prior to ih* dal* ol the Public
South tf* l* 'tt'' E o tt. along
Hearing
North line ol th* Southwest
A taped record of thll mooting
quarter ot th* atoretaid Soclion
It mod* by th* City tor Itt
a. a dittanc* of taO t l toet. to th*
convenience Thlt record moy
W ell line ol th* Eatt 1M0 00 leel
not camtltuto tn edequol* re
ol la id Soulhwatl q u a rte r,
cord tor th* pvrpOMl ot appeal
thenca run South 00*1S')S" Eatt.
from a dec 1non mod* by th*
along teid Wett Im* 400 OP leel
City Cemmltiton with reipect to
to th* South tin* ot th* North
Ih * foregoing m ailer A n y
400 00 toet ot laid Southwell
per ton wi thing ta antvrt that on
q u a rte r, thane* ru n South
edequata record of 1he proceed
tt*l*'ta" Eatt. along ta &lt;1 South
mg* I* maintained tor appeltato
lino ol the North 400 00 feet
pur pot* 11* advitad W make the
ttSS 40 ta e l to Ih * W a t t
necaktary arrangement* at hi*
Right ol Way line ot Ranioul
or her pwnaapanta
R o o d , th a n e * r u n S o u th
C it y of
O O 'J S 'll" E o tt. along told
L A K E M A R Y . FLO R ID A
Right ol Way lin*. I I U FI toet
l \ i Carol Edward*
Ihtnce run South tf*pr 11 ' Watt,
City CWrk
I l f ) FI t**t. thonc* run South
D A T E D March II. IMS
0 0 * }f')4 " Eatt. 1)4 It teat,
P ublim March IS. 11. H I April
thane* run South 01*7*14" Eatt.
S. IMS
ft* IS toot to th* South lin* ol
O E D III
th* atoretaid Soctlon f thence
run North ff*)l'4*'* Wott. otang
tald South lint, lad F0 teal:
fhenc# run North * !* )* ’**"
C IT Y OF
Watt. M l I* toet, thonc* run
L A K I M A R Y . FLO R ID A
South J P t n i " Watt, aoooo
N O TIC E OF
t**«. thonc* run North t l - t o r r
P U B LIC H IA R IN O
W a i t . I l l I* to o t to th*
T O W HOM IT M AY C O N CER N
aforementioned $ew&gt;h line
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
thence fun North f f * )l'4 * "
by th* Planning and Zoning
W e l t . 1)1 * f la a t lo t h (
Board at Itw City ol Lok* M ary.
South wett corner ol told Sac Hon
Florid*, that laid Board will
*; Ihonc# run North I**JF If "
hold a Public Haaring at F 00
Wett. along Ih* South lino of th*
P M . on April I. IMS. to
olortmentlonod taction I. *
a I Contldtr a requetl from
dittanc* ot tea a) toot to th*
Katherine O Nelton Turner that
North wett comer ot th* Watl
the City at Lake Mary, florid*
half of th* Northaatt quarter ot
vara'* and annul th* following
th* Nor the#it quarter ol Section
dew ribed portion at a Plal
d. Townthlp 10 South. Rang* K
Lot* If through H. Black tl,
Eatt. thonc* run South 00*1 I SF"
C ry tle l Lake Winter Heme*.
Eett. along th* Eott tin* of teid
S e m in a l* County, F ie n d *
W olf holt ot tho North***!
Located on Ih* North lido ot
q u a rt e r ol tho N o r th * * * !
Wilbur Avenue ot lit inttraoc
quarter. I IN *0 Net. thane* run
Hon with Second Street
North t r s r t r * Wett. along th*
Th* Public Hearing will be
South line ol teid Welt half ol
held in the City Hall, City ot
th* Northeatl quortor ot th*
Lak* Mary. Florid*. *1 F 00
Northootl quarter. 444 OS feet ol
P M on April f, INS. or at toon
th* Eatt tin* ot th* Wott halt ol
*4id Norther tl quortor. thonc*
there*ttar ** poetibto ** which
tlm* inter**led porlie* tor and
run South 00*I T 4#' Eott. along
agemtt the requetl Hated above
ta d Eatt Un*. 1125 SI toot to th*
Southoott Corner ol told Wetl
will be heard Said hearing may
be continued from tlm* to lim a
holt of the North**!i quarter,
until final recommendation 1*
thence run Nor Ih If* 4) IF" Eatt.
mad* by th* Planning and
along th* South tin* of told
Tooina ficsxr d
Northootl quarter. t ) ) t *0 Net
to th* Northeatl comer of th*
TH IS NO TIC E Ihail be potted
In three |)| public placet within
Southoott quarter. Ihonc# run
tho City et Lok* Mary. Florida,
South 00*11 AS" Eatt. along th*
al th* City Hall, and publimod
Eatt lint ol ta&gt;d Section I. a
In Ih* Evanmg Herald, a new*
dittanc* ol aSI 01 toet to ih*
paper ot gonoral circulation in
Southoott corner ol th# North
th* City at Laka Mary. In two
q u a r t e r *1 th* S a u th a o tt
weakly Itkuet al Wall tlttoon
q u a rte r, Ihonc* ru n South
IIS ) day* prior to th* dot* ol tn*
lf*4 l'M " Wett Otang th* South
Public Hearing and m* owner*
tin* ol told North quortor
ol Ih# real property which It
144} IS l**t to th* E o tt lino ot
th* Southwell quortor thonc*
altoctod hereby mall be mailed
by me city Clerh. a copy el tola
run North a r io n " W etl. along
told Cantor Soclion lino U N *4
notice at Matr addrett may
appear on the totttl ad valorem
toot to Ih* North quortor of **&gt;d
Section end th* Point ot Begin
taa record*
A loped record al ttut mooting
rung
la mad* by th* City tor It*
Th* above date ribed tract of
convenience Thl* rtcard may
land Hat In Seminol* County.
net canttlluN an adequate re
Florida, and contain* a lt * »
card tar th* purpettt el appeal
acre*, mar* or ton
tram a de ouon mad* with
and alto
rttpacl to the toregamg matter
A Tract ol land ly in g in
Any parton aiming to tnaurt
Section1 4 and t. *f Townthlp M
that an edequata rtcard el tn*
South. Rang* M Eatt deter -bed
la maintained tar
41 tollowt
' paaai it advitad to
Commence #1 th# Northwott
m at* th* noetteery arrange
corner ot tho Southwetl quarter
monte it hit or hor own tapon**
of teid Section L tor * Point of
C IT Y OF
Reloronc*. thonc* run South
L A K I M A B Y . FLO R ID A
t#*M to" ( a i t along th* North
/ t / M A Thompten
lino ot laid Soulhwatl quarter
Deputy City Clark
tad f ) Not, thenca run South
O A T I O March* IMS
N &gt; )t ) T
B a it. 400 0d toet
Publim March IS. Tl. IMS
thane* run South tt*M ' ta" (a lt .
O E D IfF
I f S I *0 le e l. ta Ih* W a il

n.

D o o n e sb u ry
M S &amp; K u m .ia K &amp; a itm
&amp; fU \J P W H A ( * f A l CtALO F
C tU C H H ABOUT H C O O P f *
I KCM Tt n x M N A l M Q U t / V S / 1 7 » Y JC H B JU iiU H H W A 4C K

legal Notice

legal Notice

BY GARRY TRUDEAU
U B U W T W V P e m c p W iM S&amp;OfTHB A P P M A O C SD StW N O

v jh o u m p s

meuen verooimAt toa*

APfsm

U AH nD U 1060VM M M C W U .
V M M n S A U M H T V C O ttU H B .

ia u c x p c a

J S f t -

*****
UP*
\

O fC O U B t.l
C H ySPC AK RX.
U tS 'J&amp; U eA A
A S P (# 5 7 A

Right OtWay Hn*. ot Renteuf
R oad
th a n e * r u n S o u th
O f 'l S ' U " E a t t . along to ld
Right ot Way Hn*. H U FI toet to
tn# Point of Beginning thonc#
continue South 0G*U U ' Eott
tSIl 00 teet thonc# run North
t f » n **'' Watt, paraiial with m#
North line ot told Section • a
dittanc* ot 4MOO teat th*n&lt;»
run North 00*15 3) Wott 4lf »
t**t thonc* run North )t* t) SS
Eott, i n n loot: thonc* run
North 00*15 )S
W ett 1*7 00
t**t thenc* run North d r o r t e
Eatt. UO 00 toot to th* Point et
Beginning
Tho above deter bed tract ot
land not in Seminole Counto
Florida, and contain* le ad]
acre* more or lot*
Th* Public Hearing will be
hold in th* City Halt. City ol
Lak* Mary. Ftortda on fth day
Of April. IMS. pi F 00 P M , or at
toon there*Her at poetibt*. at
which tlm# inter et tad partiet
tor and agamtt the requett will
be heard Said hearing may be
continued from tlm# to tlm*
until tin*! recommendation it
mad* by the Planning and
Zoning Board
Th lt none* tholl be potted In
three ( ) l public placet within
th# City ot Lok# M ary at th*
City Hall within vaid City, and
publikhed In a nowtpaper ot
general circulation in th* City ot
Lak* Mary, one tlm# at ieatt
tiltoen IIS) day* prior to Ih*
dal* et the Public Hearing In
addition notice m all be potted
in th* area to be contidered al
toat! fifteen |IS) day* prior to
th* data of the Public Hearing
A taped record ol thlt meeting
it mad* by the C ity tor itt
convenience Thl* record may
not contHtuto an adequate re
cord lor the purpotot ol appeal
from a decltton made by th*
City with retpect to th* tortgo
trig matter Any parton wtthmg
to enturt that an adequate
record ol the proceeding) it
m a in ta in e d lo r a p p e lla te
purpotet it advitad to make itw
necatkary arrangement! at hit
or her own aipenta
C IT Y OF
LAKE M A R Y . F L O R ID A
IV M A T hornpton
Deputy City Clerk
D A TE D March* IMS
Publlth March IF 1tot
D E D It)

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611
C L A S S IF IE D

Orlondo • Winter Pork
831-9993
D EPT.

HOURS
S 30 A M . • 5 :3 0 P .M
M O N D A Y th ru F R ID A Y

RATES

1 tin t

..

F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
Not let it hereby given that I
am engaged in but me it *1 111
t
Woodland Dr . Sanford
Sam, noto County. Florida under
•he tlctlHout name ot E A G LE
C L E A N IN G S E R V IC E , and that
I intend to regular teid name
with tn* Clerk ol th* Circuit
Court, Seminole County. F tor id*
tn accordance with the pro
viltont ot th* FiCHttou* Nem*
Statute*, to w it Soclion M ine
Florida Statelet IflF
t v William P Puttm
Publim March 71. 1* A April S.
17. IMS
O E i) IO
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O UR T
FOR S E M IN O L E C O U N TY ,
F L O R ID A
P R O B A T t D IV IS IO N
Flit Number U III CP
IN R E E S T A T E O F
H E L E N S C O N N E L L * k/e
H E L E N C O N N E L L a k/a
H E L E N S M ITH C O N N E L L .
Decaa wd
N O TIC E OF
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
Th* ad m lnlttralion ol tho
etltto ol H E L E N S C O N N E LL
a/k/a H E L E N C O N N E L L ata'a
H E L E N S M IT H C O N N E L L
d a c a a t e d . f it * N u m b e r
•S tat CP. It ponding in Ih*
C irc u ll C ourt lo r Somlnoi*
C o u n ty . F l o r i d * . P rob ate
Divltton. Ih* addr*«t ol which la
S#m&gt;nol# County Courlhoul*.
Sontord. Florida. llF ft Tito
name* and a d dretttt ol Ih*
per tonal ftpr***nlatlva and Ih*
parianai r*pr***nta1iv* t al
lor re y *ro vet lor Ih below
All Intoretled pertont are
required to Hto with Hut court.
W ITH IN T H R E E M O N TH S OF
TH E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
TH IS N O TIC E
I I I oil claim*
agamtt me ttleto and III any
ob|t&lt;Hon by an I n t t r t t lt d
parton on whom thl* nolle a eat
torved Ihol chaltangot in# valid
lly ot tho will, fho quoiillcaHon*
ol tho per tonal ropratanlaiiv*.
venue, or |urltd!cHon ol Iho
C&lt;HKl
a l l c l a i m s A N D O B J IC
TlONS N O T SO F I L E D WILL
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
PubHcalwn ol thl* Nonce hot
begun on March IS. IM )
Par ton* I Raprotpntallv*
IR EN E C A M P B E L L
P O Boa SI*
O r G*org,a Avenue
long wood F tor id* 1)150
Attorney tor
Perional Ropretontatlv*
S Kirby Moncrtof, of
SH INH O LSER . M O N C H IE F .
BARKSANDREI D
P O Bo* JIFf
Sanford. Florida m il 77Ff
Telephone IN S ) 17) M00
Publim March IS. 7). IMS
D E O I II

ShoppingFor A
Hew Or Used Car1
r # « can a fn a ja flad 19*
9**1 deal# In 19* (t o n in g
H e ra ld a C/aad/Fod aacffpn
R and f ildar a f renin# H e ra ld
l o t t9* Boat aafectfpn*.

i W l h F rta rk ttra re r
k a a lw rd . I l a r t d a
1 1 1 -1 9 1 1

____ 67C ■ I

3 c e n s o c u tii* tlm #* 61C a I
7 consecutiY* tim es 52C a I
10 c o n s t tu tiv e times *6C « I

S A T U R D A Y 9 ■ Noon

C o n tra c t R it e s A ia iU b le
3 Lines M inim um

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

17—Cemetery and
Crypts

25— Special Notices
Balloon Moak

CSt WV-W4 SOS 1110400
SEND A GIFT*
W ITH A L I F T I

Two detirabto camotary lot* in
Oak lawn Memorial Park
Can 111 5*0*

31 — Personals

_____ BAUOON
...... BOUQUETS

I wlI not be retpontibto tor any
debit incurred by anyone
other than m yteil at ot March
I* 1M5 ArvOttpr Holley______

.7 T T
w# D tiivtrl
For every reeten every tattoo

3 «i

Mr Slork t y lll l
make* tor a litotlm*
*1 memariet. glllt 9 till
_________ Call Ltod* W BAIIT
. M AR Y KAY C O IM t TICS •
Skin car* and ettor Hair
C O N N I I .................. ........m -T T M
PHO TO O R AFM Y
Call Ralpk
Ib U II

Mary Kay Catmehct
Free Complimantary Fee Mil
F»r a Great Spring Leek I D 4II&gt;

23— Lost &amp; Found
Lott lad** gold nugyet bract
let on March llth in vmcinity
ol Atlantic Bank Reward
Call FFS ISS4 or FM 1FF4
R ED D O B E R M A N FE M A LE
ANSW ERS TO ’ K A T IE ".
R E W A R D SA N FO R D A R EA
l » eoe e __________
C A N 'T U S I ITT
WHY K IE P IT T
S I L L W IT H A W A N T AD

CELEBRATE
A BIRTH!

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
tovlftf 4 4*altty
child ( i r e . c «ll A C M W 'i
World 111 4414

for lender

f t — or Rtduccd Child Ctre
If you qualify
17)

F IC T ITIO U S N A M E
Nolle* It hereby given that t
am engaged in bulm etl el JfOt
VHtat Green Circle Long wood
Seminole County. Florida under
the llctltioui name ol SUN
S T A T E F I R E S P R IN K L E R
CO . and that 1 inland to regitto'
laid name with the Clerk ol the
Circuit Court Seminole County
Florida in accordance with th*
provltion t of th* FtcHHout
Nam* Statute* to wit Section
M l Of F tor id* Sta'utek IttF
/kJWoyneM Wilhelm
Publim March IS. I I . I t A April
S. IMS
D E O 119

Evening Herald

y y H f f i?

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI. Friday, Marti* n , 1MS — 11A

Legal Notice
IN TH E C IR C U IT CO UR T
FOR S E M IN O L E CO UN TY.
F L O R ID A
P R O B A TE DIVISIO N
File Number 15 III CP
IN RE E S T A T E O F
H A V M O N O I LO EW EN TM AL
Dec* a wd
N O TIC E OF
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
TO A LL P ERSONS H AVIN G
C L A IM S O R D E M A N D S
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E
E S TA TE A N D A LL O TH E R
PER SO NS IN T E R E S T E D IN
THE E S T A T E
VOU AR E H E R E B Y
N O ’ I F I E O l h a l Ih * ed
mmitlralion ol Ih* atlato ot
R A YM O N D I LO E W E N TM A L.
d e c e a te d . F it* N u m b e r
IS IFF CP I* ponding In Ih*
C irc u it C ourt lor Sominol*
C o u n t y , F l o r i d * . P ro b a te
Oivitton lhe addrett si which it
Seminol* County Courlhout*
Senior*, florid* 17FF1
The per tonal repretenlolive ol
iho eiieta i* Eiitabelh Ian*
Moseley, whose addrett it t*f
Cllru* Wood Court, long wood
F L . 1115* Th o nem * end
addrett ol Ih* pertonal rvpr*
tentative * attorney or* tel
lor in below
All pertont having claim* or
demand* ogalnil Ih* eilal* are
re q u ire d . W I T H I N T H R E E
M O N TH S F R O M THE D A TE
OF TH E F IR S T P U B LIC A TIO N
OF TH IS N O T IC E , to III* with
ih* clerk ol Iho obor* court o
writton ilelemonl ol any claim
or demand they may have Each
claim mutt be In writing and
mutl ind'eaf# Itw batik lor Ih*
claim Ih* name and addrett ol
in# creditor or hit ogeni or
e lto rn o y , and Ih# am ount
Helmed II Ih* claim It nol yat
due. in* dal* whan II w ill
become due tholl be ttatod II
iho claim I* contingent or unli
quidotod. Iho notur* ol the
uncertainly tholl be ttatod II
Iho claim it tecured Ih* tecurl
ly th ell be detcrlbed Th*
cloimenl m oll deliver tulttttont
coplet ol Iho claim to Ih* clerk
lo enabto
lark to mail on*
copy to aach personal rtpr*
tentative
All pertont interfiled in the
ettale to whom a copy ol thlt
Nolle* ol Adminitlrolton hat
been m aile d are required
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N TH S
FR O M TH E O A TE OF TH E
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
TH IS N O T IC E , to III* any ob
lacliont they may hav* Inal
challenge th# validity of Ih*
docodonf t will. Ih* quoHHco
lion* ol Ih* portonal rtpr*
te ntative, o r the vpnu* or
|ur ladle lion ol Iho court
A L L 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 I L E D W ILL BE FO R E V E R
BARRED
Dot* of Ih* Hr*l publication ol
Iht* Nolle# ol Admlnlttralion
March IS. IMS
IV CHtabolh J Motaloy,
Aa Par tonal Raprttantaliv*
ol Iho E ttato ol
RAYM OND I
L O E W E N T H A l.
Dec •*ted
A T T O R N E Y FOR PERSONAL
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
W F SIM ONE T E W
400 North Ftrncrook A*#
Orlando. Florida 11*0)
Tttophon* IN S ) if* I D )
P ubhm M arch IB. 27 1M5
O E D 111

O'

31 — Priv»te
Instructions
P IA N O LESSONS
14 ptf tenon
IJJ 4f34
) PM

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Ndlic* It hereby given lhal I
am engaged in butlnett *1 119
French Av# . Seniord Samlnol#
County. Florida lt l f l under Ih*
l i c l l l l o u t nam e ol V E N T I
SANDW ICHES and lhal I In
•end to regittor tald nam* with
•he Ctork ol ih* Circull Court,
Seminal* County. Florida In
accordance with Ih* provltiont
ol Ih* Fid ii,o u t Name Slatulet.
lo w ll
Section M l 0* Florida
Statute* IfSF
t Cher tot M Butler
Publim March l . l . IS. )&gt;. IMS
D E D »4
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Halle* It hereby given lhal I
am engaged In b u tln ttt al
Highway a*. Geneva Seminol*
C o u n ly
F lo rid * under Ih*
diefIIleu* nem* ol B L U E A
G R A Y T R A IL E R M FG
and
lhal I Inland lo regittor Mid
name with the Clerk of Ih#
Circull Court Seminol# Counly.
Florida In accordance with Ih*
p ro v tiio m ol Ih* F ld llio u t
Nam* Statute* lo wil Soclion
MS g* Florida Slaiglot IMF
IV John Ripley
Publlkh M e rch l 15 IT, Ff IMS
O E D *9_______________________
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Nitlce Ik hereby given lhal I
am engaged In butlnett al M4
W SR 4)4 Sulla trt. Longwood.
Samlnol* Counly. Florida under
the licllllout nem* ol THOMAS
G A H N E L L and lhal I Intend to
regular te d name with Ih*
Clerk ol Ih* C ircull Court.
Seminol# Counly, Florida In
accordant* with Ih* provltiont
ol Ih* F ld llio u t Nam* Stoluttt.
lo w ll
Soclion MS 0* Florida
Statute* 1*51
/*' Gary T Whipple
Publim M a rtin . II, T l.lf . IMS
D E D tF
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N lllce it hareby given lhal I
am engaged In butlnett al *1)
M e llo n v illa Av*
Sontord.
Seminol* Counly. Florid* t t t t 1
under Ih* licllllout nam* ol
S O U T H E HN W E L D IN G 9
F A B R IC A TIO N and lhal I In
lend to regittor Mid name with
ih* Ctork of Ih* Circull Court.
Sominol# Counly. Florid* In
accordanco with Ih* provltiont
ol tn* FtcHHout Name Statute*,
lo w ll
Soclion MID* Florida
Stalutot IMF
/*. Barry G Pedigo
Publim March I. II. t l If. IMS
OEOat
F IC T IT IO U S K A M I
Nolle * la hartby given that I
am engaged in butlnett *1 FI I
Highway IIP ), f 191. Ltngaopd.
Semmoi# Counly. Florid* H IM
under Ih* fldlliout nom* of
B R A N D NEW IM POR TS, and
inal I inland
regittor Mid
nam* with th* Clark al Ih#
Circull Court. Sominol* County,
Florid* in accordanco with Ih*
pro vla io n i af in# Flclllioua
Nam* Stoluttt. towit Sadton
MS 0* F lor id* Stalutot IMF
IV DougMoerhood
Publim March I IX 71. It . IMS
O E D 19

to

�# y ’l *# r

H A — E v n ln q H e r«M , Sanford, FI.

3J— Real Estate
Courses

Ttowb tog ef petting •
Baal ■ ■ till LI c m m I
M l M at eev C iT M T Nlghf
April I at* ; to • PM
Wa #4toe F raa Turtle*
and tawtlnioo. Training I
CaH Dfcb ar Vick y tor de l. ill i
i n * MM
Kira* el F torlda., Inc. |

_l*y*ar*liaartoac*l

J5— Business
Opportunities
AKtrnoen Piper loot*
Far Sato-Pbewo lltlia * .a ft e r I
Attention Floor Covering In
•la ila rt
C a rp a l b u n nett.
laid* and truck tor Mia
Package doat Cali H i i*U

41—Money to Lend
B utina*. C ap ita l ut.OOO lo
•l 000 000 and ovar P 0 Baa
ra il Winter pk Fla n m

71—Help Wanted

Employment
323-5176
mi
A CCO UNT 1 R E C E IV A tL E
C L IN K Strong background m
par man I polling to computer
ly lt t m , with em pheilt on
proof proceti M u lt ba wall
organliad with good clarlcal
ik lllt Intoraitad candidate
mould contact Harcar Atumi

nun

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N A M I
H o ik . i* hereby glran that I
am angagad In butinati at m
A 4 E
S l a l a R o a d 4 ]a ,
Longoood Samlnola Countr.
Florida M/K&gt; undar Itu fkllttout
nama ol R O Y A L PRESS, and
that I Inland to raglttar Mid
nama with Itw Clark ol ltd
Circuit Court, Samlnola Countr,
Florida In accordance with the
p ro v id e n t at the Flctlllow*
Nama Statute*. to wtt Section
M l OF Florida Staluta* 1*11
/•/ Gita Sharltl
(owner) AAOttAMMAD
HASSAN S H A R IF l
Publllh March 11. I f A April 1,
II. I N I
D E D 114

IN TH E C IR C U IT C O UR T
FOR S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
F R O E A T I DIVISIO N
Flip Number I I lit
Otvltton C P
IN RE E S T A T E O F
A LP O A P IK K A M A IN E N .
Dacaatad
N O T IC E OF
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
The a d m in lilra tlo n ol lha
n l i t t
at A L P O A
P IK K A M A IN E N . dec ••ted f i l l
Numbar ( » 111 C P . I* ponding in
lha Circuit Court lor Samlnola
C a u n fy . F | a r id a . P robata
Dtrliion, lha addraai at which II
M m mala Countr CourlhouM.
North Park Ayanua. San lord.
F lo r i d a
T h a n a m a * and
addraitat ol tha parional rapra
tentative and the pertonel rep
feMnlaiivo i altornar era tel
lor In below
A ll In te rfile d period* art
requited to Ilia wllh Ihit court.
W ITH IN T H R E E M O N TH S OF
TH E FIR S T P U B L IC A TIO N OF
THIS N O T IC E
( I ) all claim*
egalntt lha atlala and 11) any
abjection by an In itia lle d
perron on whom thl* notice we*
tar wad that challenge* lha valid
ily ot lha will, tha qualification*
ol tha parional rapraMnlallva.
venue, or |url*dlctlon ol lha
court
A LL C L A IM S A N D OBJEC
TIONS N O T SO F I L E D WILL
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Publication at thli Notice hat
begun on M arch II. I f t l
Parional Rape •tentative
T IM O L P IK K A M A IN E N
eoi Colonial W ar
Santor d P L 11771
Altornar for
Parionol Rapratonlallva
P H IL L IP H LO G A N
Pitot Otflco Boa *44
Seniord. F L M771 0**4
telephone I K ill 111 1/10
Publlth M o r c t it l.il. IM I
DEO H I

N O T IC E U N D E R
F IC T IT IO U S N A M I S TA TU TE
TO W HOM IT M A V CONCE R N
Notice l i haraby given that the
undanignad. puriuonl la lha
“ F lc l llle u i N am * Slktula"
Chapter MS Of. Florida Slalulf.
will regiitor wllh tha Clock of
tha Circuit Court. In and lor
Samlnola County. Florida, upon
tacaipl of proof ot Ihe pubiKa
lion at thl* nolle*, the lictlllOul
M in a , It
w it
C J
E N G IN E E R IN G undar which I
am angagad in b u iin o n al Stl A
Ballard Slroal In the City ot
Altamonte Soring*. F lor Ida
That tha party Intaratltd In
Mid builnoti antarprii* li a*
tot law*
C A R L TO N JO H N S TO N
Dated al Winter Cardan. Or
eng# County, Florida. March 4.
IMS
PUXitft March t, IS. 71 If. M l
D E D FI

N O T IC E U N O E R
F IC T IT IO U S N A M I S TA TU TE
TO W HOM IT M A Y CONCER N
Nolle* l* haraby given that th*
undanignad. punuant to lha
" F ic l lt l o u i N am a tle lu ta ".
Chapter M l (to Florida Statute*
will ragiitar with tha Clerk at
th# Circuit Court. In and tar
Sommoia County. Florid*, upon
tacaipl ot proof at tha public#
Man at thl* Notice, th* Bet input
noma, to wit O N E TW O TR E E
undar which wo oca ingagld M
but Met* at IU 4 Me Nail Rd .
Altamanl* Spring*, Seminole
County. F tor id*.
That th* party In tore*tad In
lard bvlrna i! enter pr lee I* el
tot law* A C Maitl Tree C * .
Inc
D A T E D *1 C a n a lb e r p y .
Samlnola County. Ftorida an
March 4. IMS
A C M E L F I T R E E C O . INC.
By Anthony Char la* Malll
Ptaiktonl
Pubiikh M arch L IS. W. If. IMS
D E D FT

»

71— Halp Wanlad
Acrylic Applicator* needed to
apply pro*active coating an
cart, boa'* and plana* 11 to
Sit par hour Wa train For
work in Sontord area call
T p m p o g tm m it .
Agre**tve. family owned home
center hat made an opening
lor a Mia* train** Mutt b*
agretttv*. ambthou*. willing
to laarn and lake rttponttoill
ty A lio need port lima ca
Ihtar and Woe* pacion Call
for appointment
aik far
Alvin Kilpatrick Cell i n 0M0
A IR L IN E S NOW H IE INS Ret
*r vat ton lit t, i tower dt* tat and
ground craw potllloni avail
able Call M t l f l le t 9141 lor
detail* 14 hour*_____________
AVO N Hiring Smiling F tr a il
Full A pr lima Call Immad*
Ptatyl m l* M * r W IMS
Book k taper Eacaptlanlil
Mature, aipartanctd individual
tor boo*taping through linen
d a l Payroll, Federal Depot,t.
Q uarterly and Annual Re
porn. W M , Account* Ptreble
end Receivable, audit, amwar
telephone, correipondence
Mall cover latter or raium#
with rafervnee* to Bor Iff. ( l |
Sanford H erald. P O Bo*
H IT, Sanlord FI 11771 1411
C A R LO S IT A L IA N R ES TAU
R A N T - Delivery driver and
kitchen help Call between 1
and 1 P M . I l l ? » li good pay
C ethier Needed E *perltnce
preferred Apply In penon,
Ac* Hardware. M l E 11th
Street_______________________
C L E A N IN G L A D Y lo r Id e y ia
weak In Ganava on Lake
Her nay M u ll ba dependable
L have own treniportellon
Call Bill Stephoni Evet lef
IIS*. D o n 4718441___________

CLERK WIST

7 1 * 0 ....

A V O N C AR N IN O SW O W Iff
O P E N T E R R IT O R IE S NOWI11
_____ H i - U l l a r m to ll________
P in * up people needed S T A R T
N O W I National P ubllthor
Coll 4140041
_____
Retpontibl* per ion to car* lor 1
Children m my home Evening
hour* AAutt bo on "on call'
b a m Will pay SI » to 1110
par hour depend ng on tapan
tn ca Phon* ter interview
eppomt men I Leave menage
m foci,_____________________
Sanford manufaeturar naadi
qua idled T IG . M IG end A R C
welder with labncetlon and
layout or per lance Only a apa
r ia n c a d need app ly
If*
R u d d e r C ir c le . S a n lo r d
Airport indultrUI Park______
S E C U R I T Y N IG H T G U A R D
application now btlng ac
cepted Call for Information or
a p p ly C a n lra l F la To o
P o rta e ! lo r la m l r e tire d
par ion M IA M I______________
Super
market
eaperlancad
ct*hlar Altarnoon ihlft and
waalandt Apply In per ton
Park and Shop 11th and Park
Sag manager________________
TR U C K D R IV ER tor temporary
run to Atlanta Reply to Boa
Iff. d o Evening Herald. P O
Bo a I41T, Santard Fie 17771
Ven Driver
Day Iroelmant
worker Full lime potitlon,
d e a l i n g w lk t h c h r o n i c
p tyd a lrlc . dtabled and el
derly Call pervmnel 111 1411
attar IQ 10 A M _______ _______
W A N T E D 1 phone lofidtor*
F io a lb la hour* Apply at
A iio d a te d Contractor! 7700
F r ench A r e _______________
Will tram tor carter In child
c u rt
Fu ll and pert time
potllloni available, leechert
eidat. cook end clarlcal. Call

m im

F in a n c ia l Bookkaaper for
orlhodonlnf* offic# Career
minded Good phon# tllguatl*
Computer experience detired
Call Gayle, f to I I Monday
through T h u n d e r H I 4«lt
F ull and part lima ponnom now
available Hour* can b* tto.l
bit for tchool O' tnd |ob
Benotit, available after quell
lying Apply In penon et
R A X * 1000 W H oy 414.
HOSTESS/CASHIER
Apply 1 lo 4 PM. Holiday It out*
Raitaurant, Hwy If fl naer
Lake M ary
H O U S E P A R E N T I Chrlitian
Walter lor obuied * troubled
leant M f lo w _______________
L A B O R I R S - Strong rtllablo.
general laboran needed Im
mediately O iH er.nl location*
Phon# and traniporlallon a
m ult. Never ate* Apply

KIUY SERVICES
660 7339
Ufhl Housawoft- som*
Trpini
Part tim e..........................t n ta n
Light Delivery
m ull have
im all tar Cath dally Call
Tina or B o b a f f t llf

SEWING MACHINE
OPERATORS
C ■per tone ed tewing machine
operator* wanted all opera
tlan* apan. Wa will train
qulellled appllcanti In aur
advanced lachnlquel. plui.
altar preballanary period,
great benefit* el 4 paid hall
daya an* h a ip lta llia lla n .
Apply • I# I Monday thru
Friday at 1144 Old Lei* Mary
Rd , Sentocdj or call 111 M il

73— Em ploym ent
Wanted
lM ly D n irH houtffworfc. offict
&lt; l««n (n g
own
transpor f fspry 177110?

91—Aparlm tnts/
House to Share
D E L T O N A Ftm*l* to thara
with lam* 1 bdrm , 1 bath
h om e SI10 mo p lu i h a ll
ulllHlaa If* Sit*______________
W ill lh a ra modern country
heme SIX) per month Call
H I T i f f _____________________
Working, lobar lemeie to lhara
home with ilngla mother 4 1
c h ild re n P rlv a tt bath 4

^ltch#n^rlvll*2ai_ni_ni^_
93— Rooms lor Rent

Chrlitian Aptl 4 Hemal
IV , kite Non, laundry, maid, IV )
• I irpOrl *71 M4I l it 1*10
( Ira n I om lor 1»ble I leepIng
room with prlvatt bath 4
kltchannalta Sfl a week Call
11) to ll or ) l l t f l f ______
FamalaiOnly
Children Wilcome
__ Ceii m m *
Furniihed end Unlvrmthed

Call 322 3BS3
S A N FO R D furniihed room* t.y
the weak Reatonebla rata*
Maid *•• vice Call O l klOT
* I P M 411 Palmetto Avg
S A N F O R D . Reel weekly A
AAonthly retet Util Inc alt
&gt;00 Oak
Adult! ' 14I IM I

97— Aparfments
Furnished / Rent
Furn, Apf* tar Senior Cltlteni
111 Palmallo Are
J Cowan No Phone CaH*
L A K E M A R Y Small, ctodn
iLrnlilved apt I bdrm , tingle
working male Nice H U N R Y t

in ifio ______________
L I V E IN H O U 1 I K I I P E H
COOK
For rallrad L ik a Mary coupl*
Baaulltul home Wilt neodi
tom* pat tonal atililanc*
Nonimoker M utt dtlv*. car
a v a ila b le
P r lv a t t livin g
quartan ISOS par month Ral
aranca* required I HI 11*4
or 111 4014

LIVE IN NEEDED
Mature, Milted wamea l* car*
tar two In largo ham* Private
badraam * bath Owed talar y
permanent petition plat day I
•HI Call 111 &gt;fM
____

NEEDED;
PART TIME HELP
■ •reliant appartanlty lac the
future H I i r*&gt;
O F F I C E B O V - Oeod w llh
number*.run errand* help In
office M u lt ba II 4 hav* valid
drlvart Meant* Call Mr W*bb
•MerS N p m 14*114*

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Holly e I* hereby given Ihel I
am engaged In bulineil el 14*0
G uinevere D r .. Ceitelberry.
Samlnola County. Florida under
lha tlctltlou* name of TER M !
N A L C O M M U N IC A T IO N S .
INC . and that I Intend lo
'•gittar M id nama with lha
Clark ot tha Circuit Court.
Samlnola County. Florida in
accordance with tha proviHont
ot *he Flcliliout Nama S U M e t.
ta w il
Section U lO f Florida
Slatuta* IfSf
r»,; Lorry A W lilli
Publlth March I I If 4 April S.
U IW1
_
D E D IN
N O TIC E UNOER
F IC T IT IO U S N A M I S TA TU TE
TO W H O M IT M A Y CONC E R N
No*It# It haraby givan that tha
undanignad. purtuonl to tha
“ F lc tltla u t Nam a S M Iuto",
Chapter M l Of Florida Statute*
will ragiitar with lha Clark at
lha Clrcull Court. In and lor
Samlnola County. Florida upon
racaipt ot proof at th* public*
lion at thli Naiica. ifw licfiliout
n a m a , lo w i t
STU M P
B U S TE R S undar which wa ora
angagad In builnatt at l i l t
AAcNall Rd . Altamonte Spring*
Samlnola County , f tend*
Thai lha partial inter .tied in
M id butinati on tecpv it# ere a*
loilow* Richard A Smith. M X
A C Matt! T raa C e . Inc WX
D A T E D a l C a i ie l b a r r y .
Samlnola County. Florida an
March « IMS
A C M ELFI
T R E E C O . INC
By Anthony Charlai Malll,
Protidanl
/*/ Richard A Smith
Publllh M arch*. 11.11.1*. INS
D E D FI

M A K E Y O U R S E LF AT H O M E
In a completely furniihed tludlo
apartment Single Hory living
al II* bell Sound controlled
wollt Built In bookceie* do
cor woll covering Alio
1
Bdrm available
F leaible leeiet
Senior Clllien* dl (count
Sanlord Court Apartment*

mn»i.________
I bdrm . living room, kilchon.
c a r p o t , alt
No p e l l or
children Alter * » ) ftol

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
BAM BO O COVE APTS.
M* B. Airport Bird
Etftency I and 7 Bedroom Irom
1170 month M l 1170 I D *411
I N OlKOunt tor Senior CHI

CanUtbiiry it lha Crooinc.
1 Bdrm , I ar I bath Cende t
Prlvatt Pali* * CarpacI
Waihar/Dryar Haak up
Baautitul Country Salting
Chlidran. imall pall welcomed
Senior tit lent dkceoot

HI IfII

Lake Monroe tree
7 Bdrm ,
bdlh, carport, ulilltlat No
pat* Ceil i n *147
L U X U R Y A P A R TM E N TS
Family 4 Adult* toetlew
Peal ltd*. 1 Aadreamt
Matter Cave Apartment!
H I 74*4
Opae Ow Waabaodk.

O

p

e

n

H

w

e

S A N F O R D
Stindij Noon - 4
C O M E A N D SEE lha Brand naw
I b d r m / 1 b a tb U n l i t
Sera*wad parch, wathar and
d .ye r. mini bitodt. From M M
• IMP. Located an Oak A re at
Park Or. behind Dewy Quean

BtitisJi Armfkm Rm Kv
*1*1171__________

RIDCtWOOO AIDS APTS,
1 and 1 b*droomi
11) U lO .a r M IAM I
SPACIOUS A P A R TM E N T S
Lakelronl. pool, •ennl* adult*,
no pat*, laundry S H I to 4 M
mo C a iiH K f t lla t a a
I and 1 bdrm Alia lurniihad
attic tone y tram t i l weak U K
dapokil N ep ali C a ilU la M f
S 7 P M allPaimatto
I Bdrm . fenced yard, pal o k
U l l mo IDO Detroi t Coll
H I«* H
1 bdrm
I bath, appliance*
upcloin. near downtown U l l
month USB tacurlly d*poilt
m a e g ta r m u l l

1 4 1 -Homes For Sale

141-Homes For Sale

141— Homes For Sale

7 1 -H « lp Wanted

m leal______________

Molirated individual ter e lamp
to permanent paillien. mutt
type M W PM * good phene
veica
Call Today Work Tadeyt
Abletl Tam p Servlet*

hi

KIT N’ CARLYLE by Larry Wrtght

Friday, March 72. I t u

BANK REPORe**&lt;aSpfcieiHt
LAKE M AR Y R EA LTY
R E A L T O R ....................... TH H 4 *

S A N FO R D
t ' l bath
tcreened
lltop I D

BATEMAN REALTY

OW NER 1 tdrm
C .H rA . w w carpet
front porch work
7417

S A N F O RID
D O P E N H O U S fe '
11000 bariqw
h v a eppraiiat .1

betr-n I b*m C H A large

fencea betk yard F H A
ettumeb'e mortgage nor. ;
q u e l. tying M4 MO *'7 B ert
D,lye * Rrrenn* P » f k art#
Mu*t tee * Sat 4 Scat 1 7) 4 •
14(1 I* M to 4 00 Further
0.1*,:* Ownar * l)to )»V * 7 or
» ’ jto*04«* ________________

tot

Lie. Real Eitala Broker
7*40 Sanlord Av*
M i TO ) M ID
TO (*0R

P IN E C R E S T . Jutt Id* Naw )
B d rm
t bath N*w root
c*rp#t cab'hati. pa.nl lrr*id»
and out fenced back Cor re
riant location 154 too

in m m

STENSTROM STEMPER

321-0759 Eve 322-7643
--------- BVDWHIK---------

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
Hovta* tor rent In Sontord and
Dalton* ) bdrm porch fan*,
canlral alr^hoat. lanced yard
Convenient to tnoppmg Call
__________ H i e tK __________
• • • IN 0 E L T O N A • • •
• • M O M E IFO R R E N T • •
______ • a 174141* a •

★ LANDLORDS *
Tired ot me headache*? Lai ut
m a n a g t your re n ta l pro
pari la* Protatilonal low eo*t
tervice H I 34)1 Call anytime
United Sale* Altec to lei. Inc
Prep. Mgmt Dtu.. Realtor
Naw ) bd rm . 1 bath, C /H 'A .
tan*, blmdi. garaga ) '* ml
louth of Lai* Mary High A I
neighborhood 11)1 4 *ac
Day* Mr L o rtm
H I 1*01
E val H I 4)0)
TfO Howard
B lv d . Lon gw oo d L a t t a
pur chaia pouibl*____________
Now eccepnng application* lor
rental 4 Bdrm . It* bath,
family room, cantral haat and
a ir. carpeted, lanced beck
M M . plu* III le u 4 D D
Available 4 I. Broker Owner
c*ii m on*_________________
Sanlord Megmliciantty raitored
1 bdrm . 1 bath baaulltul wood
work, wood boor* fireplace
many blind*. Good location
M M Call H I 147* M 1 aaa i
Two Rental* One 1 bdrm end
ore t bdrm downtown Sen
lord 104 1111111
I bdrm , central heel 4 air
Fancedyerd U l l mo III, tail
4 lecurlty
O W N ER BROKER I D I f f J
M* E Ifth It 4 Bdrm , H r both
mint condition, canlral haal
and a ir, tuper ap p lia n ce
package, ta rn , no i m a ll
chlidran, no pati Retarancai
M t l mo III end Security
H I 0 ia*w * )IH 4 I
) bdrm on Summerlin Av#
F ! n l . lait and dapoiH re
g u lre d w 'relarence* 377 iroi
1 bdrm . H r bath, naw carpal
C .M /A , appliance* drape*
lanced beck yard tMO mo
Day U t 1141, E va* I D M)4
) badroom twu*a. 1)71 New ]
bedroom duple a. quWI 1341
Leave lit. Iat I and tacurlly

m m

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent
E A U T IF U L 7 bdrm I bath
carpet, eppllancet. vc reenact
patio, laundry URB/llI H U
Nice I bdrm. air, w w carpal,
lurmthad I D I mo 1)41 da
potll Nopal*, latta ID *040

141— Homes For Sale

Cu*tom built *ft*rgr afftciartf
modern home 1 year* qld
Split plan 1 Bdrm
1 full
b*!h* tfudy large dan with
*t(t' a fir# p '.c * . 11 » 10
Florida Room. ,#* in kitchen
■ndoor laundry room, eah*
large 7 car garaga with tu.it
i" lha ra* work bench f it
Large marked yard privacy
fenced in back with full mofo*
h orn* hook up E le g a n t
landtcaping Located a' l i t
Pi„ move D r Sanford l*f MO
Call M l H R
________
O E B A R Y 1 bdrm t bath Fla
ro o m , u t ilit y , ca rp o rt
FurnitTtad Larg* lot U ! » M
After ) p m u l 4*10
For Sato by Owner Sanford
N&gt;co ] bedroom homo with
living room, dining room
paneled family rogm laundry
room w o'kthop and large
tcreanad porch Call for in
formation H ) I E * 111 *00
L A K E M A R Y - S M r a*.. H i
bath, appliancat Clea* at a
am t l l ooo
L A N D 1 TO C K BROKERS
____ M l 17*1
LAKEM AR Y
Ercutive type pool Ttom* vary
lpeciou* al an al'ordabl*
price For appointment atler
1 P M Gtady Brown Heady
Broker I D )f/a or 1H 11)7

BY OWNER to* WO J H d r m , )
t»n U«, l arge hlichen. M A
Fireplace,, utilitf room, I t*r

SANFORD AREA
AFFORDABLE HOMES

127— Office Rentals

Ptofmionil Office Sp»ct
Newly r.navefed on Ftrtt If
M the Hitteric Dewntewn
Drttnct to* to l.M* tq ft
itertlng
et
17 la/ tq H
including 111 4100

9 a*

qu*e» corr+r b*goeh%

Cell HI M00or i n o i v r

REALTY-REALTOR

H A L L

HUGE I S TO R Y ! * M r m 4
bjtii, m Countr if! Defat palms
and Irwit Ireet* N*w a I/I Ion
Cant Hr a! «nd Atr with Heat
pump' New Volar he! water
Heater! Double ttried brlcb
fireplace IS ’ e I f ' screen
perch!
Beautiful
View!
Unbelievable SM.S00
CALL M A IL
M l IfM
FHA VA S P E C IA L Lew down
pa f m e n !! L o w m e n fih lf
payment* 3 Bdrm.. heme in
nice location! Cell for details I
Only IU.tOO
CALL H ALL
111 »?M
S P A R K L IN G C L E A N POOL
SETS THE MOOO FOR THIS
C O UN TR Y T Y P E ) Bdrm .
ham * •i a c r e , la n c e d ,
assum able, r»o qualifying
mortgage l i t .000
CALL HALL
i n 1774

CALLHALL
New associates wanted! Will
tram ter e rewarding
SIREAL ( S T A T E C ARE I R t l

323-5774
7PM HW Y 17*)

I

Stnfofd’t Sal« Uid«
W E L IS T A N D S E L l
M O R E HOMES THAN
A N Y O N E IN NORTH
S E M IN O LE COUNTY

N IC E L I T T L E HOUSE FO R
S T A R T IN G O U TI ) Bdrm I
bath heme with rat in krfehen
paddle fen* entity room
fenced yard! AkOret 147.100
G R A C IO U S ' 1 Bdrm
1 bath
a ld e r hem e w ith t i l la
kitchen large room* large
fa m ily dining room nice
carpeting fireplace1 141100
B E A T TH E HE A T I ) B drm . t
both hemp with twimming
pool fenced beck yard, utility
thed ttote le town) *44 00*
COOL DOWN THIS SUM M ERi
1 Bdrm , 1 both heme in
plea lent neighborhood1 Cov
tred pel to wllh pool eat tn
hitcher*, centre! heat and out

W IL L B U IL D TO SUIT! YOUR
L O I OR O U R S ' EXCLU SIVE
A G E N T FO R W IN IO M G
D E V CORP
A C EN TR A L
F L O R ID A L E A D E R ' MORE
H OM E FOR LESS MONE Y I
C A L L TO D A Y I

I Bdrm J bifh hem# ctftlr#!
H##l end «!r. double f«r«g o .
itiu fflib l* msrf|#g# S43.000

• G E N E V A OSCEOLA RD •
/ O N E O FOR M O BILES'
I Acre Country tract*
Well freed on pared R4
M S Down I* Yrt el lf \ f
From t i l SO*'

) Bdrm Assttmobfo mortgog#
Nico londscop4ng. lorgo potto,
scroonod porch, fonetd yord
Convontofit b c ile n l Mi *09

II you ere leaking lor a tuc
cettful career In Reel Cttate
Slenttrem Realty it looking
far you Cell lee Albrtqhf
today at H ) 147* Evening*
111 M*7

TONY CAPPOLA ASSOC., INC.
REALTOR................13(70333
MARKHAM ESTATES

C A L L A N Y T I ME

1 bd rm 7 1 bath, quality buill
talid timber ham*, appre*
D M tq tt under tir. high
. n . r g y value* d.ep wall,
tapfic tank, cut tom wood tab
inatt, privacy fence , Hto ooo

322-2420
&gt;1*1 S Park. Untold
♦ei Lk Mery Bird Lk Mary

Hutkey Realty, R EALTO R S
H I laoa............ Euamng* 777 1141
Sanford Owner w in help finance
lpeciou* tonverlAble home 4
bdrm , 7 bath* or home a
mother in lew apt At*um*bte
t ' i mortgage 111,MO H I H it
Sanford and Deltona home* for
tale by owner ] bdrm porch,
ton*, central air,heal fenced
yard Convenient fq ihopping
Call 111 40)0
___
SANFORD* Low damn payment
will meve you Info thit *
b d rm . home with tcreened
F tor Ida ream I year heme
warranty to).to*
W A LL ST C O M P A N Y

m

^

iM"

S ANFO R D Handyman tpectoT
1M0 tq H living area New
root Fireplace. In g ro u n d ,
poo1 guett co"Pge Fm ith pn d
*p v * I I I l i t c o th
SANFO R D
Rental. 1 B d rm ,
I r b a l N
1400 m o
CALL A N Y TIM E
R EALTO R I D CWt
i
WE N E E D LIS TIN G S '

SUPER PATIO HOME '
Quality ituv put ) bdrm /) bath
pint den
E itra t include:!'
paddle Ian*, vertical*. fr*ct
lighting light earth tenet. ■e
much m ar.I Screened portb
to weeded back yard Far
detail* contact Caret Sapp
Realtor At u c la It
Aich ‘ Assocutcs.lnc

Keillors
862-3800.... 788-3608
houic ? Bdfris i
bAih
IriufKlfy room tS#n poo! tkrt#
to UYpppirsg 0 » w f MoFivatPd
14)000 M4k#o!t#r U I 0! 11 O'
371 7077
W A IL E D S E C U R IT Y w
Nr rtf ) HR 7 b*th p&lt;*'iO hom «Jn
S «n o r« Upgr#d#d
’
t«-f! h##t #^d A t liifciuyi
• qui pped E r |oy lovtljN*
(iugbout# o v » f m e d pcfll
!#rtn!%, iMtAr! bAd |#t 900

CALL BART
REAL E S TA TE
R E A L TO R
JJJ J" t
) Bdrm ) *i b#!H, family room..
I m t f d h A rd
9« !f4t *
A%9gm#bl# • S% rnortgAgt*
AAuii
\r*« V*inorA SoutH SSf S00
Cqll fVtfllBRS Of w##fc#fKl|
m itss

0 P IN SATURDAY
• Adult &amp; Family
Svclioot

• W D £ann*ttfont
• Cobla TV Pool
• Shot* lo trfl i M t M

AvcsKobla

1 M D R O O M DUPLE I
F U I I I K S W tlC O M f

7 l»

1. 1 J If A,n

th

ham *300

S 4 2 2 0 1. ORLANDO DRIVE
SANFORD

1505 W. 25th SI.
» M

To List Your B u sin e ss-

SANFORD RETAIL STORES

Dial 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

i

Newly renovated retell ttoret an
F l n t I I . in the M ltla rlc
Downtown D H Irtc l fl* ta
I* 00* tq tt Price* itarttng at
*1 por tq tt 111*300

137— Office Rentals

k

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service
Pratottienal Taa I .peril Pre
pare, my attic. or you. hem.
•eat price* I I *4. A It*.
Lenf III Call attar* 174117)
T4 . accountant )4 year* tap*
riant. Will prepare teaet In
your home P .r io n e l and
im allbu vn e n 41 1144_______

Additions A
Remodeling
REMODUING SPECIALIST
Th* Whole Ball Ot Waa

8 E. LINK CONST.
372 7079
7macing Available

Appliance Repair
Klltfls Appliance Same*

ID E A L LO CATIO N 1 furmtnod
office* with break room
multi Una phon* tyttom and
copy machin# Ready tor
t m m a d la l* o c c u p a n c y
Attoclatod Contractor* 7700
Franch Av* H I 0447 or M l

Ull

__________

!«&gt;»' Vefvue N c l i t r i C M r f t
17 yr f t p 661 IH1. !M H »

Building Contractors
A D D IT IO N ! R f M O D I LINO
Bill llr.p p Cut tom Bul&gt;d*r
State LK
RROOHM*

(95-7411
Carpentry

- N O T IC E —
M EN &amp; W O M EN
17-62

TRAIN NOW FOR
CIVIL SERVICE
EXAMS
N o High School Nocat**ry
Poaittont Start A* High A*

$ 9 .2 2 HOUR
• FOST OFFICE
• CLERICAL
• MECHANICS •INSFECT0AS

R EM O O E LIN O
R I PAIR IN O
RCASONABLC
V IR Y R IL I
A
B
L
E
ID 4*17______ *#4 D* 1)47

Cleaning Service
Head Carpet Ctoaniog Living
Dining Room 4 Half 17100
Safa 4 Choir. u i a M R
Janitorial Service Spat tall le in
ofltta Cleaning carpal 4 tito
» year* ttpanence Call tn
morning 7 10 until I* AM
H 1 U M ______________________

MAIDS To 0t6*f
Wni* ( tnduoa Pnona N*

National Training
Sarvlca Inc.
BOK 1SF
U t EVENING M E R A i O
P O Baa 14*7
laniard. FL U F T 1 1*17

* f

I M

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

v T S T A 'A V V W A /

New Ottice Building
near
C F R H on watt Ftrtt St
Totally dec or ate J ready tor
occupancy f*4t0 417)»q tt
___________ H i Iftl ________
O n .i r or title,i V ,,.», San tor ,1
A ra
&gt;*** to 1140 tq It
« U M m n Totally rettorad
Brick Budding H I 1*11
__
S io re ge ar m a n u fa c tu rin g
1)41* 14 hour vecurity guard
Can H ) N 7 7 ___
111) French Ava
ITCH tq It
Store Front Will remodel to
tanant* (pacification* 1300
par month H I t i l l
7000 *q N of Otbco, or 1000 ot
ONic* and 1000 tt of Storoaga
with t* acta ot parking Toned

4.

BUSINESSSERVICELISTING

117— Commercial
Rentals

W LJTl

‘ *1

CONSULT OUR

CAN'T U IE I T T
W H T K E E P ITT
1 E L L W ITH A W A N T AO

■

—

IN COM E P R O P E R TY
Brick
dupto. n m eatrp to* In back
Room for Irip l* . S44 OOO
Ownar will finance

323-2920

1 IIH H

in

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS

SHENANDOAH^
VILLAGE
*100 OFF
SECURITY
DEPOSIT
^
I

A C R E S LOW D O W N
Gene v * Mob,to? 0 1^

INCOM E MoC'ie OK and cot
rage Rent one live In other
i « ooo
'* *

S P A C IO U tl 4 Bdrm
I bath
home an corner left Wood
burntn* ftre p ljce rat In
kitchen completely fenced'
1 1 7 . 1 0 0

3 Bdrm . control hoot ond Off S
ytors Now Lorgo cornof tot
•os f occoss to 13 f l MT.tOt

■VAifT i«c
ttaitee
is n m iin ta e c i

tn m

______ j

Cleenilat* t tt neat To Oodlmet*
M M i M m uI
Overenteed Servlet Law Rato*

CALI NOWI 339-0100

General Services

Lawn Service

Protottlonal Chair Coining
end ru lh w et wearing Heaton
^ b t o £ V K # ^ C o tm )M c ^ ^ ^

ACC L A W N M R V IC E
Mamtonanca Seeding Pruning
Cleaning Thalckmg Eert'llimg

Handy Man
■ ip Handyman. Ret Rellebia
Free Ctt mo*t any lob Bet'
Rato* H I Q ID Call Anytlma
We F i . It Alii
Reofing. Painting. Carpentry
Free Written E tl. ...... H I *171

Pest Control
Climtitfl Bi o l
Compi it*

Landclearing
C C N tV A L A N D C L IA R I N O
L oi and Land etaaemg.
fill d irf. and hatoing
Call M * 1*1* ar M»17M
L A N D C L E A R IN G
F I L L D IR T . BUSHOGGING
C L A Y 4 SH ALE H I U U

C A N 'T U l l ITT
WHY K IE P IT T
S I L L W IT H A W A N T AD.

rs
j

Law n Cart

\

p , Rtasonabt* H ilt s
111 4 401
-- —-N^W^witoJW!
I

Masonry
B E A L Concrete 7 man qwolny
oparallon Palto*. driveway*
D a y*M l 711) 1 va* H 7 I H )
0 H Ruby Cencrtl.
Haute tlabt e Drive* • Palto*
Lrth* Grading
D 1 S IM

Nursing Care
O UR R A T H ARC LOWER
Lakevtow Nurtmg Center
11*1 Secead S I. Sanlord
111 4N7

H) 044/________________

Firewood/Fuel
T R I t S IR VIC I 4 F IR tW O O O
F O R S A LC C A L L A F T E R
4 P M U)euaa

P A P E (H A N G IN G
Any typ# w # !k iv trln f

LAWNS MOWTO TRIM M ED
Spnnq Yard Clean ups 321 1*1)

TH O M A S 4 THOM AS Hama
rtp a k i cleaning lawn car*
C * t lH lllM ^ ^ _ _ _

C A R P EN TER
Repair* and
r . modeling Ne fob too imall
Call H ) «b41
__________
Mamtonanca of all type*
Carpentry, painting plumbing
and ito c lrk H ) 403*

p a in t in o

Vary Rallebia
t«c m m i

Paper Hanging

Home Improvement

Home Repairs

Referencti
i d 4?i7

U9 WS

Health &amp; Beauty

IP R IM O FIX-SIR
Special laving* qn thermal
window*, tofttf and facia
tiding gutter*, tcraan work
and burglar bar* Fam ily
o w n e d an d o p e ra te d
Attoclatod Contractor* TAX)
French Aye Sanford Coll

w a l l p a p e r in o

L#«vn M# nlpysMACf
l Afdwap'f'-j Buth Hog M oving

T O W IR 'S B l A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y Harriett * Beauty
Nook l i f t H ! SI H I 174)

Collier * Building A R.modeling
Na Job Tee Small
1)1 Burton Lane Lento/*
____________n i t o u i ___________
Plumbing, Pamling. Elactric
Carpentry Don t See .1' A»k Bo'
t0 j r » _ e ___ __B4L H I 0e*J

Painting

J

Got r4t*&gt; Gat
ENFO R CER "
ra t 4 n it r t * k ille r
Tha
tirongatl youenn buy E e iy tq
via loti beg* Sontord Ace
H ardware l i t 0(11. Tucker
Farm Supply H I IIM

Plastering
• A LL PttoHtaf Pteilerlngb
Repair. Stvcca. Hard Caal(
limvtcted Prick H I It* )

Plumbing
* Rvddi Plumbing Service •
Repair • Replace • Remodel
• Free Ittimata* • i d e*H •
EM ORY S P L U M B IN G
Re* Comm Repair, remodel
SiatoCt (CFCfUM O)
M l IS44 Leave mei*ege

Pressure Cleaning*.
P R IV A TE g M O B ILE HOMR1
C O M M ER CIA L
' *

Painting
A I A P A IN T IN G Inter tor end
• a l t r l a r . L i(* n .* d end
bonded I I year* eipertence
Calf ID 1)71
C A LV IN A T O M S
hout* Pamfmg 4 W*H Papac
You buy me ferial'
Wa tuppfy lobar T t SAY ■ *11
m mi
Natpawubto Man and M iner will
paint your Hama ar Butina**
•tc Giya your problem* to u l
WC CARE Qualify work. »
yr* tap H7 70*1 L k coni

Tile
S co ftm e n n Ttte P ra* *u fg ^
C le a n in g C a ra m ic , V m g C
Aibevoi All Phata* P C ~ i
Brick Hama* Bu*.na*ta*
-*-4
Free ( i f Rattonabto I D *7

TreeSarvice
■ C H O IS TR E E I C R V I C t * ^
FiaeEtlimate*! Lo* Price*f”
Lie anted m u ra d ' H I m g
"Let the Pretogteawaf*da tf-#' - '

Piofnuoftii Custom Nmtint

JO HN ALLENS LAW N 4 T R U ,
Ltoed tree itmoval LW 4 mg 1
F r a a m D1 SIM
_ 7J

Serving Canlral Flo tor 11 yr*
wllh comptoto qualily pamt
mg tar vice* Quality a M utl
laeclel wall coating H I *#71

YO U DON T N E ■ D A 0 A R A O i&gt;
TO H AVE A G A R A G E S A LE ? '
• U T Y O U D O N E E D A*
W ANT AO C A U H I M il

★

TONY C0RIN0

★

**
• •*

Vw *

to to • '--—4. « 4 •* ^J|

�14*— Commercial
Property / Sale

159-Real Estate
Wanted

I w m i im l tor*** p ro p e r

Ar* row getting Diverted tr*ni
•erred toreciotad need qu'tk
**!*» Call 0 * 1* M l * * ;

Toned G C I W i n lit St .
Senlord CPU H I tTSI_________

153— AcreageLots/Sale

143— Waterfront
Property / Sale
NEW SMYRNA (E A C H

L A R G E LO T

Ocean Iron! 11 conda t
down A 11umatkl* mortgag*

IMSANFORD
m U R __________
Oil*** S i c r t i hign dry
cleared an herdroed trtmieg*
1 ml tram Ito r f l 11000 do*”
u a n t B y O w n e r'JIJ Wag

Baicltttd* Raitty, R EA LTO R S
***«T1 t i l l O a o n t D if ll

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

OSTEEN I A W i HOCC
T r im
L e u P i . r ^ n No
mobile! Kerry I Draggort
B r il 'or m m i ______________

■ Y A P P O IN TM E N T

O NLY

Ere cond . Frlgtdiir* (heavy
d u t y ).w it h e r A d r y e r.
Irtatar. king m * bad com
plat* Rtcllnar. igwar* marbi*
labl* 1T1 ITS*______________
Haavy duty traatar. Ilk* new
f i l l Upright piano. 1111

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale
Baaufitul *ooo*0 overt,tad K ' l
with J bdrm typllor U ) 000
ITT &lt;114. gttor &lt;pm

111 A140
King nt* m a 'trrti A bo* tprmg
with tram* E n t r a n t cond
tion l i n ITT *&lt;A1 i tn r 1 PM

By O r»r»r S baauhlul A tr*i
w it h M o b i l* H o r n , 1
bdrm / Ii* bath In Otteen
U t* 0 0 After S PM I I I TUB

a R EN TTO O W N a
Color T V l . itaraoi. wethart
d ry a ri ralngtrator. Ir«*/*rv
lurnitur*. video racordrri
Spot lot lit weak I rant H (
Allarnati** TV A Appl Rintalt
I t ( i n Shopping Cantor

COUNTRY VILLAGE

111 1***
THE USEDSTORC
A pci i i m n Fumltur*
Buy Sail Anyone Financed'
• li* i ind Street M l us* .
T no
erang*
ntugahyd*
loraiaaii 111 each I0» S i nor •
B ird .Call M l *41*
______
D in ) W n N i l P li II A Service
•or K in m e rtt
M ia if r
M O O N E Y A P P LIA N C ES
W ILSON M A IE R FURNITURE*
I II J t l E FIR ST ST
M l N Tl

Adult Mobile Home Park
Saturday' Sundjy
March llrd . A JOIN
R e fre sh m e n ts fro m t !• 1

MS 447 *47
i m

m m n ;i

K Grieet

O rinf* City

JU S T O f F I 4
A T O R AN GE C IT Y E X lT lM

Liriest Ne*...l...Uwd Mobile
Home Dealer in this Are*.
Fenitltet . ....... A .............Adult!
M g T H w y ll W ....... .......... M I ’ M
IW J C y p r»»» IT &gt; *0 Nawly
remodeled M ult t » moved

u n o Call m

v n

IWJ S ly Lm* Palm Springy. 14
X 40 Jbdrm 'ib e th E lira*I

__________ m o u r ________
ttE* Sky Iin* &gt;4 ■ M ) Bdrm , I
tialti, c a th e d ra l t t l l n g t
thingl« root, metonll* tiding
ITT 44*1
•I Com old, 14*11 Adult tac
lion Carriage Co** 114 TOO
111 1*11 l i l r * mtttago
I I 14 a 10 I Bdrm
J balh
A n um*
mortgag*
Call
JIJ »TT4 altar 1 PM
O Scott Mobil* horn* J4*tl I
bdrm , | bath, adult park
C rn lfll H A 111 000 111 44J4
I ) Skylm* 14 X M 1 bdrm 1
bath iplit plan 10 X II tcreen
porch. 10 ■ &gt;0 thad central
n •&lt; pal »!**• A haal Aaull
taction SHOW 131 11*1

Riga lot Sal* Land Race
T
•aakt MS W Call ST* m *
attar a PM

213— Auctions
A U C TIO N SALE
S aturdar-M arch JJ. 10 AM
CampiaN houa* full lo c j't d 1
mliai wait on I 4 o* Wait 4*th
Ntt to Lak* Markham, go to
Ind block, turn i*tt and watch
•or n g m Sol* cantittt oil
caimpiat* houMhoid turnitur*
and color TV Oak oath ttand
tit* cab mat lawn furniture,
collecto r* B r i m b a ttla i.
r a t a l, b r a n and copper
Item*, lira aitingunhor, t»
ramie an.mai collection. po'l
and pant Imam, picturak.
ate. Garage tull ot hand and
power loo'l I gun« Rugar M
cai‘b*r automatic putoi and J*
caliber B n liih Wabtay nick*!
plated p ilot and ammunition.
P*U1 10 hp Wheal Maria Riding
mowar Sal* conducted by
Dalit Auction Sarvic*
m*
oldatt auction tt r v le * In
cen tra l F lo rid a ' S anford
m j sajb ______________ _
FOR E S T A T E
C om m o rcla l or R etiden tial
Auction! A Appraiiall Coll
Otll l Auction M l SATO

Wind Back Rockar. AAapia Bad
and Ckatt Twin Badt wlfk
Wicker Hoad Board! a add
C h i l l i at D r a w t r t .
O l a t i w a r a . and D u b a i
Pictwrai. Lawn** C h ain and
many mart Itamt

323-6593

B A t l BOAT. I I h p E vtnrudt
71 fhcvrtf Mi nr\ Ko’e Trolling
motor SfMirt flr« A w»h##1
Depth finder E*C cothJ ItfO
Qne oenef 34f I f t l _

BIO PART TIME INCOM E!!
MAJOR STEEL BUILOING
COMPANY IS SEEKING A
PAR T TIM E O E A LE R IN
YOUR AREA TO SELL OUR
PRE EN G IN EER ED STEEL
BUILDINGS AND R E L A TE D
PROOUCTS REFUNDABLE
DEPOSIT REQUIRED CALL
BOB C R A N O A LL AT
I too 414 SIM

199— Pets &amp; Supplies
F R E E TO GOOD HOM E Smoll

cuff mliatd breed ftmaf*
m im

201 — Horses
W A N T E D Young la d m I I lo
IS y a o r t . to w o r k at
g i a a e h a d a * l l a b t a i la
a■&lt;hang* lar riding M l I]IS

/y/
1985 DODGE
[ j
COLT DL
L [1 3,500 MILES, 4 DR. SEDAN.

219— Wanted to Buy
Baby Badt Strallan Clathat.
Playpant. Etc
Paperback
I 111 *JM IT l tSM
N radCribt piarpant bat.
tu rn itu r* . clo th in g good
price! Attar 7 PM Ml S1A3
PayingCASHtor
Aluminum Cant Copper
B ratt Lead H anieap rGiati. Go&gt;d. S&gt;i &gt;*'
Kokomo Tool » l i w ttt
as M Sat t 1M J HOC
W A N TE D D E A D OR A L IV E !
R o t r ig a r o t o r t
w o th a r t
dr r a n JIT 4T*t

W $9750

S E LL TR A D E B A R TE R M AKE
O
F
FER
t Saart Bat' kitchen
compactor ’ Ward J hp gal
edgar. 1 Y a l t a D r i u t
tang* oran j*
t bathroom
vanity t pm gpong labia
rartoui 1**1 goiI c k b i bagt
Call eve- ngi M l 1 * 0 * ____
I Wadd ng gown ilia t *15 ta
color TV SSO Ru*t good
Can M l v » »

231-Cars
Bid Ciedit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
'l l Cougar
14 Mark IV
'1* Daltun SW

=

Accessories

S40* Dn
S400 Dn
STS* Dn

* Where Anybody *
* Can Buy or Sell! a
fo r more d tU tU

i *04 m ij i i

Detwir y Auto A V « r m » SAlrs

Homemede King t u t guilt or
tprtftd and pi. Ilow i 171 i t U

Acroit fh* t ivtt. topOf

•ftir JPM

174 Hwy 17 *7 D * b «'r* * f Ifel

U N Dn

tSAt French Ava............. M l ttAS
Why Buy New You Can RanrwT
E apart Paint A Body Work
Fra* E lH m attt .
s:; n i l
a) Falcon A agon J Dr Ra
iiored S*n or trade to' tmali
’a** modal travel tr*n*' Cell
M l* l*S
11 VW 1 paitenga* tl&lt;(k thill
blue white Runt A look!
B 'a a t Good l l r t t 11 SSO
M l SOU
_____________ _
• It M E R C U R Y C A P R I
H A TC H B A C K Silver w red
interior Vary good cond !'On
M l |1S0 trdm * S Aik tor
Am y or allara W i n t i l l

217— Garage Sales
Big Porch Sal* ttarting T h u n
thru Sun everything! Daalart
Welcome 1130 S Elm S i_____
Garaga Sal* Saturday Iha TJ'd
» lo S 1*0 Vlhlan Rd in toot ol
houta Mowar wrought iron
c lolhai and m iK t i lanaom
M U L T I F A M IL Y . M AR
1).
S a t. I to 4. G E N E V A COM
M U N I T Y C E N T E R
G ENEVA. FLA
Rafngarator w'lcamakar whit*
can* doubl# twin badi I corn**
i*t| quean til* hid* a bad
couch. Tima* com polar Olhar
mltcallanaoui itamt Every
thing undtr LUX) Friday 4
Saturday.*!! Bath D riut__
S A N FO R D S P R IN G C L E A N
IN G I TIM Mighlewn Ay* S*t
urday A Sunday. I lo S.
Location naar Seminal* High
Spring Clean Out! IIOJ Madara
A re . oil Reoalla Dr batwaan
Sanford A w and Lacuol A r t
Saturday. M arch » L 0 ta t PM

'll

il

OVtR
2SO CARS

k fi

si

10
CHOOSE
FROM

7 7 DODGE
C H AR G ER SE

7 9 O LD S
R E G E N C Y 98

CAM. POSIllVf TRACTIOM
CHROME WMEIIS
RACING RCADT

lOAOtO IQLUFMfNT
LOW NIU I
■(LOW W M IISA U

,.,*595

..t. *3995

8 1 L Y N X GS
W AGON

80 M ER C U R Y
BOBCAT

8 1 GRAN
P R IX

AIR. s n t t o
CRUISt
CAM'T S10F US!

MATCM1ACK D41UK. AUTO
COOO MILES
NURtY

CUSTOM. 2 TONI. AIR. AUTO
PS. P I. VUORI INTERIOR
X CUAN. UNKUIVAill

*3195

*1995

*4995

*1988

A/C. NICE CAR

$6195

HW Y.

17 -9 2

SAN FO R D

1984 NISSAN
SENTRA
2 DR.. A/C. AM/FM STEREO,
PERFECT

321-0741

1982 OLDS CUTLASS CALAIS 1
ONE OWNER, LOW MIL1AU

1983 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX L$

5 SPUD. LOADED

1984 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
LOADCD, LOW KUEAGK

1

1984 PONTIAC TRANS AM
1984 CHEVROLET ZS SUED. LOADCD. 1,600 RRU18

1984 PONTIAC TRANS AM
T-TOPS, LOADCD

COURTESYPONTIAC/ •”

m i n i unonrw ujaivc iu jiv i

• iu o n ^ rt

1981
DATSUN 200SX
SPORTY

*5995

*6895

A/C AND VERY CLEAN

A/C, LIKE NEW

$5995
im ~

*11,200

*4995

’11,140

NEW YORKER

197^
CAMARO

1982
BMW 320-1

1983 ISUZU
IMPULSE

A/C, TOTAL LUXURY. LIKE NEW

A/C, NIFTY LITTLE CAR

A/C, AM/FM STEREO

LOADED, A/C

*4995

*11.495

1981 BUICK
SKYLARK LIMITED

*9850

1983 DODGE
ARIES

1981 FORD
ESCORT

1981 OLDS
CUTLASS

ALL POWER. SUN ROOF,
READY TO GO

2 DR., "BRAND NEW” , ONLY 67
MILES. NEVER TITLED

2 DR., WHITE, AUTO, A/C. AM/FM
STEREO, P/S, P/B, CRUISE CONTROL

2 DR., A/C, AM/FM CASSETTE,
P/W, LIKE NEW

$5695

$6750

$4495

J

I?

BRASS HAT. LOADCD

A/C. READY TO GC

wJ r '

1981 TOYOTA CEUCA SUPRA ]

LOAMD, LOW MULAM

4 DR.. 5 SP.y A/C. FM/AM

(
}
l\§ J

ONE OWNER

LOW EST
PR ICES
ANYWHERE

dl

\y~\

1981 CADILLAC COUPE D EV ILLE1

F O R D F i l l ttt p tide

pickup p t p b 4 dr cultom
whaali Laar toppar Lika
nan S14 MO!

1983 TOYOTA CEUCA

!,

*6595__

1981 HONDA
ACCORD
4 DR., 5 S P .( A/C.AM/FM, NICE

$6990
1981
AUDI 4000
PERFECT

$8490
1981 TOYOTA
PICKUP
1,000 MILES, DIESEL

*5295

REFLECTION OF QUALTT
I

1984 DODGE
DAYTONA TURBO

SANFORD, FLA.
SANFORD 323-6100

2913 ORLANDO DRIVE
(HWY. 17-92)

|

LOADCD

Pay Balance Waaklyl
t»* o*«d............................ I H ****

1982 OLDS
T0R0NAD0

*4990

11981 HONDA ACCORD

Serving C entral Florida Over 30 Years

7 8 P O N T IA C
SAFAR I

1

LOADCD

'74 Pinto, 5250 Donn

1979 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO

i \

1979 HONDA PRELUDE

170 004 day 301174 77*1

1982 YOYOTA
SUPRA

|j

USED CAR
EXTRAVAGANZA

App't p't cowd*

1982 DATSUN
STANZA

u SI
•j f j

COURTESY PONTIAC

truck N*w planting uphoi
ttgry lung up and front m d

*N /
//

%

DI SCARD T H A T O L O CAR
F IN D A B E T T E R O NE IN
T O O A T S W ANT ADS

B U T JU N K CARS A TRUCKS
From t i l ta tt* or mere
Call M l H it 111 n i l
TOP Dollar Pa Id tor Junk A
U ted cert.trucks A heavy
equipment ITT S**d
WE PAY TO P D O L L A R FOR
JU N K C A R S A N O TR UC KS
CBS A U T O P A R T S T*J 4S0S

BUCK. LOADCD

Jim Lash’s
Blue Book
Cars

* F4SS WACOM. 10*040
TILT C BUISC . SUMO.
MO N IS P e tN T

243— Junk Cars

i t l l Kewataki n o L T D 2X0
miles tite lie n t cond.tlon
USO Cell M l MTS

•0 Te rry 4 1 b « H bo#l IS hp
mtr * tl#c mfr , depth finder

live — it M *00obo 171 Vi77

Martin Motors

101 s French M l D l

23V— Motorcycles
and Bikes

♦•OW &gt;ou** tor MWO Dump
truck ff'iifur* dHoTMi it wgrlh

'Itt f fW 'td 1 NtNafViJS PM

223— Miscellaneous

|1 PROWLER TR A ILE R

•r* Pint*........ i.... ....... _a*sa Dn

dit&lt;gnmp«it

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION

U Pick Strawbarrlai
Tuat Thor Sat US* Hatter A rt
l l l t t t t ................
in ;m

Cui*om built 1150 'b strength
ha'b ed tlngi* ail* Good tor
J w h e tle rt Or lawn car*

ford 1 4 to*s pt&lt;k up dump

Da»toh* Beach

• * • • * Hokli

241— Recrtational
Vehicles / Campers

235-Trucks/
Buses / Vans

★ DAYTONA AUTO *
★ AUCTION *
MwrytJ

237— Tractors and
Trailers

H u .p m * n t t ! ' ! C l ' IM 1411

WE FINANCE
I I Ferd Caunar P Up

Friday. March n . 1?EJ—UA

1 ------ -----

D IS C O U N T
A U TO
SA LES

»

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1170 S. Sinford 371 4075

221— Good Things
to Eat

1982 MERCURY
CAPRI
NEW

Rebuilt K IR BY l i l t W A vs
Guaranteed Kirby Ca
710 W Ttt St. I l l 5443
Sataltllo TV Syltami
Complete A ll you naad 'OON
Financing No money down
S' M A D O U n .ia rta H ll 8*4 4 _

500 Sinford At e .

COLOR TELEVISION

191— Building
Materials

SPRING S A LE ! Silt tlowan
ceiia cta b ia t. m lt c
toyt
ciofhai. bicyciai ST* Vlhian
Read, naar idyltwid* tchoo'
NO E A R L Y
BI RDS.
P LE A S E ! Friday 4 pm to *
pm S** » *m tp S pm_________
TUSCAWILLA MULTI
F A M IL Y ; SAT. O N L Y
*4
Fum 1 b'kat Iad a t 1 S. * IE
and n u t mad tlj* cloth mg
M uch m ltc
MTS Duncan
Drive. Winter Spring!

Friday Nights.....7 PM

215— Boats end

Evtning Harald. Sanford. FI.

223— Miscellaneous
23T— Cars

L &amp; E AUCTION

183— Television/
Radio / Stereo
RCA IS" Cenlol* tok&gt;r •»!*»►
non Original price over VAOO
Balance du* 11U00 cath or
lak* orot paymantt ilO per
month Sllll In warranty NO
M O N E Y DOWN Fra* home
trial No obligation
C iil 141 11*4 Oayorm ghl

217— Garage Sales

203— Livestock and
_____ Poultry

LOADED

$
ORLANDO 8311660

i

895

�H A — Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Friday, March H , I I U

Boy, 11, Makes 'Miraculous'
Recovery, Visits Classmates

£3 13 O th ers Sentenced For D ru n k D rivin g

Woman Loses License For 5 Years
A Holly Hill woman wan fined &gt;300 and
ordered lo serve 10 days In the Seminole
County Jail for driving under the Influence of
alcohol.
Elizabeth Hughes Haight. 46. was ar­
rested Dec. 15 after her car hit two vehicles
In separate accidents In unidentified areas of
Seminole County. Her driver's license was
suspended for 5 years.
In other court action, the following
persons have either pleaded or been found
guilty of driving under the influence.
As first-time offenders, most have had
their d river’s license suspended for 6
months, ordered to pay a $250 fine, pay
court costs o f $27.50 and complete 50 hours
of community service. When a guilty or no
contest plea Is entered or If the defendant Is
found guilty of an alcohol-related offense,
other charges are usually cither not pro­
secuted or dismissed. Most of the first-time
offenders are allowed to apply for busi­
ness-only driving permits. In cases where
the sentence differs, the actual sentence Is
reported:
—Charles Alan Vandusen. 23. of Orlando,
arrested Jan. 16 after his car was Involved
In an accident on Delores Drive near
Allamonte Springs.
-W illia m Costello. 29. of 410 Sliver Oak
Lane. Altamonte Springs, arrested Dec. 6
afler his speeding car ran a red light on
Palm S p rin g s llo u le v a rd . A lla m o n te
Springs
— Michael Eugene Mfiore. 32. of 3040 Aloma
Ave.. H -l. Winter Park, arrested Oct. 20
afler his car was seen weaving on stale Hoad

436
— Royce Varnard Moore. 36. of P.O. Bo* 64
Doctor Drive. Oviedo, arrested Nov. 30 after
his car failed to maintain a single lane on
state Road 46. four miles east of Sanford.
— Benaglr Dean Claxton. 41. of Route 4. Bo*
67. Sanford, arrested Dec. 14 after his car
failed to maintain a single lane on county
Road 15. Sanford.
—Lemuel Eudell Jr.. 31. of Route 2. Box
144. Sanford, arrested Jan. 20 after his car
crossed Third Street In Sanford In front of a
Florida Highway Patrol car. causing a
trooper to brake hard to avoid hitting his
car.
—Robert Harold Greenwood. 31. of Deltona,
arrested Jan. 19 after a state trooper clocked
his car traveling 76 mph on Interstate 4.
Lake Mary.
—Thomas Atkins Hamseur. 30. o f 220
Cherokee Court. »120. Altamonte Springs,
arrested Jan 22 after police saw his car
driving south In the northbound lane ol
North Lake Boulevard. Altamonte Springs.
—Gary Nell Parent. 51. o f 2175 Marquette
A ve.. Sanford, arrested March 11 on
Bcardall Avenue at SR 46 after he did not
dltn his car's lights afler being signaled to
do so. He was fined $500 and had his
driver's license suspended for one year.
— Paler Slyder. 25. of Orlando arrested
March 10. after he was found asleep In the
front seat of his car on stale Road 434 at
Pulms Springs Road. Long wood
-D a v id Wyant. 21. o f 3040 Aloma Way.
*1.4. Winter Park, arrested March 8 afler his
car failed to maintain a single lane on
Weklva Springs Boulevard. Longwood.

C h ick en b a rb e cu e d in n er
sponsored by Brownie Troop
860 and Girl Scout Troop 294 to
benefit trip to Savahnah. noon to
6 30 p.m.. Longwood Recreation
Building. Wilma Avenue and
Church Street. Longwood. For
tickets and Inform ation call
331-0985.
Country Fair. Mt. Plymouth
Fire Station. W. State Hoad 46.
10 a m. to 4 p.m. Auction,
barbecue, baked goods and plant
sale.
Sanford A A . noon (closed
discussion) and 8 p.m.. 1201 W.
First St. open discussion.
Sanford Womens' A A. 1201
W First St.. 2 p.m.. closed.
Casselberry AA Step. 8 p.m.,
Ascension Lutheran Church,
Overbrook Drive.
Hr boa and Live Oak AA. noon.
K rbos Club, 130 Norm andy
Hoad. C a s s e lb e rry (c lo s e d ).
Clean Air AA for non-smokers,
first floor, same room, same
place and time.

SUNDAY. MARCH 24
Sanford Big Book AA. 7 p.m.,
open discussion, Florida Power
and Light building. N. Myrtle
Avenue. Sanford.
Alanon meeting. 8 p.m.. 1201
W. First St.. Sanford.

&lt; i

$i

...Raid
C ontinued from page 1A
• Tomm ie Barnes. 41. of 1204
W. I-till Street, disorderly condurl. $100

• Bennie Arnold. 35. of 43
laike Monroe Terrace. Sanford,
(Missesslon of cocaine. $8,000.
Names o f Ihe three other
iirrrsters were not available at
press tunc. Al least one Juvenile
was Involved. Wrlghl said.

—Rick Brunson

NEW YORK (UPI) — Subway gunman
Bernhard Goetz. In newly released portions
of his confession for shooting four teenagers
aboard a subway train Dec. 22. said "1 knew
In my heart (I) was a m urderer" when he
chose lo shoot the youths.

court today In u $50 million suit filed by one
o f the four teenagers he wounded.
The lawsuit was filed by Darrell Cabcy.
19. the most seriously wounded o f the four
teenagers.
The New York Dally News Friday reported
thut Goetz would not testify before the
second grand Jury as originally expected.

Goetz, who made the confession while In
police custody In Concord. N IL. shot and
wounded the four teenagers, one of whom
remains paralyzed from the waist down.

The paper said a letter from Assistant
District Attorney Gregory Waples to Goetz's
lawyer. Barry Slotnlck. said If Goetz cannot
testify on Monday, the panel will use other
Information lo make Its decision on an
Indictment.

The shooting Is being Investigated by a
second grand Jury. The first one Indicted
Goetz for Illegal weapons possession, but
declined to charge him wllh attempted
murder.
Goetz was scheduled to appear In federal

...W ine
C ontinu ed from page I A
e x p e n s iv e French Im p orted
wines has been verified.
According to Dukes, the wine
up for sale was owned In 1983
by a now-defunct Miami com ­
pany which H&amp;C. the distribu­
tors. even tu ally becam e the
owners of. When the company

Slotnlck hits said he Is working on another
case and cannot appear wllh Goetz before

folded, the wine was moved to
Sanford and Globe Importers of
Wine Incorporated, stored the
wine.
The sale la part of settling a
lo a n a g r e e m e n t

b etw een G lo b e .

Hickman. H&amp;C Distributors and
Sun Bank o f Orlando and which
Is the subject of a civil suit filed
T h u rs d a y at the S e m in o le
County courthouse.
According

to the suit.

Sun

$

! &lt;\
i **

•.

ty spotted her car parked at 800
Cllrus Tree Drive. Altamonte
S p r in g s . A m an m a tc h in g
S ta n ley's description
Continued from page IA
approached the house wtille the
county Hoad 427 at U.S. High­ deputy was there.
way 17-92. Sanford, and drove
Stanley, originally charged
away.
with kidnapping, robbery and
Shortly after Ms. Chasse re- grand theft, was found guilty by
(lorted the abduction and theft to Jury of armed robbery Jan. I I
the sheriff's department, a depu­
—Deane Jordan

ifaaarst

MANISCALCO. (M ANUSL A.

(Hollins

—Fwwral tarvkat lar Mr. Im am *! A
Mamacalcs.
at tla Wynn OrWs. t w k r i
a*l* SMS Tkun say, wta k* Hats al I I *
is h g t e v

si

Mm

I |r a |

M

(W

Church. taniars. s ilk Pattar Dari*

V

323-120*

I

Bank of Orlando loaned Globe
$150,000 over a two- year-period
since 1983. T h e loans were
guaranteed by 1I&amp;C. according
to the suit. The bank states In
the suit that It la “ insecure"
about the loan and wants It paid
back.
In a Joint agreement between
Globe and Sun Bank, according
to the suit, the wine Is to be sold
to cover the loans.

...Robbery

SIDNEY R. BOLAND II
Springs from Chapel Hill. Tenn. retired respiratory therapist and
Mr. Sidney R. Boland II. 70. of In 1984. He was a carpenter and a member of First Assembly of
2509 Clalrmont Ave., Sanford, u Baptist.
God. Sanford.
died Wednesday at his home.
Survivors Include his wife,
Survivors Include his wife.
B o rn M a r c h I I , 1915 In Mardell. daughter. Deborah Irv­ E va; tw o sons. D ou glas o f
Burlington. N.C.. he moved to ing. Palin Beach Gardens; slater. C asselb erry and M ichael o f
Sanford In 1950 from there. He E lsie D og g ett. D etro it; tw o Sanford; three daughters. Donna
was a retired truck driver and a grandchildren.
Lee. Apopka. Denise Gluhan.
World War II Army veteran and
G ard en C h a p el H om e for Longwood. Debra Fox. Sanford:
a Methodist. He was a member of Funerals. Orlando. Is In charge a brother. Frank. Brooklyn. N.Y..
the Disabled American Veterans. of arrangements.
a sister. Josle Samartano, Long
S u r v iv o rs In clu de a son ,
DORIES. JACESON
Island; eight grandchildren.
Sidney R III. Salisbury. N.C.; a
Mrs. Doris S. Jackson, 45. of
Brlsson G uardian Funeral
daughter. Barbara Johnson. 110 Academy Ave.. Sanford, Home. Sanford. Is In charge of
Sanford, four grandchildren; and died Wednesday at her home. arrangements.
one great granddaughter.
Bom Feb. 12. 1940 In Geneva,
ANNE V. WORDEN
Urltson G uardian Funeral she moved to Sanford In 1960
Mrs. Anne V. Worden. 75. of
Home. Sanford, is In charge of from there. She was a home­ 301 Nebraska Ave.. Longwood.
arrangements.
maker and was a member of St. died Wednesday at Florida Hos­
James AME Church. Sanford.
pital Allamonte Bom Oct. 18.
FLOYD B. CHASE
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e t h r e e
1909 In Glasgow. Scotland, she
Mr Floyd B. Chase. 78. of 156
H a c le n d u V i l l a g e . W in t e r daughters. Jacquelyn C.. Sherri m o v e d to L o n g w o o d fr o m
Springs, died Wednesday In A . Brenda A. Jackson: a son. Washington. D.C. In 1964. She
Winter Springs. Born Murch 17. W i l l i e C .; m o t h e r . M r s . was a homemaker.
Survivors Include a stepson.
1907 In Smlthvllle. Texas, he Josephine Smith: two sisters.
moved to Winter Springs from Mrs Christine Bryant and Dr. Lloyd Jr., Champaign. Ul.; step­
Little Rock. Ark. In 1973. He was Hortense Evans, all of Sanford: daughters. Roberta G aylord,
a retired m in in g and c iv il two brothers. Johnny Jones. Cam eron Park. Calif., Betsy
B rad en ton . R ic h a rd S m ith , Smith. San Jose. Calif.
engineer and a Baptist
Survivors Include his wife. A lb a n y . N .Y .; n in e g r a n d ­
U ald w ln -F a lrc h lld F u n eral
Home. Altamonte Springs. Is In
Ruth; son. Jerry S . Columbus. children.
Marvin C. Zanders Funeral charge of arrangements.
Ga.: two grandchildren.
U ald w ln -F a lrc h lld Fun eral Home. Apopka, la In charge of
Home, Orlando. Is In charge of arrangements.
EMANUEL A. M ANUCALCO
Funwral Notic«$
arrangements.
Mr. Emanuel A. Maniscalco.
JAMES AUDIE HAISLIP
Mr. James Audle Halsltp. 51, 63. of 714 Wynn Drive. Sanford, JACKSON, DOS It i.
o f 211 Bennett St.. W inter died Thursday at Central Florida -Funarat torvkat Nr Mr* O w n 1 Jm I m k .
M IIS Acadtmy A va. Untar*. wM k* Sat*
S p rin g s , d ie d T h u rsd a y at Regional Hospital. Sanford. Bom Saturday at II am Iran U Jama* A M I
Jan.
3.
1922
In
New
York
City,
Florida Hospital-Orlando. Born
CAurt*. Untar*, .im at* la v J.fl Camay
Dec. 17. 1933 In Lincoln County, he moved to Sanford In 1970 amoattaf Th* kaSy mil u* m d a l* at at*
Saturday Sam I am I* Amaral Mma
Tcnn., he m oved to Winter from Long Island. N.Y. He was a •arlal will 1*1Ian In I’anara Camatary. AH
Dowers For All Occasions

the panel until next Friday.
In the confession, broadcast on ABC's
"20-20" program Thursday night. Goct/
told a Manhattan prosecutor In Concord
how one o f the youths demanded money.
Goetz said he originally was not going lo
shoot the youths, but changed Ills mind and
shot to kill when he thought Ihc lour youths
"w ere going lo have fun wllh me.
"It was at that point I decided I was gonu.i
kill 'em all. murder 'em all. do anything
Goetz said.
He went on. "You can accuse me of a toi ol
things, okay? Because I know In my heart
what I was. They didn't die. well, that «
whal God wanted. If therr Is u God Th.it I
knew In m y heart (I) was a m urderer."

II&amp;C was also required lo
deliver to the Florida Division of

AREA DEATHS

j

to speak, one word at a time.
He cried as therapist Steven
Musco began working with
his atrophied muscles. Six
weeks ago. he took hts first
steps, using a walker.
On Thursday. W ayne told
hts doctor. "I'm going to my
school."
He left the hospital, and
accompanied by his physi­
cian. Dr. Ernesto Valdez, and
his mother, he walked Into
Palm Springs North Elemen­
tary School unassisted.
" I t 's nothing short of a
m iracle." Fedusenko said.
Wayne was greeted at the
school doors by his brothers.
Nelson. 10. and Al. 8 Ills
classmates, teachers and the
school Janitor quickly sur­
rounded the group.
Wayne walked around the
schoolvard. shaking hands,
to u c h in g his c la s s m a te s '
clothing and turning his head
from side to side to absorb the
Hood of colors and sounds.
S eein g W a y n e aga in Is
" O K ." said sixth-grader Rob­
ert Scavuzzo. "b u t he's dif­
ferent."
Wayne walks hesitatingly,
with a limp. He still loses his
balance and says little Hr
faces extensive therapy and ll
will be al least a year before
he can return to school for
classes.

7 Knew In My Heart I Was A M urderer'

CALENDAR
F R ID A Y . M ARCH 22
Handy Miles Concert. 7 p m .
Flist Christian Church. 1G07 S.
Sanford Ave.. Sanford Tickets
available at door.
Weklva AA (no smoking). 8
p .m . W e k lv a P r e s b y te r ia n
Church. SR 434. ul Weklva
Springs Road. Cloned.
Longwood AA. 8 p m . Rolling
Hills Moravian Church. SR 434.
Longwood. Alanon, same lime
and place.
Tanglewood AA. 8 p.m.. St.
R ichard's Episcopal Church,
Lake Howell Hoad Alanon. same
time and place,
Sanford A A Step. 8 p m.. 1201
W. First St., closed.
S A T U R D A Y . MARCH 23
Spring Festival '85 sponsored
by the Spartan Singers. 9 a m. to
4 p.m.. Mllwee Middle School,
County Hoad 427. Longwood.
Entertainment, arts und crafts,
plants, baked goods, produce.
Allamonte Springs Pet Show.
11 a m.. Westmonte Park. HeglsIratlon fee. $1. All pets must be
caged or on leash Very young
handlers must be accompanied
by adult.
East-West Klwanls Club. 8
a m . Airport Restaurant. San­
fold.

—Bruce Siegler. 23. o f DeBary. arrested Dec.
14 after his car was seen driving carelessly
on Oak Avenue. Sanford.
— Robert Stallings. 37. o f 2811 Grove Drive.
Sanford, arrested Dec. 15 on Orange
Avenue. Longwood. after his speeding car
failed to maintain a single lane.
The following persons' DU1 charge was
reduced to the lesser charge of wllfull and
wanton reckless driving.
—D. Elaine Carson. 22. of 550 Maitland
Ave., Altamonte Springs, arrested Nov. 28
after her car stopped suddendly at a traffic
light on SR 436. Altamonte Springs. Her car
also reportedly made a wide turn and
swerved from lane to lane. She was fined
$250
—William Goudy. 59. of 1365 Guinevere
Drive. Casselberry, arrested Dec. 16 after hts
car was Involved Ut an accident at the
drlve-up window o f Hardee’s. U.S. Highway
17-92. Longwood. He was fined $250.
The following persons have been found
guilty of DU1 but will not be sentenced until
April 8:
—Brett Shurman. 28, of 615 E. Sunset
Court. Altamonte Springs, arrested Aug. 19.
after being Involved In an accident In the
parking lot of the Hotline Bottle Club. SR
436. Altamonte Springs.
—John L. Jones. 50. of 1200 Bell Ave..
Sanford, arrested Nov
10 Just off U.S.
Highway 17-92. Sanford, alter his car ran ofT
the road.
—Joseph J. Michaud. 20. of 1790Oakhurst
Ave.. Winter Park, arrested Oct. 22 after he
was Involved In an accident on Oxford Road,
Casselberry.
—Deane Jordan

M IA M I ( U P I I F r a il,
brow n -h a ired . 11-year-old
Wayne Lenker went to school
T h u rs d a y , and that, h is
doctors said. Is a miracle.
On Oct. 7. Wayne was taken
to Palmetto General Hospital
In a coma, with a fractured
skull and a severe right
frontal lobe contusion — a
bruise to part o f the brain.
"Technically, he should be
a v e g e t a b le ." said Tania
F e d u s e n k o . a h o s p it a l
spokeswoman.
Wayne was In the front seat
o f a ‘ ‘ s c r a m b l e r . '* a
1 .5 0 0 - p o u n d m o t o r iz e d
land-or-water vehicle, which
was sitting In the street while
a friend attempted to move It.
The vehicle was struck by a
car and his friend. Eddie
Smith. 25. was killed. Wayne
was not expected to live more
than 24 hours.
His heart stopped, and It
took doctors 20 minutes to
revive him.
“ They said he had massive
brain dam age." his mother.
G e r a l d i n e H o c h l . s a id
Thursday. "T h e y kept his
body temperature low. at 60
degrees, to slow down the
damage."
A few weeks ago. Wayne
slowly began to regain con­
sciousness.
On March 12. Wayne began

Amaral Hama MSay &gt; I p m. Burial wttt
al * latar Am* ArranpomanN ky

Funaral Mama, a Guardian cA*s*l. SanMr*

mnu.

SOLANO, t io t t iv a.
-Funaral t*rvk *« Mr Mr ItSnay R Satan*
II. S at MS* Clalrmont A*a . Unlord. wh*
StaS WoWtaaSay. will Da hat* Monday al I*
i n l l krluon Funoral Mama with IA* Ha*
laray Sopor attktatmg Burial *111 lot loo in
Oat lawn Momortal Par* Fr land, may caRat
lAo Amaral Aam* 14 pm Sunday Arrant*
mantt ky Srltaan Funaral Ham*, a Guar01an
cAapal O T Illl.

Legal MoffctT
IN T N I O I N I R A L COURT
OR J U t T I C I tU M R IO R
COURT
D IV IS IO N M C a t II
N O R TH C A R O L IN A
C LEV C LA N O C O U N TY
C L E V E L A N D F ( D C RAL
SAVINGS A LO A N ASSOCIA
T I O N ll a r m a r l y C ltv a la n *
So, in** A Loan Auociatwn).
Plainsfl

v*.
H O M E R C D A M R O N . **
guardian Mr Lar* La* Oaltrtn
an* J t l l r t y S ta ll Oktlran.
minor 1 and H O M E R c OAF
F RON individually an* wiN.
F R A N C IS I . O A F F R O N an*
L O R A L l A O A F F R O N an*
J I F F R C V S C O TT O AFFR O N .
m ln * r«. an* C H A R L I S W
W R A Y . J R . a* trv»la# an*

ROBERT

|

LEI

an* WIN.

G E R A L D IN E H L I B . J A N E T
S TA N O IF B R . at puardMn Mr
Lara La* Oattr*n an* ja ftrrr

N O TIC E O F S C R V IC I

OS CROC ( S I ST
P U B L IC A TIO N
TO H O M B R C O A FFR O N . a*
guardian M r Lar* La* Daffrtn
an* J a llr a y S can O a ltrtn .
minor* an* H OM E R C OAF
FRON. individually an* wtN.
F R A N C IS ■ O A FFR O N . an*
L O R A L C A O A F F R O N an*
J B F F R B V S C O TT O AFFR O N .
m inor* an* J A N I T S T A N ­
O IF B R . a* kuar*ian Mr Lara
La* O a ts * " an* Jaftrrr Start
Daftran mtnart D*t*nd*ni,
TAKB NOTICE Mai a pNa*
Inf Matin* r*&lt;Mt a**m*t yaw
sat caan s m s m is* at a n
annua* action Th* nalur* *1 a *
ratal kamt ktugst it at Milawt;
T* MltaiHS an aawlakM Iwn
up*" mt raal property Ncatt* M

...Calls
Continued from pegs IA
business purposes.
"You mean gelling (business)
phone calls al home la Illegal?"
Keith asked.
"Technically, yes." Carll said.
John Hamilton, an Insurance
salesman who says he makes
business calls on his home
phone at 1001 Grove Manor
Drive. Sanford, then told the
commission. " I had no Idea I
was breaking any law as far as
zoning Is concerned."
He sa id he o p p o s ed th e
measure because he didn't think
ll could be enforced.
Afler two more oeople spoke

Legol Notice
C lt v a la n * C *u n ly , N o rtS
Carolina, an* bam* Mantilla* at
Loft la an* IS. Map 1. of th*
Map!* VaiMy Suksirltion at
•Sawn an th* plat racardt* in
Plat Baa* II. pa** U. In is*
O flk * of th* RtfitWr ol Daadt
C la r a la n * County. N orth
Carolina, an* lift** In IS* noma
at Hamar C. Daft-on at Guard
•a" Mr Lara La* Oaflran an*
Jallray Scott Oaflran. an* M
• ,* 0*4 tai* raal preparty Mr
t*M at pukik or prlveM t*M at
IS* Court may dlrtcl an* N
apply IS* net prockadt *1 tucS
taN M tha In*ak4a*natt *ua M
Cltvalan* Ftdtral Saving* and
Carat in*
You will i*** aatka that an
Or*ar *1 AltacSmanl ha* feaon
Htua* ky IS* CMrt of Suparlar
Court. Cltvalan* County. N C..
M attach that cartpin raal pro
Nntitio* abava
Yau ora rtpulra* N mat#
M S pltamnt not
latar than April M. i»*S. an*
upon your lailura M Pt to. IS*

Alcohol and Tobacco a check for
$27,000 to cover the excise tax
estimated by state auditors At­
torneys for Sun Bank said today
they expect the $27,000 lo be
p a id tod ay p rio r lo Ih c au ction s.

Carmen Rosamonda. assistant
administrator w ith the state
department of revenue, said to­
day his office will monitor (hr
auctions to be certain the stair
receives the sales tux revenues,
am ounts separate from the
$27,000 excise tux

against ll, Carl) m oiionnl lo
recommend dental because "iluwill of Ihe people" was against It
The commission voted 6 0 to
deny II.
Afler Ihe meeting. Miller said
he was ready In vole ell her way
on Ihc Issue, hut when he
discerned Ihc other commissionera weren't ready to approve ll.
he threw In his "n o” vole.
Miller. Curll und Davidson said
Knowles' hacking of ihe pro­
posed amendment did mil Influ­
ence their votes. Curll said
Knowles would still tie able lo
have his business
" H e 'll si III be able lo do
consulting." Carll said " lie just
won't be able lo pul his phone
number In Ihe book (under
‘consultants

Legal Notice
A N D B O U N D A R IE S OF
T U B IO N IN O O R D IN A N C E .
A N D A M IN D IN O T H E
F U TU E E LA N D USE
ELEM EN T OF T N I
C O M F R IH IN S IV B F L A N
OF TH E C IT Y O F
SANFORD. F L O R ID A .
Nonet it hanky pivon mat a
Pwkik Haanng will b* hoi* al
IS* Cammittian Room In Ih#
City Hail in aw City *&lt; Santar*.
Fiona* at t M a CMC* P M an
A p r il S. IM S . la c a a t ld t r
chan pal an* *m*n*m*nti M IS*
ZaMng Or*mane*, an* aman*
m t IS* FuSrr* Land Ut* I N
man! *1 is* CamprtSantiv* Plan
at *w City tf San tar*. Florid*.
A parllan *l thai c trla ln
p -a p a rt, I yin
#1 an*
abutting U S .
IFF*
IS R ISAM) a
M m a Orly* H
M k*
MR I IMuMipM
Family RatMtnMal DwalHng)
Dttkkt N O G IConor *1 Cam
martlall DHNkt. Sal* prapart,
Going mart particularly da

you will apply M IS* Capri Mr
th* ratwf tavpst
Tiu* IS* ttih **y at FtOruary
HtS
V N Doan Lactry Jr
Attarnay Nr Plaintiff
OF COUNSEL
N OiunLackay Jr ,P A
Altar nay t al Law
F O Ban ISM
Vhalby. Nart* Carolina N IM
TiltpSawa IIStINJtSII
Put!HA March I.L I L H H t!

Th* touts IS O Not at Lot* I
an* L L*B* Mirmw Batata*. Pt*'
Baa* a. Papa PI. Publk Rtcorpt
at laminar*Caiatty. Flan**
All partlot In mtpraat an*
citiian* mail Sav* an apparluni
»y N b * hoar* at tai* Soaring
By *r*tr at m* City Cam
mittMn at m* City at Santor*.
PMrMs
AOVICB TO THE PUBLIC II
a porton *to *tt N appaal a

PB Ptl______________ _

any manor
abava nwptmg or Soaring. Sa
may naa* a vorharwn racar* al
th* pratta*mgL Including IS*

NOTICE OF A
PUBLIC HEARING
OF PROPOS10 CHANG ( S
A N O AMENDMENTS
IN CERTAIN OtSTIICTS

racar* It nal

ky isa

Legal Notice
City ol laniard (F irs t BiMI
H N Tam m . Jr
City Clark
PublHh March It, J* I N I
O E D I II _____________________
IN T N I C IR C U IT ( O U S T .
IN ANOFOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
CASE N O M ll* t CA N 0
IN RC ’ Th* Intortttt
of XIM BE RL Y JE A N N E
M A C M E T T E . A Minor
N O TIC E O F A C TIO N
W ILBUR C S T E V E N S
IMS Itm Avonu*
Williamttown. Naa J t r w ,
YOU A R E N O T I F I E D Ihal 4
Petition N r Adoption ha, boon
fiia* agamtt yau Yau are re
Yu,re* n tarva a cap, al yau&gt;
wnttan Otfant*,. if any. N i n
Patitw nart attarnay. JO N S
ROSENBERG. ESQUIRE,
■haw n d d r .it l , U * D North
Magnolia A vanua . Orlando
Florida U*BI an or balort April
H . IN I an* 11ha tha original
with tha Clark al ts il Caurl
tiRwr baior, ta rvka an Pan
Honor , attarnay •r im m adwNi,
martatt*r athat wit*, a d»l*wl
wttl to on lar ad agamtl you tar
•ha ratio! daman*#* In tha
PatitHn
Tht, notlea tNall Da pukdtha*
•"CO aach m l Nr Nur cantac
wtiva waakt In th* laniard
Horal*
W ITN E S S my hand an* m* i
INI, Itth day ot March. IN I
O A V IO N B E R R IE N
CLER KO F
TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T
By S vtanB Tatar
O tpw lyCN rh
PiAINA M arch 77. Ik A Apr* L
II. H U
0 1 0 Id*

�‘ 9 »* §S 1_~\

1 fis a
i i i v

i r ri
* j

w

k y

l l

•1

11 ' ji

B

l

Im lw M ^

*.;

l

■
J . 'I Q

p 4^ *

—T •T / ,

�J -Evtntng Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Friday, March 17. IMS

S h o o tin g

Th e C u rl

Today's Skateboarders A Throwback To 60s Surfers
By Rick Brunson
Herald Staff Writer

" | fs a way of life." said 14-year-old Tetc Hodges. Tc

K has JuHt tiniicd spring. you’re 14 years old. and
yon like to surf but the water In null too cold. Even l(
you could afford a wrt null that winter surfers wear to
keep from freezing, you rnuldn'l gel to the bcarh
because you can't drive. So whul'a a young "fun In
the sun" happening type dude to do? Why he goes
over to Ida mraay closet, rummages around n bit and
finds a dusty old aka Irbon rd. o f course
And that's exactly what some young people are
doing In Seminole County. Skateboard frvrr has
rolled Into the area aflrr a long snooze and according
lo hardcore skaters It will be a long lime liefnre thr
s|Hirt goes oul with Ihe lldc of oilier fads
Almost weekly, woodrri "half pipe" ramps arc
(Nipping up In Seminole neighborhoods. Teens clad In
helmets, pads, camouflage shorts and purple and
pink checkerboard tennis shoes roll back and forth on
the ramps — twisting, turning, flipping und often
I urnhi lug lo the ground
Gene Peu rrbah n . co-ow ner o f a skateboard
specially shop In Sanford, estimates uhoul ‘20 percent
of Ihe urea's students are riding skateboards He said
Interest In thr sport locally exploded Just liefore
Christmas and continues lo climb During the
holidays, orders for skatrlrourds increased and more
youngsters started buying safely equipment, he said.
Now hr says Ids store has become a hangout for Ihe
inosily teenage skalrrs. They ihumh through Ids
skateboard magazines, lalk skate talk with Ihe sales
hrlp or gawk at the latest " h o i" addition lo bis
skateboard Inventory.
"T ills Is more like a winter lim e sport. It's cold and
they can't gel to the broch so they nkalrboard,"
truerhabn said.
Ilttl skaters would rather skate than hang curt so
most ol them can Is- Inuod at one of Ihe many
backyard ramps Is-iwreu Sanford and lauigwood —
Ihe "llanzni Pipeline" of Seminole County.

him. skating Is more than a sport — It's a lifestyle
‘It * |u*t turfing on whoelt. I’d rather surf
complete with lls own music, (hard rock), clothing
but 1 can’t got to tho bench as oaty
(i.e. lime green skate shorts stulfed with padding)
as I can horo’
and vocabulary Skaters also group themselv
-Danny Young, 18 according to loyalties to a certain brand of equlpmen

‘It’s a way of llfo. There's no limit to what
you can ao on a skateboard. It's a struggle
to see who can be the most far out.'
-Pefe Hodget, 14
At one such ramp. In the tdyllwlldc subdivision of
Sanford, a group of ubout 15 skaters meet almost
dally to rock and roll. Sieve and Carol Letchworth
had the 15 foot ramp built because they believed
some of Ihe ramps going up In Ihe neighborhood were
"rickety" and unsafe.
They commissioned a local skateboarding carpen­
ter. 18-yrar-old Danny Young, lo put one up In Ihrlr

backyard.
The Letchworth home was a logical site for Ihe
rump.
“ We hud ihe biggest t&gt;ackyurd — and the most
patience," she said.
Thr word got around und soon youngsters werr
skating Ihrlr way to the "Avalanche 1|, what I lie
thrill-seeking skaletx&gt;ardrrs have named thr 1600
plywood rump. Kcgulurs have even contributed
money (nobody Is sure Just how much) to hrlp puy for
It
The Letchworths demand parental releases from
each skater and require them to weur safely
rqulpmrnt at all times.
At a recent skate session ubout 15 l&gt;oys age 10 to 18
bilked about why skateboarding has becom e the In'
sport of the HOs, The conversation sounded a lot like
what you would huve heard talking to a group ol
sorters 15 or 20 years ugo.

or a particular skateboard shop.
Skate lingo goes something like this: A "radical'
skater has a good “ bio" when he "drops In” and doer
numerous "scrambled eggplants" without “ slam
ntlng."
In laymen's terms that means an exceptional skater
has an good performance when he starts his run frorr
the top of the ramp. Jets to the other side and turn
back around using Ills hands on the floor of the earn
If he docs this without falling on his brad t fs u “ bio 1
It takes about one year to become a radical skate
Pete said.
T o Young, the ramp's architect, skatihg Is
substitute for surfing, his true love,
"It's Just surfing on wheels. I'd rather surf but
can t gel to Ihe beach as easy as 1can here." he said.
Others arc strictly skateboarders, viewing "th;
ride" as much a pari of their adoleaence as plmpl
and changing voices.
" I f s all my life consists of right now." said Dea
Young. 16. "But that's ull right because It keeps n
busy and It's something to d o ."
Tom Anderson. 13. said his parents "ge t d
pressed" because all lie talks about Is skateboarding.
Skaters are challenged by attempting new trie
and wearing outrageous garb. Pete said, uddt
rather prtdefully that skateboarders are not co
former* like their classmates.
“ There's no limit to what you can do on
skateboard. It's a struggle to see who ran be thr me
far out." he said.
And you can lie "far ou t" In three basic ways
Irerstylr. which consists of trick riding on a lc

See SKATEBOARD, page 7

u c z rm rrz ret zzzzz zz&amp; 2pazzzzzzzzz&gt;&gt; 3 Movies Best Bets For Qscars
B a k in a q J w 's
LOBSTER HOUSE
A N N O U N C E S T H E R E T U R N O F O L D F L O R ID A S T Y L E
D IN N E R S A N D G O O D O L D F A S H IO N P R IC E S I

H A P P Y HOUR
2 Fo ri
All Highballs And Most
Cocktail* 11:50 a.m, lo «:J0 p m
A 9.JO p.m. Til Closing

EARLY BIRD DINNERS
P K M C SIB F lO U M O f A C l AM IT S lC S

on asoaio

mami mahi. m u d
tCALLOet, STUFFED FLOUNDER
lu ff P M tpscIVa IntKtOt Condi
CM a i n Ol FrsscN Onto* Soup. I S
M Soldo. Fronts Foot Or FrWS Met.
FrooS 0 arson U M Or Cals Haw. Hal

iaand A*uj |u||s|

0 .0 * 5 .9 5
(artr M
Art k n a S
■ao. t t n Fit J * s f l I m
la t A N * a T I I m -

a

A n llJSav. n t m

’

M
la s TV s I S n
Frl ....................

II N u l l M s
L N m IIF *

OLD FLO R ID A
CRACKER S T Y LE
SEAFO O D DINNERS

FlotM
tdbfl/ju.*4.95
Rock S h r i m p t r 7 u ? 4 o 9 5

i4.95
$5-95
Flounder . .
Seafood P
Uttor’6.95
*7.95
Shrimp

PAN HANDLE STYLE
STEAK, BAKE A SALAD
DINNERS
NEW YORK
STRIP . . 1/7 D

PRIME

NUhl-Mahl ini

RIB . .

Startad ,

PRIME RIB 8
DANISM
LOBSTER TAILS

Served With French
Fries. Cole Slew.
And Hvth Pupptti

2908 FRLMCH AVE. (MWY. 17-92) SANFORD

1/7 U

Served With 8A*ad Potato,
Fresh Garden Salad l
Your Choree 01 Onaaing

CHILDREN'S DINNER

*2« to »3'*
INCLUDES DRINK ANO
DESSERT

3 2

omm

cure

AaatMCANureses

zzz2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 5
&gt;ZZZZZZZZZ2XZZZZZZZZZZZ

HOLLYWOOD |IIPI» - Two
lavish historical spectacles.
Amadeus" and " A Passage m
India
and a brutal, bloody
account of war in Southeast
Asia, "T lie Killing Fields." are
cxpccicd in dominate next
week's Oscars telecast.
As with must years, there are
a couple ol sure liets lo win
Oscars And thr re are rrrtuln to
In- u Irw oddities lhal catch
movlrmakrrs and ftlmgprrs try
surprise.
Tlie 57lh annual Academy
Awards cerem onies will be
trlr v ls r d w o rld w id e lo an
estimated audience o l 250 mil­
lion from the Los Angeles
Music Center Monday.
Co-producer Gregory Peck
has promised a trimmed-down
ullulr featuring Jack Lemmon
as host with Ihe help of 10
eo-hosts Including Dlan.i Hoss
Tom Sellcrk. Candice Bergen
and Mlcharl Douglas.
If ihe awards folluw ihe script
w rtltrn by tlie nominations, the
linul results w ill be a He
Iwtwern the tw o movies that
raptured 11 nominations each
— "A m adeu s." a musically
u p 11 f 11 n g a n d m o r a l l y
challenging tale about the In­
trigue surrounding thr grnlus
Mozart In the-VlrniKse cvurl.
and "A Passage lo India." thr

epic retelling of Ihe H)2()s i
talc presented In E M Forslc
novel.
"Am adeu s" seems to In- I
b ig g e s t fa v o rite fo llo w l
honors Irnm several crlt
groups, the Directors Guild. I
G o ld e n G lob es and a
liunwlde (Kill ol moviegoers
the "You r Choice for Ihr F
Aw ards" show.
Should the Mozart st
prove too stylized for acade
voters, ihe probable wlnnr
“ Th r Killing Fields." a grap
account of friendship and
vlval during the Cambod
revolt that won seven noml
Hons und recently swept
so-called llrlllsh Oscars
A ls o eo m p etln g fo r b
pic lure urc "Places In
Heart." Ihr sagu of hard It
111 a small Texas town du
thr Depression that picked
unoihrr seven uom lnail
and " A Soldier's Story.*” a s
drama o f murder In a hi
ll.S Army unit during W
War II I hat got four num
lions.
Competing lor best actor
the co-stars of "Am adeus”
Murray Abraham as Salieri,
scheming courtier driven
with envy, and Tom Hulce.
laU-1 Med and tormented Mo

Sea OSCARS, page S

�Evening H rrild , Sanlord, FI.

Friday. March M . I W - 3

TELEVISION
M a rc h

22

Th ru

Labi* Ch

M a rc h

28

CaM* Ch

ff lO

1ASCI

Orlando

OJ) (35)

Indrpendenl
Orljndo

c «o

ICRS) Ofljndo

(8) CD

Indrprndrnl
Mrlbournr

ff) 0

Orlando

( 10) ©

Orlando Public
Braadcatlmg ly t lr m

In Jdidi tion V« Hit chijnntH Idled ciliff vition iw b ic n litrt m iy lunr in in mile pendent t Funnel 44
St PeftriPwrf. be luninf to cbennel 1 twn.nf Ip (Funnel t|. which cprnet \po*1\ end fhr CUnthen
BraaEcatlmg Nrlwork IC B N I

Specials
SATURDAY
a f te r n o o n

12:00

(2}

O ABC WEEKEND Cougar!"
MUm and Sarah triumph ovar maw
iKtnappari. tha afemanta of lha
■met and a raging Avar (Pari 3 o O )
(R )Q

1:00

(I ) O DANNY ANO THE KILLER
RAW A 5-yaar-oM boy bacomaa mvohrad In a conliovaiay balwaan a
ponar company and anvtronmantal
advocalaa ovar acid lam and Its altacta
3 :0 0
O (3 ) K X I a TEST lha lacta and
hctlon at aai ara praaantad by boat
Dr Frank Fiald and guaala Sandy
(Xmcan. Patti LaBaAa. Nancy Marc,
hand and Paggy Caaa
500
ED (10) WALL STREET WEEK WITH
LO U S NUKEYSER AN MVEBTMENT PRMER ■ Mutual tunda. optuaaad by conanodwaa conauttanl
Hobart Shiftman, mvaatur Jkn Rogarm. Linda Slngar (Plpar. Jattray.
HopwoodL Bruca Upnidi (Wharton
Aaaat Managamanl Corp l Patar
Lynch (Fktaaty MagaAan Fundi and
Dick Fabian (Tha TVaphcna 5wttch

Anwnafed Oarhatd and tua ownar
Jon ambarti on a camping u p m
tha mountama. whara tha cal haa
aoma buarra confrontation* with
unuauai toraal ananaM |R)
CD O LKESTYLES OF THE RICH
ANO FAMOUS SALUTES THE
WORLD'S SEST A « . Ot th#
world 1 Paal taaort*. hoIart and raatauranta whara lha rich and tamoua
gaihar Guaala aiduda Morgan
FawtMd. Hal Lmdan. John HUferman, Linda Fran* Joan CaWna, So
tan Lucci Hotla Robin Latch
Conm* Slavana
CD (■) COUSTEAU AMAZON Rrtar
Ot Tha Fulcra Jacquaa Couataau
and tua raaaarch craw aiarmna tha
poartrva and nagatrra attacti ot gold
nurung and othar rvtXrtlnaAiation
taking piaca along tha Amaion Rnrat Q

6*30

a (•) VISIONS -M Ttua apacial
hrghkghU vtdaoa by Prtnca. Bruca
Spnngalaan. Cyndl Laupar. Duran
Duran and ottan a ghmpaa ot
what a ahaad m tnuwc tor IM S
#

SUNDAY

EVSNtNQ
AFTERNOON

6:00
0
(M l SURVIVAL Richard Kday
narrataa Vua atudy ot Via migration
ot ona m a tin whna aarad lob arv
Mdpa acroaa Via Bema plama ot
*vaa ara gorarnad by Via
moaamanla. D
(D a

8.-00

OfThe Week
barg • altampt to Iran*far wad at
gtaa trorn Manitoba to lha Ouabbtn
Rat arrow m Maaaaclurawtta
EVENING

7:00
® O EBERT ANO StSKEL: IF WC
PICKED THE OSCARS F»m critic*
Rogar Ebarl and Dana Siaka* an

4:35
O WORLD OF AUOUBON I An InlarvWw with wan*. Cronkwa and a
protaa c*4 pro"**» anwranmantaail
Rachw Carton

5:30
a (M| H0M I ERSE: RETURN OF
THE BALD CABLE A cWomcia ot

ia.30
O Cl) ALL TOGETHER NOW A
mtddfe-agad coupaa praparad to
anfoy thaw ratwamanl mutt changa
an atdarty irvfew mova w&lt;ruth lham
Start Barbara Barna. Patar Michaal
Ooau |R)

TUESDAY

Acadamy A war da

8:10
( 0 110) GALA OF STARS U From
tha Brooklyn Acadamy ot Mwwc. a
tahrla to lha parforming aria with
hoal Bavarty Saw and muaic dwactor Jamaa lawna Among achad
ufed parlor mart Lufcai Foaa. 0Kk
Hyman. Clao Lama and John Dank,
worth Robart Marrv. Laonard Pan.
nano. Kwt Ta Kanawa, and
bara at tha Twyta Tharp
group

a) o
ITS MAGIC. CHARLIE
BROWN Anmatad Snoopy putt an
a alaight-ot-hand aalubrtion tor lha
Paanut*' gang attar tmdmg a
booh on magic at lha library (R|

11:30

1

AFTERNOON

A bahmd tha a
at Mator laagua baaabia focuarng
on tour mambarl ot lha IM 4 Allan,
ta Bravaa - Bruca Banadrct. Tarry
I o*aatar. Brad Kommwwk and Bob
Walaon

10:00
Cl) O CBS REPORTS "Tha Ortt Ot
life Corraapondant DO Kurt** an­
chor! ttua raport on paopta and
probtama mvohrad *n organ tramplant attorla, mckxlmg mlarvwwr
with lacrpwma. donor* and doctor*

12:00
(D I *01 DIONNE WARWICK IN
CONCERT Tha pop vocakat I par
tormanca mcludaa auch twit at
MaartDraatar *T1 Nwvar tan m
l o»a Agawi Wart On By " and
"Your*"

WEDNESDAY

MONDAY

THURSDAY
AFTERNOON

230
0 (10) ROBERT RUSS** WYOU M Q SCULPTOR A proMa ot Wyonung acutptor Robart Ikjaam whoaa
abati act alyfa *a characlaruad by
ctaaaicN Graah ovarlonaa
EVINtNO

EVENVtO

AFTERNOON

8:00

7:00

12:00

0 (10) ULTBAATE CHALLENGE A
documantary racountmg tha anduranew and couraga drtptayad by
companion In lha Challanga
Around tha World, a runa-month.
3 F.DOO-rrufe yacht rkca

(D O
BARBARA WALTSRS
Ouaatt Boy Oaorga. Nan Diamond
and Barbara Mandraa cj

(Z) (10) W THE SWMG Patty Andraw* wnga "South Rampart Straal
Parada." "I Can Oraam. Cant IT"

900

(7) O ACADEMY AWAROE Jack
Lammon hoala lha 87th annual
award caramoraaa tvo born Via
&gt; Oranrhar Pavton In loa
Amadaua.' Ptacaa at
thatfeart." "Tha Kkkng Flakta,- ”A
Paaaaga to M " and "A Sotdwr a
Story" ara nomwtatad lor ta il ptoILira or IMA g
0 (M l WOOOY HERMAN'S BtG
BAND CELEBRATION Woody Marman brwtga |AU and bluaa to Vat
big band catabratton at Houalon1
MWar Outdoor Thaotar with guaaM
Pata Bar butti. Kay Starr, Via Dukaa
01 OlaiNand. Dark Tarry and Joa

humor uI tha 1*40a Moat Slava Ah
k"
2.00
0 |t0) SURVIVAL Fkchard Kday
narrataa Vua atudy ot Via wugraUon
ot ona mdkon wauta aarad tab *r&gt;
latopa acroaa lha Io n a plama ol
lha Sudan and Via hunting Vtbaa
whoaa kvaa ara gevarnad by tha

900

ravon ol church and atata bawnuon ot VW National
I D*uecx snEf■ wwmwmng•on. D C

AFTERNOON

3:35

BEHIND

THE

4:35
0 MY LITTLE PONY II Ammalad
Tha cat-kka Calrma altampt* lo
aaua tha magical Flawtbow I octal
and mat* lha llltfe Pontaa har
Hava* Votcaa Paul Wdkama. Tammy G r a m

5:00
(U) (58) MY LITTLE PONY I Anwnal
ad lha happy Hurt ot a young gvl
and har pony band* ara thraatanad
by lha wtekad Twac and hw Ham
bow at Daiknwat Vote** Sandy
(hmcan, Tony Randaa

5'30
(IB (M ) MY LITTLE PONT I Anwnalad Tha cal fea Catrna atbmpt* to
aaua tha magical Rawtbow t octal
raid matt tha Lima Pontaa har
ttavaa Votcaa Paul WOkama. tam­
my Gnmaa

KENNEDY DCBATE S m Edward Karmady (OI and Via Rav Jarry Fatwal

8.-05
BASEBALL:

4:05
43 MY LITTLE PON T I Ammalad
Tha happy Naa ot a young gwt and
har pony band* ara thraatanad by
lha met ad TWac and tin Rawtbow ol
Da.tr**** Votcaa Sandy Duncan,
tony Hand a*

0 (W
) FALWYLL

FRIDAY

QARFMLO M T N I ROUGH

Tha advanluraa ol la dy Skppor and
hat btanda in Charm World ara latd.
featuring tna votcaa ot Ban Varaan.
AOaan Oumn and SaOy 5 truth* » g

O

THE

EVENVtO

7:30
(D O

SAFE HARBOR a troubfed
laamgar IJamaa McMcholl aactpaa
kom tua unhappy paal and tmda
comtorl on a ha/ung .ataal tj

10.00

0 ( 10) ROCKABY Scanaa bom rbhaaraata. and an antwa parltwm
anew ol Eawutal Bactatt ■ play at
at world pramlara In BulMo. N Y .
MB&gt; acbaaa BKta Whnalaw

Sports On The Air
SATURDAY

1:35

0

twit* Btaraa r* Naw York Mata

3.-00
8*80
O O ) ANGLINS IN ACTION

9.-00
fit (M ) WRESTLING
O M ) KARATS

9:35
Q W KSSTUNO

10:00
O ltlW R S S T U H a

CD o BOWUNO 1150.000 lira
Baar opan. Na bom Rad Carpal
Catabnty Lanaa in M N M aa

3:30
0 9 )1

0 (3

WRESTLING

o

uo

CD
COLLEGE BASKET 1ALL
Eati rtgional hnal kom Prorufenc*.
RI
.0 .1

CD O WOE WORLD OF SPORTS
Schadutad Atianra 500 atoefc car
raeo. world «ki bymg ctwmpwnahrp.

I 'M
O
NBA BABK ETSA U Boaton
CaRca M Waahmgion S J t t l

SUNDAY

4:35
MOTORWEER e l u b t r a t b d

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

1«3fi
o

■ THE U S fl

7:09

USFL FOOTBALL Tampa

0 WRESTUNO

8:06
O NBA OLDTSdSRB OlUdS

9:35

CD

3:30
O

COLLEGE BASKETBALL
i tagaonal k-

THURSDAY
8:05
0 NBA BASKETBALL MWwaufcaa
Buck I al Naw Fork Krucks

OBFORTSPAOS

1006
0

NBA BASKETBALL Oalrort P »

FRIDAY

4:30

1:30
9) o

Loo Angotaa

2:30

0 9 )1
Suparatar* A hard ol Ian I5B*
Otympiana. wtckaAng aktar PM
Mahra and boaar Mar* BraMnd.

onahip round, bom Kay Btacayrta.
Flo

(D O BRL DANCE OUTDOORS
0

th m

CD O

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

4:30

n

MO

C7J O

5:35

atdiorliaa.e auhlNUnOFhampron-

AFTERNOON

kravoa
Dodgor*

S3 WREBTUNQ

World 1
Contra*. Maty. World
CD O

WITH ORLAJOO VrtL-

A*

»* ■pBpVoW . d

9:35 ;

a w m n jN O

MONDAY
CVEMNQ

7:30
RENEGADE RAGE. COACH
CD
u a fiw S o

M 0
a t (55) COLLEGE BABKETSAU
NaitonN bwnaucmai Toutruknam

11:30

9 ) o PGA GOLF tughkghi* of loday a aacond round ol play at tna
Tourrwrnant ptayara Championafev.
botfi pph* vadra, Ffe •, - .
7
j O f e a . &gt; »d r *

�4

I gening H tra ld , Sanford, FI.

F rid a y , M arch 21, 1 W

FRIDAY
CVtMNQ

6:00

Morch 22
Aaaat Managamanl Carp L Patar
lynch If rdaaty MagaAan Fund) and
Okck Fabian (Tha TaMphona Swttch
Nawtiatlar)

e r iH iio t p O N E w s
1t)(M ) JEFFERSON*
8
(10) MACMEll / LEHRER
MCWSHOUR
B l « w e lc o m e back. K o m n

9:30
m O OFF THE RACK Sam trtaa to
kaap Kata out cA hn haw by arrang­
ing a apodal band data lor har t j

6:05
12 DOWM TO EARTH

0

6:30
o &lt;4 1 NBC N ew s
J O CBS NEWS
1 7 )0 ABC New s g
1J) (M ) At ICE
a t (•) OOOO THAIS

6:36
92 GOMTR KYLE

7:00
B (4&gt; SALE OK THC CCMTURY
(I) O
PM MAOA71NC Mandlcappad modal aeirati Kathy
RoahNr and Mm critic Sana Sham,
a o n aa o m a n aporta aalaty
cruaada
(7) O JEOP AHOY
It) (M ) TOO CtOSC FOR COM
FONT Jacaw dacidaa lo hava a
braatt Implant oparation m ordor to
maaa haraaM mora adractrva
ID (ioi tm i A in i n rt umno ir »
•lory ol two oagiaa that raturnod to
tha wddarnaaa attar Ihalt racovary
horn injurraa with Iha halp ol a Mori
da Audubon group
B ( » ONC OAV AT A THAT

7:06
92 i m u HOUSE ON THE PHAl
MB

7:30
O l|l tNTEITTAMMCNT TONIONT
Faalurad Oladya Knight and tha
Plpa. a lllbula lo Humphray [togart
J O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(7) O
1100 000 NAME THAT
TUNS
10 (M ) BENSON
B (10) THIS WEEK WTTM CHRIS
MORGAN
a ) II) ALL IN THE FAMILY

8:00
B (|J COCKNAME FOXFIRE Lu .
MaggM and Danny go undaicovwr
at an aicluahia prop achool with a
twotrA'j tmmon to dracovar who a
copying top-aacrat documanta. and
to Mop a Sovial aganl
III a DETECTIVE M THE HOUBE
Praaa M ha ad try a waaKhy mduatrl
aaat IDon Amachat who tiaKu la
ana ot hn chadran H out to murdar
h(m

(7)

O
WEBSTER WMalar and
Gaorga cavort In boor cot
hotwig to c u t Kathaiaia ol
cruah on a coaaga prolatinr Q
(ltUM ) DALLAS
tO |10t WABHMMTON WEEK IN
B It) M O W
Victory At Baa"
(1SSS) Nar triad by Alaaandar
Scourby tha World War It naval
aipfcrru ol tha ABta ara rwvtowwd
805
02 M O W "Apacha" |)SS4| Burt
I ancaatar. Jaan Malar* Indiana
Pallia lha U S Cavalry aa aatllaia
opan up tha Waal
6:30
m
O
MR BCLVSOSM Ml.
Bahrwdara a uncanny abaiiy m toaohrtng domaanc ertaaa M Malad
whan Waaray and lour achoolmataa
ara aacAidad bom a bathday party
awttatron art Q

O lW | WALL ITREET WEEK
M O
O C4) V Tha la
w nuaitca. i
dona ol taaialanca Nadar a. Ekia
bath boar da tha mothar Map to
awan laa arrival. DMna. maanahaa.
capN to Mtaitar tha paaca
( I ) B KNO TS IA N D M Q Cathy N
by Joahua a
Urkg to

1030
( | ) MIAMI Vies Croc*all and
Tubba aid MdwM agtnla In purauK
01 an arma daalar. but tha O man
m m mora mtaraaiad In ratnavmg
tha marchandwa than m mating tha
arraat (It)
&lt;I) O C 0 U S M BASKETBALL
Southaaat or Waat ragional aamtfi
naf
CD O MATT HOUSTON Matt la
batttad whan tha pnma tuapact In
lha murdar ol a modal and har
chauttaur har an awtigM aau |R)rj
1 D (M l MOEPCNOENT NEWS
B (to) M THE swwto Patty Andrawa tmga ‘ South Rampart Straat
Parana." *1 Can Draam. Can t IT"
and Boogn Woogw llugw Boy" In
N l aaiuia to lha mu m . date* and
humor ol tha ItaOa Hoal Stava AL­
OHA) POLICE WOMAN
10:05
92 MOVE Tha rantaalK knmnn
Ot Ptanat Earth" &lt;IMM| Mrchaar
Cota. Uabmah VYtkvy Young pro
tpacthm par w ill bacoma trappad m
a bubbM Worn outar tpaca
10:30
91(M|SOtNEWHART

0 14 X 7 ) 0

11:00

Mews

(Hi (M ) b e n n y h u l
B 110) DAVE ALLEN AT LANOE
QD {•) MOHT O AUIRY
11:30

0 ( 4 ) T0M0HT Hoal Johnny Car­
ton (R)
(1) O ABC NEWS NIOHTIINC An
aramwialun ol South Africa! vco

aocnl and poatiul prob
9 1) (M ) SANFORD ANO BON
B (*) TWtLIOHT TONE

12:00
(ji O new s
11) (M ) F-TROOP
B(S|KOJAK
12:06
92 MGHT TRACKS
12:30
O (4) FRKJAY MOHT VtOSOB
f aaturad Wa Ara tha World, tha
USA lor Abica hdao Maturing 41
lop muwcal parlormart othar vidaoa by Phd CoMna. khek Jaggar.
Koot i lha Dang. Dan Harkoy
( D O COLLEQE BASKETBALL
Southaaat or Waal ragional Aarmh
nal
(/) O BLACK OOLO AWARDS
from lha Cacoanut Or ova In Loa
Angain, lha praaanlatkjn ol award*
lor IM l I boat rhythm ond bhraa
muw. m tha cMagorMa ol lop maM
and MmaM vacaaat top vocal
group, boat vtdao and lop maN and
NmKi nawcomat Parlormancaa by
lha Oap Band. PhNp Baday Pam
IrBiAi Hot I louRawN
(11 (M l I LOVE LUCY

1:00
91 (M ) AFISCA CONTINENT IN
B (t) M O W HomanoN And Jutot |loan Patar Uatmov Sandra
Oaa
1.-06
92 MOHT TRACKS
29)0
91 (M ) FUTTSf ON THE MTS llpvynchad randMona ol Puttin' On
Tha Riu.
T * Canang 0uL“
Saauty School Dropout." ' Matty
i In

M 0
m s
m i

m o w

MMSOM Banaon and
0 1 (0 4

a bar wMi apair at
nm ouNOY
a n il
LOLAS

500
9 1 (M l NEWS
6:05
92 MONT TRACKS
800
Cl) O BLACK AWARENESS
7) O OOOLEBNORT HOTEL
)(M)EDrrOR‘S0ESK

6:30
B (4) OSJJOANB ISLAND
1 O THIRTY MINUTES
I U TENNESSEE T U X H »

0 6 |M) IT S YOUR BUSINESS
6:36

92 BETWEEN THE L B « S

7:05

92 SATURDAY FUNNIES
7:30

5:35
92 W RESTUNO
EYENMQ

1:00
am W N U TU N a
J O CANNY AND THE IULLER
RAM A S ywar-dd boy bacomaa mmhrad m a comrovarty balaaan a
powar company and anvbonmanm
advocaiaa ovar add ram and rtt ar
Nett
W ( K»l EARTH. SCA ANO SKY

1:30
B (4) OKLIOAfrS ISLAND
(T) O ALEXANDER QOOOBUO- (D O COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Cml
ragional
hrtal
bom Ptovtdanca.
0 T 8 OOOO NEWS MAOADNC
HI
(7) O WOBWORLD
(D O M O W “Tha Srogo At Rad
B (S) FOCUS
7:35

92 QET SMART

8:00
O liiB N O R K S
( T i O SHIRT TALES
(?) U SURERFR1FNOS LFOENOARV SUPER POWERS SHOW
91 (M| SIR ACT
ffl (10) LAP OLRLTMO
B (S) MO TV
0:05
92 QMARRON STRIP

Rrvar ‘ (1tS4) Van Johnaon Joanna
Dru Indiana attack a tori with lha
halp ol a Oaikng gun MoNn bom
ConNdarMa M A N ri
S (10) EARTH. SEA ANO SKY
1:35
92 PRE-SEASON BASEBALL At­
lanta Bravoa va Now York Matt
2:00
O G [ ) FANTASY MLANO
91 (M ) M O W
Wara FlgMmg
(lack ' |tM1&gt; Kamn Mahon. Eigm
Jonaa Now York City youtha daddk
lo band togorhor and hgl

6:30
B (4 ) RNK PANTHER ANO SONS
( I) o GET ALONO OANO
B I «0( FOCUS ON BOCMTY
111 O BURERFfaENOS LEOCNO- B IS) M O W "Targat Taro ‘ (1SMI
ARY SURER ROWERS SHOW
Ibchard Corrla PoggM CaaIN A
C (M| CISCO KJO
Koraan War kaulananl Nada Na
1 110) SQUARE FOOT DARDEN- man on a Hangar oua moumam nkw

1

M0

a Ol ANQLERS M ACTK1N
9:00

B ( 4 1SMURFS
iT

) O m urrvtbab« s

IT) O MONTY ORBOTS
IC (M ) WRESTUNO
ID 110) FLORKLA HOME DROWN
B (S| KARATE
9:3 0

(1) Q

9:35
12 WRESTUNO

10:00
(I )

O

BUGS BUNNY / ROAD

T O DRAOON-S LAIR
H (M l BIG VALLEY
tD ( t0) MAOIC OF ON. FAMTMQ
B I S ) WRESTUNO
B

10:30
CD ALVM ANO THE CMR.

17) O

3:00
B '4 ) BEX LO. TEST Tha (act* and
fiction ol taa ara praaanlad by hoal
Or Frana Futd and guaatl Sandy
Nancy Marc-

SCOOBY-OOO MYSTERIES

t0| TMS OLD HOUBE
10:35
92 M O W DNo Bombar |t«41)
(rror Ityrm. Frad MacMur la y A
Navy doctor Noma up with a hrgM
malructar to tacAN Wa madrcal
probtwn ol f M blackout which
• PNgumg Work
1 1 »
B ( I ) MOO VtOEO
l / l B VIDEO GAME
J ljW W I lA W I lO W t S T

11 J O
)(S S w O F
O U T T U Iq
I (M ) a m e r c a n
I m HOGANS

m O BOWL MG IlfcO OOO Uta
Baar Opan. Mo bom Rad Carpal
C lire rby lanwt m IN r a A rt
B (MRPRESENTS
3:30

B ODaROmtWORLD SchoduNd
WOflO IK)€)*B*(il tnifliptoniroji riijm

Carvtma. Italy. World mutational
•upar haarywatghl thing championthap bom Toronto. Canada
(|) B
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Uidwaal ragional hnaf bom Dalai
B 110) TONY BROWNS JOURNAL
prolaiwonal and alhical M
NMd lo poamg nuda |R)
4:00
910SICMRB
a
(MR MCARAGUA
FW0MTHSFW0NT
BM M OVW 0N

_

9:30
B (4) UN0CR ONE ROOF (Pram
raral I hraa ganarktiona ol ona Iami­
ty including a amgM mothar and har
two laan-aga chadran tha,a tha
tama houaahold Star* Marl Kanrvady RoamHariM

B ( S ) VEGAS
6:30
B f4) NBC NEWS
) C2 CBS NEWS
( 7 ) 0 ABCNEWSg
7:00
O ( I ) DANCE FEVER CaNbrtty
(udgat Elan Bry. Tarranca Knot.
Madga Sinclair. Brian Mitchoa. Vanna VYhria Pal Ba|ak Parlormanca
( I ) O MEE HAW Faalurad Laa
Qraonwood, Tha Juddk. Forth WMtS , Tha Naggart. Roy AcuR (R)
O SOLID OOLO Hoal Rick
Oaaa Ouaatt Oladya Knight and
tha Ptpa, Jarmama Jack ton and Pla
/abort, Autograph. QanarM PuINc.
taana Man# Don WWam*
91 (M ) BUCK ROGERS
(D 1101 SM G ALONG WITH MTTCH
B l«| TALES FROM THE DARK
P O t A bookra baft agamtl hM own
kM trim a gamblar rotumad bom
7:30
a (4) FLOfbOA S WATCMNQ Toptc Ptbn Coast, tha rafvamant catabrabon
B If) MOHT GALLERY
7:35
92 NBA BASKETBALL Boat on
Carnet at Waahmgton BuAota

8:00
O (4) OBTRENT STROKES Altar
ha t muggwd On * How York City
tlraar Arnold aultart bom amotion
N protkama and vlarla a pwychoioGARFIELD M THC ROUGH

Jon tntbark on a camping trip m
in* mountama, whara tha cal haa
torn* buarr* conbontatton* wtih
unuaual loraal antmaM |R)
(7) O UFtBTYLCB OF THE RICH
AMO FAMOUS SALUTES THE
WORLDS BEST A vNw ol tha
world t boat raaorta. hoMM and raalauttnit whara tha rich and lamou*
Qua»ta metud* Morgan
man Imda Erana. Joan Coatrw Suaan lucci Hoata Room Loach.

12 HtOM CHAPARRAL

10:00
0 (3) HUNTER (Sanaa Rational
Rick and Oaa Oaa ara on tha varga
01 a braakthrough In tha Caatornia
drug Irtda whan lhau malda kourca
■a tuddanly rritatad to Notify m a
Now York murdar caaa (Pari 1o17)
( ] ) O COVER UR Tha mwanant
atpvation ol tha itatuta ol kmrlationa on tha ertmaa ol a Moving Irto
Nad* Jack and Dark to poaa aa a
mar trad coupM m an altorl lo trap
CD O FM0CR OR LOST LOVES
Cary n calad upon to locata ■ brtda
groom al lha aflat Dairy M aakad to
bnd tha broihar oI a hoiocautt tor
vtvor (R )tJ
91 (M ) MOCPENOCNT NEWS
B(S|EWCHICD
10:30
91 (M ) BOB NEWHART
10:50
92 MOHT TRACKS: CHAR THUS

11.-00
B (4X4) O (7) O n e w s
91 (M l RUTTTN ON THE HITS U&gt;aynthad randrtion* ol "JungM
Lovk." “Uha A Virgin." “G «N »a n . ‘
“Amanca." ' Sokd
and
Mama
Wa ra AA Crary Now ”
ED ( tO) M0FTTY PYTHONS FLYMO
B (t) HONEYUOONERS

guaal Chaka Khan ("I Faar For
You ) (R)
(D O STAR SEARCH Guaata Gkv
na l ormg Hoyt Alton (R)
(7) O UFESTYUS OF THE RICH
viaw* Mickay Manila.
Vaughn. Bobby Vinton and Pair**
Wymora Flynn, widow ol Errol
Fkrrm (R)
91 (M l M O W “Rad Mountam
( m t ) Alan Ladd. Uubath Soon
a
(&gt;l VISIONS M Thra nwom I
hrghkghla mdaoa by Prbioa. Sruca
Spratgataan. Cyndl Laupar. Duran
Duran and olMri • gkmpaa oI
■hat t ahaad m muNC lor IMS
11:50
42 MOHT TRACKS
12:30
(I ) o M O W "MaatbaM" I1B7BI
Bra Murray. ChrN Makapaaca
(I) o AMEMCA B CHCaCC Catagonaa maaa alar, graal Amancan
(R)

91 (M ) M O W "TAN Shot" |1S7S|
Tony Curtra. Richard (Labourw Or
ganuwd erana abananl*. mvorvwd
with • computaruad gambkng
conapwa lo n u dor tha

»

Iry

pron duraig a MM bout
B (Ml Bsaa ALONG WITH MTTCH
8 (S) COUSTEAU AMAZON R tw
Ol Tha Futura Jaeguaa Couataau

1.-06
1 JO
B m MOW
Ht t a w . Eyaa"
I ISTSI Bo Brendan

REPORT

4:3 0
w e t WORLD OR BBORTS

Mkaigi
W Q
B

2J6

92 MOHT TRACKS

8:30
(3) DOUBLE TROUBLE KaN

330
91 (M ) M O W "Tha Phanu City
Story’ |IASS) Richard KAay. KaWryn Grant
B IS) M O W -NawoaM" 1 1BS0)

try and gal N know biau
go k ANN batlar by boaimg har lo A
rrt^*** M U m d inp.
I ll O
(T t MAQt f . CHARLIE

336

92 MOMTTRACKS

3JO
(Z) a M O W "Tha Vaww Onaa
(tM t) CAR Ibchard. Ftobart Mortry

6.-00

436

CD u r n s 'HOUBS ON THE

13 MBATT TRACKS

M 0
M O W "Youns And Oangaroua (tSST) Mam r

'. ‘3 J O ’ 1 • '
02 MFAAMLV ASSAM

(IM U EMt

92 MOHT TRACKS

Bm

3.0 0
92 MOMT TRACKS

1J0
I4 )» ROCKS TONMMT
O M O W "WM m Tha Coim-

91 (Ml MOW "SuApanaA “ (1»4B)
Altar! Dahaar. Barry SuAhran

VugoNavN
8 (It ) HEALTH MATTERS
4:38
92 MOTOWWEEK SAUBTWATED
B

11:30
(4) SATURDAY MOHT LIVE

B

poakiva and nagativo otkaclt ol gold

4.05
92 WILD. WILD WORLD OF AMt-

(D B

B G D (D B m o new s
(U (M ) BLACK SHEEP SOUADFWI
S&gt; (MR SURVIVAL Richard KAay
narralaa thra thirty ol lha nugrallan
oI ona iNMon aim * tar ad lo b anMopa kcrooa tha Boma ptama ol
tha Sudan and tha hunting trtbaa
Whoaa hraa ara govatnad by tha

s r a

2:30
8 ( MR FOCUS ON SOOETY

DUNOSONS ANO DRA-

17) O TURBO T U N
B ( MR FRUGAL o o u r m e t

Imkad aitth ramrnitconcas by Tony
Barmatl. Alan Kmg. Rat Raad. Sta
pnan Hoktan Manta* Manchaatar

9:50

6:00

12:30
B (4) AMERICA S TOR TEN
(X) o
AMERICAN 1ANOSTANO
Faalurad Oanrga Thorogood L tha
Daairoyar* ("Goar Jammar." ‘ long
Onna L Dabarga (‘ Rhythm ol tha
MgyK k. Madonna a vUJao Malarial
Oat
&lt;D (10) GROWING YEARS

7:00

l(| ) brCREOMLE HULK
( 1 ) 0 WORLD TOMORROW
) O KJOS SCORRORATEO
■.(M| JNIMY SWAOOART
) (t| ABBOTT ANO COSTELLO

Ock Fabwn (Tha TaMphona Switch
NawkNttW)
£D IS) BARETTA
5:05
12 F18HIN WITH OftLANOO WIL­
SON

wdd and a raging (Ivor. (Part 3 fl* 1)
("10
91) (M| MOVIE ‘ Ptagua Ol Tha
/ombtaa" (IM S) Andra Uorraa, Di­
ana Clara A ptolaaaor a daughtar
la** undar lha hypnotic apaa ol a
young man who &lt;a mtnguad by tha
powar ol voodoo
® (10) QAOWSaO YEARS
a&gt; (t) M O W "Tha bon Mwiraaa
(1AM) Alan Ladd. Vbgwva Mayo
fronliaraman Jbn Sown hghli lor
Taaan mdapandanca at tha Alamo

) (S| JM SAKKER

S IS) HOGANS)
M S
92 MOMT TRACKS

March 23

SATURDAY

Hobart Shuknan. nmator Jan Ragark. Unda Satgar (Ftpar. JMbay.
NM (SAW Mil

3 (IS) BRSAT M
“Judy GarNnd Tha Conpart Yawa"
LOINk DM tNlAa Bka rWvNw.gf Wa

srttia- SttfiT?®

,

*;

�SUNDAY

March 24
WTERMOOH

500

12:00

II fiJ| NEWS
OXDiBPv

( l OUOVTt SayGoodbyb
b*

£ 05

0

O

—

r _

A racenuy

—— ■ . .

. i,

i.

W»v*d OKS Atowig 9*1AAptrmg la

'Sara' Isn't 'Mary'
9:35
12 SPORTS PAGE

MOUYWOOO AMO TMS b« Adoctor

STANS

Evening Herald. Sanlord, Fl._ Friday. March JJ, 1TSS-S

O akncwsq
635
12 wu. wtu) world or anl

co»» n » r «

Darran U t O ix n

IX MdMTTRACKS
5:23

S3 (W) MOW Summor Stack
I'Mtl JudyOartand. OanaMPy A
I'Oug* ot Actor* paniapAtMmdm*1 'Armchoral » arcS—g* tor III*
UAAot AConnecticut bornto ACtAt
CD|t)VtOAt
530
3) msc ncws

I t IIS) M OW Th# Don It Deed

2 00

( l» n i

10:00

Anmany Oumr. f rtdanc

0

O

TRAPPER JOHN. M 0

Trapper. J T and th# rioapttN are
auad tar nagaganc* by W* per ami
at a young atiaan — o dad ot mtar
nal btenkng n apit* at attort* to

(1)0 LAWAM) YOU
0 P aomcultum USA.
1J(M|MSACT

Po»or MruggtAorudtt Among oo-

(Stsiracus

0 (T01OOOOMDOHSONS

a*** km
11 (Ml PtOEFENOCMT MEYYS

1 IMS) lAAMCaron. Onon «Y*a*t
JuN prior to «&lt;a Atwraton. in* oc­
cupying Mamplanto bun Pan* Id

0 NBA BASKETBALL OatrM Pla­
tan* at la* Argnia la*art

6.30
S 0 FLORIDA'SWATCMMQ
fi ll SPECTRUM
0 D VKWPOBTTONNUTNmON
[ f)S) WV OAAKT
|(I) ABBOTTAM) COSTELLO
7OO
■ S in COMPANY
® o Ro b e r t

s c m u u jr

(Ti O PICTURE OS HEALTH
tl (MlSOtKAOCN
12 WORLD TOMORROW
O ( t ) JAMES ROOMON

0 (•) M OW "M F«n* BurnmgT ■

1045
10:30

12.30
O 0 MEETTHEPRESS
0 O WAU STNEET JOUNNAL

1 t (SS| BOB MEWHART
CD (S) CAROL BURNETT ANO

B(t0| HEALTHMATTERS
140

B00B 00I

11O0

4Ti PSI SANFORD AM) ION
7.05
B HI HONEYMOONS AS
32 WRESTUNQ
O WHOCAMI TNUSTTAloo*
11:10
730
■ lakan into tn* proOtam ot c—d
B (TO) ADAM W llfl MOWST
0 ® PUWCY BREWSTER Pun*, WORLD
ffi 1*01 MASTtNPKCI THEATRE aecapa* bom mo cMdrana*n*n«
1100
'TII* Jar— In Til* Croon Tanann and Henry go** to cowl Id obtain
O 0
c n te r ta jn m e n t this
baleaan Mmdu* and Mot Iamt cuktody IPart ) otJ)(R|
I 0 LOVE BOAT

S

7:30
O $ HANMOMY AMO (MACS
0 Q ESSCNCC ON TELEVW40N
H (MILAOAMCLS

JirrwwwfmM

twgAtan* on tli* era ot Indian nd*.
pandent* a* a traat carrying Par.
ran. Sn Mi and Suaan i* attacked,
til* tat* ot Han Ki— ar ramam* a
mytlary (Part 14 ot 14|g

O f f iW V GRANT

6:00
0 0 votes OPVICTORY
I) O n u

•rng tar

PC W g tyndCAtO

m uusano

0OBOE JONES
HIM) JACKSONFIVE
iC |tO)SESAMESTNEET(N)Q
12ALVB4AM) TNI ORPMUNKS
CD|() FANTASTICFOUN
8:30
BCCl SUNDAYMASS
ill Cl OAYOFOMCOVWT
I 11 ORALROBERTS
HtSS) PORKYPW
12SUNDAYFUNMCS
aXnSPOCFUMN
MO
O 3 ) WOULD TOMORROW

1:30
0 O COUEOC BASKETBALL
Manorial Cham punatap regional k

nal

0 o SAL DANCEOUTDOORS
1:35
Q PRE-SEASON BASEBALL Allama Brara* n Lo* Angara*
Dodger*
200
0 0 MOW TH* Laet Picture
|IS7t|

tier at a *ma* Taaa* t w « Ot in*
ItSO* prepare* to ctoa*. Pi* taaa ot
pi* loan ■ raardanaa become m-

tu r

ih* Congtea at Racial (7)0 THW• THEIMFL
11 |M) M O W

The Cneei Waldo

r 1111)1NobanAadtoid Bo
in A kuitraieri American

8.00

W H X laei red -lecguerm* Bra—
0 O M OW Voyage Ot The
Damned ItfTT) Faya Ornately

KMOHT NOER Uchael and
KITT race altar a tag an al m m*
truckng ndualry »no aanit la
tore* *uMp*nd*m truckan out ot

(7 O AT THE M OW S Scheduled
Huger tbwi and Oan* Srekl &gt;»
"Tli* L a i Dragon

Bit)M ONT QALLERY

8 0

tu n M Q

o

3)
MURDER SHE WROTE -Me­ 01U» CHKOANOTHEMAN
tre* iraveM to San Francwco titter* a IS) MOW SNoodotm At Boot
ata anampta to cie* a bride­ HR" (tgstl Chart** Bronaon. Jam
groom-lo-M ot a nrgnrcJub cmner • Carradme
murder (PI,
12.00
® O UFTB MOST EMBARRASS- 0 O BUN COUNTRY Ouael*
BtO MOMENTS S im Alan koau Uo* Bandy. Tanya Tucker
me blunder* ot cMetame* mckrdmg Qt (IS) WKD KBtOOOM Jan Form
Penny Uarahad Cmdy Wtkam*
and Markn Parkrna codec! an— m
Ban* 0* ma Dk* Cmrt and Mi I
i lo Aniona •I — o-

MO
nStlCHARuriANOCU
3 |W) Pi root break Magutarty

i

•endured programmuig may be
delayed due lo pudge tarn**
B I*) M OW "The Day Ol Ik# LbcuN I ISIS) Donald Suthertand
Karan (keck Baaed on in* noil by
loot In 1U0* Ho*y-

kgMer pool become* abamatorm

M0
O *V»NATK)NS
(IJO tKBCUBSION
11(Ml P»W PANTHER
IIOIJOTOPPABfnNO
(I) HSPtCTORQAOQET
6:35

S

It ANDY0NPTITM

OP duringWorldWar I
0 |W| MOW Til* Must Man
(l*U) Noban Praato
Jona* A latiiaang
coma* le a *ma* loan
orgami* a boy* band
wMly lada*1toe* ertkanur.nar
nadkbranan
2:30
® O UBPL FOOTBALL Tampa
Bay Berxkli at Mart Jartay O n

Oekar Werner

bert ot cwrupbon and M l I
dial paryad* lea commxety

8.05
0 NBA OLDTBtf RS QAMf

12:20

FALWELL

1200

0 FANTASY
O NASttVKLEMUSIC

140

MOW "Th* World. The
Dm (|»6*| Harry
a IS)THEAVS4QERS
1:20
12 UOWE "Ts* D**ta Bureau
USTT, lawanca liKkmtaa Jo—

By D avid Handler
I keep walling for "Sara" In
gel better, but II docnn'I. This
MiId-season NIK' sllcoin has
iK'cn hailed us "T h e Mary Tyler
Moore S h ow " of (he 'HOs li
Isn't. Il has been culled Ihr flrsl
major Yuppie allcotn. Il Ian I
“ S a r a " b r e a k s no new
ground, provides no new sensi
h lllly . Il just fo llo w s the
formula.
It's not terrible. This is it
pleasant, sincere III lie rnsem
iile comedy u I m iii I a law office
tlnl w e 'v e air ratty seen a
slicom alNuit young lawyers.
"T h e Asnoelairs " Anti we've
already seen this asxutmcnl of
oddltalls. stinkers and losers In
e v e r y g a n g c o m e d y fo rm
“ T a x i" In "Harney Miller."
There Is also a in.i|or Haw
here. "S a ra " Is a show lhal Is
hulli lor a star, and they don'l
have one.
They have Gccna Davis from
"Hull.ilii l u l l " She Is very tall,
very pretty anil very sweet. She
has a naive, kid stsicr charm lo
her. hut Mary Tyler Mini re she
Ulll’I.
She larks ilie presence and
experience lo hold a allow
together. She does not. on her
own. stand for something And
— not In Ih* sneezed at — she
Isn’l particularly funny. Call
me old-lashlonrd. hut I hi III like
sitcoms that make me laugh
Sara McKenna Is a young,
single San Francisco allorucy
who shurrs ofllrr space with

three other young attorneys, all
ol them si niggling Sara Is
idealistic and cari ng She
serins lo want it all — true
love. Independence, a
me a n i n g f u l c ar e er , good
friends
llul thrrr Isn l much depth or
Inlrlllgrnre to Sam, Shr's not
p.uUeul.irlv hl|) She doesn'l
liave much ol a personality.
She's actually quite vapid. To
me. Ihcrr Isn't much more to
her than there ts lo Ihosr
well dressed Yuppies In Ihr
Mlrheloh commercials.
Her colleagues are more InIcresting. Her Ih-s I blend, (tor
(Allre VVnodanll. Is a dally,
man hungry black woman with
a sharp, sell deprecating sense
ol humor
Actually, miss Woodurd is so
warm and winning I Ihink ihev
might have had a stronger
show hen* If she were Sara and
Miss Davis were her leggy
tepid while gtrllrlcnd
"Sara" has Ils flaws, bid I
believe what II sutlers from
nurnl Is |on milch hype IIII had
slid quietly onlo the air wllhnui
any loss. II nilglil have grown
Inin somcihlng Crrlnlnly. h
would have been; bee In lake
some ("bailees, go mil oil sonic
limbs
Instead. Il’s a self-cuiiseloUB.
Icnbillvc show, one Ibill (ilays
It sale. Ih' ciiusc H'h abiihl to
lull. Therein i Iin -s iioI lie IIn
path lo greatness

NOW IS THE TIM E TO CONSIDER A
CYPRESS
GAZEBO
luratti
•urtioa tun
ism

r*v

« CTFBIM

330
0 o COUIOS BASKETBALL
m* Tayta Tharp danu
Nabontt ChampronaNp ragionl S
nal
900
400
a 0 rale i
O OS) HAWAdFIVEJ)
When tarmar M— York Cdy cog
SKI SWITCH
end —
no actor Rocky Nation
n. hat

4:50

Q WORLDAT IARQC

1005
00000 MEWS
10-30
J MOW
Q FACETHENATION
O FtRETBAPMSTCHURCH
(tot A HOUSE FOR ALL

S

1140
O thpty upaurts

mm

Lab Tech Suing M GM
Ana*ironmamaai
500
MOAN* BOONS
IMBAMTTA
I ----------

8

535

ARSIS1

LOS ANGELAS lUI'l) - A former MGM film
latxiralory trchnklan is sulntf Ihr studio amt
more than 25 other companies, charging Ilial
Him processing chemicals und equipment
permanently damaged his nervous ay ale in.
Among the defendants named In Abel
E v e r e l f * S u p e r i o r Co u r t sui t ar e
Metro-Goldwyn-Maycr Film Co.. Warner
Urol her s EaMman Kodak. Technicolor Corp.,
Dow Chemical Co. and Union Carbide,
companies lhal developed, lesled. packaged
and manufactured the chemicals, court
document* ahow
He claims lhal In the Ihrrr years he worked
al MGM he was exposed lo numerous
dangerous chemicals including bensenc.
Ulchloroelhylene and formaldehyde

Th€ Storage Experts

SEE OUR LARGE
SELECTION OF
STORAGE BUILDINGS
ON DISPLAY
IN SUES S’xS* to 24’«50l

OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9 AM to 6 PM
LO N O W O O O
O R L A N DO
1135 HWV. 17-fJ S.

69*9340
—

1

^ i B

p i

O T S

1113 E. COLONIAL

273-4663
.. ......... ..

i

�-Evaning HarsM, Sanford, FI,

Friday, March I I , I W

Daytime Schedule
6:00
(H)(M)NEWB
11 rra y o u r m m u (m o n )
12 CHILDREN'S EUMOfWED)
32a g r ic u l t u r e us a IF nr)
6:1 6
(12 WORLD AT LAMM (TMU)
5:25
(7) O HOLLYWOOD AMO THC
STARE (TUE, THU)

a (4) rs c o u n t r y rrue-fr i&gt;

7:15
© 110 )A M WEATHER
7:30
If) &lt;M» TOM AMO JERRY
(D (10) SESAME STREET O
CD(S) INSPECTOR QAOOET
7:35
$2 1DREAM O r JCANNIE

6:00

8

it)

(M ) WOODY WOOOPf CKER
9 (f) FAT ALBERT

6:05

630
(]t) (34) RNK RANTHER
O ) ( »0) I M T I R R O O EM (R)
a i It) MY FAVORITE MARTIAN
6:35
12 1LOVE LUCY

6:30

BOO
MORNING

(71 O ABC HEWS THIS MORNING

Vl (14) POKEY I
12

f u n t im e

6:45
(7) O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
(D 110| A M WEATHER
7:00
O (I ) TOOAY
( J l Q CBS MORNING NEWS
(7 O OOOO MORNING AMERICA

0 (4) DIVORCE COURT
( T i O D O N AH U C
(7) O BARMABY JONES
111 (34) WALTONS
(D 110) SESAME STREET p
0 |«) PARTRIOGE FAMILY

B.05
12 M O W
0:3 0
f l (4 ) LOVE CONNECTION
0 (t) HERE'S LUCY

10:00
O ((&gt; TNJE MACHINE

March 25

MONDAY
EVEN#*)

6 00
0 (4 H S &gt; a (7 )0 N c w s
lHi(36t JEFFERBONS
0
(10) MAC NEIL I LEHRER
u iw fitto i in

0 (S) WELCOME BACK. KOTTIR
6:05
92 BEVERLY HRIBILLIE8
6:30
O 14) NBC NEWS
i j l O CSS NEWS
( 7 ) 0 A S C N E W Sg
11 (M l ALICE
0 (S | O O O O TIMES

Atlanborough arptoraa graal rivets
of Iha amid. Including Iha Atnaion.
and Iha vanNies ot Me fuurvl In
them tj
0 &lt;•) M O W A Tima For love
11873) Jack Cakkidy. John Davidaon Two llonaa are praaantad A
u vch y krmor eiscuttve maalt an
unmNMed gal. and a pop alar who
cannot cope adlh praaaura meat a a
laathar ot daal chddran

Im an aiaytng on lha tores or mar-

7:00
O (4) SALE OF THE CENTURY
&lt;1&gt; O PM MAGAZINE Fw im i
|&gt;h i leerNary JarrtM Brady, mod­
al Carol Ax and hat husband. pro
hockay ptaya* Ron Qraachnar
(710 JEOPARDY
0® (M| TOO CLO BI FOR COM­
FORT Despite Henry’s dtaapprova).
Sara dactdaa lo puraua a TV taai
a m fob maleed ot a cosaga da&amp; T (10) WONOERWORKS "The
Hoboken ChK-kan Emargancy" Tha
peopto or Hobahsn. N J . at a Ierror
dad by a monelar sighting unta Ihay
ihaccmr a t ready a knew# MSpound clutkan Slat• Oaba Kaplan
Drck Van Fallen and Palar Setings(R)tJ
5 (D
O N E DAY AT A TIME
7:05
92 U TTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAL­
INE
7:30
O (1) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Faalured Kannytoggms
(1) O WHEEL OP FORTUNE
( 7) O RENEGADE RAGE: COACH
LEE COMBO
Oil PS) BENSON
0 P ) A U M THE F AMS.V

6:00
O (X) M O W tvary When Way
But loose' |IS7I) Cam (aetwood.
Sondra LOCka A hao-haled Iruckar
and hta orangutan companion lake
P«l w purkud M a pratly counirykraakatn Mngar (RJO
) O SCARECROW ANO MRS
KINO An undtrcovsr a«an1
maxyuarudmg aa Amanda la mu».
Agency concerned about her tt'e
BARBARA

Ouati* Boy Oaorge. Nad Diamond
and Barbara Mandrad (J
(II (M l DALLAS
0 (10) THE LIVING PLANET: A
PORTRAIT OF THE EARTH Oawd

8:05
92 M O W Blue KrugM' (IST3I
Wdiiam Hotdan. la# Hemica A Loa

5:3 6
12 SAFI AT HOME

£

8

12 BEWITCHED

O &lt;41NBC NEWS AT SUNRISE
1 O Monwmo s t r e t c h
if ) O e y e w it n e s s d a y b r e a k
(ft) (M l OOOO OAYI
NEWS
(1) JIM RAX K in

(A M Y

10:30
0 (4) SALE O f THE CENTURY
(7) O FAMILY FEUO
|W) V I - 1 CONTACT (R) p
(•) REAL MCCOYS

5:00

11 JIMMY SWAOGART

O C4) new s
($) n
CM

lO I
J O SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
1(IS) BIO VALLEY
|(10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
) ( » MAYBERRY R FO .

(1}&gt; CW| FUMTSTONCS
(0 I &lt;01 FARM DAY
CD (S) MEATHCUFF

MOFtHIMO

WALTERS

1140

O (4) WHEEL OF FORTUNE
&lt;Tj O price is rwht
7
(J t
0
©

0 TRIVIA TRAP
(IS) EIOMT M ENOUGH
{ 10) MAGIC o r OH. PAINTING
IS) FAMH.Y

92 CATUMS

11.-05

11:30
0 &lt; T &gt; SCRABBLE
' 71O RYANS HOPE
0 ( W) FLOFHOASTYLE

Tha K«Br&gt;g IMda." "A
Paatage lo Wdto" and "A Soldier I
Story ’ are nommatad tor beat ptctma ot I aft Q
flj) (M l QLMCY
0 (10) WOODY HERMAN'S BtO
BAND CELEBRATION Woody Har­
man brtnga (act and bhree 10 thta
big band calabt anon al Houalon l
Udtor Ouldoor Theater arllh guaala
Pate Barbuiu. Hay Sian, the Dukaa
ot Dmatand Clark Tarry and Joa
0:30
(11 O NCWHART On Ns »e y lo the
bstkatbkd game ot lha year. Dick la
tr &gt;etled tor Stephanas a unpaid
campua parking Uckatt (R)

10:00
(X) O CAGNEY S LACEY Whan
Mtry Bath gosa undarcovar aa a
cabbie on a murder mvaatigstion.
tear tor her aataty. nma aeay (R)
0 {a? p o u S

w oS

2 » m ,w1

10:05
32 M O W ' Latoyene Cacadrwa
(1888) Tab Hunlar. Eichiaa
Chouteau American votomsart
terye m a lagw aguadran m Franca
(hiring World War L

0

1030
I D ALL TOGETHER NOW A

s

m oLovw o
1 1) (M l BEVERLY MILL BH.LJC8

1:00
O 0 DAYS o r OUR LIVES
( 7 ) 0 ALL MYCHILDREN
(Tt (3S» OCX VAN DYKE
(10) M O W (MON. T U I, THU)
( 10) COMONESS WE THE PEO­
PLE (WED)
CD 110) FLOFHOA HOME GROWN
(FW»
0 (S) MOVIE

8

m ow

1:30

AFTERNOON

2:00

12:00
O (4 ) MIOOAY
&lt;7) 0 ( 7 ) 0 NEWS
11 (S3) BEWITCHED
ID (10) NATURE OF THINGS
IMON)
(D (10) DIONNE WARWICK IN
CONCERT (TUE)
O H 10) IN THE SWING (WED)
(0 (1 0 ) NOVA (THU)
mujdtoaged coupia prepared lo
ary.-y lha# iHvemenl m ill change
Ihex plant ahan thaw chddran and
an aidarty m law move in with them
Slara Barbara Hama Palar Michaal

O (£&gt; ANOTHER WORLD
(7) O ONE LTE TO LIVE
(ft(SS)ANOY(MWTTTH
CX&gt; &lt;10) SURVIVAL (WEOI
0 (101 JOY OF PAINTING (FRO

a

2:30

(J )
CAPITOL
I t (36) GREAT SPACE COASTER
(D 1 10) PEOPLE WHO MEAN BUSI­

Goaty |R&gt;

EVENING

11:00
O ( 4 ) ( D O NEWS
It (M|BENNY M IL
0 (10) DAVE ALIEN AT LARGE
0 (S| MGHT GALLERY
11:30
0 tf) B U T OF CARBON Hoat
Johnny Carton Quetta Tart Qart,
Pale Barbulli Mcheai Murphy (R)
111 O T A »
1 (i (M ) BANFORO ANO SON
0 (8) TW8.IGHT TONE

12:00
( I ) O BSdON t SIMON Alter an
antmal lender la ilhed by a ion. A J
and Rica go undarcovar aa too
vtart to atvaatigata (R)
O NEWS

AMERICA:

12:30
0 ( f ) LATE MGHT WITH D A W )
LETTERMAN
(7 ) O ABC NEWE MOMTUNE
I t (M ) I LOVE LUCY

too
M O W "The Diary Ot Anna

(£) o
Frar* |I88S) Joaapn Schddkraut.
MdkaPsrkma
( U OS) CHILDREN BETWEEN UP1
ANO DEATH
O |&gt;) THE AVENGERS

1:05
( Q M O W "The Story Ot A Worn•R** (1888) Robert Slack Bit* And-

1:10
(1) Q MCMILLAN 4 WIFE A doee
hand ot lha MckMane u murdered
at a maaguarada baa. leading Mac
and Seay to make mguinee ot Ihe*
l |R&gt;

2:00
3D (M ) BIZARRE
2.30
i) O C M NEWS NtGMTWATCH
n o ni adiMTTnf
3 :1 0
32 M O W
Countdoam ' (ISM I
Robert Duval Jamas Caan

3:30

( D O M O W -h Happens Every
Sprang" (18481 Ray MRand. Jean
M (M ) FAMILY APPAM

3 05
Q BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENDS
3:30
(TJ (34) SCOOSY DOO
0 (10) MIS TIN ROGERS (R)
0 |S) INSPECTOR GADGET
3:35
12 HECKLE ANO JECKLE (MONTHU)
12 THE CHARM KINS (FRI)
4:00
O ( I ) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAM
( I ) o STAR TREK
&lt;71 O MERV g r if f in
i t OS) SUPERF RENOS
0 (10) SESAME STREET Q
0 (S )H EA TH C U FF
4:05
92 FLINT ST ONES (MON-THU)
12 MY LITTLE PONY I (FRI)
4:30
17 (IS) HE-MAN ANO MASTERS
OF THE UNIVERSE
0 (I) MORK ANO MIHOY

March 26

TUESDAY

111 (M )BOB NCWHART

4:0 0
0 (1 4 ) RATTY DUKE

3:00
0 ( 4 ) SANTA BARBARA
(1 1O O U O N O LIGHT
(7) U GENERAL HOSPITAL
11 (SSI BUGS BUNNY
(D (10) FLORIOASTYLl
0 IS) VOLTRON, DEFENDER OF
THE UNIVERSE

(1) O AS THE WORLD TURNS
9 1) (18) GOMER PYLE
0 ( TO) CONGRESS WE THE PEO­
PLE OWED)
CD 110) PAJNTMa CERAMICS (FRI)

11:35
12 LUCY SHOW

1246
O
PORTRAIT OP
MASSACHUSETTS

4 :3 5
12 FLINT8TONES (MON-THU)
12 MY U TTLE PONY « (TAR

12:30
0 (4) SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
(T) □ YOUNG ANO THC R U T -

12

0 (S) KOJAK

0:00

12:05
IQ PERRY MASON

NESS (MON)
0 (M ) ROBERT RUSSIN WYO­
MING SCULPTOR (THU)
(D (10) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAJNDNO (FRI)

1:05

(f t (M ) F-TROOP

( I ) O KATE B ALL* Whan Kale
and ruae hnd an old lova tatlar taddan over lha* hraptaca. may My to
rekindle a 80-year-old urweqieted
lomanca (R)
(7J O ACADEMY AWARDS Jack
Lammon hoati lha 87lh annual
n e t tatamoraaa Bra horn lha
Oorolhy CMndNr PavtSon m Loa

&lt;W) WONOERWORKS (FRI)
(i)U A N N U

3

6:00
O •4&gt;(1 j 0 ( 7 1 0 n e w s
111 (M ) JCFFERSONS
0
(10) MACNCIL / LEHRER
urwUHTM in
0 (8) WELCOME BACK, HOTTER
6 :05
92 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
6:30
0 (4) NBC NEWS
U lO C B S N C W S
( 7 ) 0 A B C N tw a g
111 (35) ALICE
0 ( 8 ) OOOO T i d U
6 :3 6
QOOMERPYLE

7 :00
0 ® SALE OP THE CENTURY
) O P M MAGAZINE Ricardo
Uontarben the psychic* ot Casta
daga. Fla

(7^© JEOPARDY
(34) TOO CLOSE FOR C08APORT Jackie eagerly emrtt a marnaga propoaN adian Brad ralurna
horn a trip but tha rotmg man la

haring tecond Ihoughta

S

(101 NATURE OP THi
IS) ONE DAY AT A HME

7 :0 5
92 UTTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAJ-

m

7 :3 0
0 QD SNTERT &gt; BtMENT T0NK3HT

Featured Robert Conrad
) O W H E E l OF FORTUNE

StOO.OOO NAME THAT
TUNE
I T O S)l
0 (81 ALL »t THE FAMILY

8:00

0

CD A- TEAM ■ A . Hannibal and

S ) a THRSTS A CROWD Jack
•seat 8 payehoh^ttl a help •han
hto romance vnth Vicky bacomaa a
prahtam (R )Q

Ihouianda ot Pupa, planet and
people hava ditappaarad (R)Q
0 (8) MOVIE Rogua Mato (18781
Patar Q Tooto John Standing A
man eho made an unauccaaahd at
t*tarnation attampl agamtt Adolf
tuitai become* tha guarry ot Nab
805
92 M O W
The Savage (1853)
Charlton nation. Sutan U s r n A
••via man rened by Stout Indiana
la lorn batm en Put toytr im ehen
•tr breakt out

6 30
(77 O

W HO'S THE BOAST Angela
w ha tout when aha reakyat lhal
Mona la dating a young co«aga
man |R)Q

0

5 :0 5
Q LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
5 '3 0
0 ( D PEOPLE'S COURT
( I I Q U 'A T N
TO N C W S
II (M )M Y LITTLE PONY « (FRO
0 (10) OCCANUS (MON)
0 (10) UNDERSTAND#*! HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
0 (10) NEW LITERACY: AN MTROOUCTION TO COMPUTERS
(WED)
0 ( W) MONEY PUZZLE (TMU)
0 (10) ART OP BE INI
(FRI)
0 (S) LA VERNE S SHIRLEY
5 :35
12 ANDY GRIFFITH
(IT (M| BANFORO ANO SON
ffi (S| TWILIGHT ZONE
J ) a FALL GUY Colt and Homo
hava more than a kills difficulty
trying lo capture a bail lu m p er »ho
hat become lha itar ol a eoman a
roaar tkatmg learn (R)
(7 O THE SAINT
11 (35) F-TROOP
0 ( 8 ) KOJAK
12:05
12 M O W larceny, me" (T84I)
Edward G Robmaon, Jana Wyman
12:30
O (4) LATE NIGHT WITH D A W )
LETTERMAN
9l!(3S|l LOVE LUCY
140
(D O M O W 1Compulalon" (1848)
Orton Weaat Dean Sloet»e«
(It (34)LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
0 ( 4 ) THE AVENGERS

1:10

_____ 9 :00
0 * RWTTOE Cody, kack and Boa
go undarcovar in the Army to aaatol
a federal mveeligation ot lha* tormar Vietnam commander adto a
impacted ot drug amuggAng
(D O MACORUOCR A LOUO A
court order provide# kttto help 10
Makobn and Jenny aa they try to
copa aMth a Ratoua man eho a
haraaamg hw aa-wta y

17 (3d) OLANCY
0 (M ) WORLD AT WAR

1040
O (3) REM#*)TON STEELE Lau­
ra I plana tor a romantic vacation
•dh Staata on lha French tunert
gmckiy change athan ha bacomaa
lha guarry ot a trw ot daadty |sam
thtovaa(R)
ID O
MOONUGHT1NO Maddto
and David Uaca doam a real Ida
murdarar ahaa particpaling in a
murder mystery bam trip conMai

I t (3*1 aaOEPfNOENT NEWS
(W ) WORLD AT WAR
(8) AFTVCA CONTINENT M

S

92 M O W 'Snort Walk To Day
•ght" (TS77I Jamas Srotot. Don
Mrtchaa A ama* group of peopto
■ a trapped m a aubmy aflat an
aarthguaka daatroya Nan York City

10.30

01 (M ) BOB NSWHART

1140
■ C1)(X)0(Z)O N EW B
11 (MI8EMFYHH.L
0 |W) DAVE ALLEN AT LARQ4
0 1 8 ) MONT GALLERY

11:30

0 d ) TONK3HT Hoot Johnny Caraon
[ UR NOVA An exploration of lha
(H Q T A J a
l ' a ABC NEWS M G N D JN i
al of Ftones Mtars •|'7»7S
/ .v V r v ,v ," i

I t (M ) DALLAS

8

12:00

10:06
captur a a gang ol
ruthtoaa autoparta lhaa.aa |R)g
(|) o M O W Arms xaranma
(Ptamtotal JacguaSna Bitaat Chnalopnar Raaao m lata 181h-century
Hutea a voman dahei aociN eon
vantona and angagaa m a paaaronata. Ihough idumalaR Magic, tova
aria* *th a daahrng naitry othoar
Adapted Irom Lao To#toy t novel

5 :0 0
O
u It, ANYTHMO FOR MONEY
O THREE S COMPANY
O L E TS MAKE A DEAL
(M l DUXES o r HAZZARO
(MON-THU)
I I (M ) MY U TTLE PONY I (FRI)
( 10) OCCANUS (MON)
(10) UNDERSTAND**! HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
0 (10) NEW LITERACY: AN IN­
TRODUCTION TO COMPUTERS
(WED)
IS 110) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
0 (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)
0 (I ) HAPPY OAYB AGAIN

( S Q COLUMSO Columbo aukpacta a plant coaector (Ray MR and)
at mtedarmg hw naphaw lo gam ac­
cess to a Irutl fund (R|
1:30
I t (M ) SCTV
240
a t(M )B U A R M
245
32 M O W "Ftraf To Ftofif " |1MT)
Chad Evertil. Manfyn Drtot

8

2:30
0 C M NEWS MQHTWATCH
(M ) OUNSMOKE

2 :50
CD O M O W "The Virgin Ouean
118441 Berta Davt*. Richard Todd
3:30
3 t (34) FAMK.V AFFAIR
440
« P 4 ) PATTY DUKE
445
12 THAT GIRL
4 :30
CD O M O W TtoaT (1871) Rich,
ard Cranna. Angw Otckmson
17 (38) DORM DAY

�...Skateboard
C o n t in u e d fr o m p a g e 2

plane, dry swimming pool and ramp riding, and
skating for transportation, like to school or to the
corner store for some Milk Duds.
Skateboarding has become more of a precision
sport as the equipment has evolved with It
Far from the boards of yesteryear — wooden,
skinny boards usually hand made with metal wheels
probably taken front an old pair of roller skates —
11 slay's skateboards are wide and can be made of
wood, metal or plastic. They have fancy axle/shock
absorber systems, called "tru cks." and wide rubber
wheels.
In addition, skaters can add a myriad of accessories
— "b ird s," plastic sheaths that protect the axle
system from damage when the skater runs over
curbs. They are called "bird s" Itecause they resemble
the profane hand gesture of the same name.
A skater can also gel “ bones.” plastic moldings to
protect the front o f his board, and "ugly sticks" to
protect the sides from scrapes Incidentally, the ugly
sticks are screwed Into the board with "sex bolts."
Feuerhahn said. (Don't ask).
A complete board costs about $140 A full set of
safety equipment. Including helmet, wrist, knee and
e lb o w g u a r d s , costs another $100, he said.
These skaters arc more than willing to shell out the
bucks to underwrllc their pleasure and Feuerhahn
said they pay with their own hard-earned money. To
them. It's an investment. These rough and tumblers
say skateboarding Is here to stay.
Hut It has fallen out of fashion before and will
probably wane ugaln In live years. Feuerhahn and
olher business anaylsts say.
A primitive form of skateboarding originated In the

WEDNESDAY

March 27

103Os. arcuidlug to Brian Kldgeway, public relations
officer of TnttaWorld Skateboarding magazine In
Carlsbad. Calif. At that lime, roller skate wheels were
attached to apple Ikjxcs and rolled down the street In
a haphazard fashion.
Hut II was In I95H al Malibu Deach. Calif..
Kldgeway said, that skateboarding got Its first boos I.
By then skateboards had evolved Inlo "two-by-fours
on roller skates." he said
By 1965. Interest was sleamrolllng on the west
coast, skateboarders tiegan competing, and three
skateboarding magazines rolled off (he presses,
multiplying the sport's publicity.
For tile next nine years skateboarding enjoyed a
steady rise of popularity and then In 1975 II bit the
east coast like a typhoon About the same time
polyurrthane wheels emerged — which revolu­
tionized the way skaters got around The wheels gave
skalrrs a smoother ride and enabled them to turn on
a dime, which In lurn led lo more dralh-drfytng irlcks
for their repertoires.
Skaters also discovered (he III rill o f doing I heir
thing In dry swimming pools
The first skateboard park — a rink devoted solely to
skateboarding — opened In 1976 In Carlsbad,
Kldgeway said Many more followed. Including one In
Orlando.
But In 1977 the sport "slamm ed,"
" A lot of people started getting hurt around ‘ 77 ...
because there was not enough good equipment out on
the market." lie suld.
Skate parks started closing in 1979 and there were
almost none by
High Insurance premiums uud
lawsuits brought by injured skalrrs drove (hem out ol
business,
“ It was a real down point when everyone, skalrrs
and businessmen. Jusl quit.” Kldgeway said. The
number of exclusive skateboard businesses. Including
equipment manufacturers and magazine publishers.
to Madaro
10:30
81 (BE) BOB NCWHART

Evening Kara Id, Sanford, FI.

went from about 300 to 10. tie said
Bui skulrhoardlng was yet to be wl|ied out
completely.
Throaher. a San Franrlsco-based skating magazine,
kept circulating and furlrd the skullng spirit. "It gave
everybody hope" that skateboarding would rise again
to Its former status. Kldgeway said.
In 19H| ramps started (topping up In backyards
across the country and with them came a renewed
Interest In I lie sport. The sounds of skaters whizzing
hark and forth Infected a new generation ol
"radicals."
By 1982 contests were cranking up again In Ohio
and other Midwestern slates and by 15)83 professional
circuits were In full swing,
"It's hern going up rver since And It'll lie a Ini
safer llils lime around though may tie no! as big us in
15*78." Kldgeway said
Peggy Cozens, co-publisher of TranaWorhi. says In
addition In tiring a safer sport, today's skaters arc
more ‘‘commuted and sophisticated."
High! now skalrlsuirdlng Is a $'20 million to $30
million uunual business, she nald. and she prrdlrls
(here will Ik* a boom In equipment sales (tils summer.
“ This lime because tlie* technology la already there
we frrl the market Is going to grow more steadily."
But the sounds of ramp skating Oils summer may
hr stilled locally by municipal governm ents.

* Casselberry already has a ramp twin due In the
noise they make. And there Is a move underway In
Longwood. a popular haven for skaters, lo pass an
ordinance trunnlng. or at least lightly regulating,
ramps.
If skating Is thinned a few “ radicals" may I k - so
bummed out they might do a few scrambled
eggplants on the sidewalks o f city ball
And wouldn't that Ik * groley In the mux?
Fer sure!

THURSDAY

March 28

11:00
CVEHMO

8:00
a 'D C ! ) 0 ( 7 ) 0 New s
11) (M l JEFPERSONS
(Z&gt; (10) MACNEJL / LEHRER
NEWSHOUR
CD HI WELCOME SACK. KOREA
8:05
12 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

Oommgo. Corn** MacNad and IIMo
T*|o tlM In Pucemf* opart
Gruaappa Satopod M M Ida Mai
dabtit M conductor
CD H I MOVIE Madman 11*781
MichaM Back Srgownay Waarar A
young Stratum Jaa mill rarang* on
to* mind find* mat bamg in lha laraak army gnat ban m* opportunity
h* a baan a artmg lor

8 05

8:3 0
Q 4 1NBC NEWS
I) O C B S NEWS
(T O A B C N C W S g
11 (14) ALICE
(B illO O O O TIMES

«
BASEBALL: BEHIND THE
SEAMS A batondtha-acana* look
al Mayor Laagua baaabad locuamg
an lour mambart at Pi* IMS Allan
la Brava* - Brut* Banadrcl. Tarry
Fortalar Brad Kommauk and Bob
Walton

8:3 9
11 GOMER RYLE

000

7.00
O 'l l BALI OR THE CENTURY
( H O R M MAGAZINE Fin* art In
io flw *it*l photography back•Wq* nth tha natlonM louring companyol " C M ."
0 O JEORAROY
at US) TOO C LO M FOR COM­
FORT Alter many IMm alarm*. Mu
' « bnaOy goaa aiM labor ana* a
narrow* Hanry la M taork. I***mg
I'Mno Chore* but to ask Monro* tot

IMP IPM1 1o» I|

® tW) ALISTAIR COOKE"! AMER­
ICA
0 HI ONE DAY AT A TME
7:05
IX UTTLE HOUSE ON THE RRAJ-

m

7:30
a (3) ENTERTAINMENT TONKJHT
FaMurad Mario Thomat
( H O WHEEL OR FORTUNE
9) O
S *00.000 NAME THAT
TUNE
t (M| BENSON
B (B1 ALL M THE FAMILY

i

8:00

O a WOm WAY TO HEAVEN An
°*&lt;j*r mans Oapraaaim may ba
turad whan No grandaon and
Aonalhan ancowrag* Nm to taka up
&gt; " (£ BOOV BEAUTIFUL.

O 9 ) f a c t s OR U R i Blaa at
lamptt to Hold Oman to* tort m M rt
Oarrsn a abaanca - arth dutwout
( D O DYNASTY A poararkd Morm
pravanlt Jaft born locating tha
doanad plan* carrying Raaca and
Btoka. J*M make* contaigancy
plan* at Oanvar-Carrington. Aman­
da • leipradfotabl* bahavtor put*
bar krtura m laopMdy tJ
O tMIQLSNCY
0:30
a 13&gt; BARA RoiMyn b*a#*M Pial
Sara M In a btoa ton* ae aha plan* a
IpacAM I7th betbday catabnWon

10:00
a ® OT. ELSEWHERE AuatNkndar • *Ma undMgoa* opan-haart
Mrrgary. a man UaaWng to ba lb*
Maaarab r* toimd nadad to a croak
WMtpbtd. CrMg Mid AutcblandM
mart m* Cbaar* bar
( f ) O CBS REPORTS "Tha GH1 CP
i p * ■ Corraapondani M K&lt;eb* an­
chor* Pm raport on paopt* and
proPtama m.Mrad m organ n r *
plant adorti mckrdmg ananPMM
nth racipranis donor* and doctor*
(T) a HOTEL An atMaianl mono
gw bom MWtbM San Francisco kbboth botoM ban* lor ma city tat*bad crown Rotor kpaoJ* too nookand aatobmg ovar a toan-ag* It-

healthy

(Z) O FALL OUY A group ol
kaiamrfy brolhan kidnap* a bad
Nmpar achadutod 10 ba a kay *Rn a MM mvotomg mo mob &lt;R)
(M ) Da l l a s
( M ) U W FROM THE MET T o*-

U«| POLICE WOMAN
10.09
( B M O V* "TM l*«-Hand*d Ocm
(1SSEI F »d Itowman. U U M8*n A
yOudkAA S f » lb* A*d_

0 * 9 ) 0 9 ) 0 new*
(It (M&gt;BENNY HAL
ID 110) DAVE ALLEN AT LAROE
Q ) (■) NIGHT GALLERY
11:30

O (3) TONIGHT Host JoTmny CatO TAM
O ABC NEWS MOHTUNt
(fP (M l SANFORD AMO BON
(D (S* TWKJQHT ZONE

12:00
(D O MAGNUM. PX Magnum
happana lob* a doubt* tor lb* n w darad MM 0&lt; a mow* bamg mad*
M Room a Maw (R)
QD O THE SAMT
It (M)F-TROOP
OltlKOJAK
12:15
11 MOV* Braeratorm" ( IMS) Ml*
Huntor. A n a Franc**
12:30
O OD LATE HUNT WITH DAVX}
LETTIAMAM
ID (M il LOVE LUCY

1:00

9 ) o MOV* ’ Carman Jorwa"
(IbM I Harry BMatonto. Dorothy
a t (M l CML0REN RUNMNG OUT
ORTXdE

a (SI THE AVENGERS

EVENING

8:00
B 9 &gt; 9 &gt; 0 9 ) 0 NEWS
I I (Ml JEFFERSONS

0

|I0) MACNEIL

8:05
HI BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
8:3 0
0 * nm cncw s
(T t O CBS NEWS
9 J U ABC n e w s g
1 li (Ml ALICE
O* (t) OOOO TIMES

MO
I t (M l BIZARRE
2:25
tJ MOV* Mans**'" (IBM ) Scott
Brady, tota Gam.
2:30
( H O CBS NEWS MGh TWATCH

1L (M l OUNSMOKE

MO
9 ) O MOVIE Tha Way Waal
(1SS7) Kir* Douglas
Robarl
3:30
1 t (M| FAMK.Y AFFAIR

905
830

7:00
a (I ) BALE OR TME CENTURY
9 ) O R.M MAOAZME David and
MaradHh Bails, Be nay a La* An
gawa squalling conlsM nth a
acraan laal aa Nat proa
9 ) O JEORAROY
(Ml TOO GLOBE FOR COM­
FORT Hanry gala to lb* hoaprtM In
um* lo aRnaaa lb* brrtb at to* ton.
but al lb* arpans* at baaig brad by
an angry Mr Wammighi (Pari J oI

I)
O 1*1 u l t im a t e c h a l l e n g e a

*r

I (3) FAMILY T « a Stavan ralurna
dsalh
or
alb ol
hMp to*
hr* latbar and Ins* to halp
molhar prapara tar a na* la
0 (10* THIS OLO HOUSE Compto-

Uon ol flooring ml Mahon
0:00

(1) O taaON S SMON A J and
Rrck halp Doantoan Brown march
tor to* couam. a vstortoary ahidani
•bo a baan actuaad of murdarmg a

CDO

0 III POLICE WOMAN

10:20
IX MOVIE 0,sgn*l |I»U | Jack
Wabb Ban Alaianda, Sargsanl
Jo* Friday n caOad m lo crack tha
caa* o l a ayndicala murdar
10:30

III

(M ) BOB MEWHART

11:00
O 9 ) 9 10 ( 7 ) 0 NEWS
It (M|BENNY HILL
0 110) GAVE ALIEN AT LAHOE
0 ( 1 ) NIGHT GALLERY
11:30

8*0
(3) COBBY SHOW Rudy dom-

CDO MAOISM, RXArabbi araa*d 10 HaarOO ben* Into *

0 (!) TWKJQHT ZONE

12:00

( I ) O NOTH ART
(1) O THE SAMT
1 [ (M )7-TROOP
0 IS) KOJAX

12:10
I X M OV* Asaignmanl To KM"
(Ib M l Patnek ONaM. Joan Hack-

•H

to a murdar U

0

aapMaUon at church and Mala bator* a convanbon ol lb* National
RaOgloua Broadcaalar* m Waarvng

7 *0
0 ( 1 ) INTER TAMMeNT TONKJHT
Fookjrad Biel Royndda
9 ) O WHEEL OR FORTUNE
0
O
HOO.OOO NAME THAT
TUNE
01 (Ml OENOON
O M ALL Bt TME FAMILY

9 ) 0 TAXI
9 ) 0 ABC NEWS NOHTUNE
I) (M ) SANTORO ANO SON
(1C

EYE TO EVE Oscar and Tra­
cy mvaaligala ah an on* at hsr for

ton. D C
0

12*0
(4) LATE NIGHT WITH OAVIO
UtTTERMAH
(U) (M )l LOVE LUCY

12:35
( D O HARRY 0

1.00
9 ) O MOV* Blood And Sand
(1041) Ty, on* Pomat RKa Hay-

•orth

9:30
(£ ) MONT COURT Bub ba­

1 T (M ) LEAVE (T TO BEAVER
0 IS) THE AVENGERS

cons* • vokeitaar Islha, lo a U
alartang naw* about Ml* bay |R)

10:00
0

(3)

HKX

STREET

BLUES

Dovonpart nan* a taao agamat ■
gnarto youth. Bats* and CoTtoy try
to Moan ug a bun batora to* cructM
agamat a cop a r m . part"••N Sand Ranbo tpot up
9 ) 0 KNOTS LAJC0S0 Abby daloy* Mi* Empva VMtoy praract. Orag
‘ rum Gary by (Raring to*

O IM ) DORMOAT
OTHATBSB. - '

a

7*6
12 UTTLE HOUSE ON THE RRA*-

4:19

4:49

at

aoodatova g

11 (M l OUMSCY
0 (M| RALWELL-KEIMEPY d e ­
b a t e San Edarard Kannady IOUaa* | and Ihs Rov Jarry FaTwaa

4:0 0

4:30

Ibsm l)

O (1) TONKJHT Host Johnny Car-

compai flora In lb * ChMIang*
Around Iba World, o nmo-montn
77.0Od-maa yachl rood
0 IS) ONE DAY AT A TIME

0

(f t) (M ) IHOEPENDENT NEWS
0 (101 THE LIVING PLANET A
PORTRAIT OF THE EARTH Dand
A Hanbo, Hugh aipkxs* gisal rivara
at tb* aswtd mdudmg lb* Amaion.
and Iba vmiMis* at k«* found m

If I f l U l h f

(U (Ml RATTY DUKE
a GET SMART

voftart m mm*n*r*y ap#ra(*c*n
OP (J6| DALLAS
ID (tot WILD AMERICA A nail to
lb* North Amancan prana to Obaarv* Iba pronghorn antaiopa m l
o&lt;bar aramato mdrganou* to lha r*
gton (R )g
CD IE) M O V * "A Ouaabor, Ol
Gull (1ST*) Tuaaday WMd Ron
Larbman Whan an MtracVv* aom
an it accuasd ol murdarmg hat
chad, aarmua quaanon* m * raraad
mvohnng par tonM prafudica morMSy and hr*be*
OX NBA BASKETBALL U toa A a r
Bucks at Ham York Kracka

6:3 8
B O O M ER RYLE

1:10

( D o MOV* "Tbs Attangammil
(1M*I Kir* Dougtoa Fay* Dunaway

/ LEHRCR

MFW&amp;MOlJn
CD 1*1WELCOME BACK. HOTTER

Friday, March I I , IMS— 7

porta Karon *
•ho_da*v*r*d Vaft
9 ) 0 M /SOO

1:30
a i (M is e r y

2:00
(LD (M ) BIZARRE

2:15
0
M OV* One* You F a t A
Sirwigar" (IM S ) Pam Burka. Carta
Lyntoy

2*0

a CBS NEWS WOHTWATCH

2:10
( 7 ) 0 M OV* HuMi Huak S t W
Chorton* (i«ss| Sarto o*m*. osYMSoHdiMaM
»•

�%
•- Evening Herald, Sanford. FI

Friday, March 22, IttS

G O GUIDE
A n n ii n I K 11 r F r » 11v u I
s|Minsorrd by Lnrh llavrn Art
Center. 10 a in in 4 p in..
M.ir&lt; Ii 23. Loch llavrn Pink. N
Mi l l s A v r n u r . O r I a n d n
Featuring kllr m nirsis mill
e x h ib it*. puppet*. d o w n s
lllins, rock hand*. Jame* E.
Ml airs ride* anil workshops In
nrlrntul *tyle klie* M.mk arid
llngerpalntlng. Bring plrnlr or
IimnI available No general ad­
mission charge Haln d a lr.
March 2 1
‘ ' A n i m a l s . A n i ma l s I 'r l
Parade" In i hv Ihr K asirr
lltinny. registration IO a m .
Allam onlr Mall Cluldrrn re­
quested to drrss up llirlr jx-1 *
in parailr lor Judges Pri/rs (or
all entries, troplilrs for toji

...Oscars
C ontinu ed from page 2
I heir Oscar rlrals are Jell
III I d g e s a s l lie a l i e n in
Maim.in.
Albert Finney as
an alciilioln In
Under ilo
Volcano and Sam Walcrsion
as a r e p o r t e r In
Ki l l i n g
Fields "
Sally Field Is cx|M-clctl to will
her seconil Ix-st actress Ost ur
lor her definitive |xirlraval ol
the farm widow In "Places In
die Heart." rolesruni|Mrulilc to
loles jilnyed by Jessica Lange
III "C ou n try" and sissy Spncck
lit "T h e R iver." who also won
nominations Also coui|M-ting
an- Judy Davis as a neurotic
spinster to "PiiHsage to India"
and Vanessa Redgrave as an
ari sl ner al I c snob In " T h e
Ikislonlans."
Woody Allen Is nominated as
Ix-st director lor "Hmadwuy
Danny R o s e " against four
d i r e c t o r s of l ust p i c t u r e
nominees. Milos Forman with
A m a d eu s." Robert Hctilon
with "Places In Ihe Heart,"
Roland Jolfcc with " Ki l l i ng
Fields'* and David Ira n with
Passage to India
Seeking ihe sup|xirtlng actor
Oscar are Halug S. Ngor. a
CanilMxIlan ikx-lor who made
Ills acting drhut In "K illin g
Fields." and I he late Ralph
Richardson, for "G rryalokc:
Tile Legend of Tarran." A lso
nominated are Adolph Caesar
of "A Soldier's Story." John
Malkovleli of "Places In the
H eart" and Noryukl " P u l "
Morllaof "T h e Karate Kid."
Peggy Ashe roll. Ihe Faigllsh
matron to "A Passage to In*

three Free gilts for audience
The SI registration lee will go
to Missing Children's Center.
I.on gw ood
F o l l o w i n g the
parade. Golden Stars U S A
ik-auty Pageant preliminaries
lor liable* to women
Crimen of ih r Heart. Pnliorr
I’rl/e wi nni ng play, will hr
presented by the Annie Kussrll
Theatre. H p m . March 22 23:
matinees 2 p m March 23 at
Rollins College. W lnlrr Park.
For tlckrt Inform ation call
04B-2I45. I-S p.m dally
Central Florida Hoot Show,
through Sunday March 24 at
Orlando Expo Centre across
from Hob Carr Auditorium.
Friday anil Saturday 10 a m to
10 j&gt; in.: Sunday, noon til 7

p.m. Children under three Irre
Wl th l a c h o o c her SprIng
accompanied by adult
llluegrass JamlMiree. March 29.
Open house for Maitland Art 30. and 31. six miles west of
C enter Artist in Educaiion Dunnellon on Highway 40.
featuring work of potter James Features Jim m y Dickens. The
Cook, students In the Master's Lewi s F a mi l y , and many
Program and work o f area others Camping For Infnrmaelementary and middle school lion or advance tickets call
students, noon to 4 p.ni Free •MM 732 7343
to the public
Spar t an S i n g e r s Spr i ng
In v ita tio n a l Exhi bi t
H5. Festival. 9 a m to 4 p m .
Sampson Art Gallery. Stetson March 23. Mt l wcc Mi ddl e
University. Det.and. through School. C ou n ty Road 427.
March 20
Longwntxl Entertainment, arts
’ ’.innings and watercolors by and crafts, plants, baked gotxis.
A m e r i c a n Im p r e s s io n is ts , produce.
through Mav 3. .it Loch Have n
Cosmic Cone rri featuring
Art Center. 2410 N. Mills Avr.. m u s i c o f L e d Zepp11 n .
Orlando. Admission charge
xhowtlmes. 9 and It) p.m..
Also, a free exhibit through Friday and Saturday nights
April 20. features the works of during March at the Orlando
17 Chicago artists. Hours 10-5, Science Center. •.Loch Haven
Tuesday through Friday; noon Park. Hit) E. Rollins St. Ad
to 5 p.m.. Saturday; 2-5 p m , mission $2.50 per show
Sunday.
Grnrrul Sanford Museum

dla," is coinpeitng lor sup|Hirilng actress against Glenn
Cl os e ol “ T h e Nat ur al
Lindsay- t rouse ol
Places III
tin- Heart.” Chrlsdrie lathi I ol
Swing Shill" and Geraldine
Pa ge ol * ’ I h e P o p e of
Grecnwii Ii Village "
Nominees lor .mother |xipu
l-u category. Ix-si original song,
an su|x rslar Stevie Womler lor
I Just Called to Say I Line
Von
hum “ The Woman in
Red
Ray Parker Jr lor Ihr
‘ ' ( i host bu s i c r s ' t lie in r :
Grammy winner Phil Collins
lor "Against All ( kids "

B pjF toydT b— troaj
AAwrwisi

1
qq( SA1JY
m uf

ui «

t it

F IE L D

PLACES fe
IN THE
H E A R T ™ ! *
MAMMY ANAKO NOMINATIONS
•1ST ACTRESS. B£ST PICTURE
ru/A rent ii
ill f»J

Tfce Weight A Smoking Control Method Developed
■f A Doctor 4 Crontod U.S. Potont No. 4073294
VARIOUS PROGRAMS AVAILABLE STARTING AT *35.00

QQ
'*•*,

WOVflANTD I

2 50

177 I7W

$2.50
EDDIE MURPHY

ison vocation
fEJEVERLY. H ILLS

48

4 P .»

A lew months ago I decided I need
ed to taha control of my gpeOp
and eating habits. I was really
overweight and tired. My ago was
pratty low . I hen I heard about ASM.
I want to ASM and found they ware
ivd h r MHaroot. Not only dM I
lean ol a new way ol sating, and
the use of the pwtantad ecu i t M - .

dtvfco; tha radodna aMm
.

Social Security Disability
W e Specialize In:
• N EW C LA IM S
• R E C O N S ID E R A TIO N S • BENEFITS C U T O FF
• H EAR IN GS BEFORE THE JU D G E

_____ V i t , __________________

assist bahavoriai change of my
habit*. Thay mada it aasy. Thank
you ASM, I am ~ “ *

bardM
Or H i Faad Mats. Sofa
* - i Mi -

5 ^ 5 TTTOCTITO.

WARD WHITE ft ASSOCIATES
Fr—

and Library. Fori Mellon I’.uk
520 E First St Sanford 2
p.m.. Sunday. Wed m s
day.Thursday, and Friday
Seminole County Museum
H i g h w a y 17 - 92 at Hush
H o u l e v a r d . in o l d A g r i
Center/County Home building
2 4 p m. each Sunday
Central Florida Zoological
Park. Highway 17 92. Lake
Monroe, open every dav 9 3
Picnic facilities.
Orlando Ojicra G uild's Ik-signers' Show House, three
story 22-r(Mini LilchHcld Manor
In Heathrow. 1550 Haywater
Court. Lake Mary. March 9-31
Tuesday through Saturday. It)
a m. to 3:30 p.m.; Sunday.
I 4 30 p.m.: Thursday. 7 '*
p in.; closed Monday. Lunch
will lx- available. Tickets. $7
presale; $8 at dixir: $15 unlim­
ited visits.

/Om- 30 Yrm. experience)
Consultation • No Fm Uniats

Wo Wlnl

_________ ( 305 ) 321-1319 __________

ASM SYSTEMS
Weight. Smoking And Nutritional
Control Camara
Nature's Way Sinca 1974

FREE NO OBLIGATION
CONSULTATION CALL
738-2055
DeLANO
103 West Wisconsin Avarua

834-5080
A LTA M O N TE SPRINGS
251 Maitland Avanua

897-6066
O R LA N O O
1 8 1 2 East C o lo n y

Wa. Wed.. Frt 9 5
Twa A Tkora. 9-7
Sanior C h ia n Discounts.

Set g-i
Cel Ahead Or Sue la

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152058">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 22, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152059">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152060">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 22, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152061">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152062">
                <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;, March 22, 1985; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152063">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152064">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152065">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152066">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="15239" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="14853">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/4a92f97915900b66eede137848768104.pdf</src>
        <authentication>5f5ee0f50df15a9f149f54a33766d533</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="152057">
                    <text>77,h Year, No. 180 Thursday, March 21. 1»8S-San«ord, Florida
Evening

Herald

-

(USPS

481 290)

-

Price

25 Cents

State Attorney Acts On '83 Case

Man Charged In Shooting Death Of Friend

Oy Susan Loden
Palazzo was first questioned In thought It was suicide." Spolskl
and Deane Jo rd a n
ronneetion with the killing after said.
An Altamonte Spring* man an unidentified man called
Sheriffs deputies completed
has been charged with second Seminole County deputies to the
degree murder In the 1983 scene at 2:56 a m. the day of the their Investigation of the rase In
February. 1984. and turned over
shooting death of a friend. He shooting
their findings to the Seminole
was being held today without
When Palazzo answered his
bond In the Seminole County front door he was bleeding from C ounty State Attorney. A l­
Jail
7 Ills lip and told sheriff s deputies. though Investigators had the
.James Carmine Palazzo. 31. "I have an emergency. Someone same evidence almost Immedi­
was arrested on u warrant at here has a gunshot wound. My ately following the shooting that
fj.'tO p.m, Wednesday at his buddy has been shot and he they have today. Spolskl said the
Stale A tto rn e y 's office, for
home ut 109 lairkspur Drive needs help Come on In.” court reasons unknown to him. de­
lh* same home where Robert records show.
layed Issuing a warrant for
DlSano. 24. died from a bullet
In spite of the fact the body Palazzo until March 14. 1985
wound to his head on May 10. and gun were found In a position
Ralph Eriksson, assistant state
I •JH.'I. Seminole County sheriffs that might have Indicated the
attorney,
said today the rase Is
spokesman .John Spolskl said
victim shot himself. "We never under prosecution, "and I can't

discuss It." Douglas Cheshire his right hand and a fatal wound
was Slate Attorney when the between his eyes. Spolskl said
deputies turned over their In­
A autopsy the following day
vestigation results In 1984, showed DlSano could not have
Norm Wolflnger. current state shot himself. Spolskl said, and
attorney, ordered the capias deputies determined the gun
Issued for Palazzo's arrest.
used In the killing was registered
When the shooting was Inllally In Palazzo, although he re­
Investigated. Spolskl said, depu­ portedly mitally denied knowl­
ties determined that Palazzo and edge of the weapon. Spolskl said
DlSano were alone In Palazzo's
A holster for the weapon was
home where DlSano had been a also found In Palazzo's clothing
guest foruboul three weeks.
when he changed clothes prior
Palazzo told deputies “ we to his first t
'. Spolskl said
were Just fooling around.” In
Palazzo, a self employed car
explaining how DlSano ended up dealer, offered no resistance
lying on the floor with a 25c.il
when arrested at his home
automatic handgun clutched in
See C H A R G E D , page 8A

Jam es C a rm in e Palazzo

Anti-Pollution
Work Ordered
For Port Tanks
By Donna Estes
Herald Staff W rite r
A state agency is ordering the
Seminole County Port Authority to
Install devices to forestall the posslhlllJ y o f a i r p o l l u t i o n at I t s
3 5-mllllon gallon storage tank farm,
rhurglng the facility us constructed
could pollute the atmosphere The
tanksure designed to storr gasoline.
The stale Department of Environ­
mental Regulation told the authority by
letter thul It must apply for a permit
before reactivating operations at the
farm. DER specifically Instructed the
authority to fit five storage tanks with
Internal floating roofs: to attach preaaurr-vacuuin vents on IO tanks und to
Ip a ta ll a lo a d in g m to ca p a b le of lo a ding

M*r«WPlato tor Tm « | VtoKWrt

Facing replacement In a few years — the 'swiveler'
bridge spanning the St. Johns River between

Seminole and Volusia counties, as seen looking
north Irom Seminole.

D ays N u m b e re d For 'Sw iveler' Bridge
The 52-yeur-old It S Highway 17-02
bridge spanning the St. Johns River
between Seminole and Volusia coun­
ties will lie coming down, according to
state Department of Transportation
district engineer C. A Benedict. It will
In- replaced by a modern structure
similar to the Interstate 4 bridge over
the river.
Benedict. In a letter to Sanford City
Manager Warren "Pete" Knowles, said
the 1127 foot long movable bridge will
Ire replaced by one costing $33.5

million. The federal government will new one Is completed, the old. worn
pay for HO percent of the project and two-lane "sw iveler” will be dis­
the slate will pick up the other 20 mantled
percent of the tab. The money will
The new bridge will Ire 45 feet high,
come Irom stale and federal gas tuxrs.
the same height as Its Interstate 4
Cons,ruction Is scheduled to start In coun te rp a rt. Unlike the present
1991 and will take nhout iwo years, movable two-lane bridge, the new one
according to Hill Gray, district project will be non movable and may have
d e ve lo p m e n t und e n v iro n m e n t four lanes.
engineer.
T h e bridge Is bein g replaced
Tlie old bridge will lx- kept opera­ because It’s old and loo expensive to
tional unlit the new me can Ire built operate. Gray said Its movable parts.
along side of It. Gray slid After the
See B R ID G E , page 8 A

'It Can't Happen Here'

Union Carbide: Sabotage Possible In Leak
DANBURY. Conn. (UPII - The deaths
of more than 2.500 people In Bhopal.
India from a gas leak In a Union
Carbide plant — history 's worst chemi­
cal disaster — occurred when wuter
contam ination of a storage tank,
possibly caused by sabotage, went
undetected, the firm says.
In a report by Union Carbide scien­
tists and technicians from the United

'Type A ' Behavior
Not N e ce ssarily Linked
To Heart A tta ck Risk
BOSTON (UPII — A person's risk of
suffering u heart attuck docs not
uppear linked to the highly competi­
tive. aggressive behavior of "Type
A " personalities, a Columbia Univer­
sity rrport savs.^
A study of 510 people who had a
heart uttack found they w rrr no
more likely thun average to have
Type A personalities. However, the
rep o rt. p o b ll«h c d In the New
England .Journal of Medicine and
relcused Wednesday. s|ieculated the
category may be too broad
It said recent evidence Indicates
sulxategorles of Type A behavior
sueJi as hostility und repressed unger
seem to have the Injurious effert on
the heart that overall Type A
behavior was thought to have.
8«* H E A R T , p a g s $A

Stules. the company said 120 «o 240
gallons of wuter "Inadvertently or
deliberately” was allowed to contami­
nate an underground storage tank in
the Hliop.il plant.
T h e mixture started a runaway
chemical reaction that leaked a deudly
cloud of methyl Isocyanate gas over the
sleeping city of Bhopal on Dec. 3. 1984.
killing more than 2.500 people and

Injuring thousands.
Union Carbide Chairm an Wurren
Anderson stopped short of directly
charging sabotage, but said the com­
pany could not rule out the possibility
thul conlamlnullon may have been
deliberate.
"Th e amount of water (hat got Into
this tank took a while to get In there.”
Bee LEAK, page BA

Economy Shifts Into Low G ear
While Inflation Gathers Speed
W A SH IN GTON (UPII _ The U S .
economy Is growing at a sluggish 2.1
percent rate during the first three
months of 1985. an abrupt slowdown
from the fourth quarter's gruwlh of the
gross national product, the Commerce
Department said today.
At the same tim e. Inflation Is
st rongcr.
^ The department's "Hash" estimate of
GNP was far weaker than almost every
leading economist forecast. The fourth
quarter s growth for GNP was also
revised downward, to 4.3 percent at an
annual rate instead of 4.9 percent.
Inflation, as measured by the gov­
ernment's implicit price deflator Is
running at a 5.4 percent annual rate,
nearly twice the rate In the fourth
quarter, largely because of Increased oil
and gas purchases.
Corporate profits for the fourth
quarter, after taxes, grew only 0 4
percent yet turned In a better perfor­
mance than the third quarter's revised

5.7 percent dccllnr.
The department also Included, for the
llrsl time, a measure of corporate cash
flow, showing un Increase of 2.7
percent lu an annual rate of $376 6
hllllun tn the fourth quarter.
The department's "flush" estimate,
made four times a year. Is the govern­
ment's first tentative took at the first
quarter's economy and will likely be
revtsrd up or down next month.
It Is especially significant this time
around because the Ohio savings and
loan rrtsls hus focused worldwide
ultcnlkm on the U S economy — now
highly dependent on foreign Invest­
ment and lending.
Many analysts say world money
m a rk e ts are poised to readjust
themselves because of a perception the
U.S economy Is nearly as weak as
European economics. A slowdown In
such lending would be to the distinct
disadvantage of the U.S. standard of
Bee GNP. p a gs 8 A

Iwo trucks at the same tlme.“
Calling the order "a big old piece of
red tape hanging In the wind." Port
administrator Dennis Dolgncr told the
port board at Its monthly meeting
Wednesday he hus been negotiating
with a gasoline company and a rhrm l
cal firm to lease the tank farm for
gasoline blending or for nan-hazardous

A view of part of the tank farm,
chemical storuge.
W h ile

p ro b le m s

w ill* if w

UKH

arc

ironed nut Dntgnrr said the port wilt
lose about 85.000 In lease revenues
monthly. Cost of the devices hus not
been estimated.
He said he hus turned the matter over
to port consulting engineers. Conklin.
Porter A I lolmes. for study and advice.
Dolgner said the tank form was built
Bee P O R T, page 8 A

U tility Expansion O p p o se d
The Florida I’uhllr Service Com ­
mission Is expected to make a decision
sometime In May on a request of Lake
Monroe Utility Corp. to expand Its
service area to Include 2.500 additional
acres south of the slule Road 46Interstate 4 area
At a public hearing In Sanford
Wednesday, two mrmbers of the state
agency — Gerald Guttler and Katie
Nichols — heard four Lake Monroe
residents and two developers, whose
500-acre proposed housing and golf
course development LMU would pro­
vide with water and sewer service, urge
Ihe request be denied.
The residents complained of odors
from Lake Monroe's sewer plant und
charged that the plant, by dumping
effluent Into Elder Road Ditch und the
Smith Cunal, Is polluting the Si Johns
River.
But Seminole County's Environ­
mental Services Department was tfie
major opponent of the expansion
P a m H a s t i n g s , m a n a g e r of
Environm ental Services, said Ihe
county Is concerned about the quality
of service provided by the utility
company. She said Inspectors from her
department early Wednesday look
water samples from a ditch near the
utility operation to determine whether
sewer effluent Is bring routed there.
Results from tests of those samples
are expected to be uvullablr later today.
The utility's service arra now In­
cludes the Interstate 4 Industrial Park,
the Seminole County Port Authority.
Hookrrtown and the arras in between.

-Jean Melts, luikr Monroe resident
who said she was ap|M-arlng before the
c o m m is s io n as s p o k e s m a n lo r
Hookrrtow n and the 41 property
owners In St. Johns River Estates, told
the commissioners homeowners opj&gt;os&lt;the utility company's diluent holding
ponds and strongly object to the
dumping of effluent Into cither the
Hitler Ditch or the Smith Canal, both of
which empty Into the St. Johns River
She also said that expansion nl ihe
utility would "open the door” to further
Industrial zoning In her urea. "We have
no objection to single family dwellings
served bv wells und septic tanks which
the county's comprehensive land use
plan calls for.” she said
Other Lake Monroe residents who
opposed the request were N W. Strip­
ling. Jack Ray and Jim m y Boston
Meanwhile, developer Howard Pump,
whose planned 500-acre housing dev­
elopment and goll course the utility
plans to serve If expansion Is allowed,
testified that he also opposes expansion
and Is lu accord with the county's
opposition. He said he Is ulso concerned
about the opinions of the public thul
the utility Is not operated properly.
" I want to know the utility will l»r
operated to a high degree." Pump said,
adding his plans cull for a $250 million
development Eugene Chorosy. Pump's
partner In the project, while called as a
witness for the utility, said he had
spoken to J.W . Hickman, owner of the
utility company, ubout the proposed
project, but couldn't recall discussing
Be* U T IL IT Y , page BA

Slugfest N o t Sluggish
FINLEY. Wash (UPU — Swallows may return to
Capistrano and buzzards to Hinkley. Ohio, but
Plnley gets to greet the slugs on Saturday.
In a "race” across the Umatilla Bridge over the
Columbia River, slugs from far and wide will
compete lot a $500 first prize at the third annual
Finley Slug Festival, sponsors said Wednesday
"W c are really looking forward to some coastal
slugs entering because they are some big mean
dudes." said Bob Taylor, a co-founder of the
event.
Last year the festival drew gastropods from all
acroas the Pacific Northwest, hr said, and more
are expected this year.
A $100 prize will be awarded to the smallest
and largest entrants.

TO D A Y
Action Reports.. .....2A
Calenda*............ .....3B
Classifieds.......... 4,SB
Comics................
Dear Abby........
Deaths ...............
Editorial........... ... 4A
Florida
Hospital...............
Nation.................
People.................
Sports ................
Television.........
Weather........... ..B A
World..................

�No Habla Espanol

JA — Evening M trild , Sanford. FI. Thursday, M arch 11, IHS

NATION

'P u t L a n g u a g e B u r d e n O n Im m ig r a n t s , N o t O f f ic ia ls '
MIAMI |UPI| — Immigrants should bear
the burden of learning a second language —
not police officers, firefighters and other
tax-supported employees, said the leader of
a campaign to make English the official
state language.
Dr. Robert Melby, chairman of the Florida
English Campaign, said Wednesday that all
business with government agencies should
be conducted In English. Including calls to
911 emergency lines,
"We have people who call In and can t say
(heir street addresses In English. We have
people dying because of it," said Melby. u
St. Petersburg optometrist and former state
legislator.
"We can either put this monkey on the
back of our new Immigrants, and say If
you're going to be part of this great society
of ours you're going lo have to learn
English, or you're going to have to require
that all of the emergency operators, the
firemen and all. are bilingual or trilingual "
Melby said.

IN BRIEF

First Ohio SSL
Gets O K To Roopen
COLUMBUS, Ohio |UI’I) — At Irani one of Ohio's cloned
state-chartered saving* and loan assoc til ions has been
given approval to reopen Immediately, a spokesman for the
state Commerce Department said today.
Superintendent Thomas Battles also told reporters he
believes that all 68 Institutions, closed since Iasi Friday by
order of Oov. Richard F. Celeste, will eventually reopen
without a loss of money by customers and without further
"runs" on deposits
"I anticipate we're probably going to have an opening ...
certainly by Friday," Battles said Wednesday after meeting
privately for two hours with executives of the savings and
loans to brief them on procedures.
Battles said regulations will be In place by Friday for
500.000 depositors of the thrifts that arc still closed lo
l»cgln drawing out $750 as provided In the emergency law
reopening the Institutions.
One savings and loan official said some of Ills colleagues
may sue the Ohio De|&gt;oslt Ouaraniee Fund for their share
of the estimated $40 million paid out to Home State when a
"ru n " on deposits followed Ihr revelation that Home State
may have lost $100 million In the collapse of ESM
Government Securltes Inc. of Fori Lauderdale, Fla.

W ASHINGTON IUI'1) For
the lust four years. William
Brock promoted free trade,
sometimes at the expense of
American Jobs. Now. as Presi­
de ni Reagan's nominee for laltor
secretary, he wanis to "create as
many Job* as I can."
Brock. 54. a suave |&gt;olltlcal pro
tapped by Reagan Wednesday lo
rrslorc order lo a department
leaderless for six months since
Raymond Donovan's Indictment
for fraud und larceny, says his
role as labor secretary would not
con filet with his vlrws as U.S.
trade representative, when lie
foughi lo keep the nation open lo
foreign goods.
"This couniry cannot, us an
economy, create the maximum
number of Jobs, achieve the
maximum level of growth (and)
deal with Inflation ... If we have
protectionism." he said. "Tha t's
a contradiction In terms. Protec­
tionism will ultimately destroy
Jobs In this country and It Is Huwrong way logo."
Brock must he confirmed by
the Senate for the jxist.
A vo id in g questions about
specific Uibor Department poli­

NEW YORK (U l’l) — Subway gunman Bernhard Goetz
has decided to tell a grand Jury — which could charge him
with attempted murder — why he shot four teenagers uftcr
one of the youths asked him for $5.
One of Goetz's lawyers announced Wednesday his client
would apjiear Ix-forr a second grand Jury Investigating the
shooting. Goetz's attorneys lost Iwo bids this week to block
or restrict the new probe.
Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau asked
for a new grand Jury lo consider attempted murder charges
against Goetz, saying a mystery witness could testify about
the shooting.
The Initial Jury refused to indict Goetz on attempted
rnurdrrcharges, charging him Instead with Illegal weapons
|Mmsesslon Goetz pleaded Innocent lo the charge und Is
Iree on $5,000 hall
Goetz, who did not appear before the first grand Jury,
der ided Wednesday to testify Ix-forr Hie new panel He Is
scheduled lo testify March 29. a spokeswoman for tils
attorney, Barry Slotnlck. said.
Goetz, 37, admits he shot the four teenagers Dec, 22 tail
claims he tired Ik-cuiisc they had surrounded him and
asked him for $5. Goetz contends he feared he was about lo
Ik - mugged

First Woman Takes Iditarod
NOME, Alaska |UPI) — Libby Riddles, a relative
unknown In the world of long-distance ring mushing,
braved treacherous sea Ice and blinding blizzards lo claim
I he 1,135-rulle Idllarorl rare and become lls llrsl female
champion.
Riddles. 28, crossed the llnlsh line on Front Street
Wednesday after IH days 20 minutes and 17 seconds on
tile Rigid Mali fruit) Anchorage, riding behind a team of
dogs averaging 0 nijih, lo lx- greeted by 2.(XX) cheering
fans and rxplndlng lire works over I he nearby Bering Sea
Ire.
Shr gained the lead In the $50,(XX) first-prize race earlier
In the week hy crossing thr 58 mites of the Norton Sound
Ice pack
between the Eskimo villages of Shaktoollk on
the coast of northwest Alaska und Koyuk on the Seward
Peninsula — bet w ren driving blizzards
Riddles led by as much us 50 miles In the closing days of
thr race Ihut drew 61 learns lo the starling Hue March 2.

A man who apparently wanted
revrngr on u dog who bit his
girlfriend's son on the face three
weeks ago confronted the dog al
its Cliuluota home, chased the
animal through the house and
eventually wounded It In ih r
rrur legs alter emptying two
handguns Inside Hie house, the
dog's owner said.
Calvin Brown of 561 3rd St..
Cliuluota, said his 13 year-old
son. Miller Calvin Blown, was ul
lioirn. alone with his Siberian
husky. Nlekl. when the man
broke Into Ihe house about 6:30
pill. Wednesday, ransacked It,
broke Into a locked bedroom,
grubbed a 357-Magnum revolv­
er Irom the closet and chased the
ring through the house firing Ihr
gun
Young Drown telephoned his
parents when the man broke In.
ills luthe said Ttie Intruder
threw the phone to the floor und
broke It. Th e boy hid under u
table as Hie man emptied the
llrsl gun und returned to the
bedroom und got a .23-rallber
automatic pistol, which hr also
emptied Inside the house, u
shrrtirs report said.
Ntckt was wounded during the
stnxitlng spree and 1* In fair
condition today. Brown said.
Brown suld the man had been
to Ills home before and waa
angry at hit dog, He said the
man's girlfriend's 6-year-old boy
was bitten when he entered
Brown’s home ulung with the
suspect and his mother. The dog
didn't know the boy and at­
tacked him. The bite was treated
and animal control Investigated
the Inc Idem and clrarcd the dog.
Brown suld.
W h e n the m a n f i r s t
app roa che d B ro w n 's hom e
Wednesday he brandished a
knife ut the dog and then
threatened him with a lire
wrench taken from the truck.
Ihe rrport said. The man used
Ihe wrench to pry open a kitchen

TAMPA (UPI) — Postal carriers were loaded down with
an additional loud today — 120.(XX) qurslloiilialrra from
tile U S Bureuu of the Census.
Tampa Is one of two cities — Jersey City, N.J., Is the
other — selected lot field lestliig enumerating procedures
to Ik- used nationally In 1990
Uuestlouualrrs will be delivered lo every household
within thr city limits today They are lo hr filled out und
mulled back In jxislage pald envelope* Sunday,
z\s for questions dealing with lifestyles, bureau nlllctala
said Information nhlulnrd from those urrus provide
guidance for both public and private planning,
Personal questions Include how many babies u woman
has hurl, not counting stillbirth, stepchildren or udopted
rhlldrru. whether the prison has lx-rn married more than
once und It so, did Hie first marriage end because of the
druth of a spouse
Other question* cover employment and unemployment
situations, carpool Informal Ion, salaries und occupation

Conserve Water O r Else..,
W EST PALM BEACH (UPI) - South Florida residents
will probably sultrr mandatory water restrictions If they
don't begin turning their tups less fuquently now, officials
say.
Soulh Florida Water Management District ofllclals said
rnunugrrsol 192 public water systems have until March 2U
to prove their customers are conserving water.
If they can't, residents will probably be restricted In the
num brm f times they can water their lawns und wash their
car* each week.

HOSPITAL NOTES
O IK HANOIt
ADMISSIONS

Tarl *

Linda 0 Carganlat

PavtJ CMrMgy
KslMssn f Gubar t

SltaranA HaKamba
Jamas M Llvm*Oon
V K S W B PlW M n

L Suita Wi Miami
A

IIW N l

laniard
Ju ris t M LlrWgilon
Hobart H Matnat
Vint ant Hutto OoUona
Jonn P twmmar OoOona
Ju d y * Manmglalt.O/AngsClIy
Lto»d Par toil. Orsngs City
0o,&gt;d H ' v » r . Cincinnati

•1STHI

laniard
H (thord and KalMaon t

,
Gllbsrt a baby

girl
c&lt;u&gt;&gt;b«,r|

AM /till A. Jaknaan. Dallana

Dsiions

William Brock
trade can negotiate with almost
anyone."
While House chief of staff
Donald Regan persuaded Brock
to take the Job during the trip to
Canada Sunday and Monday for
Reagan's summit wlih Prime
Minister Brian Mulronry

ori slate Road 419. Riggs died al Hie scene.
Fonlulnr was irculcd by paramedics for minor
Injuries.
According to a Florida Highway Patrol report.
Fontaine's 1972 Chevrolet station wagon was
speeding westbound when It left the road at ltie
curve. T h r vehicle flipped, coming to rest on lls
top with Riggs under It on nearby railroad tracks.
Fontaine was originally charged with UUt
manslaughter but pleaded no contest to Hie lesser
charge u! vehicular homicide on Jan 2.
Mize also suspended Fontaine'* driver's license
for 3 years and ordered him lo rrfruln Irom using
drugsor alcohol during his probation
— Deane Jordan

TA L L A H A S S E E (UPI) - If the
lo n g s h o t c o n s t i t u t i o n a l
amendment setting up a slate
lottery gets through the Florida
Senate, the odds against It pass­
ing the House may lie even
greater.
House Speaker James Harold
T h o m p s o n . D -G r e lu a . said
Wednesday he opposes funding
education through a public lot­
tery. Thompson has the political
punch to p rrvrn t practically
anything from getting a twothird* majority — HO voles — In
the House, so his opposition
could stifle the lottery.
Unlike Senate President Harry
Johnston, who said he opposes
Ihe lottery but would vote for It
because about BO percent of his
constituents consider the num­
ber* a good way of raising state
revenue without a tax hike.
Th o m p s o n said he has no
q u a lm s n b o u l k i l l in g th r
amendment if It reaches the
House.
" I w o u ld hope Ihut th r
Legislature would not place the
lottery on the ballot,*' said
Thompson. “ I wouldn't mind
going down In history us the guy
that killed It.”
On another topic, Thompson
said hr expects Ihe House lo
pau

a

b ill

r a la lriK

th e

le g a l

drinking age to 21. The Senate
Commerce Committee has bot­
tled up Hie Senate version of that
bill, but tl Is expected to get
Senate floor action early next
month.
T h r House companion bill has
82 cosponsors, m ore than
enough to assure Its passage.
Under Ihe National Transpor­
tation Act of 1984. any slate not
raising Ihr drinking age to 21 by
Oct. 1. 1980 slunds to lose 3
percent of tts federal highway
money thr first year and 10
percent of Its allocation in each
subsequent year.

Man Gets Revenge On Dog; Shoots It In Legs

Tampa Is Test City
For Census Procedures

ll&gt;Sr«

cy. Brock acknowledged he has a
long way to go to repair relations
betwren the administration and
organized labor.
"We've had some very difficult
limes and we have a lot of
communicating lo do." he said.
"But that's precisely what I
would like to do."
His sentiments were echoed by
union leaders, who have been
bitter about thrlr exclusion from
policy matters and whal they
considered high-handed treat­
ment from Donovan, who re­
signed Friday.
A F L -C I O P re sid e n t Lane
Kirkland said he “ welcome* the
nomination. ... We have worked
with him In many ureas over thr
years While we have not always
agrerd. he has earned our re­
spect."
The announcement was a
surprise, coming will) only 30
m inu tes' notice and going
against the conventional wisdom
that W hite House pollllcut
director Edward Rollins would
be named to the post he coveted.
Ily way of explanation. Reagan
said. "Anyone who's spent tour
years dealing wlih International

A Sanford man who pleaded no contest to
vehicular homicide In connection wlih the death
of a It lend who was a passenger In Ills car when ||
crushed has been sentenced lo 5 years probation.
John Michael Fontaine. 31. of 2521 Polnselta
Avr.. was sentenced Wednesday try Seminole
Circuit Judge C Vernon Mize J r who also
ordered Fontaine lo pay a $5(X) fine, complete
2-10 hours of com m unity service and pay
$2,425.25 In funeral costs to thr family of Rodger
Riggs, 29. of 5 15 Elm St.. Sanford.
According lo court records. Riggs was killed at
2 50 u.tn. April 11 when he was crushed tx-ncuth
Fontulne's cur uftrr 11 left the roadway at
Wagner's curve. 1.4 miles rusl of Winter Springs

IN BRIEF

CM r*M S*n

Lottery's Chance
O f Passing House
Seen A s Long Shot

Friend's Death Nets Man Probation

FLORIDA

Wadnatda?

successful petition would require nearly
342.000 signatures. Including 8 percent of
the voters In each of 10 congressional
districts who were registered for the last
presidential election.
"We ll get it. There's not question we ll
get It." said Terry Robbins. Dade County
chairwoman for the campaign.
Melby argued that the bill would be the
first step toward saving millions of tax
dollars used to translate ballots, stale
licensing tests, and other government doc­
uments.
T h r bill Itself does not contain any
changes in the way tax money is used, or
any new language restrictions.
"You'll still be able to go to the opera In
tlallan and order in Chinese at a Chinese
restaurant. This Is not anll-Spanlsh. antiVietnamese nr anti-speaking other lan­
guages It’s pro-English." Melby said. "It
would not prevent people from speaking any
language they want except In their business
with the government."

Brock's Task: 'Create
As Many Jobs As I Can'

Goetz To Tell His Side

Csntrsl

Melby debated the proposed English
Language Amendment Wednesday with
Sen. Roberta Fox. D-Mlaml. at a meeting of
the political Tiger Bay Club, T h r amend­
ment would designate English as Florida's
official language, and give the Legislature
power to enact "appropriate" legislation.
Fox called the bill "an Insult to the new
generation of Immigrants" and Melby**
comments on Hie 91 I system "frightening "
“ You're saying to a youngster who's
having somebody assault them that you
have to let them because you can't complain
In English?" asked Fox.
Fox said ihe proposal would drive away
tourist* and foreign businessmen, divert
attention from "real problems" and result In
an onslaught of lawsuits that would clog
Florida's already crowded courts.
"It makes Florida look like a bunch of
Intolerant bigots." Fox said
The Florida English Campaign began
collecting petition signatures Jan. 28 to pul
the proposed amendment on the ballot, z\

La rry J andVtthWB Poor tan. • kaby girl
Donald J and Jayta A VattpoW a baby
bay. CasMibarry

t

A c tio n R e p o rts
★

Fires
* Courts
■k Police Beat

door to enter Hie home, the
report said.
Ellon Newton Hulclncr. 27. of
532 Eldorado Way. Casselberry,
has been charged with armed
burglary and wreeklrss display
of a firearm. He was arrested at
Ills home at 9:36 p m Werlnes
duy and wus being held In lieu ul
$8 OOOtxmd.
BURGLARIES &amp; THEFTS

A thief "reached Into" a
bedroom window at *37 Lake
Monroe Terrace und stole a
television worth about $300. a
p o lice re p o rt s a id . H e le n
Lawrence. 49. the resident of the
apartment and owner of the
television, reported lo Sanford
police the set wus taken Monday
night.
Tw o ladders valued together ut
$100 were stolen from the side of
a trailer Monday or Tuesday,
Sanford police reported The
truck was parked at Spencer
Rest Control. 2562 S Bark Ave.,
Sanford.
Louts K. Huubncr. 41. of lOO
Covcrldgc Lane, lomgwood. re­
ported to deputies Monday that
$1,094 worth of Items, some of
which he last saw tn December
and February are mlaalng front
his home. A two-way radio and
firearms arc among the Rents
missing, deputies reported.
Forty-four boxes of plaster
m ud are m issing from Ihe
arage of a house being built at
068 Hutton Point, Long wood

Cecil G a rk ley. 52. of 2198
Springs Landing, Longwood.
re|xtried to deputies that Ills
mud, worth $250. was stolen
Sunday or Monday
Stanley E. Trojak III. 28. n(
505 &amp;tn Marie Avc.. Altamonte
Springs, repo, ted to deputies
tlull his $400 gold und diamond
ring was stolen front a locker at
ERA Ikiubt. 100 S. Forest City
Houti. Forest City. Monday. TroJak said the key was In the
W k c r when the ring was stolen.
FIRE CALLS

The Sanford Fire Department
responded lo the tallowing calls.
Tuesday

— 10 a .in ., *101 Sem in ole
Gardens, rescue A 33-year-old
woman who fell out of bed.
jxxulbly breaking her hip. was
taken to Hie liospit.il

— 1:54 p m ., Sprlngvlcw Drive,
llrr. Firelighters were In the area
tn make sure a bmsh fire being
fought by the county didn't
thiratett Sanford homes.
— 2:08 p .m .. 1401 Seminole
Hlvd.. rescue. A 41-year-old
woman hit by a car waa taken to
thr hospital. Sandra Clough, of
1822 Sanford Landing. Sanford,
suffered a head Injury and
bruises to her arms, legs and
shoulders.
— 4:33 p m.. 1004 Maple Ave..
rescue. A 47-yrar-old woman
was hit on the head with a blunt
object She was treated for cuta
but refused to be taken (o the
hospital.
— 5:43 p m.. 809 Catalina Ave..
rescue. An 86-yrar-old man who
fell, possibly breaking hla hip.
was takrn lo the hospital.
— 9 40 p m .. 1903 Maple Ave.,
rescue. A 57-year-old woman
who had a possible heart attack
refused to be taken (o the
hospital.
— 11:18 p in., 13th Street and

French Avenue, rescue. There
was an auto accident with no
Injuries.
DU1 ARRESTS

The following persons have
been arrested In Sem inole
County on a charge of driving
under Hie Influence:
— Glenn Thomas Morgan, 30, of
679 Vlsluw lll Drive, Winter
Springs, was urrested at 9:45
p rn. Tuesday on Tuskawllla
Road Just south of W inter
Springs after he almost drove
head-on Into a Florida Highway
Patrol car while attempting to
l»ass other vehicles.
— James Mlrharl Gridin. 52. of
1327 Q u in t u p le t D r iv e ,
Casselberry, at 1:29 a m. Wed­
nesday after his truck drove of!
slate Hoad 427 In Sanford and
onto the shoulder several times.
— Juna M. Jones of 201 W. 15th
St.. Sanford, at 3:10 a m. Wed­
nesday after her ear was clocked
t r a v e lin g 8 m p h on U .S .
Highway 17-92. Sanford. The
vehicle was swerving from lane
to lane and Ms. Jonea reportedly
slammed on the brakes of the
car several ttmes.

E v e n in g llc m ld
(USPS Ul )M)
Thursday. M arch i t , i t u

Vol 77, No ISO

Pvbiitbad 0*11* an* Sunday, aicayt
Saturday By TK* Saatard Karald.
lo«. NS N. PraocS A**.. Saatard.
Fla. n m .
Sacaad Clan Pattaga Paid at Saatard.
FtarIda Jim
Hama Oalitsry Waak. It.Ill Man*.
M.8i t Manlbt. 114 II, a Mantta.
UI.BB* vaar. Ut St *y Mall: Waak
It.SS* Maath, USti I Maatki.
flSBii t Manlkt. ill la, Yaar,
MM*.
Fbana (Nil m Mil.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, El.

Thursday. March II, IttJ— JA

Skylark Residents Promised Sewage Plant Won't Grow
Bjr Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer

Kcsldrnls or Skylark sub­
division have been promised the
Longwood C ity Commission
havr no intention of Increasing
lh r capacity of Skylark Sewage
I re a l m en I P la n t b e y o n d
200.000 gallons even though the
rity had a permit from the slate
Department of Environmental
Regulation lo expand ihe plant
to 400.OCX) gallons
• The proximity of the sewer
plant and tts failure to work
properly have long been a sore
|*&gt;lnt between the residents and
the city. Approximately 100
Skylark residents met with Ihe
commission In city hall Monday
ttlghl prior to I hr regular inert­
ing to discuss ltrms of concern
such as the sewer plant, the
rfllucnt disposal [Minds which
ar« replacing the neighborhtM xi
bull park, and the type of zoning
that might be done in Ihe county
adjacent loSkylark.
Longwood City Commissioner
l-iirry Goldberg assured the resi­

dents that the plant would not
I m - expanded and he proposed
■he city find a site outside of
residential developments on
which to construct a new sewage
treatment plant as a tong range
solution to the sewer demands
b ro u g h t on by th e c it y 's
explosive growth
During the regular meeting,
p r o j e c t e n g in e e r R a c h e l
Christensen, of Dyer. Riddle.
Mills and Precourt. Inc., said
DER has no intention of petroll­
ing any more sewer connections
before the two new percolation
(Minds have been monitored and
arr working properly — a pro­
cess which usually takes 3-4
months. She said stir did not see
any point In the city's approving
any further flow commitments
at this time.
Th e engineering firm was
hired lo help solve the sewer
emergency In the city. Because
the two plants — Skylark and
Columbus Harbour— were not
operating properly, DER has
withheld approval for further

hookups since last year and this
has stymied development.
There are 183 000 gallons a
day a lre a d y co m m itte d at
Skylark, leaving only 17.000
gallons to lie parceled out. The
actual flow- at the plant Is
averaging 110,000 gallons per
day. according to the engineer.
The cfTlurnt disposal ponds for
Skylark are being constructed
by the contractor. ShannonWhittle. In the Candyland Park
The ponds are scheduled for
completion In a couple of weeks
Al that time Mrs Christensen
recommends the effluent How be
diverted front the old percolation
pondslo the new
Candyland Park was referred
lo by a Skylark resident as
Pooh-Pooh Park"
' There's no place for kids to
play, you’ve given us two sewer
(Minds where w r had a baseball
Held.** complained a resident.
"W e decided to use the area
with trees across the street for a
(day area and the ballpark for
the treatment plant " rxpl.lined

Mayor Harvey Smcrllson.
Commissioner Larry Goldberg
said that this was the use
originally Intended for the two
sites bv the developer.
Mrs. Christensen said she has
suhtulltrd a request to have
l.ongwood on a Its! of cities
eligible for grant money In hopes
of applying for a $500,000 grant
for refurbishing the Skylark and
C o lu m b u s H arb our sewage
treat mem plants
James W. Poacher, new ad­
ministrator of South Seminole
C o m m u n i t y H o s p i t a l In
Longwood. was asked at the
commission meeting If tie would
Im- willing to give up the 44.000
gailona It has hern allotted at the
city's Skylark Sewage Treat­
ment Plant and hook up with a
treatment plant being built by
Georges St Laurent In an Indus­
trial park Poucher replied that
the hospital had paid the cllv
$202,000 In the past two years
lot sewrr hiMikups and wanted to
know "Are we going to recoup

our up Iron! costs" Wr vr al­
ready paid for hookups to one
plant and now you want us to
[tay again somewhere else
"Do you expect our (MlIntis to
pay twice?" he asked
The engineering Mrm was also
asked lo look Into the city's
drainage situation, sewer use-,
and the land use plan
City Attorney Gerald Korman
was asked by the- commission to
draw up a resolution calling lor
phone Inquiries inim tlw public
to consultants such as himself
and the engineers to lie referred
*

*

*

*

*

*

tiack to theclly commission
Korman and Dyer. Riddle have
In-cn bombarded bv phone calls
trnm the public wanting them to
answer questions about city
business and they are paid hv
the citv by the hour and Korman
wanted elarlllcatIon it lie should
answer the questions from the
public and bill the city. He said
to answer -ill Ihe questions
interrupts the consultant's other
work Calls should In- directed lo
the city clerk, city administrator,
or commissioners, the coinni'ssiott said.

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

L o n g w o o d P u ttin g The B ra k e s O n S k a te b o a r d R am p s
Th e Longwood ( J i y Com ­
m is s i o n h as o r d c r e d a
crackdown on the skateboard
ramps tli.it have Im-cii popping
tip like mushrooms on the lawns
of the city's residential areas.
Alter receiving complaints
about the noise, (raffleJams, and
eysores caused by the ramps
Olid those who use them, city
ollleliils have been ItMikiog lido
ways of controlling what they
sec as a menace. Al Ihclr March
1 I meeting, commissioners gave
preliminary approval lo an ordi­
nance amending the zoning or­
dinance in control “ unroofed
Surfaces prepared (or sports"
which are now exempt from the
regulations
However, City Attorney Gerald
Korman. said that wasn't neces­
sary. Alter researching city
t tides, Korman reported to the
tnmmlHxkm Monday night that
the ramps arc already lllrgal
under existing city zoning laws.
Korman said the ram|is arc
Illegal In IM A zoning as they are
not “ accessory buildings or
Mrutiurcs customarily related to
structures" and would come
under the "noises, vibrations,
and other objectionable infliicnees" banned under the zoning
regulations. Fuiliermnrr. he waul
they could Im- a "hazard lo life
and limb" should a tornado or
hurricane strike.
'flu- fulhrr of a teenage son
who enjoys the sport, Korman
admitted that his legal opinion
was going lo cause him trouble
al home, hul said."It is a ricur
violalIon unless die city changes
t hr ordinance ”
He said skateboard ramp rul­
ing seems to Im- a fad and will

the side or rear ol tin property
line.
Ill addition In said the city's
n qulrcim-nts slate ramps rati Im­
ho taller than eight h-ct and
must be structurally sound
I'clcrs stated tin ramps can lie
used only by reside ills mid their
visit ties.
Tin cllv ol t asstllM'Fty has
much strti ter regulations
We have a euudiUonal list mi
I hem." said Casselberry building
and z o n in g ofltclal F ra n k
Broyles He said residents mils,
go iM-fore the ciiv council and
obtain a conditional use (rertnll
lor a sk.milliard ramp liroylcs
said that alihongii die rouiuil
tins lieen asked two or three
times in the pusi six months to
approve ramps. It has yet to do
so
Broyles said that the council
used a mimbef of reasons for
iiirn ln g down the requests
Generally tin- council has cited
the noise the location nl iln-m
and Ihe fact they feel that
they' re a safely hazzrtrd." he
said

So lar the round! has Im-c ii
able to control the number ol
skateboard rumps In the city by
n losing requests (or the coudllloii.il use |&gt;erniUn. tun M o v ie s
Mild Hie PflUnPIT tflfiv' sm m try
another approach.

"W e may go ahead and outlaw

them." he said
—Jane Casselberry

^:0

P S S S S T ...

W aste Busters
Facing 10%
Budget Cuts
W ASH IN GTON tUI'll - The
Investigators who track down
government waste anil fraud
could see their budget cut 10
ierrent In 1980. five years after
heir office was lM-efed up by
President Kragan making gtsid
on a campaign promise.
Hudgrl figures for fiscal year
MHO. adjusted for Inflation,
show the Inspectors general face
$32 million to $30 million In
cuts
Hep. Jack Brooks. D-Trxas.
chairman of Ihe House govern­
ment operations committee,
railed the cuts "ridiculous" and
“ foolish" and said his committee
will Investigate.
The budget reductions come
as Congress Is questioning the
Independence of the Inspectors
general, especially when their
budgets ure reviewed by agency
officials who oversee programs
that may come under scrutiny of
on Inspector general's auditors
and criminal Investigators.
An offlclal of the Office of
M a n a g e m e n t a n d B u d g e t,
acknowledging the administra­
tion's plan lo cut the offices'
binding, said that decision Is a
‘’lougheall."
‘•'"The IGs received substantial
IttrrruBca In resources and
personnel from 1981 to 1985."
said the official, who requested
anonymity H r said funding for
Ihe Inspectors general during
Reagan's first term Increased by
02 percent — figures not ad­
justed for inflation.
; “ In llghl of those substantial
iru reuses, we felt they ran take
their fair share of the reductions
this year .... it Is not a dremphasis of the program. It's a
Idrgrre of pure fairness,"
1 T h r Agriculture Department's
inspectors general office will
have the most severe reduction.
•The inspector general, wlio Is
‘r esponsible for Investigating
abuses In the food stamp and
other entitlement programs. Is
programmed for a $5 million
reduction, according to 0MB and
department figures.

and argue their &lt;use It they lose,
they face |M»sslbh lines
Charles Woodworth of 209
Tnllguir Trail, laingwund. which
is m the county, complained
about u skateboard In Ills
WtMidlands neighborhood that is
Id left high and 30 leel wide Hr
said Ihe skatelMiarders start ar­
riving at 2 p m and by 5 p m
there are 10 ears parked on ImiiIi
sides of the street.
Woodworth displayed photo­
graphs taken of the activities ut
Ihe ramp. Including nudity.
H r said hr Is taking his
problem to Seminole County
ollltialx Friday, but he came to
die city commission to find nui
whai Longw ood was doing in
solve die skateboard ramp pro­
blem
Most other cities in Scmlnole
Cnnniy have had little or no
I rouble with skab board ramps
Sanford Imllding offlclal Gurv
W in n said tin- t in has no
regulations covering sknltiMiard
ramps and has not had any
romplalniHalMiul them
However. Altamonte Springs
and CasscIlM-rry have guidelines
governing the rain (is.
‘‘W r treal them as accessory
s t r u c t u r e s ." said W lttdeell
Prlefs. director ol c o m m u n ity
ell-vcTopinciil ftir A ll ant tipi r '
Springs. Pctrni said the cllv
requires Ihe rumps Im- located In
the track yards ol homes and
inusi he al least seven feel from

prntMihly dts.qqM.ir eventually
Commissioner Ed Myers, who
he said his grandson bus a
soundproofed skalr-lMiard ramp
said. " I don't sec anything
wrong with skateboards, hut we
nerd lo regulate these ramps II
they're not projH-rly constructed,
the city can regulate I hem. riot
outlaw them."
"I've had first-hand experience
w it h s k a te b o a rd r a m p s ."
Charlotte Harvey o( Second
I’lace said She said It Is iqt to
the owner to (Miller- the ramps
and see that they are not
annoying ihe neighbors.
"W e don't allow smoking or
nudity and we control the noise
mnl cars. We have pm our son
on tin- |oh ol enforcing Ihe rules
and II gives him a tremendous
sense of responslhlliy."
"It's a fun. healthy thing, a
nice allernallve lo hanging
a ro u n d on Ihe co rn e r and
slashing lire*.' Mrs. Harvey
said "It should Im liMiked al on a
ease-by-case basts."
Since skalebo.ud tamps In
general are in violation of the
ordinance, the code enforcement
olllerr lias no discretion In ban­
ding out citations on the basis ol
how well they ore constructed.
Korman m UI.
..
The officer has been given the
go-ahead to cite Ihe owners,
who. If they want to contest the
matter, will have to go Iwforr the
city's code enforcement hoard

W A N T TO B U Y

/

FU R N ITU R E TH IS '
TH U R SD AY, FRIDAY,

/

---------' X

&lt; -—

1O

^

S A TU R D A Y OR S U N D A Y . . . .
]

S O F A , LO V ES I E A T
mown

TMNO, PARSON U $

Jl

ittim i

99

t

NOW

jj
1

EAtir AMRICAN, ANTVON
NYLON DUCKP*JNT
2 ONLY
t P P
MS. t$4t
▼
NOW
U U

W

S“

S O F A , CHAI R

|

R

|

S O FA , LO V ES EA T

BEDROOMN

C IIIT C

O W

WE HAVE A SELECTION OF
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
FURNITURE ON DISPLAY

1L

SCOQ

a 11"*

*799

O W

,J

;

$v

BAtun .

~™ *1099

*799
DRESSER, MIRRI
CHEST, HEADMJ
(FULL Of QUEE
AND NICHTSTAI

Si

st

?

RECUNERS
mm
$AA
FABRICS
4 ONLY

VUP

KG.

•V RASSFU. CONTEMPORARY
STY11, OAN TRIM.
Blue m m
$

SiST

4 OOO

lZ o o |

$/

179
GREAT SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPT.

• B A S S ETT
• BROYHILL
• BURUNGTON
• BERNHARDT
• SEALY
• LANE
•TREND
• MANY OTHER BRANDS

J

*899

NOW

H

IL lS S a ffilU ti

40 NO. DIXIE HIGHWAY

N O L L ’S F U R N IT U R E
OPENMOM.-fRl. M ; SAT. »* ; SUN. 12:30-5

-m

aww•

i
{

S O F A , L O V E S E A T , C H A IR 1

S O FA , LO V ES EA T

CHIPPENDALE Lit, LKNT RUST
PRINT

9„
s flNI V
5 PIECE " 1
* W lY U
M

IAHR00 TRIM, FLORIDA FLORAL
PRINT
TWO ONLY

FLORAL PRINT. MUTUAL LOOM
CUSHION

VER

;o

S O F A , C H A IR

S O FA , LO V ES EA T

m m . wooo i ■HR IV

(

1

IT T L E

1

" " X

R A

(HIGHWAY 17-W) CASSELBERRY, FL

-420

£.

�Evening Herald
300

(USPS 411 2M )
n . p r e n c ii a vf ... Sa n f o r d . f l a .

32771
A m i Code 305 322 2611 or H3I&gt;09I93
Thursday, March 21, IMS— 4A
W syn# 0 . D oyle, P u bIH her
Th o m a s O io rJa n o , M a n a g in g E dito r
M e lv in A d kin s, A d ve rtis in g D irector

llomr Delivery Week. 9110 Month. M 75 1 Months,
•14 25; fl Months, 827 OO Year, $5 TOO Itv Mall Wrrk.
81 ao Month. MOO 3 Months. SDtrXMl Months 832 V)
Yr.ir 800 00

Great Lakes
Water Tap
It "a not exactly an OPEC of water, but the
unlt-water-dlvcrslon coalition recently formed
Ijy leaders of the eight American slides and
two Canadian provinces that border on the
Great Lakes has something of the same Idea
iK'tiind It. As keepers of the world s largest
reservoir of fresh water — 65 trillion gallons
of It — the Great laikrrs know they have the
lion's share of an essential resource that
could vMtn Ik - in great demand to quench the
ever-deepening thirst of the Sunbelt. Thus
they have agreed to resist any attempts to
draw water out of the Great Lakes basin Into
water-poor areas.
Th e signing of what Is called the Great
Lakes Charter carries no enforceable
authority. In the United States, allocation of
water resources appears to a be a congressio­
nal prerogative. I in t its a statement of regional
|M»llcy, the charter Is a prudent move —
environmentally und economically.
Although there are currently no active
plans to divert Great Lakes witter, the Idea
has been discussed and pressure In that
direction Is foreseeable. According to one
analysis, the Ogallala Aqullcr that supplies
water to much of the American Southwest
will run dry In -10 years. And proposals have
been made to pipe water from the Great
Lakes to western coalfields, where it would be
mixed with crushed coal to form a slurry that
would he piped tn other parts of the country.
Hut why shouldn't the Great Lakes slates
and provinces share their water wealth with
their less-fortunate fellow North Americans?
One reason Is that the region Itself Is
consuming ever-largcr amounts of Great
Lakes water — a trend lhilt the International
Commission on the Great Lakes Water costs
the region $50 million a year In reduced
power generation and cargo-carrying capacity
plus, additional expenses lor Increased
channel-dredging and water-pumping.
Perhaps most Important, water-diversion
would neutralize one of the Great Lakes
region's best hopes lor competing with the
South amt Southwest lor industry, jobs und
tax liase. Northerners don't want the Sun­
belt's recent growth and prosperity to dry up
and blow away In another -10 years. Hut
neither do they want the "Parehhelt" stales
to keep overtaxing their own scarce water
resources on the expectation that the Great
Lukes will hull them out. As Wisconsin Gov.
Anthony Karl puls It. rather than pipe water
lo make the desert bloom. Industries and
people "ought to come lo the water." The
Great Lakes Charter serves fair warning that
they might someday have no other choice.

For The Defense
Twenty years ago. when the Supreme Court
ordered slides to provide lawyers lor poor
criminal defendants, the reaction was over­
whelmingly positive. Without legal repre­
sentation. it Wiis widely — and correctly —
thought, the right to a trial becomes a mere
formality.
Now the Justices have gone further, ruling
H-l that when the sanity ol an accused
criminal Is at Issue, psychiatric help must hr
provided. This decision evokes a far more
mixed res|K)usc: While attorneys are c learly
needed to help an accused prepare a defense,
It's less clear that psychiatrists have a vital
role In the courtroom. Nevertheless, this
judgment of the Justices — the (Irsl decision
lo expand criminal defendants' rights In over
a decode — is ihr rigid one,
The facts ot the ease suggest why. Glen
Ake. tried and convicted ol two murders In an
Oklahoma court, was Initially diagnosed by
state psychiatrists us psycho tie ami unable to
defend Idmtrlf. When Ake was subsequently
Judged compctunl to stand trial, he bad legal
assistance — bid no psychiatrist lo help In
preparing u defense based on Ake's mental
slide at tite time*ol the killings.
Th e prosecution was under no such
constraint. Its psychiatrist testified that Ake
was u dangerous man. and that unchallenged
evidence doubtless hcl|&gt;cd convince the Jury
Ibid be should be put to death. That's the
verdict scl aside by the Supreme Court
decision.

BERRYS WORLD

"So what it they didn't take you in that last
roundup Hey — you're STILL a top mobster in
my bookt"

D O N A L D LA M BR O

It Seems Nuts To Regulate Cashews
W ASHINGTON — The cash crunch at the
overstaffed Interstate Commerce Commission
has renewed a perennial question that Congress
must soon answer: Why. in the midst of 8200
billion deficits. Is this regulatory anachronism
brllig kept alive?
Alter deliberately spending more than Con­
gress appropriated for Its fiscal 1985 operations,
the ICC ts now pleading for an emergenry 5*1 5
million supplement. If Congress refuses, warns
ICC Chairman Perse II Taylor Jr., nearly 1.000
e m ployees w ill find th e m se lve s being
lurloughed one day a week, without pay.
beginning April I
Thai prospect sent shuddrrs through South
Dakota Sen. l-arry I'resslrr. an ICC supporter
who In a "Dear Colleague" letter said dental of
die added funding "would destroy the ICC. Uy
pulling them out of business one day a week,
you might as well close them down."
That would not only bring cheers from
deregulators in and out of Congress — like
Wisconsin's Sen. William Proxmlre and budget
Direr lor David Stockman — but from liberal
crusader Ralph Nader, who has tong opposed
tlie ICC's corporate welfare for the big trucking
Industry.

U n f o r tu n a te ly , the tr u th that m a n y
lawmakers can't tiring themselves to face Is that
if Congress closed down the ICC, few people
outside of Washington would notice. Not only
would Its elimination save taxpayers 848 million
a year, It would put an end to a host of Rube
Goldberg rail and trucking regulations that
prevent competition. Inflate shipping costs and
contribute to higher consumer prices.
Al a time when the benefits of deregulation In
ihc airline and energy industries are manifestly
a p p a re n t. It Is lu d ic ro u s for tru c k in g
entrepreneurs to have to seek approval from
W ashington to haul frozen pizzas from
Massachusetts to Arkansas.
The dt gree to which this agency Involves Itself
In the commerce of our nation Is stunningly
illustrated In a rreent ICC booklet, tilled "Can
They Do Thai?" It details which commodities
are exempt from ICC regidation and which arc
not.
For example, lake manure. In Its natural stale,
dehydrated or bagged, the ICC says It Is exempt,
which means It can Ik - shipped without an ICC
certificate Hut try trucking manure that ts
"fermented, with additives such as yeast and
molds, producing a rich liquor which In water

solution is used for soil enrichment” and you'll
have some ICC agents on your case-.
Or consider, appropriately enough, nuls.
Cashews, roasted or rooked, or peanuts, roasted
and salted In the shell, are not exempt, but
maeadamlas and pistachios are exempt,
The ICC has hundreds of highly paid people
working full time on such things. Indeed, there
are 50 ICC field offices scattered around the
country that are authorized to crack down on
anyone foolish enough to haul the hundreds of
unexempted products that cannot Ik - shipped
without explicit ICCauthority.
In order lo legally transport ICC regulated
commodities, shippers must first enter a closed,
incestuous world. They must hire an ICCapproved la w ye r to apply for certificate
authority in haul goods, maintain Insurance
wllh the ICC. keep their rates on file with ihe
commission and meet a number of other
requirements.
because of partial ICC deregulation begun in
1980. "America's transportation industry is
Infinitely belter off today than It was four years
ago." says Andre Now Congress must lake the
next step and eliminate this useless and
counterproductive agency.

W A S H IN G T O N W ORLD

V IE W P O IN T

Foreign
Policy
Strategy

Act Of
Budget
Handling

by J o h n
Cregnn
For much of Die postwar era. U.S.
foreign policy towards (hr commu­
nist world was guided by the
so-called "containm ent" theory.
Devised by George Kennan — one of
Ihe elders o( America’s foreign
policy establishment — ihc theory
held dial America would seek lo
" e o n I a I n " f u r t h e r S o v ie t
expansionism, while accepting the
iHtundarlrsof (tie post-Valla world.
In practice the containm ent
theory produced Ihe "n o -w in "
strategy In Vietnam and led ulllm atrly lo die fallrd policy of
detente The cornerstone of detente
was die tragic Helsinki Accords. In
which the West gave dr facto
recognition to Soviet domination of
Eastern Europe.
In preparing lor the policy of
detente, containment wus discred­
ited hy Ihr Anicrtrun lorrlng policy
establishment. lurUidtng Kerman
filniself — lint for all die wrong
reasons. 'Hie dccadr of detenu-

11070*1080) witnessed unprece­
dented Soviet expansionism In
Southeast Asia. Central Asia and
Africa.
tu recent years, however, a subtle
lull profound strategy has emerged
in eonfrout America's forrlgn policy
establishment. Ii is a strategy of
ac tion designed to assist financially
and materially the ellorts ol indige­
nous groups organized to resist
communist expansionism In their
■iw n countries.
The concept and employment ol
dlls new strategy is heialded in an
unprecedented studs Jusl published
by the Free Congress Foundation
Edited tiy Dr Charles Moser ot
George W ashington University.

Combat on Comiinnilti Territory
urgrd American aid tn freedom
lighters in coun trie s such us
Nicaragua and Afghanistan.
Tlic Iteagan administration lias
pci tod leully signaled Its acceptance
ol die IsHik's central thesis. The
President's request lor Congressio­
nal approval ol &lt;nnllmied aid to Ihe
so railed "contras" In Nicaragua Is
die most noteworthy example.
The roniru aid vote will he a
dllMcult one to will because It
contradicts the trust? presumption
cherished tiy our forrlgn policy
eslahllshment. Uulortunuiely. die
views ol the establishment hold
sway not only among Congressional
lllierah Inti also to varying degrees
within the Reagan Administration

JEFFREY H A R T

A c a d e m ia Breaks Loose
The llrngnii ndmlitlMntllon tins
pro|Misrd tll.it a "cap" ot $4,000 Ire
placed on federally subsidized tu­
ition loans and dial families with an
Inrome ol more than 835.(XX) he
iorltgUile Whereupon all lull broke
lo u s e in academia. Al inmimmcrnble (acuity meetings across Ihe
country the administration Is Ix-big
denounced as an enemy ol educa­
tion William bennetl. the new
secretary ol education who defends
tile Reagan pro|Misal. lias beromc a
campus pariah — ami die words
"W lillutn b c n n e ll" are. charac­
teristically. snarled An Invitation to
licnueli from Ihc University of the
Partite lo receive an honorary de­
gree has b ee n p r e e m p lo r lly
withdrawn
Ik-m irlls position is somewhat
populist He sees die Reagan plan us
shilling support away from the
upper middle class and toward Ih e
much less allluent. Hr docs not
Irelieve that the lederal government
lias an obligation lo enable every
student who gains admission to
Yale lo go there. It costs around
8I5.(KX) In go lo an Ivy League
college these days, and Itennetl secs
ihe much less expensive stale
university as a good enough sub
slllulr || you cannot manage the
highest tuition rales. He also It.id
some tart remarks uhout sirreos.
sports ears, and trips io Fort
laiudrnlale.
There are several |&gt;crspcrllves on
all of this, though not many ot them
are being discussed ts* outraged
academies What the federal gov­
ernment does is subsidize a student
loan at an Inieresl rale of fl |H-rcriu

A Imuk loun Uitt.iv &lt;‘tmtn ntxnit 13
perreni The difference- Is therefore
only about 4 percent, thirdly cause
lor the walls of anguish. A student
and Ids or her parents can pul
logcllier a mix ol lederal loans and
hank loans, paying them oil over a
l&gt;crtod of years.
I In- real p ro b le m w llh the
federally subsidized loans today is
Hit- rale ol default. About half Hie
students now In the Job market are
defaulting on their payments. Com­
pulsory collection through the IRS
would eliminate Hits rip oft and
staunch Ihe budget drain. After all.
If repayments approach 100 (x-rcent
of the prlnrlpui. you need only
appropriate the principal once.
Thereafter, you recyrle It to suc­
cessive generations ot students,
One or the striking things about
the attitudes of college professors
today Is their unexamlned assump­
tion lhal a tuition loan program is
s |m-i die ally a federal responsibility.
T h a t a s s u m p tio n s h o u ld he
challenged Intellectually. The Pre­
amble to the Constitution, fur
example, sets lorth the goals for
w It tell Ih e g o v e r n m e n t was
established and it mentions nothing
whatever attorn subsidizing tuition
loans, unless you Hunk they come
under thr "domestic tranquility"
clause,
Hut even desirable things need
not he a lederal responsibility. It
ought tn lx* possible fur a college to
establish its own Independent ioan
program, setting aside, say, one
million dollars for low Imerest loans
to siudenls who need thritr.

B y M ary Beth F ra n k lin
W ASHINGTON (UP1I - President
Reagan wants it both ways.
After submitting a budget pro{Krsal that shows the government
will be 81 HO billion further In debt
next year even If Congress approves
all fits proposals. Reagan then urged
Congrrss tn approve a constitu­
tional amendment to require a
balanced budget.
Th e obvious contradiction raises
two questions: If the president
wants a balanced budget, why
doesn't he submit one to Congress;
and second, flow would a constitu­
tional amendment help the gov­
ernment hulanrc its trunks.
On the first point, Treasury Secre­
tary James Baker defended the
president's decision not to submit a
balanced budget
Hakrr. testifying before a House
Budget Committee recently, said:
" A tudanerd budget. II presented
overnight, would result tn some
very difficult choices for a lot of
people '*
Although Kragan asked (or a
balanced budget amendment in tits
State of Hie Union address. Baker
said the president "never thought II
should he Implemented cold turkey
or overnight." However, he said
Reagan still would "like to sec lire
budget brought Into balance some­
day." and called the $50 billion In
pro|iosrd budget cuts a "first step"
toward that end.
On the second point, supporters ol
lire balanced budget amendment
concept argue that mandating a
twitaneed budget through a con­
stitutional amendment would force
Congress to stand up lo special
Interest groups lhal demand more
spending than Hie government can
afford.
Bill rrqulrlng a balanced budget
won’t make thr* decisions of where
to rut any easier. Ju s l saying "you
have to" doesn't make It so.
Admittedly, a balanced budget Is
a worthy goal and cutting lederal
s|N-ridlng Is a monslerous tusk, bid
wouldn’t It be Ix-llrr for the presi­
dent to point Ihe way with Ills own
budget proposal rather than Jusl
blaming Congress for Its excesses?
Reagan's new spending $974
billion blueprint certainly lets Ihc
country know where he stands —
more defense and less spending on
social programs — hut It offers little
c h a n ce of ever re a c h in g the
balanced budget goal that lie has
preached since 1980

JAC K A N D E R S O N

U.S. Program Used For Murder?
W ASHINGTON — The Pentagon
Is secretly Investigating the dis­
turbing possibility lliat dozens of
suspected Irlltsis were murdered by
llnnduruu military olflcers In a
U.S.-funded prognun.
Sources 111 Tegucigalpa told my
associate Jon Lee Anderson there i*
no evidence that U.S niflctals were
aware ot the executions In fact,
Honduran sources emphasized dial
Americans involved In the program
wen dellhcialdy kept in lire dark.
That is one of the questions being
pursued by Ihc Defense Depart­
ment
The U.S.-funded program wus
sup|HiM-d to curb the flow of urtns
hum Ihc Samllnlstu regime In
Nicaragua to leftist rebels in El
Salvador. As such, the progrum wus
■elated to the CIA-run «overt ojrcru
lion begun In 1981 to support Hie
anll Sandlntsiu contras. "Arm s In­
terdiction" was the lustthcallou the
Rragau administration gave when it

i

pcisuamo Congress tu put up lire
original $19 million lor the srrrrt
war In Mcuragua
Unlike the C IA 's clandestine
operations, the U.S aid to the
H o n d u r a n g o v c rn nre nl w u s
aboveboard. Th e need to prevent
"export of armed subversion'* by
Nicaragua has repeatedly bern cited
by the White House lo explain the
massive U.S, military presence In
Honduras.
A reliable source In Tegucigalpa
said there have been several coses
of sus|teclrd Irltists who had "dis­
appeared" after detention by Hon­
duran ulltcers In charge ot the
arms Itin-idlct mu program.
One viurcr said lhal In (hr last
month the Defense Department's
in ve s tig a tio n has focused on
charges that Hie Special Operations
Com m and, an elite Honduran
counterinsurgency forre. was " in ­
volved In M im e of the disappear­
ances."

A n o th e r s o u r c e , a fo rm e r
special-operations member, told my
associate that the outfit also
operated "safe-houses" of its own.
wherr It conducted Interrogations of
suspected leftists. Some of those
arrested hy the unit for Interroga­
tion "later ended up under earth."
the sourre said
In addition, this Honduran source
said, the Special Operations Com­
mand trained and equipped some
p r i v a t e , a n t l-c o m m u n ls l
paramilitary s q u a d s that operated
on their own. "T h e y did some of our
dirty work for us." the former COE
agent said.
T h e f o rm e r C O E m an e m ­
phatically absolved U.S. military
advisers of complicity in Ihe disap­
pearances aj suspected leftists.
Though Hie Amcrtcuns sometimes
joined In the Interrogations, he said,
they were Intentionally kepi Igno­
rant of the illcgrl executions.
"O u r officers don't trust the
Americans." he explained. The

cx-agcitl Implied that the Hon­
durans (rarrd that If the American
olflcers learned the truth about Ihr
executions, they would feel coup
(►riled lo report them to the Pen­
tagon — and thru It would Irak to
Congress and the press, and U.J).
funds for the Honduran military
would Ik - endangered.
Most observers on the scene agree
that Ihc urms-lnterdlctlon program
In Honduras hus succeeded As
early as 1982. sources said, Ihe
arms shipments to Salvadoran re­
bels through Honduras had shrunk
to a trickle This would explain why
the Kragan administration has
changed Its strategy and now de­
mands that the Sundlnlstas cry
"uncle!"
The antis-intrrdicllon Justification
may no longer exist.
Footnote: A Defense Department
sjrukrsman had not responded to a
request for comment by the lime I
went to press.

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI. Thursday. March II. m s

How Long Is Too Long?
Court Expands Police Power To Detain Suspects
W ASHINGTON (UP!) — The Supreme
Court has expanded police powers to stop
and hold a suspect without actually arrest­
ing him. saying there are no absolute time
limits on when such detention Is too long.
Wednesday's 7-2 ruling written by Chief
Justice Warren Burger was another in the
court's continuing efforts to resolve a long
line of conflicts between the privacy rights
of citizens and police needs to briefly
question criminal suspects.
Adopting I he Reagan administration’s
position. Burger overturned a federal ap­
peals court ruling that threw out the
marijuana smuggling convictions of two
North Carolina men because they were held
;!n custody for 20 minutes without being
arrested.
The administration had asked the court to
;rulr that police officers could take a
reasonable amount of time to Investigate a
possible crime before arresting the suspects.
I Burger said that prior Supreme Court
leases "impose no rigid time limitation on
iTerry stops."
Terry refers to the court's 1968 decision,
called Terry vs. Ohio, that allows police to

briefly detain a suspect for questioning
without arresting him. That action does not
violate the Fourth Amendment's prohibition
against unreasonable searches and seizures
as long as It Is brief, the court ruled.
But the court has been struggling over
how brief that period of time should be
without requiring [mlIce to come up with
probable cause — a reasonable suspicion a
crime has been committed — which is
necessary for a full-fledged arrest.
The ruling spurred lenglhv dissents from
Justices William Brennan and John Paul
Stevens, who said the brevity requirement
"functions as an important constitutional
safeguard that prevents an investigative
stop from being transformed into a custodial
detention merely because 'the law en­
forcement purposes to be served by the slop'
arc considered important."
In other action Wednesday, the court:
— Unanimously held In a Virginia case
that a person suspected of a crime cannot be
required to undergo surgery for removal of u
bullet that might be valuable as evidence.
— Ruled 8-0 in a case from Florida that
police must have probable cause to believe a

person has committed a crime before taking
the suspect's fingerprints.
The Investigative stop case was appealed
to the high court by the Justice Department
after the 4lh U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals In
Richmond reversed the convictions of
William Sharpe and Donald Savage for
smuggling 43 bales of marijuana — a total ol
2.600 pounds.
The men were arrested In June 1978
outside of Myrtli Beach. S.C. after being
pulled over In two vehicles by a Drug
Enforcement Agent and a local policeman
who became suspicious because the truck
was overloaded and the car was following it
closely.
The police officer stopped the truck on the
highway and. after questioning Savage, said
lx would have to wait for the arrival of the
federal agent, who had stopped his car a few
miles back on the highway.
Savage was only placed under arrest afler
the DEA agent arrived and searched the
truck. Sharpe, who had remained with the
other car, was also arrested. About 30
minutes had elapsed when Sharpe was
taken Into custody.

UF Researcher Says Self-Esteem
Is Battered Wives' Major Problem
G A IN E S V ILLE (U H I A
recent study by a University
of Florida psychologist In­
dicates developing self-esteem
through counseling could
help more battered wives
leave their abusive husbands.
' S o m e w om en start
believing they deserve to be
a b u s e d ." said l)r G re g
Neimeyer. who is researching
why women abused by their
husbands return to their
spouses He said many of the
women do not feel they de­
serve — or cun get — better
t r e a t m e n t fro m t h e i r
husbands.
Neimeyer said his study
seems to indicate the battered
wives' images of themselves
are consistent with being
abused.
" A person's self-image is
su pp orte d by significant
social relationships, and one
of the most significant social
relationships Is the m a r­

riage." Neimeyer said
Neimeyer said the battered
wom en's confusion about
their own Identities extended
to their prrcepimns of what a
‘ normal'' marriage should be
like.
"Th e normal expectations
of s|&gt;ousal support, kindness,
respect and sensitivity are
violated In the case of the
battered woman." Neimeyer
said. "Th e woman loves this
man. but he's not treating her
w ith kindness and sensitivity,
so It leaves her more uncer­
tain ns to what a close rela­
tionship Is,"
Compounding the problem
— from financial dcpcntlrnrc
to feelings of love, loyalty and
com m itm ent — can keep
women from leaving abusive
relationships. Neimeyer said.
None of the abused subjects
understood how they got Inin
such bad relationships

Leaders
Seminole High School stu­
dents Rodrlqulz Alexander,
middle, and Je rry Walsh,
left, are given youth leader­
ship awards by Mike Potter
ol the Sanford Rotary Club.

is H e re
I I I P o p p a Ja ys
m
in tr o d u c e s
B e t t e r ’N ’
B a c k y a rd B u rg e r

City Tries To Rain On Prince's Parade
MIAMI |UI’I| — Rock singer Prince, known for
sexually provocative lyrics, p la ns to perform
ui lhe Orange Bowl Easier Sunday despite a
chorus of dissent from Miami's religious leaders.
Prince's promoters say they will not honor a
request by city officials to reschedule the concert,
which Is expected to draw 70,000 people, because
ol the religious holiday, according to the Miami
tlcrultl. (toe &lt;n - r i t y m . u t said the liming of the
n i n m l Is "m nlnp III Hie fnr-r."
"W e are coming lo Miami on April 7. Easter
Sunday, unlrss we're told not to." Dennis
lleffernan. a tour s|&gt;okcainun In Baltimore, told
I he H r raid.
Th e City Commission voted unanimously
March 8 lo upprnvc financial arrangements for
I he concert April 7. without realizing It Is a
religious holiday. The dale Dlls year also Is
Included In Passover, an right-day Jewish
holiday.
"W e didn’t know It was Easier. Nobody brought
h is

it up." Commissioner J.L. Plummer said.
Religious leaders have been calling and writing
city hall to complain aboui Ihe concert.
"T o schedule tills on Ihc most sacred of sacred
holy days Is a slap in the face. It’s sacreltgious."
Mild Die Rev, Donald Connolly, a spokesman lor
Ihr Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Miami.
Plummer said he'll propose a resolution at a
Hurling to day to let the p ro m o te rs know part of
the community Is against the Easter concert. He
added that the city should not force a postpone­
ment.
The promoters previously turned down a
suggestion lor a week-long delay In-cause I hey
said It would cost $.r&gt;00.000. Friday Is out because
It Is Good Frliluy and Saturday Is out because of
Passover. Assistant City Manager Cesar Odlo
Mild.
The concert Is the final performance on I'rlnce's
nationwide tour Stadium scuts are sold mil.

Charges Dropped Against Rape, Burglary Suspect
Rape and armed burglary
charges against a Sanford man
will not !*• prosecuted.
Charges against Johnny Frank
Littles. 32. of 1 103 W 8th St.,
were dropped Friday.
Assistant Slate Atiorncy Ralph
Erleksson said the state decided
not to prosecute the case
because Die alleged victim asked

that Littles not be prosecuted
and because u medical exam­
iner's rc|K&gt;rt questioned whether
she hud been sexually assaulted.
Littles was arrested March IO
behind the Club Two Spot on
state Road 40 east of Sanford
alMiut 30 minutes afler a man
allegedly broke into a private
room at Die club around 1 p m.

A 25-year old woman reported
to deputies that a man bad
removed a screen from a window
In the room, entered, put a
[xxketknlfe to her throat und
raped her.
Deputies urrested a suspect
about 50 yards from ihc scene of
the alleged rupe.
— Deane Jordan

tv liiT f flit* t lMili r is ytMirs. s_|
2301 S. F re n c h A v c .. S a n fo rd
I ’ ll. .l2 2 -‘&gt;212

A p p ly in g F o r A
U se d To B e A

4 POWERFUL TILLER
4 DO THE JOB RIQHTI
Our tillers have extra
power to work your soil
to a depth ol 1z". Ideal
lor doing a thorough
job on lawn or garden
in a professional man­
ner! r r

H o m e Im p r o v e m e n t L o a n

G r im m

E x p e r ie n c e . . .

But Now, With 34 Offices In Central Florida,
Barnett Has Made It
Simple, Fast,
And
Convenient.

f

illSI

It’s Simple...

Li

Jiiu Vi.il The Harnett Office ( Une.i
To You Or Call Am Of The Number.

Liued Below.

ID APPLY 1O R A LUAN
OR FOR M O K E
IN IU R M A TK JN C A IJ j
ORANGE COUNTY
(305) 646-3045
SEAHNOLfc COUNTY
(305) 646-3466
| HRI VARD COUNTY
| (305) 636-3411
■y\ O S O O M COVS'IT
V (305)846-2727

It’s Fast...
Father Way. Well Get Back To You
Within 24 Hours.

It’s Convenient...
You Can Apply For A I fame
Improvement Loan At Any O f O ur
Offices. With 34 Location. In Orange, (
■Seminole, Brevard And Oweula Cuunlies, There** Bound T o Be A Bamrtl
Office H ig h In Your \eighh*ht**L
UU

arnett
_

tank

■
AJJ btirru iLtii lit mcmhctiti I IHC

5A

�SPORTS
Lake Mary's Forgotten Man 2-Hits Mainland
DA YTO N A B EACH - A flrr the Mike S ch m lt against No. 5
Tint Inning. II was all downhill ranked Lym an Saturday at Lake
for Neal llutrls and (h r Lake Mari' a* I p m. Lyman. 15-3 and
Mary Kami Wednesday after* 8-2. will counter with Its best.
noon. Harris, the forgotten man Derek Llvernols.
of the Rams' m ound corps,
Harris, who had been having
allowed Just two hits while going trouble getting his In n in g s
I he distance as Lake Mary among starters Schmlt. Eric
knocked off Mainland. H 2, In "Th e W hip” Hagen and A n ­
Five Star Conference hasehall at thony Laszalc. Improved his
C ity Island I’ark.
record to 2-0, The slim right­
"Neal did a damn good Job," hander has given tip Just eight
said Lake Mary coach Allen hits and two earned runs In I-I
T u ille about his Junior right­ Vi Innings this spring. Harris
hander. "He threw 32 pitches In lowered his earned run average
the first Inning and we were a to 0.95.
lit lie concerned but he didn’t
lie was nicked for two runs In
have any trouble after that.”
the first Inning by Mainland
Lake Mary, which won Its 10th when errors by shortstop Shane
conference game In 11 decisions, la-lierlo and catcher Rod " C .J ."
Improvrd lo 13-2 overall. The Metz contributed to the runs.
No. U ranked Rams will send ace
“ We botched It up a little bit In

B a s e b a ll
the first Inning.” said Tuttle.
"But Neal settled down after all
ol those pitches. I was real
pleased with his performance."
After the first. Harris retired
the next 10 hitters and 13 of 14
when third baseman Kevin Hill
started a snappy 5-4-3 double
play Harris struck out six.
walked litre*- and hit a batter. He
allowed Just one earned run.
Ryan Lisle, who has beer!
swinging the hot bat the past
week, ripped Ihrre singles to
pace the Ram attack It was
Lisle s two-run base rap to right
center which tied the game In
the second Inning Hill walked

before Ron Natherson and Brett
popped out. After Hill stole
second and third. Keith Wallace
walked and stole second. Lisle
followed with a hit to score both
before he was thrown out trying
to swipe second.
Lake Mary went ahead for
good In the top of the third. After
Letterlo Hew out. Scott U n ­
derwood walked and stole sec­
ond. Schmlt flew''out but Metz
walked and Hill singled to load
the bases. Natherson followed
with a two-run single for a 4-2
edge.
The Rams picked up one more
In the fourth and Iced the game
with two In the sixth. After
W allace bounced out. Lisle
smacked Ills second single and
L e tt e r lo socked a perfe ct

hit-and-run single through the
vacated area on the right side to
chase Lisle to third. Underwood
popped out by Schmlt lofted a
pop fly which fell In the Infield,
sco rin g L is le . Schm lt was
thrown out trying ,tJ wretch his
hit Into a double.
In the sixth. Lisle stroked a
one-out single and after Letterlo
(lew out to left. Underwood hit a
scre a m in g double to rig h t
center. Schmlt then lofted a deep
fly to left widt h fell for a triple,
scoring Lisle and Underwood.
Metz followed with a single to
plate Schmlt for the 8*2 bulge
In other Five Star action
Wednesday. Lyman slipped past
Spruce Creek. 3-1. Lake Brantley
hi.inked Lake Howell. 7-0. and
Apopka pounded Seabreeze.

Overstreet's Hurry
Up Approach Quiets
Spruce Creek, Critics

United Press International

B y Bam Cook

Must of the 16 teams remaining in the
NCAA Tournament have declared their re­
spective region tin* toughest That kind of
lalk can be Inlerprrled as a prefabricated
excuse In case of elimination.
One team has emerged a refreshing change
of pace.
A little deluded, perhaps, but refreshing.
Loyola (III.), fared with playing highly
favored defending national cham pion
Georgetown Thursday night, Is talking lough
"If we are patient we ll win,” said Loyola's
Alfrrdrlck Hughes, thr nation's second lead­
ing scorer ath nearly 27 points per game.
"We feel we can tieut Georgetown.”
The 17lh-runkrd Ramblers, unc of Ihe
surprise teams remaining In Ihe tournament,
face top-ranked Georgetown In the second
game of the East Rrgioii.il double-header after
No. 6Geurgla Tech plays No. It) Illinois
Loyola. 27-5, will iry to bark up their words
against an extremely deep team led hy
All America Patrick Ewing. Reggie Williams.
David Wingate. Bill Marlin and Michael
Jackson. The Ramblers go with Andre Battle
and 5-foot-!) point guard Carl Colston In Ihe
harkrourt with Hughes and renter Amlrc
Moore threats down low.
The Hoyas, 32 2. on average hold opponcnls to less than 40 |wrrrtu shooting
Loyola, which relies heavily on Its long runge
arsenal. Is the nation's second-highest scor­
ing team.
Ge Tech. 26-7. and Illinois. 2B-M, advanced
from the sub-Rrglouul In Atlanta. Both dig In
on defense and arc strong, bruising squads
though not especially deep.
"The Big Ten Is a physical league," Illinois
guard Bruce Douglas said. "W e likeet In there
and hung around Whenever Ihe game gels
physical, we feel It's to our advantage "
The llllnl have Douglas and Doug Allenberger at gurads, with Efrem Winters.
Anthony Welch and Ken Norman up front.
The Yellow Jackets have twotdablc hlg men . .
In 7-foot John Salley and 6 -1 1 Yvon Joseph. I I
The hackcourt Is simply one of the country's
best with Mark Price and Bruce Dairy inplc.

LONOWOOD — When you want to know
something about a man, talk to the wife. When
you want to know something about u pitcher, lalk
to the catcher.
Lyman's Byron Overstreet has Itrcn the hottest
commodity In Seminole County the past three
weeks and nobody knows It better limn Ids
butleryinatr. Jim Odom. Dverslreet jnd together
another masterpiece with Odom's help Wednes­
day night, allowing just two hits us Lyman
slipped |iuxi Spruce Creek. 3 -L In Five Star
Conference baseball at Lyman High Sehnnl.
Odom said Overstreet, who won for Ihe fifth
lime In six games. Isn't the same pitcher who was
roughed up hy this same Spruce Creek leant on
Feb. 27. a game which Lyman evrnlunlly won at
Day Iona Beach.
"Th e y knocked him all over Ihe place over
there," said Odom. “ But nobody's touched him
lately. Byron's control has been much better and
lie’s keeping Ills fastball down."
Odom said a change of style lias helped, too,
"Hymn used to take fnrrvrr to throw Ihe bull last
year." he suld. "W e used to rag him about taking
so long because everylsuly wauled lo go home.
Th is year, lie's speeded up and we don’t have any
complaints li's almost like he's Item In a trance,
lie's been norffrrllve."
Since Ihr first Spruce Creek game, Ovrmtreel
tuts Item almost untouchable, Hr lost a toughtuck 2 1 drriffloh when he gave way to Derek
Llvernols, who walked In the winning run In the
last Inning agalnsl Lake Howell on March 6. H r
relieved the next two gators — March H against
Lake Brunllry and March I i agalnsl Seminole —
and rrilm l all rlghl hitters hr fuerd. Last
Wednesday, lie took a no hitter Into the seventh
Inning against Mainland before finishing with a
one-hll shutout.
Ill Overstreet's last five apprarnnees. the Junior
rlghl-hititdri has pitched 23 AS Innings, allowed
Just live hits and two unearned runs. In his
seven Inning stint Wednesday, he struck out
nine, walked one and Induced the Creek Into nine

gmiindouu.

Jim Odom, lofl, Mid Byron Ovorstroet it
keeping hit teammates happy with hit new
hurry up style of pitching.

14-4. Seminole hosts DcLand al
3:30 today at Seminole Commu­
nity College.
— Sam Cook

Loyola: Patience
Can Upset Hoyas

Herald Sports Editor

"Ills Iasi ball bad really good movement,"
pointed out Odom. "R was taking oil oulstdr (to
rlgbl-bandrd bitters). We threw lluir good hitters
oil speed stuff with runners on Imse and then
challenged ihrm with fast balls when there wasn't
anyone on."
Spruce C rrrk ’s only run Wednesday was
unearned. Mark Hnvlcr walked In the lourtli
liming anil moved up on a sacrifice by Tom m y
Abdo. Kirk Wiley followed with a fly ball to center
on which Raul Alegre made a nice miming catch.
When Alegre tried to double Ikivter off third,
Llvernols couldn't tome up with Alegre's peg.
allowing Ikivlrr to score to tie Ihr game at 11.
Lyman had taken a 10 lead In Ihr second
Inning when Odom drew a one-out walk and John
liiiuc followed with another free pass. Both
runners moved up a base on a wild pilch and
Odom st ored on a passed ball tieforr Clint Baker
struck out.
Maker accounted for Ihr tie breaking run and
Ireshman Chris Bus k provided an Insurance tally
in the sixth liming Llvernols drew a walk to leud
ol the Inning and Alegre moved him to second
with a sacrifice bunt- Odum walked and Bane was
lilt with a pilch to load the liases
Hitker followed with a medium-deep fly Itull to
tight lletd to plate pinch runner T J . Kculrtia with
Hit- game winner " I didn't think It was deep
enough." Mid Baker. "I was Just Irving lo pull Ihe
bull."
H usk billowed with a smash Into right center to
( base home Odom lor a 3-1 edge. Brock then stole
second for his second ihrfl of the night but
Overstreet grounded lo thltd to end Ihe Inning
"When Overstreet keep* his fastball down, he's
very effective," said Lyman couch Bob Mc­
Cullough "We're asking out pitchers to do a
helluva Job every (line out and they're doing It."
Lyman, tanked No. 5 in Ihe slute. Improved to
15-3 overall and 8-2 In the conference. The
Greyhounds trail Lake Mary hy 1 Vi games with
Saturday's hlg chub un the horizon Saturday at
l-ukc Mary at I p m.

Neal H arris overcame a
s h a k y s t a r t to two hit
Mainland Wednesday.

Lake Howell was late with
just about everything Wed
nesday. Above, shortstop
John Canlleld receives a
t a r d y t h r o w as L a k e
Brantley's Kevin Bass slides
Into second. Al the right,
P a t r i o t s p e e d s t e r Lee
Bornbaum, right, smiles and
checks for a wild throw as
Vic Roberts comes ott the
bag to Held an errant loss.
The Hawks were late at the
plate, too. managing just two
hits oft Brad Dunn as the
letty ran his mark to 7 0 with
a two hit 6 0 victory.

Oklahoma plays No. H Loua Tech Thursday
night In the Midwest Regional semifinals al
Dallas and No. 4 Memphis Slate will take on
Boston College In the second game
"I guess with three teams In the top 10."
said tkrslon College roach Gary Williams.
“ we will Just show up and set- what we can
do."
"Th a t." Memphis Slute roach Dana Kirk
replied. "Is Just so much snake oil Boston
College, with Its press, ran do things a lot of
teams Just can't do.
"I know that with (BC guard) Michael
Adams and (Memphis State guardl Andre
Turner out there, there will Ik - enough
quickness on the floor to wear off three Inches
of paint."
In the Southeast semis at Birmingham,
Alu.. Maryland — which beat Vlllanova 77-74
earlier this season — meets thr Wildcats
again. No. 7 North Carolina tarkles Auburn In
the second match

'Wifii'tol Ptofti bp Gf'tQof f Gahm

H a w k s ' M usical Chairs C an't M ute D u n n 's Streak
By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor

Lake Howell played musical chairs with Its
lineup Wednesday but Ihe way Brad Dunn was
pitching, all ih r bats were out ol tune. Dunn
mowed down the Silver Hawks on two hits as
Lake Brantley clulmrd a G O Five Star Conference
victory at Lake Howell High School.
Although Dunn In 7-0 for Ihe year, hr said
Wednesday's outing — and five shulout Innings
last Wednesday against Spruce Creek — have
been more enjoyable than his first live wins.
The senior lelt-hander admits that Ills early*
season success was mote attributed to his
teammates' resounding bats than his left wing
Although be was 5 0 at one point, his earned run
average rivaled his halting average and Brad was
over .400 for both.
No one run belittle bis last two outings, though
He blanked the C rrrk in a five-inning win and
came back six duys luler to shut out Lake Howell
for seven more with five strikeout anti live walks.
Two double plays kept the whitewash Intact.
Catcher Mike Davis said Dunn's "new way of
winning" Is very simple. "Brad ts throwing the
ball much harder." said Davts "Ills control has
been great, too Wherever I put my glove, he hits
It."
In D unn's last performance against Lake
Howell, hr was touched up for most ol the 14
Hawk runs In a 15-14 Brantley win. "They were
rugging me during the last game, said Dunn.
"So this was a revenge win. 1 knew J could pitch

B a s e b a ll
t»etlrr than I did the last time."
Dunn allowed a leadolT single to Mark Schnltker
tn the Brat Inning but Davis erased him with u
perfect peg to second on a steal attempt. The
Patriot lefty then knocked down the next seven
hitters before a walk to Joey Montalvo stopped
the string In (he third.
In thr lourth. Howell coach Ulrtu Benjamin
substituted for everybody expect Montalvo and
shortstop John Canfield. It was an attempt to
shake up hls club, which lost for Ihe fifth straight
time.
Dunn wasn’t milled, though. In fact, facing the
newcomers for the first time made It easier as he
picked up four of hls strikeouts after the fourth.
T w o double plays preserved the shutout. Rick
Koch and brother Andy Dunn eorroborated for u
4-6-3 twin killing In the fifth and a fly ball to Mike
Beams In center was turned Into an 8-3-5 DP to
cut oil a run In Ihr sixth
"Although Brad was winning before, he was
throwing across hls body." said Lake Brantley
coach Gary Smlih. "He's straightened out now
and we're playing much better defense behind
him ."
And thr hitting has been constant. Mark
"l*ork” Coffey drilled a liner over the left field
fence to provide Dunn with a 1-0 lead in the first.
Davis socked a double to lelt center, moved to

frs as «is

third on a single by Dan Beaty and Mured on a
perfect squeeze bunt by Kevin Bass for a 2-0 lead
In the fourth.
The Patriots picked up two runs each In the
fifth and seventh. Lee Bernbaum. who stole two
bases Wednesday, walked und stole second In the
filth. Beams and Davis ulso drew walks to loud
the bases. Beaty's ground hull scored Bernbaum
and when Dave Marlrtte tossed away thr relay.
Beams also raced home for a 4-0 lead,
In the seventh. Davis and Beaty smacked
back-to-back singles and Bass' groundoul moved
them to serond and third. Brad Dunn's ground
ball scored Davis before Kevin Lie nurd heaved the
ball past first to allow Beaty to come home for a
6-0 lead.
Lake Brantley, which had lost four of Its last
five, picked up Its 12th win agalnsl seven losses.
The Pals arc 7-4 In the conference. "We were a lot
looser today." said Davts. "We got everything
worked out tn practice Tuesday. We've got to see
what we can salvage In the conferenc e."
Lake Howell, which won four straight before
losing Its last five, fell to 8-10. The Hawks are 4-7
In the Five Star. Jorge DelMontc was the losing
pitcher. He allowed seven hits and hts teammates
made six errors. Lake Howell strives to snap It*
skid Friday when It hosts Seminole at 3 30 p m. *
The Patriots, meanwhile, travel to Apopka
Saturday for a l p.m game with the Blue Darters.
Smith said he wtl) probably pitch lefty Tim
Smith.

*
*e&gt;

�Commission Ponders C hanges;
7-Year-Old C atches 8-Pounder
Even (hough It Is months away, the Florida
Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission Is
pondering the new proposals for the 1985*86
hunting season.
Among the changes proposed for the '85-86
seasons are a uniform opening date statewide for
the general gun season, allowing turkeys to be
taken during archery season on wildlife man­
agement areas, and a reduction In the season and
bag limits for gopher tortoises.
If approved, the general gun season will begin
statewide on Nov. 16. Previously, the general gun
season opened later In the northwest region of ihe
state.
Currently, turkeys may be taken outside
wildlife areas during archery season. If adopted,
the new regulation will allow for them to be taken
with bows on the management areas from Oct. 5
through Nov. 3.
The proposed regulation changes for gopher
tortoises would reduce the open season from six
to three months. If approved, the season will run
from Oct. 1 through Jan. 1. The commission will
also consider reducing the bag limit from five to
two and prohibiting the Interstate shipment of
gopher tortoises.
Several changes have been proposed for
Individual wildlife management areas. Most
notable are the proposed prohibitions on allterrain cycles and the use of dogs while deer and
hog hunting on the Dig Cypress Wildlife Man­
agement Area In Lee County In South Florida.
Local sportsmen have suggested opening up
more hunts for the Seminole Ranch Wildlife
Management Area near Mims. This would help
rrlieve sopmc of the hunting pressure from some
of the other local management areas.

Dick Monroe says quality ulways sells. Maybe
that's why the Ducks Unlimited banquet Is
already a sellout. Monroe, chairman of the
Seminole County Ducks Unlimited, reports that
Ihe March 23 banquet should be a huge success.
"We mailed out the notice or our March 23
banquet and talked about the 21 guns that will be
auctioned or raffled along with a three-wheeler,
microwave oven, art and decoys." said Monroe.
"All are quality Items. We had to limit the
banquet to 200 people. And two weeks before, we
were sold out."
Ducks Unlimited Is a conservation organization
founded In 1937. It Is dedicated to the preserva­
tion and restoration of wetlands In the U.S..
Canada and Mexico.
Monroe said he regretted the banquet could
accommodate Just 200 members this year but
that plans urc In the works to expand to 250 In
Hti

Fishing was excellent this past weekend, Even
though the weather was not Ihe best Sunday the
fishing was still tremendous.
I.asi Friday. Ted Williams and a friend caught
ihelr limit of bass In Lake Mary. Although the
biggest one got away, Ihe 20 keepers yielded u
III lie over six pounds of boneless filets.

Evening Hwaid, La nlord, El. Thtircday, March 31, I W 1 -M

Larry
Williams
F I S H I N O / H U N T IN Q

321-0720

Saturday morning. Williams and his grandson
kept 10 nice bass aher releasing several smaller
ones. The bass were hitting a silver and black
Rapala. A few of Ihe bass still had roe In them so
some bass are still on the bed.
Sunday morning. Lance Williams woke up
when his alarm went ofT at 5 a m. Even though
the weather was bad and the fishing trip was
almost called off. Lance put on hls coat and went
fishing with hls pop and friend. Harry Smith.
In some stretches of the canal, the wind and the
trolling motor battled to see which would win. It
sprinkled rain several times. Finally, the fish­
ermen had to turn around and fish back over the
territory already fished. The orange and green
Rebel was thrown about five feet from the shore,
not a good cast. Out. all of a sudden Ihe plug
disappeared as If something inhaled It. Lance set
the hooks and the fight was on. The 8-pound bass
came up and shook several times.
After what seemed like an hour to Lance, the
big bass finally tired out, Harry was able to reach
down and scoop the large bass out of the water.
This bass topped off the stringer of six bass, five
bluegllls, and two nice specks. This day will long
be remembered by the 7-ycar-old boy.

a*r*W PH*P*ky T h w i vntcpnt

Deron Thompson takes a breather during
last Friday's Lyman Invitational. Thompson
and his Seminole teammates can't relax

Saturday when they meet their stlffest
competition of the year In the Bob Hayes
Invitational at Jacksonville.

C O U N T Y T R A C K H O N O R R O LL
•on

tms Om/ma
Ntf______IRW«m
Irs* 1mmm
Hi
I I W 0)01
11•
t » %ri Liftf^Mtof
Hi
Eft
s to w W*ft&gt;ft
\ Berks'* Lmi kir r
l|;
1
W^*u»ft
st
100*0
1Coupon U~mm
ii
I lirdtn \
•ft
l Fk * W
••
it
1FfWftpy iiftl ftrmtor
10*» %U***44
Ml
I0
SI
4
«f
» Dxf&gt;*i lift*n—i'
HI
ttm
i PftNi W**P4
4RI
l ftflpr mt Mi)
4U1
4149
J kNr**i«iict imm
4R
» isut, lm« Bfw*hrr
\ Pfp*i it*******
44)1
to w ii**to'»
40
Eddie Wyatt, of Sanford, caught a 4W pound s
m|nH#f
Nile Perch, He caught It on a Beetle-Spin. This Is 1
01
0f
rare because the Nile Perch Is supposed to be a 1LMtltolft
01
1lifti tot
vegetarian. John D. Mitchell had a 20 pound 1 l|n«i
01
400*0
catfish from the St. Johns River last Saturday.
01
I fnmotn Wft'ri^iu
f tor’ac
01
4tt
Dell Abcrnclhy. owner of the Osteen Bridge 1
449
Fish Camp, said If there Isn't a whole lot of rain I
1I
It
good speck fishing will continue In St. Johns. •“
HI
"W e had a couple guys who had 50 apelce." said HI
Rt
Dell. "Th e bass are up In the grass. They're very II LiMtoe**
III
1ft**** Laftfttor
lift
hard to get. They're In the shallow water.”
Cl
fun* k»«n
Abernethy said some people are even catching iI W
et
Cl
the bass with cane poles. "Bream are doing very l L«te"
Iff
well In the pilings of the old bridge." said
t ttf
Abernethy. "In the early morning, using grass t to—. iwtr**r
JR ’
I M K I im ton
shrimp, they’re doing real well."
I P***! to—«*
MU
litkM'i
fat
Down at 7 Marker, the good fishing continues In 4
tu
V*te l|«4*
the shallow water for specks. Abernethy said II W
1RI
to&lt;ftM(i if****
most are using a cane pole to reach over the
nit
llllpuds. "O ur spawning season Is three-quarters
141
of the way through," continued Abernethy. t Law ton
) RI
I lift*ft-ton
"There should be some hungry bass coming 4l*MHi*ftfl
MJt
fkf
I Irto*
out."

jroma

C*'*p0*-, U1
***ii**
1Dmmm ttuxHPi
} ftftjf’a Iwm,-|j
1ftfa*
111_fLdr_ 1at ItMirt.
i (■•vi imftvMf)
W
-*H
_al1
f&gt;ua
9t rtPrt LMcItap
1liFV 10*torf
1to t k~inn
1 nm*| Lift*tort
11 News Ljm M*rv
1Ci»ip« U*pCnrrtpp
tos'*4*T
1 W” dH
1L4*iftp|rto*
J lift*HOW*
ai*t« to*
| IfAtH
Onm
kTHan Wa 0*
1isppft. 1**»H*|*II
1ftaCM 1Mi Ma.
4tifttorii Lift*toy
1Bnwtqu**101ftrcrYB**
fttonyto-w. It o
100
t H*4Vlictd**
} tl-tjiilH lift*IriPHiwi
) Jill Lift******
t CtuTt'l UMMrt,
t Ipn Irtprupr,

*

m
ax
B4
nj
*)■
•
ii
B9
|4|j
V01
9|i §
«0
Rfl
Hft1

I
i

i ftn—ALrto*
I c m la** ft*ton
|c JttiM* lift*tort
} iheepiei,. CNiti
l lv*\ lift* ton
1Mcl4r«MU. Um ftrtT

i

| A J*M

I (&lt;MM lift#***—
4p*ft* k1
**0*4
t !«**» to—
I tor**. Vr***4t
TnplileMf
I

1W L
1|H*&lt; LiM“tn 1PP*pr Lrt*
4W*0ft%r 1*p*Hpw4*
•Mftof
1 koto*
J L«s*Hm*n
) Lift*toy
4L40*ftfpffy
10)*0*
1 I)***
404*0
1U#IA li T ll'UNl
f 1 Cp0*0) Lift*to y
I &amp;Im WA'*N
i Wifftit. limmiia1
1441iai(Tir 1UpUamtl
1ort'fti* Lift*Mery
UltoSM
i o iw ftmRSi
c
----t
-1
Ia
N«---*p**rw
v*ci mj
L*a*-*
rx--*-w
a"
t POrto Lift*toy
iv ia
U'pid
!,a
A*
ia
O■
rmrrmy
w
.k
a■
t Pr&lt;POr*m
1N w L*UMlrtw,
t*rv
m
afm
t totMl! IsmiruH
f 0*000. WmsN
1liftstll Lit*N*sum
4f O00PL Lift*toy
1MrmTrm»p» prtp

04

4fM
01
41k
ft!
Rt

I DM
I 0N*r Dt*dft

| OMi.— i lift* * ton

I
14ft**ton
-*•.*•«
1 Uw«i I***ton

Uf
•ft
*2
HJ
Hi

___

1ft

I Ml

4RI
•k&gt;
HI
4■
4Rl
4111

I HMlnOft
I Iff—A
t liM ton
4CN&lt;e*
DU*
I ***** W*•—*

T»«e Dnlatcf

I C4*n l*u*we«

Rt

I A J0

toy** hmhmt
lm ft'i*—y
Lr**

I ft*
I * totoUMtoy
I C«* Ummm
I * to*to* i w *
4Cf«
IJ

I III** Lift*MMMI1

9!
tit
iff
Ml
HI

••lift
lr*0 „
m
i•
I »&lt;•
I6
t In** li***
» * * L»m Orfft—v

f R9
119
f fll
ftRI
f*i
IR4
mi
1)1u
TR1
101
10f
0f |
04
01
4i|
44•
Ot
I*
If
At
II
It
At
*4
DM
flh
flit*
HI*
R1

I C*w%Uft. 10# O'ton

l

»l
114
lit
Ilf

t 9 to o* Lift* ton

I 0 Im h*ww

•

Wm*

I Cm* k mm .
I C'— 4
ttf !•*
HJ
I Wnu liftitW
ttf I tort* Ummm
M? i Fn—» Lrto*
HI t (r*« liiHpMft
HI I
la** ton
HI Mi4vr*i«f
II • I
I
fttil I Lift*ton
» HI •Irto*
1fl 40c«4ft
Ittf OWM
|IS| i 1
ftpaM
llwp
kM
fprtta
vmra
a lkMl w
rrrtp
mi
Ulm
wfi
i1
f aycuMh
■, k
'b
ps-m
RI t tea* Lift*tow*
u**m
111 4
W^ftO*
HI 1A
Ul *CiMtoL lift*toy
04 UM
US 1An 10MIN.Wun*
1AI am
PCi,t Op*4i
*
p-m
v% 1to* Lift*toy
ttf 11*1*4lNlN*a*l&lt;
tt* | tottol Uftfttoi
HI 1CiMtoN. Lift*toy
A&gt;4 Lsmf|*a&gt;f
All 1tot*) W*am
t ft to**i* i 0 t o i
01 1 Wmtw.lemweN
09 i UiW lift*toy
4! 1 I Irry Lift*toy
4)4 •CiiN Ivmtoi
0) Htoi**o
449 1HwauiupiM l4ftl HOtoft
1ftr*AI»y Lift*Niv»N
f HI } Icn0rt0) to)-M*N
) m 4C 1*11Wl*H—Ii
f &gt;49 4to1***Ovtoft
) tl 4(V i 10*toy
I R 1Pto—*10*toy

VI
h n\
h at
HIf 4
h ni
n*
h vi
i i»f
I HI
1* I
4It 1
4lit
40
10H
'HIV
04
•44
Uf
0»
»h
|44't
04)
S II
•1
0H
If*
Ifl'i
If 1%
(4Mil
01
0 I'y
tl
&gt;|
4II
40
40
If
49

A stro s' 4-Run 5th Sends N ie k ro , Shutout T o T h e S ho w e rs
United Press International

Fori Lauderdale. In the fifth, he
looked for ihe showers.
Terry Puhl's iwo-run double
keyed a two-out. four-run rally In
the fifth Inning otf Niekro. and
lifted the Astros lo a 4-1 Grape­
fruit League victory over the
Yankees.
Niekro was cruising along with
a two-hit shutout when Alan

W e d n e s d a y, P h il N ie k ro found

oul exactly how far along he Is
toward bring ready for the
season to start.
For four Innings, the Yankees
knurklrhallrr. who will turn 46
In April, looked like a rookie
trying lo Impress hls coaches
against the Houston Astros ut

B a s e b a ll
Ashby doubled with one out in
the fifth. One out later, singles
by T y Gainey. Jim Pankovlts.
Puhl's double und another dou­
ble by Jose Cruz turned a 1*0
Yankee lead Into a 4-1 deficit.

S C O R E B O A R D

TU B E

itMiwTDwi
la 14
ri«n« cm
ia
• it *i n a l oil aa. T i*i n a a,

uuiruu

Ml«l&lt;ll)|*

•»* • ■ (V X MCAA W w w l

W w l a n (Ximrttlll
t l « - aCPIti

ngu

» -is t . m i i i t n

PREPS

»&gt;&gt;lm &gt; a V«rt Gmrtu
•oorutt
H u - i w &gt;wa iw m . a
» . » . wMmiU
W ill

i a t * - uu. am a«mn«*i Ctptm

r t r t W l n M - L I Ota l*ia

&gt;■ &lt;B IS
a a is

ik w ttta
ta
dtpnta m im a. I ittiin a

w m - a » aa
lO nim
aa ID II a
m ut
aa is
cni/aa. m u i«a t i i H i a s
M an a t

Mrtm-vaa DM

ta ta ta
na ta
ta

» It MOa Pl'tlttS 1ll«l|IM*rt

a w i T i aa
ib o o tn a
ta ta ta
iStMtoa
ta ta
I’ m M i
ta
k,tt, aa. r itt/aa. T iktiiaa
w &gt; » - t x ( na
ummimim
aa ta ta
inttamOet
ta ta
Iijim IMi
*■'
m iiB a .* iiN iia ,tli»n a a
istM»-i/i*s « n
Nwtta
t a na ta
iitaiaa
ta ta
i Mm too
ta
lonaairituaaTitM iitia
» m t - H t l at*
urmta
ta ta ta
i s /i M i
ta ta
*a
•» n * a .» 0 Hsa&gt;T!iitiaia
s m -w l.a *
I 'w u i f t
ta ta ta
'•vrmldrtt
ta ta
hm m
ta
•ituuatPaiiamtaiaina

- Ut*

irn w k tt

ifttoiStirMl

lim it M#kM*iPtt
n o k o tn i l
I t o t C m III * tw o I t

lairx*-txi no
i a ia ia
ta ta
ta

a l*pi a a pits o a t a* ti ota

Co, rt tl tart a U

mow* all * two i* M.irt*T all

*1

•copoi

PAYING “PICK4" 4 "BIQ0”
r "
_
" — r
'—
-■
■
—
—
H I G H T E C H S » T M AXI CARS ( t f u m v f l
E b tq o o d r jc h S
T / A R A D tA LS
1
- _________
" ________3

Vlad our two cMmata
oontro&lt;lad U u U io u c m for
your itna dimng and
antartainmant ptaaaura.
Clubhouaa raaarvationa

AOK Tim: MAIKT
B lS l0

M
mO
oN
n

W w

Fill
rni

S
a 5
s m
10 S
sA
aT
t

U
u Ji 0
o0
o

•o o o

t d o n
3 2 2 -7
480

.

Xt b

6 3 1 -1 6 0 0

Sinlord-Orlndo

K
annel Club
North Ot Orlando

it

D ra n u N m f

2 4 13 S. French Aye

a n i M ia at

Juit ottHwy 17-92

C a l l in g *

MIHTrcctlMilap
Sorry No Minora

SANFORD

a

M l.Is a
Okm &gt; ion n Mm* a torn
M l.lp o
I r t t o t rt Mo To* U U a Pi

TMURft. F M I
QfUNOftTANO AOM.
FOA LAOItft

Goodrich

to

ta in
at ta
io m

m ta
a n t i / ta *i
v a t u in is
n a u rt in m

ML I*•

fpiliri OlTltip*

mi

a ii • a

CmkoM* n ca oot* a Iroat

(Eaoapt Itav)

HAT.: mom .m o sat ten
PLAY THE EXCITING AHIGH

at
la ta
ai at

* o / o m nt

l o r n rt Ort**t M l a Woo*
Pa. i a* *

NIGHTLY 7:30 P.M.

m

n a ii v at ta

I Spat

NBA

t i*omo«op« «pxprmm
mmA&gt;i i &lt;m 4&gt;
afyaj a#

u

it it I pi at at
» a n a to m

P»«mm* rt a w o t a am *

P a .ia p a
UMrt* rt T(Mt a P— OOrt Pa.

lototM. Pi*. I a pa

a m YOUR TRUCK RACE RROVtN
RCRTORHANCC.

in m
&gt;H III
ta in

• l » PH CP u

t C&gt;w*f*

Ul li(tat tt 0«oot a

Mo trout*

cp

n a n n M ht

* V lo w

fa. i »*■

Crt*t w
• lp»

HAJSC YOUH STANDARDS 0 T RtDC
AND nnrORMANCt.

DOi
RACING
NOW!

jantramii m-

it.

t o * «t a sow

0*

4 a m * i t *&gt;m ill * tT»r it
ArtOtt LtSI * WMart I t
Q&gt;.trt I m l t o III 4 Ivor t#r|
I t a t o m , Bti*tt***&gt;t l l l l I
a*orot» km It k r * - U m t m
ItlM w o il
i n iM i n o r m i
k p n toon* lia j * I m I* (*ott
|CKt lor t l toortri tO*« Co&lt;ao*C&gt;
.10 Cr,rt»i*ai* Coo a t l I'OMPon
on li m m t l i
D*.t'tt tt* O II C trrtt* Ita i *
l o t l o o I I UII io rC ttM lM U *
l'o*pooIMrrt Ik M r * - M m
• o itlO tm C I

M M tlC lM l
omoiktrtMpttot
Crtpo-,' Toamt
Iproom* t Orttpt t
r t f i n , i Opatt

up twmmi
v umoCrtMti apt*
ST

tram** ’ apo
Cotpot a

RAND OPENING
YARD BARNS BY SPAR
1U

4 J m m Ux U

111 l i l t iantord
Oil 04*4 Or Ipndo

1 (111) » j *m
H M D 11*C1D

BASEBALL

S fiy u tfe S 4u *
At Ust A St*r*f* BaiMiag Hut
D**t N*t Over P***r A $auN U t

BARN ETTE 6x6x7
UT*

S A LK

* 2 0 0

u n '

littMIW * C*ft*k*ll

tecatto

a i
a i

■ S T A T E

at
ta

I
l

**

p

noon

D IL U X B

S A L E

* 6 2 0

8x12
*\w

4

• n n at* f u n * * I n i t i a l a

•m - v h Comi
I t 4*1 Poor
iCrtot*

Mom tt H«om a t o m

1Sim

lot

]R

itw u n o i
na &gt;a ta
item
ta ta
latoTrtMrt
ta
• uuaai PiMiaa to tn iaa .
Mi hi ItltttU, I mor I P i p *

01 4 l *

til im ra -o m it tm

na ta ta
na ta

'trt'trt - t i I aa
laaoMMxtoi
aa ta ta
'• n i M a i
ia ta
•Pm m
ta
•itaaai pans* rotarua

H

■Mott i

• ’w - t u aa

irwu.irt
nmiiHvCwt

Cmonta n PioiM*a a Mo
Fit.' ap a

i
•
t
a
t
i

aa •
tt a n
nh n
aa i
it a •

t Pm. i a » o

OnaiM llM nl
Upn am iim * WM, |i us.
ImpwOP U»H. *&gt;M, » &lt; Cmai
it ua t tot « l » sn «i *i v m
iOl* ( « « it
Damn HmMi'mr tOt « am
Gar** I t

•a»
at

Mo*p« . i a»*

TpupMp* l l l l «

M W a II
H iiM tl

tatm -vni it a

’ MQamirt*
itn itm
i it CamImp

l&gt; t » m s «

PaAa I I ' M l w a a ll t

SOKC
•‘H I

lant U ll 1

an* ....... ...
Ok M I

■l T

aa
n ti
aa
it it
» a
aa

op* TO* la tlrtl

UM swan * IS H M I
III a Taos II OM
lllll PkU II PMILIII Mm* It

RADIAL M U D TE R R A IN m

•till (Mltrtttt

tm a i i m w i
Ittl'rtM II U t M l
Halt krt Tat (Ml I

limit t*l.M bn
Mn

•a &lt; m - t v s v * * w i i n i «

THE ADVANTAGE m

MTIMAI aOCIIT ll»CUI

iM W ilM W I

CiMiliatWii

a* tn« iTpj

•TvtlMtll
OmaiiPmavfit
tM r.ll tart I
*n*rt&lt;1
CD) I
la O a it W t l

WITUU ta^kmars

'•win GavytTmiTQI
U i&gt;
CWX KCAA Tamm

Angeles dropped Cincinnati 4-2.
Philadelphia nipped the New
York Met# 6-5. Dclroll clocked
Pittsburgh 11-5. San Diego
topped Seattle 6-3. Houston
downed Minnesota 6-3. Cleve­
land upended Oakland 4-2. the
Chicago Cubs eclipsed
Mllwuukce 9-8.

NHL

itC m a l

OwtpUtmTnMi!
Ortjp*u*&gt;•■*»•*•••

Ta

*••••Cm*i*wmmiVmiu
'»* »- aoimcuiii

I*r•naw

as
&lt;a )a la

•rttmtim

Mike Pagllnrulo, making hls
spring debut after being side­
lined with u hyperextended
elbow, singled home ihe only
Yankee run In the fourth.
Elsewhere. Montreal zipped
Baltimore 3-0, Boston brut St.
Louis 4-1. the Chicago While
Sox edged Toronto 2-1. Atlanta
defeated Kansas City 3-1. Los

u r a u t li mwi

4
I
t
I
t
1
I
a

l
c
i
p
0
c
4
4
I
I
I

T A C K

12x8

S A L E

* 7 4 0
t A ii paicic

ALL WOOD BUILOINGS
l

BUILT ON YOUR LOT

rw
v
rv

LACMmtWLIimia

teal

tun

amPpm
m am c i p a

MI8L
Uaupr LrtMpHi)

IAVII
SIM

•an i/ii/ct

NO MONEY DOWN
100% FINANCING AVAILABLE

C O M E S E E O liR F A C T O R Y S A L E S L O T A T
200 S. M Y R TLE A V E.
SANFORD
3 2 3 .5 5 5 7

lot Ortpp I. tom,

♦ &lt;w # m «

X

�Israelis Storm Moslem Villages

•A— Evening Herald, Sanford, PI- Thursday, March H , IfU

WORLD

B E IR U T. Lebanon (UPlI Israeli paratroopers stormed
several Shiite Moslem villages In
southern Lebanon today in a
major advance Into territory
near the port of Sldon where
renegade C h ristia n m ilitias
fought the Lebanese army, mili­
tary sources said.
The action, which Involved
hundreds of paratroopers backed
by t a n k s a n d h e l i c o p t e r
gunshlps. was Israel’s largest
since Us withdrawal from the
region around Sldon on Feb 16.
The purpose was not immrdl-

IN BRIEF

Solidarity Threatens
To Call G eneral Strike
WARSAW. Poland ((JIM) - leader* of the outlawed
Solidarity union urged workers lo protest new price
increase* and threatened lo call a general atrlke unleaa the
government meets their demands for corresponding wage
increases.
Fugitive leaders of the banned trade union In the Warsaw
area called ott local workers to demonstrate on April l —
the day more government Imposed food and energy price
rises are lo lake effect.
The call came as the government announced one of the
three Imprisoned Solidarity leaders. Bogdan Us. gave up
his 11 day hunger strike Wednesday.
A source close lo I he three union leaders said Us was III
and had been force fed by prison authorities
Us. 32, was arrested Feb. 13 with fellow dissidents
W lady slaw Frasynluk and Adam Mlchnlk m a meeting of
the Solidarity leadership In a Gdansk apartment. They
were discussing plans for a round of price-hike protests,
which were later called off when the government modified
the Increases

A proposed adult entertain­
ment ordinance will be dis­
cussed by Ihe Lake Mary City
Commission at Its regular meet­
ing at 7:30 p m. today at Lake
Mary City Hall. 158 N. Country
Club Road
Th e o rd in a n ce regulating
adult entertainment In the rtty
would rejieal a similar ordinance

NEW D E LH I. India |UPI| — Tw o gunmen
riding a motorcycle assassinated a Soviet
official loday. firing four bulleis Into him as
hr rode In n car with hts wife.
The victim was Identified as Valentine
Khllrtchcnko. an engineer and staff memlier
of the embassy's economic scrllon who has
been supervising IndoSovlet projec ts tor
about two years
The Press Trusi of India said Ihe vlellrn
was taken to Dr. Ham Manor liar Lohla
Hospital where a senior doctor said hr was
jmmounerd dead on arrival
"The body had four bullet entry wounds

Catholicism Falls From Grace

the county "Is bolding Ihe rczonlng hostage" for the develop­
ers’ opposition to te rrito ry
expansion request.
Continued from page 1A
The utility is operating under
with Hickman an exact amount a temporary permit from the
of sewer capacity the develop­ stale Department of Environ­
ment might need. Choroay also mental Regulation. The permit Is
opposed the expansion of territo­ scheduled to expire Ju ly l. The
agency has ordered the company
ryttU-kmnn M il l the ilcv«tn|irT* to re ro u te d ilu e n t front Its s e w e r
will have to have the county I&gt;l.inI fimu the 13der lbi.nl din h
commission approve rcxonlng of lo holding ponds und then into
their pro|x-rty tx-forr they can nearby Smith Canal
Hlekmun said the work t»
build their development. PSC
Commissioner (ieruld Gunter expected to be completed within
wild Hickman was hinting that two weeks
— Donna Estes

...Utility

d e f in e d ," said tire re p o rt
published In Hie New England
.Journal ol Medicine.
Earlier similes showed a corre­
lation between Type A behavior
ami heart disease, which pro­
mpted the National Institutes of
Health to list It as an Indepen­
dent risk factor.

Continued from psge 1A

such as Hie gears, wear out
constantly and havr to be rejilaced. he suid.
"A n o th e r negative with a
movable bridge Is you have to
slop irnftle to let bouts through,"
Dr. Bedford Williams of Duke
Gray said.
University reported two yenrs
Th r bridge was bulli In 1933
ago that a study of physicians
and has narrower lanes because
Indicated anger and hostility ure II was built to uccommodutc
the keys to the bad effects of Model Ts and Model As
Ty|&gt;c A behavior He said a
The bridge Is a vital crossing
new study not yet published tor residents In south Volusia
from the University of Maryland
County who come Into Sanford
Indicates that hostility and re­
and Scmlnnlr County to work.
p re sse d a n g e r In c re a s e a
AImiuI 10.600 cars jx-r day travel
person's risk of heart disease.
thr bridge. That compares with

B O A T1 N Q F O R E C A S T ! St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet ou. 50
mile* — A small erafl advisory Is
til effect. East to southeast wind
Increasing to 20 to 25 knots with
higher gusts today then becom­
ing south uruund 20 knots
tonight und Friday Sea building
to B to 9 feet. Wind and seas
higher in M attered showers and
thunderstorms north part this
afternoon and tonight spreading
In south part hy Friday.
A R E A FORECAST! Today
A R E A R EA D IN O B (B a.m.Ji
In c re a s in g c lo u d in e s s ami
windy. Srutlrrrd to numerous temperature: 66; overnight low:
s h o w e rs and a few t liu n - GO; W ednesday's high: 70;
derstorms by midday. High near barometric pressure: 30 02; rela­
HO Wind southeast to 25 mph tive h u m id ity ; HI percent;
with higher gusts Rain chance winds: eust u( 8 mph; light rain;
Increasing to 110 percent. T o ­ sunrise: 6 2 8 a m , sunset 6:37
night showers likely with a few l&gt; m.
F R ID A Y T ID E S ; D a y to n a
thunderstorm*. Low in mid oo*.
South wind 15 to 20 mph. Rain Batch: highs, H:45 a m ., 8:57
cha n ce 70 percent, F rid a y p m.: lows. 2:21 a m . 2:31 p m .;
moatly cloudy with showers en­ Port C n n ava ra li highs. 8:37
ding by Ulc afternoon High a m., 8:49 p.tn.i lows. 2:12 a m .,
upper 70s. Southwest wind IS 2 22 p.m.; Bay port; highs. 1:33
mph. Rain chance decreasing to a m.. 1:35 p.m.: lows. 7:46 a m.,
8:11 p.m.
30 percent.
N ATIO N AL R E P O R T : An
casHMiund storm that pushed
IliMMlwatrrs Into a county court­
house and Injured four people
with a tornado in Texas spread
Inlo Hie Southeast today with
heuvy rains whipped by winds
gosling In 70 mph Rain fell
Imluy from the southern Plains
to Flurlda, with nearly 214 tu­
rtles rr|Kirted by late Wednesday
at Mobile. Ala

STOCKS
TSm ouxaiiani pro,«M Sr nwmttn W
•er rrprtw iliM mht ttn+r ft let , i «,
*SSfix*xp t a li, Int+r
(S s n f* MrowaSma M* J j ,

Pricr* do nW

"WltWi rtltll markup mjrkSViw*

Sul Aik
At «r*T'r Baa *
B sriw ll Sank
First F io n a * U l

OuMUPm'

» i.
a
IW

f»H
MW
m

a tank safety valve lor about two
hours.
Union Carbide also said It
would resume production of (hr
Continued from page 1
gas next month at Its Instliutr.
he said at a news conference. W.Va., plant, depending on ap­
"Th a t’s why we said It might be proval of the Environmental
deliberate. I can't Impugn malice Protection Agency. Production
here. I cau l say It's an act of was hulled there alter the Bhopal
sabolage."
disaster.
When pressed, however. A n ­
Union Carbide officials said a
derson said, "It doesn’t seem siudy of Us methyl Isocyanate
like somrthing lliul Is Inadver­ unit at Its West Virginia plant
tent."
"ull tnit ruled out" the possibili­
Anderson said hts company ty of a similar accident Ihrrr.
would not discuss possible
"W e can confidently say, 'It
blame for the Incident bcrausc of c a n 't happen h e re ’ .*.' said
civil und criminal action pending Jackson Browning, vice presi­
In India Hgutnst employees of dent of heal th, safety and
Union Carbide India Ltd.
environmental affairs for the
The findings also rould affect company.
bHIIon-dottur tawsults tiled
Suspension nl gas production
against Union Carbide, a $10.5 In West Virginia hart threatened
billion conglomerate, in the Hie Jobs rtf up lo 700 people
United States.
carrying a payroll of *20 million.
The company said Wednesday
Hon Van Mynctr. a Union
the pesticides factory was Curhtdr official who tiended the
riddled with safety violations Investigating learn, said a re­
and estimated deadly methyl frigeration unit crucial to control
Isocyanate gas escaped through rtf chemical reactions had berm

...B ridge

WEATHER

SW N s lu n t l A usrU S itn Oi U f v r i l f t O m ^ - i

* Ll#M
Fl« Progmx

I'liSm Uaingi
HCA
HW*I limply
Momimti i .
NCR Coro
fhmst ..............
UoO*'1 ............
lavltwotl Sons
tun M i l

this time.
The ordinance would require
the licensing of adult enter­
tainment facilities and permits
for employees who work there.
Th e regulation would also pro­
hibit the sale, dispensing or
consumption of alcoholic bever
ages at such a facility.
— Roger Simmons

...Charged
Continued from page 1A
Wednesday. Spolskl said
Pa'nzzo boughl his Altamonte
Sprn.gs home In 1981. sheriffs
Investigator Paul Jaynes said.
Both Palazzo and DlSano moved
lo Florida from Providence. R.I..
and DlSano was a well known
sports hero In hts Rhode Island
hometown. Spolskl said.
DlSano was defensive tackle
lor the University of Rhode
Island Hants. Hr received a
degree in physical education In
11)81 and coached high school
football and was a substitute
teacher In Rhode Island, ac­
c o rd in g to i h r P ro v id e n c e
Journal-Bulletin.

nw nw
u«* &gt;4

.....
4|tfc 4
11*4
.. ... US
ir*
... lit*
ID,
I7\*
irw
S»* 1IW

...G N P
Continued from page 1A
living.
One of the few economists who
correctly anticipated the excep­
tionally slow growth In Ihe Itrsl
quarter was UNI* specialist
Herman Llcbllng. chief forecast­
er of the Treasury Dejurtmerit
through several udmtnlsirallons
and now a professor and eco­
nomic writer. He predicted a 2.5
pcrcrnlrale.
Th r first quurtcr flgurr. even If

37,&lt;xx) per day on the Interstate
4 bridge.
Th e bridge Is still In the
concept stages, with the DOT
preparing lo make engineering
and environm ental studies.
Plan* have not been drawn up
and the project lias ycl to lx-

approved by I he Fc dera I
Highway Admlnlsirallon. Gray
said Additional lands will have
to be acquired since the bridge
will s|um farther into ImiiIi coun­
ties and penults from three stale
and federal agencies Jiave yet to
Ik*grunted.
Gruy said the project docs
present some problems Space
for roust met Ion will lx- tight
since the bridge will lx- hull!
next lo the old one and not tar

sulwttunllally changed when dala
lor the entire three-month jx-rtod
becomes available, shows coil*
clut'lvcly that the beginning of
Hits year Is no mulch economi­
cally l*.r thr spectacular growth
al the start of 1984
A year ago the llrxl quarter
e x p lo d e d wlih a 10 1 percent
advance for GNP. the market
value of all good* and services
Despite a stale third quarter,
with growth al only 1.8 perm it,
the yrar turned out lo be the
lies! since 1951 With the GNP
expanding 6.8 percent when

Flawen For All Occasion»

(it a liin a

Irom a railroad bridge. Ami
because II Is a bigger bridge, Ihe
constnirtlon activity could pres­
ent a hazard lo Hie environment,
tie said.
Hut Gray said the D O T will
con d uct extensive e n v iro n ­
mental studies In make sure Ihe
area Is ecologically unharmed.
G r a c e F r i e n d , pnl&gt;11&lt;*11 y
ch a irm a n lor the Sem inole
County chapter ol the Florida
Audubon Society, said the area
around thr bridge "Is not as
environmentally sensitive" as
the tract around lire Douglas
S trn strn m Bridge dow nriver
near Osteen. She said there are
no manatees and only a few
alllguiors In (hut section of the
— Rick Brunson

river

compared to all of 1983
Another GNP gauge more
closely tied lo prices, known as
the "G N P fixed-weighted price
Index." Is Increasing at a moder­
ate 4 1 percent annual rate,
compared lo 3.6 jiereeni In the
(mirth quarter.
Economist Llcbllng. reacting
lo the figures, said they should
be no surprise* since ihe calcula­
tions ure dominated by a re­
sumption o( foreign trade dellelis
Dial lake Ihe edge off d o m e stic
growth.

2 r .T L " .

...Port
Continued from page 1A

1975-76 and lias been leased
over Hie years until Jan. 31
when the lease with a former
tenant expired. .
He said with ihe construction
ol Hidden Harbour Marina on
laud leased from Itie jxrrt. a
dlllereul lyjx- of "containment
device" to allay any jto*.siblllty of
a spill Into ibe SI. Johns River Is
necessary.
The containment device used
prior to const ruction of the
murtna was strung from one side
of Hie water enlryway Inlo Ihe
jxirl to the other.
T h e new device w ill loop
around Hie end of a barge to hold
gasoline if it spills Gasoline is
pumped from tutrge* into thr
tanks
He added that a new operating
manual will also Jurve In be
composed. "Th a i will be no
problem." Dolgm-r said.
In other business. Dolgnrr
reported to Hie directors that he
is negotiating wllb a high-tech
Industry to locate at Ihe port. He
said thr Industry Is already
operating In another section of
Central Florida
Meanwhile, he rejxirted that
Hidden Harbour Marina expects
w ithin 30 days to open alt 183 of
tls slips for boal storage.
III

TOTAL INSURANCE
SERVICE
Heat rice; two sons. Robert
W ood dltf Lake, N. J. , Marc,
Yonkers. N.Y.; a daughter. Mrs
Audrey Relnhartz. Altamonte
S p rin g s ; a b ro th e r. Martin
Silvers. Orlando: two sisters.
Mrs Sylvia Woolf. Casselberry.
Mr*. Rose Bobrow. North Miami,
eight grandchildren
Beth Shalom-Goldslrtn Memo­
rial Ch.ipci, Or lamto Is In charge
of arrangements.

O A K LA W N
FVNtRAL MOMLfCUKTIRY
Ox* compfel* Funor al Homs, si out

«U l

I

out of operation for live months lures, reacted with methyl Iso­
before the leak.
cyanate Above-normal levels of
A flare tower designed to hum chloroform also played a part In
off gases vented from the plant ttit* rear lion. Van Mynen said.
also was shut down for mainte­
A workman who finally real­
nance at the time of the leak, he ized pressure was "clim bing
said.
rapidly" ran lo the slorage lank
Workers werr not aware of a and rc|&gt;ortcd hearing "rubbing
dangerous buildup ol pressure in sounds and a screeching noise"
Ihe slorage tank, and an alarm from a safety valve.
which hud not been reset failed
"A s lie run track to the control
lo warn of the rapid rise In room he heard the concrete over
icmj&gt;craUire, Van Myncn said.
Hie tank begin to crack.” Hie
A nderson said the safety repori said.
lapses were In "total disregard”
Anderson said production will
of com pany op e ra tin g pro­ resume at Institute next month
cedures. Unlott Carbide was not to provide (restleIdes to tanners
aware of the violations. An­ In time for the major growing
derson said.
season.
Van Mynen said four months
But a citizens group said
of Intense scrutiny. Including
Union Carbide had provided
m o r e ih u n 5 0 0 l a b o r a t o r y
experiments, revented water and " v r r v Utile u n d e rsta n d in g"
Iron were Involved 111 Hie chemi­ •itsml why a similar leak could
cal reaction sparking the toxic not occur In Instliulr
teak.
Sen. Jay Rockefeller. D-W.Va.,
The exact source of the water urged thr company lo work
was not known, he said.
closely with local, stale and
The water, which generated federal officials In restarting the
the dangerously high tempera- unit.

AREA DEATH
JO H N CHERNOK
Mr. John Chcrnok. 73, ot 491
Oakhavrn D rive . Altamonte
Springs, died Tuesday at Florida
Hospllal-Altamontr. Dorn March
18. 1012 In New York City, he
moved to Altamonte Springs
from New York City In 1972. lie
was a retired ladles' gannriu
m a n u f a c t u r e r a n d was a
member of Congregation of Lib­
eral Judaism. Orlando
Survivors Include- his wife

As the embassy car was about to enter the
Soviet compound the gunmen opened tire
Iron: ihe right stile, wounding Khiirlehenko.
the PressTrusl said
Witnesses told the Press Tru s t the
gunmen were of "Aslan origin" and ap*
Iteared In Ire In their early 20s
Rcporlrrn nl the scene said the rear and
right windshields were shattered and the
seal anti one door were- drenched lit blood.
The assassination oc curred five days after
the disappearance* In lire eajillal of Igor
G czha. 37. an attache In the- Soviet
Embassy's Information &lt;le|&gt;ar|ment.

The rructal one was in the neck, the doctor
told United Press lnirni.ilion.il "Another
bullet wound was In the chest and two In
less crucial arms."
A Soviet Embassy spokesman said the
Official's w ife and driver ol Hie ear suffered
splinter Injuries in the attack and that the
woman was hospitalized.
The Press trust said Khltnelienkn was
s lu in g In the bark seal of a white
Soviet-made Volga when two men drove
alongside on a black motorcycle as the
ccmplr was returning home from a shopping
trlji

...Leak

HOME (Ill'll — Italy's lower house of Parliament hus
approved a historic concordat with the Vulleun that
eliminates Homan Catholicism as Italy's stale religion — a
privilege granted the church hy dictator Brnltn Mussolini
In 1929 In an attempt to win church support for his FascP.t
regime.
The Chamber ol Deputies approved the new agreement,
350-73, laic Wednesday.

People with Ty|&gt;e A behavior
have a high degree of romjx-tlliveliest*, impatience, aggression
and a sense of the urgency of
tim e . People wi t h t y p e B
personalities are said to he
slower paced, more relaxed and
Itetter able to "roll with the
punches."
" T h e negative results of our
study do not Invalidate the
e(Teels of all emotional factors on,
coronary disease but suggest
that more speellle personality
characteristics Hum T yp e A
iH'havlor need to Is- examined It
a stronger relationship Is lo he

that currently covers dance
halls. It approved, the measure
would make It difficult for adult
book stores, a d u lt m otion
p ic tu re t heat er s , massage
rntuhllshrnts or adult dancing
establishments to operate In
Lake Mary.
There are no adult enter­
tainment facilities in rite city at

Grmayal warned Wednesday
the mutiny, led hy Lebanese
F o rc e s c o m m a n d e r Sam If
Geagea. was liable to provoke
foreign Intervention.

Gunm en Assassinate Soviet Official In India

UITKN HAGE. South Africa tUPIl - Police opened fire
today on a crowd of up to 4 .(XX) blacks, some armed with
sjjears and stones us they marched near a white suburb At
least Ifl people were killed and 22 wounded on the 25lh
anniversary of the Sharpevllle massacre.
Between 3.000 and 4.(XX) blacks were murchlng from the
township of Langa toward a nearby white suburb of the
city of Port Ell/nlx-th. 400 miles east of Cape Town, a
polli e spokesman In Ullenhage said.
The crowd, some armed with spears and stones, refused
orders lo dls|ierse alronl a mile from the suburb, the
spokesman said. They surrounded ulxmt 20 (rollcemcn and
hurled rocks at (hrtll. and thru police openrd fire with
rifles und shotguns, the spokesman said.

Continued from page 1A

n-lmqiiishrd Fell. IB In ihe first
phase of Israel's rhrre-slage
wi t h d r a wa l from sou thern
Lebanon.
One of the villages. Kfar Malta,
is Just 4 miles southeast of the
Sldon suburb of Aabra. where
the C h ris tia n m ilitia s are
engaged against Moslem unlls of
the Lebanese army and Moslem
militiamen.
The military sources said the
Israelis also stormed Jrba a.
Hounln Fawka. Arab el Jal.
Sarba. Kfar Melkl and Ktar Flla
— all to Ihe southeast of Sldon

A d u lt E n te rta in m e n t O r d in a n c e O n A g e n d a

Police Kill Black Protesters

...H e a rt

a t e I y c l e a r , b u * M o s le m
spokesmen charged the move
was designed lo help rebellious
Christian militiamen who have
been fighting the army near
Sldon for four da&gt;s A Lebanese
military spokesman said It could
tx- an assault on Moslem guerrillasnr a re-occupation
A Lebanese military
spokesman said Lebanese iroops
and local villagers were resisting
I he Israeli advances
Siaie-ownrd Beirut radio said
the Israrlls entered nine villages,
seven of which were in icrrltorv

U Cm

122-42*1

REMEMBER
YOUR INDEPENDENT AGENT
SERVES YOU FIRST

T

SU tTUIO CASUALTY
Coaf AST

KARNS
INSURANCE A O IN C Y me.

411 W. First SL

Pk. 322-5782

William H. "BUI" Wight C.P.C.U.
Prasidant

Ssnfard
Qsrald W. Mayar

Account Rsprssantatlv*

�PEOPLE

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday- March 11, I H S - 1B

'Miss Teen' Pageant Entry
Forms Available A t K Mart

Spring
Cleaning

Contenders for the 1986 Miss
Teenage America title may ob­
tain entry forms at any U,S K
mart discount department store,
the retailer announced today.
K mart Apparel Corp.. a sub­
sidiary of K mart Corporation, is
cosponsoring the 1986 Miss
Teenage A m erica program .
Other sponsors are Lincoln Mer­
cury. National Dairy Board and
Sea Breeze.
Miss* Teenage America Is an
achievement program lo re­
cognize o u ts ta n d in g yo u n g
women between the ages of 13
and 18. according to Tren Af.iga
zlne. which operates the pro­
gram.
The Miss Teenage America
program seeks to recognize

Sanford Mayor Bettyc Smith
explained the Sanford City
Commission's decision pro
claiming March as "cleanup,
paintup and fixup" month in
Sanford when she spoke be
fore the Sanford Lions Club
recently. Cl ub President
Sull y F l emi ng, left, an
nounces that the club voted
to support the project along
with other civic clubs and
organizations. The Sanford
Lions, assisted by the San
ford DeMolay Chapter, will
join forces to do their share
in sprucing up Sanford. Sat­
urday, March 30.

scholastic achievement, general
awar eness. In d iv id u a l a c ­
c o m p li s h m e n I . c o in m u it 11y
service, poise, appearance and
personality.
The young woman who Is
named Miss Teenage America
will receive a $20.(XX) college
scholarship, a 1986 Lincoln
Mercury Capri, a K mart Apparel
wardrobe and an assortment of
beauty products from Bristol
Myers She will travel nationally,
appear on television and on a
'Teen Magazine cover and write
a monthly column lor 'Teen
Entry deadline is June 1. The

DEAR ABBY: My parents
have been divorced since I was
14. Pm 20 now ami have a good
re la tio n sh ip wi t h both m y
parents, but my mother resents
my father for several things he
has done to her as well as lo me
and my sister. I've learned lo pul
things In the past and leave
them there. I love my father as
much as I love m y mother, but
Mother doesn't understand that
She doesn't expect me to hale
m y father, bul she doesn't like It
when I talk about (he trips he
takes with his new wife or
anything he does, so I don't
mention II.
I am engaged to be married
ami I want both parents to give
me away. My mother wants lo
give me away and says If I Inslsl
that my father share In that
honor, she will not attend my
wedding W r had a long talk
about It and I cried for two days.
I then derided to let m y mother
give me away, but she knows
I'm not happy about It.
Have you any suggestions?

Candidates must be enrolled
In high school through at least
1986. have a " B ” or heller grade
av er age and h a v e special
achievements.
Executive Vice President of
U S K mart Stores Larry M
Parkin said "We are proud to l&gt;e
a sponsor of Mias Teenage
America because the program
highlights American ideals such
as scholarship and community
service."

CARE FREE CURLS .*43.50
RELAXOR
TOUCH U P S .. * 2 2 . 5 0

iieglnnlng March 25 Seminole

Community College will oflrr a

such loving Icellngs lo my wife
— w m rth lng I failed lodo for my
mother.
Th a n k s for listening. And
(hank you. Abby. for teaching
good people how lo lie belter.

Dear
Abby

year.

JA Y’S I 1A IR ST Y L IN G DEN

Nursing
Assistant

Bride Should Be 'Given
Away' By 'Both Or None'

program will culminate with (lie
tel evi sed selection of Miss
Teen age Am erica laler lhis

IMPROVING WITH AGE
IN NEW YORK

BURGUNDY
COLORING . * 1 5 . 0 0

Nursing Assistant course leading
to slate certification
Classes will be he’d Monday
thiough Thursday. 8 am lo
4 30 p m , for eight weeks. Cost
of the course Is $80
Nursing Assistants In Florida
jur now required lo be certified
by the Department uf Education.
Register at I he admissions
olflre In (he administration
building For more Information,
rail extension 282 at 323-1450.
from Orlando 843-7&lt;X)l

HAIRCUTTING &amp;
S T Y L I N G . . . * 1 0 .0 0

q P^RA T O ^ a
W
EXFEMAMCE

"//alrruM/og A
Styling A t Hit H eal"

WANTED WITH
* 0
IN e m s 4 KLAXONS ONLY

3235227

11
NO NAME OR TOWN.
PLEASE
DEAR NO NAME: When you

marry, are you going to ask your
husband l( he's a virgin? And If
he Is not, do you think you have
the right lo qucsilori him con­
cerning his past sexual experi­
ences? Ol course not It's none of
your business.
The same is true concerning
you. Your pust Is none of his
business. What's done Is done.
Don't dwell on It.

READY
FOR
EASTER

L if e S t r i d e A f f o r d a b l e ^ .

T h e letter
signed " J u s t Woke U p In
California" moved me lo leurs.
The writer, who had always
gi v e n hi s el der l y m o l h e r
WORRIED SICK expensive gifts, vowed to give
DEAR WORRIED: In such her a gift of himself — to spend
situations I urge parents lo give more lime with her and lo tell
their marrying child (he gift of tier In so many words that he
happiness on Ills or Iter wedding loved tier while he still had time.
My 90-year-old mother lived
day, and put llielr own feelings
aside. Your mother Is wrong to with me until she died a year
punish you In her determination ago. For 20 yearse I had been
lo punish your father. Since you her shopper, chauffeur, confi­
love ihem rrpially. make It both dant, mainstay, etc., and I'm
or none — and ask a favorite sure she knew from my actions
relative or drar Irtrnd lo "give that 1 lovrd her very much, but
only once since I was a grown
you away."
many did I say. "I love you,
DEAR ABBY: I am 17 (nearly Molher" — and that was on her
I8| and am going with a very deal Idled,
So. 1 also Just woke up. and
special guy whom 1 like very
much. 1 know he feels the same have promised myself that when
way about me. We seem lo be I marry. I shall verbally convey
gelling closer and closer and
may be heading for u serious
relationship.
The problem g«&gt;cs back to
V a
V U U l t ^ r t
when I was 15. I lost my
virginity lo my first boyfriend.
At the time, 1 thought l was
going to marry him. but It didn’t
work oul that way. and we
drifted apurt.
The guy I’m going with now
knows nothing about my not
being a virgin 1 am a Catholic,
and all Catholic girls are sup­
posed to keep their virginity
until the day ihey marry. Since 1
am no longer a virgin, how can I
explain It lo him? How can I
explain II to any guy who asks
me to marry him?
1 feel so ashamed Many limes
I burst Into tears because I don't
know how I will ever be able lo
tell the man I marry. Please help
me.
DEAR

G e t In Step
O n C a s u a l Fash io n .
Just In Tim e For Easter w ith...
Com e Sec O u r Newest Hatch
O f Dressy E n stcr Shoes For
Hoys A n d G irls In All
T h e Latest Styles And
Colors F o r S pring.

ABBY:

SPIRIT

This S n a p p y S h o o
Will B « The Perfect
C o m p le m e n t T o A n y
Outfit For Easter.

Available In Whlte/Real Red Smooth
Whlte/Navy Sm ooth
&amp; Whlle/Slack Shiny
S lis i 0 -10 * 1 2 . 9 9

20-220 r. iff ST.
SaafarV, FhtUs
2 2 2 -2 5 2 4

nouns
MON S A T 9 3 JO

NEW
ARRIVALS
Mr. and Mrs. David (Frances)
Ferris of Ft. Knox, Ky.. an­
nounce the birth of a daughter.
A m y Jean, on March 10, She
weighed 6 lbs . 4 ozs.
Grandparents are Milton and
Carolyn Ferris of Sanford, and
Theresa Gorman of DeLand.
Mr. anti Mrs. Patrick Joe
(Jcana) Perneslil Sr. of Sanford,
announce the birth of a daugh­
ter. Kachel Leigh on Feb. 27.
Maternal grandparents arc Mr.
and Mrs. George A. Hughes Sr.
of S a n f o r d . P a t e r n a l
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Patary Prrnesttt of Hopkinsville.
Ky.

t U

■

&lt; A / rv

*

*

t

&amp;

rx

&amp;

y

n

&amp;

s

&amp;

s id t u J L

a

r

*

*

*

1

�BIONDIE

2B~ Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI. Thursday, March 31, IWJ

by Chic Youn f

No, Diuretics Won't
'Dry Up' Your Blood

DEAR DR. LAMB - I’ve had
high blood pressure for years
and have taken Dyazide since
(he 1970s. My blood pressure Is
130 over 83. I'm 78. My doctor
never tells me anything.
My neighbor says that her
doctor took her ofT Dyazide and
said It dries up the blood If It's
by Mort Walker taken too long. Is that right? At
BEETLE BAILEY
m y age. what should m y blood
pressure be? 1weigh 165 and am
5 feet 3.
DEAR READER - It's a halftruth. All of the diuretics used to
tower blood pressure cause you
to eliminate sodium and water;
hat is the major way in which
they work. You will lose a little
fluid from all your tissues, but if
you didn't, these medicines
would not lower your blood
pressure. However, your blood
will not "dry up.” Nor will you. tf
you don't lake too much of these
diuretics. A person can become
THE BORN LOSER
by Art Sanaom dehydrated from almost any of
these If he or she uses more than
n ri c a n BELIEVE ir .„ ir s j u s t ) / ( O U T i P T C D \ 7 n (£ Y &amp; U J5 ' '...W AS MUCH AS I
Is needed.
Your friend probably didn't
~Oj0T UKEHOUlJ-----'THE HATOCOC M ,V . (tRATUlTW
Ht&amp;SJ WEARIU6A HAT
need
to have a diuretic, or the
6iRL ♦ 51
'' ( ‘SEEMZD #J
WHEW I WElJT IM.
action was too strong In her
case. Evidently, Dyazide has
served you well for 10 years.
What diuretic should be used,
and how much, is based on your
response, as indicated by your
blood pressure and by blood
tests that measure your body
1/
salts.
►»
Your pressure Is fine for your
ARCHIE
by Bob Montana age. It la within normal limits for
any age. so count your blessings
and follow your doctor's In­
st ructions.
T o help fill your Information
gap. I'm sending you The Health
Letter 15-8. Your Vital Hlood
Pressure.
D E A R DR. L A M B My
brother recently was diagnosed
as having cancer of the liver. His
doctor told him that there Isn't
anything that can be done for
him. However, I read Just re­
cently of someone having a liver
transplant. I would appreciate
EEK &amp; MFFK
by Howl# Schneider any information you can give
me.
DEAR READER Your
AMD I TH R ttU M V
I WAS DOlWG MY MATTY
brother should rely on his
HOUR- JCM OF MOJCJUEJjr
-jcie . ce v(W3E o a r
doctor s best advice, since the
OF UJHACU
TV AEfCeJCS...
doctor knows the full extent of
his condition. The only other
course would be to have a
consultation at one of the na­
tion's cancer centers, such as

The...

TAV6R

Sloan Kettering In New York or
M.D. Anderson in Houston, or at
least the cancer (oncology) sec­
tion of a university medical
center. The decision also de­
pends upon how widespread the
cancer la In the body.
It Is true that In some cases of
liver cancer, a transplant has
been done, and the three-year
survival rate is 15 percent.
Even with treatment, the out­
look for cancer of the liver is not
good. Some treatments have
decreased the size of the cancer.
4 Compels point
5 Positive words
1 Intern beaut
B Supreme
ol burden
Egyptian deity
S Yawn {si)
7 Baking pit
9 Actress
8 Egyptian tomb
Benederet
9 Churl
12 Stars
10 Outer (prat |
13 Television
11 Egyptian sun
award
disk
14 Eight (prat l
19 Motor coach
15 Pennsylvania
21 Actress Novak
port
23 Married
16 Tan
woman’s title
17 Ear (comb,
24 Hint
torm)
25 Hindu literature
IB English sir
26 Certainly (le t )
force (sbbv)
27 Having little
19 Big ____
wermlh
20 Ohio city
28
Navy recruit
22 Australisn birds
1*1.1
24 901. Romen
29 Inch along
25 Carsens
30 Background
27 Mountaineer
32 American in
31 Companion ol
Britain
odds
35 Choica cut of
32 Common
baaf
contraction
33 Elaborate poem 1
2
1
34 Use a spade
35 Cut price deal
It
35 Hindu ascatic
practice
11
37 Eskimo
IB
39 Elactor
40 Irritata
41 Good (Ft.)
42 Marcanary
n
IB
45 toga
45 Wagar
it
49 Paruvtan plant
50 Egg call
14
52 Priest
53 Rstirament plan
1!
(abbr)
54 Poetic toot

but have failed to alTect the
survival time.
Cancers often spread to the
liver because It Is such a
vascular orga n. Cancer o r­
iginating In the liver is quite rare
in the United States, causing less
than 1 percent of all deaths and
less than 2.5 percent of cancers,
.Send your questions to L)r.
tomb. P O Box 1551. Radio City
Station. New York. N.Y., 10019
Antwar to PraviOus Puttie

ACROSS

44 fliver in Watt
Germany
45 Knock against
46 Denude
47 Elude
48 Scottish cup

38
38
39
41

Over there
Inlet
Vo«a (Let)
Fail! epectacu
tarty (si |
42 Empty place
43 Color

51 libertan natives
52 Short lor Leslie

H
J
■

10 n
’
-

r
L

55 Greek goddess

56 Christen
57 Bites
SB Televisions

«•

DOW N
1 Rivtr in
Ftenders
2 Distinctive air
3 Cutting surface
(comp, wd |

D^

it
54

1
J
let tens b, Nt» Inc

i

W I N A T B R ID G E
by Hargraavea A Sahara

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
/

GO&amp;-\, AAR CLEVER f \
( W
HAVE AM A M A Z IN G )
1 VOCABUIAKT / ALL
V TH O SE PIG Y io R P G / /

V
N
( WELL,THANK W 1
I HAVE A LWAT’S
CONSIDERED IT
^R A TH ER MEAtiER

K y
by Warner Brothera

BUQS BUNNY
-TMS

P lN D S

I -£2E3&gt; &lt;S£n T£ n C£
NO- T 3 09 N£ACS OF

y Q jZ C O N D U C T
D 'S S ^ S T I N G -

i

WACO LABOC r

99 N0ARS OF
h

A(?P

1 I U iNK I S O T V

l ABOC_

T h £ VVCOs S JJD c s J

?02 MuMTlMC
WA8BIT5 OUT
O P SEASON 7

By James Jacoby

How la u good bridge player
like u good poultry farmer?
Neither of them likes to pul all
Ills eggs In one basket.

hold up the club are until the
I bird round. At trick I wo. South
should lead a low diamond from
his hand. West will win und
continue spades. Now South
plays thr diamond ace, noting
the fall of the queen. Only now Is
the king of clubs played As
liefore, everyone follows low.

Declarer won the opening
spade lead and played the king
of clubs from his hand. Everyone
played low. Next came the Jac k
of clubs, overtaken by the
Now comes the Jack ot clubs,
queen, and everyone still pluyed overtaken by the queen. When
low. There was not much left to that holds, declarer has the now
do. Declarer tried a low diamond pleasant alternative of leading
lo the Jack, gobbled up by the up to his Jack of diamonds. That
queen In West's hand. When key curd becomes declarer's
diamonds fulled to divide 3-3. ninth trick.
the contract was one down
Declarer's foresight In playing
The right approach Is to Im ­ first a low diamond and then the
prove your chances In the uce. before attacking clubs, gives
diamond suit, Just In case the him the extra chance he needs to
opponents are going to be ublc to make thr hand.

NonTlt

♦ 5I

m u

* 7 S2

4 7 51
4 g 10 9*1
WEST

EAST

♦ J 10 9 7
V J« 41

* 5 5 41
Vq 10 9

409

4 K 10 16

♦ A ll

475
S O I'Til

♦ AKQ

» ak*
4 AJ 42
♦ K J4
Vulnerable North South
Dealer South
Ksl

Nocih

East

I’m
PlSI

24
Pau

Pus
P iu

South

14
IN T

Opening lead 4 J

HOROSCOPE
FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thavea

I ’M

16 ApouNP THf

N fcfc,

-f o

r

ApouNP

TH£ WAUT AND
96 ABOUND THE1

s

GOLF Coup/F.
QARFIELD

by Jim Davis
FOR THE FIRST

TT

T IM E IN MW L I F E .

you. Something said can tie used
SCORPIO (Ori 24 Nov. 221 Ikadvuntageously.
extra Industrious today because
OEMINI (May 2 1-June 20| Gel you can reap material and
out and circulate today where personal rew ards for work
you can meet new people. well done Ikith have their merit.
YOUR BIRTHDAY
There's a possibility you'll en­
SAQITTARIUS INov. 23-Dec.
MARCH 2 2 . :S 8 5
counter someone who can In­
21) Lady Luck Is in your comer
Expect n lot of social activities troduce you lo a fun group.
In the year ahead because you're
C A N C ER (June 2 1 July 22) today and she Is i.pt to treat you
going to broaden your range of Unusual career opportunities favorab ly t hr o ug h friends,
Interests and acquaintances. will be prevalent today. If you especially those who are mem­
New friends will Introduce you to spot some unique signals, get bers of the opposite gender.
new things.
ready lo swing Into action.
CAPRICORN (Dee 22 Jan.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
L E O (July 23-Aug. 22) A good 19) You'll lie quite creative today
New Ideas or concepts you day to look a bit ahead and make In ways (hat can enhance the
formulate today will tie sound, your entertainment plans far the
beauty of your surroundings A
so it’s Important you do more weekend. Contact those you
good day to rearrange the
with them than merely mull want to spend time with now.
furniture or pul up new drapes.
them over. The Matchmaker
V IR O O (Aug 23-Sept. 22| Ik­
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 Feb. 101
wheel reveals your compatibility on the lookout today for some­
A new friendship Is about to
to ull signs, as well as shows you thing you might be able to buy
blossom with someone you now
which signs you are best suited that will apprecUle with time.
know casually. Soon you'll dis­
lo romantically. To get yours, The present owner doesn't re­
cover how much you have In
mall $2 toAstro-Graph,
Box cognize Its value.
common.
489, Radio City Station. New
L IB R A ISept. 23 Oct. 23) T o ­
PISCE8 (Feb, 20-March 20)
York. NY 10019.
day you are likely to fare better If Unusual financial conditions
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20| Be you do things with a partner
continue to exist Be alert for
an attentive listener today when rather than attempting (hem on
beneficial stirrings that could
others arc talking about con­ your own. Team up with one
contribute to your material
fidential subjects that Interest who tsosacrtlvcand positive.
well-being

What The Day
Will Bring...

ANNIE
by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS

j LMffSM, WHO \

KUMlOKPOttfMB

%
+ j. I K

I

a i

1* 00/ mr soo

pvr up one ttcoi
OFdfWHr/
O M YM ftPY?

by Laonard Starr
vtr

�Evening Herald. Sanford, FL

Thunder. March

II, m i—ID

Don't Just Get Mad At TV, Get Involved
N EW YORK turn - Dorothy Swanson
and Donna Dean believe they can beat the
numbers — the Nielsen numbers, that is.
Swanson, a former teacher and now a
H ills d a le , M ich., h o u se w ife , worked
furiously to rescue her favorite television
series. “ Cagney &amp; Lacey.” from cancella­
tion. Donna Dean, of Plano. Texas, became
an activist to prevent “St. Elsewhere” from
getting the ax.
T h e two women learned about each
other's activities, and out of their corre­
spondence grew Viewers for Quality Televi­
sion. a non profit, non-dues paying organi­
zation dedicated to preserving quality tele­
vision series. It has attracted about -100
members In the few months It has been in
existence.
"O u r purpose," Swanson said. "Is to band
people together and get them to voice their
opinions and how they feel — to stop being
passive and at the mercy of the Nielsen
ratings.
"W e want people to let the television
networks and the critics know In a positive
In her new recurring role, Ava Gardner turns the charm on way that we arc applauding them for these
series star Douglas Sheehan of "Knots Landing" which will shows. Our goal would be to Insure that
be broadcast at a special time — 9 p.m. — for one time only these shows remain on the air."
Friday on channel 6.
Swanson and Dean have made no bones

A ll Knotted Up

about which series they mean — "St.
Elsewhere." "Cagney A Lacey." "Hill Street
Blues." "Miami Vice." "Cheers." "Th e
Cosby Show" and "Kate and Allle." "Call to
G lo ry" w’as on the list. too. but It has since
been canceled, much to Swanson's chagrin.
T h r Q TV founders want their members to
write the networks, applauding them for
quality shows, explaining why they like
their favorite shows and expressing the
hope the shows will continue on the air.
The ir latest newsletter expressed particular
concern for "Cagney A Lacey" and "St.
Elsewhere."
They also want members to write to T V
critics, and to the advertisers on quality
shows, thanking them for their sponsorship.
Th e newsletter lists the sponsors of Q TV 's
favorites.
"I feel we have the potential to Influence
these powers, the networks and the adver­
tisers," Swanson said, "because most of the
people who watch these shows are In the
prtme audience group — 1ft lo -19. with
more disposable Income with which to buy
the products advertised."
She believes that CBS dropped "Cagney A
La cey" In May 1983 before doing its
demographic homework and II was research

CALENDAR
THUR8DAT, MARCH 3 1

FUst United Methodist Church.
Overeaters Anonymous, open.
7:30 p.m. Com m unity United
Methodist C h u rc h . Highway
17-92, Casselberry.

Lecture on depression In the
medically 111 by Dr. Michael
Pipkin, University of Minnesota
Hospital, sponsored by Florida
Hospital's Center for Psychiatry.
7:30 p.m., Calkins room Florida
Hospital. Orlando.
Mother Earth Chapter 60.
Seminole County Agri-Center.
4320 S. Orlando Drive, Sanford.
7:30 p.m. Herbalist Eve Elliott,
chairman of Southern Heglln of
Herbalist Society of America will
present slides on herbs. Open to
the public.
Sanford Jaycecs, 7:30 pm. .
J ay c ee b u i l d i n g . 5th and
French, Sanford.
Theatrc-ln-the-Worka presents
a w a r d - w i n n i n g pl ays from
Throatlngalc flp Kk porosis Loop
by Bobble Bell. 7:15 p.m.. Orlando Scie nce Center
Auditorium. Free to the public.
Sanford A A . 1201 W. First St..
5:30. closed discussion, and 8
pm. , open, speaker.
Oviedo A A . 8 pm. , closed.

Gentle Exercise for seniors.
10:30 a.m., Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry.
T a x help wi th AARP/1RS
trained volunteers. 12:30 p.m..
Casselberry Senior Center. 200
N. L a k e T r i p l e t D r i v e .
Casselberry.
Randy Miles Concert. 7 p.m..
First Christian Church. 1607 S.
Sanford Ave.. Sanford. Tickets
available at door.
Weklva AA (no smoking). 8
p . m. W e k l v a Pr e s by t er i an
Church. SR 434. at Weklva
Springs Road. Closed.
Longwood AA. 8 pm. . Rolling
Hills Moravian Church. SR 434.
Longwood, Alanon. same time
and place.
Tanglewood AA. 8 p.m.. St.
Richard's Episcopal C h u rc h ,
Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same
lime and place.
Sanford AA Step, 8 p.m.. 1201
W. First St., closed.

FRIDAT. MARCH 3 3

Central Florida Klwanls Club,
7: 30 a .m .. F lo rid a Federal
Savings and Loan. State Road
436 at 434, Altamonte Springs.
Seminole S unrise Klwanls
Club. 7 a.m., Airport Restaurant.
Sanford.
O p t i mi s t C l u b of S o u t h
Seminole. 7:30 a.m ,. Holiday
Inn. Wymore Road. Altamonte
Springs.
Central Florida Blook Bank
F lo rid a Hos pl l al - Al t amont e
Branch, 601 E. Altamonte Ave,.
9a.m . to5 p.m.
Free Income tax help for re­
tirees. 9 a.m. to I p.m.. Sanford
Chamber of Commerce, 400 E.
First St.. Sanford. Through April
15. Bring copies of last tax
return, forms for the current
year and other relevant materi­
als.

SATU RD AY, MARCH 2 3

aana-rataad pn,aia datacum and
laa a, partnar a daughlar bacoma
an wwaatr mvaangaihra taam at
Hodymod Stari Charlaa Durnmg
Siapnana Faracy g

6:00

allMtJCFFinsoNS

at 110) MACMEtL / IEMAEA
NCW4H0UP
tu (I) WELCOME BACK. KOTTEB

005
U BCVESLYHILLBILLIES

6:30

S

8PSI0UNCY
(W) ULTIMATE CHALLENGE A
documentary recounting tha enduanca and cowaga wapUyad by
compatitora m tha Chaiianga
Around tha World, a mna-monln.
21000 mna yacht raca

9:05

NBC HEWS
CBS NEWS
ABC NEWS g
P(Ml ALICE
1 11)0000 TIMES

12 MOVIE ' Coplam Newman.
M D " |IMS) Gregory Pack, Tony
CixlH An Army peychrelriet ba­
coma* anormouaTy dedicated to Na
paNM

6:35

II oomes rru

11:35

S3 LUCY SHOW

331-0085
Casselberry AA Step. H p.m..
Ascension Lutheran Church.
Ovcrbrook Drive.
|f j F V jy d T h p b Se d e

“ TI1E TIME

cr ycuc Lire**
S A T U R D A Y . M A R C H 23. 1985 8 P M
S U N D A Y . M A R C H 24. 1985 3 P M
Lake M a ry High School Auditorium

is.-

^ 4 3
500

IPS) NEWS
: AQRaCULlURE U EX

7:0 0

■ ® NIGHT COUNT Harry a
brought bahxo tha (udKiM ethic*
commmaa whan rt ippaara ha haa
bean conaortmg aath a hooker |R|

10:00

) o jeorasoy

(SSI too CLOSE EOS COM

MM Mtn H*ray «n*n

h *» motYMY m e m h o d tM p p »o »M

S ( tO) NATUBf A Mudy o) tn*hmlory WK) p*ght oY the rhmocwo*.
On* ot IN* motl MrwuMy mvjmv

aciaMonaartti Q
K*d(I) ipONE
MY AT A TIME
7 05

Q LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PKAL

NS

a CD HILL STREET BLUES Amurdar charge tooma Mian a pro-Ha
adnxata acodanttdy n u aa a
pregnant woman, a no) occut
■bon • Mack tamdy movaa into a
•nna houemg propel
pp$| INDEPENDENT NEWS
(XU THE UVtNG PLANET: A
PORTRAIT OP THE EARTH A looe
at a , artery of Dying creator aa rvc u n g boga and aedat and Vm

OP)POLICE WOMAN

7:3 0
t o n ig h t

10.30

Eaatwad Van Hatan ■ Mad amgar
Oaed Laa Rom. a tnbut* to Clara

11 (U) BOB NEWHART

Q*M*
O WHEEL OT FONTUNE
O 1100.000 NAME THAT
TUNE
PEI BENSON
(I) ALL N THE FAMILY

: ® ® O i 7 O NEWS

S

PSI BENNY MU
ito) oave allin at laroe
p) HKJHT GALLERY

CD COSST s h o w am tacaa a
han laa latnar maa to
convmca Danaa ana aitoutd atiand
a predommanOy Nac» trfmarart, m
Mau o» anroamg al an Ivy Laagua
•chool IN)

CD O MAGNUM. PI Higgina har­
bor* anoM biand who baa broban
out ot (M to raacua W artnaevad
grandaon and Magnum ratuctanDf
agraaaisNag |N&gt;

^

CD o WU.D6CE tPYSYYaatal FNa
a.-gunfigniara band log*)h*f aa wo
wadaida Clwmbar ot Comma,ca lo
also ouM X on Wo rampaga M
•mal loan* throughout (No MrrSOry Sura Howard 1 Itobaa Jr. W*aam Smith g

® O COLLEGE basketball
fait or Mrdwaa) regional aamR
O ABC NEWIMOHTUNE
PSIBANPOAOANOBON
id TWILIGHT ZONE

11:50

OUOV* Uag*c lt»II| Anthony
Hopan* ArwvMargrat

1200
o THE SAINT
p»|F-TROOP
_ (D AFRICA CONTINENT M

CRM

1230
■ ® LATE MONT WITH DAVE)
LETTERMAN Femurad SUM Mar
NI. Doom SraobM. eK«M pat

Incaa(R)
JJ (Mil LOVE LUCY
100
®

I t Pd) DALLAS

PI AM BARKER
630
® N sw a
O C M EARLY

iid

MOWS “UP From The
|IMS) CM I

t JO

MO

Q CM NEWS MOHTWATCH
PDBOARM
2D
O

mow

th i

S

u jiq tin iR o b -

*rt Bums. Oon«MRilimr*
2:30

MS

O WORLDOPAUOUDON •Aa mIotwm mtn WNMr CranhMand •
proSM o) p o n w ■ i i l U Y i w i lW I

RachNCwbon
MO
} ® FAASLY m l Wton M*dory
mum th* U d m CAY aMN
merwy to 'KDH bv
rentingroom* |R)

6:35
12

FUN hM E

6:45

0

OPDaUNEAWKE

8

EY EW U N ES B D AYBREAK
(W ) A M W E A T H E R

700

S TODAY
&lt;
0000 MORMNQ AMERCA
) pd|FVMT«TONU
11«01FARMGAY
IP1HEATHCLPT

7:15

■ (Ml AM. WEATHER
7:30

Q Pdl TOMANOJERRY
ffi|W)EEEAME STREET Q
• P) BMPECTOROADQET
705

O I DREAMOPJEANNE

too

pd) WOODY W000PBCKIR
M PAT ALBERT
6:30

9J Pd|PtNKPANTHER
(D I 'D bRSTIR ROGERS(Rl
■ P) MVFAVOPTl MARTIAN
1:35

12 I LOVE LUCY

900

|®C»VORCEOOURT
) B DONAHUE
O BARNABYJONES
1PD WALTONS
)( Ml SBEAMBSTREETg
1M PARTRKMEFAARLY
906
O MOWE

S

too

® LOVE CONNECTION
pi hertb uia

too

J) DAYSOFOURUVIS
JJ ALL MYCHKOREN
t pdl OCX VANDYKE
J |W|FLONOAHOMS GROWN
IP) MOWS

s

10-30
) SALE OP THECENTURY
I (t0( A-S-1 CONTACT(R|g
I AREAL MOCOYt
11.-00

.OP FORTUNE
IDRPHT
|TRRYVLTRAP
MAQCOPOS.PASFTWG
OCAUM

(JJ PD FAANLY APTABI

1106
1100

H

RYANS HUPt
(tS) PLGRDAETYIE

^^PEO ALPU R CH AS^J

SHEETING

too
ANOTHER WORLD
_ONE
O
i UP1 TO LIVE
PDAM2VGRTOTH
IWIJOYOFPAMTWtt

SALE STARTS THURSDAY
PRICES G O O D THRU SAT.

ZAYRE PLAZA AT AIRPORT BIVO.

1:30

99°OFF

NEW ARRIVAL

KRINKLE SAIEM ICE
KRUNCH $ 1 9 9

EN T IR E S TO C K

OF PATTERNS

• Prints
s Solids

SALE PRICE
•

45" wide

( j

LIMIT J WITH
FABRIC PURCHASII

48" «id*
iO O X R O L Y iS TIE

Fy

ANO COM ON
C*mp *14 SR

( J y

PftMA PRESS

Yd.

I

300

1SANTABARBARA
IGUOBMLMHT
J OCMRAL HOSPtTAL
1Pd|BUGSBUNKY

I(MRFLORCABmE

tPVOLTRON. r ~
THBl

too
too
000

12

B U G E BURNT ANO

S

P D BOOOBT
( 10) M W T ER R O O C FM (R)

12

H E C K L E A i d JB C K L Z

ID S M P B C T O R G A D G E T

M l

FASHIONWISE,

CHILDREN*
BUnONS

Yd.
PACKAGED

SR *;

NOTIONS
• COLD IY I

7 30

® Q CAPfTOL
PS) GREAT SPACE COASTER
|Ml BMC OP DECORATIVE
PABfTBM

NEIDUS

TO

■ HOOKS B in s
• BAU POINT
PINS
• SRAM RIPPIR
Ik MORI

ASSORIfO COLORS
• llt P H A N T S
• TURTLES
1 • AIRPLANE
s R O C K IN G
HORSE
, • M O U SE
, • PUPPIES
• M AN Y O TH E R S 4

U M I? I

SALE PRICE

19

4.-00

• j® LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
MM|MIAMI ITRMTg
IPUMATHCLM
4.06
QPIEFTETOME

4JO
OPTMUMVMM

|ELECTRK COMPANY |R)
| ID MAYBERRY A FG

SANFORD - 2094 ORLANDO DR.

B U R L IN G T O N

a as THEWORLDTURNS
(MIQOMSRmi
(WIPAJNTWGCtRAMCB

'■‘.‘‘fffj

W &amp; :;-

106

ID OD HE MAN AM) UAETEM

RW UW l
4.-00

OL0VMG
BEVERLY MLLBKJJEB
8 P*l

1000

® 0 MOWS “On* 0) My WNM N
M a M (1«)SI JmA Kkjgmwv EM-

PD PATTY OUM
OET SMART

12:30

• ® SEARCHFORTOMORROW
] a YOUHO ANO THE REBT-

6 06

2:50

3:30

o

n MOWS

th e a vengcre

O P IltC T V

hm «• goMYtmd by m*

• (D MOVE Murd« M Ptytm
Puc* iltm Ed toNsn. OortKhy
MUON Thd mu,dw* «•b»« Pbyvm
IMIS'

A B C M EW S T H M M O R M N Q

P d tP O P E Y E

PD LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

• |M| SLWYTVAL toward Mar
narroMt tnm atud» o* tha mgr Men
ot ona mton a*au aarad kob an-

\at

•

12:06

600

t ® NBC NEWS AT BUHNM
O MORNMG STRETCH
O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
[ pilOOOOOAYl

11:3 0

O ® TOMGMT Hoe) Johnny C*r-

too

MEWACTJOH/NEW
* AOVtNTUSf/NEW
senes -wmoter ^

1100

8

; Pd| BEWITCHED
I ( 10) WONOERWORM
I (t| MAHNU

l ® r t COUNTRY
t JRMfT EWAOGART

CDO

HOURS

1200

MOOAY
1( D O NEW!

5:30

9:30

■ ( I SALE or THE CENTUNY
S ) O PM MAGAZINE Nautdu*
•ntragr*n*w Arthur Jon**. lunvn*

cmM* Mi m

The Ballet Guild
of
Sanford - Seminole
Proudly Presents:

(D O EYE TO rrc (P'vnw*) A

O ® ® O ’ 10 N e w s

hum

(3 0 5 ) 830*6693 8 A M - 1 PM
(3 0 5 ) 677*7069 1 PM • 5 PM

.VF

FRIDAY

CD O COLLEGE BASKETBALL
(••I at U h»«i« m ragnwl MtnMna

EVENING

■ CD in t e s t a ih m e n t

Guaroontood weight low of 10*29 lbs. In 30 days
or your money backl An All Natural Diet.
If Serious Call:

S A LLY F I E L D GOLDIE ,*2

9:00

FOST

SERIOUS WEIGHT
REDUCTION!

Spring Festival '85 sponsored

TONIGHT S TV
th u r s o a y l

by the Spartan Singers. 9 a.m to
4 p.m., Mllwee Middle School.
County Road 427. Longwood.
F.ntertalnment, arts and crafts,
plants, baked goods, produce.
Altamonte Springs Pet Show,
11 a.m.. Westmonte Park Regis­
tration fee. 6 1 . All pets must be
caged or on leash. Very young
handlers must be accompanied
by adult.
East-West Klwanls Club, 8
a.m., Airport Restaurant. San­
ford.
Chicken b arbecue dinner
sponsored by Brownie Troop
860 and Girl Seoul Troop 294 to
Ijencflt trip to Savahnah. noon to
6 30 p m.. Longwood Recreation
Building, W ilm a Avenue and
Church Street, Longwood For
tickets and Information call

on the makeup of the audience — plus the
campaign she and others staged to save the
show — that led to the series being
reinstated In the lineup. "St. Elsewhere."
she pointed out. has not remained on the air
through sheer numbers — "it has to be
demographics."
Swanson admits that the Q TV list of
quality shows la very subjective.
"If people want to use our format to write
about 'Three's a Crowd.' that's O K ." she
said. "But we're not hearing from those
people except for the call I got from a
woman who wanted to save Taper Dolls.'
That was a trip.
" I suppose In time we are going to have to
take a harder look at other shows, but this Is
Just a beginning and we made our list short
to make our point. I don't want to
compromise, but neither do I want to be too
stubborn. Member Input will tell us."
"Basically, we're looking for shows about
h u m a n ity , about feelings and r e la ­
tionships." she said.
Swanson has no Idea where all this will
lead.
"W e could die on the vine tomorrow." she
said, "or we could become a 5,000-member
organization."

• MMORKANOMfOY
4 J5
o FLMTfTONM

MO
I® ANYTIME POEMONET
) Q THMTt COMPANY
) O LITE MAREAOEAL
PDOLHIBOP HAZZAAO
|M|ART OPM M HUMAN
|M) HARRYDATE AOAM
5.06
O LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

8JO
IPDOPITE COURT
i M*A*I*H

li—

■ M LAVERNEtlHMLEY
5:35
C ANDY QARPTTH

tt* #n

, JUMBO SIZE

O*4

FO B

WAFFLE

St*® 1
OB

•DISH
CLOTHS

tSALE PRICE

b i 9‘
|ASSORTED

:F00T
SOCKS
&gt;SALE
&gt;PRICE

JA S C H A * 8

\$

( S

i— .

^ f * •4

�t v t n lw H#r#M, ten ford, FI.

Thuriday, March Jl, IIM

Legal Notice
Legal Notice
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T.
e ig h t e e n t h

In Concert
R.indy Miles will be preserved in concert at
/ p.m. Friday at First Christian Church,
1607 Sanford Ave., Sanford. Miles, a Dis
ciples of Christ minister from El Paso,
Texas who records contemporary Christian
music and has his own production company,
uses music and drama to tell fhe Gospel
message. The concert Is open to the public
and tickets will be available at the door,

No Necking In Halls
M U M K I ’O H T . M V ll/PI) — A simple |x*rk on
the r h r t'k Is tu t t piiitilr. hut HP lim y, p.isslontiir
in'* knit; Inis tx i'ii *m l lu w rit in i li« Im llw uys ul u
\ i w Vurk hit'll s* liiml
Si tiuol iilllrliils s.iiil 1 1n y li It itml o ve rly.lllr i'llim illr s lm lrllls t m il'll! s i i i o i m IlltlH III the
liiillw iiys were im iklnu *• l*inl Irnpnsslofi on
llllll tirililiTS w ho illso *11 li*ii*l rliissrs .it llir
si I i i h i I

S ln ili'itls n iiu ilit U'tinti Itry o m l n simple kiss
*until |{i'l li it two liny III srliiMil sils|M'lisl(ll) oil I h r
lu si iifTnise mill &gt;i three d a y out ol st-lionl m i s |m- i i stun K it I iu |i |h i i s .iijiiln

JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT.
IN A N D F O R
SEM INO LE C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A
C A S IN O M l|f) CA f f K
STO C KTO N W H A T L E Y
OAVIM A COM PANY e Florida
corporation.
Plaintiff
vt
B E N TO G O N C A L V E S E V A M
G O N C ALVES S TE W A R T
A N O R E W M A R S H A L L .III.
P A a profession# I assoc iat on
created under the lews of the
State ot Florida U N IT E D
S TA TE S OF A M E R IC A and
C IT Y OF SANFORO apolitical
subdi vision of the St«t# of
Florida.
Defendants
NOTICE OF A C TIO N
TO E V A M G O N C ALVES
Residence Address Unknown
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D that ar
action, to forte told the mortgage
encum bering the follow in g
property in Seminole County,
Florida
Lot « BLOCK A C O U N T R Y
C LU B MANOR Umf 7 accord
•ng to the plat 'hereof as re
co'ded m Piet Boo* II. Page iQO
of the P u b lic R e c o rd s of
SemmoleCounty, Florida
has been filed by the Plaintiff
against you end others m fhe
above entitled causa and you
are required to serve a copy of
yOur written defenses, if any to
it on D O N A L O L
S M IT H
Plaintiffs attorney 114 Barnett
Bank Building Jacksonville.
F 'orIda 17707 on or before April
73 1MV and file the original
with the Clark of fhis court
either before service on Plain
tilt % attorney or immediately
thereafter otherwise a default
will be entered against you for
the relief demanded in the
complaint or petition
W ITNESS my hand and seat
of this Court on this Ifth day of
March IMS
IS F A LI
D AVID N B E R R IE N
C Itr k of fhe Circuit C our I
By Susan f Tabor1
Deputy C lark
Publish March 71 Jl A April 4
II IMS
D E D HI
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T
IN AND FOR
SEM INOLE C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A
CASE NO IS 0«St CA 0# O
w il l ia m

Legal Notice

Legal Notice
N O TIC E U N D E R FICTIC IO US
N A M ES TA TU TE
t o W HOM If M A Y CONCERN
Notice ft hereby given t/iet ifw
undersigned, pursuant lo the
F ic tio n s N i h i l S ta tu te " ,
Chapter HAS Of. Florida Stalues,
artll regitfer with the Clerk of
fhe Circuit Court in end foe
'atninolt County Florida upon
receipt of proof ot the public#
bon At tint Notice the fictitious
name, to wit
HOM E t AMM ON C F N
I CM LO N G WOOD
under which we ere engaged ini
business at 10*4 N Highway,
if t| , io n gw Odd, F t I l f I®
Vemirtol# County, F lor Ida
that the party interested Ml
said business enterprise (l at
foilA r t
C EN T PAL FLO R ID A CUSH
lO N f m r
O A T C O af C a t tel P e rry ,
Seminole County Florida on
I ebFuAry 79 left
C C N TM A i FLO R ID A CUSH
ION INC
By Carol J Ramsey, Preti
dent
Puhhth Mar&lt;h i, 14 Jl JS tnS
O F O ao
IN f It I C IRC U lf t O U R T
IN A N D FOR
SI M lN O l I C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A
CASE NO I t M il CA 04 P
IN HF IMF MAHMIAGF OF
R M HAM [) H G U I KMI MA JM
Petitioner.
and
K A R E N I G UFM M EHA
Respondent
N O TIC E OF ACTION
TO K A R F N t GUFMMFMA
YO U AML N O T IF IE D that an
action tor O n to lull on ot Mar
tiage hat been filed againtl you
and you are required lo serve a
ropy ol your written defenses t!
any. lo ll on Lawrence L
Lidteldl Ftqune Petitioner %
Attorney whote address if Suite
O
AOI N Orlando Avenue
Me*Hand Florida H i l l , on or
lialore April 1). lets end tile Ihe
original with Hie Clerk ol lhi|
Court either before service on
Pei boner % attorney or immedl
ately thereafter otherwise a
default will tie entered againtl
you tor the relief demanded m
the Petition
W ITN ES S my hand end seal
uf this Court on tint Iflh day of
March I49S
IS E A I t
D A V ID N III MMil N
C l f MK OF THF COUMT
My Dorothy Norton
Deputy Citrk
Publish March Jl ,29 April 4 tl,
\H \
D E O I SO

FIC TIT IOUS NAME
N j l i f i it hereby given that I
am engaged Hi business #1 7CD4
French Ave Sanford Seminole
County, Florid* JJ/M under the
hth h ou! name of M ID S T A T E
RO W ER TOOL CO and that I
intend to register said name
with the Clerk of the Circuit
Cour* Seminole County Florida
in accordant# with the pro
visions of the F icidious Name
Statutes to wit Section MS Of
F lor Ida Statutes 11ST
/»/ Harvey D Riven
Publish February 21 A March t ,
14 71. \ m
D E C 14/
F IC T ITIO U S NAME
Nubia It hereby given that we
are engeged in business at ISOS
N o rth O rla n d o A v e n u e .
M aitland. Seminal# County,
f iorlde 17/11 under IK# llcllliDvi
n a m e of E L L I O T T A U T O
flMOKE MS and that we Intend
lo register said name with the
Clerk ot the C ircuil Court.
Seminole County. Florida in
at cor dance with the provisions
of tne Fictitious Name Statutes,
to w »t . Sec I Ion MS 'Of f lor Ida
Statutes IfSf
/S' Marti Elliott
f%t Gary Elliott
Publish March l l 21 H A April
4 IMS
D E O 100
F IC TITIO U S NAM E
Notice 1% hereby given that I
am engaged in business at It/
Chaucer lane So . Lake M ary,
Seminole County. Florida 12/44
under the lie tif lout name ot
S IM P LY E L E G A N T , and that I
intend to register said name
with the Clerk of the Circuit
Cour I , SemImole Coonty„ F lor ida
in accordance with the pro
visions ot the Fictitious Name
Statutes, to wit Section MS Of
F lor id# Statutes ItSZ
s Jenin# C Law
Publish March ft. 71 A April 4
II. IMS
D E D lit

F 1C T i t IOUS NAME
Nubia li tier thy given that I
am engaged in business at l i t
Geneva Dr Oviedo Seminole
County Florida Jl/iS wrsdar the
t *c t *I loo t name of P F H F I €
TIO N P IU S TRANSMISSIONS
SE HVICE and that I intend to
' agister said name with the
Clerk ol fhe Circuit Court.
Seminole County Florida in
attendance with the provisions
ot tne Fictitious Name Statutes
to wit
Section les ®f Florida
Siatutti It it
« ' Jack Greene
Publish February H A March 7,
ta. l l . i m
D E C Ita

F IC T ITIO U S NAM E
N &gt;' *e 1% hereby given that I
am engaged in business et 404
N H a y I I f l. Casselberry
Seminole County. Florida under
the I it Fit lout name ot A A J
MF PAIM M k V I I I and that I
intend to register said name
with the Clerk of the Circuit
Court. Seminole County Florida
m accordance with the pro
visions of the Fictitious Name
Statutes to wit Section MS Of
I lor ida Statutes IfS/
'•/ A J Jackson
Publish March }l If A April 4
II IMS
D E O »4f
F IC T lT IO U l NAM E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged in 'bus*ness at lOil
Antelope Dr
Winter Springs
Seminole County Florida 12709
undar the fictitious name ol
I I N D Y S LANDSCAPING , and
that I intend to register sa»d
name with the Clerk ol the
Circuit Court Seminole County.
Florida m accordance with the
provisions of the Fictitious
Name Statutes h&gt; wit Section
MS Of F k*»da Statutes t«l/
s Allen Lmdekugel
Publish March J 14. It. II, IMS
D I O Sf

and

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
SEM INOLE C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A
C IVIL O IVISIO N
CASE NO 44 1141 CA Of P
PAN AMf RICAN M O M TG AG F
COMP
Plaudit!
vS
R EN E NO R BER T P AR E and
M il A M PARE his wile and
L A k F O r TH E W OODS
H O M E O W N E R S A S S O C IA
TIO N. INC
Defendants
NO TICE OF SALE
Nolle* IS hereby given that
pursuant to the Summery Final
Judgment of Foreclosure and
Sa'e dated March 4 legs, and
entered In the cause pending in
the Circuit Court ot the | tgh
teenlh Judicial Circuit in and
for Seminole County Florida
Civil Action No 44 7441 CA Of “
the undersigned Clerk will sell
(he properly Situated in said
County, described as
LO T 411 L A K E OF T m E
WOODS TO W N H O U S E
SEC
TlO N 11. according to the plat
thereof at recorded in Plat Book
74 Pages 1 and J of the Public
Records ot Seminole County
F tor Ida.
at public tale lo the highest and
best bidder for cash at ft 0®
A M on the tth day ol April
ivt1 a! the West Front Door ot
the Seminole County Court
house Sanford Florida
D A T E D this n t h day of
March. IMS
(CO UNT SEAL l
DAVID N B E R R IE N
Clerk olth# Circuit Court
By t Diane K Oakley
Deputy Clerk
Publish March 14. ] l . IMS
D E D 144

7 1 — H t l p W a n te d

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando • Winter Park

322-2611

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
H O UR S

RATES

1*'m* ................*ZC '

■ u
e .m d m
u n u n i v .l
romav

1 e « n i « u t i * * tim ti 61C « lint
1 CVItMCIlthr# tim « l 52C I lin«

r .T .i.n .v
SATURDAY 5 - Naan

10 conitcuti** lim it « C t lint
C M tr«ct I h U t AuiUbt#

3 line* Minimum

N o o n The D a y B e fo re P u b licatio n
Su n d a y • N o o n F rid ay
M o n d a y -1 1 :0 0 A . M . Satu rd ay

April | IMS and tile th# or gi

nei with the clerk of ttvt court
e ith e r b e fo re s e r v ic e on
Husband's attorney or immedi
a iffy there tf ter otherwise a
default will 'be entered against
you for the relief demanded in
the complaint or petition
DATE Don March 4 IMS
(S E A L!
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
As C&gt;#rk of the Court
By Cheryl R Franklin
Deputy Clerk
Publish M arch/ 14 71.79 'MS
DC D l l

17— Cemetery and
Crypt*

IN THE C IR C U IT C O U R T
OF TME 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 IM IN O L E C O U N TY .
F LOR I DA
CASE NO •&gt; (90S CA 04 P
GLO RIA P AD A W ER
Plaintiff
vl
ROBfHT C
C O H E N and
SUSAN A CO M EN his wife el
al *
Defendants
R O B E R T C C O H E N and
SUSAN A C O H E N
Counter Plaintiffs,
v%
G L O R I A P A D A W E R and
JOSEPH P AD A W ER
Counter Defendants
N O TIC E OF SALE
Notice it given that pursuant
to a l mat (udgment dated Feb
ruary 11, I f f l in Cate No
•J I40S CA 04 P of the Circuit
Court ot fhe E ighleenin Judicial
Circuit in and lor Seminole
County
F lo rid a
in which
G l o r i a p a d a w e r is the
p la in tiff and R O B E R T C
CO Hi N and SUSAN A COHEN
hts wife ere Defendants I will
sell to I N highest bidder tor
cash at the West Front Door
Semmoie County Courthouse in
Sanford Sem inole County,
Florida beiween It 00 A M and
J 00 P M on March Jl IMS the
following described property let
I ovt hi in the order of 9in at
judgment
Lot la Devonshire. According
tg the plat Thereof as recorded in
Pfaibook r pages ll and 14
Public Racords of Semmoie
County Florida
Dated March 11. 1441
(S E A L)

21 — Personal*
I nil not bn rntpont.tiln tor nny
tjrb ii In c u rrtd by in y W i
othnr than mytnlt at ol Morth

23— Lost &amp; Found
lo ti ladiai gold nuqaal brae*
lal on M a x h lllh in rMwmlty
ol Atlantic Bank Raward
Call m n n or nu m i
R ED D O B E R M A N FEM ALE
A N S W ER * TO " K A T I I " .
R EW A R D S ANFO R D AREA.
m t lN

25— S p e c ia l N o tic e s

BolloonM&amp;gk
SEND A GI FT
WI T H A LI FTI

.................BALLOON
BOUQUETS
W* Oallri* f
•try , . . t a n « »»ty waiaw

CELEBRATE
A BIRTH!
Mr H w k 'H IIII
m aktt lor a lilrllm t
at mamariat. (lilt A all!
Call Linda IU 4 I1 ’
a M A R Y K A V COSM ETICS a
Skin car# and color Hair
CO NNIE
.................... H I IFM

Thinking at galling a
Raal Eitala LIctoMT
Join ut al awr Car tar Night
April ItTh T N I PM
Wa allar Fraa Tartlan
and canllniaut Training!
Call Dick ar Vicky Nr dalalit
tl* M M
Er*n*ngi I H H M

N E E D S C H AN C E W ITH T H E
SEASONS. W ANT ADS PAY
FO R M A N Y REASONS

55— Business
Opportunities

Afttrnoofl TipEr Routt
Far Sal* Phan* JTI JIM **l*r l
Attention Floor Covering in
ita M e ri
Carpet b u iin e tt
ieadi and truck for laie
Package deal C a lU ll 1444

B u tin e t i Capital 110.400 to
11 000 000 and Over P 0 Bo*
141] Winter Pk Fla 21/40

71- H e lp Wanted
A IR L IN E S NOW MIRINO Hat
arvallonitli. ilanardatkai and
ground craw poUHont avoll
ablo Coll I 1*1*1 M*01*l lor
dol*ilk Jlh ourt_________
D IS C A R D T H A T O LD CAR
F IN D A B E T T E R ONE IN
T O D A Y 'S W A N T ADS

For tender, loving 4 quality
child cere, cell A Child *
World )1 ) 4414
Free ev Reduced Child Care
It you quality
m 4440 or m 4474

31 — Private
Instructions
P IA N O LE S S O N S
V* par latton
J JI **14 attar I PM

Legal Notice
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
OF TH E H IM
JU D IC IA L C IR C UIT
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
FL O R ID A
c a s e n o i&gt; «taa c a w k
M E R R I L L
L Y N C H
M O R TG A G E CORPORATION
a Golan a, » corporation
P iam lill

Vt

Publish March 14 ]l. || April

IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
OF TH E 1ITH
JU D IC IA L C IR C UIT
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E CO UN TY.
FLO R ID A
O F H I M AI JU R IS D IC TIO N
CASE NO M IJ«* C A M P
O R V I L L E O G O E O E N and
J U L IE B G O E O E N n,i wil*
Plaintiff*.
w
TR O Y BROW N a k a TR O Y
BROWN
SR
and BROWN
\ poul *. I I any
N A N C Y E BROWN and
BROW N ipoui*. it any
Oftandanli
N O TIC E OF ACTION
C O N S TR U C TIV E SERVI CE
TO N A N C Y E BROWN and
BROW N tpouia I I any
II ally* and ll nadhar or all ol
Mom ba daad 'hair raipacliva
unknomn ipoui* h a ln dr
•&lt;!**! granltat rraddor* and
all othar c laimanly by through
undar or againtl
NANCY E
B R O W N and
------ BROW N tpouia it any
or oilhor ot thorn and all
par fiat haring or claiming la
h*&lt;* any right Ml* or inlaratl
in tha proparty haraln da
ter Wad
R ttida nctt ol all laid D*l*n
dwhlt unknomn
YOU AR E N O T IF IE D mat an
aclton to lor*&lt;lota a Mor'gag*
on lha loiiomng proparty In
Sominol* County E londa
Lot 10. Block * Tlor IS.
S E M IN O L E PARK at racordad
in Plat Book J Pag* IS ol lha
Public R acortt ol Sominol*
County Florida
A N D including tha building*
and a p p u rltn a n c a t located
ihataon and *oga'h*r ailti h r
lurmtur* turn,thing* and fir
lurat kilo*!* tha,tin and localad
•haroon,
hat baan Mad againtl you and
•ht abo .a namad Dalandanlt.
and you art rayuirad lo tarvo a
copy Ol your nnltan oalantot ll
any lo II on A nor nay M AR K
B U C H B IN O IR IS O
I TOO N
Kandail Ociv* Sulla JOT. Miami
Florida JJI t* Tal IJOSIjr* 14**
on or bdoro April 0, IMS and
III* th* original nllh th* Clark ol
■h t Court odnor balora ta r.it*
on Piam lill t Allot nay or imma
diaiaty ih*r*aii*r oiharmta a
dalauil m il ba ar.iartd agamtt
you lor iho rtliat damandad In
th* Complaint
W ITN E S S my hand and lha
taal ol rh,t Court on March I

i*»J
I SEALI
D A V ID N B ER R IE N
A t Clark ol lha Court
By SwtanE Tabor
A* Dapwly Clark
PubUkh March T, I* Jl IE IMS
D E O aj

4 'MS
DC D 101

Shopping For A
New Or Used Car?

AitUtoUntRiMACROUTUl

(m a w . lutam nsm xix
SMWV.aM&amp;MINO
ACHht&amp; U M TW ,

£5b

323-5176

U1J F ranch Aaa.
Acrylic Applicator* n*td»d 10
apply protacllr* coaling on
cart, boat* and piano* ts to
Sit par hour W* train For
n o rt in Sanford araa call
Tampa E U SEE FIST
ASSISTANT MANAGE R
T R A IN E E Valid Fla drlvort
llcanta. to S I],BOOK. Sal**
background halplul Apply
T»JA Orlando Dr . In Iho Tayr*
AVO N Miring Smiling Faca*i
Fait A pi lima Call immad,
apply I H TIE IE ar HS 1EIE. __
C A R LO S ITA L IA N R E S T A U
R A N T — Dollrory drlyOr and
kilchan halp Cali bafnaan j
a n d S P M .H T TEJE good pay
Cathiar N rtd rd E ip a n a n c t
pratarrad Apply in parton
Ac* Hardnary J0J E JSftt
Straal_______________________
C L E A N IN O LAOV I or ] day* a
n**k In Ganara on Laka
Mar nay Mull ba drpandabi*
A hav* onn lrantport*tion
Call Bill S'tphant Eva* Ja*
JI4E Day* *H fl**S___________

cudinpisT
Moffv«fed individual U r a temp
to permanent petition, mutf
type FO WPM I good phon#
vfK t
Call Today Work Today!
Ablet! Ttmp Service*
I II 14*4
414 1174
F I L f C L E R K ...................... »I44
Par! time, fiaitbie bourt will
relieve rtceptlemit and atte
work in fil# ream Good (eb for
b o u t e w l f e

61 — Money to Lend

JLegoj^ Notice

27— Nursery A
Child Care

OED &gt;01

By Diane K Oak ley

Employment

Employment

m /U Touo

Deputy Clerk
Publish March 14.11 I4«S

DAVID N BERRIEN

A C C O U U N TS P A Y A B L E . .EIM
Naadt accaanlt Mysbl* * .p*n
anc. Sam* light *M «* work.
G r i l l chinel far i b u c r

Piaia m soap___________

Kayatal Florida . Inc
)• Y a a n E.parwncal
M ary Kay Catmallci
Fra* Cempllmantarr F . 0 .11
Tar a 0 * » il t y * l ^ Lnnl 111 1411

MAX C F R A N K L IN andUANA
M FRANKLI N
Orlondanl*
N O TIC E OF ACTIO N
TO M AX C FR A N K LIN and
O A N A M F R A N K L IN
ioM I Unity Lana Potomac.
Maryland JOkSa
Y O U AR E N O T IF IE D that an
action lo lortcMna a mortgag*
on Iha lolloning datcflbad pro
parly tllu a lt and bamg In
Saminota County, F londa
Lot * Block G SECTIO N VII.
S W E E T W A T E R O A K S at
cording lo tha Plat Iharaof a*
*ac or dad m P lat Book I*. Pagat
} l and J* ol lha Public Racordt
o lSaminoiaCounly Florida
ha% baan Mad againyl you and
you ara raquirad lo tarra a copy
ol your nnltan dalanirk ll ony.
on piam lill t oilornay nhour
addratt i«
TA Y L O R BRIO N BUKEH A
G R E E N E 1111 South Baythora
O n .a M ia m i FlocidaUIJI
Tal No ITT i.'OU
Aiioclalo Countol Franklin C
W'l.gham Ekqu.ra J00 W III
S'raal Sanford Florida UTTI
Tal No )JJ Jl Jl
on or balora April tl. IWI. and
Mo *ho original oilh lha Clark ol
th i court ailhar balora larvca
on plamlitf % attornoy or imm*
daialy iharaalia* othorrkiia a
dalauil m il ba aniarad agamil
you lor lha raltal damandad m
•ha compia.nl or poliliwi
O A T E O o n M a rch ! i h &gt;
D A V ID N B ER R IE N
As Clerk of the Court
Or i Diew# k Oakley
Deputy Clerk

Clerk of Circuit Court

33— Real Estate
Courses

Two desirable cemetery lets in
Oak lawn Memorial Park
Call m *404

It iiai a, ,*!**, Mon#,
IN THE C IR C U IT C O U R T
OF THE E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY .
FL O R ID A
G E N E R A L JU R IS D IC TIO N
O IVISIO N
CASE NO 14 14l» C A M P
SUBURBAN C O AS TAL CORP
a New Jersey co rpo ratio n
euthomad to do business in the
Stale of F londa
Plaintiff
vs
SHARON L IE BE R a smgle
woman and M A H » L Y N A
SOL OMON a si ng t# worn an.
.Defendant s
N O TIC E OF SALE
Notice s hereby given that
pursuant to the Summary Final
Judgment of Foreclosure and
Sa&gt;e dated March 4, IMS. and
» n*rred m the cause pending in
*he Circuit Court of the E igh
'w M h Judicial Circuit m and
»ur Seminole County, Civil Ac
t on No 94 1414 C A 0# P the
undersigned Clerk will sell the
p ro p e rly si fu e le d in said
County, described as
UNI? N U M B E R M t LAKE
k A TM R Y N V IL L A G E
A
C O N D O M IN IU M A CCO R DING
fO THF D E C L A M A TIO N OF
C O N D O M IN IU M O F L A K E
v A f it B V ll V I L L A G E . A
C O N D O M IN IU M A N D EXM IB
IT . ANNEXED t h e r e t o
f i L E D TH E 74TH D A Y OF
AUGUST IMC IN O F F IC IA L
MFC ORDS BOOK 174) PAGES
101J TH R O U G H 1044 PUBLIC
Mf &lt; O R O S O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY
FLO R ID A
T O G E T H E R W IT H AN UN
D IV ID E D I N T E R E S T IN THF
CO M M ON E L E M E N T S AND
L IM IT E D C O M M O N E lE
M IN T S D E C L A R E D IN SAID
D E C L A R A T I O N OF C O N
DO M INIUM TO BE AN AP
P U R TE N A N C E
TO TH E
ABOVE C O N D O M IN IU M U N IT
al public sale, to the highest am)
bast bidder lor cash at II 00
A M on Hie 4th day of April
IMS at the West Front Door of
the Seminole County Court
house Vanlord, Florida
D A T E D this llf h day of
March IMS
(CO UR T S E A L !
D AVID N B E R R IE N
Clerk of lhe Circuit Cour I
By (%t Diane K Oakley
Deputy Clerk
Publish March 14 71 1441
O E D 101

AVO N EARNINGS WOWI11
O P E N TE R R ITO R IE S NOW1II
m a n ay HT-ME*
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE
C L E R K - Strong backgrotmd In
paymanl potlmg to computar
•ytiom. n llh tm phail* on
proof p r o m t Mutt bo noil
organliod nllh good ctorlcal
i t . u t Inlorttlod Candida**
should contact Harcar Alumi
hum ________________________

DEADLINES

BY GARRY TRUDEAU
H tm w K H Xsom pfCPu

on um f Accarn ut pan |
I mt n* JiwAnxw
\H K A N tm Hh ■
J00 VAOOt

hallew

A l ICE A It A l l t W his wit#
Plaintiffs
vs
JU D Y A Mac IN TOSH
Defendant
NO TICE OF A C TIO N
TO J U D V A Mar INTO SH
YOU AMF N O T IF IE D that an
ar lion to cancel a mortgage on
Ihe following described property
located in Seminole County
F lor id#
Lot 7 Block 11, N O R TH OH
L A N D O F IR S T A D D I T I O N
according to Hie Plat thereof as
rerorded in Plat Book 1J Pages
73 and 34 Public Records of
Seminole County Flor ida
has been filed against you and
you are required lo serve a&lt; copy
of your written defenses if any,
to I t o n R I C H A R D L
ROBINSON Esquire Plaintiff *
attorney, whose address is Post
Office Ho* M l. Casselberry,
Florida 17/0/ on or be lore April
11. (MS. and file the original
with the Clerk of this Court
either before service on Plain
tilts' attorney or immediately
(hereafter, otherwise a default
will ba entered against you for
the relief demanded in the
Complaint
D A TE 0 on March It. IMS
(SEAL I
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
Clef k of the C ire wit Cour 1
By Dorothy Norton
Deputy C l#rk
Publish March 7t /• April 4
II IMS
D E D IS7

D o o n e sb u ry
IV W IA b M S W IO W f

l

I N T H I C IR C U IT CO UR T
OF TH E E I O H T I E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N O F O R
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
CASE NO IS 477 CA 94 K
IN RE
Th e M a r r ia g e ©f
THOMAS D O N A LD COLE
Husband
a-d
AMANDA W IL L IA M S C O L E
MBM
NO TIC E OF A C TIO N
TO
A M A N D A W IL L IA M S
COLE
Address Unknown
YOU ARE N O T I F I E D that an
action tor dissolution of mar
r age hat been filed agamsi y©y
and you are requ.red to serve a
copy of your written defenses if
any to it on E R lC W LU D W IG
ESQ UIRE
whose addftsi it
Post Office Bo* 740/ 7S0 N
Orange Avenue Su&lt;*# 1001 Or
Jendo FL 27407 on ©r before

You can ml way* II nd IA*
k n f dra ft In IA* t i m i n g
H rra JV '$ C J a .i'f t r d ir c l'u n
Hrad Friday ■ E * m ln g JJfrafd
for I A* b a il a a ftitto n i

E v e n in g H e ra ld
M B \ * r t k I raw*A t i r a a a
k a t l w d . l i a r Ida
lll lll I

323-5176
1S1) French A v t
F i n a n c i a l Bookkeeper for
orthodonfiiH office Career
mlntfgd Good phon#' etiquette
Computer #■per lent# dietired
Call Gayle 4 lo U Monday
through Thuriday 111 4411
Full and pert lime petition* now
available Houn can be ft#si
b&gt;e for uhoot or 2nd |Ob
Benefits available after quail
lying Apply in prison af
MAX % 1400 W Hw y
424
H OSTCIS/CASHICR
Apply 1 to 4 PM. Holiday House
Restaurant. Hwy 17 47 near
LakeMar y
___
IN D U S TR IA L WO RK E R S
U rgenliy need strong depend#
bie workert Never a Fee'

TtMP MRU fERSONNEL
774-1141
IN V E N TO R Y C L IR N
*****
Keep track af daily record*,
shipping and receiving Very
busy febf Blue Jean* position

Employment
323-5176
1)3) French Ave
L A B O R E R S Strong reliable,
general laborer* needed im
mediately Different (ocationi
Phone end transportation #
musl Never a tee Apply

KUIV SERVICES

660 2339

71— H r l p W E n t e d

OAYCARITEACHERS
Part lima, «.p*rl#ne*d only.
Laka Mary n r l*SB__________
E X P E R IE N C E D Bartorxton 1
Tull lima I part lima Call

tommoor*__________

Nation * largatl chain ol family
lun canlart hat immadlato
opa n in gi tor a ma n a g e r
train** A par* *lm* aalat paw
pi* nlto* A rraakand* Mutt b*
matur*. n**l In appodranc* A
bondabl# Phon* lor appT
H I *WJ
__________________

N EED ED

PART TIME HELP
Eictltont »gg*rtunify tor I
totor* H I SIST_____________
Now hiring Tull and pari Urn*
laam mambart Start »J *0 hr
Apply In parton M u tl b* l l or
ovar Church * Frlad Chlckan,
Jl*l Franch A**nu* Sanlord
O F F I C E BOY
G o o d wi t h
numbarl.ru" arrandt halp lit
ollica Mutl b* IB A hav* vahd
drivar* Meant* Call M r W*M&gt;
altori » p m la* H«B
PERSONNEL T R A I N E E
w ill Tram to tcraan and In
t*r«&lt;*w applicant* R agu'rtt
good olflc* •■pananc* high
dag,** ol inl*M&gt;g*n&lt;*. *n*rgy
and datir* lor caraar and
growth

TEMP PERM PER S O N N EL
774-1344
Metponvb'# pe'ton to cafe tor 3
children m my home Evening
m&gt;uf* Must be on on call"
basis Will pay V SO fo t l SO
per hour depending on d p e H
enct Phone for interview
appointment Leave message
11) 404?
Sanford manufacturer needs
qualified TfG M IG and ARC
*eide' with fabrication and
layout experience Only eipe
f t t nt ed need e p p l y
2 ta
Rudder C i r c l e
Sanford
Airport industrial Per k

SECRETARY I
Entry level, minum-urn M S
Grad typing SO W PM and
d id Alien Apply to Director
of De&gt;4 P re s s in g Office of
Property Appraiser Seminole
County Services B uilding
Room E 174 HOI E First St
Sanford Fla 17771 Phone
Til 11JO eat &gt;41 Excellent
fringe benefits Equal Oppor
tunify E mptoytr__________ ___
S F C f t f T A R V ' R I C E P T ION 1ST
'General office skills type tl
WPM'. phone Busy office
Word processor helpful
Never e Feef

TEMP PERM P ER S O N N EL
______774-1344 ____ _
I IC U B I T V N IO N T O U A R D
Application now being ac
cepled Call lor information or
appl y Cent r al F la l o o
Perf ect for s e mi r et i r ed
person 171 4471___________
Super
market
e* per tented
c©shier After noon shift and
weekends Apply in person'
Park and Shop 2Slh and Perk
See manager_________________
TRUCK DRIVER! for temporary
run to Atlanta Reply to Boi
I4S. cto Evening Herald P O
Sen 14*7,Sanferd, PI# 17//)
Van Driver
Day treatment
worker Full time position
deali ng w l k l h chr oni c
psyciafric. disabled and el
deHy Call personnel IJ I }4M
alter 10 10 AM

Wanted PM COOK for U to I
PM shift Please apply at
DeHary Manor, AO N Hwy
if 47 DeBary sea 4474
Wanted
I part time salts
person For an infer view cell
Mark J71 1240
Will tram tor career tn child
cere Full end p e rl time
positions available teachers
aides cook and clerical Call
177 A44S

Li(M HousEROfk- some

TfPini

Fart lima

I I I «4T&gt;

SEWING MACHINE
OPERATORS
E .par,anc ad tawmg machina
ayarator* a ia li* all agara
flan* agan Wa w ill train
gwialliad ayglicaM* In aur
adrancad i#chn»gu*». plu*.
altar grabstianary aarlad.
graal banallT* *1 I gaM hall
day* aad b n g lt a lli a ll a n .
Aggly • to I Monday thru
Friday *111M Old Lab* Mary
Rd . Santard, ar call &gt;11 MtE

L I V E IN H O U S E K E E P E R
COOK
For ratirad Laka Mary cougt*
Baaulliul horn* Wlto naadt
tom* pa,tonal attit'anca
Nontmokar Mutl dn&gt;*. car
a ra lla b l* Pr l v at * liv in g
quartort two par month R*l
artnet* rtg u 'a d
I H I U**
or MS IBS*___________________

LIVE IN NEEDED
Matur* talllad amman to car*
tor tw« M torg* Jwnta Prir*to
bad, asm A balk Gaad talar y
parmananl patilwn plut day!
aHMCall m J**E
M O R TR A IN E E
to U J*
Will tr*M H hai tala* ability
Or bat jab tor par tan "gamg to
•h d i * p ’ B a n a l l l t
A d r a n c a m g n l

Employment

(fib

323-5176
T i l l F ranch Ara

73— Em ploym ent
Wanted
la dy desires fxiusework. office
cleaning References own
transport at iqa , 331 hnq/

t l — Apartm ents/
House to Share
D E LTO N A Ftm ato to ihara
with tam* ) bdrm . l bam
hom* I J JO m o plu* h a ll
utlliflr* JJ* J! 10
Will *ha&gt;* J bdrm horn* l , s a
w)*k pa,* all Dagotif r*
RuirtB 17] **!0
W ill *har* m o d trn country
hem* J)|0 p*r month Calf
m m
Working. tob*r tomal* to ihara
hum* with tingi* moth*, A I
c h ild ,tn P r l r a t * bath A
^ B th * n £ r lr lto j* * H IH I]^

93— Rooms lor Rent
Cbrl«ll*K Agl* A Hama*
TV. kitchan. laundry, maid JJ0
wk ugOrl C l J i l l i j ] (* io
C i« » n com lorfabl* ilaaping
ream wilt* priyat* batn a
hilthannatt* JM a waak Call
U )M ))o r » l* * * J
FwrniiAad and Unlwraithad

Cell 322 3151
Room for r*nl Prlvat* hom*
kitchan and bath priraiaga*
M il Elm
LANFORD Furnlihad room* br
t*a waak Raaionabi* rai**
Ma.diarvlct C a llH X J O T
J T PM i l l Palma Ho A»a
SAN FO R D R*a* waakly A
Manlhly rat** U til irve *Tf
W00*1
Adult* 1 B*l TM )

�97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
Torn Apt*. H r l o w O h tens
111 Palmetto Ave
J Cowan Mo Phone Cant
L A K E M A R T Small, clean
furnished apt I bdrm . tingle
working male Nice H U R S T t

m mo_______________

Lovely 1 Bdrm . aim tcreen
porch, complete privacy S&lt;00
»eek plut 1700 deposit Call
m f t n or i? i
_____
M A K E Y O U R S E LF A T HOM E
In a completely furnished studio
apartment Single tlory living
&lt;&lt; lit best Sound controlled
wells Built In bookcatet. de
cor wall covering Alio
]
Bdrm available
Flenbleleeiet
Senior Cw rent discount
Santord Court Apartmentt

________ tn-mi.________

Nicely turnttned I bedroom |
block from downtown A ll
utllltlet paid Singlet only, no
pelt 1)*0 month plut depot I
Call ) } ) PITS

K IT N 'C A R L Y L E

117— Commercial
Rentals

SANTORD RETAIL STORES
Newly renevated retail tforet an
F l i t t St In the H is to ric
Oowatewn O iilr.tf l|| to
II.400 tq ft Prlcet ttarfing at
AS per tq H M l t*0(

b y L a rry W r ig M

E v e n in g H e ra ld . S a n lo rd . F I .

For Sale by Owner Santord
Nico 1 bedroom hpmo with
living room dlnmg room
pane'ed lemdy room loundry
room workthop and large
tcreened porch Call lor in
lor motion M l 1101 A4J *00__
SANFORD All the right tTwtt! t
B d rm , 1 b a th h o m o In
eicadent cenddion Walk to
LaheMenroa H U M S

New Office Budding
near
C F R M on wet&lt; F lrtt St
Totally decorated ready for
occupancy H r to MM tq ft
Ml ItlS
Office or Retail South Santord
* Avo
10*0 to ))eo iq It
• U *0 tq tl Totally rettored
B'.ck Budding M l HIS_______

W A L L ST CO M P A N Y M l *00*
SANFORD O PEN HOUSE
AS 000 below VA appraisal )
bd rm . I both. C 'H 'A , large
lot . fenced back yard F h a
ettumebie m ortgage, non
qualifying AM.*00 a ll Beth
Drive Revenne Park erea
Must tael Sal A Sun i n A
la I t ID OO to a 00 Further
dele,It Owner S U S b Ja u / or
111 t t t o a t * ________________

MOO tq ft of Office or 1000 ot
Oftico and 1000 tt of S'oreage
• d h 'y acre of parking Toned
■nduttriel 111 t.'il___________

SANFO R D OW NER 1 bd'm
t ‘t both, C'H/A. w w carpel
tc'eened Iron! porch work
thop M l la*l_______ ________

121— Condominium
Rentals

Check ihe tea'uret J Bdrm 1
bam thadr lol huge gree'
room w,lh coly I, replace
pool 'op location Pr,cod *o
toll Ita *00 Call now TO SEE
You It bt glad you did!

SEE TO BE LIE VE

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
B AM BO O COVE APTS
JO* E Airport Bird
EM.#ncjf 1 end | Bedroom from
8270 month 77) U K 17)4441
J \ Dtuoonl tor Se4kor Cltl
fiftl

Cintubunr il the Crosunp
1 Bdrm . I or ) bath Cands t
Private Patie A Carport
leather/Dryer Hook up
Beautiful Country Sattmg
Children tmell pelt welcomed
Senior cittern dltcount
__________M l ITU________
L U X U R Y A PA R TM EN TS
Fam ily • Adultt Section
Ftooltid*. 1 Bodroomt
Matter Cove Apartmentt
M l /to#
Open On Weekend!

RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS
I end 1 bedroom t
M l taxi o r ) ) ) 44IJ
Santord COME AND SEE the
B. and new 1 bdrm/t both
U n lit
Screened perch,
w e th e r end d ry e r, m in i
blinds F ro m HtO a me
Located on Oak Ava at Park
Or behind Dairy Oveen

British A m tn u n Realty
__

s is m m

SPACIOUS A P A R TM EN TS
lefcelronV pool 1»nni», «cfu1f«
no pets laundry U 2 ) to 1140
mo Call 1710147 »o
t and 7 bdrm Aivo lurntihad
efficiency from 1M meek 1710
dapovf No ptt* Ceil 177 4W7
W PM 4 liP gtm 0 tto
' Bdrm pool, laundry, cebi#
central ha at and1air., m onic
nanca tervice 1100 month
Franklin Arm*. 1170 Florida
A Yfnu* j;a M 1714410
2 bdr nn , j bat h- app11ant at.
upttatn. near downtown 1311
mon th tJOO i#Curity deposit
m aaooor 17) 1117

1 Btjrm , 1 biifih Villa n##f golf
court* All apphar&lt;94. 7 car
garaga 1 500 He'e'en( ** Call
)77 044)_____________________

127— Office Rentals

Nvwiy renevated an Flrtt St
In the Hittertc Downtown
Oittnct JO* I* 1.000 tq tt
ttarling
at
tf M/ tq tt
I
including Ml t*M

★ LANDLORDS*
Tired ot the headaches/ Let us
m an ege your rentel pro
pertiet Professional low cot I
tervico M l JAM Call anytime
United Salet Aiseciates. Inc
Prep Mgmt Otv . Realtor
Large I bdrm ] beth fenced
home downtown Senford Area
leek a month 113 W S anytime
Now accepting appllcationt lor
rental * Bdrm
H i bath
family room, contrtl hoot and
air. carpatad. fenced bath
A4J0. plut lit latt A D O
Available * I. Broker Owner
Call M l OJSO____________ ____
Sanford Megnihcientty rottored
) bdrm , I bath baautilul wood
work wood lloort fireplace
many blindt. Good location
BAM Call M T IMA, MS aaai
Two Rental! One Jbdrm end
ora I bdrm downtown San
toed *04 MS «S I I __________
I bdrm . central heel A air
Foncad yard AMS mo lit. latt
&amp; tecurily
O W N E R B ROKER lilie s )
&gt;00 E leth St 4 Bdrm fiybath.
mint condition, control boat
ond a ir, tuper appliance
p a ck a g e , la m . no tm e ll
children no poll Reterencot
AM* mo H I and Security
M l A Ittt or AJ I JAM___________
J bdrm on Summerlin Ave
F r it tail and depot,I re
quired w/reference! MT MOJ

) bdrm., 1bath (3751 mo.
AMOdepotit Call H I WEE
J bdrm . Hy bath, new carpel
C/M/A. appliance! drepet.
lanced back yard 1*00 mo
Pay H I ASM, t r o t M l *OJa
) bedroom route Alt* New 1
bedroom duple a. quiet AJ*&gt;
Leate. ttf. tail and tacurlty
M l 0771

105— DuplexTriplex/ Rent
B E A U T IF U L

1 bdrm/l bath
carpal, appliances Kreanad
patio, laundry 1 M 0 H I M U
1 bdrm . air. carport, oppll
one at. water Included AMO
par month M ill* *

117— Commercial
Rentals
S to ra g e or m o n u lo c lu rln g
tpace }a hour locurity guard
Call m JAM_________________
11U French Avo
i n tq It
Store Front Will remodel to
tonanti specifications A*00
H I t f t l__________

SHENANDOAH.
VILLAGE

•10 0 O FF
S E C U R IT Y
D E P O S IT
[

Koeooa dopux
FAHIUXS WUC0HI

2

► 3 23-29 20

r

KM LU0ODM
SANFOtO

REAL E S T A T E

REALTOR

Ml latt

10*

DOW N

G#hav&lt;§ Moto^avO'K

B**ut,M wooOtd o*#ri&lt;f»d ac^a
w'ttb j bdrm fraii*r (37 000
127 ana aft#» a pen
By 0#n*f ) beautiful A c rt!
a ith M o b il* H o m y
)
bdrm l j b ilh in Oilcan'
)19 90C A ti»r ) PM J72 F ill

COUNTRY VILLAGE

S T E M P E R
1 ACRES

157— Mobile
Homes / Sale

141 — Homes For Sale

INCOME Mobil* OK and col
tag* Rent on* fir* tn oth*r
ISO 000

BANK RCPO Reta-eSpecialitt
LA K E MARY R E A L T Y
R E A L TO R
m nee

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie Real E ilalr Broker
H44 ianlord Ave
P IN E C B E 1 T juft like
)
Bdrm
I bath N r* roof,
carpal cabtrwH pa nt m%id#
and oul fenced back Convu

n**n1lot alien \u *00

Boom for triples sm OOO

(&gt;4h»f will finance
SAN FO R D Mendyman ipeciai
1)00 %q M lUtng art* Ntm
roof Fireplace m ground
poo) gueit cottage F tntth and
la v e
1 1 * 7 0 0 c 4 ih
1ANFO R D

I ‘ t bat h

1 4 0 0 mo

X i H A

ill T0U BUD
TO KNOW
in

t u t (Sturt

REALTY-REALTOR
Sanford's Sales Leader
WE LIST A N O S E L L
Than
ANYO N E IN N O R TH
SEM INO LE C O U N TY

m ore hom es

O N E ACRE pint, cemet with
thii trailer in the caunlryf
Privacy 179.900
C A L L H A LL
)7) )7 N

A T T R A C T IV E ! I Bdrm . I belli
hem* with I,replace, new cab
mafi. large porch I Sift on
c o rn e r lo ll l l l . l l f

ASSUM E NO O U A LIFY IN O * 1
B d rm , 1 I/ ) b ilti, la rg e
tented yard! 11,000 down. 1)19
Mo P1TII rn 11% Appeal It
y rt Move righf In I 110,100
C A L L H ALL
1111774

D O LL Ito u s e i T Bdrm . I bath
home with central heat and
air, utility thud naw carpet,
lanced raid (tote to tewnl
1 4 *
S 0
0

M O V E B IG H T IN ) Bdrm , 2
bath beautiful tpHI plan,
loaded with 9■f r i t , only
n o OOO Call v i guicfci uo.ooo
C A L L H A LL ................ 121 *774

A DO R t A B L E ! J B d rm . I&gt;i
bath hemal Sunken living
room, tenlral heal and air.
(eder trim thieughoul Inlert
or I Thii hem* I! grtal tor
re lira e *r naw c e u p le tt
S e a
t o o

7404 MW Y 17 97
L A K E M AR Y 7 bdrm
1*.
bath, appliance! Clean at a
pm i ) j ooo
LANOSTOCK BROKERS
74)1717
LAR K M ARY
Eacutivt type pooi horn* very
kpacfoui 4l in alfordable
pne* Foe appointment alter
) PM Glady Brown RtaHy
Broker 177 197aor 177 S717

SANFORD AREA
AFFORDABLE HOMES
I H i m I bath Kama central
heal and air. double garege.
atiumabla morfgaga M l.00*
J Bdrm , tenlral heal and air I
yeart Naw Large earner lei
eaty accett la II M M l.to*
) Bdrm Attvmakfe mortgage
Nice landtcapmg. large pell*,
tcreened porch, fenced yard
Canvtnienl lacalwnl M*.e«*
TO N Y C A P f O L A A S S a . INC.
REALTOR................ _ . . I 3 M 3 3 J

Long wood
Lake Mary
)
Bdrm t*i bath family room
fenced yard ISa.iOO Mutt be
refinanced C a H i P W

MARKHAM ESTATES
t bdrm / 1 balfi. qualify built
Mild timber heme, a p p ro
ISM tq N under air, lugh
energy value! deep well.
Mpfic tank, let'em weed cab
melt, p rive o fence
HM.MR
Hutker Realty. R IA L T O R S
M l M M .... ..... leaning! MT JM I
Santord Owner will help Imdnce
ipMtou* con variable home a
bdrm
] ba'ht or home e
mqlttor in lew apt Aktumobto
t 'y mortgage U M W W W l

GENEVA GARDCNS
APARTMENTS
e n u iw u
• Adult A Family
S o d Ion*
• W /D Connoclioni

• Cable TV. Pool
e Shod Term loaeo*
Available

i. M

•&gt;. i w . t •&gt; r x

fw .*3 M
150S W. 25th SL
llh im

M jfcb 7) m) A 241h
R tiffittm «nl| from t i e )

10) 44» 4Ht
2)00 I Graves

•44 77) 277)
O rin g i City

JU S T O F F I 4
AT O R A N G I C IT Y (X I T # )4

F R E E TO G OOO HOME $mai
c u lt m lit d bttad fvm tlr
II) ID )
o ld er m ale cat
Gray a
whit* On*n*f mutf IrivVl
Hmdvome im ari &amp; lavtabi*
temp Anton N tu frrrd %ho»i
12 I I )
me bad habili No
ctuldftn f r « fo nfca patton
)77 u n

20! — Horses
W A N T E D Young ladei 11 lo
I ) y « a r i , fo n 0 r a
S t o n e h e d g f S 1a b I •% fn
fu h e n g tio M id tn g 72172))

213— Auctions

MOBILE r &gt; 1 HOMES

STENSTROM

323-5774

BIG H A R T T IM E IN C O M E !!
M AJOR S T E E L B U ILD IN G
C O M PAN Y IS S E E K IN G A
P A R T T I M E D E A L E R IN
YO UR A R E A TO SELL OUR
PRE E N G IN E E R E D S TE E L
B U ILD IN G S AND R E L A TE D
P R O D U C TS R E F U N D A B LE
O E P O U T R E Q U IR E D CALL
B O B C R A N D A L L AT
I too ala I t H ________________

WE N E E D LISTINGS*

Call )77 49)0

New attociatet wantedf Will
train for a rewarding
U R E A L E S TA TE C A R E E R )!

S ilu id i) ' Sundjf

) Bdrm

yard Convenient 1ochopping

CALL HALL

Adult Mobile Home Pith

CALL A N Y T IM E
R EALTO R JJ2 4991

321 0759 Eve 322-7643
Sanford and Daltona home* for
%ai# by enmnar ) bdrm porch
fan* t antra) air haat fenced

Rental

191-Building
M aterials

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

In

INCOM E P R O P E R TY
Brick
dupi*« with •■Ira io* m back

J03— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
Houiwt for 'rant1in Sanford and
Du Iton* ) bdrm porch. fant.
canfral air heal fenced yard
Con ran lantto chopping Call
___________ J 7 im o
a a a IN D E L TO N A • • a
a b H O M E 1 FOB B EN T a a
a a 114 1414 a a

CALL BART
a i a n om \

Professional Office Space

T h u r s d a y . M a r c h 21, I f W - J B

141 — Homes For Sale

E X C E L L E N T P O T E N T IA L ! «
Bdrm . J bath I tlory home
with a tireplacatl Wood Itoon.
per chi Submit all * lfe rtl

lii(e tt New ...4 ...Used Mobile
Home Dealer in Ibis Arte
Familial
A
Advil!
M «lM w »l!tl
11111*0
t*ll C ip r* !! 11 ■ 60 Newly
remodried M ull be moved
tiioo C a iliu i t i i
YOU OON'T N E E D A O ARAG E
TO HAVE A G A R A G E SALE
B U T Y O U DO H E E O A
W ANT AD C A L L 111 l i l t ,
'*»! M r l ‘ne Palm Spr.nqi 14
Kao Ibdrm ib a 'h f o r * * '
H I Oaat
l*»J Skyline la . P0 1 Hdrm }
bath, c a th e d ra l ce iln g*
khingi* root maiumt* !,dmq
171 (•»'
tl Canctrd. Mato Adult vet
Iron Carriage C a m tw.100
n i JMI le a ve me*kapa______
•1 ia ■ ao I H d rm . j " bam
Aitume
merlgag*
Call
M l *114 alleys PM
t i Scoff Mobile home. J 414S 1
bdrm . 1 bath adull park
Central H/A t l l ooo m i gala
t l Skylina la X ta 1 bdrm /}
bath ipM plan to x j t icratn
porch. 10 a 10 khed central
A H gal ttova A heal Adult
lection I I I 000 111 Ittt

159— Real Estate
Wanted

FO R E S T A T E

Commercial or Rttldtnf f*t
Autbont A Appraiton Calf
Peti t Auction I I ) 1430

L &amp; E AUCTION

217— Garage Sales

231-Cars

GARAGE s a l e
SAT 111
Clothes lewe'ry Avon lots ot
m ite tea Baywood O re l*
Suntan* (tigs**_____________
M U L T I F A M I L Y . M AR i i ,
Sat . • t* a. G E N E V A COM
M U N I T Y C E N T E R
G E N E V A FLA
Refrigerator w Icemaker while
tan* (Soubie twin beds (corner
set), queen til* hid* a bed
couch Tim** computer Other
mittelteneous it*mi Every
thing unde' SX*) Fr,d*y A
Saturday alt Beth Orive
S A N F O R D S PRING C L E A N
IN G I 1JI1 Highlawn A.e Sal
urdey &amp; Sunder • *o 1
Location near Sem.noi* High
Spring Clean Out! TS01 toader*
Are pit Rosaha Dr between
Sanlord Are and Locus' Ar*
Saturday M a tc h }) I to*PW

Bad Credit?
No Credit’
m FINANCE

Y A R D S A L C l LO TS OF EV
E R Y T H IN G ' FR IO A Y * )
110* H I G H L A W N A V E
B E H I N O G E N E V A
G A R D E N S APTS

1*B0 Fpfd ) 4 ton pick up dump

215— Boats and
Accessories
• A l l iO A T i 11 b f&gt; ivenrude
71 thruit Minn Kota (rolling
motor Spore tire A w*e*l
Depth finder E tc cond ifiO
model Orse owner Jaf )f9S
(A tf V Hull pleatore boat with
70 M P Eveorude motor and
trailer
good %h*p« if TOO
Call 177 9744_________________

217— Garage Sales
Bug Porch Sol# ttarling Th un
thru Sun everything! Deafer*
Welcome 7170 S Elm St

ta«* On
tea* On
IT*0 On

Custom built M*0 lb strength
flat bed single ail* Good tor
1 whee'ers *r lawn car*
equ p n rn ' SMS Call 11) Sal*

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1170 S Sanford 321 407S
4) Filter* Aegon ) D» Re
fi(K id Veil or Hade fo* imal!

life model irftvRl Ifat*tf Call
)77 919)
79 M E R C U R Y C A P R I
H ATCH BAC K SHee* w rod
inferior Ve*y good condition
322 17)0 from t ) A»k Igr
Amy or altera JO ))2 1171

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes
•*!' Kawasaki ta* L T D IWO
miles eacellent condition
Sato Can Mt Sal*

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Cam pers
II PROW LER T R A IL E R
Mat tin Motor f
701 S Fr»nch 17) H U

235— Trucks /
Buses / Vans

243— Junk Car*
trucK

New pa in»

uphof

fiery fvnt up and Injuf end
olignmenf

Apptf p'e cond*

*H&gt;n Ypufi ipr UICO Dump

frtrtk f*alu*e •lone It worfh
M&gt;BBBB&gt;1 W l i ’ A j ’ t j

•74 Pinto, 52SO Do«n
Pay Balance Weekly 1
499 oaoo
|99 0900

Baby Bed! Strollers Clethtt
Playpens, Etc, Paperback
t m a i l t ii)s * * i
Need Cribs playpent baby
fu rn itu re , clothing good
p r x e ! A H g r lP M i l l 11*1
PayingCASH lor
Aluminum Cans Copper
B&gt;ats Lead Newspaper
Glass Gold Silver
Kokomo Tool H i ) It!
t * 00Sal * 111) DM
W A N T E D OE AO OR A L IV E I
R e f r ig e r a t o r s
w e th e rs
d 'r e r i M l ajea

BUY 1UNK CARS A TR UC KS
F rem 119 ta ISO or more
Call Jl) U H 17)4111
TOM Dollar P u d lor Junk A
Ut#d c a n Irvckt k Neavy
equipment 327 |9h9
WE PA&gt; TOM D O LLA R FOR
JU NK CARS AND TR UC KS
CBS A U TO M A R TS m 4S0)

COURTESY PONTIAC

USED CAR
EXTRAVAGANZA
1979 HONDA PRELUDE
LO ADED

221— Good Things
to Eat

1981 HONDA ACCORD

U Pick ffrawbemet
T « i Thuf I I I 4t)# Heifer Ave
12) 8717
1)1 0411

LOADED

1981 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE

223— Miscellaneous

O NE O W N E R
Horn«m*de King file quill or

%pr#*d and pillow* 1774974

1981 TOYOTA CEUCA SUPRA

•He* i MM
Rehu.ll K IR B Y H i t f« A up
Guaranteed Kirby Ca
114 W HI St J|l 1449
lelelMe TV Syilemi
Complete All you need 100%
Financing No money down
H I U OOUn-vervei 1)1 s'*i
Wedding gawn «||# 4 |7) 19"
Colo* TV ISO Runs good
C o iim n it

BUCK, LOADED

1982 OLDS CUTLASS CALAIS
ONE O W N E R . LO W M ILE A G E

1983 PONTIAC GRAND PR1X IS

23t — Cars

LOADED, LOW MILEAGE

★ DAYTONA AUTO a
★ AUCTION ★

1983 TOYOTA CELICA

500 Sanford Kr*.

323-6593

fl Ceugar
’la Mark IV
'fa Datum SW

219— Wanted fo Buy

Friday Nights... 7 PM
Wing Back Rocker. FAapl* Bed
and Chest Tw in Beds wrtth
WkfcOf Head Saetdi 4 edd
C h e e l t ef D r a w e r s ,
G l e i t w e r e . and O n h e t
Pictures. Laung* Chain, end
me my mote He m i

237— Tractors and
Trailers

H uy 91
• i i i i

5 S P E E D , LO A D E D

DayIon# Beach
Held* « * • * • •

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION

1984 PONTIAC FIREBIRD

Every Wed N it* a ll M PM

LOADED, LOW MILEAGE

W here Anybody *
* Can Buy or Sell f *

a

1984 PONTIAC TRANS AM

9 er mere detail*
____
1994 1)11111
D e ta ry Auto a Met »n# VeUt
AcroMthe river, top©tMI1
174 H e y II 93 Pu6+fy M t 9 U I

B R A S S H A T , LOADED

1904 CHEVROLET 1-28
S SPUD, LOADED, 1.600 N U I

D IS C O U N T
kca
AUTO
SALES

1984 PONTIAC TRANS AM

WE FINANCE

T -T O P S , L O A D E D

COURTESY PONTIAC /£ \

79 Pint*
M )t On
I I Ford Ceuner P/Up )704 Dn
1)41 French Ave
121 it t )
Why Buy New You Can Renew*
l ■pert Petnf A Body Werk
Free iih m e le t
311411)

,!1" " NOBODY WALKS AWAY! ' '"T*"?

ItS W O

U tIB H W Y

17-11 — SANFORD

ssi. we
W IL L B U ILO TO S U IT ! YO UR
LO T OR OURSI E X C L U S IV E
A G E N T FO R W IN S O N G
D E V CO U P . A C E N T R A L
FLO R ID A L E A D E R ' M ORE
HOME FOR LESS M O N E Y !
C A LL TO DAY!

Ar* you gening Divorced tram
•erred lorecloved need quick
vale* Call Dal* M l cegt_______

163— Waterfront
Property / Sale

• G E N E V A O SCEO LA RO a
IO N E D FOR M O B IL E S '
t Acre Country t r a d !
Well tread an paved Rd
1* N Down It Y d el T I M
Frem lie .SMI

NEW S M YR NA B EAC H
Ocean front } } condo No money
down Auumebl* mortgage

II you are looking lor a tuc
catilul carear In Real Eilat*
Slentlrem Really I* looking
for yeu Cell Lee Albright
today at I I I I I N
Evening!
I l l 1M1

tit — Appliances
/ Furniture

CALL A NY T IM E

322-2420
, U I S Park. Santord
W l Lb Mary Bled. Lk M ary

SUPER PATIO HOME
Ovality thru avt 1 bdrm /] bath
plut dan
Eatrai Include
peddle tent, veetlcalk. tract
lighting, light earth ton*!. ♦
much more' Screened poach
I* weeded hath yard Fee
delailt contact Caret Sap#
Realtor Aiaaciate

A/chtAuoculei.Inc
Rultors
862-3800.... 788-3608
J B d rm , J bath, van
hem* M! nk* neighborhood
&gt;10 000 Call Ml SIM__________
J Bdrm H tbelh family room
la n c a d h a r d , a a t r a k l
Alkumabla * 1 \ m ortgage1
Eacellent condlllanl M u tl
see' Sanor* South tie *00
Call evening! or waokendi

111 m i

149— Commercial
Properly / Sale
Bu!&gt;n*!i end corner properly
Zoned GC 1 Weil 1*1 SI .
_ Santord Call H I *1*1 _________

153— Acreage
Lots/Sale
O S T E E N * A ton *1000 down
Term* Lake Privilege! No
mobile! Kerry I Dreggori
Reeiler Jaa I t U ___________

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

Btathird* Realty. R E A L TO R *
to* alt 1111 Open t P e ril

BY A P P O I N T M E N T O N L Y
f tc cord Fngida r* ihea.y
d u t y ).w asher A d ry e r,
heeler king ill* twd com
pi*'* Ret liner square m*rbi*
, table 111 US*
Heavy duty Ireeier. like new.
t i l l Upright piano t il*
lie a*co____________ _______
King tire mattr**! A boa spring
with heme Etcellenl &lt;«id ,
ttgn IMS. m t l A S a tta rl PM
Queen *1 led bed
LIS* new I71S
_____
Call M l **]*
R E F R IO IR A T O R 14'GC
Ayacado 1*1
___________n i n e t ___ __
a P I N T TO O W N a
Color T V S . stereos washers
dryers, refrigerator, healers,
furniture video recorders
Special 1st we*as rent l h
Altar native TV B Appi Rpntals
(ayrei Shopping Center

_______ rosaw_______

Sears Kenmor* Washer Dryer
Almondion* Lest than ] y rt
•Id Pair SJ00 Call H I 1 1 »
attar a PM___________________
" T H E U IC O S T O R E
Appllancat Furnltura
Buy tall Anyone Financed'
* It* E Jitd » '» M f l i t aal* *
Used WesAert Parts A Service
tor Kayuneret .............I l l Met
MOONEY A P P L IA N C E S
W tLS O N M AlER F U R N IT U R E
i l l U S E F IR S T ST
111 san

143— Television /
Radio / Stereo
COLOR T E L E V IS IO N
RCA } ! Consol* cotor totov!
tron Ortglnai price over U00
Balance due S1MOO cash or
take over payments SX per
month Shit In warranty NO
M O N E Y DOWN Free home
trial No obligation
_ C e d _ S c d ^ J » a ^ e jr^ r m jM ^ ^

T o List Your Business...
Dial 3 2 2 -2 6 1 1 or 8 3 1 - 9 9 9 3

Accounting 4
Tex Service
Prefentewel Tea Iig e rfl N i
Rev*. My i N K i or yevr hem*
Best p k n
I X • M . A SIS.
iw n n c a iu ifK s n s ttn
Tea •&lt;&lt;ountent H years e.pe
riant* Will pr*«.«r* ta.et In
yeur home Persenel and
smell business 'k ! s u e ______

Additions 4.
Remodeling
REM 00ELING SPECIALIST
We Handle
The What* Bell Of Wen

B.

1. LINK CONST.
322 702)

F mating A reliable

Appliance Repair

117— Sporting Goods
E Z G o G o ilC e n
Good Cond It-on 1*00
C anIX ) a ll]

T R E C l I R V I C t A F IR tW O O O
FOR SALE C A LL A F TE R
4 P M JIJ SOPS

General Services
Protv si tonal Chau Camlng
and ruth seat wearing Reason
abt* prices Call J l ) a*4f

Handy Man
la p Handyman. Ret Reliable
Free E tf most eny |eb Beit
Ratos B H U I Call Anytime
We F l i t t Altl
Reefing. Feinting. Carpentry
Free Wrtftee 1st............ m 1YM

Landclearing

Painting

L A N O C LE A R IN G
F IL L D IR T, BUSHOGGING
C L A Y 4 SHALE m UJ1

Retpentibi* Man and helper will

Lawn Service

LAWNS MOWfD ’ TRIMMED
Spring Yard (Han ups ) ) ) ! » «

'j

C o m pU ti Lr « r C a n

if yr « « • ta* seal, s»*sasj

Building Contractors

Home Improvement

Masonry

A D D ITIO N S ■ ■ M O D IL IN O
Blit Strip? Custom Builder
Slat* Lit
RROOHM

fa llU r1!w Iiitlila
flimMiahni
w w l Na lA W
q flf^ ^ w F rrv ^
Me Jeb Tee Small
1)1 Barton Lana. Santord

B E A L Cencref* I men quality
operation Pauos dnveweyt
O eysSlI T P ) Eres M l f B I
D H Ruby Central*

6)57411
Carpentry
■ ( M O D I L IN O
R IF A IIIN G
R ( A S O N A B LB .....V I R Y R IL I
A
B
L
I
77) 4911
................ 994334 H47

Cleaning Strvict

_________w a n ________
Plumbing. Painting. Electric
Carpentry Oen l See Iff Ask Bol
IS y r t Eap
BALH 19M I
TH O M A S 4 THOM AS Hem*
repair, cleaning, law* cere
Cell i l l )**»

Home Repairs

Head Carpet O eielug Livmg
Dining Room &amp; Hell 1)100
Safe 4 Chair, SIS m SSM

C A R P EN TER
Repairs end
remodeling Ne |ob toe smell
Cell ) ) ) toal _______________

janitorial Service SpecleliM m
office Cleaning carpet 4 tile
M years taperienti Cell in
mar rung f jg until IS AM

Maintenance ef all types
Carpentry, pemting plumbing
and electric n &gt; 60M

M AI 0 5 Ta -Ot 6et
Cleanliness It neat T* Gadltneti
Call H it helper1 1
Guaranteed fe rrk a Lee Ratos
CALL NOW! 3 3 5 0 1 0 0

Landclearing
O R N E V A L A N O C L IA H IM O
Let end Lend (leering
fill dirt, end heutmg
Ceil See * e »o r see * ; «

ProltsstoAii Custom P«intin|
Vernng Central Fie for IS y rt
with (wnplele quality peinl
Ing services Qualify a M utl
tpwrielwelUeelM f iile e n
W A LLP A P E R IN G
P A IN T IN O
References .......Very Reltobto

1)1 n i l ***«MftHtWMI»** m m s m

Paper Hanging
Clm stiin Biol.

Health 4 Beauty

point your Home or Business
etc Give your problems to ut
WE CARE Quality work. »
yrt eap 1)1 701/ Lie con)

★ TONY C0RIN0*

ACR LAWN SE R V IC E
Mw lalanine a Saddlng Pruning
Cleaning Thelcblng Fertilliing
Free Eifim alet
J4E-IISI
Lawn Maintenance
Landscaping Bush Hog Mowing
______Sat W * ______________

TO W E R S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y HerrteM s Beauty
Nook I l f E fit SI m )'* )

w nw o W W TB9

intfM ____________________________________
Oiloen ig acre parcel f mid
Only l toft Improved Goad
a c re !! Good water M 000
down U r* per me U 0 000
G tettery Garland Realtor
i l l reaa

Firewood/Fuel

P A P I K H AN G IN G

Any type wellcevertng
Reesenabt*.................... 71J lua

RusoAsbl* R slts
325 4401

Hawse stabs a Drives t Pallet
ijh i^ O r e d f ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ in m *

Moving 4 Hauling
Nursing Care
O UR R A TE S A RE LOW ER
LeAevlew Nursing Center
F IF E SecendSt . Sentord
)l) H i'

Painting
AI A PAINTINO Ii
• e le r ie y . L lc a m e d and
bended IS years eapertonce
C p R i a i m , _________________

CALVIN 4 TOM S
Hewee PeMttof 4 Wen Paper
Yew buy material I
W* supply leber Ta 14 V I Sts

m in i

Plastering
• ALL Phases at Ptastoring •
Repair. Mecca. HardCeet.
Simulated B rkb n i FFF1

Plumbing
a Rudds PtvmbWg Service •

Rapeto a Raplece a Rimedal
a Free Estfmetos • D H N i •

EMORY’S PLUMRINO
Res Comm Repair, n
StoleCt TCP CODed)
m &gt;sad Leave

Tile
S c e H m a p ^ ^ H e ^ p 'r q k s u r q
C lean in g C e ra m ic . V in y l
Atbettoe All Pheeec P C :
Bncs Heme* Bveineeeet
E r e ^ s ^ R e e e e r t o e t o t t l4 7 * l

Tree Servlet
ECHOLS T R E E t l k v l c i
Free Esiimetoel Law Priceel
L 'tenuad- insured/ U ) m *

"Leftbe fy e M iile ^ N d* r* .
JO HN A L L E N S LAW N A T R I E
Deed Ire* removal Lie 4 k q
Free eel U t SIPS

•e *

�*B-Evanlnt&gt; Marald. Sanford. FI. ThurvU y, March II. IMS

fJ S

CONCRETE MIX
*1

52" Highlander
CEILING FAN

Your
Choice:

40 Lb. BAG

Scotty's'
Scotty » RI6
io«r Fatct

1“

scams
sail ruci
U U M tS I
m m Maiaati

C O H C tf l1

M IX

99 *

- J s » ? s r' •

Sm Si m

i to t

D »i»h

• Sturdy all-steel frame
• See-thru drawers
• 15 drawers
• No 11 -615.

S P R A YETTE 4
• Sprays up to 4
gallons No. 08320

2 liter No. 1985

Premixed, with sprayer.
No 412

• Sprays up to 15
gallons No 8310

Reg. 7.47

# •

Refill
No. 413.

Reg. 7.77*

LAWN SPRAYERS

POLY HAND
$. SPRAYER

FLEA AND TICK
SPRAYS xenco*

UICK-PICK
TORflGE ORGANIZER

8 Ortho

Reg. 9 .8 7

s c o rn BEST

SCOTTY'S*®**-!
BEST 27-3-3
LAWN Bog
FERTILIZER M f

FERTILIZER
*er*

R e g 3.57

Bag,

n il WUCHT

FLASHLIGHT
Comes with 2 D alkaline
batteries No DFF

In green, cocoa.
Mexican orange, and
blue-green 1 2 'width.

5/8 h.p Limited
1-year warranty
No E T-1 3 0 .

Scotty'*

J

Reg. 1.99

R e g 49.95

Instant on/of&lt; water
control Plastic
construction
No 430C

In clear, brown or pamtablej A • J j J L l
white 10 3 11 02
f iS * t \\j&gt; 11
mmi

Uil rwu
u iiw il

►f7

toe OdfWa

ttimalnor

A .

20L.B.
CYLINBER

Scotty'S P R IC E
ORGANIC PEAT or
TOP SOIL

White steel tank |
with standard
horizontal safety |
waive

25 K&gt;. bag. - ..

No R X 12 -50

Reg. 4 .8 8
5/8" x 50',
No R X58-50

EMERGENCY
LIGHT

[XJRACELL

( ] WORKS A*VWH%

SILICONE II afe, ^ TT
CAULK
iy

Sn Srorci

0 WEED
AND FEED

DURACELi.

Comes with one 6-volt
lantern battery No DFE

Reg. 6.99

Sq. Yd.~ &amp; &amp; &amp;

FLEXIBLE
WATER
SAVER
AQUA GUN®

**m

i t

••i i i nil nrncMi

Reg. 7.88

Indoor-Outdoor
CARPET

ELECTRIC
TRIMMER

•

2 2 -3 -3 . 18 lb bag

1/2 " x 50'
REINFORCED
HOSES

m

WEED AND
IL‘
FEED Scotty*

Contains slow release
nitrogen that develops
thick green lawn
Covers 5,000 sq ft
18 lbs Reg. 6.59

Reg. 3.9 9

W O R K S W ITH A P A R P E N H O S E

R eg^5^99

6- 6-6
50 lb bag

Scotty's

• High density
polyethylene
• Brass extension rod
• Rotating shut-off
• Adjustable norzle
• 2 gallon No. 1992.

Four wood blades
with bright brass
motor housing
5-year limited
warranty. (Accepts
optional light kit)

-30*
69*

TIKI*
IMtl COSt

Four leak blades with
cane inserts. 3-speed pull
chain. Light adaptable

f m ill m
XOCTY1

52" Venice
CEILING FAN

COMPACT®
POLY
Scotty**
COMPRESSED-AIR
SPRAYER

V TIME.' [a T W ^ j S THE

CORDLESS SCREWDRIVER
Drives and
removes screws, r f C '
'Z L fv Jr.
nuts and bolts.
Comes with 1
slotted and 1
Phillips bit. but
accepts any 1 / 4 " ' ^ ^ ^
hexbit or socket *
No 2305 0 2 /2 0 0 0
Reg. 3 4 . 6 6 '

0

V A " CIRCULAR
SAW
2 hp, 10 amp double
insulated motor with
burnout protection.
Blade included
No 5150/576
Reg. 5 7 .8 7

DOUBLE BOWL
____
S T AIMLESS STEEL SINK
Bowk ere 6” deep end
undercoated for durability. 33" a
22- No F433. Reg. 24.91

Your

Choice:

b UY!

Coventry
Interior
LATEX
PAINT
In white and
custom colors

261).

REPLACEMENT LOCKS

Ik

P A S S A G E KNOB SET

COM*

Reg 22 .0 0

361 sq in.
chrome cooking
grids 30,000
Btu dual
burner.
Lite-a-matic'
push-button
ignitor 20 lb.
tank included
No 3173-Z/
3174/3175H

BATHRO O M KNOB SET

In white and colors
t 12 oz. net weight

EireM eyta M l Arttqu* braaa Art
No. S n S ttE S 7A*2A

EN TR A N C E K EY LOCK

l O

CneAe teemML M u t n e •

W

OPEN

“W PM

No SPX1US ?AiKAe

' * * 2 58

ORANGE CITY
2323 S Volusia Ave
Highway 17 and 92
Phone 775-7268

A LTAM O N TE SPRINGS
1029 E Altamonte Or
(Highway 436)
Phone 339 8311

ALTAM ONTE SPRINGS
875 West Highway 436
Phone 862-7254

O PEN
SANFORO

tii

&lt;w•eeea c**|d
re -eeer.ee r « r^pta 1

700 French Avenue
Phone 323-4700

C

R eg. 1. 17

Architectural [me
Exterior
LATEX
S B H S tfr
PAINT
W hite and
custom colors. I

PM
6Hi 100 - u t fjiaa
M O IT H I-t f l

y

' O f T Seottys

PRICES GOOD THRU MARCH 23

/'////if

’ 1 »■ - ire

1

SPRAY
ENAMEL

Empra
todt Aratque braaa
No SPM 11E S 7A.

Knit wrists, leather palm end
thumb. No. 11501/4070.

m u n - ut l ata

Reg. 16 9.95

BEDROOM KNOB SET

MEN’S LEATHER
PALM GLOVES

GAS
GRILL

72?

Ew«ira «y«B M l Areeue traaa Nrae*
No SP3601ES 7A.

SconvaC 1»es

&gt;

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152048">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 21, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152049">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152050">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 21, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152051">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152052">
                <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;, March 21, 1985; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152053">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152054">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152055">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="152056">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
